Wednesday 10 February 2021

AEW Dynamite Highlights 10 February 2021

 

AEW Dynamite Live 2/10/21 February 10th 2021

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AEW Dynamite Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from February 10

sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: AEW

    The Women's Eliminator tournament officially began with this week's episode of Dynamite with Thunder Rosa taking on "Legit" Leyla Hirsch in a first-round matchup.

    Following Kenta's shocking arrival on last week's show, the New Japan Pro-Wrestling star made his Dynamite debut when he teamed up with AEW World Champion Kenny Omega to take on NJPW United States champion Jon Moxley and Lance Archer. 

    Before they face The Young Bucks for the AEW tag titles at Revolution on March 7, Chris Jericho and MJF worked on their tag team chemistry in a match with The Acclaimed.

    We also saw Pac take on Ryan Nemeth, Cody Rhodes and Lee Johnson battled Peter Avalon and Cezar Bononi, and Darby Allin defended the TNT Championship against Joey Janela. 

    Let's take a look at everything that happened on this week's episode of AEW Dynamite.

Darby Alling vs. Joey Janela (TNT Championship)

1 OF 6

    Dynamite opened with Janela making his entrance for his TNT title match against Allin. The small crowd sounded bigger than usual as it cheered for the challenger. 

    They locked up and The Bad Boy applied a waistlock. Allin backed him to the corner for a clean break but got in Janela's face for a second. Janela was not impressed. The champ put him in a hammerlock and kept it on after a few attempts at a counter. 

    Janela backed him to the corner and hit a back elbow to break the hold. Allin popped up and hit a springboard arm drag followed by a dropkick. Janela dropped him on the apron and hit a suicide dive.

    Janela slowed the pace down and applied a submission on the mat. He took Allin down with a double ax handle from the top rope but when he went back up, Allin yanked him down by his arm. He worked over Janela's arm a bit before driving him into the barricade with a huge suicide dive. 

    The Bad Boy caught Allin in mid-air for an impressive German suplex. They went back and forth with quick counters until Janela hit a piledriver for a two-count. Allin recovered and hit the Coffin Drop for the win. 

                                

    Grade: B

                               

    Analysis

    This was Janela's best match in AEW to date. He looked more technically sounds than he ever has, but Allin's contributions cannot be ignored. Both men worked hard to make this an entertaining opener.

    Were there a few sloppy moments? Yes, but that comes with any match that keeps the kind of pace this one had. They barely slowed down from the moment the bell rang until the ref counted to three.

    Unfortunately, the quick pace led to certain big moves not being sold enough. A code red from the top rope and a piledriver are moves people use as finishers. They shouldn't be sold like a simple body slam.

    Even with those criticisms, this bout was fun and engaging. This is the match that could get Janela put into regular rotation on Dynamite. 

Cody and Lee Johnson vs. Peter Avalon and Cezar Bononi

2 OF 6

    After Cody defeated Avalon in a singles match recently, The American Nightmare teamed up with Johnson to take on Pretty Peter and Bononi.

    Cody went right after Avalon and stomped him to the mat before he brought in Johnson. Bononi made a blind tag and took out Johnson from behind with a clothesline. The heels began to work the Nightmare Factory alum over but he turned things around and hit an impressive dropkick.

    Cody tagged in but Bononi overpowered him with an overhead slam. We returned from a break to see the heels controlling the pace. Cody caught Avalon in a dive and slammed him. Johnson tagged in and hit a flurry of moves to both Superstars. 

    Johnson was able to avoid Avalon's finisher and rolled him up for the pin. 

                               

    Grade: C+

                            

    Analysis

    The pace in this match was faster than it needed to be, so this bout ended up suffering from a bigger lack of selling than the opening bout.

    Johnson looked good getting his first win on Dynamite. He was crisp and kept up with more seasoned wrestlers. He was breathing heavily during his post-match interview but that does not necessarily mean he was blown-up by the match.

    Sometimes, AEW tries to make every match a show-stealer when something a little more traditional would serve the stars in the ring in a better way. 

Pac vs. Ryan Nemeth

3 OF 6

    After a backstage segment with Hangman Page, Matt Hardy and The Dark Order, Pac made his way out to battle Nemeth. It looked like they would have a clean start before Pac took him down with a few kicks.

    The Bastard hit a snap suplex and a running uppercut. Nemeth struggled to his feet before a missile dropkick took him right back down. 

    Nemeth came back with a Dolph Ziggler-style snap DDT, but Pac rolled out of the ring to avoid the pin. When Nemeth tried to follow, he was sent into the barricade. He stomped Nemeth into oblivion before hitting the Black Arrow. He immediately transitioned into the Brutalizer for the win. 

                                  

    Grade: B

                              

    Analysis

    This match was designed solely to make Pac look dangerous and in that regard, the bout accomplished its goal. Pac looked dominant and Nemeth sold well to make him look even better.

    Nemeth is the younger brother of Ziggler and he both moves and looks like him, so comparisons are going to be made until he finds a way to stand out on his own. That said, he looked good here.

    This was the third match of the night that did not feature interference of any kind. It makes it clear AEW was relying on that trope too much in recent months. 

The Acclaimed vs. MJF and Chris Jericho

4 OF 6

    Sammy Guevara had a backstage confrontation that ended with Guevara punching MJF in the gut. Before this match, MJF told Jericho what happened and had his ribs taped up as if they were broken. 

    Anthony Bowens and Max Caster looked confident on their way to the ring. MJF started the match against Caster but quickly tagged out to Jericho. Caster took down the veteran with a shoulder tackle and tagged in Bowens for a double-team.

    MJF came back in and Bowens dropped him right on his face and upper body for a near-fall. Y2J and his BFF took control as the show went to a break. We returned to see the Inner Circle members using a classic leverage technique in the corner until Aubrey Edwards caught them cheating. 

    After Caster broke free, Bowens and Jericho tagged in and had a nice exchange. Bowens picked up MJF and drove him to the mat. He knocked Ortiz off the apron. While the ref was distracted, Caster hit Jericho with his boombox for a two-count. 

    Jake Hager pushed Caster off of the top turnbuckle, allowing Jericho to hit the Judas Effect for the win. Guevara came out after it was over and quit The Inner Circle. 

                              

    Grade: B-

                                   

    Analysis

    This match had a much better pace than the previous tag team encounter. They slowed down when they needed to and sold for each other when they needed to.

    MJF and Jericho used some classic heel cheats during this bout that haven't been common in years. It was a fun throwback. As always, MJF played his role brilliantly.

    The Acclaimed has a lot of talent but Caster and Bowens still have a little work to do on some of the basics before they are ready for the tag title scene. 

    Guevara quitting the stable was predictable but necessary for this storyline to move forward. MJF's master plan is slowly starting to unfold. 

Leyla Hirsch vs. Thunder Rosa

5 OF 6

    The first match in the Women's Eliminator tournament took place this week with Hirsch taking on Thunder Rosa. The former NWA women's champion gave a promo before the match saying she wanted both the AEW and NWA women's titles.

    They locked up and wrestled on the mat until they came to a stalemate and reset. Hirsch showed off some of her amateur wrestling skills as she worked over Rosa's arm and hit a suplex. 

    Rosa hit a body slam and a running senton for a two-count. Hirsch hit a nice hurricanrana that sent Rosa out of the ring, and she followed that up with a suicide dive. Rosa recovered but Hirsch almost locked her in an armbar. 

    We returned from a break to see Rosa building some momentum. She nailed a low dropkick in the corner but Hirsch kicked out at two. Legit Leyla executed a few throws and a crossbody for another two-count. 

    Rosa avoided a moonsault to regain the upper hand and hit her finisher to pick up the win and advance to the second round. 

                                   

    Grade: B+ 

                                            

    Analysis

    Other than two or three moments where it looked like there was a timing issue, these two women put on the best match of the night up to this point.

    Hirsch's technical ability combined with Rosa's unique style to create a great performance. They had great chemistry and it would be nice to see them get a chance for a rematch down the line.

    Hirsch is still new to AEW and has time to establish herself. Even with the losses she has suffered, she has looked impressive in each outing. It wouldn't be surprising to see her get a push at some point. 

KENTA and Kenny Omega vs. Jon Moxley and Lance Archer (Falls Count Anywhere)

6 OF 6

    Omega was shown golfing earlier in the day and he told Alex Marvez that he was the best of all time and didn't need to prepare for his match like most wrestlers. 

    KENTA hit Moxley with his IWGP U.S title shot briefcase right after the bell. He tried to do the same thing to Archer but the big man showed no signs of pain. Omega helped KENTA take down both opponents.

    KENTA shoved Omega out of the way so he could stomp on Mox and it led to a brief argument. Archer ran over Omega and Moxley turned KENTA inside out with a clothesline. Omega used a trash can as a weapon and used it during a moonsault to inflict extra damage. 

    Archer and Omega fought into the crowd area during the break. KENTA hit Avalon with a GTS when he got in his way. Archer sent Omega into a heart-shaped bed Avalon keeps at ringside for some reason. Moxley rejoined the fight and got a near-fall on KENTA.

    Moxley and KENTA took the fight into the kitchen area backstage where the IWGP U.S. champ took a DDT on top of a metal table. It took a few minutes for everybody to make it back to the ringside area. KENTA tried to put Moxley through a table with a double stomp but the table didn't break. 

    Archer chokeslammed Omega and walked across the top rope to hit a moonsault for a two-count. The Good Brothers came out and attacked Archer and Jake Roberts. Moxley came in with a barbed wire bat to take out the interlopers. 

    Omega hit Archer with a V-Trigger but he needed help to get him up for the One-Winged Angel. He hit the move and got the pin. 

                                

    Grade: B-

                               

    Analysis

    For some strange reason, AEW decided to air a recap of the first half of the match at the halfway point instead of sticking with the action. It took some of the momentum away from the wrestlers.

    As fun as all of the mayhem was, this match was overbooked. If you do everything in the first encounter, it doesn't leave anywhere for these guys to go in the future.

    The relationship with AEW and NJPW should excite fans because it means we will get to see stars like KENTA more often. He looked great in this match and came off like a legit contender, which is something WWE never managed to pull off with his character.

    This was an entertaining fight but it got to a point where they were just doing things for the sake of doing them. This is a rare instance where a match would have been better with five fewer minutes. 

Monday 8 February 2021

WWE Raw Full Show Live Streaming 8 February 2021 WWE Raw Highlights 8 February 2021

 

WWE Raw 2/8/21 February 8th 2021


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WWE Raw Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from February 8

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    The February 8 edition of Monday Night Raw continues WWE's Road to WrestleMania. With WWE Elimination Chamber just two weeks away, it was time to start building that card, deciding what championships and challengers would be fighting inside the steel.

    Haunted by the ghost of Bray Wyatt inhabiting Alexa Bliss, Randy Orton continued to try to focus on gold. Continuing his rivalry with Drew McIntyre, The Viper challenged the WWE champion in a non-title match.

    The Scottish Psychopath himself had his own goal. He wanted to address his best friend Sheamus. The Celtic Warrior had attacked McIntyre last week and then demanded a WWE Championship match. It was just a matter of the time and place.

    Lacey Evans has been tormenting Charlotte Flair for weeks since Ric Flair helped her defeat The Queen. This week, Raw gave them the ring to face each other while Ric watched on.

    This episode for the red brand needed to spark excitement. This was a show with serious stakes and expectations and little promised ahead of time to deliver on that.

AJ Styles (w/ Omos) vs. Jeff Hardy

1 OF 7

    The show opened with an In Memoriam for "The Natural" Butch Reed. Raw showed a recap of the history of Drew McIntyre and Sheamus before The Celtic Warrior attacked his best friend.

    Adam Pearce introduced Shane McMahon, who had a huge announcement to make. Drew McIntyre would fight five former WWE champions inside the Chamber: Randy Orton, Jeff Hardy, AJ Styles, The Miz and Sheamus.

    The Phenomenal One arrived to mock Pearce and send him to the back with a promise of giving the WWE Universe a preview for the Chamber against The Charismatic Enigma. Shane McMahon told The Scottish Psychopath backstage that he needed to prove his mettle by winning in the Chamber.

    Styles went after Hardy from the outset, injuring the left leg of his rival. The Charismatic Enigma limped to a comeback, but after a Twist of Fate, he missed a Swanton Bomb. The Phenomenal One made Hardy tap out to the Calf Crusher.

    Sheamus questioned Pearce backstage, calling him a "yes-man" for doing whatever Shane wanted.

               

    Result

    Styles def. Hardy by submission.

                    

    Grade

    C+

                

    Analysis

    From the announcement on, Raw set the tone for the night. The favorites on the red brand have been further established while many fan favorites are left out in the cold. Shane's appearance was a complete non-factor when something special could have been done tonight.

    The Chamber is a special opportunity to tease many potential changes before WrestleMania. It would have made more sense to set up a No. 1 contender in the Chamber rather than putting the title on the line, especially since McIntyre vs. Sheamus was already set up.

    Moreover, the lineup for the Chamber is a waste of a talented roster. Orton, Styles and Miz have gotten their shots. Hardy has not earned this. WWE wants to sell the idea of a Chamber of former WWE champions, but that just set up a bunch of familiar names.

    Styles vs. Hardy was solid, but the two have faced off many times. This was barely impactful beyond further emphasizing that The Charismatic Enigma cannot beat major wrestlers anymore.

New Day vs. Retribution's T-Bar and Slapjack

2 OF 7

    Mustafa Ali was aggressive on commentary, growling about the opportunities he and Retribution never got while New Day got its shots. T-Bar and Slapjack did Ali proud for a while by leaving some lasting bruises on Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods.

    Ali continued to yell at Retibrution's representatives in the ring. However, the motivation waned for the heels as New Day came back in a flurry. Kofi and Woods hit Day Break for the victory. Ali was furious, yelling at all of the members of Retribution in the ring.

              

    Result

    New Day def. Retribution by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    B+

                

    Analysis

    This was a surprisingly fun tag team match, fueled by the venom in Ali's words. He was certainly over the top but made the most of the spotlight to sell who he is as a character. He speaks complete truth but also has his own motivation, hoping Retribution will give him a better spotlight.

    T-Bar and Slapjack are both talented wrestlers, a truth that could be forgotten beneath the masks. It would not have been hard to imagine fans getting seriously excited about Kofi Kingston or Xavier Woods vs. Dominik Dijakovic, but his evolution to T-Bar has kept fans from enjoying his work fully.

    Despite all of that, though, the athleticism in this match was off the charts. Hopefully, the next step is to give Kofi and Ali 10 minutes to showcase their talent in a full sprint.

Charlotte Flair vs. Lacey Evans (w/ Ric Flair)

3 OF 7

    Ric Flair explained that he had chosen Lacey Evans to represent him as his next protege. Both wanted to achieve a higher level through their shared respect. Despite Charlotte Flair's insistence, they explained there was no romance between them.

    The two tried to play nice with The Queen, but Charlotte was not having it. She wanted to refocus on Asuka. Both women believed they should be No. 1 contender to the Raw Women's Championship.

    A fight broke out, and The Sassy Southern Belle knocked Charlotte into the steel steps before accepting a match with her.

    The Queen hurt her left shoulder on the impact, and Evans took advantage in the match that ensued. She stomped on the bad shoulder and wrenched at it while she strutted around the ring. Ric got in Charlotte's way when The Queen seemed ready to make a comeback.

    The distractions allow Evans to do even more damage to the bad shoulder, leaving Charlotte barely able to keep up. The Queen lost it and started assaulting Evans in the corner, causing a disqualification.

    After her win, it was announced Evans would challenge Asuka at WWE Elimination Chamber.

              

    Result

    Evans def. Charlotte by disqualification.

               

    Grade

    D+

                

    Analysis

    This was another awkward segment between Charlotte and Evans, even if Ric gave a better explanation for his involvement with The Sassy Southern Belle. Working as a mentor to her is far better than being a desperate old man falling for the gold digger.

    However, Charlotte and Evans have no chemistry on the mic, struggling to deliver any kind of compelling animosity. They are better wrestling one-on-one, but without any investment, these contests lose all excitement.

The Miz Interrupts Edge; Damian Priest (w/ Bad Bunny) vs. Angel Garza

4 OF 7

    Damian Priest and Bad Bunny talked backstage. The Miz and John Morrison seemed to be laughing together with Angel Garza.

    Edge questioned if he would challenge for the WWE Championship, knowing that the title would be defended in the Elimination Chamber. The Miz mocked The Rated-R Superstar with the Money in the Bank briefcase. Edge was not impressed by Miz or John Morrison and tore into him for trying to intimidate him.

    The A-Lister and The Shaman of Sexy helped keep Garza in this match with The Archer of Infamy until Bad Bunny got the two thrown out by the referee. This allowed Priest to hit the Reckoning and emerge victorious.

              

    Result

    Priest def. Garza by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    C-

                

    Analysis

    Edge's involvement ahead of the match was completely useless. If the plan is for Edge to appear each week and talk about maybe choosing his opponent for WrestleMania, it will get tiring fast. He needs some kind of story in the meantime.

    The match that followed was fine, but Priest and Garza can do so much better. The various distractions have gotten in the way of the talent in the ring. The Archer of Infamy is getting a major rub from working with Bad Bunny, but the international star could end up stopping people from seeing Priest at his best.

    Miz and Morrison remain an oddity on Raw. They are used so regularly in stories, but they lack real credibility as heels. It is far too obvious they will lose to Priest and Bunny when the time comes.

Keith Lee vs. Riddle

5 OF 7

    Bianca Belair said she wanted the best challenge possible at WrestleMania whether it be Sasha Banks or Asuka. The Empress of Tomorrow appeared to congratulate The EST. Belair warned Asuka that she might not be ready for The EST.

    Riddle and Keith Lee talked backstage. The Limitless One told The Original Bro he should let someone else go after Bobby Lashley and the United States Championship.

    MVP talked up The All Mighty on commentary as these two fought over who might battle the United States champion next. Lee absolutely stopped Riddle in his tracks with pure power. The Original Bro legitimately looked frazzled by the punches and forearms of The Limitless One.

    Riddle found his stride with a series of Brotons and then battled out of a Spirit Bomb into a triangle choke. Lee barely escaped and then planted The Original Bro running with a Spirit Bomb to win.

    The All Mighty attacked The Limitless One from behind, planted Lee with a spinebuster and then took out Riddle with the Hurt Lock. Lashley took the steel steps and blasted Lee with them.

    WWE announced Lashley vs. Lee vs. Riddle at WWE Elimination Chamber at the end of the night.

              

    Result

    Lee def. Riddle by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    B

                

    Analysis

    Riddle vs. Lee made for a far more fascinating match than it had any right to be. With no build, the two told a strong story of men with a shared desire to be the next challenger to Lashley. The Limitless One got to dominate The Original Bro as Riddle used his technical offense to stay in the fight.

    Lashley vs. Lee is a big-time match that WWE should not waste. The Limitless One is the only man left standing who could defeat The All Mighty. If WWE can be patient, that is a huge midcard WrestleMania bout.

Tables: Nia Jax (w/ Shayna Baszler) vs. Lana (w/ Naomi)

6 OF 7

    Lana was confident and focused, standing alongside her friend Naomi. However, Nia Jax quickly took away all that confidence. She stretched Lana's injured leg with a stretch muffler followed by smacking her into the steel post.

    The Ravishing Russian used a headscissors to force The Irresistible Force onto the apron and then dodged a leg drop, letting Jax hurt herself. Jax was not ready for Lana to push her straight through a table to win.

    Shayna Baszler attacked Lana, but Naomi made the save. She knocked The Queen of Spades out of the ring and taunted Baszler into an impromptu match.

    Baszler dominated The Glow early, stomping on her left elbow with violent intent. However, The Queen of Spades got distracted by attacking Lana, allowing Naomi to recover and catch her with a leg-trap pinfall to win.

              

    Result

    Lana def. Jax by sending her through a table; Naomi def. Baszler by pinfall.

               

    Grade

    C-

                

    Analysis

    Lana vs. Jax was a culmination of months of build. The Ravishing Russian finally sent The Irresistible Force through a table. It was a bad match, especially since Jax seemed consistently off, but the end result worked for paying off Lana's revenge.

    It is time to move on, but first WWE has to make a decision. Do Jax and Baszler remain champions, or do Naomi and Lana dethrone them? Both options can work, but neither fosters much excitement.

    It would be more interesting if the women's Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic winners got that opportunity. At this point, NXT has built more of a women's tag team division in a few weeks than Raw and SmackDown have over two years.

Drew McIntyre vs. Randy Orton

7 OF 7

    Raw showed a vignette on the history of Randy Orton and Drew McIntyre before the main event. That history was on display right away as the two went for an RKO and Claymore, but both dodged.

    Sheamus arrived to mock his former friend, watching McIntyre get thrown from steel post to steel post. The Viper slammed the back of the WWE champion onto the announce table. As McIntyre struggled to get back in the fight, a superplex nearly gave Orton the victory.

    The WWE champion began to find his stride through sheer force of will, but The Celtic Warrior ran in and Brogue Kicked Orton, causing a disqualification. Afterward, McIntyre caught Sheamus with a Claymore to stand tall.

              

    Result

    Orton def. McIntyre by DQ.

               

    Grade

    B-

                

    Analysis

    Especially without any awkward stipulations, Orton and McIntyre always deliver. The two have impressive chemistry and build a unique match each time around. This time, The Viper was able to dominate McIntyre with the help of Sheamus' timely distractions.

    However, at the end of the night, it did not amount to much. Sheamus got involved before the two went beyond their second gear. It seems like this contest should not have even happened if a disqualification was the end goal.

    However, DQs are an inevitability with WWE these days. It seems WWE never likes to let matches end clean anymore.

Friday 5 February 2021

WWE Smackdown Full Show 5 February 2021 wwe smackdown highlights 5 february 2021

 

WWE Smackdown Live 2/5/21 February 5th 2021



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WWE SmackDown Results: Winners, Grades, Reaction and Highlights from February 5

Sana Ejaz Khan

    Credit: WWE.com

    On the heels of a historic Royal Rumble victory, Edge returned to SmackDown Friday night, the status of his WrestleMania championship match unknown.

    Would The Rated R Superstar officially reveal that he intends to challenge Roman Reigns at The Showcase of the Immortals or was his highly-anticipated announcement again be interrupted by one of the blue brand's top stars?

    And what about the women's Rumble winner, Bianca Belair?

    The EST appeared, too, with championship aspirations on her mind.

    Did she reveal which title she intends to challenge for come April 11 and 12 in Tampa?

    Find out with this recap of the February 5 show.

Match Card

1 OF 9

    Credit: WWE on Fox

    Announced for Friday's broadcast are:

       

    • Edge returns to SmackDown
    • Bianca Belair appears
    • Triple Threat Match for the Intercontinental Championship: Big E vs. Sami Zayn vs. Apollo Crews

       

    Coverage begins at 8:00 p.m.

The Tribal Chief Kicks Off SmackDown

2 OF 9

    Credit: WWE

    Flanked by Jey Uso and advocate Paul Heyman, universal champion and "Head of the Table" Roman Reigns made his way to the ring to kick off the night's show.

    He wasted little time putting the past behind him, admitting he doesn't like recapping. Instead, he's looking to the future and the future...is Edge.

    Reigns called himself the main event and questioned why Edge wasted time on Raw and NXT, and instead saying he should be groveling at The Tribals Chief's feet and begging for a place on the Island of Relevancy.

    Reigns ordered Edge out but the 2021 Royal Rumble winner did not appear. "Edge must think I'm a fool. Do I look like a fool, Paul? Do I look like a man who wants to play games? WHY WOULD YOU PLAY GAMES WITH ME?!" he exclaimed, clearly frustrated.

    Reigns told Edge he had until the end of the night to give him his decision by the end of the night. "Edge...you're going to give me your decision by the end of the night."

          

    Grade

    A

        

    Analysis

    Reigns is the best thing about the WWE product right now and making a serious run at best character in the entire industry. The Tribal Chief is so good, an egotistical franchise player who has no tolerance for those who don't recognize his greatness and significance to the WWE product.

    His reaction here when Edge denied his request for an appearance, his voice cracking as he asked why the Hall of Famer would play games with him, such a fantastic touch whether it was intentional or not.

    The Tribal Chief staring intently into the camera, with an intensity that suggested very bad things for The Rated R Superstar if he does not comply, as he told Edge what he was going to do was great. Whether he delivers on his not-so-subtle threat keeps fans invested through the show.

    A great start to kick off the night's broadcast and a tease for the segment later in the night.

Dominik Mysterio vs. King Corbin

3 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    King Corbin attacked Dominik and Rey Mysterio before the first scheduled match of the evening, leaving the future Hall of Famer to nurse his injuries while taking the fight to his son.

    Corbin wore Dominik down, grounding him and working over the rookie. A pre-commercial tope and twisting neckbreaker after the timeout allowed the second-generation star to fight back. Corbin cut him off with a Deep Six, though, again grounding the youngster while Rey shouted words of encouragement from the ringside area.

    At ringside, Dominik sent his opponent into the announce table. From there, Rey grabbed hold of the King of the Ring’s ankle, allowing Dominik to neutralize him and put him away with a top-rope frog splash.

         

    Result

    Mysterio defeated Corbin

        

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    The grade may suggest averageness nut this was exactly what it needed to be.

    It was simple, did not expose Dominik’s inexperience, and gave him and his father a measure of revenge against their primary tormentor of late.

    Corbin does not get nearly enough credit for being as good as he is. Three years, he wouldn’t have been able to have this quality of match against someone with as little televised ring time as Dominik. Not only did he have a good match, but he was also the veteran leader who ensured everything hit its mark and the story was told as intended. 

    He is a polished professional with underrated timing and one of the coolest signature move sets of any big man. A hidden gem, despite the disdain some have for him.

Daniel Bryan vs. Cesaro

4 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    Looking to turn his fortunes around, Daniel Bryan battled Cesaro in a rematch from a few weeks back.

    Aggressive and frustrated, Bryan pummeled The Swiss Cyborg, even opening up a wound on Cesaro’s head. Bryan set up for the running knee but Cesaro caught him and dropped him across his knee with a backbreaker.

    He followed with the Cesaro Swing and applied the Sharpshooter for a surprising submission victory.

         

    Result

    Cesaro defeated Bryan

         

    Grade

    B-

        

    Analysis

    A sprint of a match, this was a hard-hitting, uber-physical encounter that drew blood, left both men clutching at injured body parts, and provided Cesaro another statement win. 

    The commentary team really put over The Swiss Cyborg and his recent run, correctly stating it is exactly what you want with WrestleMania on the horizon. It is a hint at a potential push for the underutilized star, coincidentally as he prepares to re-sign with the company.

    None of it would have been possible without the selflessness of Bryan, who continues to put others over as he admittedly nears the end of his in-ring career. A consummate pro and, based on his performances in those losses, still one of the measuring sticks for in-ring performance in the sport.

Ruby Riott vs. Bayley

5 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    Billie Kay joined Michael Cole and Corey Graves on commentary as Ruby Riott battled Bayley in singles competition. The former SmackDown women’s champion weathered an early storm, launching Riott into the top rope and injuring her left shoulder.

    Bayley worked over the joint until Riott sent her face-first into the turnbuckle and followed with an arm drag from the top rope. Bayley recovered and went back to the shoulder of her opponent. She applied a submission that Kay tried to break up. Liv Morgan confronted the Aussie, creating a scuffle that distracted Riott enough for Bayley to drive her into the mat for the win.

        

    Result

    Bayley defeated Riott

        

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    Bayley picked up a necessary win in a fine enough match hurt only by its pacing. Riott and Bayley tried to pack so much into their limited time that it, coupled with the Kay-Morgan stuff on the floor, felt a bit rushed. The result was a match that never quite exceeded “average” status, even as the work and effort was anything but lacking.

Bianca Belair's Big Announcement...or Is It?

6 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    2021 Royal Rumble winner Bianca Belair made her way to the ring to announce the champion she will challenge at WrestleMania 37.

    She put over Raw women’s champion Asuka, calling her the “Empress of All Day, Every Day.” She put over the blue brand’s Sasha Banks but was suddenly interrupted by Carmella’s sommelier, Reginald. He laughed off the idea that she could beat Banks, then said she cannot even beat Carmella.

    This brought the Princess of Staten Island to the ring. After some trash talk, Banks made her presence felt, hitting the ring and stating she was putting Carmella in the rearview mirror. The Boss put over Belair, but said she was not the best.

    “You’ve got it all, but you don’t got this.” Banks raised the SmackDown title overhead. Reginald reiterated that Belair will not beat Banks, to which the Rumble winner whipped him with her ponytail, sending him to the floor before standing tall, still in a celebratory mood after her big win Sunday.

        

    Grade

    B

        

    Analysis

    Belair is eyeing Banks’ title but Carmella is not going anywhere, at least not yet.

    This not only teased WrestleMania’s blue brand title match, but it also kept Carmella a relevant part of the division. Expect the champagne connoisseur to be the final hurdle for Belair to clear before the most important match of her career.

    That showdown could take place on an episode of SmackDown, sure, but Fastlane on March 21 seems like the more appropriate setting. 

    That is, if WWE can keep the story fresh enough until then.

Chad Gable and Otis vs. Dolph Ziggler and Bobby Roode; Hulk Hogan Appears

7 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    SmackDown tag team champions Dolph Ziggler and Bobby Roode battled Chad Gable and Otis in nontitle action while former titleholders The Street Profits provided commentary from an undisclosed location.

    Ziggler tried to grapple with Gable, but that proved problematic as the 2012 Olympian seized outclassed him. The heels would gain the upper-hand, working the smaller of their opponents over until a hot tag to Otis sparked a babyface comeback.

    The big man punished and pummeled the champion until Gable tagged himself back in. After Ziggler sent Otis into the ring post, Roode delivered a Glorious DDT on Gable for the win.

    After the match, the commentary team threw to a video package recapping the iconic Main Event match for the WWE Championship between Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant that occurred 33 years ago today. After, Hogan briefly discussed the match before putting over Edge's upcoming decision.

         

    Result

    Roode and Ziggler defeated Gable and Otis

        

    Grade

    C

        

    Analysis

    This was a fun little sprint of a match, like most tonight, but it was little more than a showcase for the new champions and an excuse to give them a quality win.

    All signs point to The Street Profits getting their rematch against Ziggler and Roode in the near future. Montez Ford and Angelo Dawkins eluded to the fact that they have not received a rematch of any kind since, hinting that there may be obstacles for them to overcome before they get what should have been there’s contractually.

    WWE spent all evening hyping Hogan talking bout his historic match with Andre, only to have him say a dozen or so words before putting the focus on Edge and his decision. We complain about the company using nostalgia at the expense of the modern Superstar and this bucked that trend, using a historic moment to spotlight a current event.

    Even if that story involves a returning legend in his own right.

Triple Threat Match for the Intercontinental Championship

8 OF 9

    Credit: WWE

    Big E defended the Intercontinental Championship against Apollo Crews and Sami Zayn in a big Triple Threat Match in the night’s advertised main event match.

    Crews struck the first blow, wiping the opposition out with a huge die heading into the break. He doubled down, launching himself with a missile dropkick that wiped Zayn out coming out of the commercial. Big E fought back, though, tossing Crews with consecutive suplexes and flattening both challengers with a big splash.

    Dispatching Crews to the arena floor, Big E delivered a big uranage on Zayn for two. The champion continued to roll, launching both opponents with his raw power in a double overhead suplex. Building momentum, he sought the spear through the ropes but Zayn caught him with a big knee. He followed with a Helluva Kick but Crews broke up the pin-fall.

    Crews wiped out Zayn and entered the ring but Big E caught him out of nowhere with the Big Ending for the hard-fought victory. 

        

    Result

    Big E defeated Crews and Zayn to retain

         

    Grade

    B

        

    Analysis

    This was a damn good, action-packed match that spotlight all three Superstars.

    Zayn continued to perfectly portray the cerebral, at times cowardly, heel while Crews threw everything he had at the opposition. In the end, though, neither could overcome the momentum Big E has built for himself.

    The match probably would have been even better without the commercial break right in the middle of it, but this was still a strong showing with great in-ring chemistry and solid creativity that allowed Big E to showcase his pure strength.

    Crews staring Big E down, a look of disgust and frustration painted all over his face, was a great indicator of things to come. Hopefully, the ultra-talented competitor can find success as a heel because he is too good to slink back into obscurity.

Edge's Decision...Maybe

9 OF 9

    Credit: WWE.com

    On the precipice of greatness, Edge hit the ring to make his decision as to which champion to challenge at WrestleMania. 

    Before he could choose, Reigns interrupted, making his way to the ring squared circle with Uso and Heyman by his side.

    Edge immediately asked the universal champion if he’s sweating him already since he brought backup. “Uce, I’ll meet you at the bus. I got this,” Reigns said in response to Edge’s insinuations. “You disrespected me, therefore you disrespected my family.” He ordered Edge to acknowledge him as the main event of WrestleMania. “That’s your cue. Go.” 

    Before Edge could respond, Kevin Owens came from out of nowhere and dropped Reigns with a stunner to close out the show.

         

    Grade

    C

         

    Analysis

    So, SmackDown teased two WrestleMania announcements and delivered...neither? 

    Reigns was great, again, and Edge did a great job as the master manipulator, playing to The Tribal Chief’s ego in an attempt to get him to react emotionally. It did not work and Reigns called his bluff. In the end, the game of mental chess was for naught as Owens re-established his place in the main event scene with a perfectly-timed stunner that ruined any chance we had of knowing what the WrestleMania main event will be. 

    It was a fine enough segment, but one that probably should have meant more than a cliffhanger for next week’s show. Or Monday’s Raw. Or next week’s NXT. Whenever Edge decides to make his announcement.

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