WWE: THE YES MOVEMENT

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The Visionary

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The Authority called Daniel Bryan a "B-plus player." They spent months trying to keep him away from the title, but the fans refused to let it happen. Every arena across the country turned into a sea of pointing fingers and "Yes" chants that the front office couldn't ignore. At WrestleMania 30, the underdog finally broke through the glass ceiling and walked out with both championships. Now, the machine has no choice but to deal with a champion they never wanted. This is the story of the Yes Movement taking over WWE and changing the rules for good.

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~ To Be Updated ~
 

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TFC

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Just wanted to drop by and give ya the heads up, I will be defo keeping an eye on this btb.


PS: The graphics are awesome!!!!
 
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Stojy

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WrestleMania XXX was arguably one of the last great Manias. Things felt set up for a sustainable strong period but then they went and ruined it rather quickly. Looking forward to seeing how you put your own spin on things. Good luck.
 

The Visionary

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Raw opened with a powerful WrestleMania XXX video package that treated the night before like a true turning point in WWE history. Daniel Bryan’s journey was the heart of it: walking into the Superdome as the ultimate underdog, surviving Triple H earlier in the night, fighting through the post-match attack, and somehow returning to defeat Randy Orton and Batista to become WWE World Heavyweight Champion. The final shots of Bryan holding both titles in a storm of confetti were shown as the emotional peak of the weekend, but the package quickly shifted into the darker fallout around him. Triple H was left stunned, Orton watched his championship slip away, Batista sat furious on the floor, The Shield destroyed Kane and The New Age Outlaws, John Cena resisted Bray Wyatt’s temptation, AJ Lee survived the entire Divas division, Cesaro won the Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal, and Brock Lesnar ended The Undertaker’s Streak. By the time pyro hit in New Orleans, the message was clear: WrestleMania was not the end of the story. It was the night everything changed.

Daniel Bryan then opened the show to a massive reaction, walking out with both world titles over his shoulders and the crowd completely taking over with “YES!” chants before he could even speak. Bryan looked exhausted and beaten up from WrestleMania, but he also looked like a man who had finally reached the top of the mountain. He told the crowd that last night was not luck, not a fluke, and not a fairy tale. It happened because the fans refused to let The Authority decide what a champion should look like. Bryan said Triple H called him a B-plus player, Randy Orton called him unworthy, and Batista dismissed him as a fad, but he was now standing in the middle of Raw as WWE World Heavyweight Champion. Randy Orton interrupted, dressed in a suit and carrying himself like a man trying to hide how furious he really was. Orton congratulated Bryan only to dismiss the win, saying Bryan never beat him one-on-one at WrestleMania and only survived chaos. Bryan fired back that Orton had months of protection from The Authority and still lost the title when it mattered most. Triple H and Stephanie McMahon soon joined them, and the mood immediately changed. Triple H congratulated Bryan in the coldest way possible, calling WrestleMania a “little miracle” for the fans before reminding everyone that championships are business. He confirmed that Orton would receive his rematch at Extreme Rules, but then revealed that Orton was not the immediate problem. Triple H said the mistake of WrestleMania needed to be corrected right away, and he announced that Daniel Bryan would defend the WWE World Heavyweight Championship against him in the main event later that night. Bryan did not back down. He reminded Triple H that he had already beaten him once, while Triple H warned that Bryan’s title reign might not even survive its first Raw. Bryan raised both championships in Triple H’s face as the crowd exploded, setting the tone for a night where the new champion would have to fight to keep everything he had just won.

The first match kept the post-Mania crowd hot as The Usos defeated RybAxel in a strong tag team showcase. Ryback and Curtis Axel jumped the champions early and tried to slow the match down, with Ryback overpowering Jey and Axel cutting the ring in half. Jey fought through the pressure and finally made the hot tag to Jimmy, who came in with the speed and fire that made the crowd rally behind the champions. The Usos survived Ryback’s power, neutralized Axel with stereo superkicks, and finished him with a top-rope splash. Their celebration did not last long. The lights cut out, and when they came back, Luke Harper and Erick Rowan were standing silently at ringside, staring at the WWE Tag Team Championships. They said nothing, but that made the moment more unsettling. Jimmy raised his title and dared them to come get it, while Harper only laughed under his breath before the lights cut again and the Wyatts vanished. The first warning had been sent.

Backstage, The Authority tried to regroup after WrestleMania. Batista was already angry that he was not getting the first shot at Bryan, while Orton reminded him that he had been champion and lost it. Batista fired back that Orton had the title and failed to keep it. Triple H quickly shut them both down, telling them that Bryan was the problem tonight and everyone needed to fall in line. Orton would get Extreme Rules, Batista would get what he wanted later, but for now, the only goal was making sure Bryan’s celebration ended before the night was over. The tension between Orton and Batista was obvious, but Triple H forced the focus back onto the title.

Cesaro came out next with the Andre the Giant Memorial Battle Royal trophy, standing alone without Zeb Colter, Jack Swagger, or any Real Americans branding. It immediately felt like a new beginning. Cesaro said WrestleMania was the biggest night of his career and proved he did not need shortcuts, protection, or anyone speaking for him. He respected what The Real Americans had been, but winning that battle royal showed him that the WWE Universe wanted to see him stand on his own. Zeb Colter and Jack Swagger interrupted, with Zeb claiming Cesaro owed everything to him and that the trophy belonged to their movement. Swagger accused Cesaro of stealing the spotlight and forgetting who helped him get there. Cesaro calmly told Swagger that he did not leave him behind — he simply moved forward. When Zeb called him ungrateful, Cesaro answered that he was done letting other people tell him who he was. That line brought the crowd fully to his side, and the match was made official.


Cesaro defeated Jack Swagger in a hard, emotional breakup match that felt less like a normal contest and more like two former partners finally ripping apart. Swagger attacked before the bell and wrestled with anger, hammering Cesaro in the corner and targeting the ankle while Zeb shouted from ringside that Cesaro had betrayed them. Cesaro fought from underneath and slowly won over more of the building with every uppercut, counter, and power spot. Swagger nearly trapped him in the Patriot Lock and scored a strong near-fall with a belly-to-belly, but Cesaro powered through, escaped the ankle attack, and caught Swagger with a huge European uppercut. The finish came when Swagger charged in and Cesaro planted him with the Neutralizer for the clean win. After the match, Zeb slapped Cesaro across the face. Swagger tried to ambush him from behind, but Cesaro ducked, nearly sent Swagger into Zeb, and dropped him with another uppercut. Cesaro stood tall with the Andre trophy, officially ending The Real Americans and beginning his rise as a full babyface.

Backstage, Big E watched Cesaro’s victory with the Intercontinental Championship over his shoulder. Renee Young asked for his reaction, and Big E gave Cesaro credit for a major WrestleMania moment and for proving he could stand alone. But the champion made it clear that momentum did not win championships. If Cesaro wanted the Intercontinental Title, Big E respected that, but respect would not make him step aside. Swagger then walked past in the background, furious and still being calmed down by Zeb. He heard Big E praise Cesaro and glared at both of them, quietly setting the stage for the Intercontinental Title scene to become crowded, personal, and physical.

Rob Van Dam made his return next, answering Damien Sandow’s complaint that WrestleMania season rewarded chaos over intelligence. The crowd exploded when RVD’s music hit, and he came out loose, confident, and energized. Sandow tried to slow him down with knees and a neckbreaker, but the match was built around Van Dam shaking off the rust and reminding everyone what made him different. RVD hit his familiar kicks, rolling thunder, a springboard attack, and finally the Five-Star Frog Splash to score the win. It was not presented as just a nostalgia pop. Commentary framed it as a fresh start, with RVD potentially becoming a dangerous veteran presence in the post-WrestleMania reset.

The biggest emotional shift of the night came when Brock Lesnar and Paul Heyman addressed the end of The Undertaker’s Streak. Raw returned from break with a replay of the impossible: Undertaker lying flat on the mat, Lesnar kneeling beside him, and the scoreboard showing 21-1. The silence from WrestleMania was shown almost as powerfully as any move. When Lesnar’s music hit live, the New Orleans crowd erupted in boos before he even appeared. Lesnar walked out in a black hoodie with no bounce, no smile, and no performance. Heyman followed him with a serious expression, letting the hatred pour down before finally introducing himself as the advocate for the man who conquered The Undertaker’s undefeated Streak at WrestleMania. Heyman listed the names who had failed before Brock — Kane, Orton, Edge, Batista, Shawn Michaels, Triple H, CM Punk and others — before saying Lesnar did not simply beat The Undertaker. He ended the most sacred streak in sports entertainment. Heyman then turned the segment toward Daniel Bryan, and that made the promo feel even bigger. He admitted Bryan had the greatest night of his life at WrestleMania, surviving Triple H, Orton, and Batista to give the fans their happy ending. But Heyman warned that courage, talent, chants, and movements do not stop Brock Lesnar. He said the WWE World Heavyweight Championship was now the biggest prize in the company, which meant it had Brock’s attention. Lesnar finally took the microphone and kept it brutally short, looking into the camera and telling Bryan that he broke The Streak and that Bryan’s titles were next. Before the moment could settle, the lights cut out and the crowd thought for a second that The Undertaker might appear. Instead, The Rock’s music hit, and the arena lost its mind. The Rock walked out serious, with no comedy and no long celebration. He came to the ring like someone defending history. Rock admitted that Lesnar had earned the impossible by beating The Undertaker, but he told Brock that ending The Streak did not make him bigger than WWE, bigger than every man who came before him, or give Heyman the right to mock one of the most respected legacies in wrestling. Heyman tried to speak, but Rock shut him down and warned him not to run his mouth. Rock then went face-to-face with Lesnar, reminding him that they had history and that he knew exactly how dangerous Brock could be. But Rock said there was a difference between being dangerous and thinking no one could touch you. When Heyman claimed Brock did not answer to nostalgia, legends, Hollywood, or Undertaker’s friends, Rock said he was not there as anyone’s friend. He was there as a man with one good ass-kicking left. The crowd exploded, Rock dropped Heyman with one punch, and for a second it felt like Rock might stand up to the conqueror. Instead, Lesnar attacked immediately, drove a knee into Rock, powered through his elbows, lifted him with ease, and planted him with an F-5. Heyman crawled to the ropes, laughing through the pain, and told Daniel Bryan that The Rock had come back to defend history — and Brock Lesnar had turned him into a preview. Lesnar left Rock down in the ring, putting the entire company on notice.

Dolph Ziggler then defeated The Miz in a fast, sharp Raw-after-Mania match that gave the crowd a chance to breathe without losing energy. Miz worked the knee and tried to steal the match with his feet on the ropes, but the referee caught him. Ziggler fought from underneath, survived Miz’s control, and hit the Zig Zag for the win. After the match, Ziggler pointed toward the WrestleMania sign and made it clear he was not done trying to climb back into relevance.

John Cena came out next with none of his usual joking energy. He admitted that WrestleMania tested him in a way he did not expect because Bray Wyatt had not simply tried to beat him — he tried to make Cena hate himself. Cena said Bray wanted him to use the chair, lose control, and prove that everything he stood for was fake, but Cena said Bray failed because he still believed in the people who believed in him. Bray appeared on the screen from his rocking chair with Harper and Rowan behind him, congratulating Cena in a way that sounded more like a threat. Bray said Cena may have won the match, but he saw Cena’s hand tighten around the chair. For one beautiful second, Bray said, Cena wanted to be him. Cena challenged Bray to fight again, but Bray said this was not about another match. It was about showing the world that heroes do not fall all at once. They crack, bend, and finally break. Cena stood in the ring defiant, but the smile was gone. Bray had lost at WrestleMania, but he had not left Cena alone.


Backstage, Cody Rhodes and Goldust showed the first real crack in their partnership. Goldust was excited about getting back on track, but Cody was quieter and clearly frustrated. Goldust asked if they were good, and Cody forced a smile, saying they were fine. But once Goldust walked away, Cody’s face changed. WrestleMania had moved the entire company forward, and Cody looked like a man afraid he was standing still.


That tension carried into Cody Rhodes and Goldust’s tag match against Alberto Del Rio and Fandango. The Rhodes brothers started strong, but Del Rio and Fandango isolated Goldust and targeted his arm. Goldust eventually fought toward the tag, but Cody hesitated for just half a second. It was not a full betrayal, but it was enough to feel wrong. Fandango pulled Cody off the apron, Goldust got caught in the confusion, and Del Rio trapped him in the Cross Armbreaker for the submission win. After the match, Cody kept explaining that he had been pulled off the apron even though Goldust had not accused him of anything. The more Cody defended himself, the more guilty and frustrated he sounded. Goldust tried to calm him down, but Cody pulled away and left first. The breakup did not happen yet, but the first real fracture was visible.

Lana then made her Raw debut, introducing Alexander Rusev as a cold, dominant force. She insulted America’s false heroes and fragile champions before Rusev walked out with no wasted movement, no smile, and no theatrics beyond his presence. Zack Ryder tried to use speed, but Rusev absorbed his offense, threw him across the ring, crushed him with a spinning heel kick, and locked in the Accolade for a quick submission win. After the bell, Lana entered and simply said, “Rusev crush.” The camera then cut to Triple H watching backstage, clearly interested. That shot quietly linked Rusev to The Authority’s future plans without forcing it too soon.

AJ Lee came out later still proud from surviving the Vickie Guerrero Invitational at WrestleMania. She bragged that every Diva had a chance to take her championship, and every single one failed. AJ declared that she was not just the Divas Champion — she was the Divas division. Then Paige’s music hit. Paige walked out with no big smile and no nerves, simply congratulating AJ before reminding her that she had not beaten her. AJ laughed her off as an NXT girl who was not ready for Raw, the spotlight, or the champion. When Paige quietly agreed that maybe she was not ready, AJ slapped her and offered to put the Divas Championship on the line as a special post-WrestleMania treat. Paige slowly looked back at her, and the title match began. Paige shocked the world by defeating AJ Lee to become the new Divas Champion. AJ attacked immediately and tried to embarrass Paige more than beat her, dragging her around by the hair and screaming that it was her ring. AJ’s arrogance carried the match. She went for the Black Widow, the same hold that had saved her at WrestleMania, but Paige fought the grip before it could be fully locked in. AJ got frustrated, rushed too quickly, and Paige caught her with the Paige Turner. Three seconds later, AJ’s historic reign was over. Paige sat up stunned as the referee handed her the championship, while AJ sat frozen in the corner, unable to process what had happened. Paige had not just won a title. She had ended AJ’s control in one shocking Raw-after-Mania moment.

Backstage, Randy Orton found Daniel Bryan warming up for the main event and warned him that brave people make stupid decisions. Orton said Bryan should have refused Triple H’s challenge because even if Triple H did not win the title, Orton would make sure there was not enough of Bryan left to reach Extreme Rules. Bryan answered that Orton could keep talking about what he deserved, while Bryan would keep doing what Orton could not do: fighting every night like a champion. Officials had to step in before the confrontation became physical.

The Shield then entered through the crowd to one of the loudest reactions of the night, still riding the momentum from destroying Kane and The New Age Outlaws at WrestleMania. Dean Ambrose said The Authority had sent legends, monsters, and corporate puppets after them, and all of them got run over. Seth Rollins said The Shield had been treated like tools, but tools do not think, breathe, or fight back. Roman Reigns kept it simple: the leash was gone. Triple H appeared on the stage and told them they were not rebels, heroes, or untouchable. They were employees who had forgotten their place. Rollins fired back that Triple H did not create The Shield — he used them. Triple H smiled and booked The Shield against 3MB on the spot.


The Shield destroyed 3MB in just over three minutes, but the match was only bait. Ambrose, Rollins, and Reigns tore through them quickly, finishing with the triple powerbomb, but the real attack came after the bell. Batista stormed in and assaulted Rollins, Rusev appeared and crushed Ambrose, and Triple H clipped Reigns from behind before planting him with a Pedigree. Batista threw Rollins into the barricade, Rusev locked Ambrose in the Accolade on the floor, and Triple H stood over Reigns, telling him that he breaks what he cannot control. It instantly made Rusev feel like The Authority’s new weapon, not as a member of the group, but as something Triple H was willing to aim at The Shield.

Cena later found The Usos backstage and warned them that Harper and Rowan were not just looking at their titles — they were trying to drag them into Bray Wyatt’s world. Jimmy and Jey made it clear they had seen the stare and were not afraid. If the Wyatts wanted family, they had picked the wrong one. Cena told them to stay ready because Bray never moved without a reason, connecting the Cena-Wyatt war with the tag title picture in a natural way.

Sheamus defeated Alberto Del Rio in a physical television match that gave him a strong post-Mania reset. Del Rio targeted the arm and slowed the pace with kicks, but Sheamus fought back with his usual power, hammering Del Rio with the ten beats and landing a rolling senton. Del Rio nearly stole it with a Backstabber and teased the Cross Armbreaker, but Sheamus powered through and finished him with the Brogue Kick. The win gave Sheamus momentum while keeping Del Rio useful as a dangerous opponent.

Before the main event, Triple H laced his boots backstage while Stephanie told him this was where everything returned to normal. Batista entered and questioned whether Triple H really believed he could beat Bryan after losing to him at WrestleMania. Triple H stood and reminded him who he was talking to before Orton stepped in, saying none of them needed to like each other tonight. They just needed Bryan to stop being champion. Stephanie smiled and said that by the end of the night, the Yes Movement would be a memory.

The main event saw Daniel Bryan defend the WWE World Heavyweight Championship against Triple H in a gritty, high-pressure rematch from WrestleMania. Bryan entered taped up and exhausted, but the crowd carried him from the moment he raised the titles. Triple H wrestled smarter than he had the night before, targeting Bryan’s ribs and shoulder rather than trying to match his speed. He grounded the champion with knees, corner attacks, a spinebuster, and constant pressure while Stephanie screamed at ringside that Bryan’s dream was ending. Bryan survived by turning the match into movement, escaping the Pedigree, landing a flying forearm, hitting corner dropkicks, and nearly winning with the diving headbutt. Triple H kept cutting him off, but every time Bryan looked finished, the crowd pulled him back into the fight. Orton and Batista hit the ring late, trying to tilt the title match back toward The Authority. Bryan fought them off long enough to stay alive, knocking Orton from the apron and sending Batista shoulder-first into the post. Triple H tried to use the chaos to steal the win, but Bryan kicked out. Then The Shield returned through the crowd, bruised from their earlier beating but still moving with purpose. Ambrose tackled Orton over the announce table, Rollins launched himself at Batista, and Reigns stepped into the ring long enough to draw Triple H’s attention. That single second cost The Game everything. Bryan spun him around and blasted him with the running knee to retain the WWE World Heavyweight Championship.

The celebration immediately turned into chaos. Orton hit Bryan with an RKO after the bell, Batista joined the attack, and Triple H ordered them to finish the job. Rusev appeared on the stage with Lana, walking toward the ring like the final piece of the punishment, but The Shield cut him off. Reigns met Rusev in the aisle, Rollins attacked Batista, and Ambrose dragged Orton into a wild ringside fight. Bryan slowly pulled himself up in the corner as Triple H realized the night had slipped away again. Reigns dropped Batista with a Superman Punch, Rollins sent Orton over the barricade, and Ambrose threw himself onto Rusev and a crowd of officials. Bryan stood tall with both championships while The Shield surrounded the ring, bruised but defiant. Raw went off the air with Bryan leading one final “YES!” chant, still champion.

EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey


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The Visionary

Member
Joined
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Messages
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Reaction score
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Location
The City that Never Sleeps
Favorite Wrestler
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Favorite Wrestler
randyorton
Favorite Wrestler
sethrollins
Favorite Wrestler
edge
Favorite Sports Team
n1QhWSb

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WWE SmackDown — April 11, 2014
SmackDown opened with a darker, more serious video package than Raw. WrestleMania XXX was still treated like a celebration, but the joy was already starting to feel surrounded. Daniel Bryan’s confetti-covered triumph was shown first, both championships raised above his head while the Superdome shook with “YES!” chants. Then the package shifted to Raw: Bryan walking out as champion, Randy Orton calling him lucky, Triple H trying to take the title back the very next night, and The Shield returning through the crowd to help Bryan survive. The final image was Bryan standing tall with both titles while The Shield circled the ring, bruised but defiant. Then the screen cut to Orton’s face after Raw, cold and silent, watching Bryan celebrate like a man who had not accepted reality. The narrator closed over the footage: “WrestleMania was the dream. Raw was the first fight to protect it. Tonight, the dream walks into SmackDown with every enemy still waiting.”

Pyro exploded inside the arena, and Michael Cole welcomed the audience to the first SmackDown after WrestleMania XXX. The crowd was already alive, chanting “YES!” before anyone came through the curtain. Daniel Bryan opened the show with both world titles over his shoulders, moving carefully but smiling through the soreness. He stopped on the stage, looked around at the fans with both arms raised, and the building completely took over. Bryan did not speak for nearly a full minute. He just stood in the ring, soaked it in, and let the chant breathe. When he finally lifted the microphone, he said Raw proved something important: winning at WrestleMania did not make The Authority disappear. It made them angrier. He said Triple H tried to end the title reign before it even started, Orton tried to hide behind excuses, Batista tried to get involved, and yet he was still standing there as WWE World Heavyweight Champion. Bryan said he knew exactly what was coming next. He knew Randy Orton had his rematch at Extreme Rules, and he knew Orton would keep saying WrestleMania did not count because Bryan did not beat him one-on-one. Bryan looked directly into the camera and said if Orton wanted to pretend the title was stolen, then he could come take it from him like a man. That brought out Orton, but not with music. He simply walked onto the stage in a black shirt and jeans, no pose, no theatrics, just that slow, poisonous stare. Orton said Bryan was already making the same mistake every underdog makes after one lucky night. He was confusing crowd noise for power. Orton said the fans could chant until their throats gave out, but chants did not block an RKO. Bryan fired back that Orton had months of The Authority protecting him, and the second the match became fair at WrestleMania, he lost. Orton’s jaw tightened. He said Bryan survived WrestleMania, survived Raw, and maybe he would survive Alberto Del Rio tonight, because Vickie Guerrero had already made Bryan’s main event official. But survival was not the same as being champion. Orton promised that by the end of the night, Bryan would remember what it felt like to have the title taken from his hands.

The opening match gave the tag division the spotlight immediately, with Luke Harper and Erick Rowan facing Los Matadores. The Usos came out before the match and joined commentary, both champions still carrying the confidence from their Raw win but clearly aware of the threat standing across the ring. Harper and Rowan wrestled like they were not trying to impress anyone. They were trying to send a message. Los Matadores used speed early, ducking under Harper’s swings and trying to frustrate Rowan with quick tags, but the match turned the moment Harper caught Diego with a boot that nearly took his head off. Rowan mauled Fernando in the corner, threw him across the ring, and stared at The Usos while doing it. Harper finished the match with a discus clothesline, and after the bell he did not celebrate. He walked to ringside, stood in front of Jimmy and Jey, and slowly looked down at the WWE Tag Team Championships. Jey stood up first. Jimmy followed. Harper smiled under his beard while Rowan stepped beside him. Bray Wyatt appeared on the screen from his rocking chair and told The Usos that family was a beautiful thing because it gave a man something to lose. The lights cut out, and when they came back, Harper and Rowan were gone. The Usos were left standing at commentary, titles in hand, no longer smiling.

Backstage, Renee Young interviewed Paige, who still looked like she had not fully processed becoming Divas Champion on Raw. The title was over her shoulder, but she held it with both hands like it was heavy in a way she had not expected. Paige said she knew people were calling it a shock, a fluke, and the biggest upset in years, but AJ Lee put the championship on the line and Paige beat her. She said she respected what AJ did for the division, but respect did not mean fear. Before Paige could finish, AJ walked into frame. No skipping. No smile. No title. That absence made her feel more dangerous. AJ stared at the championship and said Paige did not win her life’s work; she borrowed it. Paige calmly said, “Then take it back.” AJ’s eyes changed, but she did not attack. She just stepped close and whispered that Paige had no idea what it meant to be hunted by someone who had nothing left to lose.

Big E faced Jack Swagger next in a non-title match, with Cesaro watching from ringside near the announce table. This was not worked like filler. It felt like the Intercontinental Title picture beginning to tighten. Swagger came out angry, Zeb Colter barking that Cesaro betrayed everything The Real Americans stood for, but Swagger’s eyes kept drifting between Cesaro and Big E. Big E wrestled with power and patience, absorbing Swagger’s early attack and forcing him backward with shoulder blocks and heavy suplexes. Swagger targeted the leg, trying to drag the champion into the Patriot Lock, but Big E fought through it and powered him up for the Big Ending. Big E won clean, and the crowd gave him a strong reaction. Cesaro stood and applauded from ringside, not mockingly, but out of respect. Big E noticed and lifted the Intercontinental Championship. For one second, it was a clean champion-and-challenger moment. Then Swagger snapped. He chop-blocked Big E from behind, knocked Cesaro off the apron when Cesaro tried to enter, and put Big E in the Patriot Lock until officials swarmed him. Cesaro finally broke through the officials and chased Swagger off, but the damage was done. Big E sat in the ring clutching his ankle, Cesaro stood between the champion and Swagger, and Zeb screamed that Cesaro had ruined everything again.

SmackDown cuts to a video package recapping the moment Raw stopped feeling like the night after WrestleMania and started feeling like the beginning of something much bigger. It opens with the haunting replay of WrestleMania XXX: The Undertaker flat on his back, Brock Lesnar kneeling beside him, and the scoreboard reading 21-1 as the Superdome sits in stunned silence. From there, the footage shifts to Raw, where Lesnar walks out in a black hoodie beside Paul Heyman, absorbing a wall of boos while Heyman calls him the man who conquered the most sacred streak in WWE history. Heyman runs through the legends who tried and failed — Shawn Michaels, Triple H, Batista, Randy Orton, CM Punk, Edge, Kane — before warning Daniel Bryan that the same man who ended The Streak now has his eyes on the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. Lesnar takes the microphone only long enough to make it colder, telling Bryan that he broke The Streak and that Bryan’s titles are next. Then the lights drop, the crowd thinks for one heartbeat that The Undertaker may be coming, and instead The Rock’s music hits to a thunderous reaction. Rock walks out serious, not smiling, not joking, and stands up for the history Heyman is trying to brag over. He tells Lesnar that beating The Undertaker does not make him bigger than WWE, bigger than the men who built it, or untouchable. Heyman tries to talk, Rock shuts him down, and the tension explodes when Rock drops Heyman with one punch. For a second, the building believes Rock might be the first man to make Lesnar answer for what he did. Then Brock attacks like a freight train, drives the air out of him, powers through Rock’s fight, and plants him with a brutal F-5 in the middle of the ring. The package closes with Rock down, Heyman crawling to the ropes with a twisted smile, and Lesnar standing over another icon while the message becomes clear: Brock Lesnar did not just end The Undertaker’s Streak, he has made the entire WWE roster feel vulnerable.

The show returned from break with Cody Rhodes already in the ring for a match against Kofi Kingston, while Goldust stood at ringside trying to support him. Cody wrestled sharper than usual, almost colder. Kofi’s speed gave him trouble early, and every time Kofi started to string offense together, Cody’s frustration showed. Goldust kept clapping, shouting encouragement, telling Cody to breathe and reset. Cody heard it, but he did not look grateful. He looked annoyed. Kofi nearly won with a springboard crossbody, then another near-fall off Trouble in Paradise that Cody barely avoided by dropping to the mat. Cody finally caught Kofi coming off the ropes and hit Cross Rhodes for the win. Goldust entered the ring smiling and tried to raise Cody’s hand, but Cody pulled it away a second too quickly. Goldust tried to play it off, patting Cody on the shoulder, but Cody stepped back and said something the microphone barely caught: “I don’t need you doing that.” Goldust’s face fell. Cody left first, and the camera stayed on Goldust watching his brother walk away.

John Cena came out next, and the tone shifted immediately. He was not smiling, not joking, not playing to the crowd the way he usually would. Cena said WrestleMania should have ended his issue with Bray Wyatt because he beat Bray in the center of the ring and proved he would not let Bray drag him into the dark. But Cena admitted Bray was still in his head. He said Bray did not want a rematch because Bray was not chasing a win. Bray was chasing proof that Cena could crack. Cena said if Bray wanted proof, then he could send anyone he wanted, and Cena would keep fighting until Bray stood in front of him himself. That brought out Luke Harper, with Erick Rowan slowly appearing behind him. Harper faced Cena in a physical match that felt uncomfortable from the first lockup. Harper did not wrestle like someone trying to outscore Cena. He wrestled like someone trying to wear him down for Bray. Cena fought through the clubbing shots, hit his shoulder tackles, and finally lifted Harper for the Attitude Adjustment, but Rowan slid in and caused the disqualification. Cena fought both men as long as he could, throwing Harper into the steps and knocking Rowan over the announce table, but Bray appeared from nowhere and blindsided him. Bray knelt beside Cena, smiling softly, and said, “You beat me, John. But you still came when I called.” Then he planted Cena with Sister Abigail on the floor while Harper and Rowan stood over him like guards.

After the break, The Shield were shown in the empty upper bowl of the arena, sitting among the seats instead of standing in the ring. It was shot like something WWE was not supposed to have full control over. Dean Ambrose spoke first, his lip still bruised from Raw, saying Triple H thought pain was a punishment, but for The Shield pain was just proof that they were still alive. Seth Rollins said Batista came back expecting the spotlight and instead found three men who were faster, hungrier, and done taking orders. Roman Reigns barely moved. He stared into the camera and said Rusev might be a monster, Batista might be an Animal, and Triple H might be The Game, but none of them scared The Shield. Roman said, “Control ends when the bell rings.” It was simple, cold, and it landed hard.

Paige had her first match as Divas Champion against Alicia Fox, and it was built around whether Paige could handle the pressure after the shock of Raw. Alicia wrestled aggressively, mocking Paige as a rookie and targeting her back with knees and a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. Paige looked shaky early, not because she was scared, but because every move now came with the weight of being champion. Alicia got cocky and slapped her. That woke Paige up. Paige fired back with forearms, screamed as she backed Alicia into the ropes, and finished the match by forcing Alicia to tap to the PTO. The win mattered because Paige did not just survive with a sudden pin like Raw. She made someone quit. As Paige celebrated, AJ hit the ring from behind and attacked her. AJ drove Paige face-first into the mat, grabbed the Divas Championship, and held it for a long second. She did not raise it. She hugged it to her chest, eyes wide, breathing unevenly, like the title was something stolen from her home. Then she placed it beside Paige’s face and said, “You’re holding my life.” AJ left with Paige still down, and the division suddenly felt much more dangerous.

Seth Rollins faced Batista in the next major match, and it was exactly the kind of contrast the show needed. Batista wrestled like a man still angry about WrestleMania, Raw, and the fact that The Shield refused to treat him like a returning legend. Rollins used movement, pace, and risk, forcing Batista to turn, chase, and react. Batista caught him more than once, driving him into the corner and throwing him across the ring, but Rollins kept surviving. The longer it went, the more frustrated Batista became. Rollins nearly stole the match with a springboard knee and a quick roll-up, and that was enough for Batista to lose patience. He shoved the referee aside after a near-fall and blasted Rollins with a spear, causing the disqualification. Batista kept attacking after the bell, but Ambrose ran in and tackled him with wild punches. Rusev’s music hit before The Shield could fully regroup, and Lana led him out with cold purpose. Rusev entered and crushed Ambrose with a spinning heel kick, then caught Rollins trying to springboard and threw him down with frightening strength. Roman Reigns stormed down through the crowd and went straight at Rusev. The two collided in the middle of the ring, trading heavy shots until Roman hit a Superman Punch that staggered Rusev backward. Rusev did not fall. Batista pulled him out before Roman could line up the spear, and Triple H appeared on the stage, staring at The Shield like a man measuring damage. The Shield stood in the ring, Rollins holding his ribs, Ambrose laughing through pain, Roman daring them to come back.

The main event was Daniel Bryan against Alberto Del Rio, and it felt like Bryan’s first true SmackDown test as champion. Del Rio came in with a clear plan. He did not care about chants or emotion. He targeted Bryan’s arm and shoulder, snapping the arm over the ropes, kicking at the ribs, and forcing Bryan to wrestle from underneath. Every time Bryan built momentum, Del Rio cut him off with something sharp: a kick to the shoulder, a shot to the ribs, a backstabber for a close near-fall. Bryan sold the exhaustion of the week beautifully. WrestleMania had taken something out of him. Raw had taken more. Del Rio knew it and wrestled like a predator picking at soft spots. Bryan fought back with kicks, feeding off the crowd as they chanted “YES!” with every strike. Del Rio ducked the final kick and went for the Cross Armbreaker, but Bryan rolled through, escaped, and caught him with a sudden kick to the head. Del Rio staggered. Bryan backed into the corner, the crowd rising with him, and blasted Del Rio with the running knee for the win.


Bryan climbed the turnbuckle and raised both championships, but the celebration barely lasted. Randy Orton slid into the ring from behind and struck with an RKO so sudden the crowd gasped before they booed. Bryan’s body snapped into the mat, and Orton did not yell, did not pose, did not rush. He looked down at the champion like this had been the plan all night. Orton rolled Bryan under the bottom rope and dragged him toward the announce table. Cole and JBL backed away as Orton cleared the monitors with slow, deliberate movements. Bryan tried to crawl away, reaching for the title on the floor, but Orton grabbed him by the beard and pulled him up. Orton looked at the WWE World Heavyweight Championship, then at Bryan, then dropped him with a second RKO through the announce table. The arena went silent for a beat before the boos poured in. Orton rose from the wreckage, breathing hard but still controlled. He picked up the WWE World Heavyweight Championship and held it like it already belonged to him again. Officials checked on Bryan, who was barely moving in the broken table pieces. Orton crouched beside him and said, “This is reality.” SmackDown ended with Bryan down, the Yes Movement wounded for the first time since WrestleMania, and Orton standing over him with the title raised.

EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
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Raw opened with a video package that did not treat Daniel Bryan’s championship reign like a celebration anymore. It began with WrestleMania XXX, with Bryan on his knees in the confetti, both titles raised as the Superdome chanted “YES!” loud enough to feel like the whole company had changed. Then the footage cut to the Raw after WrestleMania, where Bryan survived Triple H and The Authority’s first attempt to take the title away from him. The music darkened as the package moved to SmackDown. Bryan defeated Alberto Del Rio in a hard main event, fighting through the damage from WrestleMania and Raw, only for Randy Orton to strike from behind with a sudden RKO. The final shots were slower: Orton clearing the announce table, Bryan trying to crawl away, the second RKO driving him through the table, and Orton lifting the WWE World Heavyweight Championship like it had already returned to him. The narrator closed over the image of Bryan broken in the wreckage: “Daniel Bryan climbed the mountain at WrestleMania. Now every enemy he made on the way up is trying to throw him back down.”

Pyro exploded inside the arena, and the crowd was already chanting before Michael Cole could even finish welcoming everyone to Monday Night Raw. Cole immediately framed the night around one question: how much punishment could Daniel Bryan take before Extreme Rules? JBL said Bryan wanted to be champion, and this was what champions dealt with. Jerry Lawler pushed back, saying there was a difference between defending the title and being hunted. The camera panned across “YES!” signs in the crowd, but the mood was different from the Raw after WrestleMania. That night felt like a party. This felt like the first week of a war.

Daniel Bryan opened the show with both championships over his shoulders, ribs taped under his shirt, moving slower than usual but still forcing a smile as the crowd rose for him. He stopped on the stage and lifted the titles, leading the building into a loud “YES!” chant, but even that had some anger in it now. Bryan walked to the ring carefully, stepped through the ropes, and stood in the center while the crowd kept chanting. When he finally spoke, he admitted that Randy Orton hurt him on SmackDown. He said Orton hit him from behind, drove him through the announce table, and left him lying because that was the only way Orton knew how to make a statement. Bryan said Orton could call himself reality, The Apex Predator, or the face of WWE, but the reality was simple: Bryan was still champion, and Orton was still the man who lost everything at WrestleMania. Randy Orton interrupted before Bryan could go any further. He came out slowly, dressed in black, no title, no smile, no rush. Orton stood on the stage and said Bryan was still making the same mistake. He was confusing survival with success. Orton said Bryan had survived WrestleMania, survived Triple H, survived SmackDown for a little while, but the title did not make him untouchable. It made him easier to find. Bryan leaned on the ropes and told Orton to stop standing on the stage and come finish the conversation in the ring. Orton smirked and said he already proved on SmackDown that Bryan was brave enough to fight, but not smart enough to protect himself. That brought out Triple H and Stephanie McMahon, and the arena turned immediately. Triple H walked out in a suit, Stephanie beside him with that calm corporate smile, and they stood between Orton and Bryan on the stage. Triple H said he was not impressed by Bryan’s courage, because courage was just stupidity with applause. Stephanie said the WWE World Heavyweight Champion represented the company every single night, and right now Bryan looked like someone who could barely stand without the crowd chanting him upright. Bryan told her the people had carried him farther than The Authority ever wanted him to go, and if that bothered her, she should get used to it. Triple H’s face tightened. He said Bryan wanted to prove he could survive every obstacle, so tonight he would get one more. Bryan would face Kane in the main event. The crowd booed, and Bryan’s expression shifted because Kane was not just another opponent. Stephanie leaned into the microphone and said this would not be Corporate Kane in a suit, not the Director of Operations, and not the man who sat in meetings. Tonight, Bryan would face the monster. Orton looked pleased for the first time all night. Bryan did not back down. He lifted both titles and said if Kane was the next monster The Authority wanted to send, then Kane could come get some too. Triple H stared at him and said Bryan’s problem was that he still thought every fight was about winning. Some fights were about leaving someone with nothing left for the next one.


The opening match kept the pace high as Dolph Ziggler faced Damien Sandow. Sandow came out angry, still carrying the bitterness of a man who believed the post-WrestleMania spotlight had passed him by again. He took the microphone before the bell and said the audience cheered noise over intellect, flips over substance, and empty charisma over real greatness. Ziggler cut him off with his entrance, and the crowd reacted like they were happy to see someone ready to fight instead of complain. The match had good energy from the start. Sandow slowed Ziggler down with knees, a side Russian leg sweep, and a sharp elbow drop, repeatedly shouting that Ziggler was a showoff with no direction. Ziggler sold from underneath, bumping hard and making Sandow feel more dangerous than he had in weeks. When Ziggler finally fired back, the building came with him. He hit a jumping DDT for a near-fall, survived Sandow grabbing the tights on a roll-up, and finished him with the Zig Zag after ducking a clothesline. Ziggler celebrated like the win mattered, pointing toward the camera and saying he was done being background noise.

Backstage, Randy Orton found Kane standing in a dark corner of the hallway, no suit, no expression, just staring down at his gloved hands. Orton tried to talk strategy, saying Bryan’s ribs were already damaged and Kane did not need to beat him clean. He just needed to make sure Bryan crawled into Extreme Rules weaker than he was now. Kane did not answer. Orton kept talking, saying they had both known Bryan was never built to carry the company. Kane slowly turned his head toward Orton, and that was enough to stop him. Stephanie stepped into frame and told Orton that Kane understood his role perfectly. Orton asked what that meant. Stephanie smiled and said it meant Daniel Bryan would learn tonight that some monsters did not need motivation.

The Usos came out next for Jey Uso against Luke Harper, with Jimmy at ringside and Erick Rowan standing silently in Harper’s corner. The tag champions were still confident, but the camera caught how often they looked toward Rowan. This was not just another singles match. This was the champions trying to learn what kind of fight was coming for them. Jey started fast, using kicks to Harper’s legs and chest, staying away from the big right hand and forcing Harper to chase him. Harper absorbed more than Jey wanted him to, then changed the match with one boot to the face that stopped Jey cold. From there, Harper wrestled ugly. He threw Jey into the ropes, leaned on him, smothered him, and kept looking at Jimmy every time he landed something heavy. Jey fought back with a burst of speed, ducking a discus clothesline and hitting a jumping kick that finally staggered Harper. He went to the top rope, and the crowd rose with him, but Rowan moved one step closer to the apron. He did not grab Jey. He did not touch the ropes. He only moved. That was enough for Jey’s eyes to shift for half a second. Harper used that half-second to recover, sprint across the ring, and knock Jey off balance. Jey landed awkwardly, stumbled forward, and Harper turned him inside out with the discus clothesline for the win. Jimmy slid in immediately to check on his brother, but Harper did not celebrate. He crouched in the corner, breathing through his mouth, staring at the WWE Tag Team Championship on Jimmy’s shoulder. Rowan stepped onto the apron. Jimmy stood up ready to fight. Then the lights cut out. When they came back, Bray Wyatt was on the TitanTron in the rocking chair. He said brothers were supposed to protect each other, but protection was just fear with a better name. Bray said The Usos had something beautiful, something pure, something that made them strong. Then he smiled and said beautiful things were always the easiest to ruin. The lights came back fully, and Harper and Rowan were already gone from ringside. Jimmy helped Jey up, but neither brother looked comfortable anymore.

After the break, Renee Young interviewed Paige backstage. Paige had the Divas Championship over her shoulder, still looking young, still looking almost surprised by the speed of her own rise, but there was more confidence than there had been on SmackDown. Renee asked about AJ Lee’s warning that Paige had no idea what it meant to be hunted. Paige said AJ was right about one thing: she did not know what it felt like to lose a title reign that had defined her life. But she did know what it felt like to be doubted, dismissed, and treated like she did not belong. Paige said AJ could call it luck all she wanted, but AJ put the title on the line, AJ got in the ring, and AJ lost. AJ walked into frame before Renee could ask another question. No skipping. No playful smile. She looked calmer than she had on SmackDown, and that made her feel more dangerous. AJ congratulated Paige again, but the word sounded empty. She said Paige was holding the title, but that did not mean she understood it. That championship was not a prop. It was proof. Proof that AJ was smarter than everyone who laughed at her, better than everyone who overlooked her, and tougher than every woman who thought she could replace her. Paige said if the title meant that much, AJ should fight like it. AJ stepped close and said Paige’s problem was that she thought winning the championship made her special. AJ said all it really did was put her in the center of AJ’s world.

The show returned to the ring for Cesaro against Mark Henry, with Big E joining commentary and the Intercontinental Championship placed on the desk in front of him. Cesaro entered to a strong reaction, no Zeb Colter, no Jack Swagger, no old Real Americans presentation. He looked like a man moving forward on his own terms. Mark Henry gave him exactly the right kind of test. Henry shoved Cesaro around early, overpowering him in the lockup and daring him to try the same strength he had used at WrestleMania. Cesaro did not run from it. He absorbed the power, answered with uppercuts, and slowly started building momentum. The first major reaction came when Cesaro caught Henry coming off the ropes with a European uppercut that rocked him backward. Big E nodded at commentary, clearly impressed but not intimidated. The finish came when Henry tried to crush Cesaro in the corner, only for Cesaro to move and catch him with another uppercut. Henry staggered out, and Cesaro shocked the crowd by getting him up just long enough to plant him with the Neutralizer. It was not smooth. It was not easy. That made it better. Cesaro covered and got the win, and the crowd gave him a real ovation. Big E stood at commentary and applauded respectfully. Cesaro looked at him from the ring and nodded. For a moment, it was exactly what the Intercontinental Title scene should be: champion and challenger, respect and competition, two men wanting the same prize for the right reasons. Then Jack Swagger ruined it. He came through the crowd and blasted Cesaro from behind, clipping the knee and driving him down near the ropes. Big E threw off the headset and rushed toward the ring, but Swagger slid out before he could get there. Zeb Colter appeared on the stage, shouting that Cesaro was a fraud and that Big E was protecting the wrong man. Swagger backed up the ramp, furious, while Big E stood over Cesaro and held the title. Cesaro did not want help getting up. He pushed himself to his feet, limping slightly, and looked past Big E toward Swagger. The triangle was clear now. Big E was the champion. Cesaro was the rising challenger. Swagger was the bitter man willing to ruin both of them.

John Cena came out next, and the noise changed. Cena was not bouncing on the stage or smiling into the camera. He walked straight to the ring and got right to the point. He said WrestleMania should have ended it. He beat Bray Wyatt. He proved he would not use the chair. He proved he would not become what Bray wanted him to become. But he admitted something felt wrong. Bray had lost the match and still walked away smiling. Cena said that was because Bray never cared about winning at WrestleMania as much as he cared about planting doubt. Cena said he was done with the sermons, done with the games, and done watching Harper and Rowan appear every time Bray was in trouble. If Bray wanted to prove Cena was afraid, then Cena wanted him at Extreme Rules inside a steel cage. The arena reacted big to the challenge. Cena said the cage was not for show. It was not a gimmick. It was there for one reason: to keep Harper and Rowan out and force Bray to stand across from him with nowhere to hide. The lights cut, and when they came back, Bray was sitting in the rocking chair on the stage. Harper and Rowan stood behind him like shadows. Bray laughed softly and said Cena still did not understand. Cena thought the cage was protection. Bray called it a prison. He said those walls would not keep the darkness out because the darkness was already inside Cena. Bray said Cena wanted to lock himself in a cage because deep down, he knew the people could not save him once the door closed. Cena shouted back that Bray could talk all night, but at Extreme Rules he would have to fight. Bray stood up slowly and accepted. He said at WrestleMania, Cena looked into the dark and walked away. At Extreme Rules, he would be locked inside it. The lights cut again, and when they came back, the rocking chair was empty. Cena stood alone in the ring, staring at the stage, trying to look angry instead of unsettled.

Backstage, Cody Rhodes stood in front of a monitor watching footage of himself pulling away from Goldust on SmackDown. Goldust walked up behind him and said they needed to talk. Cody said he was tired of talking. Goldust told him he was not trying to embarrass him, not trying to hold him back, and not trying to make everything about the Rhodes family. Cody laughed under his breath and said that was the problem. Goldust did not have to try. It happened anyway. Before the argument could go further, Dusty Rhodes walked into frame, and the crowd reacted warmly. Dusty told both of them that families could fight, but they needed to remember who they were before they said something they could not take back. Cody looked at his father and said that was easy for him to say. Dusty got to be The American Dream. Goldust got to be the bizarre legend who survived everything. Cody said he was still treated like the son, the brother, the partner, the next chapter in somebody else’s story. Goldust looked hurt, but Cody walked away before either of them could answer.


The next match was Rob Van Dam against Fandango, giving the show a needed change of rhythm. Fandango tried to slow RVD down with kicks and arrogance, dancing after every small opening and yelling at the crowd to respect him. RVD gave him flashes of vintage offense, hitting quick kicks, a monkey flip out of the corner, Rolling Thunder, and a springboard kick that brought the crowd up. Fandango got a near-fall after crotching RVD on the top rope and landing a leg drop across the back of the neck, but he wasted time afterward. RVD recovered, caught him with a kick to the jaw, and finished with the Five-Star Frog Splash. Commentary put over that Van Dam’s return was not just a one-week nostalgia pop. He was stacking wins, and in a midcard scene full of moving pieces, that mattered.

Triple H came out after the break with Batista, Randy Orton, Lana, and Rusev behind him. The Authority side looked powerful, but not united. Orton and Batista stood apart. Rusev stood with Lana, not wearing a suit, not looking like an official member of anything, just a weapon Triple H had invited into the picture. Triple H said The Shield had embarrassed themselves by pretending they were revolutionaries. He said they were not heroes. They were not rebels. They were not the future. They were three attack dogs who forgot who opened the gate. He said at Extreme Rules, he would remind them what happened when employees mistook themselves for equals. The Shield came through the crowd before Triple H could continue. Ambrose, Rollins, and Reigns moved through the people with purpose, still carrying themselves like they were willing to fight the whole stage. Ambrose said Triple H kept calling them dogs like that was supposed to insult them. He said dogs had teeth, and The Shield had finally stopped biting for someone else. Rollins said Triple H loved rewriting history, pretending he built them, but all he really did was point them at people he was scared to deal with himself. Roman kept his eyes on Triple H and said, “You don’t own us.” The crowd erupted. Triple H smiled and made the announcement: at Extreme Rules, The Shield would face Triple H, Batista, and Alexander Rusev in a Six-Man Street Fight. No tags if they did not want them. No disqualifications. No count-outs. No protection. Ambrose grinned like Triple H had just given him a gift. Rollins looked from Batista to Rusev and said The Authority had made the same mistake again. They thought violence scared The Shield. Roman looked at Rusev and said monsters got put down too. Lana stepped forward and said Rusev would crush all three of them. Triple H then booked Dean Ambrose against Rusev for later in the night, telling Ambrose he could start proving how much pain he enjoyed.

The Divas Champion was in action next as Paige faced Alicia Fox. Alicia wrestled more aggressively than usual, trying to test whether the rookie champion could handle being targeted. Paige took some early punishment, especially when Alicia threw her into the corner and mocked her by holding the Divas Championship pose. But Paige settled in, and the crowd started to respond to her grit. She fought back with short clotheslines, a knee in the corner, and a fallaway slam that sent Alicia rolling toward the ropes. The finish came when Alicia tried to escape a second slam and got caught in the PTO. Paige locked it in tight, and Alicia tapped out. Paige released the hold and was handed the Divas Championship, but AJ Lee attacked from behind before the celebration could breathe. AJ drove Paige face-first into the mat, mounted her with frantic punches, then grabbed the championship. For one second, it looked like AJ was going to hit Paige with it. Instead, she dropped to her knees beside her, placed the title next to Paige’s face, and whispered loud enough for the camera to catch: “You are holding my life.” Paige tried to push herself up, and AJ grabbed her by the hair. Officials rushed in before it got worse, but AJ did not fight them hard. She had already made her point. Paige was champion, but AJ was not going away.

Dean Ambrose versus Alexander Rusev felt different before the bell even rang. Ambrose came out first, pacing like he was excited by the idea of getting hurt. Rollins and Reigns stayed at ringside, while Triple H and Batista watched from the stage and Lana stood near Rusev’s corner. Rusev overpowered Ambrose early, throwing him across the ring and crushing him with knees to the ribs. Ambrose kept getting up. That became the story of the match. Rusev would knock him down, and Ambrose would rise with a worse idea than the one before. He threw punches from underneath, clawed at Rusev’s face, and laughed after getting dropped with a brutal body kick. Ambrose finally created an opening by low-bridging Rusev to the floor and diving onto him through the ropes. Rusev caught part of him but still staggered into the barricade. Ambrose hammered away until Rusev shoved him spine-first into the apron. Rollins moved closer. Batista stepped down the ramp. Roman watched Rusev with a cold focus. Back in the ring, Ambrose caught Rusev with a rebound clothesline that actually took him off his feet, and the crowd exploded because it was the first time Rusev looked human. Ambrose covered, but Rusev powered out before two. The match broke down when Batista walked closer and distracted Ambrose long enough for Rusev to hit a spinning heel kick. Rusev locked in the Accolade, bending Ambrose backward while Ambrose refused to tap. Rollins hit the ring and caused the disqualification, springboarding onto Rusev to break the hold. Batista rushed in and flattened Rollins with a spear. Roman entered next and went straight at Rusev. The two traded heavy shots in the center of the ring while the crowd rose. Roman hit a Superman Punch that staggered Rusev backward. For the second time in this build, Rusev did not go down, but he moved back. That mattered. Triple H stepped onto the apron, and Roman turned toward him. Batista pulled Rusev out before Roman could spear him, while Ambrose crawled to the ropes smiling through pain. The Shield stood in the ring, hurt but still ready, and Triple H looked more annoyed than satisfied.

Before the main event, Stephanie found Daniel Bryan in the trainer’s room. Bryan was taping his ribs tighter, wincing as he pulled the tape across his body. Stephanie told him nobody would blame him if he admitted he was not medically fit to compete. Bryan said she would love that. Stephanie said she would love having a champion who understood responsibility. Bryan looked up and said responsibility was exactly why he was going out there. The people who chanted for him did not believe in him because he never got hurt. They believed in him because he kept getting back up. Stephanie’s smile faded for a second. She told him Kane did not care about chants. Bryan stood up carefully, picked up the championships, and said Kane would have to learn like everyone else.

The main event was Daniel Bryan against Kane, and the arena shifted the moment Kane’s music hit. The red light, the fire, the mask, the slow walk — it felt like The Authority had stopped trying to outsmart Bryan and started trying to damage him. Bryan came out second, titles over his shoulders, and the crowd tried to lift him from the moment he appeared. He moved carefully, but once the bell rang, he attacked first. Bryan fired kicks at Kane’s legs, trying to chop him down before Kane could grab him. Kane shoved him off once. Bryan came back. Kane shoved him off again. Bryan came back harder, hitting the ropes and landing a low dropkick to the knee. For the first few minutes, Bryan wrestled smart. He did not try to match Kane’s power. He used movement, kicks, and angles, forcing Kane to turn and reset. He hit a corner dropkick, then another, but when he went for a third, Kane stepped out and caught him with a huge uppercut. Bryan dropped hard, and from there the match became survival. Kane targeted the ribs immediately. He drove knees into Bryan’s midsection, threw him into the barricade, and pressed him across the ropes while the referee counted. Bryan tried to fight back with strikes, but every Kane shot changed the pace. JBL said this was what The Authority wanted. Kane was not trying to prove Bryan was unworthy. He was trying to make sure Bryan could not make it to Extreme Rules in one piece. Bryan fought from underneath and created a real rally late. He slipped out of a chokeslam, kicked Kane in the chest, and fired up as the crowd chanted “YES!” with every strike. Kane caught the final kick, but Bryan countered into an enzuigiri that staggered him. Bryan climbed to the top rope and hit a missile dropkick. Kane went down. Bryan crawled into the cover, but Kane powered out at two. Bryan backed into the corner, breathing hard, holding his ribs, and the entire building rose because they knew what was coming. He waited for Kane to stand, then sprinted for the running knee.

Kane caught him by the throat.

For a second, it looked over. Kane lifted Bryan for the chokeslam, but Bryan countered in midair, turning his body just enough to land behind him. Kane turned around, and Bryan caught him with a small package. One, two, three.

Bryan escaped with the win.

The crowd exploded, but Bryan did not get long to celebrate. He rolled away clutching his ribs, and Kane sat up almost immediately. The win had counted, but it had not solved anything. Bryan used the ropes to stand, and Orton slid into the ring from behind. The crowd warned Bryan just in time. Orton went for the RKO, but Bryan shoved him off and started firing kicks. For the first time since SmackDown, Bryan had Orton in trouble. He kicked Orton to the ropes, clotheslined him over the top, and the building came alive. Bryan turned back toward Kane, but Kane grabbed him again. Bryan escaped a second chokeslam and sent Kane into the corner. He backed up for the running knee again, but Orton slid back into the ring with one of the world title belts. Bryan turned, and Orton smashed the championship into the back of his head. The chants died instantly. Kane stepped over Bryan’s body and looked down at him. Orton crouched beside Bryan, breathing hard, then slowly lifted the WWE World Heavyweight Championship as Raw goes off the air.
EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey
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The Visionary

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SmackDown opened with pyro, but the energy in the arena carried a harder edge than usual. The final images from Raw still hung over the show: Daniel Bryan down on the mat, Randy Orton holding the WWE World Heavyweight Championship over him, and Kane standing nearby like The Authority had finally found the right monster to wear the champion down. This was no longer just about whether Daniel Bryan could beat Randy Orton at Extreme Rules. It was about whether Bryan could even make it there in one piece.

Then Vince McMahon’s music hit.

The entire building rose at once. Vince walked out in a dark suit with a microphone in his hand, and he did not have the look of a man coming out for a routine announcement. There was no grin, no big strut, no playing to the crowd for too long. He stopped on the stage, looked across the arena, then made his way to the ring while the crowd buzzed louder with every step. Once he stepped through the ropes, he waited for the reaction to settle, then looked directly into the camera.

Vince said WrestleMania XXX was supposed to be a turning point. Daniel Bryan fought through every obstacle placed in front of him, survived Triple H, Randy Orton, and Batista, and ended the night as WWE World Heavyweight Champion. Vince said that should have been the beginning of something new: new champions, new opportunities, and a company moving forward because the people had made their voices impossible to ignore. But over the last two weeks, what he had seen was not leadership. It was not competition. It was personal.

He said The Authority had taken their disappointment from WrestleMania and turned Raw and SmackDown into a weekly punishment chamber. Triple H tried to take the title from Bryan the very next night. Randy Orton attacked Bryan from behind on SmackDown and drove him through an announce table. Kane was sent after Bryan on Raw, and even after Bryan survived that, Orton used the championship itself as a weapon. Vince paused as the crowd booed, then said that was not how a champion should be tested. That was how desperate people acted when they could not accept that the company had changed without their permission.

The crowd broke into “YES!” chants, and Vince let it breathe. He said this was not only about Daniel Bryan. He had watched The Shield become targets because they refused to keep taking orders. He had watched The Usos get dragged into Bray Wyatt’s games because Harper and Rowan wanted to make a statement. He had watched Paige win the Divas Championship and immediately become the center of AJ Lee’s obsession. He had watched Cesaro step out on his own, only for Jack Swagger and Zeb Colter to try to drag him backward. Vince said that was what WWE was supposed to have: ambition, conflict, emotion, and people fighting to be the best. But there had to be a line between chaos and control, and The Authority had crossed it.

Before Vince could go any further, Triple H’s music hit.

Triple H walked onto the stage with Stephanie McMahon, both of them dressed like they had expected this confrontation and were already tired of it. Stephanie spoke before they even got to the ring, telling Vince that nobody was abusing power and nobody was punishing Daniel Bryan. The Authority was simply holding the WWE World Heavyweight Champion to the standard that came with the position. Triple H stepped into the ring and said Bryan wanted the chants, the titles, the spotlight, and the right to call himself the face of WWE. Triple H said the face of WWE did not get to complain when the job became difficult. Then he looked at Vince and added, “You taught me that.”

Vince did not move. He stared at Triple H and said there was a difference between making champions fight and trying to break them before a pay-per-view. Triple H smiled and said Vince was being emotional. He said Daniel Bryan was not special because people chanted three letters with him. He was champion, which meant every target in the company belonged on his back. Stephanie said The Authority had done nothing except give the WWE Universe must-see television. Raw and SmackDown were intense because The Authority knew how to create pressure.

Vince looked at Stephanie and said pressure was one thing. A corporate tantrum was another.

The crowd erupted, and Stephanie’s face immediately changed. Triple H stepped closer, but Vince kept talking. He said he was not there to erase The Authority or pretend Triple H and Stephanie did not still have influence. But Raw and SmackDown were bigger than their egos. WWE was bigger than personal grudges. Vince said both shows needed one clear voice who could make decisions without waiting for The Authority’s approval. Not a puppet. Not an assistant. Not someone sitting in the back waiting to be told what was “best for business.” A real General Manager.

Triple H laughed under his breath and asked if Vince had lost his mind. Stephanie said WWE did not need another voice in power. It needed one clear direction. Vince turned toward her and said, “And that’s exactly why I’m doing this. Because your direction keeps ending with my champion face-down on the floor.”

The crowd popped again.

Vince said the new General Manager would not be there to protect Daniel Bryan from defending the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. Randy Orton would still get his match at Extreme Rules. Triple H, Batista, and Rusev would still have to face The Shield in a Six-Man Street Fight. John Cena and Bray Wyatt would still be locked inside a steel cage. But from this point forward, if The Authority wanted to stack the deck, somebody would be there to cut it.

Triple H stepped closer and said, “So who is it? Who did you find that you think can stand between us and the way this company is supposed to run?”

Vince smiled for the first time.

He said he did not need two General Managers. He did not need one person for Raw and another person for SmackDown, each trying to survive whatever mess The Authority created. He needed one person with enough experience, enough guts, and enough history on both shows to handle the entire machine. One person who understood championships, betrayal, manipulation, chaos, and what happened when power went unchecked.

Vince turned toward the stage and said Raw and SmackDown now had one General Manager.

Then Edge’s music hit.

The reaction was massive. Edge walked onto the stage in a black leather jacket, smiling just enough to enjoy the moment, but not enough to make it feel like a nostalgia cameo. He stood at the top of the ramp, soaking in the reaction, then looked straight at Triple H and Stephanie in the ring. The smile faded into something sharper. He made his way down the ramp, slapped a few hands, entered the ring, and shook Vince’s hand.

Triple H stared at him with a cold smirk. Stephanie looked him up and down like the announcement had already irritated her. Edge took the microphone from Vince and waited through the “EDGE!” chants before speaking. He said it felt good to be back, but he was not going to stand there and pretend he had always been fair, noble, or easy to deal with. Raw and SmackDown had both seen the best and worst of him. He had lied, cheated, manipulated, stolen opportunities, cashed in at the perfect time, and taken every shortcut in the book when he was an active competitor.

Then Edge looked directly at Triple H and Stephanie.

He said that was exactly why Vince called him. Because if The Authority wanted to play games, he knew the board. If Randy Orton wanted to strike from behind, he knew the trick. If Triple H wanted to hide control behind business language, Edge knew what manipulation sounded like because he had done plenty of it himself. But he also knew the difference between being ruthless and being insecure.

Randy Orton appeared on the stage with no music, watching the whole thing unfold.

Edge turned toward him and said Orton could stay up there if he wanted, because tonight he would not need to sneak through a crowd, slide into the ring from behind, or wait until Daniel Bryan was exhausted. Orton raised his microphone and told Edge to be careful. He said power looked strange on a man who could not fight anymore. The crowd booed hard, and Edge’s smile disappeared.

Edge said Orton was right about one thing. He could not wrestle anymore. But he could still make decisions. And now, those decisions applied to both Raw and SmackDown.

Edge said his first decision as General Manager was simple: Randy Orton would compete in tonight’s main event against Dean Ambrose. No Triple H. No Stephanie. No Batista. No Kane. No Rusev. No excuses. Just Orton and Ambrose.

The crowd erupted as Triple H immediately turned toward Edge. Stephanie called it reckless. Triple H said Edge had been in power for less than five minutes and was already trying to provoke a war. Edge shook his head and said the war had already started. He was just making sure everyone had to fight it face-to-face.

Edge then looked back at Orton and said if he wanted to spend the last two weeks proving Daniel Bryan was not strong enough to survive him, then tonight Orton could prove he could survive one night without The Authority standing beside him.

Orton stared from the stage, saying nothing. Triple H and Stephanie looked furious in the ring. Vince stood beside Edge, clearly satisfied, while the crowd chanted for Ambrose. Edge raised the microphone one more time and said Raw and SmackDown were officially under his watch now. The Authority still had power, but they no longer had the whole company to themselves.

Then Edge looked into the hard camera and said, “Welcome to my show.”

His music hit again as Orton backed away from the stage with a cold stare. Triple H and Stephanie remained in the ring, furious but forced to absorb the moment. Vince left beside Edge, and for the first time in weeks, The Authority looked like they had been forced to react instead of dictate. SmackDown moved forward with one clear message: Edge was now in charge of both Raw and SmackDown, and The Authority’s free ride was over.


SmackDown returned from break with the camera already backstage, following Cody Rhodes as he walked through the hallway alone. He was in his ring gear, but he was not warming up or bouncing around like someone trying to get loose for a match. He moved with his head slightly down, jaw tight, eyes fixed ahead like he had been carrying the same thought all day and could not get away from it. Michael Cole reminded viewers that the tension between Cody Rhodes and Goldust had been getting worse since WrestleMania, especially after Cody pulled away from Goldust on last week’s SmackDown and then spoke harshly to both Goldust and Dusty Rhodes on Raw. JBL said Cody had a right to be frustrated because he had all the talent in the world, but sometimes a man had to stop being somebody’s little brother if he wanted to become his own man. Cole said there was a difference between wanting your own identity and taking it out on the people who loved you.

Renee Young stepped into frame before Cody could reach the gorilla position and asked if she could get a word before his match. Cody stopped, but he did not look thrilled about it. Renee asked about Goldust, saying the WWE Universe had watched the two of them drift further apart over the last few weeks, and she wanted to know whether Cody believed the relationship could still be repaired. Cody let out a small laugh, not because anything was funny, but because he seemed tired of hearing the question. He said everyone kept asking about the relationship, the family, the partnership, the Rhodes brothers, like that was the only story anyone knew how to tell about him. Cody said he had a match tonight against Kofi Kingston, a former Intercontinental Champion, one of the most athletic men in WWE, and still, the first question was about Goldust. He looked directly at Renee and said that was exactly the problem.

Before Renee could respond, Goldust walked into frame. He was already dressed to be at ringside, wearing his entrance coat and face paint, but his expression was not theatrical. He looked concerned. He told Cody he was not there to steal his interview or make the night about himself. He was only there because Cody had a match, and brothers were supposed to have each other’s backs. Cody turned slowly toward him and stared for a second before answering. He said Goldust always made it sound so simple. “I’m just here to help. I’m just here to support you. I’m just here because we’re brothers.” Cody said those words used to mean something to him, but lately they felt more like a spotlight Goldust kept dragging behind him. Goldust shook his head and said that was not fair. He said Cody knew better than anyone how hard they had fought to earn respect as a team. They had beaten The Shield. They had been tag champions. They had brought pride back to the Rhodes name. Cody cut him off and said there it was again — “the Rhodes name.” Not Cody Rhodes. Not his career. Not his future. Just the family name, the team, the legacy, the thing everyone could celebrate because it was safe and sentimental.

Goldust stepped closer and lowered his voice. He told Cody he knew what insecurity sounded like because he had lived with it his whole career. He said he knew what it felt like to be laughed at, underestimated, dismissed, and treated like a sideshow instead of a serious wrestler. Goldust said the difference was that he never blamed Cody for his pain. Cody’s face changed when he heard that. For a second, it looked like Goldust had hit something real. Cody blinked, looked away, then hardened again. He told Goldust not to turn this into some lesson. He said he did not need advice from his older brother, did not need a shoulder to cry on, and did not need Goldust standing ringside tonight trying to clap him into confidence. Goldust said he was still going out there because he loved him. Cody nodded once, coldly, and said, “That’s the problem. You always think love gives you permission.”

Cody walked off, leaving Goldust standing there with Renee. Goldust did not chase him. He just watched Cody go, and the camera stayed on him long enough for the hurt to settle in. Cole said that was hard to listen to because Goldust was clearly trying to help, but Cody was hearing everything as an insult. JBL said Cody was tired of being handled, and sometimes the people closest to you were the last ones to realize they were holding you back. Lawler said Goldust was not holding Cody back. Cody was letting bitterness talk for him.

The show cut back into the arena as Kofi Kingston’s music hit. Kofi came out first with his usual energy, slapping hands with fans on both sides of the ramp, but commentary made it clear he was not just there to be part of someone else’s family drama. Cole called Kofi one of the most dangerous opponents to face when a wrestler was distracted because he could beat anyone in a split second. Kofi entered the ring, climbed the turnbuckles, and pointed out into the crowd while the fans responded. Then Cody’s music hit, and the atmosphere changed. Cody walked out with purpose, but there was no smile, no posing, no attempt to connect with the audience. He stepped onto the stage and immediately looked over his shoulder because Goldust had come out behind him. Goldust kept a respectful distance. He did not try to stand beside Cody or touch him. He simply followed him down the ramp, clapping lightly and encouraging him from a few steps back. Cody heard the support and looked irritated by it before he even reached the ring.

Cody climbed onto the apron and wiped his boots slowly before stepping through the ropes. He glanced back at Goldust, who had taken a spot near ringside, and shook his head. The referee checked on both men, then called for the bell.


The match started with Cody trying to wrestle clean but aggressively. He locked up with Kofi and immediately forced him into the corner, holding the collar-and-elbow tie-up longer than he needed to. The referee counted, and Cody broke at four, but he did it with a little shove against Kofi’s chest. Kofi did not take the bait. He circled back out, reset, and used his speed on the next exchange, ducking under Cody’s arm, hitting the ropes, and catching him with a quick arm drag. Cody popped up annoyed. Kofi hit another arm drag, then held onto the arm and brought Cody down to the mat. Goldust clapped at ringside, shouting, “Take your time, Cody! Reset!” Cody looked toward him immediately, and that half-second was enough for Kofi to tighten the hold.

Cody fought to his feet and pushed Kofi into the ropes. Kofi came back fast, leapfrogged over Cody, then dropped down as Cody ran over him. Kofi went for a jumping back elbow, but Cody slid under it and rolled to the floor to slow everything down. The crowd booed a little, wanting the pace to continue. Cody paced near ringside, breathing through his nose, trying to calm himself. Goldust walked toward him and said something softly, probably encouragement, but Cody snapped back before the camera could fully hear it. He pointed a finger at Goldust and told him to stay back. Goldust raised both hands and stopped. Kofi, seeing Cody distracted again, ran across the ring and teased a dive, but Cody moved away at the last second. Kofi landed on the apron instead, adjusted quickly, and kicked Cody in the shoulder from above. Cody stumbled backward, and Kofi followed with a springboard crossbody to the floor that got the crowd going.

Kofi rolled Cody back into the ring and went for the first cover of the match, but Cody kicked out at one. Kofi stayed on him with a side headlock, keeping the tempo quick. Cody worked his way up and backed Kofi into the ropes again, this time using a knee to the midsection to cut him off. That changed the match. Cody followed with a hard forearm to the back, then another, and suddenly he looked much more comfortable. He whipped Kofi into the corner and charged, but Kofi got both feet up. Cody staggered, Kofi went to the second rope, and Cody recovered just in time to sweep the legs out from under him. Kofi landed hard on the top turnbuckle and then dropped to the mat.

Cody covered for two, then immediately mounted Kofi and drove short right hands into him. The referee warned him, and Cody backed away with a frustrated look. Goldust clapped again, trying to keep him focused, and Cody turned toward him with clear annoyance. Cole said Cody was in control of the match, but even when things were going his way, he could not stop hearing Goldust. JBL said that was because Goldust kept making himself part of the story. Lawler said Goldust had barely done anything except support him.

Cody slowed the match down with a front facelock, grinding Kofi down and forcing him to carry Cody’s weight. Kofi tried to fight up, but Cody snapped him back down and looked out at the crowd, almost daring them to cheer for Kofi. The fans started clapping, trying to bring Kofi back, and Goldust joined in. That made Cody tighten the hold. Kofi fought to one knee, then to his feet, landing body shots to break free. He hit the ropes, but Cody caught him with a drop-down uppercut that stopped him clean. Cody covered again. One, two, Kofi kicked out.

Cody began to argue with the referee, not wildly, but with a controlled irritation that showed how badly he wanted this match to prove something. He pulled Kofi up and went for a suplex, holding him in the air for an extra second before dropping him. Then he stood up and looked toward Goldust again. Goldust nodded, impressed, and that somehow bothered Cody more than a boo would have. Cody shouted, “I know what I’m doing!” Goldust looked confused and said, “I didn’t say you didn’t!” Cody turned back around and Kofi nearly caught him with a small package. One, two, Cody kicked out just in time.

Cody scrambled up angry and immediately blasted Kofi with a clothesline. It was not pretty, but it was effective. He stood over Kofi and looked down at him for a second before dragging him toward the corner. Cody climbed to the middle rope and came off with a knee drop, then covered again. Kofi kicked out at two. Cody’s frustration grew. He pulled Kofi up by the hair and set up for Cross Rhodes, but Kofi spun out, pushed Cody toward the ropes, and caught him on the rebound with a jumping clothesline. Both men were down.

The crowd started to rally. Kofi got up first and began firing back with chops, then a dropkick, then another. Cody swung wildly, but Kofi ducked and hit a leaping clothesline. Kofi circled him, clapped his hands, and the building knew what was coming. He hit the Boom Drop clean in the center of the ring and popped back up with energy. Goldust, unable to help himself, shouted for Cody to get up. Cody heard him and rolled toward the ropes, trying to pull himself upright. Kofi backed into the corner and started setting for Trouble in Paradise.

Goldust stepped closer to the apron, not getting involved, just trying to encourage Cody. Kofi spun for Trouble in Paradise, but Cody ducked underneath. Kofi landed on his feet, and Cody grabbed him from behind, looking for Cross Rhodes again. Kofi escaped a second time and shoved Cody forward. Cody nearly collided with Goldust, who had stepped too close to the apron. Cody stopped himself inches away from his brother and turned around furious. Goldust immediately backed up, apologizing. That moment almost cost Cody the match. Kofi rolled him up from behind. One, two, Cody barely kicked out.

Cody got up in a panic, and Kofi charged. Cody sidestepped him, sending Kofi shoulder-first into the ring post. This time Cody did not hesitate. He grabbed Kofi as he stumbled out and hit Cross Rhodes in the center of the ring. One, two, three.

The bell rang, and Cody sat up quickly, breathing hard, almost like the victory did not give him the relief he wanted. The referee raised his hand, but Cody pulled away after only a second. Goldust entered the ring carefully, not rushing him, not making a big show of it. He approached Cody with a small smile and tried to raise his hand, the same way he had done after Cody’s win the week before. Cody looked at the hand, looked at Goldust, and stepped back.

The crowd reacted with a mix of boos and uncomfortable noise. Goldust lowered his hand slowly. He tried to speak to Cody without a microphone, telling him it was a good win, telling him he was proud of him. Cody’s face tightened at the word “proud.” He asked Goldust if he wanted a medal for standing there. Goldust shook his head and said, “I’m trying to be your brother.” Cody answered, loud enough for the camera to catch, “Then stop trying to be my shadow.”

Goldust looked like that one hurt more than the others. Cody moved toward the ropes, ready to leave, but Goldust grabbed his wrist. Not hard. Not aggressively. Just enough to stop him. Cody froze. The crowd buzzed because it felt like the moment could turn. Goldust told him, “Don’t walk away from me again.” Cody slowly looked down at Goldust’s hand on his wrist, then back up at his face. He pulled free, but this time he did not leave right away. He stepped closer, forehead almost touching Goldust’s, and said Goldust did not get to tell him when to stay anymore.

Goldust asked what Cody wanted from him. Cody laughed under his breath and said he had been asking himself that for years. He said maybe he wanted space. Maybe he wanted silence. Maybe he wanted one night where he could win a match and not have everyone cut to Goldust’s reaction like Cody was still a child waiting for approval. Goldust said none of that was what he wanted. Cody snapped back, “Then tell me what I want, Dustin. You always seem to know better than me.” The use of Goldust’s real name changed the feeling of the segment. Goldust’s expression dropped. The paint was still on his face, but for a second, the character disappeared and the brother was all that was left. He said, quietly, that he had never wanted to be in Cody’s way. Cody replied that wanting it did not matter if it kept happening.

Before the argument could go further, Dusty Rhodes appeared on the stage.

The crowd gave him a warm reaction, but it was not the kind of happy moment it would have been a month earlier. Dusty stood there with a microphone, looking at both of his sons from the stage. He did not come to the ring right away. He just told them to stop. His voice was calm, but there was enough weight in it to make both men look at him. Dusty said he had watched this family survive too much to let pride turn brothers into strangers. He said Cody was hurt, Goldust was hurt, and both of them were saying things that would echo longer than they realized. Cody leaned on the ropes and looked up at his father. He did not yell at first. That made it better. He said Dusty always knew how to make it sound beautiful. Family, legacy, pride, blood. Cody said those words filled arenas, sold interviews, made people cheer, but they did not answer the question he had been carrying since he walked into WWE. Dusty asked what question. Cody said, “When does it get to be mine?”

The arena quieted.

Cody said every step of his career had been measured against someone else. Dusty’s son. Goldust’s brother. Legacy’s young prospect. Dashing. Undashing. A tag partner. A second-generation star. A talented kid with potential. He said he was not a kid anymore, and he was tired of potential being used as a polite way of saying he had not become what everyone expected. Goldust tried to interrupt, but Cody turned back to him and said he was not finished. He said Goldust could paint his face, reinvent himself, fall apart, come back, be strange, be loved, and everyone admired him for surviving. Cody said when he changed, people treated it like a phase. When Goldust changed, they called it genius. Goldust did not have a quick answer. Dusty began walking down the ramp now, trying to lower the temperature. Cody saw him coming and stepped through the ropes to the floor, but he did not retreat. He met Dusty near the bottom of the ramp. Dusty told Cody he loved him and believed in him. Cody nodded, but his eyes were wet with anger now. He said that was not enough. He said love did not erase being overlooked. Belief did not give him a WrestleMania moment. Family did not stop him from waking up every day feeling like he was fighting ghosts that had his own last name. Dusty reached out and put a hand on Cody’s shoulder. Cody looked down at the hand and went still. For a second, the crowd thought he might break down. Instead, Cody gently removed Dusty’s hand from his shoulder. He did not shove him. He did not attack him. He simply took the hand away, and that was almost worse. Cody looked past Dusty at Goldust, who was still standing in the ring, and said he was done being held together by people who did not understand they were pulling him apart.

Cody backed up the ramp alone. Goldust started to follow, but Dusty turned and quietly told him not to. Goldust stayed in the ring, torn between anger and heartbreak. Cody reached the stage and stopped one last time. He looked back, not at Dusty first, but at Goldust. He said, “One day you’re going to have to let me go. Or I’m going to make you.”

Then Cody disappeared behind the curtain.

The segment ended with Dusty standing at the bottom of the ramp, Goldust alone in the ring, and the crowd quieter than they had been all night. No match was made. No challenge was officially accepted. But the direction was obvious. This was no longer just tension between tag partners. This was Cody Rhodes reaching the point where being loved by his family felt like another thing he had to escape. Michael Cole said Cody had won the match, but nothing about him looked victorious. JBL said that might have been the most honest Cody had sounded in years. Lawler simply said he hoped somebody reached him before he did something he could never take back.

SmackDown returned from break with Jimmy and Jey Uso walking through the backstage area with the WWE Tag Team Championships over their shoulders. They were not joking around or bouncing with their usual loose energy. Both brothers looked focused, and Jey kept glancing down at the title on his shoulder like he understood Harper and Rowan were no longer just staring at gold — they were trying to get inside their heads. Jimmy told Jey that the Wyatts had been doing the same thing for two weeks: appearing, disappearing, whispering about family, and waiting for the Usos to blink. Jey said they were done blinking. If Harper and Rowan wanted to test their family, they could step into the ring and find out what blood really meant.

Before they could go any further, Edge walked into frame. The new SmackDown General Manager looked between both champions and said he knew exactly what they wanted. Jimmy immediately said they wanted Harper and Rowan tonight. Jey added that they did not care if Bray Wyatt was in their ear, sitting in a rocking chair, or hiding behind the lights. Edge told them he respected that, but he was not going to make championship matches because people were angry. He said Harper and Rowan had been dangerous, but they still needed to prove they had earned that shot. Jimmy said they had already proved enough by putting their hands near the titles every week. Edge nodded and said that was why tonight was not about the titles yet. Tonight was about control. Jimmy Uso would face Erick Rowan one-on-one, with Jey and Harper allowed at ringside. Edge warned them that if this turned into a full six-man-style fight, he would shut it down himself. The Usos did not argue. Jimmy looked at Jey, tapped his title, and said, “Let’s remind them we’re not scared of monsters.”


Jimmy Uso made his entrance first with Jey beside him, both brothers holding the Tag Team Championships high on the stage before heading to the ring. They still had energy, but it was sharper than usual. Jimmy slapped hands with fans on the ramp while Jey stayed closer to him, keeping his eyes on the entranceway. When the Wyatt sounder hit, the arena changed. The lights dropped, the lantern appeared, and Erick Rowan walked out with Luke Harper at his side. Bray Wyatt was not with them, and somehow that made it feel more unsettling. Harper moved slowly, head tilted, eyes locked on the titles. Rowan kept his sheep mask on until he reached ringside, then removed it and placed it carefully near the steps before entering the ring. Jimmy did not back up. He stood in the center and waited.

The bell rang, and Jimmy tried to start fast. He fired kicks into Rowan’s leg, then hit the ropes, looking to use speed before Rowan could grab him. Rowan absorbed the first few shots and shoved Jimmy down hard with both hands. Jimmy rolled through, popped back up, and came in with a dropkick to the knee. Rowan staggered, and Jimmy followed with another kick to the chest. Jey clapped from ringside, trying to keep his brother moving. Harper stood on the opposite side without saying a word. He did not need to. Every time Jimmy got close to the ropes, Harper’s presence was there.

Jimmy kept chopping Rowan down, landing a quick right hand, another kick to the thigh, and a jumping forearm that finally knocked Rowan back into the corner. He charged in, but Rowan caught him with both hands and threw him across the ring. Jimmy landed hard and rolled to the apron, grabbing his back. Rowan followed slowly, pulling Jimmy up by the hair and dragging him over the top rope with raw strength. Jimmy tried to fight from underneath, but Rowan clubbed him across the chest and dropped him with a heavy body slam. Rowan covered, but Jimmy kicked out at two.

Rowan slowed the match down from there. He leaned his weight across Jimmy’s shoulders, squeezed at his neck, and forced him to carry the pressure. Jimmy fought to one knee, then to his feet, but Rowan cut him off with a knee to the ribs. Jey shouted from ringside for Jimmy to keep moving. Harper heard him and slowly walked around the corner, stopping a few feet away from Jey. Jey turned toward him, ready for a fight, but Harper only smiled. That small distraction was enough for Rowan to crush Jimmy with a splash in the corner. Jimmy dropped to the mat, and Rowan covered again. Jimmy kicked out.

Rowan dragged Jimmy back up and threw him toward the ropes, but Jimmy ducked a clothesline and came back with a kick to the face. Rowan stumbled. Jimmy hit another kick, then a third, finally bringing Rowan down to one knee. The crowd came up as Jimmy climbed to the top rope. Harper stepped closer to the apron, and Jey immediately moved between him and the ring. Harper stopped, raised his hands like he had done nothing, and smiled again. Jimmy stayed focused this time. He came off the top with a crossbody, but Rowan caught him in midair. For a second, it looked like Rowan would slam him, but Jimmy slipped out behind him and shoved him into the corner.

Jimmy built momentum quickly. He hit a running hip attack in the corner, then dragged Rowan toward the center. He went for the cover, but Rowan powered out at two with enough force to throw Jimmy off him. Jimmy did not let that shake him. He waited for Rowan to rise and went for a superkick. Rowan caught the foot, shoved Jimmy backward, and went for a big boot. Jimmy ducked. Rowan turned around, and Jimmy nailed the superkick clean. Rowan staggered but did not fall. Jimmy hit the ropes, looking for one more burst, but Harper suddenly climbed onto the apron.

Jey pulled Harper down immediately.

The referee turned toward Jey and Harper as they squared up on the floor. Jimmy looked out for half a second, worried about his brother. That was all Rowan needed. He grabbed Jimmy from behind and planted him with a huge side slam. The referee turned back around. Rowan covered. One, two, Jimmy got his shoulder up.

Rowan sat up, breathing heavily, annoyed that Jimmy had survived. Harper and Jey were now face-to-face at ringside, and the tension finally broke. Harper shoved Jey. Jey shoved him back. Harper swung first, and Jey ducked, firing back with right hands. The referee leaned through the ropes and shouted for them to stop. Jimmy, still hurt, saw Harper and Jey fighting and rolled toward the ropes to help his brother. Rowan grabbed him by the ankle, but Jimmy kicked free and dove through the ropes onto Harper. The referee called for the bell.

The match was thrown out, but nobody cared about the result anymore. Jey went after Rowan as soon as Rowan stepped outside, and all four men started fighting around ringside. The Usos finally looked like themselves again, not afraid, not confused, just throwing punches and refusing to be swallowed by the Wyatt mind games. Jimmy sent Harper into the barricade. Jey rocked Rowan with a superkick that knocked him against the announce table. For the first time in the feud, Harper and Rowan were the ones backing up.

Then the lights cut out.

When they came back, Bray Wyatt was on the TitanTron, seated in his rocking chair. Harper and Rowan had retreated to the aisle, both breathing hard, both staring at the champions. Bray smiled and said family made men brave, but it also made them foolish. He said the Usos fought with heart, but heart was easy to break when two brothers believed they could save each other from everything. Jimmy and Jey stood in the ring with the Tag Team Championships raised, daring Harper and Rowan to come back. Bray leaned closer to the camera and said, “Soon, boys. Soon we take away the one thing you think keeps you together.”

The screen cut to black. Harper and Rowan backed up the ramp without taking their eyes off the champions. Jimmy and Jey stayed in the ring, titles lifted, but neither brother looked satisfied. They had finally fought back, but the Wyatts had not gone away. They had only made it clear that the championships were becoming their next obsession.
SmackDown returned with Paige walking backstage with the Divas Championship over her shoulder. She was still young in the role, still carrying herself like someone adjusting to how quickly everything had changed, but she no longer looked overwhelmed by it. The shock of beating AJ Lee was starting to settle into something stronger. Renee Young stopped her near the interview area and asked how she was handling the pressure after AJ’s attack on Raw. Paige looked down at the title for a moment, then said pressure was exactly what she expected when she came to WWE. She said AJ could call her lucky, inexperienced, or out of place, but none of those words changed what happened. AJ put the championship on the line, Paige accepted, and Paige won. She said AJ had spent the last two weeks acting like the title was stolen from her, but Paige did not steal anything. She made AJ pay for underestimating her.

Before Renee could ask another question, AJ Lee stepped into frame. She was calm, almost too calm, with her eyes locked on the Divas Championship. She congratulated Paige again, but it sounded empty. AJ said Paige was getting better at saying champion things, but she still did not understand what being champion actually meant. Paige turned fully toward her and told AJ that if she wanted the title back, she should stop talking about it and fight for it. AJ smiled and said Paige was brave because she still thought this was about one lucky match. AJ said she did not want to beat Paige by accident, did not want a cheap roll-up, and did not want anyone saying the rookie slipped away again. She wanted Paige trapped with nowhere to go. Paige stepped closer and said AJ could choose the place, the time, and the fight, because she was done being treated like a temporary champion.

Edge entered before the two could get any closer. He looked at AJ, then Paige, and said he had heard enough to know where this was going. Edge said Paige had proven she could win the championship, but AJ had also made one thing clear: she was not going to move on until she got a real chance to take it back. AJ nodded, pleased, but Edge held up a hand and said this match was not going to be built on sneak attacks, breakdowns, or someone grabbing the title and refusing to let go. If AJ wanted Paige trapped, and Paige wanted AJ to stop making excuses, then Extreme Rules would settle it with no flukes. Paige would defend the Divas Championship against AJ Lee in a Submission Match. Paige did not hesitate. She looked at AJ and said, “Good. Then I’ll make you quit.” AJ’s smile faded for the first time. She leaned in and whispered, “No, Paige. I’m going to make you beg.”


Paige made her entrance first, the Divas Championship held close to her chest before she raised it on the stage. The reaction was stronger than it had been the week before. The crowd was starting to accept her as more than the woman who shocked AJ Lee. She entered the ring with purpose, handed the title to the referee, and kept her eyes on the aisle. Summer Rae came out next, carrying herself with confidence and a little arrogance, clearly seeing an opportunity to make a name for herself against the new champion. AJ Lee followed a few steps behind her, not dressed to compete, skipping slowly with a smile that never reached her eyes. She did not join commentary. She simply sat cross-legged near ringside, close enough for Paige to see her every time she turned.

The bell rang, and Paige started aggressively. She locked up with Summer and quickly forced her into the ropes, breaking clean but staring straight through her. Summer tried to laugh it off and slow things down with a hair pull, but Paige answered with a hard forearm and backed her into the corner. Summer covered up, and the referee stepped between them, giving Summer just enough space to roll to the floor. AJ clapped from ringside, telling Paige she looked angry, and Paige immediately turned her head. Summer used the distraction to grab Paige by the ankle and pull her down hard on the apron.

Summer took control from there. She rolled Paige back into the ring and went after the champion’s back, driving knees into her spine and stretching her across the middle rope. Paige tried to fight up, but Summer kept using the ropes and cheap shots to cut her off. She hit a snapmare, followed with a kick to the back, and covered for two. Paige kicked out quickly, but Summer stayed on her, pulling her into a chinlock and wrenching back while AJ watched from ringside with a satisfied look.

Paige fought to her feet and drove elbows into Summer’s ribs. She broke free, hit the ropes, and came back with a clothesline, then another. Summer stumbled up, and Paige caught her with a short kick to the midsection before throwing her with a fallaway slam. The crowd started to rally behind the champion as Paige screamed and pulled Summer back toward the center of the ring. She looked toward AJ for half a second, making sure AJ was watching, then grabbed Summer’s legs.

Summer kicked Paige away before the PTO could be locked in. Paige fell backward into the corner, and Summer charged, but Paige moved. Summer hit the turnbuckles chest-first and stumbled out. Paige caught her, lifted her, and planted her with the Paige Turner. Instead of going for the cover right away, Paige looked down at Summer, then looked out at AJ. She wanted the submission now. She wanted to prove the point before Extreme Rules.

Paige grabbed Summer’s legs again and turned her over into the PTO. Summer screamed immediately, reaching for the ropes, but Paige pulled back and sat deep into the hold. Summer had nowhere to go. She tapped out quickly.

Paige released the hold and stood up with the Divas Championship as her music hit. The win was clean and decisive, but Paige did not celebrate for long. AJ stood up slowly at ringside and walked toward the apron. Paige stepped closer, daring her to get in. AJ climbed onto the apron but did not enter right away. She looked at Summer still hurting on the mat, then looked at Paige’s hands, almost studying the hold Paige had just used.

Paige raised the title in AJ’s face.

AJ suddenly smiled and stepped through the ropes. Paige dropped the championship and moved toward her, ready for the fight, but AJ backed away with both hands raised. Paige hesitated for one second, and that was all AJ needed. She lunged low, grabbed Paige’s arm, and twisted herself around the champion, locking in the Black Widow in the middle of the ring. Paige tried to stay on her feet, but AJ pulled her down and wrapped the hold tighter, screaming at her to tap.

Paige refused.

Officials rushed in, trying to pull AJ away, but AJ kept the hold locked in as long as she could. Paige’s face tightened in pain, but she shook her head and kept reaching for the ropes even though there was no match happening anymore. Finally, the officials pried AJ loose. AJ backed into the corner, breathing hard, smiling again now that she had made her point. Paige pushed herself up on one arm, still hurting, but her eyes were angry instead of scared.

AJ picked up the Divas Championship from the mat and looked at it for a long moment. She did not raise it. She walked over to Paige, placed it carefully in front of her, and crouched down close enough for Paige to hear her.

“That hold ended reigns before you ever got here.”

Paige reached for the title, but AJ slid out of the ring before Paige could grab her. AJ backed up the ramp, skipping again, while Paige pulled the Divas Championship into her arms and sat against the ropes. The match was official now. At Extreme Rules, Paige would not be able to survive with one sudden move. AJ would not be able to hide behind obsession and sneak attacks. One of them would have to make the other submit.

SmackDown returned at the top of the hour with the arena lights lowered and a low buzz running through the crowd. The camera found the three members of The Shield standing in the empty upper section of the building, surrounded by fans but separated from the ring like they were watching WWE from the outside before choosing when to invade it. Dean Ambrose stood in front, wrists taped, eyes restless, already dressed for his main event with Randy Orton later. Seth Rollins leaned against the railing beside him, focused and calm, while Roman Reigns stood behind them with his arms folded, staring down toward the ring.

Ambrose spoke first. He said The Authority kept making the same mistake. They kept thinking The Shield were angry employees, bitter dogs, or three guys who forgot who signed their checks. Ambrose said that was never what this was. The Shield did not turn on The Authority because they wanted attention. They turned on The Authority because they finally saw the truth. Triple H never wanted soldiers. He wanted weapons. Weapons do not ask questions. Weapons do not make choices. Weapons get pointed at somebody and used until they break.

Rollins stepped forward and said The Authority loved to talk about control, but control only worked when people were afraid to lose something. He said The Shield had already lost the one thing Triple H gave them — permission. They did not need permission to walk through the crowd. They did not need permission to fight. They did not need permission to survive. Rollins said Batista could call himself The Animal, Rusev could stand beside Lana like some unstoppable machine, and Triple H could keep calling himself The Game, but at Extreme Rules, all of those names became meaningless once the fight left the rules behind.

Roman took a slow step forward, and the crowd got louder before he even spoke. He said Triple H brought in Rusev because he needed another body between himself and what was coming. Roman said he had felt Rusev’s power, Batista’s spear, and Triple H’s cheap shots, but none of it changed anything. Then he looked straight into the camera and said, “You can bring monsters. You can bring legends. You can bring kings. We bring justice.”

The Shield began moving through the crowd. Fans reached for them as they came down the steps, but the three men never lost their formation. Ambrose moved first, Rollins followed close behind, and Roman walked last, watching every direction. By the time they reached the barricade, the entire arena was on its feet. Ambrose climbed over first and rolled under the bottom rope. Rollins hopped onto the barricade and springboarded down to ringside before sliding in. Roman stepped over the barricade last and entered through the ropes with no rush. They stood together in the middle of the ring while the crowd chanted for them.

Ambrose lifted the microphone again and said he had Randy Orton later tonight, but he did not want to wait until the main event to say what needed to be said. He said Orton was just one more man who got comfortable standing behind power. Batista came back expecting the same company he left, where people moved aside because his music hit. Rusev walked in thinking everyone would fall down because Lana said the word “crush.” And Triple H thought he could put them all together and call it a plan. Ambrose smiled and said it was not a plan. It was panic wearing a suit.

Triple H’s music hit before Ambrose could continue.

The mood changed immediately. Triple H walked out onto the stage with Stephanie McMahon beside him. Batista came out behind them, dressed to fight, jaw tight, not bothering to hide how much he wanted to get to the ring. Lana followed next, walking with complete control, and Alexander Rusev stood beside her like a wall. The five of them stopped on the stage instead of rushing down. Triple H had a microphone in hand, and for a few seconds he said nothing. He just looked at The Shield with the expression of a man trying to remind everyone that he still owned the bigger army.

Triple H finally said The Shield sounded proud of themselves. He said they talked about justice like that word meant anything when they built their name jumping people from behind, putting men through tables, and doing whatever he asked them to do. He said Ambrose, Rollins, and Reigns were not pure. They were not heroes. They were not some rebellion. They were three dangerous men who forgot the only reason they ever had power was because he gave them direction.

Rollins raised his microphone and said Triple H still did not understand the difference between giving orders and creating greatness. He said The Shield were never great because Triple H told them who to attack. They were great because every time the bell rang, every time the fight spilled into the crowd, every time the pressure got worse, they were better than the men standing across from them. Rollins said Triple H did not create The Shield. He borrowed them until they became too much for him to control.

Batista ripped the microphone from Triple H’s hand before Triple H could answer. He said he was tired of hearing Rollins talk like a philosopher, Ambrose talk like a lunatic, and Roman stand there like he was already the toughest man in the building. Batista said he had headlined WrestleMania, won world titles, beaten legends, and come back to WWE for the spotlight that belonged to him. He pointed at The Shield and said they had turned his return into a fight in the mud with three punks who did not know their place.

Ambrose laughed and leaned against the ropes. He told Batista that the problem was not that The Shield did not know their place. The problem was Batista came back and found out his place had been taken. Batista stepped forward instantly, but Triple H put an arm across his chest. Batista shoved it away, but he did not go down the ramp yet.

Lana took the microphone next. Her voice was calm, and that made the threat feel colder. She said The Shield spoke with American arrogance, loud voices, and empty courage. She said Dean Ambrose confused pain with strength, Seth Rollins confused speed with intelligence, and Roman Reigns confused silence with power. Lana turned toward Rusev and said real power did not need speeches. Real power crushed resistance. Rusev stepped forward, eyes locked on Roman, and said one word into the microphone.

“Reigns.”

Roman moved to the ropes immediately, and the crowd rose with him. He did not yell. He did not posture. He simply looked up the ramp at Rusev and said, “Come find out.”

That was all it took. Batista started down the ramp first, but Triple H grabbed him again and held him back. Rusev stepped forward too, but Lana put a hand against his chest. The Shield stayed in the ring, ready, almost inviting the fight. Ambrose threw his microphone down and leaned over the ropes, telling them to stop holding each other back. Rollins paced behind him, looking from Batista to Rusev, while Roman remained still, focused only on the man he had challenged.

Triple H raised his microphone again and said this was exactly why The Shield would lose at Extreme Rules. They were too emotional. Too eager. Too easy to lead into a trap. He said a Street Fight was not about bravery. It was about damage. It was about finding the weak point and breaking it until the other side could not stand. Triple H said he had already seen the weak points. Ambrose could not stop himself from walking into punishment. Rollins could not stop himself from taking one risk too many. Roman could not stop himself from believing he was impossible to put down.

Triple H then said tonight would be a lesson in patience. He was not going to give The Shield the fight they wanted on their terms. Ambrose already had Randy Orton in the main event, and Triple H wanted him softened up before he ever got there. So right now, The Shield could stand in that ring and wait, because The Authority was choosing when the violence started.

Ambrose picked his microphone back up and said Triple H could wait all he wanted. The Shield had waited long enough. He said they had spent months standing behind The Authority, listening to the speeches, watching the manipulation, watching Triple H point at people like they were problems to be solved. Ambrose said now Triple H was the problem. Batista was the problem. Rusev was the problem. And The Shield solved problems the same way every time.

The Shield dropped their microphones together.

Triple H saw it coming and finally let Batista go. Batista stormed down the ramp with Rusev beside him, and the crowd exploded as Ambrose, Rollins, and Reigns stepped out of the ring to meet them halfway. Security rushed from the back before anyone could collide. Edge appeared on the stage behind Triple H, shouting for everyone to hold their ground. More officials poured out and created a wall between the two sides, but the separation barely held. Ambrose kept trying to push through, laughing as two officials held him back. Rollins climbed onto the apron and pointed over the crowd of bodies at Triple H, telling him he could not hide forever. Roman and Rusev never looked away from each other, even with six people between them. Batista broke through first and shoved an official aside, reaching over the crowd to grab Rollins by the hair. Rollins snapped back with a kick from the apron that caught Batista in the shoulder. Ambrose used the opening to dive over the top rope onto the pile of security, knocking bodies everywhere. The arena erupted as the whole scene broke loose. Rusev tried to charge through toward Roman, and Roman finally broke free from the officials on his side. The two men met near the bottom of the ramp with heavy right hands, each shot landing like a warning for Extreme Rules.

Triple H stayed on the stage at first, watching the chaos with a tense smile. Then Ambrose slipped through the crowd of officials and sprinted up the ramp toward him. Triple H saw him coming and backed up just enough for Batista to cut Ambrose off from the side. Batista drove Ambrose into the LED board near the stage, and Ambrose dropped to one knee, laughing through the pain. Rollins came flying off the apron onto Batista before he could do more damage, and both men crashed hard on the floor. Roman rocked Rusev with a Superman Punch near ringside, and for the first time, Rusev stumbled backward into the barricade and had to grab it to stay up. He did not fall, but he had been moved. Roman stepped toward him again, but Lana shouted for Rusev to pull back. Rusev looked furious, but he listened. Batista dragged himself up beside him, Triple H pulled Ambrose away from the stage, and officials finally managed to wedge themselves between everyone again.

Edge stood on the stage now, microphone in hand, angry but controlled. He said if The Authority and The Shield wanted to tear each other apart, they could do it at Extreme Rules, not on his first night running SmackDown. He warned both sides that any more fighting before the main event would come with consequences. Triple H looked at Edge like he had just been insulted in his own house. Edge did not back down. He said Ambrose still had Orton later tonight, and if Triple H, Batista, Rusev, Lana, Stephanie, Rollins, or Reigns got involved, there would be suspensions before Extreme Rules. The Shield regrouped at ringside, breathing hard but standing together. Ambrose had a red mark near his cheek from the LED board. Rollins was holding his ribs. Roman’s eyes were still locked on Rusev. Across from them, Batista looked ready to explode, Rusev paced like a caged animal, and Triple H stood behind the line of officials with his jaw clenched. Nobody had won the fight. Nobody had gotten the full fight they wanted. But the point was clear: Extreme Rules was no longer just a match on the card. It was becoming inevitable. The segment ended with The Shield climbing back into the ring and raising their fists together while The Authority backed up the ramp. Triple H kept pointing at Ambrose, reminding him that Randy Orton was still waiting later. Ambrose smiled back, wiped his mouth, and mouthed, “Good.”


SmackDown returned with Big E already standing in the ring, the Intercontinental Championship resting over his shoulder. He was not smiling or playing to the crowd. He looked like a champion who had spent the last two weeks watching his title picture turn into a personal fight between two other men. Edge stood beside him with a microphone and said the Intercontinental Championship deserved better than sneak attacks, cheap shots, and arguments over who owed who. He said Big E had carried himself like a fighting champion, Cesaro had earned momentum by stepping out on his own, and Jack Swagger had made it impossible to ignore him because every time Cesaro moved forward, Swagger tried to drag him back down. Edge said that ended tonight. Cesaro would face Jack Swagger one-on-one, and the winner would face Big E at Extreme Rules for the Intercontinental Championship. Big E nodded, satisfied with the decision, but he kept his eyes on the stage. He said he did not care whether it was Cesaro or Swagger. He respected competition, but he was not there to be used as a prize in somebody else’s breakup. He said whoever won tonight needed to understand that Extreme Rules would not be about The Real Americans, revenge, or wounded pride. It would be about his championship. Edge gave him the space to say it, then told Big E he could stay at ringside if he wanted, as long as he did not get involved. Big E stepped through the ropes and took a spot near the announce table, title still over his shoulder, standing instead of sitting. He wanted both men to see him.

Cesaro entered first to a strong reaction. He walked out alone, focused and calm, but there was still a slight stiffness in his movement from Swagger targeting his leg in recent weeks. Cesaro stopped on the stage, looked at Big E, then looked toward the ring. He did not point at the title. He did not make a big gesture. He simply nodded once, like he understood the opportunity and did not plan on wasting it.

Jack Swagger came out next with Zeb Colter, and the mood shifted immediately. Zeb was already shouting before they reached the ring, pointing at Cesaro and calling him ungrateful. Swagger did not take his eyes off his former partner. He looked less like a man walking into a title opportunity and more like a man walking into a fight he had been waiting to start for weeks. Zeb stepped in front of Swagger near the bottom of the ramp and yelled that Cesaro had stolen the spotlight, stolen the people, and stolen the future that belonged to a real American. Cesaro leaned against the ropes and let him talk. He did not answer with words. He just waved Swagger into the ring.

The bell rang, and Swagger attacked immediately. There was no feeling-out process. He drove Cesaro into the corner with shoulder thrusts, then hammered him across the back and neck while the referee warned him to open the hands. Cesaro covered up, absorbed the early storm, and shoved Swagger away. Swagger came right back, but Cesaro caught him with a European uppercut that snapped his head back. The crowd came alive at once. Swagger stumbled, surprised more than hurt, and Cesaro stepped forward with another uppercut. Swagger bailed to the floor before the third could land.

Zeb rushed over to Swagger and tried to calm him down, but Swagger pushed past him and slid back inside. This time he went low. He kicked Cesaro in the bad leg and immediately changed the match. Cesaro dropped to one knee, and Swagger grabbed the ankle, dragging him toward the center. Cesaro kicked him away, but Swagger stayed on the leg, stomping at the knee and twisting the ankle against the mat. Cesaro tried to pull himself toward the ropes, but Swagger grabbed him by the waist and threw him backward with a hard amateur-style takedown. He covered quickly, but Cesaro kicked out at one.

Swagger did not look frustrated yet. He looked pleased. He had found his target. He wrapped Cesaro’s leg around the bottom rope and leaned all his weight into it until the referee forced him to break. Zeb shouted from ringside that Cesaro was nothing without them, nothing without the foundation they had given him. Cesaro pulled himself up with the ropes, jaw tight, refusing to show how much the leg hurt. Swagger charged, but Cesaro moved just enough to send him shoulder-first into the post. Swagger staggered backward, and Cesaro caught him with a sharp uppercut to the back of the head.

Cesaro tried to build momentum, but every burst came with a cost. He hit another uppercut, then a short clothesline, then tried to lift Swagger for a gutwrench. His knee buckled before he could get him all the way up. Swagger used the opening to shove Cesaro into the ropes and catch him coming back with a chop block. Cesaro dropped hard, grabbing the leg, and Swagger immediately went for the Patriot Lock. Cesaro rolled through before Swagger could fully turn him over and kicked him away with both feet. Swagger bounced off the ropes, came back fast, and Cesaro exploded upward with one of his cleanest uppercuts of the match. Both men went down.

Big E stayed still at ringside, watching closely. He did not cheer for either man. He did not react to Zeb. He simply studied them. This was his next challenger being decided in front of him, and he treated it like business. Cesaro crawled toward the ropes and pulled himself up. Swagger rose at the same time, angrier now, and both men met in the center. Swagger threw a right hand. Cesaro answered with an uppercut. Swagger threw another. Cesaro answered again. The exchange got heavier, less polished, more personal. Swagger finally drove a knee into Cesaro’s bad leg to stop the rally, then lifted him for a belly-to-belly suplex. Cesaro landed hard, and Swagger covered. One, two, Cesaro kicked out.

Swagger slapped the mat and looked toward Big E. He shouted that the title was his, then turned back to Cesaro and dragged him up by the head. That mistake gave Cesaro a chance. Swagger leaned in too close, and Cesaro fired upward with a sudden headbutt to the chest, then another uppercut. Swagger swung wildly. Cesaro ducked and managed to lift him this time, powering through the bad leg to hit a deadlift gutwrench suplex. He could not bridge into a cover because the knee gave out again, but the strength of the move brought the crowd up. Cesaro dragged himself over. One, two, Swagger kicked out.

Zeb climbed onto the apron, yelling that Cesaro was a traitor and had no right to this opportunity. Cesaro stood and moved toward him, but the referee stepped in between. Swagger used the distraction to roll to the outside and grab the Intercontinental Championship from near Big E. Big E immediately stepped forward and took it back before Swagger could use it. Swagger got in Big E’s face, shouting that the title would belong to him soon. Big E did not move. He simply held the championship up between them and told Swagger to earn it.

Swagger turned back toward the ring, and Cesaro came flying through the ropes with a dive that knocked Swagger into the barricade. Cesaro landed awkwardly and grabbed his knee, but he forced himself up. He rolled Swagger into the ring and climbed back in after him. Cesaro went for the Neutralizer, but his leg slowed him down. Swagger dropped to a knee, blocked it, and suddenly grabbed the ankle. This time he turned Cesaro over into the Patriot Lock in the middle of the ring.

Cesaro yelled out, trapped with nowhere easy to go. Swagger leaned all the way back, screaming for him to tap. Zeb shouted that this was where Cesaro belonged, under Swagger, broken and exposed. Cesaro clawed toward the ropes, but Swagger pulled him back. The crowd got louder as Cesaro pushed up on his hands, refusing to quit. He rolled once, but Swagger held on. He rolled again, twisting his body with everything he had, and finally sent Swagger forward into the turnbuckles.

Swagger stumbled out, dazed. Cesaro could barely stand, but he dragged himself up. Swagger charged again, desperate now. Cesaro sidestepped and caught him with a huge pop-up European uppercut. Swagger dropped to the mat, and Cesaro fell with him, too hurt to cover right away. Zeb slapped the apron in panic, telling Swagger to get up. Big E leaned forward at ringside, watching like he knew the match had reached the moment that would decide his challenger.

Cesaro pulled Swagger up and hooked the arms. His bad leg shook under the weight, but he did not let go. Swagger tried to fight out, kicking and twisting, but Cesaro locked in tighter. With one final burst, Cesaro lifted him and planted him with the Neutralizer in the center of the ring. He rolled Swagger over and covered. One, two, three.

Cesaro won.

The crowd rose as Cesaro sat up, breathing hard, one hand on his knee. The referee raised his arm, and Cesaro looked exhausted more than celebratory. He had not just beaten Swagger. He had survived the man who knew exactly where to hurt him. Zeb stood outside the ring stunned, yelling at the referee, yelling at Cesaro, yelling at anyone who would listen. Swagger rolled toward the ropes, furious and beaten, staring at Cesaro like the loss had made the betrayal feel even worse.

Big E entered the ring with the Intercontinental Championship. Cesaro pushed himself to his feet, still favoring the leg, and stood face-to-face with the champion. There was no smile from either man. Big E looked down at Cesaro’s knee, then back into his eyes. He raised the title between them, making it clear what Cesaro had earned and what he still had to take. Cesaro nodded, then extended his hand.

Big E looked at the hand for a moment before shaking it.

The handshake was firm, respectful, and tense. Cesaro had earned the title match. Big E had accepted the challenge. For one clean moment, the Intercontinental Championship felt like the center of the ring again.

Then Swagger attacked from behind.

He clipped Cesaro’s bad leg and knocked him down before Big E could react. Big E shoved Swagger back and stepped between him and Cesaro, but Swagger grabbed the championship from the mat and drove it into Big E’s midsection. Big E dropped to one knee. Swagger stood over both men, breathing hard, eyes wild, completely unable to accept that he had lost his chance. Zeb screamed for him to finish it. Swagger grabbed Cesaro’s ankle and locked in the Patriot Lock again, this time with Cesaro already hurt and the match over.

Big E forced himself up and broke through with a shoulder tackle that sent Swagger rolling out of the ring. Swagger backed up the ramp with Zeb, still shouting that this was not over. Big E helped himself to his feet first, then looked down at Cesaro. For a second, it looked like he might help him up. Instead, he picked up the Intercontinental Championship, held it tightly, and let Cesaro stand on his own.


Cesaro pulled himself up with the ropes, limping but refusing help. Big E raised the title. Cesaro stared at it, then at the champion. The respect was still there, but it was no longer friendly. Swagger had made sure of that. The match at Extreme Rules was set: Big E versus Cesaro for the Intercontinental Championship.
SmackDown returned from break without music, without an arena shot, and without the usual noise of the crowd. The screen was black for a second too long, then a dim light flickered on inside a small backstage room. It did not look like a normal WWE interview area. It looked hidden. The walls were bare concrete, the floor was stained, and one old light swung gently overhead, casting shadows that moved across the room even when nobody touched them. A steel chair sat in the center, but it was empty. Somewhere off camera, Bray Wyatt’s voice began to hum softly. Not loud. Not theatrical. Just enough to make the silence uncomfortable.

The camera slowly moved forward and found Bray sitting in his rocking chair in the corner of the room. Luke Harper stood behind him with his head lowered, hair hanging in front of his face. Erick Rowan stood on the other side, still and silent, his sheep mask held in one hand instead of worn. Bray did not look at the camera right away. He rocked back and forth, smiling to himself like he had already heard a joke nobody else understood. Then he said John Cena was not in the building tonight. He said it slowly, almost kindly, like he was comforting someone. Cena was not here to run to the ring. Cena was not here to lift his hands for the children. Cena was not here to smile, salute, or pretend the world was still bright because he said it was. Bray finally looked up, eyes fixed on the camera, and said that even when John Cena stayed away, he could still feel him shaking.

Bray leaned forward, elbows on his knees, hands clasped together. He said John believed absence was strength. John believed if he stayed home, if he stayed quiet, if he kept himself away from the family, then maybe Bray’s words would lose their power. Bray laughed softly and shook his head. He said that was the lie heroes told themselves when they had already started to crack. Bray said he did not need Cena in the arena to reach him. He did not need Harper and Rowan to hold him down. He did not need the lights to go out or the rocking chair to appear at ringside. All he needed was the truth, because truth followed a man home. Truth sat beside him when he tried to sleep. Truth whispered when the room got quiet.

Harper slowly lifted his head as Bray kept speaking. Rowan placed the sheep mask on the steel chair in the center of the room, facing the camera. Bray looked at it and smiled. He said Extreme Rules was coming, and John Cena thought the steel cage would save him. He said Cena asked for the cage because he wanted walls. He wanted something solid. Something he could touch. Something he could point to and tell the world, “See? Now it’s fair.” Bray’s smile faded. He said John still did not understand. The cage was never meant to keep monsters out. It was meant to show everyone what lived inside.

Bray stood from the rocking chair, and the camera pulled back just enough to show Harper and Rowan standing behind him like shadows. Bray said at WrestleMania, Cena won the match but lost something more important. He lost peace. He held that chair in his hands and, for one second, the whole world saw the truth in his eyes. Bray said Cena wanted to swing. Cena wanted to hurt him. Cena wanted to prove that deep under the bright colors and big speeches, there was a man just as angry, just as frightened, and just as breakable as everyone else. Bray stepped closer to the camera, lowering his voice. He said Cena did not throw the chair away because he was strong. He threw it away because he was terrified of how good it would feel to use it.

The light above them flickered again. Bray looked upward, then back to the camera. He said on Raw, Cena could come back and tell everyone he was fine. He could say he believed in hustle, loyalty, and respect. He could promise the children that Bray Wyatt was wrong. But Bray said the cage would not care about promises. Steel did not cheer. Steel did not forgive. Steel did not lie for heroes. At Extreme Rules, when the door closed and Harper and Rowan stood outside, when there were no excuses left, John Cena would finally be alone with the man Bray had been trying to introduce him to all along.

Bray reached down and picked up the sheep mask from the chair. He held it close to the camera for a moment, then lowered it slowly. His smile returned, smaller this time. He said Cena should enjoy his night away from SmackDown. He should enjoy the quiet. He should enjoy pretending he had escaped. Bray then whispered that the funny thing about cages was that a man usually did not realize he was inside one until he heard the lock click.

Harper stepped forward and blew out the swinging light. The room went dark. Bray’s voice came through one final time, soft and certain.

“Run, John. Rest, John. Pray, John. But don’t you worry. I’ll see you in the cage.”

The screen stayed black for a beat before the Wyatt sounder cut through the silence.


SmackDown came back from break with Daniel Bryan shown backstage, both championships over his shoulders, ribs still taped from the damage he had taken over the last two weeks. Edge stood in front of him, making it clear Bryan was not cleared to compete tonight and would not be put in another match just because The Authority wanted him weakened before Extreme Rules. Bryan did not argue about the match. He only said he was tired of Randy Orton hitting him from behind, tired of Orton holding his championship over him, and tired of everyone telling him to be careful. Edge told Bryan that Orton had Dean Ambrose in the main event, and if Bryan went out there looking for a fight, the entire night could explode. Bryan looked down at the WWE World Heavyweight Championship, then back at Edge, and said the night had already been exploding since WrestleMania. He said the only difference was that tonight, if Orton wanted to start something, Bryan was going to finish it.

Randy Orton made his entrance first, and he came out alone, which somehow made him feel more dangerous. There was no Triple H beside him, no Batista, no Kane, no Stephanie, and no Rusev. Orton walked slowly to the ring with that cold, controlled look he had carried since attacking Bryan on SmackDown the week before. He stepped through the ropes and stared toward the stage, not waiting for Dean Ambrose as much as waiting for the champion to appear. Ambrose came through the crowd next, moving fast, shoulders loose, eyes wide, looking like he had been waiting all night for someone to finally let him fight. He hopped the barricade, slid into the ring, and immediately walked straight up to Orton. The referee stepped between them before the bell, but Ambrose leaned around him and smiled right in Orton’s face.

The bell rang, and Ambrose came out swinging. He backed Orton into the corner with quick punches, forcing Orton to cover up and slip through the ropes to slow the pace. Ambrose followed him outside, but Orton used the chase against him, sliding back into the ring and catching Ambrose with a stomp as he came in. Orton took control with sharp, simple offense. He drove a knee into Ambrose’s ribs, sent him shoulder-first into the corner, and slowed everything down with a chinlock, forcing Ambrose to carry his weight. Ambrose fought up, but Orton cut him off with a backbreaker and covered for two. Orton did not rush. Every move had a purpose. He was not just trying to beat Ambrose. He was trying to send a message to The Shield and Daniel Bryan at the same time.

Ambrose kept refusing to stay down. Orton stomped at his hands, dragged him up by the hair, and threw him to the floor, but Ambrose came back with a wild right hand from the apron. Orton tried to knock him off again, but Ambrose snapped his neck across the top rope and climbed back inside with a burst of energy. Ambrose hit a running forearm, then another, then sent Orton over the top rope with a clothesline. Orton stumbled to the floor, and Ambrose hit the ropes without hesitation, diving through them and driving Orton into the barricade. Ambrose got up laughing through the pain, slapped the barricade, and threw Orton back into the ring.

Ambrose climbed to the top rope and came off with an elbow for a close two-count. Orton kicked out and rolled toward the apron, trying to create space, but Ambrose grabbed him before he could escape. Orton answered by snapping Ambrose’s arm over the top rope, then pulled him into position and planted him with the hanging DDT. Ambrose rolled onto his back, stunned, and Orton slowly dropped to the mat, waiting for him to rise. Ambrose pushed himself up, unsteady but still smiling. Orton went for the RKO, but Ambrose shoved him off and caught him on the rebound with a clothesline that turned both men inside out.

Ambrose crawled into the cover. One, two, Orton kicked out.

Ambrose pulled Orton up and hooked the arms for Dirty Deeds, but Orton twisted free, shoved him chest-first into the turnbuckles, and struck with an RKO as Ambrose stumbled back. Orton covered. One, two, three.

Orton won, but he did not look satisfied. The bell rang, and he sat beside Ambrose for a second, breathing hard, then slowly pushed himself to his feet. Ambrose rolled toward the ropes, trying to recover, and Orton looked down at him with disgust. He grabbed Ambrose by the hair and dragged him back toward the center, setting him up for another RKO after the match. Before he could hit it, Seth Rollins and Roman Reigns appeared at the barricade. They did not jump in right away. They just stood there, watching, ready to move if Orton crossed the line.

Orton saw them and smiled. He knew Edge had warned everyone earlier. He knew The Shield wanted to hit the ring but were trying to hold themselves back. Orton let Ambrose drop, then leaned over the ropes and told Rollins and Reigns they were too late. That was when Daniel Bryan’s music hit.

The arena erupted as Bryan walked onto the stage with both championships. He was still taped up, still moving carefully, but there was nothing cautious in his face. Edge followed him out almost immediately, telling him not to do this, but Bryan kept walking. Orton backed away from the ropes and invited him in, holding his arms open like he wanted Bryan to lose control. Bryan set both titles down at ringside, stepped through the ropes, and stood across from Orton while Ambrose pulled himself into the corner.

For a few seconds, nobody moved. Orton smirked and told Bryan he looked hurt. Bryan answered by stepping forward and drilling him with a kick to the chest. The crowd exploded as Bryan hit another kick, then another, backing Orton into the ropes. Orton tried to cover up, but Bryan kept firing, every shot carrying two weeks of frustration. Orton finally grabbed Bryan by the ribs and drove a knee into the tape, stopping him cold. Bryan doubled over, and Orton grabbed him by the head, looking for the RKO. Bryan shoved him away, caught him turning around, and blasted him with the running knee.

Orton dropped hard, and the building came unglued. Bryan went down too, clutching his ribs from the impact, but he pushed himself back up using the ropes. Rollins and Reigns finally climbed over the barricade to help Ambrose, and for one brief moment, it looked like Bryan and The Shield had the night under control.

Then Triple H’s music hit.

Triple H walked onto the stage with Stephanie McMahon, Batista, Lana, and Alexander Rusev behind him. They did not waste time talking. Batista started down the ramp first, furious after what happened earlier in the night. Rusev followed beside Lana, eyes locked on Roman. Triple H moved behind them with a colder purpose, watching Bryan, Ambrose, Rollins, and Reigns regroup in the ring. Edge stepped onto the stage and shouted for security, but Batista and Rusev were already moving too fast.

Batista hit the ring and went straight for Rollins. Rollins ducked the first shot and fired back with punches, but Batista overpowered him and drove him into the corner. Ambrose launched himself at Triple H the second The Game slid in, tackling him with wild punches before Triple H could even stand. Roman met Rusev in the center of the ring, and the two started trading heavy shots while the crowd came alive. Bryan, still hurt, went after Orton again as Orton tried to roll toward the ropes. Bryan grabbed him and hammered him with punches, refusing to let him escape.

The fight kept spilling around ringside until Edge finally had enough. Security rushed down the ramp, but even that barely slowed anyone. Roman Reigns and Rusev were still throwing heavy shots near the announce table, neither man giving ground. Seth Rollins had Batista backed into the barricade, firing quick punches until Batista shoved him off and tried to charge again. Dean Ambrose was halfway up the ramp trying to get to Triple H, laughing through the chaos as officials grabbed him from behind. Daniel Bryan had Randy Orton near the ring steps, driving him into the barricade and refusing to let him crawl away after everything Orton had done to him over the last two weeks. Orton tried to grab Bryan for an RKO on the floor, but Bryan shoved him off. Orton turned back around, and Bryan blasted him with the running knee at ringside. Orton dropped hard beside the announce table as the arena erupted. Bryan fell to one knee, clutching his ribs, but he forced himself back up and reached for both championships. The Shield regrouped around him, bruised but still standing, while Triple H, Batista, Rusev, and Orton were all being separated by officials and security.

Edge’s music hit, cutting through the noise.

The new General Manager of Raw and SmackDown stormed onto the stage with a microphone in hand, furious at what the night had become. He shouted for everyone to stop, but the fighting kept threatening to break loose again. Batista tried to shove past security. Ambrose tried to break free and get to Triple H. Roman and Rusev never took their eyes off each other. Edge looked down at the wreckage around ringside, then at Bryan and The Shield in the ring, and finally at Triple H’s side on the ramp.

Edge said he had tried to bring order to SmackDown. He had tried to let Randy Orton prove himself against Dean Ambrose. He had tried to keep The Authority out of the main event. But every time this group got within ten feet of each other, the whole show turned into a war zone. Edge said he was done watching it spill into hallways, ringside areas, barricades, and security lines. If they wanted to fight this badly, then he was going to give them exactly what they wanted.

The crowd rose as Edge pointed toward the ring.

Edge announced that this Monday night on Raw, they would settle it in the ring: Daniel Bryan and The Shield against Randy Orton, Triple H, Batista, and Alexander Rusev in a massive four-on-four tag team match.

The arena exploded. Bryan stood in the ring with both championships in his hands, breathing through the pain but nodding like he wanted the match right then. Ambrose smiled like Edge had just handed him permission to start another riot. Rollins leaned over the ropes, yelling up the ramp that The Authority had nowhere to run now. Roman stepped forward and locked eyes with Rusev, not saying a word.

On the ramp, Triple H looked furious. Stephanie argued with Edge from behind the security line, saying he had no idea what he was doing. Batista paced like he wanted to fight immediately, while Rusev stood beside Lana, still staring at Roman. Orton pulled himself up near the announce table, dazed from the running knee, and looked into the ring at Bryan with pure hatred.
Bryan climbed onto the turnbuckle and raised both championships high as The Shield stood beneath him. The crowd chanted “YES!” while The Authority’s side was forced backward up the ramp. SmackDown ended in complete chaos, but with one thing finally clear: on Raw, the war would be settled face-to-face.
EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey


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WWE Monday Night Raw — April 21, 2014

Raw opened with a video package that made the last two weeks feel like the beginning of a company-wide power struggle. It started with Daniel Bryan on his knees at WrestleMania XXX, both championships raised above him while confetti covered the ring and the Superdome chanted “YES!” like the whole building had decided the future. Then the tone changed. Triple H trying to take the title from him the next night. Randy Orton dropping Bryan through the announce table on SmackDown. Kane standing over him on Raw. Orton using the WWE World Heavyweight Championship as a weapon. The Shield walking away from The Authority. Batista returning to the same spotlight he expected to own, only to find three younger men staring back at him without fear. Rusev standing beside Lana like a hired destroyer. Finally, the package cut to Edge’s return on SmackDown, Vince McMahon handing him control, and Edge making the announcement that brought everything to tonight: Daniel Bryan and The Shield against Randy Orton, Triple H, Batista and Alexander Rusev in an eight-man tag team main event. The final shot was Bryan raising both titles while The Shield stood beneath him, then Orton staring from the ramp with the face of a man who was done waiting.

Pyro exploded across the stage, and Michael Cole welcomed everyone to Monday Night Raw, saying that for the first time since WrestleMania, The Authority would not be able to attack from the shadows. JBL immediately pushed back, saying Edge could call himself General Manager all he wanted, but putting Daniel Bryan and The Shield in the ring with Triple H, Orton, Batista and Rusev was not restoring order. It was lighting a match and throwing it into gasoline. Jerry Lawler said maybe that was the point. For weeks, Bryan had been jumped, ambushed, and surrounded. Tonight, everybody had to stand across from each other and fight.

Edge opened the show, coming out in a black jacket with a microphone already in his hand. He did not do the usual long smile or pose on the stage. He walked straight to the ring like someone who understood how much could go wrong tonight. Once inside, Edge said SmackDown was supposed to be the first night of a new standard, but even with him in charge, the show still ended with half the roster trying to tear each other apart. He said he was not naive. He knew what kind of company he had walked back into. He knew The Authority would not suddenly respect rules because Vince McMahon gave him a job title. He knew Randy Orton did not stop being Randy Orton because someone told him no. But he also knew something else: chaos only helped the people who already had power. Tonight, the chaos would be pointed in one direction.

Triple H’s music hit before Edge could continue. Triple H walked out with Stephanie McMahon beside him, Randy Orton trailing behind them in a black hoodie, Batista in sunglasses and a sleeveless shirt, and Lana leading Alexander Rusev just a step behind. The Authority side did not look like a family. It looked like four different threats forced onto the same stage. Triple H entered the ring slowly and told Edge that he had been General Manager for one episode and was already making rookie mistakes. He said Edge thought the solution to violence was more violence, which sounded exactly like the kind of thinking that ended careers. Edge stared at him and said Triple H would know plenty about ending careers, because lately that seemed to be the whole plan. Stephanie cut in and said Edge was confusing accountability with persecution. Daniel Bryan was champion now. Champions were tested. The Shield had betrayed the people who gave them power. Traitors were punished. John Cena wanted a cage match with Bray Wyatt. That was Cena’s choice. Paige wanted to call herself champion after one lucky night. That was Paige’s burden. Cody Rhodes and Goldust could not stop tearing their own family apart. That was not The Authority’s fault either. Stephanie said all Edge had done was walk into a business already running at full speed and pretend every fire was new because he had just arrived to see the smoke. Edge let her finish, then said that was the difference between him and The Authority. He was not pretending the fires were new. He was admitting who kept pouring fuel on them. He said tonight’s main event would stay exactly as announced. Daniel Bryan and The Shield against Randy Orton, Triple H, Batista and Rusev. No one was being removed. No one was being replaced. No one was getting the night off. Triple H smirked and said Edge was brave when he had other people’s bodies to gamble with. Edge stepped closer and said he was not gambling with them. He was giving them what The Authority had been denying them: a clean look at the people trying to break them. Daniel Bryan’s music hit, and the building snapped alive. Bryan walked out with both championships over his shoulders, still taped around the ribs but moving better than he had the week before. He did not come out smiling like the Raw after WrestleMania. He came out focused, eyes locked on Orton. A few seconds later, The Shield’s music hit, and Ambrose, Rollins and Reigns came down through the crowd. Ambrose moved first, practically dragging the energy with him. Rollins hopped the barricade and paced at ringside. Roman stepped over it last and never looked away from Rusev. Bryan entered the ring and stood beside Edge, while The Shield climbed onto the apron behind him. For the first time all night, The Authority looked outnumbered.

Bryan said he was tired of hearing about survival like it was some kind of insult. He survived WrestleMania. He survived Triple H. He survived Orton’s cheap shots. He survived Kane. He said if that bothered Orton, then maybe Orton should ask himself why he had needed tables, belts, monsters, and bosses to make Bryan stay down. Orton slowly raised the microphone and said Bryan still did not understand. Extreme Rules was not going to be a celebration of Bryan’s heart. It was going to be the night reality caught up with him. Orton said Bryan could keep leading chants, keep hiding behind The Shield, and keep talking about survival, but at Extreme Rules there would be nowhere to crawl once Orton started taking him apart. Bryan answered by looking at Edge and saying he wanted Orton in the kind of match where nobody could complain about rules, excuses, bad breaks, or who got lucky. He wanted Orton in an Extreme Rules Match. The crowd erupted. Orton smiled because that was exactly the language he liked. Edge looked from Bryan to Orton and said if both men wanted it, then he would make it official. At Extreme Rules, Daniel Bryan would defend the WWE World Heavyweight Championship against Randy Orton in an Extreme Rules Match. No count-outs. No disqualifications. No escape through technicalities. The only way out would be pinfall or submission. Triple H laughed under his breath and said Edge had just handed Orton the perfect weapon. Edge said maybe. Or maybe he had just taken away every excuse Orton planned to use when Bryan beat him again. Batista stepped forward, annoyed that the whole opening had turned back toward Bryan and Orton. He said The Shield could stand there looking tough, but tonight they were getting exposed. Ambrose leaned over the ropes and told Batista the only thing getting exposed was how badly he needed Triple H to make him feel important again. Batista moved toward the ring, but Triple H stopped him. Lana calmly raised her microphone and said Rusev did not need speeches, titles, or nostalgia. He only needed bodies. Rusev stared at Roman and said his name again, low and direct. “Reigns.” Roman stepped forward and said nothing at first. Then he leaned into his microphone and said, “Main event. Don’t blink.” Edge ended the segment by saying there would be no sneak attacks tonight before the main event. If anyone on either side jumped the other before the match, Edge would pull them from Extreme Rules consequences or not. He said everyone wanted violence, and they would get it, but they would get it when the bell rang. The Authority backed up the ramp angry, Bryan raised the titles in the ring, and The Shield stayed still behind him. It set the tone perfectly. Tonight was not about whether war was coming. War was already here. Edge was just trying to keep it inside the ropes.


The first match of the night was Big E against Jack Swagger, with Cesaro on commentary and Zeb Colter at ringside. Big E came out with the Intercontinental Championship around his waist, all business, while Swagger walked behind Zeb like a man who had been living with the same argument in his head for a week. Cesaro joined commentary with his leg still slightly taped after Swagger’s attack on SmackDown, and Cole immediately asked him if he felt one hundred percent. Cesaro said he was good enough to fight and good enough to win the Intercontinental Championship. JBL pointed out that good enough might not be enough against Big E, especially if Swagger kept damaging his leg before Extreme Rules ever arrived. Big E and Swagger started physical right away. Swagger shot low for the leg, but Big E sprawled out, used his power to shove Swagger away, and flattened him with a shoulder tackle that sent Swagger rolling to the floor. Zeb screamed that Big E was protecting Cesaro because he feared a real American challenger, but Big E ignored him. Swagger returned and finally got control by clipping Big E’s knee as he stepped through the ropes. From there, Swagger wrestled mean. He drove knees into Big E’s thigh, twisted the leg against the rope, and kept looking over at Cesaro every time he did it, almost proving that everything he did to Big E was really meant for the man on commentary. Cesaro stayed seated longer than expected, jaw tight, hands folded in front of him. He did not want to give Swagger the satisfaction of reacting. Big E fought back with body shots, powered Swagger into the corner, and hit a belly-to-belly that shook the ring. He went for the Big Ending, but his knee buckled just enough for Swagger to slide off and chop block him again. Swagger locked in the Patriot Lock in the center of the ring, and Big E had to fight hard to crawl toward the rope. Cesaro finally stood up at commentary, watching closely as the champion reached out. Big E got the rope, but Swagger held the ankle until the referee reached four. Swagger backed away, then suddenly turned and shoved Cesaro at commentary. Cesaro dropped the headset and stepped forward. The referee leaned through the ropes warning Cesaro not to get involved, and that gave Swagger the opening to grab the Intercontinental Championship from the timekeeper’s area. Big E rose behind him before Swagger could use it. Swagger turned around into a huge clothesline, the title falling harmlessly to the mat. Big E scooped him up and hit the Big Ending for the win.

After the bell, Big E picked up the Intercontinental Championship and stood over Swagger, but Cesaro entered the ring. The two men stared each other down, and the crowd leaned into it because the respect was starting to feel tense now. Swagger, still down, saw them both focused on each other and attacked from behind, driving his shoulder into Cesaro’s taped leg. Big E grabbed Swagger and threw him off, but Swagger rolled out, laughing through his frustration while Zeb shouted that neither of them could ignore him. Edge appeared on the stage and said Swagger had made one thing clear: he was not going away. Edge said Big E and Cesaro had earned their match, but Swagger had forced himself into the conversation by turning the entire division into a fight. So at Extreme Rules, it would be Big E defending the Intercontinental Championship against Cesaro and Jack Swagger in a Triple Threat Match. Then Edge added that one fall would not be enough to settle this. The winner would have to score two falls to leave with the championship. Big E looked annoyed because his path had just become harder. Cesaro looked at Edge, then at Swagger, then back at the title. Swagger backed up the ramp with a grin, acting like he had won something even after losing the match. The segment gave the Intercontinental Title match a clear identity. Big E was the champion trying to prove power and pride could survive chaos. Cesaro was the rising challenger trying to win on his own. Swagger was the bitter ex-partner willing to injure both men if that was what it took to stay relevant.

Backstage, Renee Young found Paige warming up with the Divas Championship resting on a crate beside her. Renee asked about AJ locking in the Black Widow on SmackDown and refusing to let go even though there was no match. Paige said AJ wanted everyone to believe the Black Widow was some mythical hold that ended careers before Paige arrived. Paige said she respected the hold. She respected what AJ had done as champion. But she did not fear her. Paige said AJ’s problem was that she had spent so long being the queen of the division that she forgot other women were learning how to fight while she was busy calling herself untouchable. Paige said at Extreme Rules, AJ could not win by crying about the title, hugging it, or sneaking up from behind. She would have to make Paige submit.

AJ Lee stepped into the frame slowly, skipping only once before stopping right in front of Paige. She was smiling, but the smile looked thin. AJ said Paige sounded good. Strong. Confident. Almost like a real champion. Then AJ looked down at the title and said Paige still carried it like something she was borrowing. AJ said the Black Widow was not mythical. It was simple. It took champions, veterans, favorites, and survivors and turned them into people begging for air. Paige stepped closer and told AJ to try it tonight if she was so sure. AJ laughed softly and said she was not wasting the first real lesson in a hallway.


That led into Paige versus Aksana. Paige came out with the Divas Championship, and the commentary team put over how fast her life had changed. Two weeks ago, she was an NXT name arriving on Raw. Now she was champion, with AJ Lee obsessed with taking back what she believed still belonged to her. Aksana tried to bully Paige early, using knees, hair pulls and a hard side slam to slow her down. Paige did not wrestle like the shocked rookie from the night she won the title. She took the punishment, got angry, and began answering with sharp forearms. Aksana cut her off with a spinebuster for two, then mocked Paige by pulling at her arms like she was setting up a submission. That mistake woke Paige up. She kicked Aksana away, grabbed both arms, and transitioned into the PTO. Aksana tapped quickly, and Paige held it just long enough to make the visual matter before releasing. She stood with the Divas Championship, but AJ appeared on the stage clapping. Paige invited her to the ring. AJ walked halfway down the ramp, then stopped. She pointed at Paige’s arms and mouthed, “Those are mine.” Paige looked confused for a split second. Aksana then grabbed Paige from behind, and AJ sprinted the rest of the way to the ring. Paige fought Aksana off, but AJ slid in, clipped Paige low, and attacked the left arm. She wrapped it around the middle rope, pulled until officials came running, then finally let go. AJ did not lock in the Black Widow this time. That was the point. She wanted Paige thinking about the arm. She wanted the champion wondering if she could even apply the PTO properly by Extreme Rules. Paige sat against the ropes holding her shoulder, furious but hurt. AJ picked up the Divas Championship, stared at it, then placed it on the mat just out of Paige’s reach. She whispered that a submission match was not about being tough. It was about finding one part of someone and making it belong to you.
After the break, a steel cage lowered halfway above the ring while the arena lights dimmed. It did not touch the floor, but it hung there like a warning. John Cena came out without his normal bounce. He slapped hands with fans, but he kept looking up at the cage. Cena entered the ring and said he asked for the Steel Cage Match because he was done chasing ghosts. At WrestleMania, Bray Wyatt tried to make him use a chair. On Raw, Bray tried to convince everyone that Cena had already started to break. On SmackDown, Bray sat in a dark room talking like he could follow Cena home even when Cena was not in the building. Cena said he had heard enough. He said at Extreme Rules, the cage was not a prison. It was a promise. No Harper. No Rowan. No disappearing. No sermons from a rocking chair. Just Bray Wyatt locked inside with the man he had been trying to expose.

The lights cut out before Cena could continue. When they came back, Bray Wyatt was standing on the stage with Harper and Rowan behind him. Bray laughed and said Cena still believed walls could protect him. Bray said that was what made heroes so easy to destroy. They built symbols, wore colors, held up slogans, and convinced the world that the right words could keep the dark outside. Bray said the cage was not there to keep Harper and Rowan away. It was there because Cena wanted something to hold onto when his hands started shaking. Cena told Bray to come to the ring and test that theory. Bray smiled and said not yet. He wanted Cena to feel what it was like to look through bars and know the people could see him, but not save him. Edge appeared on the stage before the segment could turn into another Wyatt ambush. He said he was done letting Bray’s family orbit every Cena segment and every Usos segment until nobody knew where one feud ended and the other began. Edge said tonight John Cena would face Luke Harper one-on-one, and Harper and Rowan had better listen closely, because at Extreme Rules they would challenge The Usos for the WWE Tag Team Championship in a Tornado Tag Team Match. No tags required. No hiding behind corners. No waiting for Bray’s timing. If Harper and Rowan wanted to drag The Usos into chaos, Edge would make sure the rules matched the fight.

The Usos came out next, interrupting before the Wyatts could respond. Jimmy and Jey stood beside Cena in the ring, each holding a tag title, and Jimmy said Harper and Rowan had spent two weeks trying to make them afraid of the dark. Jey said the only thing they had learned was that the Wyatts did not like it when the champions punched back. Bray smiled at all three men from the stage and said family was a beautiful thing because it made people brave right before it made them stupid. Cena stepped to the ropes and told Bray that at Extreme Rules, all the riddles ended. Bray backed away laughing while Harper and Rowan stared at The Usos. The cage began rising again, leaving Cena alone in the ring looking up at it, then back at Bray.


Cena versus Luke Harper followed after the commercial break, and it became one of the strongest TV matches of the night. Harper did not wrestle like a normal henchman. He wrestled like someone trying to punish Cena for every word he had spoken. He hit hard, used his size, and kept throwing Cena into the corner ribs-first. Cena fired back with right hands, but Harper cut him off with a big boot that nearly turned him inside out. Bray sat in the rocking chair at ringside, laughing whenever Cena reached for momentum. Rowan stood behind him, silent. The Usos stood on the opposite side of the ring, not interfering but making sure Harper and Rowan knew they were not alone. Cena fought through the middle of the match with that familiar slow comeback, but Harper kept interrupting the rhythm. Cena hit the shoulder tackles, went for the side slam, and Harper countered with a swinging side slam of his own for a close two-count. Harper shouted “Follow the buzzards” and went for the discus clothesline, but Cena ducked, lifted him, and hit the Attitude Adjustment. Rowan immediately climbed onto the apron. The Usos pulled him down, and the referee turned toward the commotion. Bray stood from his chair, and Cena, instead of covering Harper, leaned through the ropes and shouted at Bray to get in the ring. Harper recovered behind him and almost stole it with a roll-up for two. Cena kicked out, grabbed Harper again, and locked in the STF. Harper fought longer than expected, crawling toward the ropes while Bray laughed, but Cena pulled him back to the center. Harper finally tapped. Cena released the hold and stood up, but the second the bell rang, Rowan attacked. The Usos hit the ring, and all six men erupted into a brawl. Jimmy superkicked Rowan through the ropes. Jey dove onto him outside. Harper tried to attack Cena again, but Cena lifted him for another Attitude Adjustment. Bray entered the ring behind Cena, but Cena saw him coming and turned. For the first time in weeks, Bray did not get the jump. He froze, smiling, but the smile slipped a little. Cena stepped closer, daring him. Bray backed out through the ropes, still laughing but choosing not to fight yet. Cena stood tall with The Usos, but commentary made the point: Cena could win fights, he could win matches, but Bray still seemed focused on making him doubt every reaction.
Backstage, Cody Rhodes sat alone in the locker room with his wrists taped, staring down at the floor. Goldust walked in quietly and said they could still stop this from getting worse. Cody did not look up. Goldust said they were brothers before they were partners, before they were wrestlers, before the tag titles, before the losses, before all of this. Cody finally looked at him and said that was the problem. Goldust always got to speak like the older brother trying to save the family. Dusty always got to speak like the legend trying to teach a lesson. Cody said nobody ever asked what it felt like to be the one still trying to become something while everyone around him was already allowed to be remembered.

Goldust said Cody was not living in anyone’s shadow unless he chose to stand there. Cody snapped back that Goldust did not get to say that. He said every time he looked like he was about to break out, the story became about the Rhodes family again. Goldust’s comeback. Dusty’s legacy. Cody’s potential. Cody said he was tired of being potential. He was tired of being next. He was tired of being introduced through someone else’s name. Goldust’s voice got firmer. He told Cody if he wanted to fight him, then say it. Stop circling it. Stop blaming the family. Stop making everyone else responsible for the words he was too afraid to say.

Cody stood up and said he did want to fight him. Not in a tag match gone wrong. Not in a backstage argument. Not in some emotional apology after the bell. At Extreme Rules. One-on-one. Goldust looked hurt but nodded like he had expected this. Then Cody went further. He said it could not just be a match, because if he beat Goldust and Goldust came back the next week smiling and painting his face like nothing happened, then nothing would change. Cody said one of them needed to leave so the other could finally breathe. Goldust’s expression changed. Before he could answer, Edge walked in. Edge said he had heard enough to know this was real, but he would not make that kind of match unless both men understood it. Cody said he understood perfectly. Goldust looked at Cody for a long moment, then told Edge to make it official. If Cody needed to find himself by trying to end Goldust’s career, then Goldust would fight for his own. Edge reluctantly announced Cody Rhodes versus Goldust at Extreme Rules, Career versus Career. Dusty Rhodes appeared in the hallway at the end of the segment, having heard the last line. He did not yell. He did not step between them. He just looked at Cody with a crushed expression and said, “Son, don’t make a memory you can’t live with.” Cody looked like the words hit him, but he pushed past Dusty anyway. Goldust stayed behind, breathing through the pain of what had just become official.


The next match was Cody Rhodes against R-Truth, and the whole point was to show how Cody wrestled when he was no longer pretending everything was fine. Truth came out energetic, trying to get the crowd involved, but Cody attacked with a cold focus. He wrestled tighter than usual, keeping Truth grounded, driving knees into the body, and snapping him down with a front suplex. Goldust watched from backstage on a monitor with Dusty beside him. Truth made a comeback with clotheslines and a spinning kick, but Cody cut him off by targeting the leg and then hit Cross Rhodes in the center of the ring for the win.

After the bell, Cody did not celebrate. He asked for a microphone and looked into the hard camera. He said everyone would call him cruel for asking for Career versus Career. Everyone would say he had gone too far. But nobody called it cruel when he spent years being measured against his own bloodline. Nobody called it cruel when his name came with a history lesson every time he walked into a room. Cody said Goldust was not a villain. Dusty was not a villain. That almost made it worse. Because Cody loved them, and he still felt trapped by them. He said at Extreme Rules, if he had to break his brother’s career to finally start his own life, then he would live with it. Backstage, Goldust watched without blinking. Dusty lowered his head, and the segment ended with the family feud feeling less like a wrestling angle and more like something nobody could fully repair.

Later in the night, The Shield were shown in their usual stairwell-style promo location. Dean Ambrose sat on a concrete step taping his wrist, Seth Rollins stood behind him, and Roman Reigns leaned against the wall with his arms folded. Ambrose said Triple H had spent weeks talking about weak points. He said maybe Triple H was right. Maybe Ambrose liked walking into punishment too much. Maybe Rollins took too many risks. Maybe Roman believed he could not be put down. Ambrose looked into the camera and said the mistake was thinking those were weaknesses. Those were the reasons The Shield had survived. Those were the reasons they had been The Authority’s favorite weapon. And those were the reasons The Authority was scared now that the weapon was pointed back at them. Rollins said tonight’s eight-man tag was not Extreme Rules. There would be a referee. There would be tags. There would be some kind of order. But at the pay-per-view, the Six-Man Street Fight would not have any of that. No corners. No disqualifications. No hiding behind corporate power. Rollins said Batista could talk about movie-star status, Triple H could talk about evolution, and Lana could call Rusev power, but The Shield had been born in fights like that. Roman finally pushed off the wall and said Rusev had said his name twice now. Roman said tonight Rusev would get to stand close enough to find out why most people stopped doing that. Ambrose smiled and said, “Believe that.”

The show then shifted back to the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. Randy Orton was interviewed backstage by Renee Young, and Renee asked if the Extreme Rules stipulation favored him or Daniel Bryan. Orton stared at her like the question annoyed him. He said the stipulation favored reality. He said Bryan had built his whole title reign on emotion, crowd noise, and the idea that pain made him noble. Orton said at Extreme Rules, pain would not be noble. Pain would be a tool. Chairs, tables, steps, titles, barricades — all of them would be legal. Orton said Bryan had survived everything because there were always people to interrupt, always chants to lift him, always referees to stop something before it went too far. At Extreme Rules, Orton said, there would be nothing too far. Daniel Bryan walked into frame before Renee could ask another question. Orton did not back up. Bryan looked at him and said Orton kept talking about weapons like Bryan had never been in a fight before. Bryan said the difference between them was simple. Orton used weapons because he liked hurting people who were already down. Bryan used whatever he had because people like Orton never gave him a fair path to begin with. Bryan said if Extreme Rules meant he had to crawl through broken tables, chairs, and RKOs to keep the title, then he would do it. Orton stepped closer and said Bryan might crawl, but he would not keep crawling forever. Edge stepped in before it could become physical and reminded both men that if they touched each other before the main event, there would be consequences. Bryan looked at Edge and said he could wait. Orton smirked and said he could too.


Rob Van Dam defeated Alberto Del Rio in the next match, giving Raw a useful change of pace while also keeping RVD’s return momentum alive. Del Rio worked the arm and tried to ground Van Dam, but RVD fought through with his usual bursts: the leg lariat, Rolling Thunder, and finally the Five-Star Frog Splash for the win. The match did not directly tie into Extreme Rules, but commentary used it to frame how competitive the post-WrestleMania reset had become. Every division was moving. Every win mattered. And with Edge now in charge, people who stacked victories could force their way into bigger matches.

After that, the show gave Bray Wyatt one more moment before the main event. The arena went dark, and Bray appeared in a pre-taped video from inside the same bare room used on SmackDown. This time the steel chair in the middle had a piece of chain draped across it. Bray said John Cena won tonight, and the children cheered because children loved simple stories. Good man wins. Bad man falls. Hero smiles. Family leaves. But Bray said grown men knew the truth. Cena did not win because he was free of fear. Cena won because Luke Harper could feel pain and John Cena could still fight pain. Bray leaned closer and said Extreme Rules would not be about pain. It would be about silence. The silence after the door closed. The silence when the crowd realized they could chant but not enter. The silence when Cena looked across the cage and understood that Bray never wanted him beaten. He wanted him revealed. Bray smiled and said, “At Extreme Rules, John, I don’t need to escape the cage. I just need to make sure the real you does.”

The main event entrances were treated like a pay-per-view. The Authority side entered first. Triple H came out in his gear with Stephanie behind him, even though she was not competing. Batista followed, still angry from earlier but confident after beating Rollins. Lana came out next and introduced Alexander Rusev with a cold, controlled speech about power and obedience. Rusev walked out last for their side, eyes fixed forward, not reacting to the crowd. Randy Orton entered separately, which told its own story. He was part of the team, but his focus was Daniel Bryan. He stepped into the ring and immediately looked toward the stage, waiting for the champion. The Shield’s music hit next, and Ambrose, Rollins and Reigns came through the crowd together. Rollins was still selling the ribs from the Batista match, but he moved with purpose. Ambrose looked ready to start before the bell. Roman climbed over the barricade last and locked eyes with Rusev again. Then Daniel Bryan’s music hit, and the arena came alive. Bryan walked out with both championships, ribs taped, head high, and for the first time all night he smiled. Not because he was safe. Because he finally had a fight he could see coming. Bryan joined The Shield at ringside, and the four of them entered together.


The match started with Bryan and Orton, but Orton immediately tagged out to Triple H, drawing boos. Triple H entered with a smile, circling Bryan like he wanted to remind him of WrestleMania. Bryan did not hesitate. He went after Triple H with kicks to the leg and body, forcing Triple H into the corner. The crowd chanted “YES!” with every strike until Triple H rolled under the ropes to regroup. Bryan held the ropes open and invited him back in. Triple H took his time, then tagged Batista. Batista entered and pointed at Bryan’s ribs. Bryan tagged Roman. That first Roman-Batista exchange had weight. They circled, locked up, and Batista tried to overpower him. Roman held his ground. Batista shoved him. Roman shoved him back harder. Batista threw the first punch, Roman answered, and suddenly the match had its first real collision. Roman hit the ropes and knocked Batista back with a shoulder block, but Batista came back with a knee and drove Roman into the corner. Roman fought out, hit a leaping clothesline, and Batista rolled away to tag Rusev. The building rose because that was the matchup they had been teasing for weeks.

Rusev stepped in slowly. Roman did not move. They met in the center and started throwing heavy shots. Rusev landed first, Roman answered, Rusev drove a knee into the body, and Roman came back with a right hand that forced Rusev to take a step back. Lana shouted instructions from ringside. Rusev charged, but Roman caught him with a clothesline. Rusev did not go down. Roman hit another. Rusev staggered but stayed up. Roman ran again, and Rusev finally cut him off with a spinning heel kick that dropped him. Rusev shouted in Bulgarian and tagged Orton, who entered only once Roman was down. Orton slowed the match by stomping at Roman’s limbs, then tagged Triple H. The Authority side began cutting the ring in half, using quick tags and cheap shots without breaking Edge’s rules. Triple H targeted Roman’s ribs. Batista hit shoulder thrusts. Orton hit the backbreaker. Rusev came in and crushed Roman with knees to the body. Roman kept trying to rise, but each time The Authority dragged him back. Ambrose paced on the apron, shouting for the tag. Rollins leaned over the ropes, still holding his ribs. Bryan kept clapping, trying to rally the crowd.

Roman finally created separation by catching Orton with a Samoan drop. Both men crawled. Orton tagged Batista. Roman reached for Ambrose, but Batista grabbed his ankle. Roman kicked him away and tagged Ambrose. Ambrose exploded into the match with punches, a running crossbody, and wild shots in the corner. He knocked Triple H off the apron, ducked a Batista clothesline, and hit a rebound lariat that brought the crowd up. Ambrose went after Orton on the floor, throwing him into the barricade, but that opened the door for Batista to catch him coming back in. Batista drove Ambrose into the ring post shoulder-first, and the match swung again.

Ambrose became the next target. The Authority side punished him because Triple H had already said Ambrose could not stop himself from walking into damage. They made that flaw the story. Batista threw him into the barricade. Orton hit the hanging DDT. Triple H tagged in and taunted The Shield while grinding Ambrose down with a face lock. Ambrose smiled through it, which only made Triple H angrier. He slapped Ambrose across the head and told him he was not crazy. He was stupid. Ambrose bit Triple H’s hand to escape. The crowd erupted, but Triple H cut him down with a spinebuster before he could tag.

Rusev entered and crushed Ambrose in the corner. He went for the Accolade, but Ambrose rolled through before Rusev could fully sit back and tagged Rollins. Rollins came in fast despite the ribs. He hit a springboard knee to Rusev, knocked Orton off the apron, ducked Batista and sent him over the top rope. Rollins hit a dive onto Batista, then rolled back in and hit Rusev with an enzuigiri. He climbed to the top rope, but Lana shouted, and Rusev rolled away. Rollins adjusted mid-plan, leaping onto Triple H and Orton at ringside instead. It was the kind of risk Triple H had warned about, and it worked for a moment.

But when Rollins got back in, Rusev caught him. Rusev drove him into the corner, hammered the ribs, and tagged Triple H. Triple H smelled the injury immediately. He hit a rib breaker, then another, and covered for two. Bryan tried to get the crowd behind Rollins, leading “YES!” chants from the apron. Triple H mocked the chant while driving knees into Rollins’ side. Rollins fought out with desperation, kicked Triple H away, and crawled toward Bryan. Triple H grabbed the ankle. Rollins rolled through, sent Triple H into the corner, and finally made the tag.

Daniel Bryan came in against Triple H, and the arena erupted. Bryan hit the running dropkick in the corner, then another. Triple H stumbled out, and Bryan hit him with kicks to the chest. Orton tried to enter, but Bryan knocked him off the apron with a dropkick. Batista entered, and Roman cut him off with a Superman Punch. Rusev entered and tackled Roman through the ropes, sending both men to the floor. Ambrose threw himself onto Rusev, and suddenly the match was breaking apart.

Inside the ring, Bryan and Triple H were legal. Bryan countered a Pedigree, backdropped Triple H, and backed into the corner as the crowd rose for the running knee. But when Bryan pushed off, his ribs gave out for half a second. It was small, but it was enough. He slowed, grimaced, and clutched his side before he could explode forward. Triple H saw it immediately and cut him down with a knee to the midsection.

Bryan dropped to one knee, coughing through the pain. Triple H grabbed him by the beard and shouted that this was what happened when little miracles tried to play champion for too long. He dragged Bryan up for the Pedigree, but Bryan somehow twisted free and fired back with a kick to the leg, then another to the chest. The crowd started chanting “YES!” again as Bryan fought through the pain and backed Triple H into the corner. He hit the first running dropkick. Then the second. He tried for the third, but this time his body failed him. Bryan hit the corner hard and dropped to the mat, clutching his ribs.

The Shield were desperate for a tag. Ambrose screamed from the apron. Rollins reached as far as he could. Roman stood with his hand out, eyes locked on Bryan, trying to pull him across the ring by force of will alone. Bryan crawled, one arm wrapped around his ribs, fingertips inches away from Roman’s hand. The building came alive, believing he was about to make it.

Then Randy Orton struck.

Orton yanked Roman off the apron and sent him shoulder-first into the steel steps. The referee turned toward the crash, and that opened the door for Batista to drag Rollins down on the opposite side. Ambrose jumped off the apron to attack Batista, and suddenly The Shield were pulled into a fight around ringside. Bryan, still crawling, reached for a corner that was now empty.

Triple H smiled.

He tagged Orton.

The crowd booed hard as Orton entered slowly, not rushing, not panicking, just stalking. Bryan used the ropes to pull himself up, still refusing to stay down. Orton waited until Bryan turned, then drove a sharp kick directly into the injured ribs. Bryan collapsed to his knees. Orton grabbed him by the hair and spoke right into his face, telling him that heart did not matter when the body was already broken.

Bryan shoved him away and started throwing desperate kicks from one knee. One caught Orton in the chest. Another caught him in the arm. Bryan forced himself up and swung for the roundhouse, but Orton ducked underneath. Bryan spun around, holding his ribs, and Orton struck with the RKO.

One.

Two.

Bryan kicked out.

The entire arena erupted, and Orton sat up stunned. Triple H looked furious on the apron. Stephanie screamed at the referee. Even Edge, watching from ringside, leaned forward like he could not believe Bryan had survived again. Orton’s expression changed from shock to anger. He pulled Bryan up again, but Bryan suddenly shoved him off and caught him with a small package.

One.

Two.

Orton kicked out.

Both men scrambled up. Bryan ducked another RKO attempt and hit Orton with a running knee, but he did not get all of it. His ribs buckled as he landed, and instead of collapsing across Orton for the cover, Bryan rolled away in pain. That hesitation became the whole match. Bryan had Orton beaten for one second, but his injuries would not let him finish.

Bryan crawled over and finally draped an arm across Orton.

One.

Two.

Orton got his shoulder up.

Bryan pulled himself toward the corner, trying to stand again. The crowd chanted “YES!” louder and louder, willing him through it. He staggered to his feet and looked for one more running knee. But before he could charge, Orton rolled out of the way and Bryan crashed chest-first into the turnbuckles. He bounced backward, completely exposed.

Orton caught him with a second RKO.

One.

Two.

Three.

Randy Orton pinned Daniel Bryan.
The bell rang, and the arena fell into a shocked wave of boos. Orton rolled away from Bryan, breathing hard, but smiling because he knew exactly what he had done. He had not just beaten Daniel Bryan. He had proven that the champion’s injuries were real, that the damage was catching up, and that Extreme Rules might be the perfect environment to finish the job.

The Shield tried to get back into the ring, but Batista, Triple H, and Rusev cut them off. Ambrose launched himself at Batista near the announce table. Rollins fought Triple H at ringside. Roman and Rusev crashed into each other near the ramp, throwing heavy shots until security poured out to separate them. It was complete chaos, but inside the ring, Orton stayed focused on Bryan.

Orton grabbed the WWE World Heavyweight Championship from ringside and stood over Bryan with it. Edge stepped into the ring and warned him not to do it. Orton looked at Edge, then looked back down at Bryan. For a moment, it seemed like he might swing anyway. Instead, Orton slowly placed the title across Bryan’s chest, leaned down, and whispered that at Extreme Rules, there would be no teammates close enough to save him and no referee able to stop the damage.

Bryan clutched the championship weakly, still trying to sit up. Orton backed into the corner and watched him with a cold smile. Triple H stood at ringside, proud of the damage. Stephanie looked satisfied for the first time all night. Batista and Rusev were still being held back from The Shield, but the message had already landed.

Raw ended with Randy Orton standing over Daniel Bryan, not with a chair, not with a cheap-shot title swing, but with something more dangerous: proof.

Bryan was still champion.

But he was hurt.

And at Extreme Rules, Randy Orton now had a target.

EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey


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WWE Friday Night SmackDown — April 25, 2014

9 DAYS TILL EXTREME RULES

SmackDown opened with a hard, tense video package from Raw. Daniel Bryan was shown fighting through taped ribs in the eight-man tag main event, throwing everything he had at Triple H and Randy Orton before his body finally betrayed him. The key replay came in slow motion: Bryan hitting the running knee on Orton, collapsing from the pain before he could cover, then Orton recovering just enough to hit the second RKO and pin the WWE World Heavyweight Champion. The voiceover framed the entire night around one question: Daniel Bryan had survived WrestleMania, survived The Authority, survived Randy Orton’s attacks, but with Extreme Rules just nine days away, had the damage finally caught up with him?

The show went live with pyro across the SmackDown stage, and Michael Cole immediately said Raw had changed the entire road to Extreme Rules. Randy Orton had pinned Daniel Bryan. Not with help from Kane. Not with a chair. Not with the championship belt. He pinned him because Bryan’s ribs gave out at the worst possible moment. JBL said that was not bad luck — that was the point of Orton’s attack plan. He said Orton had found the champion’s weakness, and in an Extreme Rules Match, weakness becomes a target. Jerry Lawler pushed back and said Bryan was still champion, still fighting, and still dangerous, but even he admitted that Bryan looked more hurt than at any point since WrestleMania.

Randy Orton opened the show, and he did not come out frantic or loud. He walked slowly, dressed in ring gear with a sleeveless hoodie, smiling like a man who had finally proven something. He entered the ring, took his time with the microphone, and let the boos build before saying Raw was not an accident. It was not a fluke. It was not some great heroic near-miss for Daniel Bryan. It was the truth finally showing itself. Orton said Bryan could chant with the crowd, carry two championships, and talk about heart all he wanted, but on Raw, his body told the truth. One rib shot slowed him down. One missed cover cost him the match. One RKO was enough to pin the WWE World Heavyweight Champion in the middle of the ring. Orton said everyone loved calling Bryan a miracle, but miracles do not hold up under pressure. He said Extreme Rules would not be about spirit, chants, or dreams. It would be about impact. Chairs to the ribs. Tables to the spine. Steps to the chest. Orton said Bryan’s title reign had already started bleeding out, and at Extreme Rules, he was going to finish it.

Daniel Bryan’s music hit, and the building exploded. Bryan came out in jeans, a black “YES!” shirt, and both championship belts over his shoulders. The ribs were taped under the shirt, but the way he walked told the story. He was slower than usual. He did not sprint to the ring. He did not throw his arms up as wildly as before. Still, he walked straight toward Orton without fear. Edge came out right behind him, trying to keep the situation from turning physical before the show even got moving. Bryan entered the ring and stared at Orton for a long moment before raising the microphone. He admitted Orton pinned him on Raw. He said he was not going to stand there and make excuses, because everybody saw what happened. His ribs hurt. His body gave out. He was a second too slow. Orton took advantage. Bryan said that was the difference between them. Orton saw an injury and called it proof that Bryan was not good enough. Bryan saw an injury and called it the price of being champion. Bryan said Orton had been handed opportunities his entire career and still acted like the world owed him more. Bryan had been told no, pushed down, laughed at, and beaten up, and every time he stood back up, someone like Orton acted offended by it. Bryan said Extreme Rules was not going to be clean, pretty, or safe. If Orton wanted to target the ribs, target them. If Orton wanted to use chairs, use them. If Orton wanted to find out how much pain it took to keep Daniel Bryan down, then Extreme Rules was the perfect place to try. Orton stepped closer and quietly told Bryan he was making the same mistake again. He was talking like pain made him stronger. Orton said pain made people slow. Pain made people desperate. Pain made people stupid. Bryan raised the titles and said pain also made people honest, and the honest truth was that Orton needed Bryan hurt because a healthy Daniel Bryan had already beaten him when it mattered.

Edge finally stepped between them. He said both men had made their points, but he was not letting SmackDown become another medical disaster before Extreme Rules. Bryan was not cleared to compete tonight. The crowd booed, but Edge turned to Bryan and said this was not punishment. It was protection. Bryan looked annoyed, but he did not argue much because he knew Edge was right. Orton laughed and said that was perfect. The great fighting champion had finally found a doctor’s note. Edge looked at Orton and said he was still cleared to compete. If Orton wanted to prove Raw was no accident, then tonight he could do it against someone who had been waiting to get his hands on The Authority’s side all week. The main event would be Randy Orton versus Roman Reigns. The crowd erupted. Orton’s smile faded just slightly. Edge added that Batista, Triple H, Rusev, The Shield, and Daniel Bryan would all be banned from ringside. After Raw’s chaos, tonight Orton and Reigns would settle it one-on-one. Orton stared at Edge, then at Bryan, and said that was fine. He had pinned one hero on Raw. He could put down another one tonight. Bryan stepped close enough that Edge had to hold a hand out between them. Bryan told Orton that if he survived Roman, Bryan would still be waiting at Extreme Rules. Orton looked down at the titles on Bryan’s shoulders and said Bryan should enjoy carrying them while his ribs still let him breathe.


The opening match was The Usos against Ryback and Curtis Axel, designed to give the tag champions a strong win before the Wyatt Family storm rolled in again. Jimmy and Jey came out with the WWE Tag Team Championship belts raised, but they were not smiling the way they usually did. The Tornado Tag Team Match at Extreme Rules had changed the tone. They were not preparing for a normal title defense. They were preparing for Harper and Rowan in a match where tags would not save them, corners would not organize them, and the Wyatt Family’s chaos would be legal. Ryback and Axel tried to use size and quick tags to slow the champions down, but The Usos wrestled with more urgency than usual. Jey took the early punishment after Ryback caught him coming off the ropes and threw him hard into the corner. Axel mocked the “Uso” chant and kept Jey grounded, but Jey fought back with a jawbreaker and a sudden Samoan drop. The hot tag to Jimmy picked up the pace immediately. Jimmy flew in with clotheslines, a corner splash, and a corkscrew dive to Axel on the floor. Ryback tried to cut him off, but Jey wiped him out with a superkick from the apron. Jimmy hit the top-rope splash on Axel for the win. The victory should have been clean momentum, but the lights cut out before The Usos could celebrate. When they came back on, Luke Harper and Erick Rowan were standing at ringside. No entrance. No warning. Harper’s eyes were locked on Jimmy. Rowan stared at Jey through the sheep mask before slowly removing it. The Usos did not wait. They dove through the ropes, and all four men started brawling on the floor. The difference was that Harper and Rowan seemed comfortable without structure. That was the point. Jimmy threw punches at Harper against the barricade, but Harper answered with a boot that nearly folded him. Jey attacked Rowan near the steps, but Rowan shoved him into the apron and drove him back-first into the edge of the ring. The Usos fought hard, but the challengers turned the fight into exactly what Extreme Rules would be — no tags, no control, just bodies hitting metal.

John Cena ran down for the save before Harper and Rowan could do more damage. Cena tackled Rowan over the announce table and started throwing punches. Harper grabbed a chair, but Cena ducked and drove him into the ring post. The crowd came alive as Cena and The Usos briefly cleared the Wyatts from ringside. Then Bray Wyatt appeared on the stage, laughing into a microphone. He said Cena kept running into fires that were not his because heroes always needed to feel useful. Bray said Cena thought he had saved The Usos, but all he had done was prove that when the cage door closed at Extreme Rules, nobody would be there to save him. Cena grabbed a microphone from ringside and told Bray to stop hiding behind sermons and start walking to the ring. Bray smiled and said Cena still did not understand. The cage was not about keeping Harper and Rowan out. It was about keeping John Cena in with the truth. Bray lowered the microphone, Harper and Rowan backed up the ramp beside him, and The Usos stood with Cena in the ring. It was a strong babyface visual, but the Wyatts had already made their point: Tornado Tag favored disorder, and disorder belonged to them.

Backstage, Big E was shown taping his wrists when Cesaro entered. There was no Paul Heyman beside him tonight, which made the moment feel more direct. Cesaro told Big E that at Extreme Rules, he was not there to take part in a spectacle. He was there to take the Intercontinental Championship. Big E said he respected that, but respect did not mean he was going to let Cesaro walk through him. Cesaro said nobody walked through Big E. That was why beating him mattered. Before the moment could turn into mutual respect, Jack Swagger and Zeb Colter interrupted. Zeb said this was exactly the problem. Big E and Cesaro were standing there having a respectful little conversation while Jack Swagger was treated like the outsider in a match he belonged in. Swagger said Cesaro had forgotten where he came from, and Big E had forgotten that power did not mean anything when someone took out the leg underneath it. Big E told Swagger he talked too much for someone who lost on Raw. Swagger stepped forward, but Edge appeared and cut it off. Edge said if all three wanted to keep circling each other, then tonight Big E and Cesaro could try being partners against Jack Swagger and Alberto Del Rio. He told them to save the rest for Extreme Rules, where the Intercontinental Title would be decided by the first man to score two falls.


The tag match later in the first hour had the exact uneasy feeling it needed. Big E and Cesaro were not friends, but they were professionals. Swagger and Del Rio, meanwhile, were only united by convenience. Swagger started with Cesaro and immediately went after the taped leg, proving he had learned nothing except how to be more specific with his damage. Cesaro fought him off with uppercuts and tagged in Big E, who tossed Swagger around with overhead throws and a huge shoulder block. Swagger bailed out, and Zeb screamed that Big E was hiding behind strength because he could not wrestle two falls under pressure. Del Rio gave the heel team control by catching Big E’s arm across the ropes and working the shoulder. He and Swagger made quick tags, trying to keep the champion grounded. Cesaro kept reaching for the tag, but when Big E finally got close, Swagger ran across the ring and kicked Cesaro off the apron. That gave Big E enough anger to power out, flatten Del Rio, and crawl again. Cesaro returned to the apron and got the tag, coming in hot with uppercuts, a springboard attack, and a deadlift gutwrench that brought the crowd up. The finish came when Swagger tried to sneak in with the Patriot Lock on Cesaro, but Big E blasted him with a running body block that sent both men to the floor. Cesaro caught Del Rio with the Neutralizer and pinned him. Big E and Cesaro won, but the celebration immediately turned tense. Cesaro stood and looked at the Intercontinental Championship around Big E’s waist. Big E noticed. The crowd buzzed. Swagger then returned with a chop block to Big E from behind and grabbed Cesaro’s bad leg, slamming it into the ring post twice before officials pulled him away. Swagger backed up the aisle shouting that two falls meant two chances to break someone. Big E was down holding his knee. Cesaro was down holding his leg. Swagger had lost the match, but he left the segment feeling dangerous because he had made the stipulation matter. To win at Extreme Rules, Big E and Cesaro could not just beat each other. They had to survive Swagger long enough to score twice.

The next major segment centered on Cody Rhodes and Goldust. Goldust came to the ring alone, face paint on, but without his usual theatrical confidence. He said there were matches you accepted because you wanted championships, matches you accepted because you wanted revenge, and matches you accepted because walking away would hurt worse than fighting. He said Career versus Career against Cody at Extreme Rules was not something he wanted. It was something Cody had forced into existence because somewhere along the line, his brother convinced himself that the only way to step out of a shadow was to burn down the house behind him. Cody interrupted before Goldust could continue. He walked out in a suit jacket over his gear, looking calmer than he had on Raw, which somehow made him feel more dangerous. Cody said Goldust still did not understand. This was not hatred. This was clarity. He said Goldust was loved because he was different, remembered because he survived, and forgiven because everyone saw him as part of Dusty’s great story. Cody said he never got forgiveness that easily. Every mistake became proof he was not ready. Every success became proof he had finally lived up to the family name. Cody said he was tired of being graded against ghosts. Goldust told him the Rhodes name was not a prison. Cody snapped back that it was easy for Goldust to say that after making a career out of escaping into paint. That line hurt, and the crowd reacted like it went too far. Goldust’s expression changed, but he did not attack. He told Cody that if he wanted to hurt him, he should at least be honest about why. Cody said he was being honest. At Extreme Rules, one brother would leave with a future, and one would leave with memories. Dusty Rhodes appeared on the stage before it could get physical. Dusty walked slowly, microphone in hand, and the crowd gave him a respectful reaction. He said he had spent his life fighting men who wanted to take food off his table, but nothing prepared him for watching his own sons talk like this. Dusty told Cody that being born into a family did not mean being trapped by it. Cody looked away, but Dusty kept talking. He said Cody had all the talent in the world, but if he ended Goldust’s career to prove he was his own man, he would wake up the next morning still Cody Rhodes — only now he would be Cody Rhodes with something broken in him. Cody looked shaken for a second, then hardened again. He told Dusty that was the problem. Even now, Dusty was trying to make him feel guilty for choosing himself. Cody left the ring without touching Goldust, but as he passed Dusty on the stage, he stopped and said, “After Extreme Rules, you won’t have to split your pride anymore.” Then he walked away. Goldust stayed in the ring, Dusty stayed on the stage, and the silence did more than a brawl could have. The match now felt painful, not just personal.

Paige wrestled Alicia Fox in the next match, with AJ Lee on commentary. Paige’s left arm and shoulder were taped from AJ’s attack on Raw, and AJ immediately made that the whole story. She said Paige was brave, but bravery was useless when a submission match came down to one damaged limb. AJ said Paige had the Divas Championship, but AJ had the blueprint for how to take it back. Alicia targeted the arm from the start, yanking it across the ropes and driving Paige shoulder-first into the turnbuckle. Paige fought from underneath, selling the injury while refusing to look overwhelmed. She hit short headbutts, a knee lift, and a quick series of forearms before Alicia cut her off again with an arm wringer. AJ smiled at commentary every time Paige grabbed the shoulder. Cole said AJ looked proud of herself. AJ said she was proud of Paige for learning that championships hurt. Paige made her comeback with one good arm, using kicks and a running knee before catching Alicia in the PTO. The bad arm made it harder to lock fully, but Paige adjusted and forced Alicia to tap. The win mattered because it showed Paige could still apply the hold even damaged. AJ left commentary and slowly entered the ring, clapping. Paige stood and invited her in. AJ stepped close, smiled, then slapped Paige across the face. Paige fired back immediately, and the two rolled into a fight. AJ went after the bad arm again, but this time Paige was ready. She shoved AJ off and almost trapped her in the PTO. AJ scrambled to the ropes and slipped out of the ring before Paige could lock it. Paige grabbed the Divas Championship and held it up with her good arm while AJ backed up the ramp, laughing but clearly annoyed. For once, Paige had not just survived AJ’s mind games. She had forced AJ to retreat.

Later backstage, The Shield delivered another tight, focused promo. Dean Ambrose said The Authority loved rules until rules stopped helping them. At Extreme Rules, there would be no rules to twist. No orders to hide behind. No corporate language. Just a street fight. Ambrose said Triple H had spent years building systems, but The Shield was built in alleys, stairwells, parking lots, and places where nobody came to save you.

Rollins said a Six-Man Street Fight was not about the biggest man. It was about the team that could create chaos and still know exactly where each other was.

Roman Reigns stood in the center and spoke last. He said Randy Orton was standing across from him tonight, but he knew Triple H, Batista, and Rusev would all be watching. Roman said Orton pinned Bryan on Raw because Bryan was hurt. Tonight, Orton would stand across from someone who was not hurt, not afraid, and not interested in sending a message. Roman leaned closer and said, “I’m not sending a message. I’m delivering one.”


Rusev had a showcase match against Zack Ryder, but the purpose was not just a squash. It was to make him feel like the extra weapon The Authority had added to a war that was already dangerous. Lana introduced him with a short, cold promo, saying America celebrated popularity, noise, and weakness, while Rusev represented discipline and destruction. Ryder got a few quick shots in early, but Rusev ran through him with terrifying force. He crushed him in the corner, hit the fallaway slam, then locked in the Accolade. The referee called for the bell, but Rusev did not release. Lana did not tell him to. That brought Roman Reigns onto the stage, not to fight, but to make eye contact. Rusev finally released Ryder and stood in the ring, breathing hard, staring back at Roman. Lana looked between them and smiled because she knew Rusev had Roman’s attention. Roman did not charge. He did not need to. He simply raised his fist slightly, then turned and walked away. It was short, but it worked. Rusev was not just another body in The Authority’s team. He was a problem Roman could not ignore.

The Wyatt Family returned for the six-man tag against John Cena and The Usos in the final stretch before the main event. This match had energy from the beginning because it carried two Extreme Rules stories at once. Cena wanted Bray in the cage. The Usos wanted Harper and Rowan in Tornado Tag conditions. Bray, Harper, and Rowan wanted the same thing they always wanted: to make the match feel less like competition and more like a trap. The babyfaces started hot. Cena and The Usos cleared the ring early, and Jey hit a dive onto Harper while Jimmy teased one on Rowan. Bray slid out before Cena could reach him, laughing and refusing to give Cena the clean fight he wanted. The Wyatts gained control when Harper caught Jimmy coming off the ropes with a brutal side slam. From there, Harper and Rowan isolated Jimmy, using power and awkward timing to keep him off balance. Bray tagged in only when Jimmy was already hurt, landing a few shots, whispering something to him, then tagging back out like he was more interested in the damage than the work. Jimmy finally escaped after countering Harper with a superkick, and the hot tag to Cena brought the crowd up. Cena ran through the shoulder tackles and side slam, but Bray tagged himself in before Cena could hit the Five Knuckle Shuffle. The arena shifted. Cena and Bray stood face-to-face, and for once Bray did not back away. Cena threw the first punches, Bray answered with a headbutt and a hard shot to the ribs. Cena fought back, lifted Bray for the Attitude Adjustment, but Rowan distracted the referee. Harper yanked Cena down by the leg from the outside, and The Usos immediately flew into action. Jey superkicked Harper over the announce table. Jimmy hit Rowan with a dive that sent both men into the barricade.

Inside the ring, Cena turned back into Sister Abigail. Bray covered him.

One. Two. Three.

Bray Wyatt pinned John Cena.

It was not clean, but it was exactly the kind of win Bray needed before Extreme Rules. Cena had been so focused on stopping Harper and Rowan, so focused on protecting The Usos, that Bray caught him in the one moment he was not fully looking. After the bell, Bray crawled toward Cena and sang softly while Harper and Rowan pulled themselves up outside. The Usos tried to reenter, but Harper and Rowan dragged them down and slammed them into the barricade. Bray sat beside Cena’s body and said without a microphone, close enough for the camera to catch it, “The cage won’t save the hero. It will reveal him.”

By the time SmackDown returned from the final commercial break, the tone had shifted fully to the main event. Randy Orton came out first, all confidence again. He had watched Bray pin Cena. He had watched Rusev crush Ryder. He had watched Cody and Goldust tear each other apart without throwing a punch. SmackDown had been a night where the villains kept finding pressure points, and Orton looked like he wanted to be the last one to press down.

Roman Reigns entered through the crowd alone. No Ambrose. No Rollins. Edge’s ruling held. Roman stepped over the barricade and into the ring, staring straight at Orton. The match started slowly, not because they were afraid, but because Orton knew he could not treat Roman like Bryan. Roman was not coming in with damaged ribs. He was not smaller, not worn down in the same way. Orton tried to circle and pick spots, but Roman forced him into the corner early and made the match physical. He threw heavy right hands, drove Orton into the turnbuckle, and knocked him down with a shoulder tackle that made Orton roll to the floor to reset. Orton took control by using the ropes and the referee’s count. He caught Roman coming back through the ropes with a kick, then hit the hanging DDT from the middle rope. Orton covered for two and immediately slowed everything down. He stomped the arm, the leg, the hand, the shoulder — that old Orton methodical cruelty — but Roman kept rising faster than Orton wanted. Every time Orton tried to make the match about control, Roman turned it back into a fight. Roman’s comeback built big. He ducked a clothesline, hit the leaping clothesline of his own, then unloaded in the corner with repeated shots as the crowd counted along. Orton stumbled out and tried for the RKO, but Roman shoved him away and hit the Superman Punch. Orton rolled to the floor before Roman could cover, and that saved him. Roman followed him outside, but Orton grabbed Bryan’s weakness as inspiration. He drove Roman ribs-first into the announce table, then again into the steel steps. The commentary team immediately connected it to Raw. Orton had a target now, and once Orton found a target, he did not stop. Back in the ring, Orton tried to finish with another hanging DDT, but Roman powered him up and dumped him over the ropes to the floor. Roman recovered, ran around the ring, and hit the drive-by dropkick. He rolled Orton back in, set up in the corner, and the crowd rose for the spear. Orton slowly got to his feet. Roman charged.

Orton leapt over him.

Roman hit the turnbuckles hard, and Orton struck immediately with the RKO.

One. Two.

Roman kicked out.

Orton sat up in disbelief, the same look he had after Bryan kicked out on Raw. He grabbed at his own hair, then backed into the corner, staring at Roman like he had to solve a problem. Roman pulled himself up. Orton went for another RKO, but Roman shoved him away and hit a second Superman Punch. This time Orton did not roll out. Roman dropped into the corner, fired up, and waited for him to rise.

Then Batista appeared on the stage.

He did not come to ringside, but the distraction was enough. Roman looked up for half a second. Orton tried to attack from behind, but Roman caught him and threw him off. Triple H then appeared beside Batista. Rusev stepped out next with Lana. They were not breaking Edge’s rule by coming to the stage, but they were making their presence felt. Roman stared up at all three men, and Orton used the moment to roll out of the ring and grab a chair. The referee leaned through the ropes to stop Orton from bringing it in. That gave Batista the chance to walk halfway down the ramp. Roman stepped toward the ropes, daring him to come closer. Orton slid back in without the chair and grabbed Roman from behind, pulling him into the RKO.

One. Two. Three.

Randy Orton defeated Roman Reigns.

Orton had now pinned Daniel Bryan and Roman Reigns in the same week. That was the commentary point immediately. Not because either win was spotless, but because Orton was stacking results at the exact right time. The bell rang, and Orton rolled out of the ring, backing toward The Authority side as Roman tried to recover. Batista, Triple H, and Rusev came down now that the match was over. Ambrose and Rollins ran out from the back to even things up, and the fight exploded at ringside. Ambrose threw himself at Batista, driving both men into the barricade. Rollins went straight for Triple H, landing quick shots before Triple H cut him off with a knee. Roman recovered enough to tackle Rusev over the announce table, and the two monsters started throwing punches in the wreckage. Edge came out with officials and security, trying to keep SmackDown from ending like Raw, but the brawl had already taken over.

Then Daniel Bryan came out.

Edge turned immediately and told him not to do it, but Bryan ignored him. He was still in street clothes, still taped up, still hurt, but he ran down as fast as his ribs allowed when he saw Orton standing near the WWE World Heavyweight Championship at ringside. Bryan went straight for Orton and fired off punches, sending him backward into the barricade. The crowd erupted because Bryan finally got his hands on him after spending the whole night being told to wait.

But the burst did not last.

Orton drove a knee into Bryan’s ribs. Bryan dropped instantly. It was the same weakness again, and Orton knew it. He threw Bryan into the apron, then pulled him back and dropped him ribs-first across the announce table. Bryan rolled off, clutching his side, trying to breathe. The Shield were too busy fighting The Authority to save him right away. Edge tried to push through security, shouting for Orton to stop.

Orton did not need a chair. He did not need a title belt. He grabbed Bryan, pulled him up by the beard, and hit an RKO on the floor.

The arena booed loudly as Bryan lay motionless near the announce table. Orton picked up the WWE World Heavyweight Championship and stood over him, breathing hard but smiling. The rest of the fight started to slow as everyone saw the visual. Roman was on one knee near the table, Ambrose was being held back by officials, Rollins was down near the barricade, Batista and Triple H stood near the ramp, and Rusev was still breathing heavily after his fight with Roman.

Orton lowered the championship onto Bryan’s chest again, just like Raw. This time, though, Bryan did not clutch it right away. He was too hurt. Orton leaned down and said, loud enough for the camera to catch, “Nine days. That’s all you have left.”

SmackDown ended with Randy Orton standing tall for the second show in a row. Bryan was still champion, but the story had changed. Orton was no longer just chasing the title. He was breaking the champion piece by piece. The Shield had war waiting at Extreme Rules, Cena had just been pinned by Bray Wyatt, The Usos had been dragged deeper into Wyatt chaos, Paige had survived AJ but not escaped her, Swagger had damaged both Intercontinental Title rivals, and Cody and Goldust were walking toward a match that would end one brother’s career.

The final image was Bryan on the floor beneath the title, trying to breathe, while Orton backed up the ramp with a cold smile.

For the first time since WrestleMania, the question was not whether Daniel Bryan could fight.

It was whether he could physically make it to Extreme Rules with enough left to survive.

EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey


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TFC

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Extreme Rules is going to be an awwwwwwwwwwesome show, defo gonna be reading it will more than likely do a review as well.
 
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WWE Monday Night Raw — April 28, 2014

Go-Home Raw Before Extreme Rules

Raw opened with a video package that made the last week feel like Daniel Bryan’s first true crisis as WWE World Heavyweight Champion. It showed Bryan fighting through the eight-man tag on Raw, his taped ribs betraying him when he tried to cover Randy Orton after the running knee. It showed Orton hitting the second RKO and pinning the champion clean in the middle of the ring. Then it cut to SmackDown, where Orton used the same cold patience to defeat Roman Reigns before dropping Bryan with an RKO on the floor. The package ended with Bryan lying beneath the WWE World Heavyweight Championship while Orton stood over him and whispered, “Nine days. That’s all you have left.” The message was simple: Daniel Bryan had reached the top of WWE, but with Extreme Rules less than a week away, Randy Orton was no longer chasing him. He was hunting him.

The show went live with pyro across the arena, and Michael Cole immediately framed the night as the final stop before Extreme Rules. JBL said Daniel Bryan’s title reign was already on life support, and nobody wanted to admit it because the crowd loved chanting “YES!” too much. Jerry Lawler pushed back and said Bryan had made a career out of proving people wrong, but even Lawler admitted that Orton had found the one thing Bryan could not will away: a damaged body.

Edge opened the show to a strong reaction, but he did not look like a man enjoying power. He looked like a man trying to keep a building from collapsing. He stepped into the ring and said the last two shows had made one thing obvious. Extreme Rules was not waiting until Sunday. It was already here. Randy Orton had pinned Daniel Bryan on Raw. He had pinned Roman Reigns on SmackDown. The Shield and The Authority had turned every arena into a battleground. Bray Wyatt had pinned John Cena. AJ Lee had tried to break Paige’s arm. Cody Rhodes and Goldust had agreed to a match that could end one brother’s career. Edge said that was why tonight could not be a normal Raw. It had to be the final line before everyone crossed it.

Edge announced that later tonight, Daniel Bryan and Randy Orton would sign the contract for their WWE World Heavyweight Championship Extreme Rules Match. He said Bryan had been medically evaluated earlier in the day and was cleared for Sunday, but not cleared to wrestle tonight. The crowd booed, but Edge said he was not going to let pride rob Bryan of the chance to defend the championship. He said Bryan could appear, he could speak, he could sign the contract, but if he got into a sanctioned match tonight, there was a real chance the doctors would pull him from Extreme Rules completely.

That brought out Randy Orton.

Orton walked to the ring slowly in a black hoodie, no music theatrics beyond his entrance, no wasted motion. He smiled as he stepped through the ropes because everything Edge had just said supported his entire argument. Orton told Edge he appreciated the update because now everybody could stop pretending. Daniel Bryan was not a fighting champion. He was a damaged champion being protected by management. Orton said Bryan had fooled the fans into believing heart was enough, but his ribs had already told the truth. Bryan could not wrestle tonight because Bryan could barely breathe. Orton said Extreme Rules would not be a title defense. It would be a mercy killing. Edge stepped closer and warned Orton not to confuse Bryan being hurt with Bryan being helpless. Orton laughed and said Edge sounded just like every fan in the building, clinging to the fairy tale because the alternative was too ugly. He said Bryan had needed The Shield on Raw. He had needed Edge to stop him from competing tonight. He had needed doctors to give him permission to walk into Sunday. Orton said he did not need permission. He needed one chair, one table, one mistake, and one RKO.

Daniel Bryan’s music hit, and the building erupted.

Bryan came out wearing jeans and a black “YES!” shirt, both championships over his shoulders, his ribs clearly taped underneath. He moved better than he had on SmackDown but still slower than normal. He entered the ring and stared at Orton without raising the titles right away. Bryan said Orton kept talking about his ribs like he had discovered some great secret. Bryan told him everybody knew he was hurt. He knew he was hurt. Edge knew. The doctors knew. The crowd knew. But being hurt did not make him afraid. It made things clearer. Bryan said Orton had spent the last week proving he could beat him when his body gave out. At Extreme Rules, Orton would have to prove he could beat him when there were no excuses left and no rules stopping Bryan from fighting back with everything around him. Orton stepped toward Bryan, but Edge immediately got between them. Orton smiled and said Bryan was trying to sound brave because that was all he had left. He told Bryan to look at him closely because this was the last Raw where Bryan would walk out as champion. Bryan looked down at the championships, then back at Orton, and said Orton had been handed the world and still acted like he had been robbed. Bryan said he had been kicked in the ribs, dropped on the floor, RKO’d, and told by doctors to rest, and he was still standing in front of Orton with the titles Orton wanted. Bryan said if Orton thought that made him weak, then Sunday would be a long night.

Edge cut them off before it got physical and made the contract signing official for the end of the night. Then he made the rest of Raw feel important. Roman Reigns would face Batista. John Cena would face Erick Rowan inside a steel cage later tonight so Cena could experience the structure before facing Bray Wyatt on Sunday. The Usos would face Harper and Rowan in a non-title match, but if either side caused a disqualification, Edge would personally add consequences to the Tornado Tag Team Championship match at Extreme Rules. Big E and Cesaro would team against Jack Swagger and Alberto Del Rio. AJ Lee would face Natalya in a submission match preview. And Cody Rhodes and Goldust would have one final face-to-face with Dusty Rhodes in the ring.

Orton looked annoyed that the show was moving on without letting him attack Bryan. Bryan raised both titles in Orton’s face while the crowd chanted “YES!” Edge stood between them, and the opening ended with the champion defiant but clearly protected by the last bit of order left before Sunday.


The first match was Big E and Cesaro against Jack Swagger and Alberto Del Rio. It was the right choice to open the wrestling portion of the show because the Intercontinental Title match at Extreme Rules needed to feel like more than a thrown-together triple threat. Big E came out first with the championship, intense and focused. Cesaro followed with no Paul Heyman, no distraction, just tape on his leg and eyes on the title. Swagger came out with Zeb Colter, who spent the entire walk down the ramp shouting that both Big E and Cesaro were frauds: one hiding behind muscles, the other hiding from the country that made him. Del Rio looked amused by all of it, treating Swagger like a useful weapon rather than a partner. The match started with Cesaro and Swagger, and the tension was immediate. Swagger went low for the bad leg, but Cesaro was ready and blasted him with a European uppercut. Swagger stumbled back, and Cesaro followed with another one that knocked him into the corner. Big E tagged himself in, and for a second Cesaro did not like it, but Big E did not do it cheaply. He wanted Swagger too. Big E drove Swagger into the corner and hammered him with shoulder thrusts until Swagger bailed to the floor. Zeb screamed for a timeout, but Big E followed him out and threw him back inside. Del Rio changed the match by catching Big E with a kick to the arm as he stepped through the ropes. From there, Del Rio and Swagger used quick tags to isolate the champion. Del Rio worked the arm. Swagger worked the leg. It was smart because Extreme Rules would require two falls to win, and both challengers seemed to understand that damaging Big E early could make the second fall easier later. Big E fought through it and eventually hit Del Rio with a belly-to-belly that bought him enough space to tag Cesaro. Cesaro came in hot. He hit Del Rio with uppercuts, caught Swagger coming through the ropes, and lifted him into a deadlift gutwrench that brought the crowd up. Del Rio tried to sneak behind him for the Cross Armbreaker, but Cesaro powered through and dumped him with a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker. Cesaro then looked out at Big E and pointed to the championship, making it clear he was not doing this for friendship. He was doing it because he believed he was the better man. The finish came when Swagger tried to reenter with a chop block on Cesaro, but Big E intercepted him and sent him flying through the ropes. Cesaro turned Del Rio inside out with another uppercut, then hit the Neutralizer for the win. Big E and Cesaro had beaten Swagger and Del Rio, but the second the bell rang, the trust disappeared. Cesaro stood up and looked at Big E’s title. Big E stepped into the ring and lifted the championship. The crowd buzzed because they wanted the fight. Swagger ruined the moment by attacking both men from behind with a chop block to Big E and a tackle to Cesaro’s injured leg. He grabbed Cesaro’s ankle and slammed the leg into the ring post twice, then rolled in and locked the Patriot Lock on Big E. Big E fought, trying to power out, but Swagger had him trapped near the center. Cesaro crawled back in and blasted Swagger with an uppercut to break the hold. Big E then rose and shoved Cesaro. Cesaro shoved him back. Swagger tried to attack again, but both men turned and dropped him together. Big E hit Swagger with the Big Ending, and Cesaro immediately caught Big E with a Neutralizer before he could recover. Cesaro stood over both men and picked up the Intercontinental Championship. He did not steal it. He looked at it, then placed it across Big E’s chest. That was the final message. Swagger was dangerous because he would injure anyone. Big E was powerful because he could survive anyone. But Cesaro was precise, and in a match where the winner needed two falls, precision might be everything.

Renee Young interviewed John Cena earlier in the day. Cena was standing near the cage structure as crew members prepared it for later. Renee asked if facing Erick Rowan inside the cage tonight was risky with Bray Wyatt waiting on Sunday. Cena said everything about Bray Wyatt was risky because Bray did not just want to win. He wanted to make people question why they fought in the first place. Cena said Bray pinned him on SmackDown, and he was not going to pretend that did not happen. Bray caught him. Bray beat him. But Cena said that was the difference between them. Bray treated one win like proof that Cena was secretly broken. Cena treated one loss like a reason to get back up. Cena looked at the cage and said Sunday was not about escaping. It was about making sure Bray Wyatt had nowhere to run when the words stopped working. Cena said tonight, Erick Rowan would learn what happened when the door closed and the fight stayed inside. Then Cena looked directly into the camera and said, “Bray, I hope you’re watching. Because on Sunday, this is not your pulpit. It’s my cage.”

The Usos versus Harper and Rowan came next, and it felt different from a normal tag match because everyone knew the pay-per-view match would be Tornado rules. Jimmy and Jey entered with the WWE Tag Team Championships and were more serious than usual. Harper and Rowan came out without Bray at first, walking slowly to the ring with that dead-eyed Wyatt Family calm. Harper started against Jimmy, but before the first lockup, Rowan stepped into the ring and refused to go back to the apron. The referee warned him, and Harper just smiled. It was a preview of Sunday. The challengers already wanted to fight like tags did not exist. Once the match settled, Harper and Rowan controlled long stretches with size and awkward violence. Harper hit Jimmy with a boot that dropped him hard. Rowan leaned over the ropes and shouted at Jey, trying to draw him in and create chaos. Jimmy made the tag after a counter, and Jey came in fast with kicks, a flying forearm, and a Samoan drop on Harper. Rowan broke up the cover, and Jimmy immediately came back in to attack him. The referee tried to restore order, but it was starting to slip. The finish never fully arrived because Harper shoved the referee aside while going after Jey in the corner. The referee called for the bell, but Harper and Rowan did not care. They had forced the disqualification because they wanted the fight more than the win. Rowan threw Jimmy into the barricade. Harper sent Jey over the announce table. Edge appeared on the stage furious, saying he had warned both teams there would be consequences. He said if Harper and Rowan wanted to ignore rules so badly, then at Extreme Rules, the Tornado Tag Team Championship match would now have no count-outs and no disqualifications. The crowd roared because the match had just become exactly what the Wyatts wanted — but also exactly the kind of fight The Usos had been begging to survive. Bray Wyatt appeared on the stage behind Edge, laughing. He said Edge thought he had punished monsters by removing their chains. Bray said The Usos would learn what family meant when there were no corners left to hide in. Then he turned his attention to Cena without Cena even being there. Bray said heroes always built cages because they thought evil needed walls. But on Sunday, John Cena would learn the cage was not there to keep Bray Wyatt in. It was there to keep Cena’s lies from escaping.

The camera cut backstage to Cody Rhodes watching on a monitor, expression blank. Goldust walked into frame. For a moment, neither man spoke. Goldust said he wanted one last chance to talk in the ring, not as opponents, not as performers, but as brothers. Cody did not look at him at first. Then he said Goldust could talk all he wanted, but talking had never changed the fact that Cody was the one still suffocating. Goldust said maybe Cody was suffocating because he kept mistaking love for chains. Cody looked at him then, angry, but quiet. Goldust told him Dusty would be in the ring later, and Cody owed him enough to listen. Cody answered, “I listened my whole life. That’s why I’m here.”

AJ Lee versus Natalya followed in a submission match preview, with Paige watching from ringside. AJ came out skipping, but she was not playful. She kept staring at Paige’s taped arm. Natalya was the perfect opponent for this segment because she could make the technical side of the submission match matter. Early on, Natalya controlled AJ with wrestling. She took her down, worked the leg, and nearly turned her into the Sharpshooter twice. AJ scrambled to the ropes both times, laughing nervously because she knew Natalya could actually beat her at her own game. AJ shifted the match by targeting the arm, which brought the story back to Paige. She twisted Natalya’s wrist, snapped the arm over the rope, and then looked directly at Paige while doing it. Paige stood up from commentary but did not interfere. AJ wanted her angry. AJ wanted her reckless. Natalya fought back, hit a discus clothesline, and finally locked in the Sharpshooter. AJ screamed and crawled, fingertips inches from the rope. Paige watched closely, almost willing AJ to tap, but AJ twisted her body just enough to pull Natalya into the Black Widow out of nowhere.

Natalya fought hard, but AJ had it locked in tight. Natalya tapped.

AJ won, but she did not release the hold. Paige immediately entered the ring and pulled AJ off. AJ swung at Paige’s bad arm, but Paige saw it coming and trapped her in the PTO. The crowd erupted because for the first time in weeks, AJ was the one caught. AJ screamed and clawed forward, but before Paige could fully sit back, Tamina pulled AJ to the floor. Paige grabbed the Divas Championship and held it up with one arm while AJ backed away, shaken and furious. The segment landed exactly how it needed to: AJ was still the submission specialist, still dangerous, still targeting the arm, but Paige had proven that if she locked in the PTO on Sunday, AJ could be in real trouble.


The Cody Rhodes and Goldust face-to-face came next, and Raw slowed down in the best possible way. Dusty Rhodes was already in the ring when the show returned from break. He did not cut a big promo. He simply said there were things in wrestling that were hard, things in family that were harder, and things that happened when those two worlds became the same fight. Goldust came out first. Cody followed. The two brothers stood on opposite sides of Dusty, and the silence felt heavier than shouting. Dusty said he was not there to stop the match because he knew he could not. Both men had signed. Edge had made it official. At Extreme Rules, Cody Rhodes and Goldust would fight Career versus Career. Dusty said all he could do was ask them to remember one thing before they stepped through those ropes. Careers end. Families do not have to. Goldust said he had spent years being strange, broken, rebuilt, and forgiven. He said he understood what it meant to feel trapped in your own skin. But he told Cody that ending his career would not free him from the Rhodes name. It would only add a scar to it. Goldust said if Cody beat him on Sunday, he would shake his hand and leave because that was the stipulation. But if Cody thought Goldust was going to lie down out of guilt, he was wrong. Goldust said he would fight with everything he had left because his career was not a burden. It was his life. Cody listened with a tight jaw. Then he said Goldust always made pain sound noble after the fact. Cody said Dusty got to be an icon. Goldust got to be a survivor. Cody got to be the promise everyone was still waiting to cash in. He said he loved both of them, and that was the part nobody understood. He loved Dusty. He loved Goldust. But every time he looked in the mirror, he saw a man introduced by his father’s name, measured against his brother’s reinvention, and judged against a legacy he never asked to carry. Cody said Sunday was not about hate. It was about space. One of them had to leave so the other could finally breathe. Dusty stepped closer and told Cody that breathing room bought with regret did not feel like freedom. Cody’s eyes flickered for a second. Goldust offered his hand. Cody stared at it for a long time. The crowd wanted him to take it. Dusty wanted him to take it. Goldust clearly wanted him to take it. Cody slowly reached out, then stopped just before touching Goldust’s hand.

He said, “After Sunday, you’ll understand why I couldn’t.”

Then Cody walked away without attacking him. That made it hurt more. There was no cheap shot, no easy heat, no simple villain moment. Just Cody leaving his father and brother in the ring with the knowledge that he had made peace with something they still found unbearable.

Backstage, Triple H was shown with Batista and Lana. Rusev stood behind Lana, silent. Triple H said Edge wanted to pretend he had control, but control was not about making matches. Control was about making people understand consequences. He said The Shield had spent the last two weeks acting like they were free because they refused to take orders. On Sunday, a Six-Man Street Fight would teach them the difference between rebellion and survival. Batista said Seth Rollins liked to jump, Ambrose liked to bleed, and Roman liked to act like nobody could knock him down. Batista said he had already beaten Rollins, Orton had already beaten Roman, and tonight he would do it again if Roman had enough guts to meet him in the ring. Lana then spoke for Rusev, saying The Shield believed in brotherhood, but Rusev believed in destruction. She said at Extreme Rules, belief would not protect them.


The steel cage lowered for John Cena versus Erick Rowan, and the arena changed immediately. This was not the pay-per-view match, but it felt like a warning. Cena entered first and looked up at the cage as it came down around him. Rowan entered with Harper and Bray Wyatt, but Edge came out and ordered Harper and Bray to remain outside the cage. He said if they entered or interfered directly, Rowan would lose and Bray would be barred from ringside during the Tornado Tag match on Sunday. Bray smiled like Edge’s rules amused him, but he sat in his rocking chair outside the cage as Rowan stepped inside. The match was rough and claustrophobic. Rowan used his size to throw Cena into the cage walls early, making the structure feel dangerous rather than decorative. Cena fought back with punches, but Rowan cut him off with a headbutt and crushed him in the corner. Bray watched from the chair, singing softly without a microphone. Harper stood beside him, motionless. Every time Cena looked outside the cage, Bray smiled like the cage was already doing its work. Cena made his comeback after Rowan missed a charge and hit the steel. Cena hit the shoulder tackles, the side slam, and the Five Knuckle Shuffle. He lifted Rowan for the Attitude Adjustment, but Rowan grabbed the cage and pulled himself free, then threw Cena face-first into the steel. Rowan tried to climb, which was strange because the match was not really about him escaping. It was about proving the cage could trap Cena’s focus. Cena caught him near the top, dragged him down, and hit a second-rope Attitude Adjustment. Cena covered and got the three.

Cena defeated Erick Rowan inside the cage.

The win should have been the end, but Bray stood from his chair and walked to the cage door. He did not try to enter. He simply opened the door and held it wide. Cena stood inside, breathing hard, staring at him. Bray smiled and invited him to leave. It was a small thing, but it became a challenge. Cena could walk out and take the victory, or he could stay inside and prove he was not afraid of Bray. Cena stepped through the ropes toward the door, then stopped. He looked at Bray and backed into the center of the ring. He was telling Bray that on Sunday, he was not escaping. He was fighting.

The lights went out.

When they came back, Harper had pulled Rowan out of the cage, and Bray was standing inside with Cena. The crowd erupted. Cena turned, and Bray attacked. They threw punches in the cage, Cena gaining the advantage at first and driving Bray into the steel. He lifted Bray for the Attitude Adjustment, but Bray raked the eyes, slid down, and hit Sister Abigail in the center of the ring. Harper and Rowan stood outside the cage, blocking the door. The Usos ran down and attacked them, and all four men brawled around the structure. Inside, Bray crawled toward Cena, laughing as he pressed his forehead against Cena’s.

Bray whispered, “You chose to stay.”

That was the point. Cena had won the match, but Bray had turned the victory into another question. Cena had chosen the fight over the escape. On Sunday, Bray wanted to know how far that choice would take him.

Roman Reigns versus Batista came after the break, and it felt like the final physical test before The Shield’s Street Fight. Roman entered alone through the crowd, jaw set, eyes locked on the ring. Batista came out with no Triple H and no Rusev at ringside because Edge’s ban was in effect. The match started with both men trying to prove power. Batista shoved Roman. Roman shoved him back harder. Batista threw a right hand. Roman answered. Within thirty seconds, it was less a wrestling match and more two heavyweights trying to see who would move backward first. Batista took control by targeting Roman’s ribs after whipping him into the barricade. The commentary connected it to Orton’s strategy against Bryan. The Authority had clearly realized that even the toughest men could be broken if you found one body part and stayed on it. Batista slowed Roman down with a bearhug, then drove him into the corner with shoulder thrusts. Roman fought out with headbutts and a clothesline, but Batista caught him with a spinebuster for two. Batista shook the ropes and set for the Batista Bomb, but Roman powered out and hit a Samoan drop. Roman’s comeback built big. He hit the leaping clothesline, the corner clotheslines, and the Superman Punch. Batista rolled to the floor, but Roman followed with the drive-by dropkick. Back inside, Roman set for the spear. Batista pulled the referee into the path just enough to force Roman to stop. Batista then grabbed a chair from ringside and brought it in. The referee tried to take it, but Batista shoved him away and blasted Roman across the back.

The referee called for the bell.

Batista did not care. He hit Roman again with the chair. That brought Ambrose and Rollins running down, and Triple H and Rusev immediately appeared from the crowd instead of the stage, proving they had been waiting for the rule to break. The fight exploded. Ambrose tackled Triple H over the announce table. Rollins launched himself at Batista with a springboard knee. Rusev entered the ring and started hammering Roman with heavy shots, but Roman fought back, and the crowd came alive as the two monsters collided again. The Shield looked outnumbered for a moment when Triple H recovered and grabbed the chair. He cracked Ambrose in the ribs and went after Rollins, but Rollins ducked and hit an enzuigiri. Batista caught Rollins from behind, but Ambrose returned with the chair and hit Batista across the back. Rusev threw Ambrose down and locked eyes with Roman. Roman rose slowly, hurt but furious. Rusev charged. Roman hit the Superman Punch. Rusev staggered but did not fall. Roman backed up and speared Rusev through the ropes, sending both men crashing to the floor. The crowd exploded. The Shield regrouped in the ring while Triple H and Batista pulled Rusev away. The Authority side had caused the damage, but The Shield ended the segment standing. Ambrose was clutching his ribs, Rollins was favoring his side, Roman was down on one knee after the spear to the floor, but they were together. That was the image the feud needed. The Authority had power. The Shield had unity. In a Six-Man Street Fight, that difference could decide everything.


Backstage, Randy Orton watched the monitor and smirked. Renee Young approached him and asked if he was concerned by Daniel Bryan’s confidence earlier. Orton said confidence was what people used when they had no evidence left. He said he had pinned Bryan. He had pinned Reigns. He had dropped Bryan on the floor. He had made doctors protect the champion from himself. Orton said Bryan could talk about heart until his lungs gave out, but at Extreme Rules, Orton would not be aiming for the heart. He would be aiming for the ribs. Renee asked if Orton was worried about the no-disqualification environment bringing out Bryan’s best. Orton’s smile faded. He said that was the mistake everyone made. Extreme Rules did not bring out the best in people. It brought out the truth. And the truth was that Daniel Bryan’s body had already quit on him once. On Sunday, Orton would make it quit for good.

Then it was time for the final contract signing.

The ring had been reset with a black carpet, a table in the center, two chairs, and the WWE World Heavyweight Championship contract waiting between two microphones. But because this was Extreme Rules, Edge had also placed weapons around the ring: a steel chair leaning against one corner, a kendo stick on the table, a trash can near the steps, and a folded table set up outside. It was not subtle. It was a preview.

Edge entered first and said he hated contract signings because they almost always ended the same way. But tonight, he was not pretending this was about peace. This was about making sure there was no confusion. At Extreme Rules, Daniel Bryan would defend the WWE World Heavyweight Championship against Randy Orton in an Extreme Rules Match. No disqualifications. No count-outs. No protection. Pinfall or submission would decide the champion.

Orton entered first, calm and confident. Bryan entered second with both championships. He was walking slower after the long night, but he was upright and focused. Edge reminded them both that once the contract was signed, the match was locked. Orton signed first without hesitation. He slid the contract toward Bryan and told him to take his time because it might be the last important thing his ribs let him do. Bryan sat down, looked at Orton, and signed.

Edge picked up the contract and made it official.

Orton immediately leaned back in his chair and said Bryan had just signed away the miracle. He said WrestleMania made Bryan feel chosen. The crowd made him feel invincible. The titles made him feel legitimate. But none of that changed anatomy. Orton said ribs crack. Lungs burn. Bodies fail. He told Bryan that every “YES!” chant on Sunday would turn into a countdown to the next chair shot. Orton said he did not need to outwrestle Bryan. He did not need to prove he had more heart. He only needed to keep hitting the same place until Bryan’s body stopped answering him. Bryan did not respond right away. He looked at the contract, then at the kendo stick sitting on the table, then at the championships. He said Orton was right about one thing. Bodies fail. Bryan said his had failed before. His body had told him he was too small. WWE had told him he was not the guy. The Authority had told him he was a B-plus player. Every shortcut Orton had ever taken was built on the idea that people like Bryan eventually stopped getting up. Bryan said the reason he was champion was not because his body never failed. It was because every time it failed, he got back up anyway. Orton stood up slowly. Bryan stood too. Edge stepped between them again, but this time the contract was already signed. Orton told Bryan getting back up was not winning. It was delaying the inevitable. Bryan said maybe. Then he picked up the kendo stick from the table and said, “Let’s find out what happens when there’s nothing left to delay.”

Orton threw the first punch.

Bryan answered with the kendo stick to the leg. Orton stumbled, and Bryan hit him again across the back. The crowd erupted because Bryan finally had a weapon in his hands after a week of being hunted. Edge backed out of the way, letting them fight because the contract was signed and Sunday’s rules had already swallowed the moment. Bryan cracked Orton across the ribs, but the swing hurt Bryan too. He winced, and Orton saw it. Orton kicked him directly in the injured ribs. Bryan dropped to one knee. Orton grabbed the steel chair and raised it over Bryan, but Bryan moved before the shot landed. The chair hit the table instead, cracking the setup in half. Bryan fired back with desperate kicks, each one answered by the crowd. “YES!” Kick. “YES!” Kick. “YES!” Kick. Orton caught one, looking for the RKO, but Bryan shoved him away and hit the running knee.

The building exploded.

Bryan could not cover, because there was no match, but he collapsed next to Orton and grabbed his ribs. That was the story in one image. Bryan could still hit the shot. He could still hurt Orton. But every burst cost him. Bryan crawled toward Orton and grabbed the chair. For a second, it looked like he might use it the way Orton would. Instead, he trapped Orton’s arm through it and locked in the Yes Lock.

Orton screamed and tapped immediately.

It did not count. It did not decide anything. But it was the first time all week Orton looked scared. He kicked, clawed, and finally rolled out under the ropes to escape, leaving the chair behind. Bryan released the hold because his ribs would not let him keep it. Edge checked on Bryan, but Bryan pushed himself up anyway. Orton backed up the ramp holding his arm, furious and rattled. Bryan stood in the ring, one hand on his ribs, the other lifting the WWE World Heavyweight Championship.

The crowd chanted “YES!” louder and louder as Orton stared from the ramp. Bryan was hurt. Everyone could see it. Orton had damaged him. Everyone knew it. But for the first time in two weeks, Orton was the one retreating.

Raw ended with Bryan standing on the broken contract table, both championships raised above him, his body barely holding together but his eyes locked on Orton. The final line from Cole sold the whole pay-per-view: Daniel Bryan might be walking into Extreme Rules wounded, but Randy Orton had just learned that wounded did not mean finished.

Extreme Rules was six days away.

And now there was nothing left between them.

EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey

6 DAYS AWAY


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The Visionary

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WWE Friday Night SmackDown — May 2, 2014

Go-Home SmackDown Before Extreme Rules

SmackDown opened with no cold match graphic, no quick fireworks, and no lighthearted introduction. Instead, the show began with a long, tense recap of Monday Night Raw. The footage showed Daniel Bryan signing the contract for his Extreme Rules Match against Randy Orton, his ribs still taped, his movements still slower than normal, but his eyes never leaving the challenger. It showed Orton saying the champion’s body had already quit on him once and would quit again at Extreme Rules. Then the package shifted into the fight after the signing: Bryan cracking Orton with the kendo stick, Orton kicking the damaged ribs, Bryan fighting through it anyway, blasting Orton with the running knee, then trapping Orton’s arm through the chair and locking in the Yes Lock until Orton tapped in panic. The replay froze on Orton scrambling away from Bryan, furious and shaken, while Bryan stood over the broken table with both championships raised. The final narration made the question clear: Randy Orton had spent two weeks proving Daniel Bryan could be hurt. On the last SmackDown before Extreme Rules, Bryan had to prove he could still be champion.

The show went live with blue and white pyro across the stage, and Michael Cole welcomed everyone to the final stop before Extreme Rules. JBL said this was the night where talk ended, because by Sunday, every grudge on the card would be legal, dangerous, and impossible to walk back. Jerry Lawler said that was exactly why tonight felt different. Nobody was trying to start a fight anymore. Every fight had already been made. Tonight was about what each man and woman had left to say before they stepped into the kind of matches that could change careers.

Edge opened the show, but instead of coming out smiling, he walked down with a contract folder in one hand and the kind of expression that made it clear he was tired of separating people. He stood in the ring and said that when Vince McMahon made him General Manager of both Raw and SmackDown, he knew the job would be hard. He just did not realize how quickly every issue in WWE would become personal. The WWE World Heavyweight Championship was not just a title match anymore. It was Randy Orton trying to break Daniel Bryan’s body before Bryan could truly begin his reign. The Shield versus Triple H, Batista and Rusev was not just a six-man match. It was a war between control and rebellion. John Cena versus Bray Wyatt had gone beyond wins and losses, because Bray was trying to drag Cena into a cage and prove the hero was a lie. The Usos and Harper & Rowan were going into a Tornado Tag Team Championship match with no disqualifications and no count-outs. Paige and AJ Lee were going into a submission match where one woman would have to admit the other was better. Big E, Cesaro and Jack Swagger were going to fight until one of them scored two falls. And Cody Rhodes and Goldust were walking into a Career versus Career match that Edge admitted he wished he never had to sanction.

Edge paused there because the crowd reacted heavily to the Rhodes name. He said there was one final change to that match. After conversations with both brothers and one man who had no business being trapped in the middle but could not stand outside of it either, Cody Rhodes versus Goldust at Extreme Rules would now have a special guest referee.

Dusty Rhodes.

The crowd responded with surprise, then a respectful cheer. Edge said Dusty had not been forced into it. He had asked for it after Raw. Edge said Dusty told him that if one son’s career might end, he could not sit in the back and watch it happen on a monitor. He had to be close enough to know it was done right. Edge looked uncomfortable as he said it, because he understood how painful that request was. Then he announced tonight’s four matches. Big E would face Jack Swagger. Paige would face Tamina. The Usos would face 3MB in tag team action. And in the main event, Dean Ambrose would face Batista. Everyone else would have to do their damage with words, because Edge was making it clear now: if anyone ruined the final SmackDown before Extreme Rules with an unauthorized brawl, there would be consequences Sunday.

Randy Orton interrupted before Edge could leave. Orton walked to the ring slowly, not as smug as usual, but not rattled enough to show weakness either. He had his arm taped from Bryan’s chair-assisted Yes Lock on Raw, and Cole immediately pointed it out. JBL said Bryan had done real damage. Orton stepped into the ring and looked at Edge with disgust before saying the entire show had become a celebration of one moment. One desperate moment. One lucky moment. Bryan locked in the Yes Lock on Raw after the contract signing and now everyone wanted to pretend the champion had turned the tide. Orton said Bryan did not win a match on Raw. Bryan did not pin him. Bryan did not defend the championship. Bryan survived another night by swinging weapons and feeding off fans who cared more about chanting than seeing the truth.

Edge said Orton sounded like a man who tapped.

The crowd erupted, and Orton’s face changed immediately. He stepped closer and said Edge should be careful, because the only reason Edge still had authority was because people like Orton were allowing the show to continue. Edge did not back up. He told Orton that if he wanted to threaten the General Manager, he could do that after Sunday. Tonight, he was not wrestling. Neither was Bryan. Edge said he was done letting the WWE World Heavyweight Championship match turn into a weekly medical incident before the pay-per-view. Orton smiled and said that was convenient. Bryan was protected again.

Daniel Bryan’s music hit, and the building came alive.

Bryan came out with both championships, taped ribs under his shirt, and a microphone already in his hand. He did not sprint. He did not bounce. He walked carefully, but he walked with purpose. He stood on the stage rather than rushing the ring, and that made the visual stronger. Bryan said Orton could keep calling him protected, but everybody knew the truth. The doctors were not protecting him from Orton. Edge was protecting Orton from what happened when Bryan stopped caring about doctors. Bryan said Orton had been talking about his ribs for two weeks. He had kicked them, dropped him on the floor, RKO’d him, pinned him, and stood over him with the championship. But on Raw, the second Bryan got one weapon and one opening, Orton tapped.

Orton snapped back that Bryan was clinging to a moment that did not count. Bryan said it counted to Orton’s face when he was screaming.

The crowd chanted “You tapped out!” and Orton looked like he wanted to leave the ring and charge the stage. Bryan said he knew Sunday would hurt. He knew Orton would aim for the ribs. He knew an Extreme Rules Match favored a man as cruel as Randy Orton. But Bryan said the one thing Orton still did not understand was that Bryan had spent his whole career fighting people who thought pain was supposed to make him quit. Pain did not make him quit. Pain reminded him why he fought. He raised both championships and said that at Extreme Rules, Orton could break tables, bend chairs, and swing whatever he wanted. But if Orton gave him one arm, one leg, one second, Bryan would make him tap again.

Orton stared from the ring. Bryan stared from the stage. Edge stood between them from a distance, almost like the whole arena had become the contract table. No punch was thrown, but the segment did exactly what it needed to do. Orton was still dangerous. Bryan was still injured. But the psychological advantage no longer belonged fully to the challenger.


The first match of the night was Big E against Jack Swagger, with Cesaro watching from a chair at ringside and Zeb Colter pacing on the outside. Big E entered with the Intercontinental Championship around his waist, his knee taped from the attacks Swagger had targeted on Raw. Swagger looked proud of that tape. He came in like a man who had decided the best way to win a two-fall match was to make sure neither opponent could stand long enough to score once. Cesaro sat quietly, no headset, no promo, just eyes locked on the champion and Swagger. Swagger started by going straight after the knee, but Big E caught him and threw him across the ring. The champion wrestled angry, using power to overwhelm Swagger early. He hit a massive shoulder tackle, a belly-to-belly, and a corner splash that made Swagger roll out to consult with Zeb. Zeb shouted that Big E was all strength and no strategy. Big E followed Swagger out, but Swagger caught him coming back in and clipped the knee. From there, Swagger worked like a man who had studied every weak point. He wrapped Big E’s leg around the rope, kicked behind the knee, and kept glancing at Cesaro as if to say the same thing was waiting for him Sunday. Big E fought back with raw force, powering out of a Patriot Lock attempt and sending Swagger shoulder-first into the post. Cesaro stood up when Swagger stumbled toward him, but he did not interfere. Big E pulled Swagger back inside, hit the Big Ending, and got the three-count.

Big E defeated Jack Swagger.


The win gave the champion momentum, but the moment after the bell was more important. Cesaro stepped into the ring and stood face-to-face with Big E. Swagger was down between them, but both men were looking past him at the title. Big E raised the championship. Cesaro pointed to it and said, without needing a microphone, “Sunday.” Big E nodded. There was respect, but there was no friendship.

Swagger then struck from the mat, yanking Big E’s bad leg out from under him and knocking him down. Cesaro moved immediately, not to save Big E out of kindness, but because Swagger had crossed into his space too. Cesaro grabbed Swagger and nailed him with a huge uppercut. Swagger rolled out, but Zeb handed him the American flag pole. Swagger swung it at Cesaro’s leg, clipping him behind the knee from the floor. Cesaro dropped. Swagger backed up the ramp laughing while both opponents held their legs.

Zeb took the microphone and said that at Extreme Rules, everybody wanted to talk about Big E’s power and Cesaro’s skill, but Jack Swagger only needed one thing: an ankle. Zeb said two falls meant two chances for the Real American to make someone tap. Swagger stood beside him, shouting that he did not need to pin anyone twice if he could make them quit twice. Big E used the ropes to stand. Cesaro did the same. The final image of the segment was all three men hurt, all three men dangerous, and the Intercontinental Championship match feeling like it had a real tactical hook: Big E needed to overpower two challengers, Cesaro needed to outclass them, and Swagger needed to break them.

Backstage, Renee Young interviewed Paige. The Divas Champion had the title over her shoulder and her left arm taped, but her voice was steady. Renee asked if AJ Lee’s experience in submission matches gave AJ the advantage at Extreme Rules. Paige said AJ wanted everyone to believe submission wrestling belonged to her because she had spent so long twisting people into the Black Widow. Paige said AJ was brilliant at finding weakness, and she was not going to insult her by pretending otherwise. Her arm hurt. AJ caused that. But Paige said being champion meant learning very quickly that everybody had a plan for how to hurt you. At Extreme Rules, AJ’s plan was the arm. Paige’s plan was simple: endure long enough to lock in the PTO and make AJ say what she had never wanted to say — that Paige was the champion now.

AJ Lee stepped into frame, clapping slowly. Tamina stood behind her. AJ said Paige sounded adorable when she tried to be intense. She said Paige had been champion for a few weeks and already talked like pain was some noble burden. AJ said she had carried the division for months while people laughed, underestimated her, and called her crazy. She said Paige did not understand pressure. Paige had a title. AJ had an identity. At Extreme Rules, AJ said she was not just trying to win back a championship. She was reclaiming the proof that nobody in this division survived unless AJ allowed it.

Paige told AJ that if she wanted to prove it, she could stop hiding behind Tamina. AJ smiled and said Paige would get her Sunday. Tonight, she could practice suffering.


That led into Paige versus Tamina. AJ joined commentary, and the entire match was built around danger. Tamina overpowered Paige early, using her size to drive the champion into corners and wrench the damaged arm. AJ kept saying on commentary that Paige was brave in the way rookies were brave, meaning she did not know enough yet to be afraid. Paige sold the arm but fought with grit, using headbutts, kicks, and knees because she could not fully trust the shoulder. Tamina cut her off with a big boot and nearly pinned her, then dragged her toward AJ’s side of the ring so AJ could smile down at the champion. Paige fought back when Tamina went for the Samoan drop. She slipped out, kicked the knee, and hit a sharp running knee to the face. She tried to lock in the PTO, but the bad arm slowed her down, and Tamina powered out. AJ stood from commentary, almost enjoying how close Paige came. Tamina charged again, but Paige moved, rolled her up, and got the three.

Paige defeated Tamina.


AJ immediately hit the ring after the bell. Paige saw her coming and swung first, but AJ ducked and attacked the bad arm. Tamina recovered and helped AJ drag Paige down. AJ wrapped Paige’s arm around the bottom rope and pulled while Tamina blocked officials for a few seconds. Paige screamed in pain, but she kicked AJ away before the damage could go too far. AJ backed up laughing, but Paige grabbed her by the hair before she could leave. For one second, Paige had AJ trapped. She tried to turn her into the PTO, but the arm gave out just enough for AJ to scramble free.

AJ rolled to the floor, no longer laughing as easily. Paige picked up the Divas Championship with her good arm and shouted that AJ would not get away Sunday. AJ backed up the ramp, clutching her neck, smiling again but with a little more panic under it. The segment gave AJ the final attack but Paige the final defiance, which was exactly the balance the feud needed.

The next segment was the biggest emotional piece of the night: Cody Rhodes, Goldust, and Dusty Rhodes in the ring.

Dusty came out first to a warm reaction. He was not dressed like a manager or legend making a cameo. He wore a black referee shirt under a jacket, and the visual immediately told the story. On Sunday, he would not just watch. He would count. He would call rope breaks. He would raise one son’s hand and send the other son home. Dusty stood in the ring for a long time before speaking. When he did, his voice was low and heavy. He said he had been in wrestling long enough to know that sometimes a man had to fight even when everyone who loved him wished he would not. But being the special guest referee for Cody versus Goldust was not an honor. It was a burden. He said he asked for it because he trusted himself to be fair, and because if one of his sons’ careers had to end, he wanted to make sure it ended clean.

Goldust came out next. He looked emotional before he even reached the ring. He hugged Dusty, but Dusty did not look relieved. He looked like the hug hurt him. Cody came out last, dressed in a suit jacket again, calm, sharp, almost too composed. He entered the ring and looked first at Goldust, then at Dusty’s referee shirt. Cody said he was glad Dusty accepted. He said people had spent weeks accusing him of being cruel, but this was the opposite. This was honesty. He wanted Dusty to see it. He wanted Dusty close enough to count it. He wanted the whole Rhodes family to stop pretending this could be solved with one more speech.

Goldust told Cody that bringing Dusty into the match was not honesty. It was punishment. He said Cody knew exactly what it would do to their father to make him count one of them out of a career. Cody shook his head and said Goldust was wrong. He said Dusty had been counting their whole lives. Counting Goldust’s comebacks. Counting Cody’s missed chances. Counting how many times the family name could survive another failure. Cody said on Sunday, Dusty would count to three one last time, and when he did, Cody would finally stop being compared to everyone around him.

Dusty stepped between them, voice breaking just enough to feel real. He told Cody that no referee shirt would make him stop being his father. He told Goldust that no face paint would make him stop being Dustin. Then he told both of them that on Sunday, he would call it down the middle because he loved them both too much to cheat either one. If Goldust’s shoulders were down, he would count. If Cody’s shoulders were down, he would count. If one of them submitted, he would call for the bell. Dusty said it might break his heart, but he would not break his word.

Goldust looked at Cody and said he still loved him. That did not mean he would spare him. Cody looked down for a moment, then back up and said love was not enough anymore. He said Goldust had spent years surviving. Cody said now he would have to survive him. The crowd booed, but Cody did not smirk. He almost looked like he hated that he meant it.

Then Goldust did something unexpected. He removed one of his gloves and placed it on the mat between them, almost like a symbolic line. He said if Cody crossed that line on Sunday, he needed to understand there was no brother on the other side, no father to soften the fall, no family story to protect him. Just a man fighting for his career. Cody stepped forward and placed his shoe directly on the glove. Dusty closed his eyes. Goldust stared at Cody, wounded but ready.

There was no brawl. Dusty would not allow it, and neither brother seemed willing to cheapen the moment. Cody left first. Goldust stayed in the ring with Dusty, and Dusty picked up the glove, holding it like it was something heavier than leather. By the end of it, the Career versus Career match felt like one of the most emotionally loaded matches on the card.


The Usos faced 3MB in the third match of the night. It was kept short and energetic, giving the champions a final televised win while allowing the Wyatt threat to hang over them. Jimmy and Jey came in aggressive, clearly still carrying the damage from Harper and Rowan’s attacks. 3MB tried to use numbers at ringside, with Heath Slater shouting distractions and Drew McIntyre using cheap shots, but The Usos wrestled like a team trying to remind everyone why they were champions. Jey caught Drew with a superkick. Jimmy wiped out Slater on the floor. Jey hit the top-rope splash on Jinder Mahal for the win.

The Usos defeated 3MB.


Before they could celebrate, the lights went out.

When the lights returned, Harper and Rowan were not in the ring. They were standing in the crowd, just beyond the barricade, each holding one of the WWE Tag Team Championship belts that had been at ringside moments earlier. The Usos looked down, realized the titles were gone, and immediately moved toward them. Harper raised one title and said into a microphone that gold did not make a family strong. Pain did. Rowan held the other belt against his chest like a trophy, silent and unsettling.

Jimmy grabbed a microphone and said Harper and Rowan could play all the mind games they wanted, but on Sunday, there would be no lights-out trick, no hiding in the crowd, no Bray whispering from the shadows that could change the fact that The Usos were walking in champions and fighting like brothers. Jey said Tornado rules meant Harper and Rowan did not have to tag, but it also meant The Usos did not have to wait. No disqualifications meant the Wyatts could use anything, but it also meant The Usos could hit back with everything.

Bray Wyatt appeared on the screen instead of the stage. He was sitting in the rocking chair, the steel cage faintly visible behind him in the dark. Bray said families were beautiful because they convinced people that love made them stronger. But love also made people reckless. The Usos would throw themselves into danger to save each other. Cena would throw himself into darkness to save his idea of who he was. Bray said Sunday would be a harvest. Harper and Rowan would take the tag titles, and Bray would take the last honest piece of John Cena.

John Cena came out before Bray could continue, standing on the stage and looking up at the screen. Cena said Bray had talked for weeks about truth, lies, heroes and monsters, but Sunday was finally simple. Steel cage. One man wins. One man loses. Cena said Bray wanted to turn the cage into some kind of confession booth. Cena saw it as a fight. He said if Bray wanted the real John Cena, he would get him — the man who kept standing up, kept fighting back, and kept refusing to let people like Bray decide what hope was supposed to look like.

Bray smiled on the screen and said, “Then don’t run, John.”

Cena answered, “I won’t.”

The Wyatt Family cut disappeared. The Usos stood in the ring staring into the crowd at Harper and Rowan, while Cena stood on the stage staring at the empty screen. The segment tied the two Wyatt matches together without overcrowding either one. Harper and Rowan wanted the titles. Bray wanted Cena’s identity. The Usos and Cena were fighting different battles against the same darkness.

Backstage, The Shield were shown walking through the hallway. No promo yet, just the visual of Ambrose, Rollins and Reigns moving together with purpose. Elsewhere, Triple H stood with Batista, Lana and Rusev. Triple H told the camera that The Shield had built their reputation by attacking people three-on-one, by appearing through crowds, by creating panic and calling it justice. At Extreme Rules, there would be no surprise left. The Shield would be in the ring with men who understood violence better than they did. Batista said Ambrose was reckless, Rollins was breakable, and Roman was not as untouchable as he thought. Lana said Rusev did not care about brotherhood, justice, or rebellion. He cared about crushing whoever stood in front of him. Rusev said one word: “Reigns.”

The Shield answered from another part of the building. Ambrose said Triple H always talked like he invented violence because he put a suit over it. Ambrose said The Shield had never needed office doors, boardrooms, or backup plans. They had each other. Rollins said Batista called him breakable because Batista was scared of anything he could not catch. Rollins said a Street Fight was not about posing. It was about speed, timing, and guts. Roman stepped forward last and said Rusev had spent weeks saying his name like a warning. Roman said at Extreme Rules, Rusev would find out his name was not a warning. It was a promise.


The main event was Dean Ambrose versus Batista, and it gave the show its final physical burst without turning the entire episode into chaos. Ambrose came through the crowd alone, per Edge’s ruling. Batista entered from the stage alone as well, though the camera made sure to show Triple H watching on a backstage monitor and Rusev standing behind him. Ambrose started fast, throwing punches before Batista could settle. Batista shoved him away and tried to overpower him, but Ambrose kept coming back from odd angles, biting at the hand, dragging Batista into an ugly fight. Batista eventually took control with a hard clothesline and a spinebuster that nearly ended it. He targeted Ambrose’s ribs, continuing the Authority’s theme of breaking bodies before Sunday. Batista slowed the match down, talking trash as he drove shoulders into Ambrose in the corner. Ambrose laughed through some of it, which only made Batista angrier. He went for the Batista Bomb, but Ambrose slipped out and hit a rebound lariat that brought the crowd up. Ambrose climbed to the top rope and dropped an elbow for a close two-count. The finish came when Ambrose looked for Dirty Deeds, but Batista powered out and shoved him into the referee. The referee was not knocked out, but he stumbled enough for Batista to thumb Ambrose in the eye and hit a spear. Batista covered and got the win.

Batista defeated Dean Ambrose.


Batista was not satisfied. He dragged Ambrose up for the Batista Bomb after the bell, but Seth Rollins sprinted down the ramp and Roman Reigns came through the crowd. Triple H and Rusev appeared almost immediately, and for a moment it looked like Edge’s warning would fail again. But instead of a full brawl, everyone stopped at the edges of the ring. Ambrose rolled to the floor and stood beside Rollins and Roman. Batista backed toward Triple H and Rusev. Six men stared across the ring, the Street Fight only forty-eight hours away.

Triple H took a microphone and told The Shield to enjoy that feeling. The feeling of restraint. The feeling of knowing everyone was watching and they still had to wait. He said on Sunday, there would be no waiting and no escape. He said The Shield called themselves justice, but justice was a word children used when they had not yet learned who owned the building. Triple H said at Extreme Rules, he was not trying to beat The Shield. He was trying to put them back in the place where he found them: useful, obedient, and beneath him.

Ambrose, still holding his ribs, laughed into his microphone and said Triple H could not control himself long enough to control them. Rollins said Sunday was not about who owned the building. It was about who was still standing when the building stopped shaking. Roman stared directly at Rusev and said, “Believe that.”

Rusev tried to charge, but Lana grabbed his arm and held him back. Roman smirked because he had finally seen Rusev restrained. Triple H kept Batista back too. Nobody touched. That made it feel bigger. They were not fighting because they were afraid to fight. They were fighting because the first punch Sunday had to matter.

The final segment belonged to Daniel Bryan and Randy Orton.

Bryan came out first, both championships over his shoulders, and the crowd gave him the kind of reaction that made the whole arena feel like it had chosen a side. Bryan stood in the ring and said that for three weeks, Randy Orton had tried to make the story about his injuries. Bryan said maybe Orton was right to. His ribs hurt. Breathing hurt. Sleeping hurt. Laughing hurt. Getting up hurt. But Bryan said there was something Orton did not understand because Orton had never had to fight for every inch. When pain was part of the road, pain did not scare you off the road.

Bryan said Sunday would not be inspirational. It would not be pretty. It would not be the kind of match where everyone got to clap and say the better wrestler won. Extreme Rules would be ugly. Orton would bring chairs. Bryan would bring chairs. Orton would aim for the ribs. Bryan would aim for the arm he trapped on Raw. Orton would try to end the miracle. Bryan would try to prove it was never a miracle in the first place. It was work. It was sacrifice. It was every “no” he had ever turned into one more “YES.”

Randy Orton appeared on the stage rather than coming to the ring. His taped arm was still visible. He said Bryan wanted the people to believe pain made him special because without that belief, Bryan was just a hurt little man holding championships he could not protect. Orton said he had spent the last two weeks doing what Bryan’s fans refused to do: telling him the truth. The title reign was not a movement. It was a countdown. Orton said at Extreme Rules, Bryan would not be able to chant his way through steel. He would not be able to kick his way through broken ribs. And he would not be able to lock in the Yes Lock when Orton took that arm and drove it through a chair.

Bryan told Orton to come prove it now.

Orton smiled and said no. That was the difference between them. Bryan was still emotional. Still easy to bait. Still willing to risk Sunday for one more cheer. Orton said he had already proven he could hurt Bryan. On Sunday, he would prove he could take everything. Bryan raised both championships and told Orton that the last time Orton waited too long, he tapped. Orton’s smile faded.

Edge came out onto the stage before Orton could move. He said the final words had been spoken. No more attacks. No more excuses. At Extreme Rules, there would be nothing between them. Orton turned toward Edge, annoyed, but Bryan did not look at Edge. He kept staring at Orton. Then Bryan slowly led the crowd in a “YES!” chant. Not wild. Not frantic. Controlled. Defiant. Every chant felt like a heartbeat.

Orton backed up the ramp, holding his injured arm, eyes locked on the champion. Bryan stood in the ring, one hand on his ribs, the other holding the WWE World Heavyweight Championship high.

SmackDown ended not with a brawl, but with tension. Every match had been loaded. Every stipulation had been sharpened. Dusty Rhodes would referee his sons in Career versus Career. Paige and AJ were ready to make each other submit. The Intercontinental Championship match had become a battle of damaged limbs and two-fall strategy. The Usos were walking into Wyatt chaos with the tag titles at stake. Cena had promised not to run from Bray’s cage. The Shield and The Authority had stopped inches from war. And Daniel Bryan, hurt but unbroken, stared down Randy Orton one final time before the match where there would be no protection left.

Extreme Rules was forty-eight hours away.

And nobody looked safe.


EXTREME RULES 2014 OFFICIAL CARD
East Rutherford, New Jersey

**THIS SUNDAY**

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Stojy

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I've really enjoyed the booking in here so far, has been good stuff. The build to Bryan/Orton has been enjoyable with Orton trying to break his body down, and Bryan continuing to survive. The moment on Raw with Bryan finally getting an advantage was telling. I must admit, I was surprised that these two got two segments here tonight, to open and close the show. They were good segments for a go home show, just not sure both were required. It could have been done in one. Also, the GM choice of Edge has been nice for something differently, although outside of tonight, he hasn't maintained order at all which is interesting.

No issues with Batista getting a win over Ambrose here. The dirty nature of the victory means Ambrose doesn't lose anything anyway. Shield/Authority build has been fine here, and I love the recruitment of Rusev. Also digging the slow build of Roman/Rusev in the background to all of this. I'll lump in all The Wyatt Family stuff together, like you did on this show. I think Bray being obsessed and trying to further damage the hero character of Cena has been brilliant. Probably my second favourite thing in this BTB so far. The promos from Bray have been terrific, with Cena playing his defiant character well too. Usos/Rowan and Harper has obviously been heavily assisted by Bray promos, but has still had solid build. That continued tonight, although I wasn't a big fan of the feuds being lumped together. You mentioned in your writing that neither overshadowed the other, but from my reading perspective, that was wrong. The fact the tag feud guys were going back and forth, and then just stood there awkwardly once Bray interrupted and Cena came out. It's fairly obvious which is the bigger feud and which overshadowed the other.

AJ Lee/Paige has been really fun based off the submission game, and whether Paige can handle being champion. AJ having Tamina for back up has been a fun inclusion. I wasn't a big fan of the build for the IC Title match on the go home episode of SD. Swagger has basically just gotten involved with Big E and Cesaro on attacks only, but hasn't actually won any serious matches against either. He definitely feels like the lesser of the three during this build. I thought SD was the perfect opportunity to finally give him a win to make him feel on par with the others, but it didn't go that way. Swagger just doesn't seem on these guys level right now, and I'm not sure that's where you wanted the build to head.

On another note, we have Bryan's body falling part, Paige having issues with her arm, Swagger targeting knees, feels like a lot of angles surrounding body parts at the moment. They don't yet, but there's only so many ways this can be done, so you need to avoid them all feeling to similar. Cody/Goldust has been my favourite thing in this BTB. The inclusion of Dusty for the extra emotion makes sense, but the character work for Cody in particular has been amazing since the first show. Can't wait for him to retire his brother at Extreme Rules. A little bit of constructive criticism in here from the go home SD, but my overarching feeling is that this has been some good stuff so far.
 
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