We're quickly moving toward the greatest party of the hot days for WWE. SummerSlam 2019 is only half a month away, with the current year's occasion occurring inside the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Canada as the second-greatest occasion of the year leaves Brooklyn without precedent for a long time. SummerSlam will go down on Sunday, Aug. 11, with the primary card starting at 7 p.m. ET on the WWE Network. The opening shot show will lead us in one hour earlier at 5 p.m.
The SummerSlam card has just started to come to fruition, with some quite strong matches as of now on tap. SummerSlam is, undeniably, perhaps the greatest demonstration of the whole year, so there's still bounty more to get to. How about we currently examine how the SummerSlam 2019 card is meeting up and make a couple of expectations for what we could see ahead.
2019 WWE SummerSlam matches
Universal Championship - Brock Lesnar (c) vs. Seth Rollins: At Extreme Rules, Lesnar earned three-time all inclusive hero status when he traded out his Money in the Bank contract on the man who took the title from him in the WrestleMania 35 opener. Still situated - for the present - as the top babyface on Raw, the "Monster Slayer" earned the privilege to challenge Lesnar the exceptionally one night from now on Raw when he won a 10-man fight imperial. The opening match of WrestleMania 35 will presently be kept running back at SummerSlam - this time likely in the headliner.
WWE Championship - Kofi Kingston (c) vs. Randy Orton: Kingston was managed the chance to pick his own challenger for SummerSlam, and he squandered no time in getting out a recognizable enemy he has storied history with in Orton. What's staggering about this fight is the way that they're immovably tying in everything that went down in 2009 between these two, which will, undoubtedly, make this program even more charming throughout the following a little while.
Raw Women's Championship - Becky Lynch (c) vs. Natalya: It was clear Lynch expected to proceed onward from Lacey Evans, so there was a lethal 4-way end match hung on Raw to decide her next challenger. Natalya developed successful from that match and had a few words with her "companion" a short time later. This may not be what fans imagined for Lynch at SummerSlam, however the truth of the matter is, Natalya getting the title shot in Canada adds a tad of sense to this.
SmackDown Women's Championship - Bayley (c) vs. Ember Moon: If we thought the Raw ladies' title coordinate at SummerSlam was somewhat out of fantasy land, at that point what about this one on the blue brand, eh? In the wake of joining together on SmackDown, Bayley proceeded amidst the ring to offer Moon a title shot, which obviously the challenger immediately acknowledged. I'd be amazed, however, on the off chance that Charlotte Flair isn't added to this match in the coming weeks.
Kevin Owens vs. Shane McMahon (If Owens loses, he stops WWE): One of the top - and best - storylines going in the organization right currently will reach a critical stage at SummerSlam. Following quite a while of forward and backward, Owens set out the test to McMahon for the match in Toronto, and that challenge was immediately acknowledged. Owens' star as a babyface keeps on sparkling more brilliant and more splendid every week, so finishing the Shane McMahon rule of dread at SummerSlam would be a gigantic positive development.
"The Fiend" Bray Wyatt vs. Finn Balor: Wyatt focused on Balor upon his hotly anticipated return, and after two weeks, Balor displayed the test. Wyatt, from the "Firefly Funhouse," acknowledged in the interest of his satanic modify self image. With Balor purportedly set to take some all-encompassing downtime soon, this match likely may not include an appearance from Balor's "Evil presence" persona. However, you never know - WWE might be so hellbent on getting this new Wyatt character over that he could be the first to hand Balor's individual change sense of self a misfortune, making Balor's approaching return after get-away even more charming. We will see.
2019 WWE SummerSlam card forecasts
United States Championship - AJ Styles (c) vs. Ricochet (Ladder Match): These two have, obviously, put on some fabulous matches generally. Styles took the U.S. title from Ricochet at Extreme Rules with some help from The Club, and it was clear the next night on Raw that this fight will progress forward. For this third portion, be that as it may, perhaps we make things fascinating and hurl a few stepping stools in with the general mish-mash.
Intercontinental Championship - Shinsuke Nakamura (c) vs. Ali: Nakamura has been on a flat out tear, as of late guaranteeing the Intercontinental title from Finn Balor at Extreme Rules with a genuinely overwhelming success. On the SmackDown following Extreme Rules, Ali drew nearer Nakamura behind the stage to set himself up for a future title shot.
Charlotte Flair vs. Trish Stratus: Flair was irate on SmackDown Live that she's as a rule left off of probably the greatest card of the year, and she at that point promised to demonstrate that she's the "best ever" in Toronto. GOAT talk? Toronto? Indeed, you can sign me up for Flair versus Stratus if that is the place this is going.
Raw Tag Team Championship - The Revival (c) vs. The Usos: Two of the best label groups on earth should totally run it back again on a SummerSlam card, that appears like an easy decision. Their session at Extreme Rules was engaging, so they should tear the house down in Toronto.
SmackDown Tag Team Championship - The New Day (c) vs. Heavy Machinery: My gut sense could not be right as expert wrestling is one of the more unusual types of excitement out there, yet I trust Daniel Bryan will return singles rivalry under the Eric Bischoff system on SmackDown. Overwhelming Machinery didn't eat the pinfall at Extreme Rules in the triple risk, and a matchup with Big E and Xavier Woods ought to be enjoyable.
Women's Tag Team Championship - The IIconics vs. The Kabuki Warriors: If a spot can't be found on one of the most stacked cards of the year for these titles to be protected, at that point something is radically off-base.