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McIntyre gets his due

- CHRIS MUELLER

reviews WrestleMan­ia 36

WRESTLEMAN­IA 36 was one of the most unique pay-per-views we have ever seen, and we will likely never see anything quite like it again.

The Boneyard and Firefly Fun House matches were two of the most creative and innovative segments ever produced, but some wrestling purists did not enjoy the overproduc­ed short films.

We also saw a handful of titles change hands on both nights.

The first show featured Alexa Bliss and Nikki Cross winning the women’s tag team titles and Braun Strowman defeating Goldberg to win the Universal Championsh­ip.

Night two featured Charlotte Flair becoming the new NXT women’s champion and the main event saw Drew McIntyre, pictured, put down Brock Lesnar with four Claymore Kicks to win his first WWE Championsh­ip.

Unfortunat­ely, what should have been a career-defining moment for the Scottish Superstar did not have the impact it should have had.

THE MATCH PLACEMENT

On any normal PPV, closing the show with somebody winning their first world title would be the right call every time. This was not a normal PPV, though.

The format of WrestleMan­ia had to be tweaked in order to make it work without a crowd in an empty Performanc­e Centre and that led to some creative choices nobody expected.

The Boneyard and Firefly Fun House matches were shocking in how entertaini­ng they were. Whether you loved or hated them, everybody was glued to the screen.

WWE made the right call to have The Undertaker v AJ Styles close the first night because nothing could have followed it – not even Strowman defeating Goldberg.

WhatCultur­e reported that the match between AJ Styles and Undertaker, which the latter won, was filmed by “an outside production unit to custom-build the set that would be used, and it took five days to make everything they wanted”.

The report said: “WWE filmed overnight from 9pm-5am. That eight-hour shoot caused a weeklong clean up afterward.”

On the second night, management chose to have McIntyre and Lesnar close the show right after the acid trip that was the Firefly Fun House match.

Going from a surreal art piece to a traditiona­l match that only lasted a few minutes completely ruined the flow of the show and ended up making McIntyre’s moment in the sun a little less engaging. Wyatt and Cena should have closed the weirdest WrestleMan­ia with the weirdest match of all time, while McIntyre and The Beast should have preceded it.

THAT MATCH WAS FAMILIAR Did you get a feeling of deja vu while watching McIntyre v. Lesnar? Almost like you had seen this match somewhere before?

That is because it was almost the same set-up as Strowman vs. Goldberg. They hit the same beats and almost the same number of moves.

Lesnar hit the Scot with a few F-5s before McIntyre took him down with a series of Claymores.

Goldberg nailed Strowman with a few Spears and a Jackhammer before The Monster Among Men put him away with a few Powerslams

It was almost like somebody copied and pasted the rundown for each match by mistake and WWE just went with it. Just when the company could have used one of those classic Lesnar performanc­es, he ended up in one of his shortest matches in months.

These matches would have been received well in the usual WrestleMan­ia setting with fans screaming their heads off in the stands, but every detail is more evident in an empty arena. MCINTYRE DESERVED BETTER

McIntyre has been one of the hottest acts on Raw for months. He was even picking up steam before he had his standout performanc­e at the Royal Rumble.

While it is understand­able why WWE booked the title change to happen despite not having a live crowd, it’s hard not to think it might have been more special had they waited until they could run regular shows again.

Lesnar is not going anywhere, so it’s not as if management couldn’t stretch this feud until SummerSlam.

In fact, losing might have made McIntyre an even more interestin­g character because he would be hungrier and more obsessed with winning the title.

Still, it’s great to see The Scottish Psychopath get his due.

He was put in an impossible position when WWE brought him in as Vince McMahon’s hand-picked protege in 2007. He left, made a name for himself on the independen­t scene and returned bigger and better than ever.

His rise to the top has been a joy to watch, and it is going to be a lot of fun to see how he handles being the face of WWE’s flagship brand.

■ WrestleMan­ia’s Day 1 and Day 2 (both have three segments each, can be viewed on SuperSport­s Dstv’s catch-up (Sport).

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