WrestleMania Recap, Part 1: NXT, Peacock TV, EST

This is Part 1 of our WrestleMania recap series, in which wrestling is taken over, rained out, and changed forever.

Charlie Davis: Guysā€¦ please. There is so much wrestling. Help. 

Forrest Hollingsworth: Sorry, canā€™t help, I have never felt more alive.

Vishal Gullapalli: This is my time to shine! Give me the wrestling! I need it!

Mikey Zee: ADRENALINE! IN MY SOUL! SOMETHING SOMETHING–shit, wrong promotion. But I do have a lot to say about music-related wrestling.

Robert Secundus: [points at the “Mandated Cody Distance” sign vigorously]

MZ: Oh, right. Sorry.

Takeover Night 1

CD: I had a lot going on on Wednesday, so I cannot say that I got to the first night of Takeover.

VG: I, on the other hand, watched Takeover Night 1 and it was really great! My predictions were all off but I had a very good time. Pete Dunne and KUSHIDA had a very nice technical match that Iā€™m still puzzling over the finish of. Colossal Bronson Reed won the Gauntlet Eliminator in a match that made him look great – I love really big guys, and Bronsonā€™s a really big guy. The tag team triple threat match was something I expected to be a bit of a cooldown but it was a real banger – happy for MSK! My personal favorite match of the night involved Ciampa doing the most damage to WALTER that any of us have seen, but still not being able to get the job done. WALTERā€™s one of the best wrestlers in the world, and brings such legitimacy to his style that I feel like has been missing from a lot of modern wrestling. And of course, in the main event, Big Mami Cool Raquel Gonzalez beat the best womenā€™s wrestler on the planet to become the new NXT Womenā€™s Champion. Iā€™mā€¦ worried about Io getting called up to the main roster, because sheā€™s been so great at NXT, but Iā€™m glad Raquelā€™s getting that shine.

CD: Iā€™m not gonna lie, Vishal. I am a little sad I didnā€™t get to see Walter v Ciampa, but I was having an emotional collapse on the other channel so I am unsure I could have handled it. 

FH: I canā€™t overstate how much I adore Io, she was my wrestler of the year last year (trash can off the WarGames cage!) and I have always loved the rumor that she played chicken with NXT to get her much deserved title reign. That being said, she was running out of opponents and angles quickly, and while Iā€™m a little sad Dakota probably wonā€™t be getting the shine I want for her anymore, Raquel is big and tall and cool and I think itā€™s a genuinely surprising and good choice. 

WALTER is also big! Stats are your thing Vishal, but I believe heā€™s the first champion to hold a WWE title continuously for over two years since Hulk Hogan which I think speaks both to NXT UKā€™s unfortunate stagnation, and to how singularly impressive of a wrestler he is. Man what I would give to see WALTER chop Hogan today…

Takeover Night 2 

CD: I DID tune in for Takeover Night 2 at least! This was the night that I was jazzed for because it actually had the match whoā€™s story I have been the most invested in in NXT. Ever since Takeover Vengeance Day when Adam Cole melted down because Kyle Oā€™Reily showed that he might look up to Finn Balor just a littleā€¦ they have been at each otherā€™s throats. An Unsanctioned match was booked between them and I have been salivating at the idea of an unhinged Adam Cole. Sadly though, within the confines of WWE, they could only take it so far. 

Itā€™s actually making me more unhappy the longer and longer I think about it. WWE has a habit of wanting to have its cake and eat it too with wrestlers’ history. They want to use it to leverage emotion, but they never want to weave it into the story in a meaningful way. 

https://twitter.com/WWENXT/status/1380348014640967683

FH: TakeOverā€™s second night was a celebration of NXTā€™s ability to set up the best ideas, and a condemnation of its inability to execute on them for me:

  • I love Shotzi Blackheart, and I want to take a moment to celebrate her being the first Filipino woman to hold a title at WWE, but the womenā€™s tag match was lackluster, lacking any sense of pathos or narrative. 
  • Bronson Reed and Johnny Garganoā€™s match was compelling, but as new talent like Reed impresses, it becomes apparent that Gargano would now better serve NXT without a title. 
  • Karrion Kross and Finn Balorā€™s match was the best of the night, a stunning David vs. Goliath story as Balor effortlessly and athletically baited Kross into making mistake after mistake in the first half before Karrionā€™s bulk and endurance carried him into a devastating, decisive finish — the argument can be made that Balor is the best wrestler in the world simply because of how good he makes others look. Itā€™s immediately undercut by knowing that Karrion, and many like him there, are devout Qanon supporters, COVID deniers, and anti-vaxxers that NXTā€™s production and management apparatus canā€™t get a handle on appropriately, even for the auspiciousness of a new champion reign.
  • Kyle and Adamā€™s match brought two of the most aggressive, deserving, determined men in the company into the ring and refused to let them use any of the narrative connective tissue to tell the story the match was predicated on. Kyle and Adam can go at it, they can bring all the tools — chains, wrenches, more —  they can slam through referees and television monitors, through the very construction of the arena, but without anything that tells the story of Adam stealing Kyleā€™s soul without remorse, without the story of the Undisputed Era turning to dust in their hands (and I mean literally, not weirdly spray painted, logo bearing chairs) of Roddy and Bobby and Adam and Kyle together, it quite honestly means nothing to me. A technically good match that nonetheless felt like two men who know better going through the motions.

VG: I donā€™t think I can say anything about the matches Forrest talked about better than they did. They did skip the opener for moral reasons that I respect, but having watched it I did have some takeaways.

  • Jordan Devlin and Will Ospreay feel like the same wrestler to me, and itā€™s not just because theyā€™re both from the British Isles and mistreat women. Everything they do in the ring feels over-choreographed. There was a spot in Io vs Raquel where Raquel picked Io up for a powerbomb and Io quickly clapped Raquelā€™s head with her feet to prevent it. It was dynamic and memorable, and all the things that I want from quick, agile wrestlers. Devlin instead starts rolling for moves before heā€™s supposed to take them, and expects his opponents to do the same. Wrestling is more like ballet than sports, and I know that, but a Devlin or an Ospreay make the artifice visible in a way that tangibly takes away from the end product for me. 
  • Itā€™s also darkly funny that WWE (or NXT in this case) made a better decision than New Japan by having Escobar take the title. Ioā€™s been the MVP of NXT for the whole pandemic era, but Escobar has low key been right behind her this whole time. Heā€™s been an incredible heel champion, made Legado Del Fantasma look like stars even when they lose out every week, and is bar none the most attractive unmasked luchador to have graced WWE – including Andrade! His charisma is always on full display and Iā€™m very happy to see him get the shine he deserves, unblemished by any Irish manā€™s claims of being the ā€œrealā€ champion.
  • The womenā€™s tag match was disappointing and lackluster. Shotzi and Ember should be a great team – Shotzi makes up for Emberā€™s lack of charisma and Ember makes up for Shotziā€™s lack of refinement in-ring. But instead it feels like theyā€™re taking each otherā€™s worst qualities – Shotzi feels like she has to carry the weight of two wrestlers with only one wrestlerā€™s personality, and Emberā€™s gotten sloppier. I donā€™t know, maybe this match was just a dud, but Iā€™m hoping the womenā€™s tag championship gets some amount of prestige soon. 
  • Johnny and Bronson Reed was fantastic, but my takeaway was different from Forrestā€™s – I think Johnny holding the North American Title for as long as he has is deliberate and an attempt to pull the record for longest reign away from someone who WWE would love to not acknowledge. But more importantly, itā€™s letting him showcase different styles to his wrestling. In his big feuds with Ciampa or Adam Cole, it was always his smaller man style up against smaller men, so they got to just do everything they normally do. Against big men like Damian Priest or Bronson Reed, Johnny has to adjust significantly, and it leads to matches that genuinely feel new, something Iā€™m always in favor of. I expected Reed to win because I worried heā€™d look weak otherwise, but honestly? I think Johnny did a great job selling him as someone who is deserving of the championship and could easily get it another day.
  • Iā€™m unhappy with the result of Balor vs Kross, but it cemented that Balor is the best wrestler in the world today. Kross has mostly looked like crap since he debuted on NXT, because theyā€™ve tried so hard to book him as a monster that his squashes just feel pointless and not fun to watch. But this match was a masterclass in how to make a monster challenger take on the most dominant champion in NXT history. Balor at no point looked weak, at no point looked like he couldnā€™t win – he just pushed Kross one step too far and paid the price for it. I hope Finn stays on this tear heā€™s had since he came back to NXT – heā€™s hit the best part of his career and I hope it lasts.
  • The further I get from the real main event, the more disappointed I am with it. Kyle Oā€™Reilly and Adam Cole are both very able to tell stories in the ring, and both able to bring emotion and fire to everything they do. But they didnā€™t here, and I donā€™t know why. The match felt like it was just them going from spot to spot, weapon to weapon, but not like anything was happening between these spots. Are either of them different men coming out of that match? Because I donā€™t think so.

CD: Vishal said something very important to me last week concerning my disappointment with Adam v Kyle. The Elite turned heel finally, somehow 2 years into the promotion, accepting their destiny. Adam Cole is their Portrait of Dorian Grey. One cannot flourish without one suffering. I wanna know why I cannot have ALL the nice things. Seems unfair. 

FH: Kross seems like the champion that needs the win to legitimize his main roster debut, Santos seems like the one to become their next fighting, long reigning champion in the model of Gargano, Ciampa or Cole.

FH: That sums us up for TakeOver! Letā€™s have the new power group of Shotzi Blackheart, Scarlett Bordeaux, and Harley Cameron play us into the rest of the week with their new single Indestructible (Good for them! Itā€™s not good!)

Smackdown

CD: Because I didnā€™t know exactly what I was getting into with this one, I didnā€™t watch Smackdown. Welp.


FH:  A very, very solid go home show (or pre-pre-show?) Hereā€™s some quick takeaways: 

  • Jey Usoā€™s Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal was his first win in five months.
  • The Tag Team fatal fourway was the Dirty Dawgā€™s first defense of the titles since they won them three months ago.
  • Not enough talk about how the Edge-Roman-Bryan match is a hot dad triple threat.
  • WWE selling Undertaker NFTs after the bubble has burst is the most hilariously, sadly on point thing they could possibly do.
  • Sasha and Biancaā€™s Night One main event will be the first ever WWE main event with two Black wrestlers, and if Iā€™m not mistaken, the first ever main event for two black women from a major wrestling promotion. I have no doubt they will deliver.
https://twitter.com/EdgeRatedR/status/1380977349701873665

MZ: I watched this with a friend in the background as I took some much-needed time to deal with personal administrative stuff after a long week. It was nice to have wrestling that was fun, not super high-stakes, and still emotional. It let me chat with a friend, while still being able to follow the action. AEW, on the other hand, tends to be very moment-to-moment to the point where if I tear my eyes away from the screen for just a second I miss something. Two very different tastes, obviously, but I think itā€™s worth pointing out that difference and the appeal of Smackdown. Itā€™s my ā€œLo-Fi Beats to Wrestle To,ā€ if you will.

I was glad for Jey Uso to get the win, even if the prestige of the Andre the Giant trophy is a little dubious to me given the slate of previous winners. Roman actually cut a promo himself, rather than Paul Heyman speaking for him, which is the first time Iā€™d seen him do that in a while. I almost have to wonder if theyā€™re setting up some kind of stable for him? Only time will tell, I suppose.

WM Night 1

Pre-Show

CD: Please. Please. There was a weather delay for night one of WrestleMania which made the kick off for the first fan filled wrestling event for WWE in a year…very strange. Ponchos, dripping wet structures, a very uneasy looking Titus Oā€™Neil. Goodness. 

FH: The sheer outpouring (heh) of memes about this mess during that first half hour made the anticipation all the more electric for me. Vince was clearly in the back just naming talent he knows can talk — a genuine word of appreciation for Kevin Owens who cuts 99% truthful promos on his best friend Sami Zayn by just replacing the word ā€œloveā€ with ā€œhateā€ — and the random cuts to Michael Cole and Samoa Joe looking miserable in ponchos created this kind of cathartic, chaotic atmosphere that made the return of fans to WrestleMania feel well…auspicious with few reservations.

RS: If we were going to delay, maybe we could have just skipped over the segments involving noted racist and accessory-to-online-journalismā€™s-destruction Hulk Hogan to catch up? MAYBE? Maybe we could stop trying to appeal to the 80s nostalgia of ancient, ancient men?

FH: Youā€™ll be happy to find the crowd booed him into next week, Rob:

WWE Championship: Bobby Lashley vs. Drew McIntyre

CD: I love Drew. I think Bobby is pretty good sometimes! But…something about this did not click for me. I have come to a realization over the last few months that I just…donā€™t like slow, plodding and methodical wrestling. It just doesn’t get it done for me. Plus, the opener is such a big deal. You have to get the crowd energized. This did not do that. Plus, the ending? Ending on Bobby putting Drew to sleep for the finish? Not big in the Charlie demographic.

FH: I was disappointed by this one at the moment for similar reasons, and as an opener to WWEā€™s return to fan attending shows, but the more distance I get from it the more I like it. Drew was the stalwart pandemic era champion, I celebrate him and I appreciate him more than words can say, but that also means we saw…a lot of him. That also means, as WWE might be keenly aware, that itā€™s hard to look at him right now and not see the Performance Center, the Thunderdome, the masks and the artifice. We need time away from him to allow him to exist outside of that. Choking, not tapping protects him. It gives the almighty mountain before him to climb again. Knowing how important it is to both MVP and Bobby Lashley to have a Black champion hold this specific title for a little longer also helps.

VG: I missed the opening 3 matches for Mania but I did go back and watch this one and Rollins v Cesaro, because I was excited for both going in. I liked this match a lot. Forrest really hit the nail on the head with their thoughts as time went on – Bobby Lashleyā€™s presence as champion means a lot, and it means even more when heā€™s able to legitimately and genuinely defend his title at the biggest show of the year. He didnā€™t cheat to win, he didnā€™t get a lucky break – the only thing that could be construed that way was MVP pulling him out of the way of the Claymore, but it felt clean. Drew will come back for sure, but Bobby deserves his moment in the sun. Er, or rain, I guess.

Womenā€™s Tag Team Turmoil 

CD: I am unsure I even have words for this. The Riott Squad is the only real tag team in here since WWE simply cannot understand the appeal of a real team. Yay for ladies wrestling, but not like this. 

RS: Iā€™m glad for a lot of these women getting at least a Wrestlemania moment; Naomi always deserves a Wrestlemania spot. Billie Kay has been putting so much work into making the most out of the nonsense situation she was placed in when the WWE broke up, for no reason, one of the best tag teams in the business; Mandy and Dana have, I think, actually become an interesting team, and started to find some creative success after the former experienced a nightmare and after the later finally begun to be recognized after years of being ignored; and then yeah, the Riott Squad are the one real tag team left in the womenā€™s division, and theyā€™re a wonderful team, and theyā€™re fantastic wrestlers. I watched the match and, again, I was glad that they got a moment, because they deserve it, but itā€™s hard not to be bitter because they deserve so much more. It ended with, for me, the least interesting choice for winner, and so Iā€™m really not looking forward to Night 2ā€™s Tag Champ match.

FH: This was disappointing not because these women arenā€™t talented, but because WWE refuses to give them the tools or structure with which to showcase their talent. When thereā€™s no real tag teams outside of the Riott Squad, as you all have said, whatā€™s the story for even them? At the very least Iā€™m happy that Carmella seems to have reverted to the Ms. Money in the Bank character to tag with Billie Kay as her previous heel turn wasnā€™t working for me at all (Mella is funny! Let her be funny!), those two could take the company over given the right opportunities.

Cesaro vs. Seth Rollins

CD: Sethā€™s been going through a bit of an identity crisis for a long while now that I have been attempting to reconcile. Ever since losing his status as an over babyface in 2019 and pivoting to a myriad of different takes on a cult leader…I just havenā€™t been able to enjoy much of what heā€™s been doing. Finally though, and I think the remix of his theme helps, its slotting into place. This match was always going to have the potential to steal the show and I found my love for Seth as a wrestler returning as I watched this match. Cesaro, when able to let go, is someone almost no one can top. I am SO glad this got the time it deserved even if the build was nothing special. Which just seems like a running theme for this WrestleMania if I am being honest. 

RS: Iā€™m in a weird spot, as I entered wrestling post-Shield, so Iā€™ve never had strong feelings about Seth Rollins, apart from when he posts something goofy on social media. I started to enjoy the Monday Night Messiah gimmick, but then they just never embraced it, and it descended into an endless mess that I only remember as The Eyeball Saga. But this? Charlie, you say the build was nothing special, but I think thatā€™s what got me to love it. Seth giving an absolutely absurdly silly political attack style ad about Cesaro because he got swung around a bunch? A feud that is entirely centered on ā€œyou didnā€™t just swing me around, you swung me around A LOT. I got LOTS of swings. That is EMBARRASSING.ā€? I love it. Iā€™ve always heard Cesaro was someone that people loved, but he was never involved in any major plotlines while I was watching that allowed him to shine. Here we just have two men, who are, I can now see, extremely good at their jobs, put into something low-stakes, but low-stakes and fun. Something where clearly they can have fun. No expectations: just two creative people having a blast and getting the spotlight the deserve. I canā€™t wait to see what both of these men do next.

FH: The stomp into the uppercut sequence was good enough to carry the rest of the night and that was before the UFO. A dominant Cesaro reaffirmed what every fan already knew about him, that given the right time and place you could build an entire company around him, and Seth attested to the idea that all of WWEā€™s worst writing impulses canā€™t dampen how impressive he can be in the ring. I also finally figured out what Sethā€™s character is meant to be: the wrestling equivalent of Hillary Clinton saying ā€œPokemon Go to the pollsā€. 

VG: This match was fun! I didnā€™t love it for reasons itā€™s hard to articulate, but I did still enjoy it. These are two very good wrestlers with a weird story going in that I generally found enjoyable in clips I saw on the internet, and Cesaro got to show off just how fantastic of a wrestler heā€™s always been. It was the perfect pick up after a Tag Team Turmoil that just never had any chance to be good.

Raw Tag Team Championship: The New Day vs. AJ Styles and Omos

CD: Not going to lie. I loved this match. I loved it a whole lot. Itā€™s something different than what WWE presents and honestly, it felt a lot like something youā€™d see in AEW or NJPW. Some fun spots, some great comedy and character work from all involved and the story of keeping this horribly large man out of the ring because Xavier and Kofi knew it meant destruction. Loved this. More of this please. 

RS: Iā€™m not caught up on RAW recently; are the New Day comedy heels now? Or are they people who we love so much that theyā€™re able to just do fun Comedy Heel Matches while staying face? Regardless, this was literally the most fun Iā€™ve had watching an AJ match the entire time Iā€™ve been watching WWE, with the single exception of that one cinematic match where the Undertaker murdered his Bullet Club buddies and then teleported on top of a tractor to shove AJ into a Big Hole of Dirt.

FH: Itā€™s interesting that you brought up the heel/face conversation, Rob, because I saw a lot of it online during this match. Iā€™m, respectably, confused by it. Whatā€™s inherently heelish about the New Day recognizing a threat in Omos and refusing to let AJ capitalize on it? Twerking intro dropkicks isnā€™t subverting the power of positivity necessarily, itā€™s celebrating it as the reason Kofā€™, Woods and E are where they are both as athletes and characters, none of it was really about belittling AJ so much as it was about rightfully fearing Omos. It seemed to me more like they were inviting AJ, Omos, and us to have fun with them at the show of shows. I love that, and it’s why I love them honestly.

RS: Itā€™s not the tactic that I read as heelish, but the way the joke is set up/ the turning point of the matchā€” the move from two people who are extremely dominant and laughing about it, to that tag where Omos finally steps into the ring, and they realize, oh shit. Weā€™re screwed. You have a crowd excited to see him finally get into the ring and destroy everyone, and you have a comedic beat where you laugh at the look of horror on the New Dayā€™s faces. That energy is what read to me as positioning them as heels; structuring the match so people are excited to see that tag rather than dreading it. 

FH: I can see that! I can also say that them successfully creating that moment for Omosā€™s debut speaks to the kind friends, colleagues, and performers they are both in and out of the ring. If they go full heel at SummerSlam to recapture the gold, Iā€™ll rescind my point. For now, I celebrate the nuance, especially as we move towards a night two main event that arguably has THREE heels headlining.

VG: I was very (pleasantly) surprised at how genuinely excited the crowd was for Omos joining the match. When AJ managed to tag him in there was a genuine pop, and he felt like a big deal. I donā€™t watch Raw, so the last time I saw Omos he was just this stoic dude beating people up on behest of AJ, but here he was genuinely really fun. The New Dayā€™s antics could be framed as heelish, and in the moment I guess they were, but they were hilarious and sold Omos to be the strongest guy on the roster. Great stuff from everyone involved, even AJ who had a delightful Phenomenal Forearm off of Omosā€™ shoulders.

Shane McMahon vs. Braun Strowman

CD: Had the least expectations for this one, considering the previous slime antics. But! Shane fell off something AND Braun did a cool spot by ripping the cage. Good cool off match. 

RS: This match defined Night 1 for me, because I absolutely had low expectationsā€” and then it ended with such a fun, memorable, and creative finish. I think the overall story of Wrestlemania 37 for meā€” there were problems leading up to this event, there was every reason for so many things not to workā€” but the people involved hurdled those obstacles to give us something special anyway. I absolutely did not and do not care about this weird Braun VS Shane feud about bullying? Or? Whatever itā€™s supposed to be about? But Iā€™m always going to remember how delighted everyone in the room was when we saw Braun rip that cage open. 

FH: The inclusion of Jaxson Ryker, a Q-supporting racist, sure highlights some of the points I made higher up. That being said, this was fun! Shane came across looking significantly less selfish than he has with his previous Mania moments, and I honestly feel like thereā€™s a clearer direction for Braun out of this than his Universal Championship win last year. 

VG: This bullying PSA match was dumb and the video package couldnā€™t even make it look good, but Braun ripped the cage and it ruled. I didnā€™t love the match, but it was good enough to keep the momentum of the event going, which is all I can ask for. Shane really is an idiot though, why would you lock yourself in a steel cage with this dude?

Bad Bunny & Damian Priest vs. The Miz & John Morrison

CD: Bad Bunny is a delight and I could not stop smiling the entire time he was in the ring. Someone whoā€™s cool as a cucumber, loves wrestling and flips gender norms getting a huge WrestleMania spot is incredible. I am so glad everyone finally saw what a star he is. 

MZ: Holy. Shit. Yā€™all. I realize Iā€™ve talked quite a bit about Bad Bunny before, and thereā€™s a reason for that. I feel like I should give a little bit of backstory for both Bad Bunny and the match to explain how truly incredible this was. Bad Bunny went from uploading songs on SoundCloud in between bagging groceries and studying in university in 2016, to winning a Grammy for his 2020 album YHLQMDLG just a month ago. He also works to break down gender barriers, misogyny, and harmful stereotypes of masculinity within the genre of reggaetĆ³n and Spanish trap, as well as do political outreach in Puerto Rico.

But it wasnā€™t enough for Benito MartĆ­nez Ocasio to do all that. A lifelong WWE fan, heā€™s collaborated with WWE legends, most recently on the hit single Booker T. After a brief performance of Booker T plus a cameo in this yearā€™s Royal Rumble, WWE realized they had something. So much like Bad Bunny crammed English 8 hours a day to do interviews in English, he dedicated himself to training at the WWE Performance Center for a Wrestlemania match to tag team with Damian Priest. The connection there is more than just tag partners, too. ā€œI was raised in the same town he was born in,ā€ Damian told TVinsider in an interview this past February. ā€œHe loves wrestling. We hit it off immediately when we met. There was a bond.ā€ And if you were following his Instagram, wellā€¦ youā€™d see he was putting in the work in the gym.

So. Miz and Morrison tease and make fun in the entrance like Bad Bunnyā€™s nothing, with grotesque bordering on terrifying bunny costumeā€™d dancers, Priest gets his entranceā€¦ and Bad Bunny rides atop his signature black semi truck like a steed, license plate emblazoned with YHLQMDLG (Spanish for ā€œI do whatever I wantā€). Itā€™s Stone Cold on steroids, and I screamed with glee. A Wrestlemania moment indeed.

And then. And then!!! As if that wasnā€™t enough, the match was legitimately incredible! The storytelling! The tandem vertical suplex! The Canadian Bunny Destroyer!!! This match was everything I hoped for and more.

RS: In the room where I was watching we all lost our minds at the Bunny Destroyer. It was just an incredibly fun match, and it was so wonderful to see someone like Bad Bunny get this moment. I canā€™t wait to see him again. I know heā€™s not going to become a full-time professional wrestler, but if thatā€™s the match he can put out with that brief time training?! I canā€™t imagine what fun stuff weā€™ll see in the future when he returns. 

FH: Iā€™ll say what weā€™re all thinkingā€¦ Bad Bunny is the greatest celebrity wrestler of all time. Thatā€™s a huge compliment to Miz and Morrison and Damian Priest, too, of course as they all worked safely, impressively, and succinctly to tell a simple but really compelling story. I almost found myself wishing Bunny was the full time wrestler and Priest was the celebrity. So good that they should had ended it with a cut to:

[BAD BUNNY WILL RETURN]

MZ: They didnā€™t do a teaser like that, but HHH did give Bad Bunny a send-off on Night 2 that I thought was appropriate (and of course, very cool).

VG: I hate to be the odd one out, and I especially hate it when the only difference is that the magnitude of my enjoyment was less, but I thought Bad Bunny was decent and the match was alright. The Canadian Destroyer definitely popped me, but the entire match I was just completely sold on how great Miz and Morrison are. Iā€™m basically the heel of the group and I know it, so this is just consistent for me. Very happy that Bad Bunny got to get his moment, and very happy for all his fans like Mikey who got to see him achieve one of his biggest dreams. 

SmackDown Womenā€™s Championship: Sasha Banks vs. Bianca Belair 

FH:  This was the best Mania event of, at least, the last ten years. Bianca crying, Sasha meeting the moment with acknowledgement but also vindication — they deserve this, theyā€™ll take nothing less — as they stood there for just a minute longer with the audience. There were no seams, trading in both raw athleticism and storytelling prowess as they moved from meteora to carry to hold to lock to high spot and back, meeting each other with answers for every single thing that had gotten them here. The growing desperation of the match as Sasha realizes that Bianca isnā€™t going to yield, pulling at her hair and shoving before Bianca hits her with that ear shattering, confirming hair whip. Really, really masterful. 

Bianca has never held a single title in WWE before, but this match was a confirmation that she deserves nothing less as Sasha looked on from the floor, smiling in her defeat, proud of what they had accomplished, a celebration of women in the sport, of each other, of selflessness: 

CD: I was absolutely floored by this main event. Itā€™s hard to think up words for the emotions I was feeling at times. This was perhaps the purest distillation of wrestling joy I’ve felt since last year’s Stadium Stampede. The bones of those things are different, but as someone who feeds off and feels emotions so deeply, the moment you mentioned Forrest, before the match, the quiet, shaking and humbling determination of the woman in front of me left me speechless. I am tearing up a bit just thinking about it as I type. Brilliant in ring story, brilliant work rate, brilliant women. 

RS: Itā€™s weird to think that just two years ago, Sasha Banks disappeared, and we all thought she might leave WWE, or wrestling all together. Since her return, sheā€™s been, imo, the #1 throughline of the company, the one person at the center of the most consistent, clear, and well executed booking at the company. She and Bayley reunited, dominated the division, and then fell apart. She then proved what a force she could be alone, as she was finally able to defend a title. And that reign only ended with this incredible, incredible match. Bianca Belair, meanwhile, has proven just how deserving she is of this title. This match, I think, will be remembered as one of the greatest matches of any Wrestlemania. Weā€™re all going to remember that sharp sound, that incredible crack of the braid as Bianca left a mark on Sashaā€™s side, but also on history.

VG: I canā€™t put into words how special this match was. How absolutely deserving both of these competitors were of the moment they were given, and Bianca in particular. Sashaā€™s no stranger to putting someone over in their first ever title win [Flashback to Takeover Brooklyn], and put on just as great of a performance as she did nearly 6 years ago. Bianca not getting the NXT championship was one of NXTā€™s greatest sins in the pre-pandemic times, but this moment was worth it. This was, in my opinion, the best main event that Wrestlemaniaā€™s ever had, and Iā€™m still buzzing from the high the Monday morning after.

Final Thoughts

FH: Thereā€™s really nothing like WrestleMania is there? For all the chaos and nonsense, it feels celebratory. This is my first year watching with a live audience, and I felt this kind of mutual understanding, connectedness, and openness with everyone there — performer and not — thatā€™s really hard to dismiss even when things donā€™t go the way you want them to. For all its highs and lows the first night delivered in ways I think WWE very obviously meant for it to, and in hilarious, affirming ways it didnā€™t mean to. Just look at Game Changer Wrestling deathmatch performer Jimmy Lloyd who was in a hard cam ringside position in his GCW shirt before WWE provided him with a Hurt Business shirt of his very own…that he promptly wore to his own match later that night:

RS: Night one, taken by itself, is the best PayPerView WWE has put on in a long while. I know that shouldnā€™t sound like muchā€” itā€™s Wrestlemania, so of course it should be something specialā€” but going in, I honestly didnā€™t know if they were going to pull it off. There were so many matches on this first nightā€™s card that I had no expectations for, that then really, really wowed me. And then it ended not just in a great match, but in an historically great match.

CD: I try and leave my expectations at the door because itā€™s a lot to expect so much from people, but itā€™s WrestleMania and while I was a little afraid as the night unfolded that this may just be a weird disaster, of course everyone pulled it together. I found myself laughing with you all after the show as we decompressed and realized that for all the times I wish WWE was different from what it is, that the weirdness, the chaos and the artifice that is the WWE is justā€¦ there isnā€™t anything like it, is there?

MZ: There really isnā€™t. This was my first WrestleMania watching all the way through, and honestly? Even when itā€™s not great, the experience alone of watching through it with friends and being able to laugh and cry and scream and joke together is worth it. I get it in a viscerally-deep way that I just truly did not before watching. Last year I cherry-picked my matches, and there werenā€™t crowds, so the vibe was just different. This year I was dubious, but Night 1 ended up delivering for me… especially for those last two matches.

If youā€™re reading this and you havenā€™t watched any of the matches from Night 1, you honestly owe it to yourself to watch Sasha v Bianca. That is a match, like Sashaā€™s title match at Takeover Brooklyn before it, that I would show to anyone as the best of wrestling. The story was communicated so well throughout the match, and the finish? Iā€™m getting teary-eyed just thinking about it. Iā€™ll be riding that emotional high for a long time, and I was only watching on TV.

VG: If Mania was just this night, Iā€™d have been satisfied. There was so much really fun wrestling, and there was maybe the most triumphant and impactful moment in the history of the event at the end of it. Becky vs Charlotte vs Ronda was a frustrating ā€œfirstā€ for women main eventing Mania (Not at all Becky or Charlotteā€™s fault), so seeing the ā€œfirstā€ Black wrestlers main eventing Mania tear the house down like they did felt like vindication. Maniaā€™s the one that you watch with your non-wrestling friends, and this was the perfect indication of that – even the matches with bad builds looked good, and all the failures of the road to WrestleMania get washed away in the event itself.

Charlie Davis is the worldā€™s premier Shatterstarologist, writer and co-host of The Match Club.

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Forrest is an experimental AI that writes and podcasts about comic books and wrestling coming to your area soon.

Robert Secundus is an amateur-angelologist-for-hire.

Vishal Gullapalli is highly opinionated and reads way too much.