Wrestling

Stunning WWE Money the Bank ending changes everything about Roman Reigns, The Bloodline

We have no choice but to look at The Bloodź¦line storylinešŸ¦¹ from a different lens after Money in the Bank.

Jey Uso stunningly being the first person to pin Roman Reigns since December 2019 to win The Bloodline Civil War in the main event at the O2 Arena in London on Saturday truly shows this is more likely to end as a family affair. Jey or Solo Sikoaā™‹ feel more likely to take the Undisputed WWE Universal championship from Reigns than ever before. An outsider like Seth Rolliš’†™ns for Cody Rhodes likely wonā€™t feel as special now.

While the night ended on quite the note, there were plenty of hits, misses and suš’rprises the rest of the way. WWE went with the safe choice of Damian Priest in the menā€™s Money in the Bank match and hit a great note with Iyo Sky on the womenā€™s side.

John Cena and Drew McIntyre both returned, but too much of the in-ring action felt liš’†™ke filler or just a means to an end for a surprise or angle ā€” especially the womenā€™s tag championships.

Here are five takeawaysšŸŽ from Money in the Bank:   &nbšŸ…°sp;  

End of an Aura

Jey Uso pinning Roman Reigns was the firmest indication of how The Bloodline story could end. The shocking win came after a ref bump kept The Usos from pinning Reigns earlier after a 1D and it appeared The Tribal Chief was going to win two other times. Solo Sikoa delivered a Samoan Spike to Jimmy and he and Reigns hit Jey with a spike-spear combination. Reigns covered a stacked pair of Usos, but they both kšŸŽ¶icked out.

Jey Uso pins Roman Reigns in the main event of Money in the Bank. WWE

Jey Uso used a callback to the early days of The Bloodline with a kick out-low blow to Reigns after a spear. It was a fitting bit of medą·“icine of something Reigns once used all too effectively. With Sikoa subdued on the outside, the move opened the door for some superkicks and Jey Uso hitting a splash from the top rope to keep Reignsā€™ shoulders to the mat to š“ƒ²bring the story nearly full circle.

While Iā€™m not sure Reignsā€™ aura of invincibility needed to be taken away from him before losing the championships, it is quite the story beat and put in doubt if someone outside the family will end the historic reigns. Jey Uso is now lined up to be Reignsā€™ opponent at SummerSlam and it feels like Jey or Solo need to be the onesāœØ to dethrone him.  &nbsÜ«p;  

The match itself seemed to play aroušŸ¬nd if Sikoa would stay loyal to Reigns and go for the kill on his brothers. He did every step of the way ā€” even snapping the champ out of an emotional breakdown after the stacked kick-out. It felt like a big moment for him and will the loss make him doubt Reignsā€™ leadership.

Story over Star

Sometimes WWE refuses to give fans what they want ā€” no matter how much they express their desires. L.A. Knight was the clear peopleā€™s choice to win Money in the Bank and boy did WWE toy with that fact. Near the end, the 40-year-old Knight fought off the majority of the six other competitors and appeared to be in the clear to become šŸ’®Mr. Money in the Bank. That was until Damian Priest came along and sent him crashing down onto another ladder with a Falcon Arrow before claiming the champioź¦‘nship contract for himself.

Damian Priest is Mr. Money in the Bank. WWE

Priest, who has never been a world champion of a major promotion, was one of the three logical winners coming into the match because of exactly the story WWE is telling between him and fellow member of The Judgment Day, Finn Balor. He cost Balor a shot at winning the World Heavyweight championship by appearing to want to cash in on him. But if you arenā€™t going to pull the trigger on the mega-over Knight, will the opportunity coź§ƒme again?

WWE did resist the temptation of having Logan Paul win, but the YouTube sensation continues to leave an impression in every match heā€™s in. Paul delivered a top-rope frog splash onto an unforgiving ladder propped up between the ring and the barricade. Then he and Ricochet combined for a dangerous Spanish Fly from the second rope through two tables on the outside. The final few minutes were chaotic in a good wašŸŒœy as it felt Santos Escobar, Butch and others kept thwarting the three favoriteā€™s attempts to win.

Skyā€™s The Limit

Iyo Sky finally turned the tables on Damage CTRL leader Bayley in maybe the most creative way possible. Sky had assisted Bayley at different points during the match, even once after the multi-time womenā€™s champion ź§‚pushed her off the ladder to spoil her initial shot at the briefcase.

Iyo Sky celebrates winning the women’s Money in the Bank match. WWE

She finally had enough and shortly after, Sky got her revenge and her championship cź¦‰ontract. It came with help from Zoey Stark and Trish Straus failing to fully handcuff Becky Lynch to something. Instead, Sky cuffed Lynch and Bayleyā€™s arms togetheršŸ…· between the middle of the ladder before climbing over her partner to win in a poetic moment and a big pop.

The match itself didnā€™t have the wild spots the menā€™s did but told good stories. Stark and Stratus ā€” who has some awkward moments taking and delivering moves ā€” worked together against Lynch. The Man hį€£ad her own moments with just Stratus ā€” including a Man-handle slam on a ladder. Zelina Vega was the plucky underdog and may have had thš“ƒ²e move of the match. She hit Stark with her sandal and then delivered a Code Red (used by her cousin Amazing Red) from the top of the ladder onto a ladder propped up by the middle rope.

In the end, unlike the menā€™s match, gave fans the winner they wanted and we will see if BayšŸƒley doesnā€™t mess up Skyā€™s cash-in.

Unexpected Breakup

WWE continues to undermine its womenā€™s tag divisioź§‚n by breaking up maybe its most formidable squad a little more than a month after they won the belts. Shayna Baszler, unprovoked, turned on long-time friend and partner Ronda Rousey as the former UFC womenā€™s bantamweight champion was about to put her signature arm bar on Liv Morgan to āœØend things. Instead, it opened the door for Liv Morgan and Raquel Rodriguez to pin the wounded Rousey after Baszler left to win back their championship.

Shayna Baszler turned on friend and tag partner Ronda Rousey at Money in the Bank. WWE

While we have all wondered what a Rousey-Baszler feud would look like ā€” and will likely now see at SummerSlam ā€” this came way too soon and without any foreshadowing in storytelling. It made for a stunned and less enthusiastic reaction from the crowd than it needed. It continued the company playing hot potatoes witįƒ¦h the womenā€™s tag belt and gave Rodriguez and Morgan ā€” their best babyface team ā€” a very holšŸŒžlow win.

Cenaā€™s pitch

John Cena returned for the first time since WrestleMania in a complete surprise. The London crowd waā„±s incredible singing every word of this themeā™• song. The 16-time champ thanked the U.K. fans and told them how underappreciated they are. He told them he is trying to bring WrestleMania to London. Cena was interrupted but Grayson Waller, who mocked Cenaā€™s acting and floated WrestleMania in his native Australia instead. Waller has been treated very well by WWE and felt like he belonged in a segment with the legend despite taking an Attitude Adjustment from Cena. Seeds may have been planted.

Grayson Waller and John Cena at Money in the Bank. WWE

Other Matches

Gunther over Matt Riddle to retain the Intercontinental championship (Drew McIntyre returns)

What a perfect way to bring back Drew McIntyre for the first time since WrestleMania. The Scotsmanā€™s music hit in front of his U.K. fans after Gunther submitted Matt Riddle to retain his Intercontinental championship. The match was quick but entertaining enough as the champ continually weaken Riddleā€™s storyline ankle injury until his challenger could not take any more and tapped. McIntyre versus Gunther is a perfect SummerSlam matšŸŽƒch and could spell the end of his reign if WWE wants to start moving Imperiumā€™s leader up the card.

Gunther tapped out Matt Riddle at Money in the Bank. WWE

Cody Rhodes over Dominik Mysterio

A pretty textbook win for Rhoā™Šdes in a bit of a plodding match that felt like it belonged on ā€œMonday Night Rawā€ RhšŸŽƒodes surprised Mysterio by taking off his cast, was able to circumvent a few interference attempts by Rhea Ripley and delivered a Cody Cutter and Cross Rhodes for an easy win. With no Brock Lesnar this felt like filler.   

Seth Rollins over Finn Balor to retain the World heavyweight championship

Damian Priest ended up being the star of the match, costing Balor by threatening to cash-in his contract as he was ready to hit the Coup De Gras. Rollins got out of the way and delivered a Stomp to win. While it furthered The Judgement Day story, it felt unfulfilling to the great build-up of Balor trying to right the believed wrong seven years ago in Brooklyn. The match itself was pretty standard centered on rip injury Balor had previously iā™›nflicted on him.   

Biggest winner: Jey Uso

Biggest loser: Finn Balor

Best Match: Womenā€™ā™”s MonšŸŽ‰ey in the Bank ladder match   

Predictions: 5-2

Grade: B+