BROCK LESNAR RETURNS, THEN TURNS ON PAUL HEYMAN
For the better part of three hours on Monday night, we got a
small glimpse into a world in which Roman Reigns was
as popular with live crowds as WWE wished he could be.
Though there often don't seem to be shows crafted to cater
towards certain cities or crowds, save for an occasional sports reference or
themed match, Monday Night Raw couldn't have picked a better city for a crucial
moment on the way to SummerSlam,
given their reactions.
Although the overwhelming likelihood is that we are a few
weeks away from another major WWE show culminating in a main event that will
get an overwhelmingly negative reaction at the Barclays Center -- it won't be
for a lack of trying or effort from the Raw creative team.
Monday's was a show that went to great lengths to tie as
many different segments and elements together to tell one cohesive story as
possible -- something that's been a struggle of late for Raw. It was an easier
task than most weeks with Universal champion Brock
Lesnar's first WWE appearance since late April to build around,
but WWE also chose to tease playing a trump card they've had in their pocket
since the moment Lesnar stepped back into the world of WWE.
Since Lesnar walked back into the company in 2012, and all
the way back to 2002, really, Paul Heyman
has played one crucial role or another in Lesnar's WWE career.
For the most part, Heyman has been Lesnar's advocate pledging his undying
loyalty, hyping up matches and doing most of the talking so Brock doesn't have
to. To this point in Lesnar's second WWE run, though, we got similar builds to
almost every Lesnar match -- promos from Heyman, the occasional few words from
Lesnar and the tease or realization of some out-of-the-ring confrontation. Have
the match, rinse and repeat.
Monday night was different, though. We got to see Lesnar in
a series of backstage segments designed to turn as many fans against him as
possible. Even as he was compelled to show up at a WWE show for the first time
in three months, Lesnar sat backstage turning through the pages of a couple of
different outdoorsman-based magazines. But rather than Heyman, Reigns or
general manager Kurt Angle telling
us that Lesnar is a selfish person who doesn't care about anyone or anything,
we saw it with our own eyes.
When Heyman tried to show Lesnar what Reigns had done,
Lesnar grabbed Heyman's cell phone and threw it against a brick wall, breaking
it -- as offensive a thing you could likely do to a guy whose life has been
cell phone-based since the early 1990s.
Through Lesnar's apathy, we got key moments for at least
three other characters. Heyman was tasked by Angle to get Lesnar into the ring
with the threat of termination, which drove a series of increasingly desperate
pleas from Heyman that fell mostly on deaf ears. Reigns got to cut an
impassioned promo and even drop his favorite cuss word that starts with a
"b." Angle was forced to scramble the threat and then, upon receiving
pressure from Stephanie
McMahon, remove Reigns from the building and the equation.
All of those actions had ripple effects through the rest of
the show. Kevin Owens,
who was paranoid that Angle was setting Lesnar up for a Braun
Strowman Money in the Bank cash-in, pleaded with Baron Corbin to
do something, only for Corbin to step out of the way and claim it wasn't his
problem. It was an active night for Corbin is well, who beat Finn Balor clean
as a whistle early in the show, got further under Angle's skin and then bore
the brunt of Reigns' frustrations at getting escorted out by eating a solid
strike to the face.
It all led up to a will he/won't he, with Heyman pleading to
keep his job at any and all costs, groveling at Angle's feet and begging for a
punishment to be laid upon Lesnar rather than himself. Like most opportunities
that Heyman gets to flex his creative chops, he sold it in such a way that it
wasn't quite clear if he was playing mind games with Angle and everyone else,
or if he was genuinely an advocate who had lost his last shred of control over
Lesnar.
Of course, Lesnar finally came out, hit Angle with an F-5
and then, just as Heyman seemed to be returning towards his smug, all-knowing
self, Lesnar grabbed Heyman's face and shoved him towards Angle as evidence of
what he'd just done. Heyman has been Lesnar's guardian angel through thick and
thin during this run, and the tease of tensions opens up a few different
possibilities.
It could be yet another red herring, with Lesnar once again
defying the odds to remain champion. Heyman could step away and Reigns could
win, or Heyman could take up a new client like Reigns or Strowman as he becomes
the direct instrument of Heyman's disguise.
What WWE undeniably accomplished on Monday was what they
have inexplicably been waiting for years to do -- push all-in on Reigns without
a safety net to back out on, and leave Lesnar vulnerable enough to make it
happen. A solid crowd cheered for Reigns at the beginning and end of the show.
Regardless of how fans react to what happens at SummerSlam, a title change
would finally bring an end to the uncertainty and stop-and-start booking that
hasn't done Reigns or Lesnar any favors.
Then again, with Strowman and the Money in the Bank
briefcase lingering, we may be on a path towards more Reigns wait-and-see as a
challenger rather than a champion. Only time will tell.
HITS AND MISSES
- Ronda Rousey officially
returned from her 30-day "suspension" during which she made multiple
appearances, but it wasn't good news for Natalya,
whom Rousey was cornering in a match against Alicia Fox.
Fox and Alexa Bliss
conspired to get Fox a win, and even though Rousey landed her finisher
post-match, a 2-on-1 attack left Rousey vulnerable. It also set up her first
ever Monday Night Raw match for next Monday, which will appropriately put her
up against Fox.
- Speaking of Strowman and the briefcase, we ended up on
shaky ground as to why he wouldn't come out to confront Lesnar and cash in on
his first opportunity to use his Money in the Bank contract. Strowman
faced Jinder Mahal,
and early on in the match Owens appeared, as he tried to steal the briefcase to
prevent Strowman from being able to cash in his title opportunity later in the
night. While not holding the physical briefcase would've been an easy excuse
for a no-show later on, they bailed out on the actual theft as Strowman simply
got himself counted out in his pursuit of Owens.
- Drew McIntyre and Seth Rollins
predictably had the match of the night, with everything from multiple parts of
the ring apron's steel being in play, to a deadlift powerbomb, to a catch of a
perpendicular Rollins that fed into a deadlift vertical suplex. McIntyre even
threw in a top rope version of a move similar to Sheamus' white noise, but it
all fell apart after Rollins successfully landed a stomp on McIntyre's
head. Dolph Ziggler rolled
in and took the DQ, and the 2-on-1 attack carried backstage.
- The B-Team picked
up a new set of challengers on Monday, as Revival challenged and then
defeated Matt Hardy and Bray Wyatt. Could this be the first signs of real life
in the Raw tag team division?
- Sasha Banks and Bayley were
decked out in matching gear as they took on Liv Morgan and Sarah Logan of
the Riott Squad. Banks and Bayley won with a backstabber/Bayley-to-Belly
combination on Morgan. And the beat goes on.
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