So, there we go. Brock Lesnar and Goldberg are set to go head-to-head - and I didn't expect the latter's return to be so emotional. WWE would be unwise to go down that route, to be honest. Book Goldberg like a beast and have him run through competitors aggressively. Still, what a moment to see that return. Great stuff.
WWE has been very smart with the build to Seth Rollins vs Kevin Owens. They have booked the champion as a cowardly heel, which is shrewd, and we haven't seen Owens in the ring all too often. His title reign, thus far, has reminded me of Triple H circa 2003. He has been protected, while Rollins has shone in-ring, and he delivered another good promo segment to kick off the show with the champ before beating Jericho on Monday's RAW. It was smart to give Rollins the way, and dissension between Owens and Jericho continues to build, with the former costing the latter the victory inadvertently.
Elsewhere, Mark Henry and the Golden Truth beat The Shining Stars and Titus O'Neil in a match which was flimsy and just completely pointless, to be honest. The former three competitors have experienced gimmick changes in the recent months, but none have worked.
The New Day's days as champions are clearly numbered - and Sheamus and Cesaro are the team to get the straps off them, in my view. The pair are dysfunctional in a Team Hell No sort of way, and it was good to see Big E take on the former in singles action. Sure enough, he won after a miscommunication between the two new partners, but their team is something WWE is investing in and it's proving beneficial for both competitors, who now have some character development and a clear track.
Competitors without direction remain Neville, who lost to Bo Dallas of all people, before Dallas hurled Curtis Axel - his former stable-mate - into the barricade to signify that dark turn in direction, while Braun Strowman clubbered The Mile-High Trio with ease and desperately needs to move onto midcarders or cruiserweights now. It looks like he's on course for a programme with Sami Zayn.
Personally, I felt the Rusev segment was drawn out and lengthy, and I was disappointed it was given so much time because there are infinitely more interesting feuds going on right now than his battle with Roman Reigns. One of them is the Club vs Enzo and Cass, which saw the former take on Karl Anderson and overpower him early on, which is a shame because the Club need to be booked dominantly and that just isn't happening.
We saw the cruiserweights develop a bit more and were treated to a six-man tag-team match too Brian Kendrick, Drew Gulak and Tony Nese vs. Cedric Alexander, Rich Swann and T.J. Perkins - but all competitors need to further their character out of the ring for us to fully invest.