Tag: WWE Elimination Chamber

  • Randy Orton Comments On Dropping Cody Rhodes For Elimination Chamber Victory

    Randy Orton didn\’t hate RKOing Cody Rhodes.

    The Viper won the chaotic Men\’s Elimination Chamber match at the PPV tonight, last eliminating Cody Rhodes for the victory. This came after Drew McIntyre interfered in the bout and Orton was able to take advantage of the distraction.

    The 14-time world champion was interviewed right at the ringside after his victory. Commenting on the ending of the bout, Randy Orton suggested that taking his friend and former protege out was worth it for a WrestleMania match:

    \”In an heartbeat, I made that decision to drop Cody with an RKO. Now he\’s a longtime friend. I hate doing it but do I really hate doing it? No, I don\’t. I\’m going to WrestleMania. I\’m main eventing WrestleMania. I deserve to be in the main event of WrestleMania.\”

    The events of tonight were very similar to a few days ago when Drew inadvertently cost Sami Zayn his Elimination Chamber qualifying match. Cody, who took advantage of the situation then, had a heated exchange with Zayn later on, with Sami calling him the golden boy of WWE.

    While Randy has found his ticket to WrestleMania, his opponent could still change as Nick Aldis has announced a big WWE title match for this Friday\’s episode of SmackDown. You can check out more about it here.

  • Watch: Danhausen Makes WWE Debut From Elimination Chamber Mystery Crate

    Danhausen has come to WWE.

    The company had been running a mystery crate storyline for the past few weeks on both Raw and SmackDown, with the reveal set for the Elimination Chamber PPV.  The show tonight saw the two general managers, Nick Aldis and Adam Pearce, coming together on the stage to finally open the crate, and inside it was a wooden coffin.

    A number of dancers dressed in black and red capes popped out of the coffin when it opened, followed by none other than Danhausen himself.  The former AEW Star walked to the ringside with all the dancers, but he first went around it and stopped at the announcer\’s table.

    The newest WWE star handed Michael Cole a jar of teeth before finally entering the ring for a dance routine. The lights went out when the performance was complete, and Danhausen and his partners were all gone when it came back on.

    The 35-year-old only became a free agent on Saturday morning after being kept off AEW TV for over a year. It\’s unknown what the company is planning for him but it\’s very much possible that he will be kept a free agent instead of being assigned a brand for the foreseeable future.

  • WWE Elimination Chamber: 2002 Original Remains the Best

    Elimination Chamber takes center stage this coming weekend as the last PLE stop on the Road to WrestleMania is guaranteed to have a big impact on The Showcase of the Immortals. It\’s a fitting time to look back on the history of what has become a near-quarter-century institution on the WWE landscape.

    Thirty-six Chamber matches have occurred to date with two more set to join that catalog. For all the passage of time and different faces who\’ve made their way through this particular WWE battlefield, a surprising truth emerges. The original Elimination Chamber match is still the best of all time.

    The Roster For The First Elimination Chamber Match Was Perfect

    The Elimination Chamber has more often than not either seen a world champion put his or her title on the line or had WrestleMania implications with the winner getting a world title shot at the biggest show of the year. As such, the bout tends to be filled with big names.

    It\’s debatable whether the first Elimination Chamber had the most star-studded field of competitors of all time. It\’s undeniable, however, that the match represented a combination of big stars, well-respected talents, and performers who played very different yet complementary roles.

    Triple H and Shawn Michaels were the surest main eventers, not to mention that they had a world-class rivalry with one another underway. Add into the mix Kane as a big man base, crucial to a lot of the spots of a multi-man match like this. Then there was RVD, still an ahead-of-his-time athletic spectacle, in the hunt for his first world title. WWE was still putting the pieces together on Booker T, but two and a half years into his run with the company, he had become one of the top athletes on the roster. Rounding out the field? None other than Chris Jericho, quite arguably in his prime and on a short list of the best all-around wrestlers of the day.

    These talents were well-suited to establish a new gimmick match and, indeed, delivered at the highest level when they came together at Survivor Series 2002.

    The First Elimination Chamber Arrived At A Perfect Ending

    There are those moments in wrestling history that went on to shape an era, like Shawn Michaels winning his first world championship at WrestleMania 12 in a victory that cemented his place as a defining main eventer for WWE for two years to follow, not to mention his \”second act\” after four years away from the ring.

    By contrast, Michaels\’s fourth and final world title victory resulted in a reign that lasted less than a month. HBK would remain a top-level act for much of the following seven years, but this title win itself was less a watershed moment than a quintessential feel-good triumph for fans to relish for the victory itself.

    The first Elimination Chamber delivered that moment of satisfaction and vindication as top heel Triple H dropped the title to a beloved legend who was still fresh off returning to the ring just three months earlier.

    The moment\’s all the more remarkable in consideration that it came just shy of the forty-minute mark and with a pin on The Game, who\’d been badly hurt earlier in the match off an RVD frog splash gone wrong from the top of a Chamber entry pod. This element of unplanned near-catastrophe only adds to the story of a unique moment in wrestling when veteran hands worked together to preserve the magic moment planned despite nearly insurmountable obstacles.

    The Elimination Chamber Is A Tricky Match To Diversify And Improve Upon

    The original Elimination Chamber match was excellent. One reason why it remains the best version of this gimmick match, though, also relates to the match format itself.

    While bouts like the Royal Rumble have enough different variations on entries, stories to tell, and high spots possible to remain thoroughly entertaining spectacles time and again, the Chamber is simply more limited. The structure can\’t quite compare to Hell in a Cell or War Games. The six-man format struggles to keep up with the Rumble, War Games, or even traditional Survivor Series elimination tag matches. For whatever combination of reasons, Elimination Chambers rarely compete with multi-person Ladder Matches like Money in the Bank.

    Yes, there have been other good and arguably even great Elimination Chambers. Ultimately, though, it\’s one of WWE\’s less inspired annual spectacles. Most years, the match tends to be more engaging for its WrestleMania implications than the action inside the specialty cage itself.

    Will WWE ever pull off an Elimination Chamber match that tops the original outing? Only time will tell. For now, though, a combination of the right talents, the right storytelling, and precisely the right booking for the debut bout seem to have realized the gimmick\’s fullest potential.

  • Oba Femi Dismisses Doubters: \”Is the Chamber Ready for Me?\”

    Former NXT Champion Oba Femi recently flipped the script on doubters questioning his readiness for WWE\’s biggest stages. During the No-Contest Wrestling Podcast, \’The Ruler\’ said the real question is whether the Elimination Chamber or any opponent is ready for him.

    \”A lot of people\’s question is, is Oba ready for the next big thing, the next big stage? Is he ready for the chamber? But the real question is, is the chamber ready for Oba Femi? Because a lot of times it\’s not just that we\’re looking for a spot for Oba, where to plug him in. The truth is like not everybody wants to be plugged in, not everybody [wants to face him] because the boys know what that entails. So wherever I can fit, I will dominate. I will execute and it will be great.\”

    Oba Femi\’s Dominant Main Roster Debut

    Femi addressed his destructive Raw debut against The War Raiders and highlighted that his dominance was not a knock on the veteran tag team. He said:

    \”I think the main roster crowd has not, the audience has not fully understood the concept that it\’s Oba. Like they don\’t get, I don\’t think they understand yet. They will, they\’ll catch on. They\’re starting to. Oba destroying the War Raiders is not a knock on the War Raiders. That\’s just how good Oba Femi is. Come on now. And the sooner they realize that, the sooner they understand that, the easier things will be for them.\”

    Femi put the main roster on notice with his performance on the post-Royal Rumble edition of Raw when he demolished Erik and Ivar, continuing his run as WWE\’s hottest free agent. With momentum building and confidence sky-high, Oba Femi would be aiming to make a mark at the Elimination Chamber.