Monday 16 November 2020

WWE Raw Full Show Live Streaming 16 November 2020 WWE Raw Highlights 16 November 2020 HD

 

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WWE Raw Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from November 16

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    November 16 marked the final night of Monday Night Raw before WWE Survivor Series 2020. This show promised title matches that could change the complexion of that big show as well as the likely appearance of various SmackDown stars looking to get an edge for their brand.

    Drew McIntyre demanded his WWE Championship rematch against Randy Orton While The Viper did outsmart and defeat The Scottish Psychopath at WWE Hell in a Cell 2020, McIntyre has more often than not had Orton's number.

    New Day may be the most dominant tag team in WWE history, but fans have not gotten a chance to truly see what Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods can do without Big E. Their biggest test to date was The Hurt Business' Cedric Alexander and Shelton Benjamin, who already held a victory over the Raw tag team champions.

    Team Raw has had a rocky start, but the red brand looked to get the group on the same page. Keith Lee, Sheamus, Braun Strowman and Riddle took the fight to the cohesive unit Retribution. They hoped to show that they could work together and win, even against a dominant faction like the one Mustafa Ali leads.

    This night had the typical air of the go-home show before Survivor Series. SmackDown and Raw have often sought an upper hand by invading the other brand before Sunday. It was likely someone or a whole group would appear to cause trouble.

    Raw had a monumental task of elevating Survivor Series after a month of lackluster build. Luckily, this stacked card could certainly pull it off.

Drew McIntyre Refuses to Let Randy Orton or The Miz Intimidate Him

1 OF 6

    Drew McIntyre opened the show to address what was to come. He called out Roman Reigns for putting himself on a pedestal over everyone else. Randy Orton appeared on the TitanTron, explaining that he was too good to lose or be fazed by any suspension he faced.

    The Miz and John Morrison interrupted as McIntyre headed to the back. They explained that they would make an impact regardless of who won in the main event. The A-Lister and The Shaman of Sexy said Bray Wyatt was afraid of them as they held control over the WWE Championship that no one else did.

               

    Grade

    D

                

    Analysis

    This was an overlong reminder of everything that has already been done on Raw recently. The red brand is cycling without direction. Every week, it is the same story. McIntyre said it clearly that he and Orton have said the same things over and over without resolution.

    Especially with a huge show ahead, this should have been a much better opener. The Scottish Psychopath tried his best to elevate the content, but even his natural charisma can only go so far. This was flat and uninteresting, amounting to wasted time.

Asuka, Mandy Rose and Dana Brooke vs. Shayna Baszler, Nia Jax and Lana

2 OF 6

    Lana put on a brave face as she agreed to team with the women who had tormented her, Nia Jax and Shayna Baszler. The WWE women's tag team champions did not let Lana do much early as they isolated Mandy Rose, badly injuring her elbow on the steel steps.

    After Jax and Baszler dominated Asuka and Dana Brooke as well, Lana found an opportunity to potentially pin the Raw women's champion. However, The Empress of Tomorrow kicked out and then trapped her in the Asuka Lock to force a submission.

    Jax feigned respect for her partner and then grabbed Lana and sent her with a Samoan drop through the announce table for the ninth time.

    Backstage, Reckoning attacked Brooke as she was trying to explain the extent of the injuries Rose had suffered at the hands of Baszler and Jax. Peyton Royce and Lacey Evans replaced Brooke and Rose for Sunday.

              

    Result

    Asuka, Rose and Brooke def. Lana, Baszler and Jax by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    D

                

    Analysis

    The commercial break during this match was longer than the actual in-ring action, and it barely felt like anyone benefited in this contest. Once more, Lana plays the heel in trying to steal a win, but she failed. She does not earn the Samoan drops. However, she also has not earned anyone's sympathy.

    At best, this story has kept Lana relevant without overexposing her weekly. Maybe WWE can make her a middle-of-the-road babyface for the red brand. It will take a seriously impressive effort at Survivor Series to make it happen.

Raw Tag Team Championships: New Day (c) vs. The Hurt Business

3 OF 6

    Credit: WWE.com

    MVP explained that The Hurt Business needed to represent Raw because the group was the best of the best. Shelton Benjamin promised he and Cedric Alexander would defeat The Street Profits at Survivor Series while Bobby Lashley takes out Sami Zayn. Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods were not impressed.

    Hurt Business started out trying to slow down and dominate Kofi, hitting an impressive top-rope Famouser/powerbomb combination. The former WWE champion fought out with a tilt-a-whirl DDT to get the tag to Woods.

    Woods went off with momentum that allowed him to clear the ring of both men. An impressive missile dropkick on Alexander nearly took the win. Kofi survived an Angle Slam and brainbuster and then set up Daybreak for the pinfall win on Alexander.

              

    Result

    Woods and Kofi def. Alexander and Benjamin by pinfall to retain the Raw Tag Team Championships.

               

    Grade

    B

                

    Analysis

    This match attempted to save the show, but the pacing with commercial breaks was awkward. It never felt like the teams got going until the second commercial break. From that point on, the teams truly shined in what became a great athletic showcase.

    If this were on pay-per-view, it would have been fantastic. Instead, the start and stop held the teams back. The contest was better than anything else on the show to this point, though, which is worth quite a bit.

    New Day vs. Street Profits needed to happen to sell Survivor Series. At the moment, the card is flat, but that tag team match could be the absolute selling point of the entire night.

Team Raw vs. Retribution

4 OF 6

    Jeff Hardy was angry about a flier floating around on Elias' accident. He found the musician backstage and attacked him, telling him to drop the accusations.

    AJ Styles handed out matching Raw T-shirts to Team Raw, but no one was interested. The Phenomenal One then found out that his bodyguard could talk based on comments from Riddle.

    Styles started on commentary, but he had to go meet Braun Strowman and Sheamus as the two argued. The tempers calmed as Retribution isolated Riddle for a bit and he faced the aggressive energy of T-Bar, Mace and Slapjack, guided by Mustafa Ali.

    Keith Lee got the hot tag and ran over Retribution with full focus. Once Sheamus and Strowman got back into the fight, the two could not stop fighting. Ali managed to roll up The Original Bro after knocking him into The Monster Among Men to steal the win.

              

    Result

    Retribution def. Riddle, Strowman, Sheamus and Lee by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    C

                

    Analysis

    As a negative, this was a messy match that never really got going. Despite all the talent involved, no one found his rhythm. The arguments told more of a story than anything in the contest, and Retribution played bystander in this match.

    As a positive, Retribution finally picked up a win. Following up Ali's solo victory over Ricochet the previous week, the group finally has a small amount of momentum. It may be a little too late, but every win counts.

Bray Wyatt vs. The Miz

5 OF 6

    Bray Wyatt called out The Miz on "Firefly Fun House" after his comments to start the night. Nikki Cross was still looking for Alexa Bliss, sure that her friend could still be saved.

    Miz tried to talk Wyatt out of this match, but Bliss arrived to make clear that the "Firefly Fun House" host was not backing down. Cross tried to interrupt The Goddess, and Bliss slapped her. A fight broke out that was calmed by the arrival of Wyatt.

    The A-Lister took control early, but he just couldn't keep Wyatt down. The "Firefly Fun House" host rallied, especially after Bliss launched herself at John Morrison. Wyatt caught Miz in the corner and hit Sister Abigail for the win.

    As Wyatt and Bliss held hands up the ramp, The Fiend appeared to stare down at them.

    Angel Garza cut a promo about protecting the beautiful women of the world. Asuka promised that she would defeat Sasha Banks for Raw at Survivor Series.

              

    Result

    Wyatt def. Miz by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    A

                

    Analysis

    This was not a classically great match, but the story of it all worked so well. Everything Wyatt has done recently has been phenomenal. He and Bliss carry an energy that no one can match. Miz knew exactly how to sell his fear as things turned against him.

    The segment around this match was just as good. Cross vs. Bliss has been developed into a fascinating rivalry that needs a major blowoff match down the line. Wyatt and The Fiend finding themselves at odds adds another fascinating layer to his complicated two-face tale.

WWE Championship: Randy Orton (c) vs. Drew McIntyre

6 OF 6

    Sheamus gave Drew McIntyre a kilt and an impressive sword to help him remember his Scottish roots. Randy Orton was not interested in talking before his match with The Scottish Psychopath.

    The Viper tried to walk out on this match early after McIntyre clearly had him off balance. However, Adam Pearce announced that this match would have a winner, so there would no longer be any count-outs or disqualifications.

    Orton shifted his focus and took advantage, grabbing every weapon he could to take down McIntyre. With a steel chair and the steel steps, The Viper wore down The Scottish Psychopath and then blasted him repeatedly on the announce table.

    While the challenger had taken a beating, he refused to stay down for the champion. The two battled back to the ring where McIntyre nearly caught Orton with a backslide followed by the Future Shock DDT. McIntyre knocked him off the apron through a table, finally feeling the momentum as he closed in on the win.

    The champion countered the third failed attempt at the Claymore into a powerslam and then planted the challenger with a draping DDT off the announce table followed by a second in the ring. However, Orton could not save himself from a fourth Claymore, taking the loss.

              

    Result

    McIntyre def. Orton by pinfall to become the new WWE champion.

               

    Grade

    A+

                

    Analysis

    This was a fantastic end to the show. WWE gave the champion and challenger 30 minutes, and they used it all. The shifts in the contest highlighted the two incredible performers. McIntyre dominated early until Orton saw his opening with the allowance of weapons.

    The contest was physical from start to finish. Both men sold the contest as back and forth, yet they did not over-rely on big moves. It was call and response, driven by focused use of weapons. Even at its length, the contest never lagged.

    The Scottish Psychopath walked into this match feeling destined for the victory, and the two men sold it. This was McIntyre's night, and he earned this win with one of the best matches of his career. McIntyre vs. Orton will be a match to remember at Survivor Series.

Sunday 15 November 2020

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Friday 13 November 2020

WWE SmackDown Full Show Live Streaming 13 November 2020 WWE SmackDown Highlights 13 November 2020

WWE SmackDown Live 11/13/20



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WWE SmackDown Results: Winners, Grades, Highlights and Analysis from November 13

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    Just nine days until the Survivor Series pay-per-view, SmackDown hit the Fox airwaves seeking to write the latest chapter in the build to the battle for brand supremacy while simultaneously furthering its own exclusive rivalries.

    What did Universal champion Roman Reigns have in store for cousin Jey Uso as he continued to pull him down to his level? What retribution awaits Carmella after her sneak attack on Sasha Banks last week? Who will be the fifth and final participant on Team SmackDown come November 22?

    Find out the answers to those questions with this recap of Friday's broadcast. 

Match Card

1 OF 8

    Announced for Friday's show:

       

    • Roman Reigns continues his rule over the SmackDown roster

        

    Whatever that means.

    Coverage begins at 8:00 PM.

Drew McIntyre Interrupts Roman Reigns

2 OF 8

    Credit: WWE

    The Tribal Chief, The Head of the Table and Universal Champion Roman Reigns kicked off this week’s show, just nine days before a showdown with WWE Champion Randy Orton at the Survivor Series pay-per-view.

    “The numbers, the analytics...they don’t lie,” Reigns said after referring to the blue brand as “The Island of Relevancy” and chalking it up to himself. He said Jey Uso will lead his team to victory, then he will further establish his reign of dominance over Orton.

    This brought out Drew McIntyre, who will challenge The Viper for the WWE Championship on Raw. Big Daddy Claymore claimed he will defeat Orton and it will be the two of them squaring off at Survivor Series for the first time since McIntyre eliminated Reigns to win the Royal Rumble.

    McIntyre reminded Heyman that he made Brock Leshnar his bitch at WrestleMania and said he stepped up at WrestleMania when The Big Dog left them high and dry.

    McIntyre called himself “the man,” to which Reigns responded, saying he’s back now and no one knows who he is. 

    A tense exchange of words gave way to Uso making the save, cutting a promo while Reigns looked on. He challenged McIntyre to a match and The Scottish Psychopath answered with an insulting shove. Reigns and his cousin left the ring, leaving McIntyre to watch on as they made their exit.

         

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    Take away the complete disregard for the brand split and you had a hell of a segment to kick off this week’s show.

    McIntyre bringing up Reigns’ absence from WrestleMania and insinuating that he stepped up to become the top dog in WWE during his extended leave was a nice touch, as was The Tribal Chief’s arrogant rebuttal in which he claimed no one knew McIntyre now that he is back.

    Jey thinking he is doing the right thing by stepping up and confronting McIntyre, only for Reigns to look on with an almost dismayed expression on his face, fit the ongoing story of the former tag champ looking for approval from the head of the table.

    Reigns exploding after the break, taking exception to Uso and berating him only supported what we saw moments early and further put Uso in the proverbial doghouse.

Intercontinental Championship Match: Apollo Crews vs. Sami Zayn

3 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    Denouncing the idea that he just found out about his Intercontinental Championship defense an hour before the start of the show, Sami Zayn cut a scathing promo on WWE officials for booking him against Apollo Crews.

    Crews attacked early and often, overpowering and punishing the loudmouth heel.

    As the action spilled to the floor, Zayn pulled the apron from the ring and proceeded to tie his opponent’s foot to the ring. The referee counted to 10 and awarded the victory to Zayn as Michael Cole protested the “win.”

        

    Result

    Zayn defeated Crews to retain

        

    Grade

    B+

         

    Analysis

    This was an excellent way to put over the resourcefulness of the champion.

    Wholly overpowered and outmatched, he used his brain to pick up a win, no matter how tainted or underhanded it might have been. He will need to think like that at Survivor Series when he meets an even bigger, more powerful competitor in Bobby Lashley.

    For Crews, the loss protects him as he doesn’t endure a loss by pin-fall or submission and has a legit out.

Carmella Attacks Sasha Banks

4 OF 8

    Credit: WWE

    A week after enduring a cheap superkick from the returning Carmella, SmackDown Women’s Champion Sasha Banks made her way to the squared circle to address her seemingly newfound rival.

    Just as she began to speak her mind, Bayley’s music played and her familiar foe provided a distraction. Carmella attacked from out of nowhere, delivering a second superkick and planting her with an X-Factor in the center of the ring.

    The segment ended with the self-proclaimed “Untouchable” competitor exiting, obviously proud of her actions.

        

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    This was such a blip on the show that it almost begs the question, “why was it even here?”

    Banks, fresh off an appearance in this week’s episode of The Mandalorian, said nothing of note while Carmella benefited from Bayley’s appearance, despite showing no signs of an alliance of any kind.

    If there is a positive, it is that the audience is left with questions to chew on for awhile and that WWE is learning to be more patient with its storyline developments rather than giving it all away at once.

Otis vs. Dolph Ziggler...Again

5 OF 8

    Credit: WWE

    After a backstage encounter, Otis battled Dolph Ziggler in the renewal of their rivalry from this past spring. 

    Ziggler nearly benefited from interference by Robert Roode, delivering a Zig-Zag but failing to keep the former Mr. Money in the Bank down.

    Otis fought his way back into the match, delivered the caterpillar elbow drop and set up for the Vader Bomb. Roode again attempted to interfere but this time backed down as Otis stared him down. The big man executed his new finisher and put The Showoff away for the win.

        

    Result

    Otis defeated Ziggler

        

    Grade

    C-

        

    Analysis

    This did nothing for anyone involved.

    Otis has beaten Ziggler so often in 2020 that a win here is of little meaning. For Ziggler, losing further diminishes whatever credibility he has left at this point while Roode looks like a total weakling for backing down without any sort of physical encounter.

    The only saving grace? The backstage promo afterward in which Chad Gable approached Otis and pitched him on the idea of discipline under his guidance.



The Final Chapter: Rey Mysterio vs. Seth Rollins

6 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    The long, long rivalry between Rey Mysterio and Seth Rollins finally came to a head Friday night in a match dubbed by the mass marketing team of WWE and its voice, Michael Cole, as The Final Chapter. Angie, Dominik and Aalyah Mysterio all accompanied Mysterio to the squared circle for the no holds barred contest.

    Mysterio struck first with an ugly tornado DDT on the ring apron that left The Messiah reeling while Murphy watched from the floor. Mysterio delivered a sunset flip powerbomb into the guardrail but Rollins recovered and drove his opponent spine-first onto the announce table.

    Corey Graves put over the effect Rollins’ targeted attack to the back of Mysterio would have while Cole reminded the viewers at home of Mysterio’s many instances of incredible resiliency.

    Mysterio mounted a momentary comeback but Rollins cut it off and sent him crashing face and sternum-first onto the floor. Rollins blasted the future Hall of Famer with the steel steps before shooting an intimidating glare at the Mysterio family. 

    Just in time for the break, Rollins crashed back-first into the steel steps he had setup at ringside. 

    A recovered Rollins introduced a table to the fray and, despite tenacious fight from Mysterio, powerbombed him through it. Mysterio kicked out. 

    A frustrated Rollins removed a rubber stopper off the chair and attempted to go after Rey’s eye. Dominik pulled him from the ring but ate a superkick for his troubles. Murphy watched as Mysterio delivered a dropkick, driving the chair back in Rollins’ face. 

    The Disciple handed him a chair, then betrayed Rollins with a leaping knee to the face. Mysterio capitalized, delivered a 619 after a botched first attempt and followed with an apropos frog splash on the 15th anniversary of the death of Eddie Guerrero for the win.

    The Mysterio family embraced in the center of the ring while Murphy contemplated his actions. Rey prevented Aalyah from joining Murphy, then confronted him. He gave his approval, as did Dominik and Angie, and the group left together in a fitting ending for the bloated, overlong storyline.

         

    Result

    Mysterio defeated Rollins

         

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    For as overly long, unnecessarily messy and horrifically soapy as this storyline became, this was the perfect ending to it all.

    Mysterio and his family had their happy ending, while Murphy was accepted by all involved and given blessings to continue dating Aalyah. Rollins got his comeuppance and all was right with the world.

    This was probably the worst of the big matches in the program, but the commercial break hurt the flow and an amped-up Rey flubbing the first 619 attempt didn’t help matters.

    Still, the grade reflects the overall execution of the story in this, The Final Chapter, and is apropos for what WWE presented.

Fatal 4-Way: Liv Morgan vs. Tamina vs. Natalya vs. Chelsea Green

7 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    What was originally slated to be a Triple Threat Match to determine the latest member of Team SmackDown at Survivor Series became a Fatal 4-Way Match with the debut of Chelsea Green and her joining Natalya, Liv Morgan and Tamina Snuka.

    The action was fast and furious, none of the four competitors gaining any sort of sustained advantage.

    Natalya looked to sap the energy out of Morgan, grounding her and applying a rear chin lock in search of a submission. Morgan fought back and eyed victory, delivering consecutive facebusters, including one to Tamina that earned her the win.

        

    Result

    Morgan defeated Natalya, Tamina and Green

        

    Grade

    C+

        

    Analysis

    Kudos to Morgan for scoring a big win to cash her ticket to Survivor Series. She has been fantastic in 2020 and deserves the opportunity to showcase herself on pay-per-view.

    Green’s debut and insertion in this match was quite the curiosity.

    Why put her in that spot after months of leaving her in limbo, only to have her barely involved in the match and definitely not in the finish? It was a total waste of a fresh new face and further evidence tht Vinnie Mac and Co. have no idea what to do with the talented Canadian. 

    A talented wrestler with character in spades, she should be a focal point of the division rather than the afterthought she was here. 

    Be better than that, WWE, or stop wondering why Superstars fail to make the successful jump from NXT to the main roster.

Drew McIntyre vs. Jey Uso

8 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    Labeled an “Unsanctioned Match” due to the interpromotional nature of the contest, Drew McIntyre vs. Jey Uso served as the main event of Friday’s broadcast, the result of an overzealous Uso jumping the gun and putting his foot in his mouth earlier in the broadcast.

    An aggressive McIntyre punished Uso from the opening bell, sending a message to Roman Reigns in the process while Corey Graves questioned the intelligence of expending energy and emotion just days before his WWE Championship Match against Randy Orton on Raw.

    Uso seized control during the break, pounding away at the face of the former WWE Champion as the show returned from the commercial timeout. He cut McIntyre’s attempt at a comeback off with a Samoan Drop, then stomped away in the corner. 

    McIntyre answered with a Glasgow Kiss headbutt, then a Sky High for a two-count. Uso rocked him with a superkick and scaled the ropes, only for McIntyre to meet him up top. Uso hung him in the Tree of Woe but McIntyre sat up and delivered an overhead superplex. 

    He looked for the Claymore Kick but Uso bailed to the floor. McIntyre followed, attacking him until Reigns’ music played. The Tribal Chief walked with purpose as he headed to the ringside area. Uso capitalized on the distraction, sending The Scottish Psychopath into the steel steps. 

    “I don’t care if you beat him. Make him understand,” Reigns demanded.

    A confused Uso slid back into the ring and unloaded with a flurry of punches to the face. McIntyre recovered and delivered the Claymore for the win as the Universal Champion stared him down, seemingly unfazed by McIntyre’s win or the potential showdown with him. 

    “Get you one of these, then we’ll talk on Sunday,” Reigns said, leaving McIntyre behind as he headed up the ramp.

        

    Result

    McIntyre defeated Uso

        

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    What happens when someone strays from orders and goes into business for themselves?

    This. This happens.

    McIntyre overcame Uso to pick up the win, almost certainly guaranteeing an unpleasant week for Uso as he continues to serve The Tribal Chief.

    The post-match exchange between Reigns and McIntyre was great and the Universal Champion continues to be the best thing about WWE television right now.

    Arrogant, confident, imposing and intimidating, he is the epitome of a great heel and the character around whom SmackDown should absolutely revolve now and well into the future

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