When you sit to break down the latest edition of Monday Night
Raw, it's pretty easy to pick out a number of glaring flaws.
The show opened with a red-hot Seth Rollins taking a pinfall
loss to Elias in a match designed to get Roman Reigns sympathy
and cheers, Baron Corbin got deputized as Stephanie
McMahon's proxy "constable" and Ronda Rousey's flat
affectation on commentary was pretty tough to get through
during the Nia Jax vs. Natalya match.
The Sami Zayn-Bobby Lashley rivalry that already touched on a
few raw nerves in terms of misogyny, doubled down with
accusations of stolen valor, the only Raw tag team title
contender with momentum behind them inexplicably got thrown
into a battle royal and unceremoniously tossed out in short
order, and the renewal of a somewhat forgotten tremendous
rivalry from NXT in Finn Balor vs. Kevin Owens ended with a DQ
in the main event.
But even on a night where the only precipitous change to the
equation for Money in the Bank was the B-Team of Curtis Axel
and Bo Dallas winning a Raw tag team championship match in
that aforementioned tag team battle royal, there were a
number of moments on Monday night that indicated some light
at the end of the tunnel.
Say what you want about changing the equation that made
Rollins the most popular figure on Raw (and there is plenty
to tackle there), the story continuity from week to week
makes a lot of sense. After a steel chair was introduced
into his Intercontinental championship defense against
Jinder Mahal last week, ultimately leading to a DQ, Rollins
eventually used a chair as a counter-measure to Sunil
Singh's constant interference once again this week -- only
this time, it backfired. Elias nailed a brutal DDT onto that
chair, connected on the Drift Away, and pinned Rollins in
the middle of the ring for what could easily be called the
biggest win of his career. There's nothing wrong with
adding some intrigue to Money in the Bank, and on that
Sunday night Rollins can get back to what he's been doing
best -- putting on tremendous matches.
*Makes note* ladders aren't a GLORIOUS strategy when
facing @BraunStrowman... @REALBobbyRoode #Raw
pic.twitter.com/R6OjOxBZNm
- WWE (@WWE) June 5, 2018
Braun Strowman added to his highlight reel of absurdities in
his match against Bobby Roode, when the latter set up a
ladder as a ringside barrier only for Strowman to bring his
fists crashing down on that ladder to snap it in two.
Despite the DQ finish, Balor landed a Coup de Grace from
the top rung of a ladder on Owens.
The #CoupDeGrace was just taken to INSANE heights!!!
@FinnBalor #RAW pic.twitter.com/NqPOmsOaQJ
- WWE (@WWE) June 5, 2018
Adjustments made in Rousey-Jax build
The biggest silver lining of all Monday night was mid-stream
adjustment to what's going on between Rousey and Jax. In
recent weeks, Jax had done a rapid and unexplained 180 degree
change in character from the voice of the bullied to a giant
bully in her own right simply to satisfy a need to present
Rousey as a conquering hero. At least part of the backlash to
this almost instantaneous change seemed to get through on
Monday night, and regardless of how you feel about the
execution between Rousey, Jax and Natalya, there's no denying
the effort to wind things back to try to retain some of Jax's
humanity and defined personality traits.
When Natalya went down with a knee injury towards the end of
the match, Jax and Rousey were equally concerned with
Nattie's health. Rousey got territorial and bumped Jax out to
the outside, leading to a face-to-face confrontation, but in
the ring and afterwards each leaned on their friendship with
Natalya in an attempt to humanize each of them and attempt
to put together a narrative to explain this hastily cobbled
together Raw women's championship match.
Was it perfect? Of course not. But the potential ramifications,
which go up to and including the possibility of Natalya being
forced out of the women's Money in the Bank ladder match,
bring some intrigue into next Monday's go-home Raw for a
show that's often lacking stakes on a week-to-week basis.
It's time to take some chances with Roman Reigns
While there was a strong creative ending to the tag team
match featuring Rollins, Reigns, Mahal and Elias, the opening
effort for Raw fell into a familiar, troublesome pattern. The
effort to take Rollins' momentum and popularity and make it
rub off on Reigns by any means necessary feels eerily similar to
moments over the past few years that did uber-popular guys
like Daniel Bryan no favors while their moment in time was
cresting.
When it comes to storytelling, WWE has been afraid to do much
to tweak Reigns' character and that stasis has negatively
affected everything he touches. There were some flashes in the
build-up to WrestleMania when Reigns broke down the fourth
wall that got the crowd excited, but in most ways he's still the
same exact character he was in the months following the
break-up of The Shield four years ago. He will always have his
fans and sell a lot of merchandise, but there's no reason he
can't do that and be a more dynamic character.
We're not talking about a heel turn here, but maybe take a few
more creative chances on the microphone that feel like they
have stakes. Change up the move-set a little bit, and remove
the short-arm corner clotheslines that, while they may be quite
painful in real life look like the least effective regularly used
bit of offense in the entirety of the WWE. Narratives are built
when you take what works, drop what doesn't and build up
dynamic personalities and character traits. Give Roman Reigns
a chance to be something other than a perpetual punching bag
for large swaths of every live crowd he performs for.
Hits and misses
- The guitar versus chair standoff between Rollins and Elias to
start the show had an Old West feel to it, and between his
song, his expressions and his pinfall win, the opening portion of
Raw did wonders for Elias. Working the neck, with everything
from Rollins hurting himself on a suicide dive into the barrier to
the DDT on the chair, gives the Money in the Bank title match
something to build on.
- Curt Hawkins' 200th consecutive loss allowed him to do more
on camera than anything he's done since campaigning to be
Strowman's WrestleMania tag team partner. Houston was
going wild for the possibility of free tacos (and not so crazy
about an enhancement talent coincidentally named James
Harden), only for Corbin to swoop in and break everyone's
heart by initiating a DQ.
- There's no issue in trying to build up Rousey's first title shot
and televised one-on-one match, but calling the Money in the
Bank Raw women's championship match the biggest in that
title's history is flat out wrong. How quickly have we forgotten
about the intensely personal and landscape-shifting rivalry
between Sasha Banks and Charlotte Flair that spanned many
months and a number of tremendous matches?
- Since their debut during the Superstar Shakeup, Dolph Ziggler
and Drew McIntyre have been set up as world beaters and a
breath of fresh air for Raw. They have a dynamic tag team
finishing move, and they've torn through every obstacle put in
their way. In a world where Gallows & Anderson can show up,
pick up one win over The Usos and suddenly be number one
contenders to the SmackDown tag team championships, they've
done more than enough to be worthy challengers to Bray Wyatt
and Matt Hardy. If WWE wanted them to continue to build up
momentum and stay away from the titles for a while, there
was no rhyme or reason in getting them involved in Monday's
tag team battle royal, only for Ziggler to immediately get his
team eliminated. Sure, they busted up some heads going into
the commercial break, but why mess with a good thing when it's
just getting rolling?
- Wyatt and Hardy have floated around in purgatory and
weirdness for far too long since the Greatest Royal Rumble,
and while the B-Team doesn't feel like a serious challenger, at
least they have some forward momentum to work with now.
- The Riott Squad spent a short stretch getting believable
victories and felt like they were building some momentum, but
being the beneficiary of a retroactive DQ does very little for
them. Perhaps Ruby Riott could step into Natalya's spot in
Money in the Bank and rectify a significant oversight?
- The less we say about Lashley-Zayn, the better. Poking fun
at Lashley's inspirational Instagram posts is all good fun, but
Zayn accusing Lashley of not being a military veteran led to a
very uncomfortable moment and a forced "USA" chant. Lashley
needs to batter Zayn, get a decisive win, get better entrance
music and then walk away from this poisonous rivalry.
- Next week we're set to get two Fatal 4-Way matches leading
into Money in the Bank. Men's Money in the Bank participants
Strowman, Owens, Balor and Roode will go at it and, if they're
fit enough, women's Money in the Bank participants Natalya,
Bliss, Banks and Ember Moon will have a match of their own.
- Despite the lack of need for another on-screen authority
figure, Corbin playing the voice of logic in regards to Bayley's
nonsensical attempt to join a six-woman tag team match that
already featured six other women was a pretty nice touch.
No comments:
Post a Comment