Time for one of the better recent Royal Rumble shows....
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| Wells Fargo Center - 1.28.18 |
2018 kicked off with a helluva good PPV, as WWE continued its rediscovery of how to put on a fun Royal Rumble. TWO in fact. For a while there the Rumble had become one of my least favorite events on their calendar, but by 2018 it had fully returned to form, with one of the best examples of the gimmick, plus an historic first women's edition. There was nary a bad match on the main card, both Rumbles delivered, there were memorable moments abound, lots of fun surprise entrants, a clear direction for WrestleMania, and a monumental debut to end the show. Hard to ask much more of a Rumble PPV.
First up, oddly, was the WWE Title match. AJ Styles defended against Kevin Owens and Sami Zayn, in a crisply worked 16-minute match. Nothing spectacular here, but the three of them worked well together and AJ even got to bust out his moonsault-reverse DDT combo (the first WWE instance of this move I remember seeing). Styles retained after countering an Owens pop-up powerbomb into a roll-up, but Owens and Zayn protested since Owens technically hadn't tagged into the match. Solid opener.
Next was the Smackdown Tag Title match (SD kinda got shafted with this lineup; both of their bouts went on first), as The Usos defended against Chad Gable & Shelton Benjamin. Energetic, fast-paced and well-booked, with a shocking two straight falls for Jimmy and Jey, this was a fine undercard match. I liked that the first fall was long and the second fall was surprisingly short - it was realistic and defied the typical structure for a 2/3 Falls match.
The men's Royal Rumble was third out of six, which was pretty baffling until the end of the show when it was made clear why. I daresay this was the best Rumble match since 2004. The booking of this match was predictable in a good way; everyone who should've gotten to shine did. The final five ended up being the five most plausible winners. Finn Balor entered at number 2 and made the final four, having lasted 57+ minutes. And of course Shinsuke Nakamura got his WWE career-defining moment by outlasting both John Cena and Roman Reigns to win the whole thing (after 44 minutes of in-ring time). This is how you book a Royal Rumble match in 2018. Other notes: The returning Rey Mysterio looked better than he had in ten years, Andrade Almas and Adam Cole both had good showings and it was great to see the NXT guests not geeked out on the main roster for a change (Almas's main roster career is another matter unfortunately). Anyway, this was a fantastic Rumble match that ranks up there with the 1992 and 2004 editions. WWE's follow-up on Nak's big moment of course sucked, as he failed to dethrone AJ Styles for the title at four consecutive shows, two of those matches going to a draw. But for one night it looked like Nak was poised to break the glass ceiling.

Participants: Rusev, Finn Balor, Rhyno, Baron Corbin, Heath Slater, Elias, Andrade Almas, Bray Wyatt, Big E, Sami Zayn, Sheamus, Xavier Woods, Apollo Crews, Shinsuke Nakamura, Cesaro, Kofi Kingston, Jinder Mahal, Seth Rollins, Matt Hardy, John Cena, The Hurricane, Aiden English, Adam Cole, Randy Orton, Titus O'Neil, The Miz, Rey Mysterio, Roman Reigns, Goldust, Dolph Ziggler
Final Four: Shinsuke Nakamura, Roman Reigns, John Cena, Finn Balor
Long Man: Finn Balor (57:30)
The match given the unenviable post-Rumble spot was Seth Rollins and Jason Jordan vs. The Bar. This was easily the weakest match on the show and since Jason Jordan was injured and still hasn't returned, the whole angle was pointless, but this was inoffensive. And The Bar regained the straps as they should have. So no complaints there.