Monday 21 December 2015

WRESTLING RANT AWARDS 2015

Another year in Wrestling has gone by... it's been another crazy one, full of ups and downs.

To coincide with WWE's Slammy Awards edition of RAW tonight, it's time for The CC Network to take a look at the good, the bad and the ugly in the 5th Annual Wrestling Rant Awards! There are a total of 30 awards up for grabs, with 8 awards debuting for the first time!

"IN THE NEWS" STORY OF THE YEAR: Hulk Hogan getting fired and blacklisted for racist and homophobic comments
With both Dusty Rhodes and "Rowdy" Roddy Piper dying in the summer, I thought I would once again be giving this award to a wrestler's untimely and unfortunate death (with Paul Bearer & Ultimate Warrior's deaths receiving it in the last 2 years). However, what can trump death itself? WWE's biggest icon showing himself to be a racist homophobe, that's what.

The story of Hogan's offensive remarks shook WWE to its core, with him losing his job and having him cut from WWE's public records. It received major news coverage from every outlet imaginable, including the BBC here in the UK. If the BBC end up following a wrestling news story, then it has to be something of magnitude. They did it with the Benoit Murder/Suicide, the vocal reaction to Daniel Bryan, Roddy Piper's death and then this. It even got reported on the TV bulletins, not just the website.

When I look back at 2015, it will be remembered as the year that Hogan's statue took a mighty fall, crumbling before us. Will he come back? Who knows. While I don't agree with what he said, and have never been a fan of his, I do still hope he can return some day because WWE isn't the same without him. We'll just have to wait and see how kind the company are to him.

WRESTLING MEME OF THE YEAR: Unexpected Cena
While the Network price point of $9.99 got 2014's Meme Of The Year award simply because WWE overhyped it, Unexpected Cena came literally out of nowhere. It put all of the years smaller memes to shame.

It was adapted against many sources, from animation to live action drama and news stories. Wherever a video lay on the internet, the cry of "AND HIS NAME IS JOHN CENA" was dreaded by many. Hell, even I included it in my Night Of Champions Predictions video. The Unexpected Cena meme shattered all perceptions of pro wrestling memes dating back to the rise of the format earlier this decade, overtaking the RKO Outta Nowhere in terms of prominence. While it may be tiring to see now, and can be predicted far too easily, it's a meme that will live on as one of the greatest not just in wrestling, but across the whole interwebs. Hell, I went to a screening of the two-part finale of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic and STILL couldn't escape the meme... THAT is how large it has gotten, that even Bronies can't help but do it.

Congratulations John, you've received immortality now. Enjoy it, as it will be something that will live far longer than you. Hogan was an icon of the 80's thanks to catchphrases, Austin was an icon of the 90's thanks to beating up his bosses, and John Cena is an icon of the 2000's & 2010's for being the newer and more annoying Rick Roll. What a wonderful accolade to have.

PPV THEME SONG OF THE YEAR: Cool For The Summer - Demi Lovato (Summerslam 2015)
This years PPV themes have been largely forgettable, with Friction by Imagine Dragons (Payback 2015) being the only other one that has gotten me full on excited for its connection to an event. It would have won, if not for a pop song sung by a former Disney starlet turned pop diva.

I never expected a pop song like this to be used as a WWE event theme, let alone it be good enough to warrant me attention, and have me like it. This song delivered in intensity with its driving beat, catchy verses and choruses, providing an anthemic backdrop for Undertaker's rematch VS Brock Lesnar and making the event feel big. It did its job, which for a song I didn't have high hopes for before listening, is a job well done. WWE's Music Licensing team pulled a rabbit out of the hat with this one, that's for sure.

COMEBACK OF THE YEAR: The Undertaker
In this year we saw Sting's WWE in-ring debut, Samoa Joe arriving in NXT and Cesaro going from nowhere to Tag Champion & consistent all-round match of the night winner on RAW. However, surprisingly it was The Undertaker who surpassed them all in terms of a comeback.

After Wrestlemania XXX, the loss of the Streak and his declining health looked to signal the end for The Deadman. We all considered him to have wrestled his final bout, fuelling Lesnar's monster push and giving us a moment we'd NEVER forget on his way out. Come the next year, he's back wrestling a quality match with Bray Wyatt. He wasn't seen for 4 months, attacking Lesnar at Battleground to reignite their rivalry. In doing so, Taker has been on his most consistent schedule since 2010, fighting at Summerslam, Hell In A Cell and Survivor Series, with those matches receiving ****1/2, ****1/4 and ** ratings respectively and appearing on RAW regularly to promote them. He's looked better than he has in years and shows that even at 50 years old, his conditioning is fantastic. For his 25th Year in the company, this rooster still has some fight left in it, and with his retirement looking set to be on the horizon, I couldn't be happier to see Taker continue to wow when we all thought he was spent. You can never count a legend out, not in this business.

RISING STAR OF 2016: Kevin Owens
The Rising Star Award, an award that has NEVER been able to fulfil its promise. Dolph Ziggler, Cody Rhodes, Roman Reigns and Dean Ambrose have all fallen to this awards dreaded curse. Whether it be injury, booking problems or just a lack of progression, this award has never delivered. I was going to choose Cesaro for this award at first, but then I thought, who could become a major player in WWE quicker than him to ensure this award finally does some good. Then Kevin Owens came to mind in an instant, and my mind was made up.

The now former Intercontinental Champion has what it takes on the mic and in-ring to improve and go to the top in 2016. He's already going in and out of upper mid-card feuds after less than a year on the main roster, and with Sami Zayn's return from injury almost a certainty in 2016, we know it will only help improve the stock of Owens to where he can truly fight for the main title afterwards. He got to the Semi-Finals of the Survivor Series WWE Championship Tournament for a reason, so its obvious WWE have plans for him. I just ask, can they finally do the right thing and have a winner of this award get what they deserve? I'll have to wait and see.

MAIN ROSTER ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Kevin Owens
When the nominees for this award are Kevin Owens, Neville, The Lucha Dragons, Charlotte and Sasha Banks, which of them has done the most? It's an obvious answer. Kevin Owens.

Owens had three match of the year candidates with John Cena, beating him in the first of them and winning the Intercontinental Championship after winning the NXT Championship 7 months before, it all adds up to form an incredible portfolio of success. He's got a bright future, and for a debutant on the main stage, he's the first in years to naturally belong and fit right in with the rest without sticking out like a sore thumb. It shows his ability nicely.

NON-WRESTLER OF THE YEAR: Lana
While I could have continued Paul Heyman's streak of 3 consecutive wins, I realise that even though Heyman's ability on the mic is unparalleled, it has gotten stale. One non-wrestler came out of the shadow of her client, where up until her injury in September was set to be a major player: Lana.

Lana has progressively grown in popularity and become stronger on the mic. She made Rusev's dominant run with the US title and his feud with Cena have some meaning, and came out the strongest when she split from Rusev, even surpassing Summer Rae and Dolph Ziggler in her presence and performance. People cared about her every time she was outside the ring, wanting her to do what was right. If not for injury, she may have gotten more and more involved, and if she wrestled at Night Of Champions, this award would have gone to Heyman instead. I do have to give the year 2015 some credit, for making this valet become the centre of attention for the right reasons: in showing a woman who could become a force to be reckoned with in the coming years.

Whether she wrestles or not in 2016, I know she's done the position of manager/valet justice this year and is a good model for all who follow. Even though she was involved in the worst feud of the year (spoiler alert), she was the only one who has looked better coming out of it. Which is a positive.

COMMENTATOR OF THE YEAR: Michael Cole & Byron Saxton (SHARED)
The Commentator Of The Year Award has become something of a non-entity in recent years, with WWE's 3-man teams not providing much in the way of standout moments, calls and overall professionalism to warrant the award at all. Hell, my award last year went to Matt Striker of Lucha Underground, I was THAT dissatisfied with them. This year, even among the quagmire of lacklustre performances from the broadcast team (including NXT), there was one event where they shined through. For the first time ever, I'm giving this award to a single event done by WWE commentators: The "Beast In The East" WWE Network Special.

Michael Cole & Byron Saxton showcased great chemistry, as well as doing something different from the usual WWE norm. They performed with a passionate, informative approach to how they were calling the matches, by focusing on moves and history of the wrestlers rather than bickering between each other and saying things that didn't relate to the action. It was incredibly refreshing, and something I was absolutely stunned by when watching the event live. It's something I wish to see more of, alas I'm likely to have to wait for WWE to do another event like this to ensure the same quality is repeated.

INSPIRATIONAL WRESTLER OF THE YEAR: Dusty Rhodes (posthumous)
This year, wrestling hasn't had any real life stories that have been 'inspirational'. So I thought, why not give the industry the award, in memory of a man who gave so much of his heart and soul to it, right until his final breaths.

Dusty Rhodes' death was a sudden and saddening event in wrestling this year. The industry lost one of its most charismatic and unlikely success stories, while also having NXT lose its producer and talent advisor. Which is a shame, but at the same time, what he has taught those who will learn from The Performance Centre will shape the future of this company for years to come.

This generation of WWE talent have learnt from the "American Dream" first hand, and by watching NXT, it shows. With the 'developmental' product having more connection with those working in the business creatively than the main roster has had in a decade, it has given us consistent quality in-ring and on the mic coming straight from his tutelage. Since his death, the NXT staff have implemented his ideology so that even though he is no longer among us, those who enter in years to come will still be able to be influenced by him.

His death may have been a major loss to wrestling, but his legacy will continue to live on. We miss you Dusty, I hope this award finds you in good faith.

"EL STUPIDO AWARD" for STUPIDEST WRESTLING MOMENT OF THE YEAR: Sunny comments "wanting a Holocaust of the Islamic Religion" after Paris Attacks
For most of the year, I thought that WWE fans almost rioting after Roman Reigns won the Royal Rumble in January would not be topped for this award. When you have fans cancelling Network subscriptions and blocking wrestlers cars from leaving the arena over a match result, you know you've encountered some stupid people. I was more than happy to give this moment of colossal tantrums my favourite award of the my award collection. Especially considering how ironic it was that the same crowd were cheering Reigns when he won the title two weeks ago. Funny how time and story changes perception.

However, those plans were undone when the Paris Terrorist Attacks took place last month, and the disgraced, 'original WWE Diva' Sunny, emerged from the woodwork with a nugget of text so offensive that I still want to punch her for typing it.

When a Facebook post you make calls for the world to "instigate another Holocaust" on the Islamic religion and deciding to hail Donald Trump at the end of it, it doesn't just reek of stupidity but outright discrimination with hate on a level that can't be rivalled or equalled. While Hulk Hogan's remarks got him fired, I can at least cut him SOME slack for being an old man who ended up saying those things while under the influence of alcohol recording a sex tape (which isn't a good set of circumstances). Sunny's remarks look to have been said in a good frame of mind, especially considering how she decided to retort to the backlash by claiming it to be a 'joke', like her other posts on Facebook are apparently.

The Paris Attacks were a tragedy, with one of my best friends being in the city experiencing it all on the night. To have a classless woman like her, support a barbaric and ridiculous statement, while praising the worst person in US politics today in the process; it really shows that America won't be the land of the free, the shining light of equal opportunity and be seen as a 'blessed land' if this type of ignorant person remains able to open their mouth and NOT get punished for it.

Sunny... you did a lot to outdo angry babies that call themselves wrestling fans for this award. So well done for that, I guess. I hope to never hear things like this again, from you or anyone. We're in the 21st Century, in a multiculturalist and globalised world that isn't slowing down. So you can either accept it or don't speak your mind on a public forum. It's that simple. However with the 2016 Presidential Election coming in 11 months, the Republicans are sure to support your statement, much to my chagrin.

WORST FEUD OF THE YEAR: Dolph Ziggler & Lana VS Rusev & Summer Rae
It is usually easy to name the Worst Feud Of The Year, because it normally involves the Divas. For the 2015 winner, we got a halfway house. It involved two Divas, and two of the best performers on WWE's roster: Dolph Ziggler & Rusev.

With Rusev losing the United States Title, he blamed and took out all his frustration on Lana, who proceeded to leave him and become infatuated with Dolph Ziggler, the rebel who allowed her the freedom to do what she pleases. Rusev angered about losing his love, tried to mould Summer Rae in Lana's image. The feud was building for a Mixed Tag Match between the two teams, which would have launched Lana as a new figure in the Divas Division and give Summer Rae something meaningful 2 years after she left Fandango. However, the entire feud fell on its face for a number of reasons. Firstly, Ziggler and Rusev had no chemistry in-ring, making the matches look awful. Secondly, the feud between Lana & Summer Rae took up more TV time and was seen as more important, despite them both never getting involved in their Ziggler or Rusev's PPV matches despite it making sense storyline wise. Thirdly, the mic segments were boring, sluggish affairs that didn't give the crowd any excitement. Finally, Lana getting injured lead to the Mixed Tag Team Match at Night Of Champions being scrapped.

 The entire angle got scrapped before it could reach its aforementioned end after Rusev was injured, and his engagement to Lana was broken by TMZ. When you fast forward to November, with both Lana & Rusev kissing on MizTV and not mentioning their sour breakup beforehand... it shows how little WWE cares for continuity in this day and age. This entire feud took all four participants two steps back instead of forward. It wasn't going anywhere and had everyone turning off whenever a segment devoted to it was on their screens. It was an unmitigated disaster, and to have it end in such a way, was the icing on the cake that it deserved.

FEUD OF THE YEAR: John Cena VS Kevin Owens
When it comes to this year on WWE Television, no feud has grabbed my attention more than John Cena VS Kevin Owens. Hell, no feud has produced the quality that rivals what these two produced in just 2 months of television. Over those two months, they livened WWE programming up with electric, intense promos about the values of being somebody of status in the company, and doing all you can to prove yourself to those around you. When you combine this, with the single best PPV rating record of ANY feud since I started rating PPV events over 5 years ago then you have something truly special. When a feuds three matches are two ****1/2 matches and one ****3/4 match... I can't complain. That is an incredible return for these two. Yet, people still think Owens' 'carried' Cena in this feud, for shame. Those people have no idea, as both men made each other look equal in-ring, which makes a difference from the standard Cena-fare.

During a year where Owens & Sami Zayn were tearing NXT up with an emotional narrative and some simple, violent matches, Seth Rollins & Dean Ambrose were giving us dynamic promos and arguably the Match of the Year in the process, and Undertaker & Brock Lesnar reignited their 2014 rivalry to rave reviews, WWE's Golden Boy and its biggest new heel achieved something incredible. They delivered the most intense thing on weekly programming since Punk left with matches that in ANY other year would have won Match Of The Year. Owens may have lost this feud two to one, but he's now incredibly strong because of it. I couldn't ask for more from the company this year after this wonderful piece of television.

"THE SHELTON BENJAMIN AWARD" for UNDERRATED WRESTLER OF THE YEAR: Cesaro
With this new award, I want to acknowledge a wrestler that doesn't get the respect by WWE that he or she deserves for how good they are, just like the awards namesake, Shelton Benjamin. Who in his career from 2003 - 2010, was adored by fans and critics but was never given the time or place to showcase himself. The first winner of this award is a wrestler who has wrestled some of the best matches on RAW this year, improved his mic skills exponentially, and won a competitive title for the first time since 2012, but consistently hasn't gotten the biggest rub from management: Cesaro

Cesaro showed from his work on the indies what potential he had, and upon arriving in WWE he was immediately given the United States Championship. Since then, WWE realised the fans were into his hard workrate and in-ring style, but were never enthused about how he communicated with the audience. Even after winning the Andre The Giant Memorial Battle Royale and broke up with The Real American's at Wrestlemania XXX, he still wasn't allowed to carry himself thanks to WWE's thoughtless overbooking, making him look worse. Over the last year, Cesaro has defied his critics by showing his worth, and finally WWE have started to take notice. 

Even though his injury last month halted his momentum, apparently Vince McMahon was disappointed it happened and wants him back as soon as possible. While they didn't elevate him to new heights like many thought, Cesaro has still proven himself to be an all-round talent of excellent calibre. Hopefully, WWE can elevate him when he returns, so he won't be a casual footnote, but someone much stronger.

WORST GIMMICK OF THE YEAR: The Mega/Meta Powers (Curtis Axel & Macho Mandow)
They say "parody is the ultimate art of flattery", unfortunately in professional wrestling, parody can be interpreted as being bereft of new, creative ideas. With this new "Mega Powers", WWE did something absolutely horrific: ruin two wrestlers momentum, which they've both failed to recover from since.

Curtis Axel, a rarely used but accomplished wrestler took his angle of not being eliminated in the Royal Rumble Match and ran with it, creating AxelMania and getting people behind him. Damien Sandow had been Damien Mizdow, The Miz's stunt double and Tag Team Champion partner since the middle of last year before turning on the Miz and the gimmick altogether at Wrestlemania 31. Some weeks after, he proclaimed that this was a new era for him and his character. We all thought it would be a return to the Sandow we knew before, leading him on a good run up the ladder to singles title success Instead, WWE loved his comedic work, and had him team with Axel as Macho Mandow, a Randy Savage parody while Axel himself became a whole parody of Hogan. This entire gimmick came across as nothing but a joke, further taking two characters who the fans like and putting them down. Their appearances were fleeting, which did nothing to help them.

You know what's the icing on the cake for this team? Due to Hogan's racist/homophobic comments, the entire gimmick was stripped away. However, they still didn't have the chemistry to connect with the audience. They disbanded soon after and we haven't seen EITHER of them since. While Sandow has returned to his 'Intellectual Saviour Of The Masses' gimmick that we all know and love, he hasn't been on RAW or Smackdown with it since the team broke up. Which shows how damaging this entire experiment with them was. Horrible, horrible stuff.

GIMMICK OF THE YEAR: The New Day (Positivity Preachers)
Over a year ago, when The New Day debuted, they were simply three under-used black wrestlers dancing and being happy. No one cared in the slightest and we all just feigned ignorance. Then, in 2015 they started gaining momentum, turned heel, became the Tag Team Champions, and started preaching positivity in the funniest promo segments on RAW. They've shown to be happy with themselves, but are still complaining and whining like heels. All of this happening while allowing each other time to have unique aspects of their on-screen personality shown.

When you couple in Xavier Woods' expert trombone playing and the recent adaption of the unicorn motifs to the mix and you have a gimmick that was unexpectedly great and never fails to deliver a smile to my face whenever they appear. Friendship is indeed magic, so is what this team has done to make themselves entertaining. Vince, they took that 'brass ring' with something that SHOULDN'T have worked, and you have been duly rewarded.

TAG TEAM OF THE YEAR: The New Day
I'm not done in praising The New Day yet.

Not only have they been the most entertaining entity on the mic outside of Kevin Owens, they've also been the most consistent tag team in terms of match quality. Cesaro & Tyson Kidd would have won this without question if Kidd didn't suffer his career threatening injury. Even with the revival of Prime Time Players, the return of The Uso's, the arrival of The Lucha Dragons and the surprise The Dudley Boyz reunion; The New Day have kept WWE's tag team division alive. Alive and beating with positivity! NEW DAY ROCKS!

WORST PPV EVENT OF THE YEAR: Fast Lane 2015 (2.5/10)
This year, WWE has had some pretty bad PPV's. From Survivor Series dull and predictable matches, to Battleground's underwhelming card that was saved from the bottom of the pile by Owens VS Cena III. I look back at the Road To Wrestlemania 31, which had already hit a pot hole with the aftermath of the Royal Rumble, and thought to myself: "Surely, the February PPV can't be as bad?" It wasn't bad, but worse. The car driving on that road suffered a massive puncture.

Fast Lane had a fairly decent looking card, but with this being the fourth PPV out of six since Summerslam 2014 not to feature Brock Lesnar defending the WWE Championship, the rest of the roster had to show what it could do. Unluckily for me, it turned out to be a really dull, boring show. While Cena VS Rusev and Bryan VS Reigns were average matches, they were the ONLY ones that got above 1 star. Which for me, is atrocious quality for a 7 match card. This was mostly due to not enough build for the matches and the matches themselves lacking pace and storytelling, which lead to consistent crowd boredom. They took a potential Wrestlemania feud between Goldust and Stardust, and reduced it into a horrible match that didn't advance the storyline from that point, wasting what the feud could have had for the biggest event of the year less than a month later. Rusev winning here foreshadowed his eventual loss to Cena at Mania, which would have been much more unpredictable if this hadn't taken place. Some claim that Bryan VS Reigns was a Match Of The Year Candidate, not in my eyes. Then again, maybe it was as good as people say, but by the time the match came around, this events fate had already been sealed, and didn't get beaten by any event since.

Fast Lane 2015 was a show that had nothing to really show for itself except another reason for the fans to hate Roman Reigns. When THAT is all you can really take from a show, you know its bad. Hopefully, Fast Lane's name doesn't become an oxymoron by cementing its disastrous start as a WWE PPV when it returns in 2016.

PPV EVENT OF THE YEAR: WrestleMania 31 (8.75/10)
WrestleMania, for the second year running, surpassed all expectations.

Seeing WrestleMania XXX live in the flesh last year was never going to be topped, but from a Network viewing standpoint, I've not had an experience like it. In terms of consistent match quality, this card hasn't been matched by many. When five of the seven matches are above *** (in my opinion), you know the event was fantastic on an in-ring level alone. When you combine that with multiple moments and a monumental title change, it's a WrestleMania that will stand up as one of the best for years to come.

WrestleMania now has its standard firmly imprinted. With Arlington and AT&T Stadium now holding its nerve, waiting for their chance, lets hope they can deliver an event similar in quality to what New Orleans & Santa Clara has given us over the last two years.

WORST PPV MATCH OF THE YEAR: The Bella Twins VS Naomi & Tamina (Payback 2015, ZERO)
NOTE: This award can only go to matches from WWE's main roster PPV's. Matches from NXT Takeover and other Network specials are ineligible for this award.

This year, there have been very few matches that have fully deserved the ZERO rating, with only TWO PPV events getting their worst match of the event with that rating: Payback and Elimination Chamber. While that is a good thing (for WWE's PPV quality) in the long term, those two matches were atrocious. While the Intercontinental Championship Elimination Chamber match had no life to it, at least it crowned a new champion. The Bella Twins VS Naomi & Tamina just had... well, nothing.

It was a throwaway match to ensure that The Bellas' kept momentum and Nikki held onto the championship, when she SHOULD have faced Naomi one on one. Hell, if that happened, it may have been a decent match and Naomi COULD have won, following her momentum from earlier in the year. Instead we got this lacklustre, boring match with nothing to gain from it all. The only reason I even remember it took place, was to mark it down for this award. Now I can forget about it, for good.

PPV MATCH OF THE YEAR: Seth Rollins VS Dean Ambrose (Money In The Bank 2015, *****)
NOTE: This award can only go to matches on WWE's main roster PPV's. Matches from NXT Takeover or Network Specials are ineligible for this award.

I always say, it's rare to get a 5-star match from me. To have Daniel Bryan VS Triple H get it last year after I saw it live in person was well deserved, but I thought it would be a long time before I'd see another one on WWE's events. I had to wait for a year and 2 months for the next one. Didn't see that coming at all.

Dean Ambrose VS Seth Rollins in a Ladder Match for the World Heavyweight Championship was a 35-minute match that was covered in psychology, with pace firmly rooted in Seth Rollins' corner while making Ambrose look like a "never say die badass" who can take the pain. With incredible use of weapons throughout, it was an enthralling spectacle that put an end to their rivalry that start a year prior. Even with the finish of the match being anticlimactic, it was a fitting end to their rivalry, and one match I won't forget for a long time.

WORST ON-SCREEN MOMENT OF THE YEAR: The Authority plug Apple, Hawaii & Cadillac for almost 30 Minutes (29/6/15 edition of RAW)
While a lot of what WWE did in promos or matches this year bored me, they didn't make me angry. This entire segment, featuring Seth Rollins, J&J Security & Corporate Kane made me nearly throw the TV remote at the wall.

After The Authority collectively sent Brock Lesnar to the hospital the week before, Rollins decided to reward his associates for their services. Doing this by giving them all Apple Watches, giving Kane an all expenses paid trip to the Hawaiian Island of Maui and giving J&J a brand new Cadillac. While this segment could have easily been done quick and fast, it wasn't. This segment, entirely full of the aforementioned product placement went on for almost half of the first hour... and included a stupid procession by some stereotypical Hawaiian dancers to boot. The segment was boring torture that showed WWE's ability to pay for products to be showcased in their TV programme thanks to the lucrative advertising time the USA Network gives them.

While the car was eventually destroyed by Lesnar (in a contender for Moment Of The Year), it was the sole repercussion that made this promo worth it, as Kane's holiday photos were horribly photoshopped and the watches were never destroyed. The segment was a complete waste of time, and made me question why Seth couldn't have made it easier it sit through. Even with 'The Architect' leading the promo through on the mic, it came across as cheesy, overly long and lacking any substantial content. Worse of all, it was the OPENING SEGMENT of the show. Which I'm sure had a lot of people reaching for their remotes.

While many will go for Roman Reigns and his disastrous "Suffering Sucatash" and "Tator Tots" promos, they small, tiny moments in otherwise well spoken segments. THIS however, was horrible to watch for its entirety. So, it wins overall. Makes sense right?

ON-SCREEN MOMENT OF THE YEAR: Seth Rollins cashes in Money In The Bank to win the WWE Championship (Wrestlemania 31)
For someone to be involved in both the Worst and Best Moment of the Year awards is something that has never been done. Who could blame me for having Seth Rollins make it possible, especially with a moment like this? Wrestlemania delivered again in terms of year defining moments, with a dream finally being realised.

For years, we had clamoured for someone to cash in the Money In The Bank Briefcase on the Grandest Stage. Daniel Bryan teased it, only to go back on his word a few months before. Seth Rollins, after feuding with both Roman Reigns & Brock Lesnar months prior, wanted to ensure his name was etched onto WWE history forever. With this moment, he did it. By doing so, he made a good match into a great one that capped off the event of the year in some style. Can't say much more really, it will define a lacklustre year with something that will live long in our collective memories as the day a new star was born.

NXT DIVA OF THE YEAR: Sasha Banks & Bayley (SHARED)
When looking at NXT and now much of an impact women's wrestling has had on their product this year, it's difficult to truly pick a winner between Sasha Banks & Bayley, which is why I decided to award it to both of them.

 Both women showed the main roster how good and well received Women's Wrestling can be, through not just their individual matches, but their eventual rivalry. Even with Sasha moving up to the main roster and stagnating, I'm not going to deny her spot as the one of the main influence on NXT's roster this year.

Bayley has been a favourite of mine since I first saw those wacky waving inflatable arm flailing tube men come into shot. Seeing her live at NXT Takeover London last week was incredible, and yes... I marked out madly, more so than when Bryan won the title at Wrestlemania XXX, that's how big a fan I am of her. As a character, she's fantastic and believable, making her in-ring work fantastic to watch as a result. Over he course of the year she's taken NXT by storm, winning the Women's title, and defending it in a 30-Minute Iron Man Match a few months later. She proves that a wrestler with a happy go-lucky gimmick can have fortitude, and consist of multiple layers, not looking tired after months of exposure.

Even with my love for Bayley being extremely obvious, I can't take away from Sasha Banks what she gave in the first half of the year that set Bayley up so well to take over for the second half. Her consistent quality matches, impressive and blunt mic work as well as her connection with fans made her the true 'star' of Women's Division. It's something that has followed her, even with her booking on the main roster not being the best it could be. If not for Sasha, Bayley wouldn't be in the position she's in now. Even with the shortest NXT Women's Title reign thus far, it looks to be the most important when looking at what it has given us since it ended.

Both of these women set NXT alight this year and defined the highest of bars for which all of Women's wrestling in America has to try and match. For that, that both deserve this award equally.

WORST DIVA OF THE YEAR: Summer Rae
I think that image sums it all up.

When you're the weakest link between the four characters who provided us with the Worst Feud Of The Year, you know you aren't very good. No one wanted Summer Rae to be involved in this feud, and what she gave us as a result wasn't a lot to write home about.

Her matches with other divas were sloppy and her mic work was horrible. I will give her some credit for wearing fake breasts and high heels everywhere she went to keep up with the gimmick for months, but that isn't going to win sympathy with me. When you return to TV, only to be the little cog in the wheel of a broken down machine that made WWE's TV product worse this year.

DIVA OF THE YEAR: Charlotte
While women's wrestling on NXT was fantastic, the main roster's women stagnated to new lows. Nikki Bella became the Longest Reigning Divas Champion, despite never really giving any good in-ring performances to show for it, AJ Lee retired from active competition, and Paige has slowly devolved into a parody of herself by taking Lee's place as the 'Anti-Diva' in the division. All hope seemed lost until Stephanie McMahon ushered in the debuts of Becky Lynch, Sasha Banks and Charlotte. The division split off into factions, which resulted in Natalya coming back into prominence, as well as Paige's long awaited heel turn (and sudden face turn). Even with all that, the best diva on the main roster this year, has barely been on it more than 5 months: Charlotte.

When looking at why, it's easy to see. She got TWO great matches out of Nikki Bella (which no one thought was possible), won the Divas Title and engaged in a heated rivalry with Paige that has FINALLY made a women's feud on RAW feel exciting. It would have gone down better in the ring on PPV if the crowd gave a damn though. She's gave the Divas Division some momentum after years of issues, and with these factions looking to implode at some point in 2016, the division (with PCB already gone) can hopefully keep building itself one slow step at a time. With Charlotte as its new figurehead, it has a good chance at succeeding. All they need to do now is promote Bayley, then we'd be set.

NXT SUPERSTAR OF THE YEAR: Kevin Owens
This isn't even close. With Neville being promoted to no fanfare, Sami Zayn being injured for three quarters of the year and Finn Balor's rise not making too many headlines despite some good matches every now and again, there can be only one man to win the first NXT Superstar Of The Year Award: Kevin Owens.

When you attack the new NXT Champion on your first night and win the title two months later, have fantastic matches event after event, put on the best mic segments and give the NXT title prominence while fighting John Cena; you know you're doing well.

While I cared for Zayn and Balor, Owens is the man who made NXT more appealing than usual. The brand definitely looks weaker without him, that's for sure.

WORST SUPERSTAR OF THE YEAR: Dolph Ziggler
I always say this award is the easiest to give out, however, I've had a difficult time of picking one this year due to their being so many candidates for it. I pondered giving this award to Bo Dallas, Big Show, Mark Henry and Stardust before finally deciding to give it to WWE's workhorse: Dolph Ziggler.

Don't get me wrong, Dolph is a great worker who is over with the crowd, but this year hasn't been kind to him. He came off the end of 2014 with colossal momentum behind him after being the sole survivor of Team Cena at Survivor Series, but since then he has taken a MIGHTY fall from grace. His matches have been dull, repetitive and tiresome, his gimmick has become a deflated, lifeless parody of itself, with Tyler Breeze being more the 'Show-Off' than he has been. The final nail in Dolph's coffin is his PPV performances this year. He has been on all the PPV cards except for TLC, and has the worst record out of EVERYONE on the roster, being part of the worst match on the card on FIVE of the THIRTEEN WWE PPV events this year: Extreme Rules, Elimination Chamber, Summerslam, Night Of Champions and Survivor Series. Through the quality of those matches, Dolph shown how poor his placement, feuds and matches have become in this reviewer/fan's humble opinion. 2015 has been the worst year of the characters entire WWE run, which makes him stand embarrassingly as the first LEGITIMATE competitor to receive this award. After years of Great Khali winning, and Adam Rose and The Bunny collectively taking it last year... its time someone with credibility got the nod for how awful they've been. Proving once and for all, that no one's safe from this one.

Sure Dolph, you mentioned Bronies on air this year, which I loved... however if THAT along with a few promo segments are your highlights, you need to go into 2016 re-evaluating yourself and come back much, much better.

SUPERSTAR OF THE YEAR
Choosing Superstar Of The Year is always a difficult job. Especially when you have lots of contenders up for it. Seth Rollins (2014) joined his fellow ROH alumni CM Punk (2010, 2011 & 2012) and Daniel Bryan (2013) as members of this elite, award winning club. This year I had to pick between five of WWE's best performers, who delivered and in some cases exceeded expectations.

John Cena won the United States Championship, put on match of the night week after week on RAW for 8 months and proved his critics wrong by wrestling incredibly. Seth Rollins produced the greatest of Wrestlemania moments by cashing the Money In The Bank Contract on Brock Lesnar and Roman Reigns, proving to be a good champion despite poor booking, by being involved in many Match Of The Year candidates and its eventual winner, with his year ending badly due to injury. Dean Ambrose rose from obscurity by fighting in numerous big title and PPV matches, establishing himself in the main event scene after dipping his toes in last year. He took part in the Match Of The Year and looks strong going into 2016. Then there's Brock Lesnar, who participated in numerous Match Of The Year candidates, headlined Wrestlemania as champion for the first time and made Undertaker look good again.

While those four names all did their part, there is one man who surpassed them all: Kevin Owens.


I may sound like a broken record at this point, but Owens' 2015 was extraordinary. He's already won 4 of this years 30 awards, so why does he deserve the top honour as well? It's already been laid out for you in describing the other awards I've given him.

He was the best thing on NXT bar none, since he debuted, outside he's been the best thing on the main roster, he's put on matches of consistent high quality, with his mic work reflecting his in-ring work and for the first time in years, someone matched Cena in a feud and came out of it not looking weaker. That takes a lot to beat. Sadly, which none of them managed to get close too. He has made a stagnant WWE product watchable, all while rising up the ladder at an alarming rate, with his poor match with Ryback at Hell In A Cell being the only major negative.

While the others who I put up for contention for this award had spent the year solidifying their positions in the company (even Cena), Owens spent this year breaking the mould and bulldozing his way to his semi-main event status, all without breaking a sweat. Not since Brock Lesnar came in some 13 years ago have I been so impressed with how a wrestler has been booked by this company and adjusted to it all so well. Kevin Owens is a star, and he has done a lot over 2015 to convince me of his worth.

Kevin Owens WILL become WWE Champion in 2016, and just like Bryan and Rollins the last two years, he didn't need to win the World Title to prove himself as the best of their respective year. Which is why, for doing all he's done, Owens will join his fellow ROH alumni as a winner of this award, which in my opinion is fully deserved without a doubt. He's won the Rising Star of 2016, Main Roster Rookie Of The Year, Feud Of The Year and NXT Superstar Of The Year, now he can add the Superstar Of The Year award to this haul to become the most successful "one year" winner in this awards history. Now all he needs to do is use 2016 to top it all. I eagerly wait to see him do it.

I've been Freddy Thomas, you've been people reading. This has been the 2015 Wrestling Rant Awards for The CC Network Blog and I'll see you next time.

Monday 14 December 2015

WWE Tables, Ladders And Chairs 2015 REVIEW

2015 has been a varied year for WWE. Full of ups and downs, and PPV's ranging from the near sublime to the absurdly bad. Will the main roster heralded by Vince McMahon end this year climbing up high, or falling flat on its face through a table? All will be revealed in the review of TLC 2015, the final PPV review of the year!

SPOILERS AHEAD: IF YOU DON'T WANT TO HAVE THE RESULTS RUINED, DON'T READ ON!

If you've never seen The CC Network's video reviews of WWE events before, then my review system will be new to you. Matches are given star ratings in accordance with an average, accumulated score of 5 rating factors: Psychology (In-ring story), Move Variety, Crowd Reaction, Match Length and Pacing, as well as my overall enjoyment as a result of those factors. 


A REVIEW VIDEO IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT THE CC NETWORK YOUTUBE CHANNEL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T8rGzOv5S6U

Now time to get into the show. As I don't review the Pre-Show Match as part of the whole televised package, here's the result of that match:

Sasha Banks def Becky Lynch (11:43)

--------------------------

THE NEW DAY (c) def THE LUCHA DRAGONS & THE USO'S IN A 3-TEAM LADDER MATCH TO RETAIN THE WWE TAG TEAM CHAMPIONSHIPS (17:46)
PSYCHOLOGY: 2.5
MOVE VARIETY: 4
CROWD REACTION: 3.5
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 4
MY ENJOYMENT: 3.5
CORRECT PREDICTION?: YES

FINAL RATING: ***3/4

Wow, WWE actually did the right thing for once by putting the fast paced, action packed match on first, and boy did it pay off. These three teams put their bodies on the line and then some. However, just like I predicted, the match would need to be mediated and well-paced for it all to work. Thankfully, for the most part, WWE pulled it off.


The match started out with mostly non-ladder action, with the teams trying to wear one another down, which did impede its pace somewhat, but it allowed the madness of the six men all fighting at once to give off an illusion of aggression and speed, which made up for it. This continued throughout, with the teams each trying to team up and gain advantages, which improved the pace more. The flow of the match was allowed to be kept consistent with the amount of shifting momentum that combined with big spots to amplify the matches' importance. Much to my chagrin, Xavier Woods was on commentary, but it played to this bouts advantage. His commentary added extra inflammatory spice and he gave out the desired reactions when necessary. Especially when questioning why The Lucha Dragons were so willing to hurt themselves in their barrage of aerial trickery and ladder combinations, doubting whether it was all worth it. Helping his team mates win was predictable, but done at a time where pretty much everyone was completely knocked out, which made it come across as realistic and essential given the story, a very tactical reason to stay out of the bout. The sight of the face teams looking up at the titles after disposing of New Day may have sealed their fate, but it was a great moment of solidarity in competition that gave their brawls and spots added meaning.

With The New Day contributing an overhead belly to belly to a ladder and The Uso's contributing a tree of woe ladder attack, a rump shaker into the same position and a cross body to a ladder prone Big E, it was The Lucha Dragons that defied all logical sense and pulled some great spots out of their repertoire. Sin Cara took a page out of Shawn Michaels book, falling with the ladder off the top rope and a plancha to a ladder with both Uso's underneath. Kalisto took it a step further with a springboard Monkey Flip transitioning into a 450 Splash onto ladder prone Kofi and finally... an incredible Asai DDT from the top of the ladder through a propped ladder on Jey Uso. Those big spots got the crowd going into hysterics, which is sad considering it took them half the match to really get excited.

Overall, this was a well paced, entertaining match with the right winners, only let down by a lack of body psychology considering the moves involved. The match delivered in almost every way and showcased the tag division well. Hopefully The Lucha Dragons weren't too banged up, they'll probably be the next in line, so they need to heal fast.


RUSEV w/LANA def RYBACK (7:56)
PSYCHOLOGY: 2
MOVE VARIETY: 1
CROWD REACTION: 1 
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 2
MY ENJOYMENT: 1.5
CORRECT PREDICTION?: YES

FINAL RATING: *

I wasn't expecting much going in, especially considering that the build-up package for this had to convince me it was worth its time. While the match didn't amount to much, it did enough without it being awful. Which for a Ryback match, says a lot.

While the crowd were indifferent to see Rusev face off against Ryback, they at least booed Rusev and Lana for their underhand tactics, which were a repeat of the 'accidental' attacks that have been overdone when valets are involved in a feud. It allowed momentum to shift after Ryback unessecarily got momentum in his favour despite being beaten most of the match. Rusev dominated and deserved the win no matter how much of an obstacle Ryback paints himself to be. Rusev used his aggression and desire for 'revenge' well, beating down Ryback's head and neck in preparation for the Accolade later on, which when combined with a stiff kick and said submission move really compounded Ryback's misery. He sold it well, I will give him fair credit when its due, but in a match that was so heavily reliant on the actions of Rusev and Lana, Ryback's position in this match seemed like an afterthought.

That being said, the match went JUST long enough to not have it be considered overblown and was steadily paced so that Rusev could show off that aggression and keep the match flowing smoothly, mostly because he had to compensate for Ryback's non-existent pace. Ryback also press slammed and dropkicked Rusev, which was impressive, but it didn't make it any less of an elongated squash for the Big Guy.

This match did EXACTLY what it needed to do, make Rusev and Lana look strong. For doing that and keeping it somewhat entertaining for the majority, I have to give this duo props for it.


ALBERTO DEL RIO (c) def JACK SWAGGER IN A CHAIR MATCH TO RETAIN THE WWE UNITED STATES CHAMPIONSHIP (11:12)
PSYCHOLOGY: 1.5
MOVE VARIETY: 1.5
CROWD REACTION: 1
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 1
MY ENJOYMENT: 1
CORRECT PREDICTION?: YES

FINAL RATING: 1/4

I knew coming in, that this match wouldn't be the most spectacular of encounters, as Chair Matches much like the abortion of a Stairs Match last year, just don't feel special. at all That trend continued with this one, a match that had some ingenuity in the use of the chairs, did little to excite.

The match was kept at a steady pace, with both men swinging momentum and chair shots to the back like they were nobodies business. Both men were aggressive from the bell, showing their desire for their own beliefs, nice for the story. Del Rio worked Swagger's back with the back stabber and a tilt-awhirl backbreaker, as well as propping the former All-American on the second turnbuckle and laying in some horrific shots as showcased above. Too bad Swagger had a hard time selling it while running for the Swagger Bomb, which he mostly missed anyway. The near falls fell flat with an apathetic crowd, who felt it a better use of their time to chant for CM Punk rather than focus on the match itself. When they had to watch moments of insanity, such as Del Rio dumping all the chairs on Swagger outside the ring, only to roll him back in afterwards for no reason, you can see why. Even an ingenious move of using a Cross Arm Breaker over the top rope in a match without rope breaks didn't help, especially when Swagger's moment of brilliance: A Patriot Lock inside a chair, didn't look all that convincing, while Del Rio didn't sell the ankle until his finishing move onto the chairs messed his foot up.

While both men tried their best to be as aggressive as possible to make this match entertaining, it went on too long and didn't pique interest. There was just enough going on for me to drag it away from the doldrums of the ZERO rating though. I will be kind on this occasion, but I could have been crueller, considering this was almost 12 minutes of very little to remember. Although Swagger did hit Del Rio square in the face with a chair, looks like a fine is coming his way.

THE WYATT FAMILY def THE DUDLEY BOYZ, TOMMY DREAMER AND RHYNO IN AN 8-MAN TAG TEAM ELIMINATION TABLES MATCH (12:30)
PSYCHOLOGY: 2
MOVE VARIETY: 1
CROWD REACTION: 1.5
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 1.5
MY ENJOYMENT: 1
CORRECT PREDICTION?: YES

FINAL RATING: *

It says a lot, for a multi-man, tag team tables elimination match to be boring. You have eight wrestlers who had what it took to make this match much more than it was. However, a concept that should have been something great, turned out to be a let down.

The ECW Originals went straight to their weapons cache in order to descend the match into chaos, which coincidentally was the case, just not in the way that would be expected. Many moments in this match came across as extremely sloppy, such as Bubba purposely missing a headshot with a trash can, Rowan missing his marked table spot, with the table breaking anyway. He had to be 3D'd through one instead, which made the match look like a mockery of itself. Harper's elimination of Rhyno through the table wasn't done with any malice, more in line with protecting his opponent rather than conveying dominance. The cheese grater to the groin while surprising looked like it had no effect, and the flaming table spot would've been cool to see but it was either botched or intentionally not done and made the final elimination of Bubba Ray Dudley end the match on a whimper.

Both teams showed aggression, the match had a steady, offence shifting pace and had the crowd somewhat on their side, but still, this match was a slow, cumbersome affair that was actually difficult to watch. If not for how strong The Wyatt Family were portrayed, the never say die attitude of the ECW crew fighting back, Harper's suicide dive eliminating Dreamer and the intense opening few and final minutes, this match would have fallen a lot further. My love affair with ECW has long since faded, and my lack of enjoyment in this match shows for it. While it was nice to see Tommy Dreamer and Rhyno back on a WWE PPV for the first time in 5 and 10 years respectively, it wasn't worth it. While this match like Rusev/Ryback did EXACTLY what it needed to do, it felt incredibly forced and wasn't at all satisfying. It got one star, but it could have been far worse.


DEAN AMBROSE def KEVIN OWENS (c) TO WIN THE WWE INTERCONTINENTAL CHAMPIONSHIP (9:52)
PSYCHOLOGY: 2
MOVE VARIETY: 1
CROWD REACTION: 2 
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 2
MY ENJOYMENT: 1.5
CORRECT PREDICTION?: NO

FINAL RATING: *3/4

I had expectations going in, that this match would be better than their Survivor Series match. Somehow, those expectations were not met. Considering the two men involved, maybe this match would need weapons or a more extreme storyline in order to have it fulfil its potential.

Both men were aggressive out of the gate, switching momentum almost every time a move came through. It kept the match quick right until a Fallaway Slam by Owens into the barricade slowed the match to a crawl, to its benefit. This allowed Ambrose' never say due attitude we've become accustomed to, make its turn in changing how Owens attacked the 'Lunatic Fringe' by resorting to a grounded offence to keep him down. It feels like I'm repeating myself, because I'm sure this is how Ryback and the prior Ambrose matches were dealt by Owens, which deflated this matches in-ring work further. What really made it come alive, was once again Owen's gesticulations about how great he is, who's crazy now, and reacting brilliantly to Ambrose's tenacity by calling Cole and the referee an idiot after a second rope steamroller didn't come through for him. With the near falls, and Owens getting his FINGER on the bottom rope (which Jimmy Korderas confirmed on Twitter to be entirely legit) to break up the Dirty Deeds, added incredible drama onto the end of quite a tense match. The match got the crowd into it slowly over its run time, and when Ambrose won, they were sent into overdrive.

Was I expecting too much from these two to not understand that they actually did a decent job? Am I irritated that this match broke my predictions streak for the night? Did this match not get enough time to tell its story thoroughly? Possibly, however these two still managed to pull out a decent match thanks to subtle elements of psychology and a steady build-up through good pacing. It may not have been up to a standard I expect from either of them, but it entertained enough for me to see value in it.


CHARLOTTE (c) w/RIC FLAIR def PAIGE TO RETAIN THE WWE DIVAS CHAMPIONSHIP (10:39)
PSYCHOLOGY: 2.5
MOVE VARIETY: 1
CROWD REACTION: 1.5
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 2.5
MY ENJOYMENT: 2
CORRECT PREDICTION?: NO

FINAL RATING: **

Knowing that Sasha Banks had won earlier in the evening, I was expecting the crowd to not bat their eye to this match. While that premonition was largely correct, this match did one thing I hoped for: be different from their Survivor Series match.

While their prior encounter was firmly routed in Charlotte getting revenge on Paige, the tables had turned, this time with the Norwich lass getting the majority of the offence in the early going, with Charlotte keeping her grounded and mocking the crowd for supporting the challenger. The pace was kept consistently quick even in its slower moments, allowing both women to get offence and make it look more like a fair contest. The crowd took their time to get invested, with a lot of mat offence not connecting, but many near falls towards the end helped its cause. Ric Flair provided great storytelling by trying to undo the turnbuckle pad and being admonished by not only the referee but his own daughter. Paige did the Figure Four, which added to her desire to embarrass the champion, only for it to distract the referee from Flair, who took the turnbuckle pad off and put Charlottes foot on the rope to break a pin attempt, before Charlotte used said exposed turnbuckle to claim the win. The story of Flair's involvement brewed slowly and naturally over time, making the match and its long term progression for the feud come out stronger than it was going in.

While the match lasted for 5 less minutes than its predecessor, it still got a lot done, which despite not having many moves to surprise, still kept me interested. It was a simplified progression match for the story and it was done well while still showing both women off in-ring. It could have had more interest from the crowd to bring it a higher rating, but for what I expected to get, this match did what it needed to do.


SHEAMUS (c) def ROMAN REIGNS IN A TABLES, LADDERS AND CHAIRS MATCH TO RETAIN THE WWE WORLD HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP (23:58)
PSYCHOLOGY: 3.5
MOVE VARIETY: 2
CROWD REACTION: 2.5 
MATCH LENGTH AND PACING: 4
MY ENJOYMENT: 3
CORRECT PREDICTION?: YES

FINAL RATING: ***1/4

From the moment this match began, I knew I'd have to listen to the crowd closely, mostly because they would be the deciding factor between this match succeeding and failing. Happily for me, even this crowd, that portrayed itself as apathetic, rowdy and passionately nonchalant, still got behind it.

Sure, the Boston crowd didn't want to support either man, chanting for many unrelated entities such as John Cena, CM Punk, Daniel Bryan, Seth Rollins and NXT. However after seeing both men put on a physical contest, and telling a good story as a result, by the time the match was ending they were into it, and booing the inevitable, predictable finish. From that moment on, Reigns gained sympathy from Boston, making the beat down of Triple H afterwards ever sweeter for them. With moves like the White Noise through a table, a sweet rotational suplex through a table, the outside ladder spot, a superman punch off the top of the ladder through the table and a leaping superman punch with a chair to the face, how could the crowd not get behind either man for the effort they were putting in? 

The physicality of the match didn't just peak with Reigns sucker punching a bruise onto the Irishman's face as the bell rang, but when you count in the marks and blood on Sheamus' body and his desire to win despite the efforts an incredibly determined opponent, the punishment they took seemed worth it. In fact, they were into hurting each other so much, it took over 15 minutes for either man to start climbing the ladder, which allowed for a steady, slowed pace, with Reigns regularly only summoning the strength to do one move before collapsing. Sheamus sold his arm after that big outside ladder spot, with the commentators referring to how a ladder match a few years ago put him on the shelf for 6-months, amplifying just how much Sheamus was willing to put himself through for the title. A nice bit of storytelling there.

While this match did have a predictable ending, it had a lot to keep me on the edge of my seat. Some of the falls looked brutal and both men put on a hard-hitting performance, looking good in the process. While it took the crowd time to warm to it, they were rewarded with a match that was ALMOST perfectly paced and had just the right amount of time to tell its story. If only Reigns didn't use Ambrose' 'endurance through everything' ability, my suspension of disbelief would have been kept for longer. Overall, this match delivered much more than expected, even with some elements letting it down, it showed once again that Roman Reigns on a big-match stage can deliver. Now we just need to see how his attack on Triple H pans out for the long term.

FINAL THOUGHTS
This event was not seen by many, including myself to be one that would get us excited and give many good matches. However, once the curtain dropped, we were all excited. Roman Reigns did what many wanted him to do, and the matches did in most cases deliver. Overall, the bad-good PPV event trend continues onward into 2016! While TLC didn't rise like Hell In A Cell and Summerslam to dwarf the bad events that preceded them, it did give us exciting matches, and showed that even without the build-up, they had something prove. Thankfully, this event hasn't completely lost its lustre following last years unmitigated disaster of a show.

While the card structure was incredibly odd, being lopsided towards its latter stages and having too many build-up packages, the show felt like it meant something, going in and out of it. While there were two standout matches, the rest only just pulled their weight, with the Divas and IC title matches inevitably falling a little short and the matches with minuscule build did what they could despite feeling lacklustre at times. The multi-man tag match disappointed but it did its job, so overall it helps balance this show out more and more.


We come out of this show looking forward to what's to see what happens next, which is a great positive. WWE need to have consistent writing over the next 4 months to ensure this continues onward, so lets pray they can use this event as a launching pad for a return to form. It wasn't the out and out success I anticipated for an event that continued a 10-month long string of alternating quality shows, but it was worth the time that it gave. It revived an event's strong record, and brings us towards 2016 with smiles on our faces. Lets bring in Wrestlemania season with enthusiasm and hope all will continue to be better, starting at this show.


TABLES, LADDERS AND CHAIRS 2015 GETS A 5 OUT OF 10!

In relation to other 2015 events, it lines up as follows:

WRESTLEMANIA 31: 8.75/10
HELL IN A CELL: 6.75/10
MONEY IN THE BANK: 6.75/10
SUMMERSLAM: 6.5/10
PAYBACK: 6/10
TABLES, LADDERS AND CHAIRS: 5/10
ELIMINATION CHAMBER: 4.5/10
ROYAL RUMBLE: 4/10
NIGHT OF CHAMPIONS: 3.5/10
EXTREME RULES: 3.5/10
SURVIVOR SERIES: 3/10
BATTLEGROUND: 3/10
FAST LANE: 2.5/10

(WWE Network Specials and the NXT Takeover Events aren't taken into consideration).

THE FINAL, AGGREGATED AVERAGE RATING FOR WWE'S 2015 PPV OUTPUT IS 4.90, rounded out to a 5 out of 10.

After the Slammy Awards edition of RAW, come to this blog for the 5th Annual "Wrestling Rant Awards", where I look at the best, worst and all round interesting things that I think went down in 2015 in WWE (and in some cases) the wider wrestling world.

I've been Freddy Thomas, you've been people reading, this has been the TLC 2015 Review for The CC Network Blog, and I'll see you next time.