WWE Fastlane 2021: Live updates, results, recaps and match ratings – CNET [CNET]

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WWE Fastlane is the final pay-per-view before WrestleMania, and the main event will determine who faces Royal Rumble winner Edge for the Universal Championship at the Show of Shows. Daniel Bryan will challenge Roman Reigns for the latter’s Universal Championship, with Edge as the “special enforcer” (i.e. interference waiting to happen), in what’s sure to be an outstanding bout. 

Bobby Lashley’s WWE Championship isn’t on the line, but Drew McIntyre, who challenges for it at WrestleMania, will face Sheamus in a No Holds Barred Match. The other headlining “match” is Randy Orton versus Alexa Bliss, which will surely lead to the return of The Fiend.

Fastlane is also notable for being the first pay-per-view to stream on NBC’s Peacock streaming service, and the last to air on the WWE Network.

Scroll below for rolling live updates and analysis on Fastlane.

Randy Orton vs. Alexa Bliss

Unfortunately, Randy Orton versus Alexa Bliss is next.

Drew McIntyre pins Sheamus

The match was exactly what you’d expect: McIntyre and Sheamus beat the hell out of each other, and then McIntyre won. How much you’d like it depends on how much you like physical brawling, since the match was mostly that.

McIntyre came out with Braveheart-style Scottish makeup. The first weapon introduced to this No Holds Barred match was the Kendo stick, which both men duly used to pound the crap out of each other. Sheamus also used it to choke McIntyre, then McIntyre used it to try and gouge out Sheamus’ eye. Pretty gnarly. 

They then fought to the outside, and battled in the ThunderDome area in between monitors. I personally zoned out here, since there’s a lot of generic striking and throwing each other into things. There were some definite high spots though, like when McIntyre tossed Sheamus through some ThunderDome monitors, causing some pyro to go off. Later, Sheamus hit a White Noise through the announce table.

Sheamus then took a part of the annouce table into the ring to try and kill McIntyre with it, but he was countered and McIntyre got the Futureshock DDT, slamming Sheamus’ head into the table part. Then it was Claymore Kick, 1-2-3.

Rating: 3.5 stars. These two worked very hard, and smashed each other to bits. But some of the action was plodding, and the stifness was undermined by the fact that McIntyre’s victory was never really in doubt. 

Seth Rollins vs. Shinsuke Nakamura

In by far the best match so far, Seth Rollins defeated Shinsuke Nakamura with a curb stomp. The result came as no shock, since Rollins is on course for a clash with Cesaro at WrestleMania, yet the two wrestled well enough to make the bout compelling regardless.

Rollins took much of the opening minutes, but the tide was turned when he tried to mock Cesaro by giving Nakamura a Giant Swing. Nakamura countered it into a Triangle Choke attempt, and then began fighting back. From there, it became a fun back-and-forth contest. Nakamura countered a buckle bomb into a Falcon Arrow, Rollins counted a Kinsasha into a buckle bomb.

Rating: 3.5 stars. The match would have benefited from an extra couple of minutes, as the pinfall came just as it was getting great.

Braun Strowman defeats Elias

Braun Strowman was scheduled to face Shane McMahon, but an alleged leg injury put McMahon on the shelf. Instead, McMahon tricked Elias into taking his place against the Monster Among Men.

Simple match. Elias got a DDT and an elbow drop on Strowman over the course of about five minutes, but other than that it was all Strowman. He dominated Elias, and also bulldozed Jason Ricker on the outside. He got the pin following a powerslam. I expected McMahon to ambush Strowman after the match, revealing his injury to be fake, but there was no such angle.

Rating: 1 star. More of a Raw segment than a pay-per-view match.

Big E retains Intercontinental Championship

Big E defeated Apollo Crows with a very awkward, possibly-botched rollup after a short but intense match. This feud is clearly headed to WrestleMania, as the short, indecisive contest was followed by Crews attacking, slapping and insulting Big E.

The match opened strong. The story leading into it had Big E apoplectic, threatening to destroy Crews and bulldoze his house. No chill from Big E going in, and E starting explosive by hitting his signature spear through the ropes. He then trash talked Crews as he beat him down on the apron. In essence, unlike too many performers, Big E was actually wrestling like he had a grudge. It was good stuff.

Crews then cut him off by attacking E’s injured leg. But before the match could get into a third gear, it came to an end. Crews got a small package on Big E, but Big E reversed it to get the pin. It sounds much better on paper than in practice though, as the refereee started three counts for two pinfall attempts, and not even the announcers could explain what happened. They didn’t even try, and no replay was shown.

Rating: 2 stars. Bad finish, but the fiery action is hopefully auspicious for a WrestleMania encounter.

Nia Jax and Shayna Baszer retain Women’s Tag Titles

The Women’s Tag Team Championship match between Nia Jax and Shayna Baszler on one side and Bianca Belair and Sasha Banks on the other opened the show. It was decent action, though not exceptional, but with booking that ultimately made the Banks versus Belair storyline less compelling.

The match had a basic structure: Plenty of action to begin with, long heat on Belair in the middle and a flurry towards the end. The finish itself was also formulaic WWE: Banks had Baszler in the Banks Statement, Jax pushed Belair onto Banks to breakup the hold, Banks got mad at Belair and, as the two squabbled, was rolled up for the pin by Baszler.

Again, there was good action here. Belair’s wrestling with Baszler earlier in the match was great, ending with Baszler hitting a wicked knee to Belair’s chin. Later, Sasha’s hot tag was creative and fiery, a reminder how of fun she is to watch. And there was a nice false finish when Belair hit a 450 Splash only to have the pinfall broken up by Reginald, who’s now in a love angle with Jax.

But ultimately, the storyline made Banks look silly, getting mad at Belair even though it was Nia Jax who pushed Belair onto Banks. It also made Banks look incompetent, when her distraction led to being pinned. And after the match the two had a showdown that ended with Banks calling Belair a rookie before slapping her. Belair took the slap and pointed to the WrestleMania sign.

Rating: 2.5 stars. The build to Banks versus Belair at WrestleMania has been weak so far. With the tag team red herring now climaxed, hopefully the creative picks up between now and WrestleMania.

Ridde pins Mustafa Ali

The kickoff show bout saw Riddle defend his US Championship against Mustafa Ali. It was a strong match, which will come as no surprise to anyone who saw the pair’s previous bouts on Raw. In the end, Riddle pinned Ali with a BroDerick off the top rope. After the match, Retribution turned on Ali. Apparently tired with Ali’s failure, Mace and T-Bar double chokeslammed the now former leader of the faction.

A solid match and a faction breakup angle. Good stuff — but it says a lot about what WWE thinks of Riddle and Retribution that this was on the Kickoff Show.