Friday, February 5, 2010

Royal Rumble thoughts

Royal Rumble thoughts

I don’t think the “big surprise” of Edge showing up as a participant in the Royal Rumble match at Sunday night’s pay-per-view was really much of a surprise to most fans, but Edge winning the Rumble certainly was – at least for me.
Edge – who had been out of action since suffering a torn Achilles tendon last July – drew No. 29 in the 30-man contest, and he immediately eliminated former tag team partner Chris Jericho, which is exactly what I and probably everyone else who expected an Edge appearance believed would happen. When it came down to Edge, John Cena and Batista as the final three, I turned to my wife and said it’s going to Cena who wins, or maybe Batista, but it definitely won’t be Edge. I should have heeded the old adage that it’s better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt.
So what does Edge’s victory mean as far as the road to WrestleMania is concerned? Beats me, but you can bet there will be some detours as the road passes through the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view on Feb. 21 on the way to Phoenix for WrestleMania XXVI.
I’m still expecting an Edge-Jericho match at WrestleMania, but the question now is whether it would be for the world heavyweight title. Edge earned a world title shot by winning the Rumble, so that could mean Jericho wins the Smackdown elimination chamber match to become champion. Another scenario is that Edge puts his title shot on the line in a match before Mania and he loses – perhaps thanks to Jericho, which would set up a grudge match at Mania.
In other major developments at the Rumble: Shawn Michaels super-kicked DX partner Triple H over the top rope and out of the Rumble match, so the possibility that they would face each other at Mania is still there. Michaels was eliminated by Batista, so we’ll see if that leads to something between them before Mania. … Randy Orton appears to be doing a babyface turn, as outside interference by Cody Rhodes caused Orton to be disqualified in his match against WWE champion Sheamus. After the match, Orton attacked both Rhodes and Ted DiBiase Jr. before Sheamus laid him out.
With Edge seemingly a babyface now, if Orton does turn it will mean that two of WWE’s top heels will have switched sides.
Here is a match-by-match look at Sunday night’s show:
Edge won the 30-man Royal Rumble match: The star of the match in the early going was CM Punk. He entered the ring at No. 3 and quickly eliminated Evan Bourne and Dolph Ziggler. He went on to throw out three others (JTG, Zack Ryder and surprise entrant Beth Phoenix), and every time he cleared the ring, he cut a promo about “saving” people. That was great stuff and it made Punk stand out, but I wish he would have lasted longer. Triple H came out at No. 8 and put an end to the fun by tossing out Punk at around the 12-minute mark. … Before she was thrown out by Punk, Phoenix eliminated The Great Khali by putting a liplock on him and pulling him over the top rope. … MVP was No. 14, but before he could even get in the ring, The Miz attacked him on the ramp and he was taken to the back. Miz came out two spots later, and MVP hit the ring and clothes-lined Miz over the top, with his momentum carrying him over as well. They continued to brawl to the back, so it appears that their program isn’t finished. … Matt Hardy was the 17th man to enter and in a matter of seconds he was thrown out by Kane. Talk about what a difference a year makes. At last year’s Rumble, Hardy turned on his brother Jeff to kick off the biggest singles push of his career. Now he is buried deep. … Shawn Michaels was No. 19, and he eliminated six guys in succession (Carlito, Cody Rhodes, Ted DiBiase Jr., John Morrison, Drew McIntytre and Triple H). The announcers pointed out that Triple H had saved Michaels from being eliminated by John Cena right before Michaels eliminated Triple H. …
R-Truth was No. 25, and he took out The Big Show and Mark Henry simultaneously, which was a nice feather in his cap. … Jack Swagger came out next, and he started like a house of fire, hitting moves on R-Truth, Cena and Michaels. Before he could eliminate anyone, however, he was thrown over the top by Kofi Kingston, who was in at No. 27. Kingston was eliminated by Cena, which the crowd didn’t like. … That left Cena, Michaels and Chris Jericho – who was No. 28 – in the ring with two entrants still to go. When it was time for No. 29, Edge’s music hit and the crowd popped. Jericho (who was sporting a shiner, possibly from his much-publicized incident with Gregory “Hurricane” Helms last week) had a look of disbelief and fear as Edge charged the ring and quickly disposed of him. … Batista was the last one in, and he eliminated Michaels, who totally snapped and attacked two referees as he kept asking for “one more chance” before finally going to the back. … Cena eliminated Batista, which left longtime rivals Cena and Edge as the final two. Edge went for a spear but Cena caught him with a kick to the stomach. Cena then charged at Edge, but Edge sidestepped him and threw him out for the win. ... It was a fun match, but there have been better Rumble matches. It was interesting that no one with a low number lasted a long time this year.
World heavyweight champion The Undertaker defeated Rey Mysterio: This is pretty much what you would expect from these two: a good match in which Mysterio put up a courageous fight against his much larger opponent before finally succumbing. Mysterio really took it to The Undertaker, who had a lot of blood coming from his nose, which made for a great visual. I guess nosebleeds are allowed in WWE, as there were no medics running in the ring to shove cotton swabs up The Undertaker’s nostrils. After hitting consecutive 619’s – one on each side of the ring – Mysterio attempted to springboard off the top rope, but he was caught by The Undertaker, who hit The Last Ride for the win.
WWE champion Sheamus defeated Randy Orton by disqualification: Before the match, Cody Rhodes and Ted DiBiase Jr. went to Orton separately and said that they had his back while selling out the other. Orton later told them not to interfere because he wanted to beat Sheamus by himself. There wasn’t a lot of heat during the match because the majority of fans just don’t buy Sheamus as a world champion. The crowd was behind Orton and there was a “Randy” chant early. Later, I think there were about three people chanting “Let’s go Sheamus.” The match had a slow pace and was only average at best. Sheamus focused his attack on Orton’s arm, while Orton targeted Sheamus’ knee. Orton did a great job of selling his arm, but Sheamus was inconsistent in selling his knee. The finish and post-match happenings were the real story. At about the 12-minute mark, Rhodes came down to ringside and attacked Sheamus right in front of the referee, making it appear as if he may have intentionally gotten Orton disqualified. While the referee chastised Rhodes, Orton hit the RKO on Sheamus and covered him. The referee, however, called for the bell and awarded the match to Sheamus. Orton attacked Rhodes after the match, and when DiBiase tried to intervene, Orton laid him out, too. When Orton turned around, Sheamus nailed him with a bicycle kick. There are several directions this story line could go from here. DiBiase came off looking less like a heel than Rhodes, so I could see DiBiase turning babyface and wrestling Rhodes at WrestleMania, while a babyface Orton challenges Sheamus for the WWE title (although the speculation is that the plan is for Sheamus to face Triple H at WrestleMania). Or, DiBiase and Rhodes could both remain heels and feud with Orton. The long-rumored Orton-DiBiase singles match at WrestleMania doesn’t seem likely.
ECW champion Christian defeated Ezekiel Jackson: This match, which opened the show, was a lot better than most probably expected. There were several signs during the course of the match that pointed to a Christian victory. Right off the bat, color commentator Matt Striker said, “How can Ezekiel lose?” Then William Regal was ordered by the referee to go to the back, so my theory about outside interference costing Christian the match was out the window. Jackson also was getting an awful lot of near falls, but he couldn’t keep Christian down for a three count. The match told a good story, as Christian tried to counter Jackson’s substantial size and power advantage by using stick-and-move tactics. Christian absorbed everything Jackson dished out, and in the end, the savvy veteran overcame the inexperienced powerhouse. In his biggest match to date, Jackson made a good accounting of himself.
U.S. champion The Miz defeated MVP: Smackdown general manager Teddy Long made this match early in the show. The match was fine, but it only went about seven minutes and seemed more like a TV match than a pay-per-view contest. Miz won with a small package after catching MVP off guard as MVP was coming through the ropes. Miz retaining the title was not a surprise, as is he clearly higher than MVP in the pecking order at this point. MVP did get some heat back by hitting The Playmaker on Miz after the match, although he got a lot of boos for it.
Mickie James defeated WWE women’s champion Michelle McCool to win the title: After McCool hurled more insults at James on the mic and Layla came out in the fat suit, James ran down the ramp and immediately jumped on Layla. Once the bell ring, McCool attempted to kick James but she missed and nailed Layla, who was standing on the apron. James than hit a big DDT on McCool for the win in 23 seconds. After the match was over, several female babyfaces came out with a big cake, and James smashed it in the faces of McCool and Layla, who both sold it great. After all the humiliation she had suffered as of late, it was a sweet victory for James, and McCool and Layla finally got their just deserts. The only drawback to the quick finish is that it almost came off like a fluke victory. I’d like to see McCool get a rematch and this time have James score a decisive win in a longer match.
Here is the order of entrance for the Royal Rumble match, with the order of elimination in parentheses:
1. Dolph Ziggler (2)
2. Evan Bourne (1)
3. CM Punk (7)
4. JTG (3)
5. The Great Khali (4)
6. Beth Phoenix (5)
7. Zack Ryder (6)
8. Triple H (17)
9. Drew McIntyre (16)
10. Ted DiBiase Jr. (14)
11. John Morrison (15)
12. Kane (11)
13. Cody Rhodes (13)
14. MVP (T-8)
15. Carlito (12)
16. The Miz (T-8)
17. Matt Hardy (10)
18. Shawn Michaels (27)
19. John Cena (29)
20. Shelton Benjamin (18)
21. Yoshi Tatsu (19)
22. The Big Show (T-21)
23. Mark Henry (T-21)
24. Chris Masters (20)
25. R-Truth (24)
26. Jack Swagger (23)
27. Kofi Kingston (25)
28. Chris Jericho (26)
29. Edge (winner)
30. Batista (28)

Saturday, December 19, 2009

wwe tody news

WNW reader Jeremy sent this in... Local television is advertising for the Jan 4th RAW says DX will take on Chris Jericho & The Big Sho`w for the Unified Tag Titles. Note from Richard: Do not expect this bout to happen, not even as a dark match main event with Jericho now being a Smackdown-only talent.

WNW live events correspondent Devin Cutting sent this in... The WWE Smackdown & ECW house show on March 6th, 2010 will be held in Pullman, Washington at the Beasley Performing Arts Coliseum on the campus of Washington State University. Tickets go on sale January 15th, 2010 at 10 AM. Go to http://prowrestlingevents.tk orhttp://prowrestlingevents.webs.com for info about upcoming wrestling shows worldwide.

WNW reader Todd Oblak sent this in... Just wanted to drop a note saying that if the proposed Royal Rumble main event goes through as scheduled for Batista vs Undertaker for the World Championship, it will be the same match that occurred in that building the last time WWE hosted a PPV at Philips Arena. Backlash 2007 (which I attended) had Undertaker (The World Champion then, too) working as a face defend against Batista working as a face 'tweener (he was definitely not the fan favorite against 'Taker) in a Last Man Standing match that ended in a no contest and Undertaker retained the title. 











Umaga



WWE Superstar Umaga
Edward Fatu better known as Umaga was born on 28 March, 1973. Umaga died on 4 December, 2009 following two heart attacks. Umaga’s wife found him not breathing with blood coming out of his nose. He was taken to a local hospital in Houston, Texas. Later, Umaga was pronounced dead after suffering a second heart attack.
DownUp (+6 rating, 12 votes)

Rey Mysterio suspended for 30 days on wellness violation



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WWE Intercontinental champion Rey Mysterio (Oscar Gutierrez) has been suspended for 30 days for a violation of the company’s policy. The suspension for Rey Mysterio will begin on Wednesday, September 2.
DownUp (+18 rating, 6 votes)

The Undertaker returns at Summerslam

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After CM Punk beat Jeff Hardy in TLC Match to win the World Heavyweight Title at Summerslam, The Undertaker returned and viciously chokeslamming CM Punk, sending a message to all that he’s back, and he’s very angry!
DownUp (+15 rating, 6 votes)

John Cena tie the knot with The Liz

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The Liz on the day of Wedding.

WWE Superstar John Cena tie the knot with his long time girlfriend Liz Huberdeau Saturday night. His father did the ceremony. The 32 years old WWE heart throb and his 29-year-old bride will exchange vows on Saturday in Boston, Massachusetts. The loved up couple met in high school and have been engaged since 2007.

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

World Heavyweight Champion Undertaker def. Batista (Chair Match)



SAN ANTONIO – With a bone-jarring Tombstone, World Heavyweight Champion Undertaker stopped the ragingBatista inside the packed AT&T Center. (PHOTOS)
But the victory was not without controversy.
With chairs scattered about the outside of the ring from the start – and entirely legal to use against the opponent – the match could only end in pinfall or submission.
After exchanging chair shots throughout the brutal encounter, The Animal appeared to have captured the World Title after capitalizing on an ugly low blow he delivered to the champion. With The Phenom dazed from the dastardly deed, Batista struck with a chair shot to the head, followed up with the apparent pinfall.
However, SmackDown General Manager Theodore Long ordered the match to be restarted, after explaining that although chairs were legal, low blows were not.
An angry Deadman seized the opportunity, stopping The Animal cold with the Tombstone.
Ever since regaining the World Heavyweight Title earlier this year at Hell in a Cell, The Undertaker has shown no signs of accepting anything but victory. The Phenom chalked up subsequent wins at WWE Bragging Rights, Survivor Series, and tonight at WWE TLC.
As 2009 comes to a close and Royal Rumble looms, The Phenom appears to be on course to successfully defend his inhuman 17-0 record at WrestleMania XXVI.
To find out if The Animal – or any Superstar – will try to derail the champion as 2010 approaches, don’t miss the next edition of SmackDown this Friday at 8/7 CT on MyNetworkTV.

SHEAMUS STUNS CENA AND ENTIRE WWE UNIVERSE!




SAN ANTONIO - Every second seemed like the most important tick in squared circle history during Sunday’s epic Tables Match for the WWE Championship at WWE TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs. In the end in San Antonio, however, it was Sheamus who utilized the timber to defeat John Cena to capture the WWE Title for the first time in his career and stun the WWE Universe.
From bone-crushing blows to each competitor’s extreme passion, John Cena and Sheamus delivered a battle for the ages as each gladiator in this blockbuster bout aimed to slam their adversary through a table. In the closing moments of the collision, it appeared Cena was ready to suplex Sheamus onto a table from the top rope. But Sheamus used his raw power to shove the former champion off the top and through the table to claim shocking victory.
Similar to his violent outbursts on Raw recently when he smashed Cena and guest host Mark Cuban through lumber, The Celtic Warrior capitalized on the opportunity to become one of the fastest rising Superstars to earn the WWE Title in WWE history.
Just less than two months after debuting on Monday Night Raw, the vicious Irishman proved he is as dominant as he has alleged to be. The ferocious warrior never backed down from the renowned Cena, and showed that even an inexperienced Superstar can pull off the unexpected.
In the Tables Match fallout, a rare look of disappointment in the eyes of the former WWE Champion told a tale of a defeated warrior, but don’t expect this to last long. This year alone, Cena has been involved in some of the memorable matches including ones against Triple H,Shawn MichaelsEdgeRandy OrtonBig Show and now Sheamus – the new WWE Champion.
The WWE Universe may clamor for Sheamus and Cena’s paths to once again intersect. But now that even John Cena has been unseated by The Celtic Warrior for the title, can he (or anyone) possibly stop the uncontrollable Irish champion?

DX FINALLY WINS TAG TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP!



SAN ANTONIO — Just when it appeared as if the iconic pairing of Shawn Michaels and Triple H couldn’t ascend any higher in WWE, D-Generation X climbed to a new pinnacle in a Tables, Ladders & Chairs Match against Unified Tag Champions Jeri-Show. Capturing their first and only taste of tag titles together, DX thus established themselves as the holders of the glistening gold prizes.
Appropriately enough at the inaugural WWE TLC pay-per-view, The Game & HBK competed in their first TLC Match together – united – and prevailed despite the 7-foot leviathan, Big Show, swinging weapons of aluminum, steel and wood in their general direction. Thwarting Chris Jericho’s equally unrelenting defense as well in a match where virtually anything goes, Michaels scaled the rungs of fortune to not only clinch Jeri-Show’s titles, but also to vanquish Jericho from Monday Night Raw. (PHOTOS)
After chair jousting, ladder suplexes, tabletop combat, DX’s two-man, Texas-sized Pedigree on The World’s Largest Athlete, and a Jeri-Show headstand, the more cohesive team rose to the occasion. Utilizing a halved ladder previously dismantled by Big Show, The Cerebral Assassin bolstered the hardware upright for HBK to climb and reach the championships dangling overhead in his hometown of San Antonio.
The keepers of the tag titles are empowered (and also more susceptible to challenge) in their ability to compete on any WWE brand, despite their assigned roster. Defeated and devoid of the championships, Jericho & Big Show’s association comes to a most probable conclusion. More importantly, SmackDown’s Jericho is now without his golden inter-brand passport, thus liberating Raw from his insults, vainglory and smug grimace beside his towering tag partner.
Just eight months after the birth of the prestigious Unified WWE Tag Team Championship crown at The 25th Anniversary of WrestleMania, The King of Kings & The Showstopper have initiated a new legacy in WWE’s tag team lineage at the close of the year.
With two top-tier foes in Jeri-Show now fallen, the DX army marches onward into 2010 for perhaps even bigger wars for the lustrous Unified WWE Tag Team Titles.

WWE News

WWE announced the following Slammy Award winners on tonight's three-hour Raw.

-- Superstar of the Year: John Cena by virtue of being booked to win a tournament over Randy Orton in the finals and C.M. Punk in the semi-finals.


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-- Match of the Year: Shawn Michaels vs. The Undertaker from WrestleMania. Michaels was then scripted to challenge Taker to a re-match at WrestleMania 26, but the challenge was left open.

-- Tag Team of the Year: Chris Jericho & Big Show. Jericho & Show then took a re-match against DX for the Unified tag titles, but DX was scripted to intentionally DQ themselves to use Jericho's re-match and remove him from Raw.

-- Diva of the Year: Maria. During Maria's victory speech, Batista interrupted ala Kanye West on Taylor Swift at the MTV Music Awards and he complained about being screwed out of the World Title at the TLC PPV.

-- Best Raw Guest Host: Bob Barker. Barker recorded a speech for the show, then tonight's Raw guest Dennis Miller asked McMahon about bringing back Bret Hart to host. McMahon repeated the "Bret screwed Bret" line before Miller encouraged the audience to cheer for Hart.

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-- Shocker of the Year: C.M. Punk retiring Jeff Hardy on the Smackdown following Summerslam.

-- Extreme Moment of the Year: Jeff Hardy at Summerslam. Matt Hardy accepted the award after another name-drop for Hardy.

-- "Oh My" Moment of the Year: Michael Cole's "Vintage" vomit on Chris Jericho at the 10th Anniversary of Smackdown. Cole was scripted to cut a tongue-in-cheek promo on Jim Ross, who is in the middle of contract negotiations with WWE.