Wwe Smack Down Ve Raw 2011 | Real — 2026 |

So here’s to 2011. Here’s to the summer of Punk. Here’s to Christian’s tragic heel turn. Here’s to the Hall of Pain. Here’s to a time when SmackDown and Raw felt truly distinct, and you couldn’t afford to miss either night.

June 27, 2011. Las Vegas. If you were a fan watching live, you remember exactly where you were. CM Punk, sitting cross-legged on the entrance ramp with a microphone, delivered the “Pipe Bomb” promo. He called out Vince McMahon, Triple H, John Cena, and the entire stagnant system. It was raw, it was real, and it shattered the fourth wall. Suddenly, Raw was must-watch television again. WWE Smack Down ve Raw 2011

Enter . Captain Charisma finally, FINALLY won the World Heavyweight Title at Extreme Rules in a ladder match against Alberto Del Rio. The pop was deafening. It was a moment years in the making. But joy turned to heartbreak five days later on SmackDown when Randy Orton, fresh off his heel-to-face turn, beat Christian for the title. This sparked one of the best rivalries of the year: Christian vs. Randy Orton. Christian turned bitter, jealous, and desperate—a perfect heel character. Their series of matches (Over the Limit, Capitol Punishment) were technical masterpieces, culminating in a stunning No Holds Barred match at SummerSlam. So here’s to 2011

Let’s break down the beautiful chaos of . Monday Night Raw: The Year of The Voice of the Voiceless If you watched Raw in early 2011, you were watching The Miz’s world. Love him or hate him, The Miz was your WWE Champion heading into WrestleMania XXVII. He was arrogant, he was brash, and he had Alex Riley by his side. But the real story of Raw wasn’t the champion—it was the chase. Here’s to the Hall of Pain

The rest of the year on Raw was a wild ride of worked-shoot angles. Triple H became COO. Kevin Nash showed up. Alberto Del Rio cashed in Money in the Bank. The title went from Punk to Del Rio to Cena to Punk to Del Rio to Punk again in a dizzying carousel. By year’s end, Raw had a new energy. It wasn’t the Cena show anymore—it was a chaotic, unpredictable battlefield. While Raw was drowning in controversy and pipe bombs, SmackDown in 2011 was quietly having a renaissance. With a roster that felt more “wrestling” than “entertainment,” SmackDown was the show where work-rate and storytelling merged beautifully.