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WWE Wrestlemania 36 முடிவுகள்: வெற்றியாளர்கள், தரங்கள், மற்றும் சிறப்பம்சங்கள் Part 2

Wrestlemania 36 முடிவுகளை விரைவாகப் பார்ப்போம்:


Kickoff Show: Cesaro def. Drew Gulak
Cesaro picked up the victory after breaking out the UFO (no-hand airplane spin), a well-deserved feat for a Superstar who has long been one of the very best workers in the industry. Gulak was also game, working his opponent’s arm and continuing to build on the momentum he has gathered over the last month.

Though they did not quite reach that classic encounter their skill sets deem possible, they still warmed the viewing audience up with a good bit of grappling that set the stage for things to come.


Grade: C


Women's Tag Team Title Match: Alexa Bliss and Nikki Cross def. Kabuki Warriors
Cross fought back, complete with unbuttoning her top in what has become the Scottish competitor’s equivalent to “hulking up.” The champions tried to put her away with the Doomsday Device, made popular by Hall of Famers The Road Warriors, but Alexa ultimately scored the win and titles for her team with Twisted Bliss.


A fun and solid wrestling match, maybe a bit long at 15 minutes, it kicked the show off on the right foot and probably featured the right team going over.

Grade: C

Elias def. King Corbin
That WWE’s resident songster had to cheat to defeat Corbin, even after bashing his back with a guitar, felt tonally off but it does seem to suggest at least one more match between the two is to come.

For better or worse.


Grade: C


Raw Women's Championship Match: Becky Lynch def. Shayna Baszler
Channeling the great Bret Hart in his match against Roddy Piper, Lynch shifted her weight, rolled back on Baszler’s shoulders during the Kirifuda Clutch and pinned her for the win. The psychology behind the finish, Lynch turning The Queen of Spades’ own unwavering desire to put her opponent to sleep, was smart and helped elevate the match.

Even if you cite Kairi Sane using the same finish, the story becomes Lynch learning from the past whereas Baszler’s own intensity doomed her to repeat it. Great stuff early in the night.

Grade: C

Intercontinental Championship Match: Sami Zayn def. Daniel Bryan
Taking that into context and living for the story rather than expecting a five-star mat classic, this was a damn fun and entertaining match that continued to position Zayn as the most effective heel on the roster.

Furthermore, it elevated the Artist Collective’s Shinsuke Nakamura and Cesaro, who figured prominently in the match as distractions for Bryan and tackling dummies for Drew Gulak.


Grade: B


Ladder Match: John Morrison def. Kofi Kingston and Jimmy Uso
High spots, jaw-dropping bumps and underrated psychology made up the ingredients of a spectacular match that showcased the creativity of the three grizzled veterans involved.

It was that same creativity that led to the finish in which Morrison narrowly wrestled the tag titles out of his opponents’ hands and crashed into a ladder propped up below, the pain and agony no match for the sheer joy of escaping the match with the championship reign of him and The Miz intact.


Grade: B+


Universal Championship Match: Braun Strowman def. Goldberg
Braun Strowman defeated Goldberg in two minutes to win the Universal Championship, answering the Hall of Famer’s succession of spears with three straight powerslams for the pinfall victory.

There was no real story, no rhyme or reason for anyone to care about it before the match and nothing they did between the ropes changed that.

The match accomplished its goal, got the title off of Goldberg, and we moved onto the night’s main event.


Grade: B


Boneyard Match: The Undertaker def. AJ Styles
The main event of WrestleMania 36, Night One was a cinematic masterpiece. It was a fantastic production from a much-maligned WWE Creative team and the perfect example of what it can accomplish when it thinks outside of the box.

Taking place in a remote cemetery, or “boneyard” in this instance, the match saw AJ Styles pull out every possible shortcut to defeat The Undertaker. Neither interference from Karl Anderson and Luke Gallows nor druids could earn The Phenomenal One the victory.

Even when he placed a clearly beaten down, out-of-breath Undertaker in the grave and attempted to proceed with the burial, Big Evil rose from the great beyond and pummeled him into mush. He systematically eliminated the rest of The OC before chokeslamming Styles from the tin roof of a barn.

Instead, it was a revolutionary match on wrestling’s grand stage that may have created the template for The Deadman’s matches to come.

Grade: A+++
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