Monday 23 November 2020

WWE Raw Full Show Live Streaming 23 November 2020 WWE Raw Highlights 23 November 2020 HD

WWE Raw 11/23/20



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WWE Raw Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from November 23

Sana Ejaz Khan
    Credit: WWE.com

    After winning the battle for brand supremacy, WWE Raw hit the USA Network looking forward to the TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs pay-per-view with new feuds, the latest developments in existing ones and a showdown between former tag team championship-winning partners.

    What went down in the fallout from the annual fall classic, and how will it affect the brand in the weeks to come?

    Find out with this recap of the November 23 episode.

Match Card

1 OF 9

    Announced for Monday's show:

    • Alexa Bliss vs. Nikki Cross

Team Raw's Celebration

2 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    WWE official Adam Pearce kicked off the show, suggesting that one member of the victorious Team Raw would have the opportunity to challenge Drew McIntyre for the WWE Championship.

    Sheamus balked at the idea of AJ Styles being the leader of the team and then brought up his long and sordid history with McIntyre. Keith Lee reminded Styles that he pinned the other team's captain to win the match, and Riddle repeated the word "dope" over and over again, in case you didn't already get his gimmick.

    Braun Strowman took exception to being the last to state his case, grabbing Pearce by the collar and demanding that he be chosen before shoving his superior to the mat.

    Styles and Co. checked on Pearce heading into the break.

        

    Grade

    C-

       

    Analysis

    This was...not particularly great.

    Strowman snapping and assaulting Pearce felt really out of place considering he could have made like any of his teammates and jumped into the bickering any time he damn well pleased. Under those circumstances, being pissed off that you were chosen to go last seems silly and irrational.

    Everything that preceded it was almost painful to watch, particularly Riddle's contributions.

    Bad writing and worse delivery only further drag a segment deeper into the depths of the creative abyss.

    This was proof positive.

Raw Tag Team Championship Match: New Day vs. The Hurt Business

3 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    Set up by a confrontation earlier in the evening, The New Day's Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods defended the Raw Tag Team Championships against The Hurt Business' Shelton Benjamin and Cedric Alexander in a rematch from a week ago.

    Benjamin and Alexander dominated early, sending Woods to the arena floor heading into the commercial break.

    Back from the break, Kingston attempted to headbutt his way out of a superplex, only to be knocked from the top rope. He and Alexander fought on the floor but were late getting back to the ring, leading to a double count-out finish.

    Confusion reigned supreme, the viewing audience even overhearing the official call The Hurt Business the winner. Eventually, after some nudging from MVP, the match was restarted.

    Kingston fired off rights and lefts, but a scary back body drop to the floor left him nursing a left knee injury. Benjamin and Alexander expertly targeted it, working over the injured joint. Kingston finally created some separation and inched his way toward the corner, only for Alexander to pull Woods off the apron.

    Kofi delivered the S.O.S. for a near-fall, but Alexander delivered a cheap chop block and trapped him in a leg lock. Kingston broke free and finally made the hot tag to Woods. The UpUpDownDown host exploded into the match and nearly scored the fall on more than one occasion.

    Woods survived an Angle Slam from Benjamin and delivered a sunset flip bomb for the win.

         

    Result

    New Day defeated The Hurt Business

        

    Grade

    C+

        

    Analysis

    Two commercial breaks and unnecessarily complicated booking plagued what would have been a great match on its own merit and talent.

    Instead, it was merely good, with a gutsy performance from Kingston and a nice explosion from Woods.

    The major issue with the entire ordeal was how bad it made The Hurt Business look.

    Benjamin and Alexander could not win last week. They could not capitalize on a restarted match tonight to win the titles, and they let a New Day fighting from underneath because of a knee injury retain the titles. There is no logical reason The Hurt Business should be granted a rematch of any kind moving forward.

    Knowing Vinnie Mac and his creative formula, we will see these two teams in a ladder match or table match come December 20, just cuz.

Riddle vs. Sheamus

4 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    After taking the cases of several Superstars under consideration, Adam Pearce announced three singles matches for tonight's show. The winners would meet next week in a Triple Threat match to determine the No. 1 contender to Drew McIntyre's WWE Championship at TLC.

    First up, Riddle vs. Sheamus.

    An intensely physical battle saw Sheamus ground The Original Bro and work a submission style. Riddle countered into an armbar that forced The Celtic Warrior into the ropes for the break.

    Riddle turned the tide in his favor, delivering an exploder suplex on the floor and following with the Bro-ton back inside the squared circle. Sheamus recovered and delivered the Irish Curse backbreaker for a near-fall.

    Riddle answered with a barrage of kicks about the chest and body of his opponent, but Sheamus rocked him heading into the commercial timeout.

    Back from the break, Riddle delivered a Floating Bro on the outside, but Sheamus responded with the Cloverleaf as he sought a submission victory. Riddle fought out but quickly found himself trapped in the heel hook. He stayed alive and rocked Sheamus with a kick to the head.

    A Final Flash knee to the face put Sheamus down for two, leaving Riddle stunned. The fight headed to the ropes, where Sheamus delivered White Noise for yet another two-count as exhaustion set in.

    A series of late-match roll-ups gave way to a modified victory roll for the upset victory, leaving Sheamus dismayed and irate.

        

    Result

    Riddle defeated Sheamus

         

    Grade

    B+

        

    Analysis

    This was a kick-ass wrestling match, superphysical throughout, that probably could have lost five or so minutes and still been excellent.

    This is the first time we have seen Sheamus and Riddle given the opportunity to have that type of match, and they did not disappoint. With a ton of television time to work with and the opportunity to beat the unholy hell out of each other, they produced a physical war that put over just how important advancing to next week's Triple Threat match really is.

    High stakes, high energy and huge effort make this an easy thumbs-up.

'Firefly Fun House'

5 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    Another week brought with it another edition of the "Firefly Fun House."

    This week's topic? Friendship.

    Bray Wyatt again made reference to Randy Orton burning down the Wyatt Compound before encouraging Alexa Bliss to dismantle her friendship with Nikki Cross. She battered Friendship Frog and then observed a moment of silence for the departed amphibian.

    "It's a real shame he...croaked," Wyatt said before breaking out into laughter.

    "See you soon, Nikki," he ended the segment.

         

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    The dark humor and over-the-top nature of the "Firefly Fun House" segments are so refreshing that no matter how weird, twisted or disturbing they may be, they are a welcome addition to the WWE product.

    This was centered around a concept and further established the dark turn for Bliss. The result was a fun and harmless few minutes.

    Something that can be said about most of these segments from the mind of Wyatt.

Asuka vs. Lana Gives Way to Tag Team Action

6 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    After lucking her way into the "sole survivor" at Survivor Series, Lana received a Raw Women's Championship match against Asuka on Monday night.

    Unfortunately, before the match could begin, Women's Tag Team champions Nia Jax and Shayna Baszler let their presence be felt, attacking Asuka and drawing a disqualification. Jax and Baszler challenged Asuka and Lana, a challenge the babyfaces accepted.

    Back from the break, a fired-up Lana unloaded on Baszler until Jax reached in and pulled her to the mat by her hair. The heels proceeded to work over her, punishing the overmatched competitor and cutting her off from her partner.

    Baszler tried for a baseball slide but missed, allowing Lana to make the tag to The Empress.

    The Raw Women's champion delivered a Codebreaker to Baszler, uncorked a hip attack in the corner and followed with a German suplex.

    At ringside, Jax attempted to put Lana through the announce table, but The Ravishing Russian dodged and The Irresistible Force rushed over it.

    Baszler applied the clutch to Lana through the ropes, allowing Asuka to seize the opening and score the pinfall victory.

         

    Result

    Asuka and Lana defeated Jax and Baszler

        

    Grade

    C

       

    Analysis

    The story here was all about Lana getting over at Jax's expense once more, and from that perspective, it succeeded.

    The match, though, was not good and felt like a major waste of Asuka. It is something we should probably get used to, though, as it certainly feels like Lana and Asuka vs. Jax and Baszler will be the pay-per-view match.

    Presumably in a tables match, which would make sense given the long story preceding the program.

Keith Lee vs. Bobby Lashley

7 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    Keith Lee battled United States champion Bobby Lashley (accompanied by MVP) in a match to determine the second entrant in next week's Triple Threat No. 1 Contender's match.

    The big men locked up and engaged in a test of strength, each jockeying for position early. Lee missed a blind charge in the corner, and Lashley delivered a big clothesline that barely stunned The Limitless One. The Flatliner put Lee down for a one-count, and Lashley failed to apply the Hurt Lock.

    Lee fought out and quickly allowed himself to become distracted by MVP. Lashley rocked Lee at ringside and sent him face-first into the ring post heading into the commercial.

    The All Mighty grounded Lee, looking to take away his raw power. He delivered a big suplex and teased the Hurt Lock, but Lee fought out. Lee leapfrogged Lashley, sending the U.S. champion crashing into the middle turnbuckle. A big pounce sent Lashley to the floor. A crossbody on the floor flattened Lashley as his larger opponent built momentum.

    On the floor, MVP sent Lee into the ring post behind the official's back. Lee fought out of the Hurt Lock, drawing MVP into the ring for the save as the referee called for the bell.

         

    Result

    Lee defeated Lashley via disqualification

        

    Grade

    C-

        

    Analysis

    This wasn't very good.

    A lack of chemistry, no semblance of story and an overreliance on the Hurt Lock teases made for a fairly tedious match.

    And that is a major disappointment given the explosiveness of Lee and the raw power of Lashley. They simply did not mesh on this night.

    Making matters worse? The idea that MVP would intentionally get his man disqualified, costing him a chance at more gold for The Hurt Business.

Alexa Bliss vs. Nikki Cross

8 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    After a video package recapping the lengthy journey to the match, Alexa Bliss and Nikki Cross did battle, former tag team partners waging war in an intensely personal match.

    Bliss toyed with Cross early, but Nikki unloaded weeks of frustration on her former friend. As Cross became more and more aggressive, Bliss dropped to her knees and cried tears of confusion. "I don't know what's happening," she said before embracing her former partner.

    Bliss dropped her with an STO and scored the win.

    After the match, Cross looked on in disbelief while a smiley Bliss made her way up the ramp.

         

    Result

    Bliss defeated Cross

        

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    Less of a match, more of a story, this was some excellent storytelling.

    Bliss dragged aggression, anger and frustration out of Cross and then proceeded to use her emotions against her. She suckered Cross in, showing her a glimpse of the Lexi she became best friends with. Then she dropped her, just like she dropped her out of her life the moment Bray Wyatt and The Fiend came along.

    It was great stuff that, hopefully, will only further the story and add layers to both Bliss and Cross' characters.

AJ Styles vs. Randy Orton

9 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    In the third match to determine the final competitor for next week's Triple Threat No. 1 Contender's match, Randy Orton squared off with AJ Styles, accompanied by his massive unnamed bodyguard.

    Styles used The Viper's early aggression against him and, after the final break of the night, worked over Orton's leg with a brutal shin lock. Orton finally escaped the grasp of his opponent but quickly found himself in the Calf Crusher as The Phenomenal One attempted to force a tapout.

    Orton made it to the ropes by his fingertips, just barely necessitating the break.

    Styles delivered an enzuigiri, rocking Orton as he continued his relative dominance. As the fight spilled outside the ring, The Fiend appeared, providing a distraction that completely caught Orton off guard. As The Viper delivered a draping DDT, the lights went out and The Fiend appeared, startling Orton and setting him up for the Phenomenal Forearm.

    Styles scored the win to advance to next week's Triple Threat match.

         

    Result

    Styles defeated Orton

         

    Grade

    C+

         

    Analysis

    The match itself was merely OK, but The Fiend's appearance was fantastic, and the impending feud with Orton should be a lot of fun. Especially taking into consideration the lengthy history between them.

    Styles winning sets him up to be the most logical option to challenge McIntyre at TLC, and his presence in next week's three-way lends it the much-needed heel centerpiece to feed off babyfaces Riddle and Lee. At the very least, the match should be damn fun and a quality main event to the show to boot.

Sunday 22 November 2020

WWE Survivor Series 2020 Full Show Live Streaming WWE Survivor Series 2020 Highlights HD

 

WWE Survivor Series 2020 PPV November



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WWE Survivor Series 2020 Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights

Sana Ejaz Khan
    Credit: WWE.com

    On a night when the "best of the best" battled for brand supremacy at Survivor Series, WWE celebrated one of its greatest icons in a final farewell at the event in which he debuted 30 years earlier.

    The UnderTaker said one last goodbye to the company he reigned over for three decades Sunday night, with his Hall of Fame career lauded in grand fashion. The homage to one of the greatest to ever lace a pair of boots came on the same night that the Superstars of Raw and SmackDown battled for bragging rights.

    Which brand emerged victorious from this year's Survivor Series pay-per-view and what did The Deadman's departure entail?

    Find out with this recap of the November 22 spectacular.

Match Card

1 OF 8

     match card    

    • WWE champion Drew McIntyre vs. Universal champion Roman Reigns
    • United States champion Bobby Lashley vs. Intercontinental champion Sami Zayn
    • Raw Tag Team champions The New Day vs. SmackDown Tag Team champions The Street Profits
    • Raw Women's Champion Asuka vs. SmackDown Women's Champion Sasha Banks
    • Team Raw (AJ Styles, Sheamus, Braun Strowman, Keith Lee and Riddle) vs. Team SmackDown (Jey Uso, Seth Rollins, Kevin Owens, Otis and King Corbin)
    • Team Raw (Shayna Baszler, Nia Jax, Peyton Royce, Lacey Evans and Lana) vs. Team SmackDown (Bianca Belair, Natalya, Ruby Riott, Liv Morgan and Bayley)
    • Kickoff Show: Interpromotional Battle Royal

      

Kickoff Show: Dual-Branded Battle Royal

2 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    Participants included: Dominik Mysterio, Rey Mysterio, Murphy, The Miz, John Morrison, Shelton Benjamin, Cedric Alexander, Bobby Roode, Dolph Ziggler, Chad Gable, Elias, Apollo Crews, Humberto Carrillo, Angel Garza, Kalisto, Ricochet and Jeff Hardy

    Dominik Mysterio scored the first stunning elimination of the Kickoff Show match when he sent John Morrison over the top rope. Dolph Ziggler dumped Rey Mysterio, and The Hurt Business earned a few eliminations until Ricochet delivered a massive suplex that sent Cedric Alexander packing. 

    Apollo Crews got a measure of revenge on The Hurt Business, eliminating Shelton Benjamin to clear the faction from the match. 

    Murphy and Dolph Ziggler teed off on each other on the apron until Bobby Roode sent the former to the locker room. Dominik knocked Roode to the floor and paired off with The Showoff. An ill-advised blind charge into the ring post and a dropkick from Dominik led to Ziggler's departure.

    Across the ring, Jeff Hardy eliminated Shinsuke Nakamura, then continued his intensifying rivalry with Elias by ending his night prematurely.

    SmackDown's Chad Gable and Dominik teamed up to battle Raw's Hardy and The Miz.

    Gable eliminated Hardy with a clothesline, while Miz countered a 619 attempt by Dominik with a big boot to the face.

    Dominik appeared to have eliminated The A-Lister, only to endure a trio of suplexes by Gable. Mysterio junior recovered and eliminated Gable, only for Miz to slide into the ring and send the rookie over the top for the win.

        

    Result

    Miz won the Battle Royal

           

    Grade

    C-

         

    Analysis

    Battle Royals are at their worst when guys are wandering aimlessly around the ring, punching and kicking, then occasionally pairing off with another Superstar en route to their inevitable elimination. There was a lot of that going on here as there was no story to speak of.

    Sure, Miz staved off elimination in sneaky fashion to win but beyond that, this was just a bunch of bodies doing things with no rhyme or reason.

    And worst of all, no one is really better off for having competed here. Their stars not enhanced or strengthened in any measurable way.

Men's Traditional Survivor Series Elimination Tag Team Match

3 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    The battle for brand supremacy kicked off with Team Raw’s AJ Styles, Braun Strowman, Sheamus, Riddle and Keith Lee taking on Team SmackDown’s Jey Uso, Otis, King Corbin, Kevin Owens and Seth Rollins in the night’s opening contest.

    The first drama of the night came when Rollins demanded to be tagged into the match and, after being despondent for the majority of the contest, sacrificed himself. A Brogue Kick from Sheamus sent The Messiah packing. (SmackDown’s Rollins eliminated)

    Otis and Lee teed off in a battle of super heavyweights. They exchanged teases of superhuman feats of strength before Lee tagged Strowman into the match. The Monster Among Men uncorked a shotgun dropkick on Otis and tagged Styles into the match. 

    Styles and Owens quickened the pace until a fired-up KO unloaded with Stunners to the rest of Team Raw. Styles seized the opening and delivered the Phenomenal Forearm, eliminating his longtime rival. (SmackDown’s Owens eliminated)

    The action broke down and Riddle pinned Corbin to send him to the locker room. (SmackDown’s Corbin eliminated)

    Otis exploded into the match late, suplexing and clotheslining his way through the competition before coming face-to-face with Strowman. The former Universal Champion flattened him with a big boot but Otis recovered and delivered the caterpillar. He set up for the Vader Bomb but Riddle ran interference and Strowman powerslammed him for the fall. (SmackDown’s Otis eliminated)

    A desperate Uso unloaded on the competition, wiping them out with a dive at ringside. He followed up with superkicks to everyone in sight, including one that left Styles hung up on the ropes. A blind tag to Lee saw The Limitless One deliver the Spirit Bomb for the clean sweep. (SmackDown’s Uso eliminated)

         

    Result

    Team Raw defeated Team SmackDown (5-0)

          

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    The story of Uso nearly pulling things out and finding renewed strength within himself was a nice story late but for the most part, this one was all about Raw proving it could stay united long enough to win the match.

    While that played out effectively enough, it was the least interesting story it could have told and led to the equivalent of a 35-0 Chiefs shut out of the Jets. It was one-dimensional and while it was a fine enough opener, it may very well go down in Survivor Series as the least compelling of these Raw vs. SmackDown matches.

Raw Tag Team Champions New Day vs. SmackDown Tag Team Champions Street Profits

4 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    What started as a fun-loving exchange between Raw Tag Team Champions Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods (accompanied by Big E) and SmackDown Tag Team Champions Angelo Dawkins and Montez Ford, gave way to a steadily increasing battle that saw New Day gain the upper hand following a dive by Kingston onto Ford on ringside.

    The Raw tandem targeted the midsection of Ford, working him over while cutting the ring off. Corey Graves put over the aggression shown by Kingston and Woods just in time for Ford to create some separation and tag Dawkins in. 

    The biggest competitor in the match exploded into the bout, using his power advantage to toss Kingston around and deliver an underhook neckbreaker to Woods. The SmackDown champs fired off a flurry of offense but New Day fought back and delivered Midnight Hour. Ford kicked out.

    Late, Dawkins downed Kingston and Ford delivered the frog splash. His previously injured ribs proved costly as he failed to immediately make the pin, allowing Kofi to kick out. Ford unleashed Kingston’s own Trouble in Paradise against him and Woods followed with a gutbuster for a quality near-fall.

    The finish came when Dawkins blindly tagged in and hoisted Woods up on his shoulders. Ford came off with a blockbuster for the hard-fought victory.

         

    Result

    Street Profits defeated New Day

        

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    This was the best match of the show. Easily. 

    At least to this point.

    High-energy, strong in-ring content and a story revolving around Ford’s injured midsection that nearly cost his team the victory led to a captivating match.

    The match had the unenviable task of being a babyface vs. babyface match, telling a story and living up to rather lofty expectations. Not only did the performers find a way to tell that story, it did so in a way that never forced either of the teams to play the de facto heel.

    That is a testament to those involved in the match itself and in laying it out.

United States Champion Bobby Lashley vs. Intercontinental Champions Sami Zayn

5 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    United States Champion Bobby Lashley made his way to the ring, accompanied by Hurt Business teammates MVP, Cedric Alexander and Shelton Benjamin, for his showdown with Intercontinental Champion Sami Zayn.

    Lashley dominated early, punishing Zayn with his power while his stablemates prevented the SmackDown star from escaping.

    Citing the same vertigo he suffered at the hands of Lashley two years ago, Zayn begged off, only to deliver a cheap rollup for two. The Hurt Business, though, provided a momentary distraction and Lashley resumed his beating of Zayn.

    The IC champ sought to make the most of an opening with a Helluva Kick but Lashley grabbed hold of him and obliterated him with a spinebuster. Zayn tried to escape but MVP tripped him and rolled him back into the ring, where Lashley applied the Hurt Lock for the submission win.

        

    Result

    Lashley defeated Zayn

        

    Grade

    C+

        

    Analysis

    This was a really fun take on a squash match.

    Lashley obliterated Zayn for the most part but by the end of the match, the IC champion had a logical complaint about the interference of MVP and Co.

    For a match that was overlooked heading into the show, this was much more harmless fun than expected and should make for the latest in Zayn’s conspiracy theorist character.

Raw Women's Champion Asuka vs. SmackDown Women's Champion Sasha Banks

6 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    Raw Women’s Champion Asuka and SmackDown Women’s Champion Sasha Banks rekindled their rivalry from this past summer in yet another battle between red and blue brand champions.

    Early chain wrestling netted neither woman a sustainable advantage as reversals and counters reigned supreme.

    Asuka applied an ankle lock, booted Banks in the midsection and delivered a running kick to the face. Asua delivered her hiptoss into a knee to the face but a shining wizard attempt missed and Banks tried for the Bank Statement. Asuka fought it and Banks settled for a modified abdominal stretch, then octopus submission.

    The action spilled to the floor, where Asuka answered The Boss’ Meteora attempt with a codebreaker. Back inside, they traded quick pinfalls but neither could score the win. Banks finally executed the Meteora in the corner but a frog splash failed to land. Banks countered a double knee into the Bank Statement. Asuka fought out into an Asuka Lock.

    A second codebreaker earned Asuka a two-count.

    A series of near-falls ensued as drama built. Asuka delivered a big kick to the face but Banks recovered and answered with a modified victory roll for the win.

        

    Result

    Banks defeated Asuka

        

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    At the risk of jinxing them, it is seemingly impossible for Asuka and Banks to have a bad match. 

    The chemistry here was off-the-charts. They executed reversals and counters that lesser-talented wrestlers would stumble and fumble their way through. Instead, they kept fans on the edge of their seats, unsure if this was the rollup or submission that would end the match.

    Banks winning was the right move to further solidify her title reign, especially since Asuka has been at the top of the Raw brand for months now. 

    Considering the lack of obvious direction for Asuka, the outcome here was a no-brainer.

Women's Traditional Tag Team Elimination Match

7 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    Team Raw’s Shayna Baszler, Nia Jax, Lana, Lacey Evans and Peyton Royce battled Natalya, Ruby Riott, Liv Morgan, Bayley and Bianca Belair of SmackDown in the next bout.

    Early, Jax sought to dominate, only for Lana to tag herself in. After some spirited action on the part of The Ravishing Russian, she tagged Royce into the match and proceeded to be berated and degraded by Jax. The former IIconic ate snake eyes from Belair and a top-rope elbow drop from Bayley but Evans made the save. 

    Royce delivered a superplex from the top rope, driving Bayley into the pile of bodies on the floor. Back in the ring, Royce delivered De Ja Vu to Bayley for a surprise elimination. (SmackDown’s Bayley eliminated)

    Royce continued her roll, unloading a flurry of offense on Natalya and putting her down for two. After an ugly exchange with a botch or two, Natalya applied the Sharpshooter for the first Raw elimination. (Raw’s Royce eliminated)

    Evans missed a springboard moonsault and Natalya tried for the Sharpshooter. She took her eyes off Evans just long enough for The Sassy Southern Belle to deliver the Woman’s Right for the pinfall. (Natalya eliminated)

    Belair entered and powered Evans down. A distraction by Baszler allowed Evans to recover and deliver a super Spanish Fly for two.

    The Riott Squad partnered to take the fight to Jax, rekindling their rivalry with the Women’s Tag Team Champion. Riott rocked Jax with the Riott Kick, forcing her to tag Baszler back into the match. Baszler applied her trademark clutch and, despite Riott countering into a pinfall, eventually put her away. (SmackDown’s Riott eliminated)

    Morgan responded to her partner’s elimination, delivering a crucifix bomb to Evans for the elimination. (Raw’s Evans eliminated)

    The New Jersey native’s onslaught came to a sudden halt on the receiving end of a Samoan Drop by Jax, who sent her packing. (SmackDown’s Morgan eliminated)

    Belair impressed, looking to keep SmackDown’s hopes alive as she laid out Jax at ringside. Unfortunately, she springboarded her way right into Baszler’s grasp. She powered her way to her feet and stumbled into the ropes. When Baszler refused to break the hold, she was disqualified. (Raw’s Baszler eliminated)

    Belair and Jax fought outside the ring and failed to make it back into the squared circle ahead of the referee’s 10-count, leading to a double count-out and Lana’s unlikely victory as the sole survivor.

         

    Result

    Team Raw defeated Team SmackDown (Lana the sole survivor)

        

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    That was...not a good finish.

    Yes, Lana winning as the sole survivor was the right call given the story told heading into the show but a lazy double count-out was hardly the best option at their disposal. Worse, such a finish does more to make Lana a useless-yet-lucky babyface than an underdog that fans can actually get behind.

    With that said, there were positives.

    Belair looked fantastic as she showcased her athleticism and powered through Baszler’s clutch. Royce, too, impressed in a rare opportunity to prove herself. Bayley losing to her was an interesting decision and makes one wonder if The Role Model may be on her way to a hiatus of sorts. 

    Even if it’s just from the title picture on Friday nights.

    While the action as fine enough for what it was, the execution and layout left quite a bit to be desired and the finish didn’t exactly accomplish what WWE hoped it would.

WWE Champion Drew McIntyre vs. Universal Champion Roman Reigns

8 OF 8

    Credit: WWE.com

    In a main event heavily hyped by the commentary team, WWE Champion Drew McIntyre battled Universal Champion Roman Reigns.

    Reigns stalled early and ate a big shoulder block from his opponent that forced him to re-evaluate on the arena floor. Back inside, he caught the Raw superstar with a big boot and clubbed away in the corner. He drove McIntyre into the post and continued to control the encounter. 

    Reigns dominated, wearing McIntyre down and further rocking him with a jumping clothesline. The Scottish Psychopath fought back, delivered a big neckbreaker and teased the Claymore. Reigns hesitated to get up, McIntyre tried for Future Shock and Reigns delivered a Samoan Drop for two.

    Reigns tried for the Superman Punch but McIntyre caught him with a spinebuster for another two-count. 

    McIntyre drove Reigns into the ring steps on the arena floor, only for The Tribal Chief to stun him with a kick to the chest. McIntyre caught Reigns in another Superman Punch attempt and delivered the Future Shock for two.

    Reigns answered a Claymore attempt with the Superman Punch. McIntyre fought out of a guillotine choke but still couldn’t execute the Claymore. Reigns posted McIntyre, sending the WWE champion shoulder-first into the steel post.

    Reigns went for the spear but McIntyre rolled through and applied a Kimura but the stunned Big Dog made it to the ropes.

    On the floor, Reigns caught McIntyre and drove him through the announce table after two attempts. Reigns speared McIntyre through the guardrail, rolled him into the ring but still only kept him down for two.

    Reigns delivered another spear and the referee delivered another two-count.

    McIntyre finally delivered the Claymore but Reigns bumped the referee. Jey Uso appeared, Reigns delivered a low blow and Uso followed with a superkick. Reigns delivered a Superman Punch and applied the guillotine for the win.

         

    Result

    Reigns defeated McIntyre

         

    Grade

    A+

        

    Analysis

    And thus, Reigns’ string of Match of the Year candidates continues.

    The Tribal Chief has been involved in the three best matches WWE has produced this year, including this heavy-hitting battle between two titans. Reigns was the dominant assassin while McIntyre was the gutsy, resilient babyface one Claymore away from proving himself worthy of sitting at the head of the table. 

    Unfortunately for Drew, Jey Uso picked this match to prove his loyalty to the family and he did so, furthering his story in the process.

    That story is as good as anything WWE has produced in years while this match lived up to the lofty expectations set for it after their fantastic promo this past Friday on SmackDown.

    A legitimate main event in any arena in the country and a battle between two stars riding an incredible wave of momentum at this point.




Friday 20 November 2020

WWE SmackDown Full Show Live Streaming 20 November 2020 WWE SmackDown Highlights 20 Noveber 2020

 

WWE SmackDown Live 11/20/20





Matchcard / Timing / Channels / Infos

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Video Highlights Removed as new show uploaded


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WWE SmackDown Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction, Highlights from November 20

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    Sunday is WWE Survivor Series, which means Friday's SmackDown show was the last chance that management had to fill up the teams for the blue brand.

    Going into the show, the women's team had two open spots and the men's team had one. Who qualified to join the SmackDown brand at Survivor Series?

    Drew McIntyre headed to SmackDown for the second week in a row. This time he was there to sign a contract for his match against Roman Reigns.

    Danial Brayan returned to action to get revenge on Jey Uso after Jimmy Uso took him out a few weeks ago with a brutal attack. Buddy Murphy took on Seth Rollins.

    Let's take a look at everything that happened on Friday's SmackDown. 

The New Day and Street Profits vs. Ziggler, Roode, Corbin and Zayn

1 OF 5

    SmackDown opened with The Street Profits in the new and improved champion's lounge. They make some jokes about The Undertaker and Big W shows up in a sombrero doing an impression of Taker. Big E talks some trash about how The New Day will beat them and they say they will knock the Jamaican accent back into Kofi Kingston. 

    When we go live to the arena, Xavier Woods and Kingston head to the ring. They do their best Undertaker impression until Sami Zayn comes out and says they shouldn't be making jokes. He said the only reason Taker is retiring is because he knows Zayn owes him some payback. 

    Corbin came down and said they don't belong on his show and ordered them to leave. Before they could respond, Dolph Ziggler and Robert Roode made their way out. 

    Woods and Kingston offer to defend their titles and say Zayn and Corbin should fight Roode and Ziggler for the right to challenge them for the Raw tag titles. They all seem to the idea but Ziggler and Roode quickly turn around and attack The New Day. Angelo Dawkins and Montez Ford run down to make the save. 

    We returned from a break to see the eight-man tag match already taking place. Michael Cole made sure to mention how Adam Pearce approved this bout during the commercial. What unfolded was exactly what you would expect from a match involving these eight competitors.

    We saw some double-team moves from the established duos and every Superstar had a chance to shine for a few moments. Unfortunately, that means nobody really stood out from the pack. Kingston accidentally took out Ford with a crossbody when Roode moved out of the way to create some tension.

    After another break, Ford scored the win for his team with a giant frog splash. 

                               

    Grade: B

                             

    Analysis

    The backstage exchange between Big E and The Street Profits was funny and fed right into the first segment in the ring with the rest of The New Day. 

    Ziggler and Zayn are both great on the mic and added to what was already going on to make this an entertaining way to kick off the show. Even King Corbin contributed, but Roode barely said two words if anything at all. 

    The action in the eight-man match was good but predictable. This kind of match almost always follows the same pattern. It allows for everyone to get some time in the ring but it leads to a lot of confusion over who is legal sometimes. 

    This took up a surprising amount of time considering how many other things this week's SmackDown needed to accomplish. 

Natalya vs. Tamina (Winner Joins Women's Survivor Series Team)

2 OF 5

    Bryan got into a brief confrontation with Zayn backstage before he gave an interview with Kayla Braxton. She replayed the clip of Uso attacking Bryan a few weeks ago. In another quick segment, Otis is named as the final member of the men's SmackDown team. Natalya walks up and yells at Pearce for having to compete for a spot on her team and he revealed Bayley as the other member of the women's team. 

    Rollins also gave a short promo backstage before we went to the ring for Natalya vs. Tamina. Bianca Belair joined the commentary table and Bayley came out right as the match began. She bragged about being handpicked for the team while Nattie had to qualify. 

    Tamina took control immediately and got a two-count after sending Natalya into the steel steps. The Queen of Harts took her down with a discus clothesline before locking in the Sharpshooter to get the win. 

    Natalya hugged Bayley as they celebrated. Liv Morgan, Ruby Riott and Belair joined them in the ring to pose together for the first time as a team. 

                            

    Grade: D

                          

    Analysis

    This match was really short and too much attention was being paid to the two women on commentary instead of the two who were in the ring.

    Tamina and Natalya are the two most tenured women on the roster and to see them given what was essentially a squash match was disappointing. 

    We can't expect every segment to knock it out of the park, but it felt like minimal effort was put into putting this one together. They left two open spots until the last show before the PPV and filled them in less than five minutes. That tells you everything you need to know. 

Contract Signing

3 OF 5

    Pearce was sitting at the head of the table but when Reigns got to the ring, he made him get up so he could sit at the head of the table to play some mind games with his opponent.

    The Tribal Chief stared at McIntyre and the WWE champion stared right back at him. Reigns said he knew McIntyre would regain the title because he has been in his shoes before. 

    He said The Scottish Psychopath was in the right place at the wrong time. McIntyre said Reigns' games wouldn't work and he is not going to get under his skin. 

    They continued to go back and forth with verbal barbs for a little bit. The segment ended without a single punch being thrown, which was the right call. 

                           

    Grade: A

                       

    Analysis

    When Reigns and McIntyre had their feud on Raw last year, they never quick clicked for some reason. This segment proved they had it in them but needed to switch roles as heel and babyface for it to work.

    The tension was palpable as they traded insults and fake advice. Reigns has found his calling as a cocky champion and McIntyre is the perfect foil for him.

    Calling his opponent a secondary champion was a nice touch by The Tribal Chief. This segment sold this match that has had only one other segment before this week's show. 

Seth Rollins vs. Murphy

4 OF 5

    Rollins attacked Murphy before the bell and knocked him from the apron. Rey, Dominik and Aalyah Mysterio helped him up and he rushed back into the ring.

    He and Rollins fought until The Messiah threw him into the barricade and ring post. Rey stopped him from using a kendo stick but Rollins made him pay by slamming his head into the announce table. He also threw Dom into the barricade before The Juggernaut recovered and took him down. 

    Rollins shoved him from the top rope all the way down to the barrier and he hit hard. We returned from a break to see Murphy kick out after a sling blade. 

    Rollins hit a superplex and a falcon arrow for another near-fall. He yelled at Murphy before sending him into the corner with a buckle bomb. Murphy caught him with a pair of jumping knees before he hit Murphy's Law. He made the cover and got the upset victory.

                         

    Grade: B+

                           

    Analysis

    This was a good match with a surprisingly clean outcome. Murphy beating Rollins clean would have been better a PPV but seeing it happen at all was still great.

    These are two of the best workers on SmackDown and they lived up to that reputation with a high-energy contest. The Mysterio family being there made sense but it would have been nice if Murphy got this win all on his own. 

    Rollins will likely take some time off soon when his child is born, so this could have been WWE's way of writing him off of television for a few months. 

Daniel Bryan vs. Jey Uso

5 OF 5

    Sasha Banks and Asuka had a strange segment together in the ring before Carmella attacked The Boss from behind. Asuka just watched as Mella beat her down.

    The main event of the night saw Bryan take on Uso in an attempt to get some payback for the brutal attack he suffered a few weeks ago. As soon as the ref called for the bell, Bryan sprinted at Uso and started hitting strikes.

    He locked Uso in a modified STF and hit a few forearm blows before letting him up. Uce took him down and brought him out of the ring so he could drive him into the steps. He cleared off the announce table but it allowed Bryan to recover and roll him back in for a missile dropkick. 

    As we went to a break, Uso put Bryan through the announce table. We returned to see Uso still dominating the match. He taunted Bryan before picking him up for a simple body slam. 

    Bryan countered a Samoan drop and lined up for the running knee but Uce blocked him and hit a couple of superkicks. Bryan blocked the Uso Splash and rolled him up for the win. 

                              

    Grade: B+

                          

    Analysis

    Just like their first encounter, Bryan and Uso put on a great show. They aggression was much higher this time around, which led to a very physical exchange of strikes.

    The attitude change Uso has gone through has been almost as significant as the one Reigns has undergone. He is convincing in his delivery and has adjusted his style to work as a villain.

    Bryan is still one of the best underdogs in the business because he is also one of the toughest. He may be smaller than a lot of guys but he always looks realistic when he stomps somebody's face into the mat. 

    This was not related to Survivor Series but it was still a fun way to close the go-home show.

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