Jimmy Uso vs Luke Harper
Really fun little match. Starts off really nicely, as both
guys are big guys who can move at quite a pace, and both lay in some nice
shots. Loved the Uso crossbody with Harper draped over the ropes, and I loved
how Harper took control of the match by flinging Jimmy face first into the
middle ropes. Uso gets a few hope spots, but Harper is great at cutting them
off, be it stopping a corner charge with a big boot to the face or stopping an
Uso suicide dive with a big forearm to the face. The end is a bit abrupt, as
Uso nails a superkick and gets a quick roll up, but I like that it took a
sudden death shot to stun Harper just long enough to pick up the win.
Rusev vs Kofi Kingston
Really interesting to remember how strongly Rusev was pushed
in the early days. Right at the start Kingston tries to use his speed advantage
to slide through Rusev’s legs, but gets caught and takes a huge clothesline to
the back of the head. Rusev hits some great looking driving knees with Kingston
in the ropes and though Kofi gets a brief fightback, Rusev hits a great looking
sudden superkick and the Accolade finishes. Fun squash.
Seth Rollins vs Dolph Ziggler
So yeah, without including Enzo, who wasn’t on the main
roster at the time, this is basically my nightmare WWE match. Two guys who
haven’t the foggiest idea on how to put a match together or how to wrestle
appropriately for their character. Therefore, I’m pleasantly surprised to say
this wasn’t too dreadful. It actually contains a really good Seth Rollins
performance for 2/3 of it – here, he grounds Ziggler, wearing out his back with
repeated suplexes and ramming him into the turnbuckles with real force. I mean,
Ziggler doesn’t bother to sell this damage long term, but I appreciated the
effort from Seth. Plus, he acts like a total condescending prick throughout,
dismissively kicking Ziggler in the head and talking shit to him. He gets drawn
into a “you hit your move, I hit mine” ending, but he was really good here. On the
other hand, Ziggler was wretched. Moves on Rollins like a hiptoss or a backdrop
seem to happen in spite of Ziggler here, who barely connects with his opponent.
His grounded punches are woeful and he hits maybe the worst fameasser of his
career. Just terrible stuff. The end sees Ziggler sell a turnbuckle bomb by
crawling conveniently into the middle of the ring to eat a curb stomp for the Rollins
win.
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