ROMAN REIGNS SURGES TO NO. 1 AFTER UNIVERSAL TITLE WIN,
SHIELD REUNION
Between vanquishing longtime foe Brock Lesnar and winning
the Universal championship, to reuniting The Shield to counter Braun Strowman,
Roman Reigns, center, is rolling on all cylinders coming out of
SummerSlam.
After spending the better part of the past three years on
the outside looking in, Roman Reigns finally owns one of WWE's two major men's
championships. There were stops and starts along the way, detours like Seth
Rollins' Money in the Bank cash-in at WrestleMania 31 and the controversial
ending to the Universal championship match against Brock Lesnar at
April's Greatest Royal Rumble.
Not only has Reigns assumed the throne on Monday Night Raw,
but WWE also has pushed all of its chips into the middle with a bold move to
counter Braun Strowman's march toward the championship -- reuniting The Shield.
Though the first attempt at bringing one of the WWE's hottest acts of the past
decade back together was marred by injury and bad timing, bringing Reigns, Seth
Rollins and Dean Ambrose back together as a unified force opposite Strowman
feels strangely balanced.
What makes this such a bold move is that it risks sapping
the value and momentum from Rollins and Ambrose, two of the hottest characters
on Monday Night Raw in their own right, in order to keep fans off of Reigns'
back. There's plenty of wiggle room to take this conflict in a hundred
different directions over the course of the next few months, especially with the
wild card of Constable Baron Corbin as
the new de facto authority figure on Raw, but the potential of taking the
Intercontinental championship out of play or stunting Ambrose's potential just
after his return still lingers.
Regardless of which direction this story is heading, in two
nights of action -- two matches and one big moment -- Reigns stepped up and
proved how strong a commodity he is to the WWE. Seemingly 100 percent of the
crowd was reacting to what Reigns was doing, and even if it was a 70-30 split
between negative and positive (though those numbers might be skewed by which
people were doing the cheering and booing), Reigns is in a position the WWE has
wanted him in for a long time.
It's easy to slip into hyperbole, but with four of Raw's
biggest performers converging at such a critical time in their respective
careers, this conflict feels like a do-or-die moment for Reigns and a key time
for Strowman, Ambrose and Rollins. If Reigns plays up to more of a dark
persona, and drifts into heelish territory with moments like a coordinated
3-on-1 attack, that combined with his reunion with Ambrose and Rollins could
well shift audience reaction and give Reigns a desperately needed depth of
character.
Up against The Shield, Strowman finally has an opposing
force that seems to have him at a disadvantage because of the numbers game. If
he hopes to carry a singles title at some point in the near future, which
hasn't happened at any point thus far, giving Strowman a situation he struggles
with should be a way to learn more about him than his undying desire to destroy
everything in his path.
Should this rivalry go sideways, however, there are very
real risks in play. Outside of Finn Balor, who could easily get involved
directly or tangentially, the "face" personnel on the men's side is
paper thin at this moment. If Ambrose and/or Rollins get burned along the way,
they could struggle to recapture what they have right now.
None of The Shield's trio of Reigns, Ambrose and Rollins
said a word on Monday night, but there's little doubt that they'll be the
central figures on Raw for the foreseeable future. The uncertainty is gone, as
is Lesnar, and Reigns finally can show what he's capable of when given the ...
reins to lead the show as Universal champion. Where things go from here is
anyone's guess, but if this ultimately leads to another split and an epic
Shield triple threat, it could change the course of each of their careers. --
Tim Fiorvanti
Rankings are based
upon the perceived value of a superstar to the on-screen product of WWE.
1
|
ROMAN
REIGNS (4)
|
+8
|
You love him or you hate him -- let's face it; there's no
gray area left. Reigns deserves the Universal championship, and he deserves it
for a long run -- maybe even through WrestleMania. If anything, the decibel
level over the two nights he was in Brooklyn reminded us Reigns is the backbone
of the WWE. Now he has the hardware to prove it.
2
|
AJ STYLES (1)
|
-1
|
The feud against Samoa Joe is a great blend of personal
psychology and in-ring brilliance by two of the best in the business. Styles
might not have the main event potential that Roman Reigns or Ronda Rousey bring
to the table, but no one outside of maybe Seth Rollins or Daniel Bryan is more
capable of having four- or five-star matches on a regular basis.
3
|
BRAUN
STROWMAN (1)
|
-1
|
Strowman added another dimension to Brock Lesnar-Roman
Reigns that kept an antagonistic crowd from overwhelming the SummerSlam main
event. Strowman, the next night, seemed to be the catalyst for the seeds of a
Roman Reigns heel turn, as his mere presence made Reigns resort to a 3-on-1
attack from a reunited Shield. Now his delay in becoming champion has become
incredibly compelling, as he finds himself in an unusual role as the underdog.
Those are all key pieces of evidence that prove why Strowman is the most
valuable asset to WWE's flagship show right now.
4
|
RONDA
ROUSEY
|
+1
|
It's incredibly hard to prove yourself in this industry in
just a few months -- but Rousey has done it. It's clear the company is behind
her, the locker room is ready to support her, and in terms of entertainment,
there's no one else I'd rather see at the moment. Ronda's future looks bright;
she'll be the face of the WWE's upcoming Evolution pay-per-view -- and quite
possibly WrestleMania 35 in 2019.
5
|
SETH
ROLLINS
|
-2
|
The newly crowned two-time Intercontinental champion was
part of the best match on the SummerSlam card, along with Dolph Ziggler. What
else is new? Rollins has been the standout in-ring performer of the year in the
WWE. His matches are consistently excellent, and while he holds
Intercontinental gold right now, it shouldn't be too long before we see Rollins
creep into the Universal championship picture, whether his Shield compatriot
Reigns has the title or not.
6
|
THE MIZ
|
+1
|
It's really tough to like The Miz, but that's the point. His
ability to get under everyone's skin with ease brings to mind Rowdy Roddy
Piper's skill at irritating audiences and getting the exact reaction he was
looking for in a way that looks easy.
7
|
THE NEW DAY
|
NR
|
This trio is simply the best act in WWE now, in singles, tag
team or whatever other kind of action they find themselves in. It doesn't
matter which New Day member it is, either -- each shines with power,
athleticism, in-ring acumen and an innate ability to entertain. Big E, Kofi
Kingston and Xavier Woods make everyone around them better. Let's not take
their SmackDown titles away from them anytime soon.
8
|
BECKY LYNCH
|
NR
|
Now, more than any other time in the history of the WWE, it
appears as though the creative forces behind Raw and SmackDown are determined
to make their vision for the shows a continued reality, live crowd reactions be
damned. But you only had to be inside the Barclays Center on Sunday night (or
watching at home) to hear Lynch get one of the (if not the) loudest positive
reactions of the night when she attacked Charlotte Flair after the latter won
the SmackDown women's championship at the former's expense. For too long, Lynch
has been building toward a moment that's never come; after becoming the first
SmackDown women's champion, Lynch hasn't had much in the way of something
substantial to sink her teeth into. Whether the WWE is dead set on keeping her character
evil, or can work toward a "Stone Cold" Steve Austin-esque approach
that showcases Lynch's versatility and talents to their fullest, its clear WWE
has a white-hot star that they should be taking full advantage of on
SmackDown.
9
|
DANIEL
BRYAN
|
-1
|
Bryan didn't get his comeuppance on The Miz at SummerSlam,
and that's OK. It wasn't time for that story to end with a simple 1-2-3 victory
for Bryan, getting his hand raised and moving on. Bryan-Miz is possibly the
storyline of the decade in WWE, and hopefully will carry on until the stakes at
their highest.
10
|
SAMOA JOE
|
NR
|
Samoa Joe has shined as the villainous adversary of WWE
champion AJ Styles. He has found a way to strike an emotional chord and combine
that with a fierce in-ring style. Joe seems destined for a WWE championship
run. Whether that happens during his current rivalry with Styles remains to be
seen, but Joe has proved that he is championship material in every ring he has
wrestled in.
DROPPED FROM RANKINGS: Dolph Ziggler, Bobby Lashley, Drew McIntyre
HONORABLE MENTION: Charlotte
Flair, Dean Ambrose,
Ziggler, McIntyre, Tommaso Ciampa, Johnny Gargano
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