Click on the drop down below to see the 8.0-or-above matches that happened between Clash at the Castle and Extreme Rules. It was feeling a little unwieldy to have those matches and the PPV in one post without anything that contracts.
Road to Survivor Series War Games October 31, 2022 – Dallas, Texas Seth Rollins def. Austin Theory November 4, 2022 – St. Louis, Missouri Gunther def. Rey Mysterio {WWE Intercontinental Championship Match} November 5, 2022 – Riyadh, Riyadh Roman Reigns def. Logan Paul {Undisputed WWE Universal Championship Match} November 11, 2011 – Indianapolis, Indiana Jey Uso & Jimmy Uso def. Kofi Kingston & Xavier Woods {WWE Undisputed Tag Team Championship Match}
From Raw 1,536. This got off to a great start, with Rollins embarrassing Theory by making him look like a rookie out of his depth. In the first half of the match, Theory was unable maintain a sustained stretch of control because Rollins had answers to all of Theory’s strengths. Theory got closest to victory because of a lucky punch and a neckbreaker. A Blockbuster got him another near-fall. Rollins forced Theory to earn every big move after that, keeping Theory from getting comfortable. Theory stupidly went for the Pedigree, which was countered to the Stomp. That gave Rollins the win at 11:26 (shown of 14:40). I would have loved to see this plus five more minutes. I think these two could put on something really special. ***¾
From Smackdown 1,211. I think beyond some of the inflated ratings people are giving WWE matches because of their Triple H derangement syndrome, we might be entering an era of Gunther derangement syndrome. This match was good, and featured a very cool bit during which Mysterio blocked a series of bodyslams just by holding on to Gunther and then hitting a crucifix bomb. Though I think the live crowd may have had a bit of trouble understanding what was happening as they weren’t as loud as I’d expect them to be for a rather unprecedented spot. From there, this was little more than above average and I can’t imagine the stuff during the commercials would make me think differently. Mysterio got a couple fun looking nearfalls, but neither of them felt like the finish. I was struck by Mysterio kicking out of Gunther’s powerbomb. It didn’t feel like that kind of match. Gunther blocked the 619 with a big boot and hit a short-arm clothesline for the win at 12:40 (shown of) 18:18. ***¼
From Crown Jewel. The Crown Jewel card didn’t look great to me, and the Saudi shows are arguably (though I don’t think it’s a good argument) only semi-canonical. So I decided to treat it like an episode of Raw or Smackdown and just review the 8.0+ matches on it in the lead up to Survivor Series. And this was the only one. Paul got this shot for the Universal Championship in his third match, because he and Reigns got into a spat on a podcast. Get Reigns on WTF please. During the introductions, Paul gets booed while Reigns gets a big pop. I have to imagine that the people who rated this so highly when it happened a few weeks ago did so on a sliding scale because Paul is a celebrity. He’s better than he has any right to be given that he’s a celebrity. His athleticism lends itself well to wrestling, and his selling is actually quite good. But I found it impossible to believe that Paul was ever close to winning the title. His most convincing moves were stolen from Reigns, which is a problem we’re running into here because we haven’t had a chance to learn through more matches what Paul’s winning moves are. He hasn’t had a chance to get any of his work over. The frog splash was the closest thing to over. That didn’t make the match boring at all, but it kept it from feeling epic. That said, hitting a flying elbowdrop while livestreaming it on his cell phone was pretty cool. And I don’t hate outside interference as a rule, but five minutes of the Bloodline fighting Jake Paul only for Logan Paul to goofily walk into Reigns’ Superman Punch made the rest of the match feel pointless. Reigns followed that with a spear for the win at 24:49. I truly hope when Reigns eventually drops the title, the match doesn’t have this much gaga at the end. ***½
From Smackdown 1,212. This is a neat deal that you don’t get from WWE all that much: if the Usos beat the New Day here, they are guaranteed to overtake the New Day’s record for longest single WWE tag title reign ever. I love that Jimmy and Jey have different hair styles now so I can tell them apart. And I love that the mullet wearing Jey is more of a heel. If they were trying to get across that these two teams are very familiar with each other, but that the Usos have blown past the New Day in terms of in ring prowess and dominance, they did a great job. New Day was never able to get a solid footing in the match, and were put down with a mid-dive 1D on Kingston at 16:07 (shown of 23:50). The Usos came out of this looking terrific, and deserving of their record-breaking title reign. Well done all around. ****
November 26, 2022 – Boston, Massachusetts
Bianca Belair, Asuka, Alexa Bliss, Becky Lynch & Mia Yim def. Bayley, Rhea Ripley, Iyo Sky, Dakota Kai & Nikki Cross {War Games}
The opening five minutes between Belair and Kai was pretty dull, and the crowd was rather quiet for it. Sky came in and livened things up a bit. Belair getting whooped by the tag champs was an interesting story, especially as Kai & Sky have been in every women’s War Games. Asuka came in next and livened up the crowd. Sky vs. Asuka has shockingly never happened before one-on-one with the exception of on a WWE house show in August about 80 miles from this building. Cross brought a few wimpy weapons (kendo sticks and trash can lids) into the ring. Bliss came in and all the ladies inexplicably stood together in a bunch so that Cross could jump off of the top of the cage onto them. Bayley brought tables and ladders into the ring. Yim brought the trash can bottoms in. Her technique hadn’t improved, so Cory Graves used his “ugly but effective” line on commentary for the second time in the same match. Curious how many times he’ll say that in the Shotzi match later. Everyone was conveniently down on the mat after multiple superplexes were hit so that Ripley’s could have the spotlight upon her entry into the match. At this point, there’s literally nothing for Cross or Kai to do, so they just stand around doing absolutely nothing. Yim and Bliss were just laying around on the mat, why not attack them more? When Lynch came in, anyone who wasn’t her or an opponent attacking her (one at a time for some reason) laid around on the mat. And with that, I’ve completely tuned out. The requisite Tower of Doom spot is thankfully thwarted by a kendo stick attack, but the “everyone stares at each other in a line before attacking” trope remains. I hate it. At one point, Asuka mists Ripley, but it happens too early and Ripley is able to recover and be a fully functional member of her team. Why do that spot then? Bliss and Cross get handcuffed to each other in something that I can appreciate as at least an attempt at an emotional moment with backstory, but that’s pretty much the only thing approaching that in this match. Lynch hits the tag champs with a diving senton through a table for the win at 39:35. This was the worst women’s War Games by a lot. **½
AJ Styles def. Finn Balor
Perfectly fine, but I felt nothing. Stuff happened after other stuff happened but none of the stuff that happened led to the subsequent stuff that happened. Styles hit the Phenomenal Forearm for the win at 18:23. I haven’t seen their 2017 match, but I have to assume it was better than this. Styles is old. ***
Ronda Rousey def. Shotzi {WWE Smackdown Women’s Championship Match}
The best thing I can say about this match is that the bits involving Shayna Baszler worked. In fact, as a non-participant in this match she held the entire thing together. Rousey and Shotzi had zero chemistry, killed the already subdued crowd, and put on a bad show. Rousey has got to be the worst Women’s Champion by the PPV appearance metric. She won with an armbar at 7:12. Why have this match be dedicated to Shotzi’s dead dad’s memory if she was going to get more or less squashed? *
Austin Theory def. Seth Rollins and Bobby Lashley {WWE United States Championship Triple Threat Match}
Remember when Matt Riddle won the main event of Extreme Rules by defeated Rollins and then wasn’t featured on the next two PPVs? What is going on in WWE? I do like that the commentators call this the premier championship on Raw at present. On the same token, I like that there was just a tournament to determine the number one contender to the Intercontinental Championship. So in theory, the US and IC titles are the top titles on TV and the Universal Championship is the top on PPV. The problem, of course, is that Reigns only defends on half of the PPVs. Anyway, this match saved the show from disaster. As usual for a 2022 performance, Rollins brings the goods. It started out with a fun bit that saw Lashley and Rollins dispose of the annoying Theory to concentrate on each other. The match played on everyone’s recent history with each other, escalating as it went into more and more exciting moments. The finish saw Rollins hitting Theory with a superplex and attempting to immediately follow with the Falcon Arrow, but Lashley speared Rollins and Theory fell on top of him for the win at 14:50. Tragic and terrific. ****
Roman Reigns, Sami Zayn, Jimmy Uso, Jey Uso & Solo Sikoa def. Drew McIntyre, Kevin Owens, Sheamus, Butch & Ridge Holland {War Games}
While it’s neat that the commentators reference Paul Heyman managing a War Games team in 1992, saying that his guidance would be helpful here when his team lost 30 years ago doesn’t really make sense. Jey worked over Butch’s arm in the opening minutes. Holland came in, and even more distracting than the babyfaces having the advantage in this match is the Brutes and the Usos wearing t-shirts in this match. Is this some weird holdover from the Raw vs. Smackdown elimination matches? The crowd didn’t know what to make of the babyfaces wrestling 2-on-1. Whoops. Jimmy wanted to save Jey, but Reigns insisted that Zayn go instead. That’s interesting, but would be more interesting of Owens was already in the ring. The Brutes helpfully laid around doing nothing while McIntyre beat up Jey and Zayn. I hate this version of War Games. Jimmy brought tables into the ring. This is the exact same point in the match that Cross brought weapons into the ring earlier. At least this has some dissension in the ranks on the heel team. Owens came in and cleaned house while his teammates, you guessed it, laid around and did nothing. The crowd reacted to almost nothing to this point, save for a bit of noise during Zayn’s entrance. We’re spared the face-off spot because instead they did a bit where all of the babyfaces pounded on the Bloodline against the cage after Sheamus’s entrance. Reigns came in just as the babyfaces and heels happened to be separated in different rings, and then they all face off. They couldn’t help themselves. Fuck this match. This made the babyfaces look like giant morons. Sheamus had just his Sikoa with White Noise; why not hold him in the far ring and pin him the second Reigns entered the ring and the “match beyond” began? Because this match is just an excuse for photo ops with no regard for putting together an entertaining narrative. Then, Sheamus and Reigns fought in one ring while all eight of the other guys laid around in the other ring. If this recap sounds repetitive it’s because the match is repetitive. And it’s boring. Reigns speared Holland through a table, and all I could wonder is how long it would be until Holland got back to his feet for some stupid big dive spot. Owens almost pinned Reigns with a Stunner, but Zayn stopped the referee from counting the pin. Everyone else is just laying around, by the way. Zayn hits Owens, you know, his opponent, with a low blow. Then he hits the Helluva Kick and drops Owens for Jey’s Superfly Splash. That gets the Bloodline the win at 38:32. Jey hugs Zayn after the match. The finish played into the Bloodline saga well, but the 35 minutes leading up to it were painful. **¾
They should have left War Games in NXT. I’m still into the Bloodline storyline, but holy crap was this match a chore. Here’s hoping whatever they do at the Royal Rumble is shorter and involves less laying around.