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| University of Phoenix Stadium - 3/28/10 |
'Mania 26 had one of the best buildups of any 'Mania card in recent memory. From January to April 2010 WWE was in peak form, presenting exciting new feuds and expertly rekindling old ones. WrestleMania XXVI was a grand culmination that felt very special.
Both World Championship matches involved fresh rivalries, or at least rivalries that hadn't yet been beaten into the ground. John Cena vs. Batista had only occurred once before as a face vs. face Summerslam match, and in 2010 Batista was a ruthless, bitter heel; a role I always felt much better suited him. In hyping this match WWE referenced Batista's clean win over Cena in 2008, and also had Batista physically maul Cena at every turn which truly put the babyface character in jeopardy. This is how you build a classic hero vs. villain match. Not only that, but they provided Batista's heel character excellent motivation in the form of professional jealousy over not becoming the WWE's Posterboy. The match itself while not epic, was a strong WWE-style championship bout where Cena finally got a win over his larger rival.
On the Smackdown side, we were finally treated to a Chris Jericho vs. Edge PPV match (this was scheduled to happen in 2002 before Edge was rerouted into a tag team with Hulk Hogan, and again in 2004 but Edge got hurt), and WWE built their feud around the fallout from their shortlived tag team run. Edge sustained an injury, forcing Jericho to find a replacement tag partner, and in doing so Jericho publicly threw Edge under the bus. Edge unexpectedly returned at the 2010 Royal Rumble, targeting Jericho, and winning the title shot. Nice simple way to build to a Championship match at 'Mania, and the resulting match was very good, if hampered by a rather lethargic crowd.
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| Finally we got a Jericho-Edge PPV match! |
Elsewhere on the card, multiple newer talents got actual matches instead of being crammed into the annual Money in the Bank spotfest (this edition was won, surprisingly, by Jack Swagger). CM Punk and Rey Mysterio got a pretty good little 6-minute bout (criminally short by my calculations), The Miz and Big Show successfully defended the Tag Team belts against John Morrison and R-Truth (even shorter), and Sheamus's first 'Mania match saw him take on his offscreen mentor Triple H (in Hunter's first non-championship 'Mania match since 2001).
The returning Bret Hart finally got his long-awaited onscreen revenge for Montreal, against Vince McMahon. Sadly while the buildup to this match was pretty intriguing, the match itself was nigh unwatchable and about twice as long as it should've been. Bret was severely limited in what he could do in the ring, and WWE blew what could've been a nice late-match twist. During Vince's ring introduction he appeared with Bret's entire family seemingly in his corner, making it appear as though Bret would be facing a whole entourage. Unfortunately it was revealed right at the beginning of the match that the Harts duped Vince into thinking they were on his side, thus destroying all suspense and turning the whole affair into a heel vs. 15 babyfaces scenario. Not much of a match when the heel gets beaten up by 15 people for 10 minutes.

















































