The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20180428222047/http://www.arabnews.com/node/1292836/offbeat

First-ever WWE Greatest Royal Rumble wows 60,000 in Jeddah

John Cena, right, in action against Triple H at the show in Jeddah on Friday. (AFP)
Updated 12 sec ago
0

First-ever WWE Greatest Royal Rumble wows 60,000 in Jeddah

  • In another landmark moment for Saudi Arabia, women were free to attend and enjoy the show
  • Four Saudi tryout WWE candidates also made an appearance, receiving a deafening reaction from the crowd as they took on Persian duo the Daivari brothers

JEDDAH: The first televised World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) event in the region was a huge success, with 60,000 delighted fans cheering their heroes at the King Abdullah Stadium on Friday night.

In another landmark moment for Saudi Arabia, women were free to attend and enjoy the show.

WWE pulled all the stops to ensure the success of its Greatest Royal Rumble, with all seven men’s titles on the line.

WWE legends The Undertaker, Rey Mysterio, Chris Jericho and Mark Henry were part of the loaded roster.

This was the first WWE event with a 50-man “Royal Rumble” match, rather than the traditional 30.

Four Saudi tryout WWE candidates also made an appearance, receiving a deafening reaction from the crowd as they took on Persian duo the Daivari brothers.

In the first bout of the night, John Cena defeated Triple H. Cedric Alexander then retained his cruiserweight title against Lucha sensation Kalisto, while Jeff Hardy held on to his US championship title against modern-day maharaja Jinder Mahal.

In the fatal four-way intercontinental championship ladder match, Seth Rollins came out on top against Samoa Joe, The Miz and Finn Balor.

Meanwhile, A.J. styles defended his WWE championship title against Shinsuke Nakamura, while the legendary Undertaker defeated Rusev in the Kingdom’s first casket match.

The battle between Brock Lesnar and Roman Reigns for the universal championship proved to be too much for the steel cage that was supposed to contain them, with Lesnar ending up the winner after the pair destroyed part of the structure.

The final match was the 50-man Royal Rumble match, which was down to Big Cass and Braun Strowman. Braun ran into Cass and knocked him to the floor to win the Greatest Royal Rumble match.


‘Avengers: Infinity War’ sets Marvel record on opening night

Updated 28 April 2018
0

‘Avengers: Infinity War’ sets Marvel record on opening night

LOS ANGELES: “Avengers: Infinity War” took in $39 million on Thursday evening at U.S. and Canadian box offices, the biggest opening for a Marvel Studios film and the fourth-highest of all time, distributor Walt Disney Co said.

By Sunday, the movie is expected to come close to, or even break, the weekend record set in 2015 by “Star Wars: The Force Awakens,” according to box office analysts. “Force Awakens” grossed $248 million over its initial weekend.

“Infinity War” features more than 20 superheroes from Marvel’s ever-expanding cinematic universe, including Iron Man, Spider-Man, Black Panther and the Guardians of the Galaxy.

Critics have largely praised the movie for its ambition, scale and wit and for a jaw-dropping ending that seems designed to get audiences hooked for another installment next year. Plot details have been shrouded in secrecy, but several major characters die or appear to be killed off.

“Marvel hits the jackpot again,” said The Hollywood Reporter, while USA Today loved its “unexpected returns, true surprises, real sacrifices and a cliffhanger ending that’s going to freak fans to their superhero-loving core.”

Variety called the movie “overstuffed and bedazzling” and predicted the ending would be much talked about. “It is dark and spooky and, in its way, chancy and shocking. Do any of our beloved characters die? Well, yes. But, in fact, the ending is so audacious that you realize it’s all an elaborate card trick.”

Among the less enthusiastic were Time Out, which called it “an overstuffed sausage of summer entertainment,” and Slant magazine, which said it was “all manic monotony” but “passably numbing in the moment.”

0
'; if (i == 4){ return false; } }); jQuery('#share_day').append(html); var newItems = jQuery('#share_day').find('[data-nid]'); viewsCountShared(newItems) }); } catch (err) { console.log('products json has failed'); } try{ jQuery.getJSON('https://web.archive.org/web/20180428222047/http://www.arabnews.com/sites/default/files/tmp/week.json', function(data) { var html = ''; jQuery.each(data, function(i,item){ html +='
0
'; if (i == 4){ return false; } }); jQuery('#share_week').append(html); var newItems = jQuery('#share_week').find('[data-nid]'); viewsCountShared(newItems) }); } catch (err) { console.log('products json has failed'); } try{ jQuery.getJSON('https://web.archive.org/web/20180428222047/http://www.arabnews.com/sites/default/files/tmp/month.json', function(data) { var html = ''; jQuery.each(data, function(i,item){ html +='
0
'; if (i == 4){ return false; } }); jQuery('#share_month').append(html); var newItems = jQuery('#share_month').find('[data-nid]'); viewsCountShared(newItems) }); } catch (err) { console.log('products json has failed'); } }); //--><!]]>