Dipping into a palette that included splintered tables, the clang of steel chairs and seething hatred, Dean Ambrose and Seth Rollins painted a violent masterpiece inside the Hell in a Cell.
In a gimmick match that has lost much of its potency in the PG era, those men showed just how to maximize the steel structure. Their performance gives fans hope that the Hell in a Cell can be the fearsome arena it is intended to be, even within the limits of today's WWE.
It will be the hokey ending that gets many folks talking; capping off a battle with a ghostly hologram will do that.
The focus, though, s...
Get the full article at Bleacher Report - Pro Wrestling
BleacherReport.com is the owner of this article.