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Oooh The Rock Concert. Oh the memories!
This was one of my favorite times, especially for Smackdown so jumping back into this project here seems like a good thing.
The opening angle with Kurt Angle immediately sets a serious tone for the show and does a great job reinforcing his personal motivation heading into Vengeance. The promo feels emotionally grounded, and the callback to his injury and WrestleMania 19 adds real weight to his title pursuit against The Rock. The involvement of Cornette and the Samoan Death Squad helps escalate things without derailing Angle’s momentum, and starting the match immediately was a smart pacing decision that keeps the show moving.
Much like Haskell mentioned, I absolutely loved Umaga back in the day and wished he could've gotten a world title run during his feud with Cena, even if it was short. But I digress. The early in-ring action is straightforward but effective, especially in how it establishes Umaga as a legitimate physical threat while still protecting Angle through resilience and timing. The finishing stretch works well and maintains Angle’s aura as a top contender who can survive chaos and still find a way to win. The post-match direction also keeps multiple threads alive, particularly with the faction tension brewing around Cornette’s group and Angle’s rising importance in the title picture.
The midcard segments continue the show’s strength in character work. The Edge and Brock Lesnar exchange is especially strong, with both men clearly positioned as volatile main-event level threats. Their confrontation feels like a natural boiling point rather than a forced segment, and the physicality delivers exactly what it should.
The Billy Kidman handicap match segment is a solid blend of character development and storyline progression, particularly in how it positions John Cena as both dominant and slightly antagonistic, while also giving Paul Heyman a role that enhances the match’s unpredictability. The finish is clever in a classic WWE-style way, using miscommunication and opportunism to protect all involved while still giving Kidman a meaningful win. The follow-up tease for Vengeance adds clarity to the direction of the US title program
Haha, Jamie Noble's comedy relief stuff was well done. The debt to APA seems like a lot of fun.
And then of course there's the Rock Concert itself. I think you nailed the intentionally over-the-topness needed for the segments. Too bad Kurt Angle had to ruin it (lol). But yeah no, the interruption by Angle was inevitable and was a solid way to build toward Vengeance. And as a Jeff Jarrett superfan, I always appreciate a good guitar shot to close out a show.
Finding more time in my life, I will be sure to keep closer track of this moving forward because this is great stuff EZ3.
This was one of my favorite times, especially for Smackdown so jumping back into this project here seems like a good thing.
The opening angle with Kurt Angle immediately sets a serious tone for the show and does a great job reinforcing his personal motivation heading into Vengeance. The promo feels emotionally grounded, and the callback to his injury and WrestleMania 19 adds real weight to his title pursuit against The Rock. The involvement of Cornette and the Samoan Death Squad helps escalate things without derailing Angle’s momentum, and starting the match immediately was a smart pacing decision that keeps the show moving.
Much like Haskell mentioned, I absolutely loved Umaga back in the day and wished he could've gotten a world title run during his feud with Cena, even if it was short. But I digress. The early in-ring action is straightforward but effective, especially in how it establishes Umaga as a legitimate physical threat while still protecting Angle through resilience and timing. The finishing stretch works well and maintains Angle’s aura as a top contender who can survive chaos and still find a way to win. The post-match direction also keeps multiple threads alive, particularly with the faction tension brewing around Cornette’s group and Angle’s rising importance in the title picture.
The midcard segments continue the show’s strength in character work. The Edge and Brock Lesnar exchange is especially strong, with both men clearly positioned as volatile main-event level threats. Their confrontation feels like a natural boiling point rather than a forced segment, and the physicality delivers exactly what it should.
The Billy Kidman handicap match segment is a solid blend of character development and storyline progression, particularly in how it positions John Cena as both dominant and slightly antagonistic, while also giving Paul Heyman a role that enhances the match’s unpredictability. The finish is clever in a classic WWE-style way, using miscommunication and opportunism to protect all involved while still giving Kidman a meaningful win. The follow-up tease for Vengeance adds clarity to the direction of the US title program
Haha, Jamie Noble's comedy relief stuff was well done. The debt to APA seems like a lot of fun.
And then of course there's the Rock Concert itself. I think you nailed the intentionally over-the-topness needed for the segments. Too bad Kurt Angle had to ruin it (lol). But yeah no, the interruption by Angle was inevitable and was a solid way to build toward Vengeance. And as a Jeff Jarrett superfan, I always appreciate a good guitar shot to close out a show.
Finding more time in my life, I will be sure to keep closer track of this moving forward because this is great stuff EZ3.


