Chairshot Classics
Chairshot Classics: WWE TLC 2016 – Ambrose vs. Styles
Match #6 – Tables, Ladders & Chairs Match for the WWE World Championship: Dean Ambrose vs. WWE World Champion AJ Styles
The bell rings and Ambrose tackles the champion, fires away with right hands, sends him into the corner and puts the boots to him. He whips Styles across and scores with a back elbow off the rebound, connects with stinging chops, shoots AJ to the ropes and elevates him with a back body drop. The Lunatic Fringe goes to the outside, throws a chair in the ring, starts to slide in a ladder, The Phenomenal One grabs the chair, then whacks the ladder in Dean’s face. Styles stands it up under the title and starts climbing, the challenger rolls in, rips him down to the mat and they exchange opportunities to ascend the ladder.
The Phenomenal One hits a series of chops, irish whip to the ropes is reversed, AJ ducks under standing ladder, bounces off the ropes on the other side and Ambrose shoves the ladder into him. He clotheslines the champion to the outside and goes out in pursuit, drives Styles head-first off of a ladder placed on a table, throws him over another table, then picks it up and tosses it at him. The Lunatic Fringe takes a seat on a chair, talks some trash before ramming AJ face-first into it, walks to the side of the entrance ramp and plants Styles with a snap suplex on the steel. Ambrose drags The Phenomenal One over to a table and lays him across it, starts to climb a massive ladder, the champion rolls off the table and walks away through the crowd.
The challenger catches him with a clothesline from behind, puts a trash can over his head and delivers a right hand, then brings him back ringside and throws AJ over the barricade. Dean climbs on top of the barricade and comes off with a double axe handle, the champion meets him in mid-air with a dropkick, charges in and squashes him with a leaping clothesline against the retaining wall. The Phenomenal One hammers the challenger with punches, tries another leaping clothesline that misses the mark, Ambrose crotches him on top of the barricade, grabs a chair and rushes in with a big shot to the head. He heads into the squared circle to go up for the belt, AJ slides back in, tips him over and The Lunatic Fringe falls throat-first into the top rope.
The champion pushes the ladder over on top of Dean, picks it up and throws at him, then body slams him on top of it. Styles drops his patented knee across the forehead, props the ladder on the ropes, hooks Ambrose for a suplex into it, the challenger countering out. AJ switches gears and attempts to run him into it instead, The Lunatic Fringe reverses into a double leg takedown, then catapults the champ into the ladder and he spills down to the floor. Ambrose picks the ladder up over his head and tosses it at Styles, goes out after a table and starts setting it up in the ring. The Phenomenal One comes back in with a chair across the spine, buries it into the midsection, then batters Dean across the back again. AJ sets it up and plants the challenger on it with a side slam, then uncorks big right hands.
He smacks Ambrose with the chair again and sets it back up, heads outside after more chairs, then sets them side-by-side and facing each other. He picks up the challenger and attempts a suplex, The Lunatic Fringe blocks it, drops AJ across the chairs with a release vertical suplex, then follows with a body slam across another chair. He lays Styles on top of one, comes off the 2nd rope with a 2nd chair across the face, flips a table upside-down, props the legs up and throws the champion into it. Ambrose props the table up in the corner, picks Styles up, The Phenomenal One fires up with punches and sends Dean through the table with a snap suplex. Styles starts pie-facing the challenger, The Lunatic Fringe unloads with punches and chops, AJ combats it with a dropkick, but Dean rebounds off the ropes and turns him inside-out with a Lunatic Lariat.
He tosses the champion out to the apron, pulls him up to the 2nd rope for a superplex to the outside, Styles fights it off, pushes Ambrose back into the ring and springboards in for a Phenomenal Forearm. The Lunatic Fringe meets him coming down with a kick to the breadbasket, hooks him for Dirty Deeds, AJ counters out and unloads with fists, hits the ropes and gets elevated over the top to the floor. The challenger builds a head of steam and flies through the ropes with a suicide dive, bounces the champion’s head off the announce table, then clears all three of them off. He pulls Styles to the middle announce table, stands a ladder up on the one next to it, uses a barrage of fists to keep the champion down, then heads up the ladder and comes crashing down with a diving elbow through the table.
The Lunatic Fringe crawls over the ring, pulls another ladder out and heads inside, stands it up and goes to retrieve the championship. The Phenomenal One drags himself back up to the apron, springboards in with a Phenomenal Forearm to knock the challenger down, both guys struggle back to their feet and climb opposite sides of the ladder. They meet at the top and trade punches, both fall back to the mat, Styles goes for a clothesline, Ambrose counters into Dirty Deeds, the champion slips out and sets for a Styles Clash. Dean powers AJ up for an Alabama Slam, spins around and rams Styles into the ladder, then goes back up for the belt. The Phenomenal One hangs onto Dean’s foot, pulls him off for a powerbomb, The Lunatic Fringe counters with a hurricanrana and they both fall over the top the floor.
Ambrose climbs back to the apron and gets pulled down, AJ hops up to the apron now, moonsaults into a reverse DDT and plants the challenger on the floor. He gets a table and sets it up next to the ring, lays The Lunatic Fringe across it, bludgeons him with big rights, then heads back into the ring. The Phenomenal One springboards from inside the ring, delivers a 450 splash and crashes through Dean and the table, staggers to his feet and back into the squared circle. The champion scales the ladder after his title, James Ellsworth makes his way down to ringside, AJ stops in his tracks and goes out after him. He clubs Ellsworth down, positions the bottom half of the steel steps, sets for a Styles Clash off of it, but Ambrose stops it with a clothesline.
He spikes AJ on then stairs and crawls into the ring, goes up the ladder rung-by-rung, Styles rolls in and climbs up the other side. The challenger knocks him off and down to the floor with a right hand, Dean reaches up for the championship, Ellsworth climbs into the ring and tips the ladder over, sending Ambrose crashing through two tables on the floor. He motions to AJ to get back in the ring, The Phenomenal One stands the ladder back up, makes one final climb and retrieves the title.
Winner and STILL WWE World Champion: AJ Styles
- EA’s Take: Easily a match of the year candidate with (pardon the cliche) phenomenal outings from both champion and challenger. Styles hitting a springboard 450 to the outside through a table? Are you kidding me?!?! Just an example of why AJ is arguably the best wrestler in the world. Now, James Ellsworth turning on Ambrose….makes no sense to me logically. Was Dean perhaps treating him a little poorly recently? Yes, but AJ planted him on the floor with a Styles Clash last week, so that kind of throws that excuse out the window. I’ll be interested to see what they come up with for reasoning, but if we’re going into an Ambrose/Ellsworth feud, I can tell you right now I’m not enthused.
EA’s Finisher: Once again, in my opinion, SmackDown proves why they are the better show. Styles/Ambrose in an instant classic, Bray gets his first taste of WWE gold, Miz/Ziggler with another tremendous performance and a surprisingly entertaining Chairs Match. Not to mention continuing to advance storylines, which is by far SmackDown’s strong-point. If you like gimmick-PPVs, then TLC is always one of the most anticipated of the year and SmackDown one hundred percent delivered tonight.
Top Three To Watch
1 – AJ Styles vs. Dean Ambrose
2 – The Miz vs. Dolph Ziggler
3 – Baron Corbin vs. Kalisto
What was your favorite match from TLC 2016? Let us know on social media @theCHAIRSHOTcom and always remember to use the hashtag #UseYourHead!
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Launched in 2017, the Chairshot Radio Network presents you with the best in sports, entertainment, and sports entertainment. Wrestling and wrestling crossover podcasts + the most interesting content + the most engaging hosts = the most entertaining podcasts you’ll find!
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Attitude Of Aggression Podcast: The Big Five Project (chronologically exploring WWE's PPV/PLE history) Unidentified History (Ufology) & Game Gone Wrong (Game of Thrones Universe)
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Chairshot Classics
Chris King Looks Back at WWE Clash In The Castle 2022
With WWE Clash In Italy fast approaching, Chris King looks back at the first Clash In The Castle!
With WWE Clash In Italy fast approaching, Chris King looks back at the first Clash In The Castle!
We are a few weeks away from WWE Clash In Italy PLE, which airs on May 31st. Chris King has gone back to look at the 2022 Clash At The Castle PLE and the matches with the most important future implications.
Alexa Bliss, Asuka, and Bianca Belair vs. Bayley, Dakota Kai, and Iyo Sky
All six superstars started the match in front of this wild UK crowd. The babyfaces took advantage early with a triple suplex, and Bianca Bel-Air hit her patented springboard moonsault and covered Bayley, Iyo Sky, and Dakota Kai for a near fall. Alexa Bliss and Sky got the match going with some fast-paced offense. Bliss hit their Glitz Flip, and Sky tagged in the leader of Damage Control. Despite the crowd chanting for Bayley, “I wanna know, will you be my girl?” the methodical heel would purposely tag out for most of this match.
Bliss hit a beautiful sunset flip powerbomb and covered Sky, but Kai was the legal participant, so she ate a huge kick. Asuka and Sky now went toe-to-toe with some incredibly fast-paced action (I can’t wait to watch their match at Backlash); these two have insane chemistry. The crowd wanted the Raw Women’s Champion and Bayley tagged in. The EST is showcasing her raw power over all of Damage Control. The babyfaces looked to rally after a superplex off of Belair’s back. The heels took advantage of the numbers game; Kai hit her signature Kaio Kick, Bayley delivered Rose Plant, and Sky hit her picture-perfect moonsault. Bayley got the huge victory for Damage Control!
- This was a breakout performance for the new dangerous trio “Damage Control.” Bayley was such a genius changing the theme music so the crowd couldn’t sing it. That’s Heel 101. Bayley tagging out and not giving the UK crowd what they wanted was brilliant.
- Bayley, Dakota Kai, and Iyo Sky would run roughshod on SmackDown for the entire year with some amazing performances, including headlining WarGames. The Damage Control storyline would continue through the next two years, and Bayley would ultimately win the Women’s
Championship from Iyo Sky at WrestleMania 40.
Gunther VS. Sheamus (Intercontinental Championship)
Ludwig Kaiser introduced Giovanni Vinci, bringing back together Imperium as ‘The Ring General’ made his way down to the ring. The bell rang, and the punishment began as Sheamus’s chest was already red. Gunter chopped ‘The Celtic Warrior’ right off the turnbuckle to the outside. The challenger was writhing in pain as Gunther locked in a Boston Crab.
Sheamus was fighting for his life to become a grand-slam champion here, taking all of the champions’ brutality. Gunther delivered a nasty bodyslam to Sheamus on the outside. The Celtic Warrior was finally able to deliver The 10 Beats of the Bodhran for a count of twelve.
Midway through the match, both the champion and the challenger got into a slugfest, and Sheamus hit a loud knee strike for a two-count! Sheamus delivered White Noise for another near-fall. The entire UK crowd was on their feet as the Brogue Kick was countered;
Gunther hit his patented dropkick into the corner. Sheamus lifted Gunther up for the Celtic Cross from the turnbuckle for a count of 2.99! The Celtic Warrior tried to go for the brogue kick, but his back gave out. The Intercontinental Champion delivered a powerbomb followed by a colossal lariat to retain his prestigious title.
Sheamus got a standing ovation from the raucous UK crowd despite his loss. He may not have won the intercontinental title, but he won their respect!
- Both Brutes stood in the middle of the ring, staring at each other without throwing a punch as their faction members fought to solidify a singles match with no interference. That was so brilliant and creative to see. As soon as the match got underway, both superstars beat the holy hell of each other for 20+ minutes.
- ‘The Ring General’ would have the longest reign of 666 days in WWE history as Intercontinental Champion, defeating the likes of Sheamus, Drew McIntyre, and Chad Gable. He would eventually lose to Sami Zayn at WrestleMania 40, but Gunther has the bar so high with such an amazing reign.
Edge & Rey Mysterio VS. The Judgement Day
Finn Balor and Rey Mysterio started the tag team match with some hard chops in the corner. Mysterio bounced back with some head-scissors takedown, and Damien Priest tagged in and clocked Edge with a nasty right hand. ‘The Rated-R Superstar was all fired up with some quick offense, sending Mysterio onto both JD members on the outside.
Priest and Balor utilized the numbers game to take out their opponents with a leg drop and some double-team maneuvers. Mysterio had taken a lot of punishment and wanted to make the tag to Edge, but Priest prevented the tag with a big boot.
The former leader of the JD came in firing on all cylinders, hitting some clotheslines and nailing Balor with an Edgecution. The UK crowd was going wild for Edge as he delivered his tag-partner’s signature 619, followed by a splash from Mysterio for a near-fall.
Edge intercepted a chokeslam attempt on Mysterio with a spear to the outside! Dominik interfered to help his dad hit a sunset flip powerbomb, and Rhea Ripley made him pay. Mysterio and Edge ensured the victory with a 619 and a picture-perfect Spear!
Following the match, Dominik would low-blow Edge and take his father’s head off with a wicked clothesline. This was the last time he was side-by-side with his father for the foreseeable future in WWE.
- Edge was trying to get comeuppance on the faction he helped create and was kicked out of. The Judgment Day had been targeting and terrorizing Rey’s son Dominik for months now, who was at ringside. ‘The Rated-R Superstar would ultimately get his revenge on JD at WrestleMania 39, when he faced “The Demon” Finn Balor inside Hell in a Cell.
- This was the birth of Dirty Dom, after being jealous of his dad choosing Edge as his tag partner instead of him. After the match, Dominik gave Edge a low blow and clotheslined his dad’s head off to a loud cheer from
the crowd. His heel turn has been the greatest creative decision in his young career.
- Dirty Dom is a two-time Intercontinental Champion, two-time NXT North American Champion, and current AAA Mega Champion during his time in The Judgment Day, and he’s one step away from becoming world heavyweight champion.
Roman Reigns VS. Drew McIntrye (WWE Undisputed Universal Championship)
The always overconfident and arrogant undisputed champion and his challenger locked up with the power of one-upmanship. Reigns had been trash-talking his opponent, and McIntyre made his rival back away. The Undisputed WWE Universal Champion looks shook because of this insane UK crowd.
The champion answered back with some heavy right hands to his challenger. Reigns looks scared as McIntrye has his way with the champion. Karrion Kross and Scarlet provided a distraction, which allowed Reigns to take advantage. The confident champion now is slowing down the match with explosive, powerful offense like we’ve seen throughout his title reign thus far.
Reigns delivered a big boot, and his challenger kicked out at one! The champion mocked and trash-talked McIntrye and delivered some nasty punches. Both superstars tried to deliver suplexes to each other but to no avail. Reigns then grabbed the mic for Cardiff to acknowledge their Tribal Chief, and The Scottish Warrior hit a Glasgow Kiss to the champion. McIntyre fired up and delivered his patented belly-to-belly throws. The challenger wanted a Claymore Kick as Reigns left the ring. A spinebuster into a jackknife pinfall gave McIntrye a near-fall.
The champion intercepted a Claymore Kick with a devastating Superman Punch for a two-count. The champion locked in the guillotine choke hold in an attempt to get McIntrye to submit. The challenger speared the champion through the barricade. Reigns again intercepted a Claymore Kick with another spear for a 2.99!
McIntyre clocked Reigns with a Claymore Kick to the back of the head and into the referee, Charles Robinson. Austin Theory then made an attempt to cash in his MITB, but Tyson Fury knocked his lights out from the crowd. Back in the ring, the champion has a chair and ate a Claymore Kick for yet another near-fall!
A slugfest ensued between both superstars, followed by a blitz of offense, a headbutt, a spear by the challenger, and a Claymore Kick. McIntyre was one second away from being WWE Undisputed Universal Champion, but Solo Sikoa pulled the referee out before the three-count. Reigns capitalized and delivered a massive spear for the victory!
- ‘The Scottish Warrior’ Drew McIntrye made an amazing entrance, which was highlighted by a storybook video package with his Broken Dreams theme song! The raucous crowd was red-hot for the biggest match of McIntyre’s career since his breakout year in 2020, which was thwarted by Covid. The UK crowd was chanting, “Oh, Drew McIntyre,” before the champion made his entrance.
- Roman Reigns always looks like a million bucks during his elaborate entrance; this time he was all alone. ‘The Tribal Chief’ had his most difficult title defense to date. Drew McIntyre has always been a thorn in Reigns’ side, ever since returning to WWE in 2018. Reigns went on to have a history-making 1,316-day title reign until Cody Rhodes defeated him at WrestleMania 40. The Tribal Chief won this year’s Royal Rumble and won the World Championship from CM Punk in a five-star classic.
- Solo Sikoa made his shocking debut when McIntrye delivered a Claymore Kick and pulled the referee out of the ring to stop the count. The Scottish Warrior has not had the same amount of momentum since the PLE. Yes, he won the world title for about four minutes and was the WWE Undisputed Champion for a month this year, but still, he hasn’t felt like a dangerous threat. Since Sikoa’s debut on the main roster, he’s been the silent enforcer for The Bloodline, the Tribal Chief, and now the leader of the MFTs. He has portrayed a menacing and funny heel at times, and I could see him becoming WWE or World Heavyweight Champion by next year.
Chairshot Radio Network
Launched in 2017, the Chairshot Radio Network presents you with the best in sports, entertainment, and sports entertainment. Wrestling and wrestling crossover podcasts + the most interesting content + the most engaging hosts = the most entertaining podcasts you’ll find!
MONDAY - Bandwagon Nerds (entertainment & popular culture)
TUESDAY - 4 Corners Podcast (sports)
WEDNESDAY - The Greg DeMarco Show (wrestling)
THURSDAY - Nefarious Means
FRIDAY - DWI Podcast (Drunk Wrestling Intellect)
SATURDAY - The Mindless Wrestling Podcast
SUNDAY - 30 Mindless Minutes
CHAIRSHOT RADIO NETWORK PODCAST SPECIALS
Attitude Of Aggression Podcast: The Big Five Project (chronologically exploring WWE's PPV/PLE history) Unidentified History (Ufology) & Game Gone Wrong (Game of Thrones Universe)
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Chairshot Classics
Chris King Looks Back: Edge vs Randy Orton in the “Greatest Wrestling Match Ever”
Chris King takes a look at the memorable WWE Backlash 2020 “Greatest Wrestling Match Ever” featuring Edge and Randy Orton!
Chris King takes a look at the memorable WWE Backlash 2020 “Greatest Wrestling Match Ever” featuring Edge and Randy Orton!
Edge made his shocking return at the 2020 Royal Rumble and immediately reunited with his former Rated-RKO member Randy Orton. It all seemed like old times as both superstars shared respect with each other. The following night on Monday Night Raw after Orton proclaimed he wanted to get Rated-RKO back together, he hit a vicious RKO and CON-CHAIR-TO on Edge.
‘The Viper’ was in his mind trying to protect his former partner after being out of the business for nine years but, Edge wanted to write his own storybook ending to his career. After Orton took out Edge’s wife Beth Phoenix, both men went to war in a Last Man Standing match at WrestleMania,,, in which Edge was victorious. This did not sit well with The Viper, who had gone back to his sick and sadistic ways. In order to prove who the better wrestler is, WWE announced they would compete in the Greatest Wrestling Match Ever at Backlash.
The production for this match was legendary as both superstars were introduced by Howard Finkel via a Madison Square Garden-esque microphone, which made it feel like a big deal. Even the referee, Charles Robinson, was dressed up with a blue collared dress shirt and bow tie. The iconic match started with Edge attempting trying to outwrestle his opponent, but The Viper outsmarted him at every turn. Edge delivered a kick to Orton on the outside to gain some advantage. ‘The Master Manipulator’ utilized Orton’s weakened shoulder to keep him locked in a headlock, slowing down his opponent’s attack.
Orton tried to hit a superplex on the outside, but Edge hit a flying clothesline, and The Viper started to bleed. It’s been all Edge so far in this match as he locked in a crossface on his friend-turned-rival. Orton turned things around with a nasty modified neckbreaker that sent Edge gasping for air. The Viper kept the punishment going as he slung his opponent into the pixie glass, barricade, announce table, and even the steel steps neck first. The Viper slowed everything down with a stiff sleeper hold, keeping Edge on the mat.
In the third quarter both superstars started pulling out tricks, including the late great Eddie Guerrero’s Three Amigos suplexes. While the assault continued, Orton hit a massive Superplex off the top rope for a solid two-count. The Viper tried to take advantage of his rival’s neck with a super-draping DDT, but Edge countered with an Edge-E-Cution for another two count. After a modified chokehold, Orton hit an Angle Slam to give him some reprieve.
The Viper dumped Edge to the outside and was able to capitalize with his patented draping DDT. The Master Manipulator hit Edge-O-Matic for a near fall. Edge wanted a spear but instead managed to hit Christian, his long-time tag team partner’s, signature move, the Unprettier, for a two count. The Viper bounced back and hit a Pedigree, paying homage to Orton’s former Evolution leader HHH. Edge then hit a Rock Bottom! After several unique pinfall attempts by Edge, The Viper struck with an RKO for a 2.99 count.
The finishing minutes of this classic match saw Orton going for a punt kick, and Edge hit two devastating spears for a solid two count! He went up for a flying attack, and Orton caught his rival into an RKO for yet another near fall. Edge locked in the Anti-Venom submission, but The Viper hit a low blow followed by a vicious Punt for the three-count!
Was this the greatest wrestling match ever… No, not really. This was a solid match, though, as both superstars tried to utilize everything in their playbooks and even some homages to the greats of WWE. I think at this point of COVID, WWE was trying to use any taglines or unique creativity to produce great wrestling content. Edge unfortunately suffered a torn triceps injury that would keep him out of the ring until the 2021 Royal Rumble. The Viper would go on to become WWE Champion once again later that year!
Chairshot Radio Network
Launched in 2017, the Chairshot Radio Network presents you with the best in sports, entertainment, and sports entertainment. Wrestling and wrestling crossover podcasts + the most interesting content + the most engaging hosts = the most entertaining podcasts you’ll find!
MONDAY - Bandwagon Nerds (entertainment & popular culture)
TUESDAY - 4 Corners Podcast (sports)
WEDNESDAY - The Greg DeMarco Show (wrestling)
THURSDAY - Nefarious Means
FRIDAY - DWI Podcast (Drunk Wrestling Intellect)
SATURDAY - The Mindless Wrestling Podcast
SUNDAY - 30 Mindless Minutes
CHAIRSHOT RADIO NETWORK PODCAST SPECIALS
Attitude Of Aggression Podcast: The Big Five Project (chronologically exploring WWE's PPV/PLE history) Unidentified History (Ufology) & Game Gone Wrong (Game of Thrones Universe)
Chairshot Radio Network Your home for the hardest hitting podcasts... Sports, Entertainment and Sports Entertainment!
Powered by RedCircle
Let us know what you think on social media @ChairshotMedia and always remember to use the hashtag #UseYourHead!
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