Watch Full Episode @ Watch Live The Walking Dead is an American horror drama television series developed by Frank Darabont, based on the comic book series of the same name by Robert Kirkman, Tony Moore, and Charlie Adlard. Andrew Lincoln plays the show's lead character, sheriff's deputy Rick Grimes, who awakens from a coma discovering a world overrun by zombies, commonly referred to as "walkers".Grimes reunites with his family and becomes the leader of a group he
forms with other survivors. Together they struggle to survive and adapt
in a post-apocalyptic world filled with walkers and opposing groups of
survivors, who are often more dangerous than the walkers themselves.
Much of the series takes place within the Atlanta, Georgia metro area and surrounding countryside. Later, the setting transitions to other parts of the country including Alexandria, Virginia. The Walking Dead premiered in the United States on October 31, 2010, exclusively shown on cable television channel AMC and internationally on Fox International Channels. As a result of very favorable Nielsen ratings
that rank the show unprecedentedly high for a cable series, AMC has
renewed the series each year. Beginning with its third season, The Walking Dead attracts the most 18- to 49-year-old viewers of any cable or broadcast television series. It is presently airing its seventh season, which began on October 23, 2016,and has been renewed for an eighth season to air in late 2017.
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Unbeaten
knockout-artist Artur Beterbiev is back in action on December 23rd when
he faces Isidro Ranoni Prieto in Quebec, live on BoxNation.
The
Light-Heavyweight, who has 10 knockouts from all 10 of his professional
contests, was sidelined for a year from June 2015 due to an injury to
his right shoulder which required surgery.
In his first comeback
fight in June of this year he stopped Argentina’s Ezequiel Maderna in
brutal fashion after four knockdowns in as many rounds.
Beterbiev,
who fights out of his adopted hometown of Montreal, now faces Prieto
(26-1-3, 22 KOs) at The Casino du Lac Leamy in Gatineau.
Prieto
has only lost once, dropping a unanimous decision to undefeated Eleider
Alvarez, a promotional stablemate of Beterbiev, in August 2015. Since
that loss the 30-year-old Paraguayan has two knockout wins on the bounce
but faces a tough task to stop his next opponent.
Beterbiev is a
two-time Olympian and won the 2009 World Amateur Championships. He also
beat Sergey Kovalev in the unpaid ranks, who is currently the unified
WBO, WBA and IBF ruler.
Since turning pro his best wins have come
over Tavoris Cloud and Gabriel Campillo, and prior to picking up his
injury the Russian-born 31-year-old was due to fight in a World Title
eliminator.
Now Beterbiev will be looking to deliver a Christmas
cracker in Quebec to finally earn himself a Light-Heavyweight World
Title contest, possibly against his countryman Kovalev further down the
line. Read more
Watch @ABeterbiev vs @Prieto Full Fight @ LIVE #boxing #lightweight #live #Fullfight
Following last night’s WWE Roadblock: End Of The Line,
tonight’s episode of Monday Night RAW is in Columbus, Ohio. WWE.com has
provided a preview of what to watch for when RAW airs live at 8PM EST
on the USA Network: Best Friends Are Reunited “At Roadblock: End of the Line, Chris Jericho stunned the !!! Read more @ Read More
In
the wake of Roadblock: End of the Line, how deep will the shockwaves be
felt from the controversial ending of the WWE Universal Championship
Match between Kevin Owens and Roman Reigns and the destruction that took
place as a result? WWE.com has some ideas.
By Eric Baldwin: #2 WBC light heavyweight contender Joe Smith
Jr. (23-1, 19 KOs) knocked out the 51-year-old Bernard Hopkins (55-8-2,
32 KOs) in the 8th round on Saturday night to end B-Hop’s long
28-year-old pro career at the Forum in Inglewood, California.
The 27-year-old Smith Jr. struggled through the first seven rounds
with the boxing skills of Hopkins. However, in the 8th round, Smith
caught Hopkins in the corner and landed five bone-crunching shots to the
head that knocked him out of the ring. Hopkins said he was hurt and
couldn’t get back in the ring.
Hopkins insisted that he’d been pushed out of the ring. It didn’t look that way.
I think at the end of the day, it was Smith’s youth, persistence and
his punching power that led him to get the victory. Even if Hopkins
hadn’t fell out of the ring, I think he was in serious trouble from the
five big power shots that Smith had hit him with. Those were brutal head
shots that Smith landed in the final sequence in the 8th that led to
Hopkins falling out of the ring.
I don’t think Smith missed one punch. Smith landed at 100 percent
accuracy with those final five head shots, and the look on Hopkins’ face
at the time that he fell out of the ring was one of someone that was
hurt by the shots. If Hopkins was injured from the fall out of the ring,
then there’s not much you can do about that. But if Hopkins had stayed
inside the ring, I think he would have gone down from those punches,
because the ropes were holding him up, and that’s why he slid out of the
ring. Hopkins was sliding down the ropes from the impact of the big
power shots that he was hit with.
The official time of the stoppage by referee Jack Reiss was at 0:53
of round 8. That’s not a great way for the 51-year-old Hopkins to go out
with him falling out of the ring like that, but he’s made up his mind
that he doesn’t wish to continue his boxing career. Hopkins isn’t
interested in fighting Smith Jr. in a rematch. It’s always possible that
Hopkins could change his mind.
You never know. If he sees the fight on replay, he’ll understand that
he appeared to be in the lead after seven rounds. All Hopkins needed to
do was win a small handful of rounds in the last five rounds for him to
get the victory. It’s just too bad that he suffered the injury, because
he looked like he was going to win. Hopkins did a great job of moving,
tying Smith Jr. and making him miss with almost all of his big power
shots.
The replays showed that Hopkins was hit by a five straight punches to
the head from Smith Jr. that caused him to fall out of the ring. The
finishing punch from Smith Jr. was a left hook to the head of Hopkins
that caused him to fall out of the ring. It looked like Hopkins fell out
of the ring due to him getting hit with some bone crunching shots to
the head.
Hopkins said after the fight that he will not be returning to the
ring to resume his boxing career. He said he’s not in denial, but he
doesn’t believe that he should have lost the fight. I don’t know if the
boxing fans agreed with Hopkins, because they weren’t booing after the
fight.
“He shoved me out of the ring,” said Hopkins to HBO after the fight.
“My angle got twist when I fell out of the ring. I couldn’t stand on my
feet. If I wouldn’t have been pushed out of the ring, I believe he was
starting to fade. I know I had the chin to get the win in the second
half. He got frustrated. I can’t believe they gave him a TKO. They can
call it a no contest but not a loss. The momentum from his body pushed
me. I went out like a soldier. I’m not in a denial,” said Hopkins.
Smith did his job in chasing after Hopkins for seven rounds before finally catching up to him in the 8th round to bang him out.
The way that Hopkins went out on an injury stoppage was very similar
to his first fight against Chad Dawson in 2011. In that fight, Dawson
was getting the better of Hopkins for two rounds. Out of frustration of
Hopkins falling onto his back, Dawson lifted Hopkins up and dropped him
on the canvas, causing him to injure his left shoulder.
The fight was stopped when Hopkins couldn’t resume fighting, and the
fight was later scored as a no contest. We can only hope that Hopkins’
loss tonight isn’t changed to a ‘no contest’ as well, because it sure
appeared that he was knocked out of the ring by the effects of a punch
from Smith Jr. It was a left hook to the head of Hopkins from Smith that
knocked him out of the ring. There was no push, no elbow and no bumping
into Hopkins like he says that happened.
Hopkins did a good job of walking around the ring to elude Smith Jr.
in the first seven rounds. Boxing News 24 had Hopkins ahead in the fight
five rounds to two going into the 8th. It looked like a fight that
Hopkins was going to win going into the second half of the contest.
Hopkins fought like an older version of Andre Ward with the way that he
moved, landed quit pot shots, and tied Smith up to keep him from landing
his big power shots.
Hopkins was frequently with his back against the ropes defending
shots from Smith, but he did a great job each time making him miss with
almost everything he threw. At the time, Hopkins was landing shot
punches on the inside to get the better of Smith. I’m not sure if the
judges saw what was going on, but it was clear to me that Hopkins was
winning the fight.
It’s really not that surprising that Smith eventually caught Hopkins
with some big power shots to get him out in round eight. Smith is a
devastating puncher. Yeah, Smith maybe a crude fighter in terms of his
boxing skills, but his punching power is first rate. There’s not too
many guys in the light heavyweight division that can punch harder than
Smith. With the shots that Smith caught Hopkins with in the last seconds
of the fight, I can’t see Sergey Kovalev, Artur Beterbiev or Adonis
Stevenson landing any harder than that. Smith has world class power, and
he clearly had Hopkins shook as he was falling from the ring. That was
not a push that sent Hopkins out of the ring. Those were all devastating
head shots. I think Hopkins might have been too stunned to realize how
he was knocked out of the ring. This was an old fashioned case of a
fighter being knocked out of the ring from the effects of power shots
rather than being pushed. If Smith’s training team could work on his
ring skills, he could develop into a very good fighter in two or three
years.
Watch the monday night full show live
The WWE is in Buffalo with both McMahon siblings in the building to
offer one of the last bits of hype for the upcoming Survivor Series.
Let's get right into the action.
UFC 207 is the biggest and last fighting event of year 2k16. It is the fight between renowned MMA fighter Russi Ronda vs Nuunes. Russi had got major popularity when she came on Hollywood screen in FnF 7. People are expecting this to be historic fight.
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With its perfect cocktail of speed, skill and power, the
160lb middleweight division is viewed by many as boxing’s ultimate
weight category and through history it has been occupied by several of
the finest prizefighters who ever thumped noses.
In terms of pure numbers, Bernard Humphrey Hopkins of Philadelphia –
who bows out at the sprightly age of 51 years, 11 months and two days in
California on Saturday, live on BoxNation – is certainly the greatest
ever to grace the division. But, stats apart, where does his standing
truly lie among the plethora of 160lb legends?
It is incontestable that the ex-con initially known as ‘The
Executioner’ and latterly as ‘The Alien’ reigned for longer than any
other middleweight emperor (10 years, two months, 17 days) and retained
the claim to his assorted thrones more times (20) than any of the
divisions other fine champions. At 40 years and six months, BHop can
also boast to being the division’s oldest ever belt holder.
Splintered titles, contrasting activity levels and ever evolving
advances in nutrition and training techniques makes the task of
comparing legends from across the eras an unforgiving, near impossible
task. But dastardly Dev, Head of Digital, is insisting upon it so here’s
my best go!
Across the decades, Britain has represented strongly at 11st 6lbs so
it’s perhaps fitting that the division’s first obvious superstar was
Cornish born Bob Fitzsimmons. ‘Ruby Bob’, a crippling puncher
particularly to the solar plexus, ruled from 1891-95 before absconding
to the more lucrative heavyweight (and later light-heavy) category.
However, during his term in office Fitzsimmons retained just twice so
can’t be considered a serious threat to Hopkins as the division’s
ultimate kingpin.
Not so Stanley Ketchel, a hard living, hard punching roughhouse who
terrorized the globe’s middleweights in the opening decade of the
twentieth century. ‘The Michigan Assassin’ was just 20 when he first
claimed the title in December 1907 by wiping out San Francisco’s Joe
Thomas in the 32nd frame of a scheduled 45 rounder.
Ketchel, successfully retained five times within an eight month
period and, still only 22, entered the annuls as the division’s first
two time champion by crushing Illinois’ Billy Papke (ko12) who’d briefly
relieved him of his crown 80 days earlier.
Thereafter, Ketchel carved his name in ring ‘lore by jumping to
heavyweight and dumping heralded champ Jack Johnson – who outweighed him
by 35lbs – before getting ironed out himself in round 12. Within a year
he was murdered and martyred by a lover’s jilted boyfriend. Gone at 24,
he could’ve amounted to anything.
By the 1920s, the unholy trinity of Harry Greb, Tiger Flowers and
Mickey Walker had surfaced. The former, known as ‘The Pittsburgh
Windmill’ was sometimes wild but always wildly exciting. He nailed the
crown from Johnny Wilson in 1923 and successfully retained four times –
including a win over Walker – before conceding a split to Flowers in
1926.
His conqueror, the division’s first African-American champ, was
devoutly religious but had an ungodly ring manner and was not averse to
thumbing and heeling. ‘The Georgia Deacon’ repeated his win over Greb
but succumbed to ‘Toy Bulldog’ Walker via a decision so mystifying it
was investigated by the state athletic commission – to no avail.
Walker, formerly a welter champ, held off four challengers before
abandoning the title to chase heavyweights. All three were all but
deified by contemporary historians but their title CVs lack the depth to
threaten Hopkins.
The same could be said for Indiana body snatcher Tony Zale and
colourful NYC bomber Rocky Graziano, two seriously hard practitioners
who shared a disturbingly violent trilogy in the late 1940s. Alas, both
lacked the longevity to merit serious consideration for the division’s
all-time number one slot.
Shortly after, came concrete chinned Jake LaMotta, fabled in film as
‘The Raging Bull’. The New Yorker infamously chucked a fight to secure
his long overdue crack at the title but, in June 1949, dethroned a very
worthy French champion in Marcel Cerdan.
LaMotta survived two challenges – famously playing possum then
dramatically exploding to knockout Laurent Dauthuille with just 13
seconds remaining when miles adrift on the cards – before being
butchered, stopped, (but never dropped) in 13 by Sugar Ray Robinson in
the 1951 St Valentine’s Day Massacre.
The supremely gifted Sugarman is commonly regarded as the finest
glove man ever– there’s certainly a strong case he was the best
welterweight – and he claimed the world middleweight title five times
between 1951 and 1960, during a Golden Age for the division.
However, that meant that he was himself fleeced of the crown on four
occasions, albeit to good men (Randy Turpin, Gene Fullmer, Carmen
Basilio and Paul Pender), always on points. And, get this, Robinson
triumphed in just eight of 15 fights for the middleweight championship
whereas Hopkins was bettered in just three of 24!
In the 60s, the fabulous flamboyant Virgin Islander Emile Griffiths –
another former welterweight king - reigned twice but his reigns proved
frustratingly short. Like so many of the aforementioned, it’s
conceivable that on his very best night, he might have scalped Hopkins
but he simply lacks the body of work to be placed above him.
The same could be said for ring superstars such as Hearns, Duran,
Leonard, McCallum and Jones Jr who passed along the 160lb highway during
the 80s and 90s, briefly gobbling up a fragmented slice of the
middleweight pie en route.
The first serious challenge to Hopkins’ hegemony comes from Carlos
Monzon, the obscenely rugged Argentinean who ruled with iron fists for
seven years and 14 defences during the 1970s. The pride of Santa Fe
collected the undisputed crown by upsetting Italy’s Nino Benvenuti in
Rome (rsc12) in Ring Magazine’s Fight of the Year for 1970.
Eleven of his defences were executed on foreign terrain and nine
challengers failed finish. The vanquished included Griffiths (twice),
Bennie Briscoe, Jose Napoles and Rodrigo Valdez (twice). He abdicated
(and retired) as undefeated champion in July 1977.
Brockton’s Marvellous Marvin Hagler compiled a similarly impressive
championship portfolio throughout the 80s. People have hung for lesser
crimes than that committed by two officials who adjudged his first title
tilt with Vito Antufermo as a draw. Being left in limbo for a further
ten months didn’t lighten his mood and he viciously mugged Crawley’s
Alan Minter in three rounds before a toxic, bottle tossing audience at
Wembley Arena in September 1980.
Over the ensuing six and a half years, the scowling southpaw executed
a reign of terror, repelling 12 challengers with only Roberto Duran
completing the course. Worthies such as Mustafa Hamsho (twice), Tommy
Hearns and John ‘The Beast’ Mugabi were among the demolished dozen. MMH
retired in disgust after conceding controversially to bitter nemesis
Sugar Ray Leonard in 1987.
Post Hopkins, Kazakh kayo king Gennady Golovkin has been ripping up
the division but remains a work in progress and is best evaluated after
he exits. A 160lb belt holder since August 2010, ‘GGG’ has ruined 17
successive challengers without the judges being called but, through
little fault of his own, has served as a slalom stick for every
meaningful rival. Way too good for his own good.
Of the above mentioned, it would be difficult to locate a fighter who wasn’t more
exciting than Hopkins and several were more blessed technically. But
the Philadelphian mastered eight world champions – most notably stopping
Tito Trinidad and Oscar De La Hoya – and few arrived for battle better
conditioned. None were wiser or tougher mentally.
His standout stats are further enhanced when one considers that he
never boxed amateur, conceded his debut at light-heavy shortly after
departing clink (four years for ‘strong arm’ robbery) and was well into
his 26th year before he won his first fight. It’s doubtful his physiological make-up will ever be replicated.
Golovkin continues to rise but, presently, BHop need only genuflect
before Monzon and Hagler (who both triumphed over superior competition)
when it comes to debating the division’s greatest champion.
It looks like Samoa Joe
may be injured or, at the very least, he’s banged up. Joe was at the
NXT live event in Riverside, CA but he did not wrestle. He did address
the fans and, while trying to stay in character, told the fans that he
was not cleared to wrestle. Joe was supposed to team up with Bobby Roode
in the main event against Shinsuke Nakamura and Tye Dillinger. However,
Andrade “Cien” Almas teamed with Roode while Joe watched from ringside.
Joe attacked Nakamura a couple of times during the match before being
ejected by the referee.
It was noticeable during the Joe vs. Nakamura match in Australia that
they were working a slower, smarter pace and the match was down several
notches from what they did at the last couple of Takeover shows. He did
wrestle at the 12/13 show in Sydney, Australia but he was protected in a
multi-man match with Roode and Elias Samson as his partners against
Nakamura, Murphy and
Dillinger. The original plan was for a Fatal 4 Way match with Joe vs.
Nakamura vs. Roode vs. Dillinger but plans changed, presumably to
protect Joe and to limit how many spots he does.
He is still be advertised to appear at the show in Las Vegas on
Saturday night. If we hear further word on Joe then we’ll pass it along.
Hopefully, they have plans to move him up to the main roster because
it’s long overdue for him and Nakamura.
When India’s poster boy of boxing, Vijender Singh, came for the weigh-in, his rippling muscles gave an indication of the hard work he has put in to guard his WBO Asia-Pacific Super Middleweight belt against Francis Cheka of Tanzania on Saturday.
It will be Vijender’s eighth pro bout on the circuit and his second on home soil. In July, the Indian had outclassed Australia’s Kerry Hope to win the belt.
It has been a smooth ride for Vijender on the pro circuit so far --- he has fought seven bouts and remained unbeaten. On the eve of the title defence, he exuded confidence of winning Saturday’s showdown against his African rival, a former world champion.
On the scale, Vijender tipped 76kg, slightly more than his rival who weighed 74.7kgs. It was one last time both boxers came face to face before stepping into the ring.
Cheka, 34, was very guarded about his preparation for Saturday’s fight, his first on the Asian circuit. “Will show tomorrow on the ring,” was all he communicated through his manager. On paper, Cheka is supposed to be a seasoned player with 43 fights under his belt, winning 32; 17 of those by knockout.
Records, however, don’t make Vijender lose his focus. He has fought seven times on the pro circuit and won all of them. The Beijing Olympic Games bronze-medallist said, “It would be naïve to think of pressure of facing a more experienced opponent this time. (I) Have vast experience on the amateur circuit. It would be all about focusing in the 10-round contest,” he said.
Besides the main event, the programme also features five greenhorns for undercard bouts on the pro circuit.
Sheamus and Cesaro won a #1 Contenders Fatal 4 Way over Luke Gallows & Karl Anderson, The Shining Stars and Golden Truth on tonight's WWE
Tribute to The Troops. They will face RAW Tag Team Champions The New
Day at Sunday's WWE "Roadblock: End of The Line" pay-per-view from
Pittsburgh.
Below is the updated confirmed card for Sunday:
Iron Man Match for the RAW Women's Title Charlotte Flair vs. Sasha Banks
Triple Threat for the WWE Cruiserweight Title TJ Perkins vs. The Brian Kendrick vs. Rich Swann RAW Tag Team Title Match Cesaro and Sheamus vs. The New Day
Ten-Minute Time Limit Braun Strowman vs. Sami Zayn
Seth Rollins vs. Chris Jericho Kickoff Pre-show Rusev vs. Big Cass
Watch the Aj Styles Fight Package. Aj styles fan can enjoy this buck of disk. Detail about the Disk is given below. Aj Styles Collection 30+ matches 12 hours of action watch @ Click here
DISC 1: June 2002: Jerry Lynn, Low Ki & AJ Styles vs. Flying Elvises (first ever TNA match) June 2002: X Title: AJ vs. Low Ki vs Psicosis vs. Jerry Lynn (to crown the first X Champion) May 2003: AJ Styles & D-Lo Brown vs. CM Punk & Jason Cross June 2003: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Raven vs. Jeff Jarrett April 2004: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Jeff Jarrett June 23, 2004: AJ Styles vs. Jeff Hardy (Hardy’s TNA debut) August 2004: Street Fight: AJ Styles vs. Kid Kash Final Resolution 2005: Ultimate X: AJ Styles vs. Petey Williams vs. Chris Sabin Lockdown 2005: Steel Cage: AJ Styles vs. Abyss
DISC 2: Hard Justice 2005: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Jeff Jarrett No Surrender 2005: AJ Styles vs. Sean Waltman Unbreakable 2005: AJ Styles vs. Samoa Joe vs. Christopher Daniels Bound For Glory 2005: Ironman Match: AJ Styles vs. Christopher Daniels Slammiversary 2006: Tag Team Title: AJ Styles & Christopher Daniels vs. America’s Most Wanted No Surrender 2006: Ultimate X: Christopher Daniels & AJ Styles vs. The Latin American Xchange Bound For Glory 2007: Tag Team Title: AJ Styles & Tomko vs. Ron Killings & Consequences Creed February 2008 IMPACT: AJ Styles vs. Tiger Mask
DISC 3: Slammiversary 2008: AJ Styles vs. Kurt Angle Hard Justice 2008: Last Man Standing: AJ Styles vs. Kurt Angle Destination X 2009: Legends Title: AJ Styles vs. Booker T September 2009 IMPACT: AJ Styles vs. Chris Sabin September 2009 IMPACT: AJ Styles vs. Douglas Williams No Surrender 2009: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Sting vs. Kurt Angle vs. Hernandez vs. Matt Morgan Bound For Glory 2009: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Sting Turning Point 2009: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Samoa Joe vs. Christopher Daniels
DISC 4: Lockdown 2010: World Title: AJ Styles vs. D’Angelo Dinero No Surrender 2010: I-Quit Match: AJ Styles vs. Tommy Dreamer September 2010 IMPACT: Ladder Match: AJ Styles vs. Sabu October 2011 IMPACT: AJ Styles & Rob Van Dam vs. Christopher Daniels and Jerry Lynn Bound For Glory 2011: I-Quit Match: AJ Styles vs. Christopher Daniels Slammiversary 2012: Tag Team Title: AJ Styles & Kurt Angle vs. Christopher Daniels and Kazarian Hardcore Justice 2012 Ladder Match: AJ Styles vs. Samoa Joe vs. Kurt Angle vs. Christopher Daniels July 2013 IMPACT: AJ Styles vs. Jeff Hardy No Surrender 2013: AJ Styles vs. Austin Aries Bound For Glory 2013: World Title: AJ Styles vs. Bully Ray Aj fight package 2016,styles fight package 2016,aj styles fight PACKAGE
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TNA 12/15/16 Full Show Online HDTV Total Nonstop Action (TNA) Wrestling is a privately
held American professional wrestling promotion based in Nashville,
Tennessee. Founded by its former President, Jeff Jarrett, and former
Chief Executive Officer (CEO), Jerry Jarrett, in 2002 as J Sports & Entertainment, LLC, it is the second-largest professional wrestling promotion in the United States, after WWE.
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WWE Roadblock is a professional
wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the WWE, a
Connecticut–based promotion. It is broadcast live and available on PPV
and the WWE Network. The event was established in March 2016, debuting
as a WWE Network-only exclusive. The second event, now a Raw brand
exclusive event, was moved to December 2016 where it will not only air
on the WWE Network, but also traditional PPV outlets as well. The
event’s name was a reference to its original March position on the “Road
to WrestleMania”.
On WWE Raw, the tension brewing between “best friends” Chris
Jericho and Kevin Owens have grown thicker over the past few weeks. In
what once seemed like an inseparable unit, the duo has even become
physical with one another, pushing and shoving after matches. Seemingly,
Team Chris and Kevin is on their way to completely dissolve.
Oddly, Chris Jericho is still being viewed as a conduit from Seth
Rollins to get to Kevin Owens and the WWE Universal Title. Although the
team is near its end, Rollins has this theory that Jericho is a why to
get to Owens, which is ultimately a way to get to Triple H. So does this
mean that Triple H being the end goal is more important than the top
title of the company? It looks like there is a bit of a lapse in that
logic.
Watch the latest updates regarding WWE Roadblock here @ Get Updates
Watch the latest stream on 18 December 2016 here @ Watch Live
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