Royal Rumble (2016)

Royal Rumble (2016) was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event and WWE Network event, produced by WWE. It took place on January 24, 2016, at the Amway Center in Orlando, Florida.[2] It was the 29th event in the Royal Rumble chronology. The event also was the fifth Royal Rumble pay-per-view to be held in the state of Florida (1990, 1991, 1995, and 2006), the second (1990) to be held in Orlando, and the first pay-per-view event at the Amway Center. The Royal Rumble match was the second that was contested for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship (after the 1992 Rumble), and the first match in which the champion defended his title in the Rumble match.

Royal Rumble (2016)
Promotional poster featuring John Cena
PromotionWWE
DateJanuary 24, 2016
CityOrlando, Florida
VenueAmway Center
Attendance15,170
Buy rate91,000[1] (excluding WWE Network views)
WWE Network event chronology
 Previous
NXT TakeOver: London
Next 
Fastlane
Royal Rumble chronology
 Previous
2015
Next 
2017

Six matches were contested at the event, including one on the Kickoff pre-show. In the main event, the returning Triple H won the Royal Rumble match by eliminating Dean Ambrose to win the WWE World Heavyweight Championship, winning his second Royal Rumble match, as well as making him the third person to win it from the number 30 entrant. Roman Reigns the defending champion, was also eliminated by Triple H. The event was also notable for the WWE pay-per-view debut of longtime TNA mainstay AJ Styles as a participant in the Royal Rumble match.[3][4][5]

Production

Background

The Royal Rumble is an annual gimmick pay-per-view, produced every January by WWE since 1988. It is one of the promotion's original four pay-per-views, along with WrestleMania, SummerSlam, and Survivor Series, dubbed the "Big Four".[6] It is named after the Royal Rumble match, a modified battle royal in which the participants enter at timed intervals instead of all beginning in the ring at the same time. The match generally features 30 wrestlers. Traditionally, the winner of the match earns a world championship match at that year's WrestleMania—2016's was WrestleMania 32. For 2016, however, the reigning WWE World Heavyweight Champion was scheduled to defend the title in the Royal Rumble match as entrant number one, marking the second time that the promotion's world championship was the prize of the match (the first being at the 1992 event), but the first time in which the champion defended the title in the match. 2016 was the twenty-ninth event in the Royal Rumble chronology. It was also the last Royal Rumble event to occur before the reintroduction of the brand extension in July, again splitting the roster between the Raw and SmackDown brands.[7][8]

Storylines

The card consisted of six matches, including one of the Kickoff pre-show. The matches resulted from scripted storylines, where wrestlers portrayed heroes, villains, or less distinguishable characters in scripted events that built tension and culminated in a wrestling match or series of matches, with results predetermined by WWE's writers, with storylines produced on their weekly television shows, Raw and SmackDown.[9][10]

Traditionally, the winner of the 30-man Royal Rumble match is awarded a world championship match at WrestleMania. However, as a culmination of his attempts to deprive the WWE World Heavyweight Champion Roman Reigns for attacking his son-in-law Triple H and overall disrespecting the McMahon family, WWE CEO and Chairman Vince McMahon decided that Reigns would have to defend his title in the Rumble match as entrant number one.[11]

On the December 28 episode of Raw, Big Show was the first wrestler to announce his participation in the Royal Rumble match.[12] Early in January, Curtis Axel, Ryback, The Wyatt Family (Bray Wyatt, Luke Harper, Erick Rowan, and Braun Strowman), Dolph Ziggler, Chris Jericho,[11] Stardust, and Sheamus[13] were added to the match. On the January 11 episode of Raw, Stephanie McMahon announced that Brock Lesnar would compete in the match in spite of Lesnar's advocate Paul Heyman arguing that Lesnar should bypass the match and face the winner at WrestleMania 32.[14] The next week on Raw, a rigged lottery assigned the #1 spot to Reigns, meaning that he would be the first contestant to enter the match.[15]

At TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs, Dean Ambrose defeated Kevin Owens to win the WWE Intercontinental Championship.[16] Their rivalry intensified for over weeks; including a match ending in a double countout for the Intercontinental Championship.[17] On the January 14 episode of SmackDown, Owen's accepted Ambrose's challenge to a Last Man Standing match for the Intercontinental Championship at the Royal Rumble.[13]

On the January 7, 2016 episode of SmackDown, John Cena introduced Kalisto as an opponent for United States Champion Alberto Del Rio. After Kalisto won the match,[17] he was granted a title match on the January 11 episode of Raw, in which he defeated Del Rio to win the United States Championship.[14] Del Rio went on to win back the championship the following night on SmackDown.[13] Subsequently, another title match between the two was scheduled for the Royal Rumble.

On the January 4 episode of Raw, Becky Lynch was attacked by Divas Champion Charlotte after defeating her in a non-title match.[11] With the help of father Ric Flair, Charlotte defeated Lynch to retain the championship on the January 7 episode of SmackDown.[17] Subsequently, Lynch challenged Charlotte for another title match at the Royal Rumble. Though Charlotte was unwilling to grant Lynch another title opportunity, Lynch goaded Flair to accept the challenge on his daughter's behalf.[13][15]

On the January 11 episode of Raw, The Usos defeated The New Day.[14] The following week on Raw, a tag team title defense by The New Day against The Usos was scheduled for the Royal Rumble.[18]

On January 20, a fatal four-way tag team match between Darren Young and Damien Sandow, The Dudley Boyz, The Ascension, and Mark Henry and Jack Swagger was scheduled for the Royal Rumble pre-show, with both members of the winning team earning a spot in the Royal Rumble match later in the night.[19]

Event

Other on-screen personnel
Role: Name:
English commentators Michael Cole
Corey Graves
Byron Saxton
John "Bradshaw" Layfield
Spanish commentators Carlos Cabrera
Marcelo Rodríguez
Ring announcers Lilian Garcia
Eden Stiles
Referees John Cone
Dan Engler
Mike Chioda
Charles Robinson
Rod Zapata
Backstage interviewers Rich Brennan
Pre-show panel Renee Young
Booker T
Jerry Lawler
Corey Graves

Pre-show

On the Royal Rumble Kickoff pre-show, The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley), Jack Swagger and Mark Henry, Damien Sandow and Darren Young, and The Ascension (Konnor and Viktor) competed in a Fatal Four Way Tag Team match, in which the winners would qualify for the Royal Rumble match. In the end, Bubba Ray and D-Von performed a 3-D on Viktor before Swagger applied a Patriot Lock on Bubba Ray whilst Henry performed a Running Splash on Bubba Ray. Henry pinned Viktor, allowing Swagger and Henry to qualify for the Royal Rumble match.

Preliminary matches

The actual pay-per-view opened with Dean Ambrose defending the Intercontinental Championship against Kevin Owens in a Last Man Standing match. During the match, Owens performed a Cannonball through the barricade on Ambrose. Owens attempted a Powerbomb on Ambrose through two chairs but Ambrose countered with a Back Body Drop through the chairs. Ambrose performed Dirty Deeds on Owens on a chair. Ambrose performed a Diving Elbow Drop on Owens through a table. Owens performed a Swinging Fisherman Suplex off the top rope on Ambrose through a table. In the end, Ambrose pushed Owens off the top rope through two tables stacked outside the ring. As Owens could not stand by a ten count, Ambrose won the match to retain the title.

Next, The New Day (Big E and Kofi Kingston) defended the WWE Tag Team Championship against The Usos (Jimmy Uso and Jey Uso). In the closing moments of the match, Big E tackled Jimmy into the barricade, only for Jey to perform a Superkick on Big E. Jey leapt to the top rope but was caught by Big E, who performed a Big Ending on Jey to retain the title.

After that, Alberto Del Rio defended the United States Championship against Kalisto. During the match Del Rio attempted a double foot stomp on Kalisto whilst he was held in the tree of woe, but Kalisto avoided it and executed a Salida Del Sol, however, Del Rio grabbed the ropes to void the pinfall. In the end, as Del Rio removed the padding from a turnbuckle, Kalisto performed a Diving Hurricanrana on Del Rio, knocking Del Rio into the exposed turnbuckle. Kalisto performed a second Salida Del Sol on Del Rio to win the title.

In the fourth match, Charlotte defended her Divas Championship against Becky Lynch. In the climax of the match, as Lynch applied the Dis-arm-her on Charlotte, Ric Flair threw his jacket onto Lynch. Lynch threw the jacket only for Charlotte to execute a Spear on Lynch to retain the championship. After the match, Sasha Banks returned and applied the Bank Statement on Charlotte. Flair pulled Charlotte out of the ring.

Main event

Triple H won the 2016 Royal Rumble match to become WWE World Heavyweight Champion, his second overall Rumble win.

The main event was the 30-man Royal Rumble match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. WWE World Heavyweight Champion Roman Reigns and Rusev began the match at number one and number two, respectively. After Reigns eliminated Rusev, AJ Styles entered at number three, marking Styles's WWE pay-per-view debut, and eliminated the next entrants, Tyler Breeze and Curtis Axel. On orders of WWE chairman Vince McMahon, the League of Nations pulled Reigns out of the ring and attacked him, where Rusev performed a Running Splash on Reigns through a broadcast table, causing an injured Reigns to be taken backstage.

As the match continued, Braun Strowman eliminated Kane and Big Show. Kevin Owens eliminated AJ Styles but was later eliminated by Sami Zayn, who was a surprise entrant at number twenty. Brock Lesnar eliminated Jack Swagger and three members of the Wyatt Family: Erick Rowan, Luke Harper, and Braun Strowman. When Bray Wyatt entered, The Wyatt Family attacked Lesnar again and eliminated him from the match. Whilst Sheamus entered, Reigns attacked him with a Superman Punch before returning to the match. Reigns then eliminated The Miz and Alberto Del Rio.

At number thirty, Triple H, who had been inactive since being attacked by Roman Reigns at TLC, made his return and eliminated Dolph Ziggler. Sheamus performed a Brogue Kick on Wyatt and, together with Triple H, eliminated Wyatt. Chris Jericho performed a Codebreaker on Triple H but was eliminated by Dean Ambrose. Sheamus attempted another Brogue Kick on Ambrose; however, Ambrose countered and Sheamus fell onto the ring apron. Reigns eliminated Sheamus after a Superman Punch only for Triple H to eliminate him. After a back-and-forth shuffle, Triple H eliminated Ambrose, resulting in Triple H winning his second Royal Rumble and becoming WWE World Heavyweight Champion for the ninth time, and a 14-time World Champion overall.

Aftermath

On the following night's episode of Raw, The Authority decided that Triple H would defend the WWE World Heavyweight Championship at WrestleMania 32 against the winner of a Triple Threat Match between Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose, and Brock Lesnar, to be held at Fastlane.[20] Roman Reigns won the match (and the title opportunity at WrestleMania) by pinning Dean Ambrose. However, Ambrose also received a title match in the run-up to WrestleMania, at WWE Roadblock, where Triple H defeated him to retain the championship. Prior to his Triple Threat match with Roman Reigns and Brock Lesnar at Fastlane, Dean Ambrose lost the Intercontinental Championship on the February 15 episode of Raw in a "Fatal 5-Way" Match also involving Kevin Owens, Dolph Ziggler, Stardust, and Tyler Breeze when Owens pinned Breeze to regain the title.

The Usos had another confrontation with the New Day, after the latter team interrupted the Usos' cousin, The Rock, who appeared on the January 25 episode of Raw. The Usos forced the trio into the ring, where The Rock attacked each New Day member with his signature moves. On the February 8 episode of Raw, The Usos and The Dudley Boyz defeated The New Day and Mark Henry in an 8-Man Tag Team Match. After the match, The Dudley Boyz attacked The Usos, turning heels in the process.

Also on the January 25 episode of Raw, AJ Styles made his Raw debut, defeating Chris Jericho. The two shook hands after the match but Jericho refused to release Styles' hand while giving him a staredown before leaving. After Styles defeated The Miz on the February 4 episode of SmackDown, Jericho challenged Styles to a rematch. Jericho defeated Styles on the following week's episode of SmackDown, giving Styles his first loss since the Royal Rumble.

Additionally, Sasha Banks and Becky Lynch faced each other on the January 25 Raw in a match which ended in disqualification after Charlotte attacked both women. After Banks confirmed her intentions of going after the Divas Championship and split from Team B.A.D on the February 1 Raw, she faced Lynch that night in a rematch which ended with Banks winning by disqualification after Team B.A.D members Naomi and Tamina attacked her, turning her face in the process. Lynch helped Banks fend off Naomi and Tamina leading to a temporary and uneasy alliance between the two. Also that same night Charlotte lost a non-title match to Brie Bella by roll-up. This led to a title match between the two for the Divas Championship scheduled for Fastlane, which Charlotte won.

Reception

The event received generally positive reviews, with most commenters praising the undercard (particularly the Last Man Standing match between Dean Ambrose and Kevin Owens) and noting a marked improvement in the titular match from the 2014 and 2015 events.[3][4] Dave Scherer of PWInsider.com wrote that the opening match for the Intercontinental Championship was "an awesome spectacle, with really good psychology mixed in" as "it felt like they hated each other". Scherer added that the tag title match was "a lot of fun", and the United States title match "good, if you can appreciate Lucha", otherwise "a lot of Kalisto's offense isn't believable". Scherer expressed mild disappointment towards the Divas Championship match, writing that it was not an "NXT style match", and described Ric Flair forcibly kissing Becky Lynch as "sexual assault". For the Royal Rumble match, Scherer noted that the booking of the match failed to help Roman Reigns, writing that "Vince thought he booked [the Rumble] for the people to cheer for Reigns", but that "the Orlando crowd made Triple H the "face". Scherer added that he was not surprised at Triple H's entry and win of the main event.[21]

AJ Styles, making his WWE pay-per-view debut, entered the Royal Rumble match at #3. Styles had briefly wrestled in WWE in 2002[22] before rising to stardom in NJPW, TNA, ROH and other promotions.

James Montgomery of Rolling Stone wrote that "the Royal Rumble was an entertaining show, paced by the battle royal and bolstered by its undercard". He described the opening match as "a thoroughly entertaining I.C. battle" and the tag-team title match as "a creative match that had its moments, but hopefully signaled the end of this feud". He described the United States Championship bout as "a hard-hitting match that featured a great false finish", and expressed his desire for Kalisto to have an extended run with the championship. For the Royal Rumble match, Montgomery wrote that it was a "pretty good Rumble. Storylines began and advanced." He described the arrival of AJ Styles as "surreal" and praised Dean Ambrose's performance, writing that "his future appears to be brightening by the minute". However, he expressed disappointment at the use of Brock Lesnar in the match and added that "Triple H's victory at the Royal Rumble will no doubt cool some folks' reactions to the event as a whole".[4]

James Caldwell of PWTorch.com praised the Intercontinental Championship match, writing: "What a match. Just a non-stop battle capturing the story of this feud" and rating it as 4 and a quarter stars out of five. Caldwell rated the tag-team title match at 2 and a quarter stars out of five, describing it as "an up-and-down match with the main issue of no reason to view New Day as heels". He gave the United States Championship match 2 and three-quarters out of 5, calling it as a "solid, unspectacular singles match", and wrote that the Divas Championship match "was more of a bridge to what was next" in reference to the appearance of Sasha Banks. Caldwell gave the Rumble main event 3 and three-quarters out of 5, commenting that there were "overall, too many downpoints for this year's Rumble hurting some up-points". He wrote that "the Rumble started really well, got ridiculous in the middle with the now-annual compromise of the Rumble, and ended with the crowd not sure what to do with the players in the mix outside of Ambrose".[23]

Will Pruett of Pro Wrestling Dot Net described the event as "a delightful show from beginning to end". The Rumble match was described as "very fun" and the best since 2010. Pruett raised questions over the booking of Roman Reigns, noting that he "failed to truly be heroic" twice at the event. In comparison, Pruett felt that Triple H came across as "the conquering hero" and "avenging party" in the storyline against Reigns. Regarding Dean Ambrose, Pruett felt he "was presented as more of a star on this show than he has been in a long time", commenting that "unlike Roman Reigns, who walked away, Ambrose fought hard and still kept fighting to the end". He described the opening match between Ambrose and Owens as "insane". Pruett wrote that the re-debuting AJ Styles "instantly seemed like he fit on the roster", but noted that he was "not presented in the upper echelon of WWE". For other matches, Pruett called Kalisto's win "a major surprise"; while lamenting that "the lines of the WWE women's division were blurred once again" as to who fans should support between Sasha Banks and Charlotte after their post-match antics.[3]

Some reviewers were more critical of the event. John Powell of Slam! Wrestling rated the show 6 out of 10, expressing his disappointment in the outcome of the main event match which he felt represented WWE "going out of their way to frustrate fans and keep their product in a continued state of uninspired monotony". Powell rated the Rumble match 6 out of 10, claiming that it "had its moments here and there" but also noting inconsistencies with the past 28 Rumbles, such as allowing Roman Reigns to rejoin after "missing the majority of the match". The Intercontinental title match was the best rated on the show at 8.5 out of 10, and was described as a "very brutal affair with Owens and Ambrose hammering each other into oblivion with chairs, kendo sticks and tables". The tag title match was called "standard, hum-drum" and rated 5 out of 10; the United States title match was "a classic David versus Goliath encounter", rated 6 out of 10, and the women's title match was described as "unexceptional" with a poor ending, rated 3 out of 10. The pre-show match was also rated 3 out of 10, described as a "snorefest" and a "mess". Lastly, Powell described AJ Styles' re-debut as "one of the highlights of the night", and noted the positive crowd responses to Becky Lynch and Damien Sandow.[24]

WWE Hall of Famer Bret Hart gave a strongly negative appraisal of the show, ranking the Rumble match as "one of the least exciting" in history, and the overall event as perhaps "the worst Royal Rumble". Of Triple H's WWE World Heavyweight Championship win in the Rumble match, Hart said: "I didn't like the decision that Triple H, surprise, put the belt on himself again... it just showed a real lack of imagination if you ask me".[25]

Kyle Johnson of the Wrestling Observer specifically analyzed the merits of the Royal Rumble match: while not "one of the greatest", it achieved two "key things that any good Rumble should": firstly helping to "advance or create undercard storylines heading into Wrestlemania", secondly helping to "generate a handful of legitimate title contenders for the year to follow": Braun Strowman, Bray Wyatt, Kevin Owens and AJ Styles. For the negatives, Johnson highlighted storyline irregularities: Triple H winning cleanly without any "underhanded advantage"; Reigns "voluntarily" leaving a title match, returning later "not selling any injuries whatsoever", the League of Nations not eliminating Reigns; and no Lesnar rampage post-elimination.[26]

Results

No. Results Stipulations Times[27][28]
1P Jack Swagger and Mark Henry defeated The Ascension (Konnor and Viktor), Damien Sandow and Darren Young and The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) Fatal 4-Way tag team match to qualify for the Royal Rumble match[29] 7:58
2 Dean Ambrose (c) defeated Kevin Owens Last Man Standing match for the WWE Intercontinental Championship[30] 20:50
3 The New Day (Big E and Kofi Kingston) (c) (with Xavier Woods) defeated The Usos (Jey Uso and Jimmy Uso) Tag team match for the WWE Tag Team Championship[31] 10:53
4 Kalisto defeated Alberto Del Rio (c) Singles match for the WWE United States Championship[32] 11:30
5 Charlotte (c) (with Ric Flair) defeated Becky Lynch Singles match for the WWE Divas Championship[33] 11:40
6 Triple H won by last eliminating Dean Ambrose 30-man Royal Rumble match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship[34] 1:01:42
  • (c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match
  • P – indicates the match took place on the pre-show

Royal Rumble entrances and eliminations

    NXT
    WWE debut
     – Winner
Draw Entrant Order Eliminated by[34] Time[34] Eliminations[34]
1Roman Reigns (c)28Triple H59:485
2Rusev1Roman Reigns01:300
3AJ Styles11Kevin Owens28:582
4Tyler Breeze2Roman Reigns & AJ Styles01:180
5Curtis Axel3AJ Styles01:300
6Chris Jericho26Dean Ambrose50:471
7Kane9Braun Strowman19:071
8Goldust4Titus O'Neil06:180
9Ryback8Big Show12:370
10Kofi Kingston6Chris Jericho08:260
11Titus O'Neil7Big Show09:061
12R-Truth5Kane00:590
13Luke Harper19Brock Lesnar24:163
14Stardust14Luke Harper14:120
15Big Show10Braun Strowman04:582
16Neville13Luke Harper10:170
17Braun Strowman20Brock Lesnar18:015
18Kevin Owens12Sami Zayn04:581
19Dean Ambrose29Triple H29:571
20 Sami Zayn16Braun Strowman04:551
21Erick Rowan17Brock Lesnar04:352
22Mark Henry15Braun Strowman, Erick Rowan & Luke Harper00:470
23Brock Lesnar2109:314
24Jack Swagger18Brock Lesnar00:150
25The Miz22Roman Reigns08:550
26Alberto Del Rio2307:020
27Bray Wyatt25Sheamus & Triple H11:250
28Dolph Ziggler24Triple H07:100
29Sheamus27Roman Reigns08:461
30Triple H-Winner09:034
  • (*) – Strowman, Harper, and Rowan returned to the ring to eliminate Brock Lesnar, after they were eliminated by Lesnar.
  • (**) – The Miz stayed around ringside before officially entering the ring.
  • (***) – Sheamus was attacked by Roman Reigns before officially entering the ring.
  • (****) – The League of Nations attacked Roman Reigns, taking him out of the match for approximately 30 minutes. Reigns was not eliminated and eventually returned to the ring.

References

  1. Observer Staff (March 2, 2016). "March 7, 2016 Wrestling Observer Newsletter: TNA seeking investors, UFC 196 preview, plus tons of news". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Retrieved April 9, 2020. The Rumble is currently estimated at 32,000 domestic buys, a number less than SummerSlam and Night of Champions, as well as another 59,000 buys outside of North America. The 32,000 buys represent a 47 percent drop from the prior year’s 61,000 in North America. The international drop was 49 percent, going from 115,000 buys for the 2015 Rumble to 59,000 this year.
  2. Johnson, Mike. "2016 WWE ROYAL RUMBLE & FAST LANE PPVS WILL BE IN..." Retrieved April 13, 2015.
  3. Pruett, Will. "Pruett's Pause: WWE Royal Rumble 2016". prowrestling.net. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  4. Montgomery, James. "WWE 'Royal Rumble': Triple H Wins the Title, A.J. Styles Arrives". Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  5. Powell, John (March 9, 2000). "Wight goes to court". Slam Wrestling. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved June 6, 2007.
  6. Ian Hamilton. Wrestling's Sinking Ship: What Happens to an Industry Without Competition (p. 160)
  7. "Specialty Matches: Royal Rumble". WWE. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  8. Waldman, Jon (2005-02-02). "Statistical survival – breaking down the Royal Rumble". SLAM! Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-12-09.
  9. Grabianowski, Ed. "How Pro Wrestling Works". HowStuffWorks. Discovery Communications. Archived from the original on November 18, 2013. Retrieved March 5, 2012.
  10. "Live & Televised Entertainment". WWE. Archived from the original on February 26, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
  11. Tedesco, Mike. "WWE RAW Results – 1/4/16 (Reigns vs. Sheamus)". wrestleview.com. Retrieved January 4, 2016.
  12. Martin, Adam. "WWE RAW Results – 12/28/15 (John Cena vs. Alberto Del Rio)". wrestleview.com. Retrieved December 28, 2015.
  13. Kahrs, Alex. "WWE Smackdown Results – 1/14/16 (Tag team main event)". wrestleview.com. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
  14. Tedesco, Mike. "WWE RAW Results – 1/11/16 (Brock Lesnar returns)". wrestleview.com. Retrieved January 12, 2016.
  15. Tedesco, Mike. "WWE RAW Results – 1/18/16 (Final hype for Royal Rumble)". wrestleview.com. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  16. Caldwell, James. "12/13 WWE TLC PPV RESULTS – Caldwell's Complete Real-Time Report". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  17. Martin, Adam. "WWE Smackdown Results – 1/7/16 (Ambrose vs. Owens)". wrestleview.com. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
  18. Caldwell, James. "1/18 WWE Raw Results – CALDWELL's Complete, Live Report". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  19. "Royal Rumble Update – Pre-Show match announced for entry in the Royal Rumble". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved January 20, 2016.
  20. Fowle, Kyle. "Monday Night Raw fails to keep the Royal Rumble momentum going". Retrieved February 7, 2016.
  21. Scherer, Dave. "Shocking winner at the Rumble (OK, I am kidding)". pwinsider.com. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  22. "Superstars you didn't know were in WWE!". WWE. July 9, 2014. Retrieved March 7, 2016.
  23. Caldwell, James. "1/24 Royal Rumble PPV Results – CALDWELL's Complete Live Report". Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  24. Powell, John. "Chaos reigns at The Royal Rumble". canoe.ca. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  25. "Bret Hart Thinks The 2016 Royal Rumble Was 'One Of The Least Exciting' He's Ever Seen". Yahoo! News. Uproxx. January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 31, 2016.
  26. Johnson, Kyle. "Royal Rumble 2016: What Worked, What Can Be Better Next Year". Wrestling Observer. Retrieved 28 January 2016.
  27. "WWE Royal Rumble '16 Times". Internet Wrestling Database. Retrieved 25 January 2016.
  28. Caldwell, James. "1/24 WWE Royal Rumble PPV Results – CALDWELL's Complete Live PPV Report". Pro Wrestling Torch. Retrieved 24 January 2016.
  29. "Darren Young & Damien Sandow vs. The Dudley Boyz vs. The Ascension vs. Mark Henry & Jack Swagger (Fatal 4-Way Kickoff Match to qualify for the Royal Rumble Match)". WWE. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  30. Pappolla, Ryan. "Intercontinental Champion Dean Ambrose vs. Kevin Owens (Last Man Standing Match)". WWE. Retrieved January 15, 2016.
  31. Clapp, John. "WWE Raw Tag Team Champions The New Day vs. The Usos". WWE. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
  32. Clapp, John. "United States Champion Alberto Del Rio vs. Kalisto". WWE. Retrieved January 18, 2016.
  33. Clapp, John. "Divas Champion Charlotte vs. Becky Lynch". WWE. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
  34. Murphy, Ryan. "Triple H won the 2016 Royal Rumble Match for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship". WWE. Retrieved January 24, 2016.
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