10 Things WWE Got Wrong At Hell In A Cell 2014

An above average PPV, but that doesn't mean everything went how it should have...

The 2014 edition of the Hell In A Cell pay per view has come and went. It took place in Dallas, Texas, and the event had the standard eight matches including four title matches and two matches within the Hell In A Cell structure. In the pre-show leading up to the pay per view, we had your usual panel of Renee Young, Booker T, and Alex Riley. The special guest this month was a great one in Paul Heyman. Anytime you can get analysis and insight from Heyman on what is going on outside of Brock Lesnar is a treat. You also have to figure that he wanted a front row seat for the John Cena v. Randy Orton match as the winner will be the #1 Contender for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. The four titles that were up for grabs at Hell In A Cell were the United States, Intercontinental, Tag Team and Divas Championships. All four champions (Sheamus, Dolph Ziggler, Gold & Stardust and AJ Lee) all retained, and that was not a bad thing. In recent history, there has been way too many title changes and not enough long title runs. Save a title change or two for the bigger show in Survivor Series next month or the Royal Rumble In January. The two Hell In A Cell Matches were #29 and #30 in the history of the match, and overall they did not disappoint. The Bella Twins get a pay per view match against each other, and another wrestler tried to defend our country in The Big Show against Rusev. Overall the pay per view was solid. It was definitely an above-average pay per view with some great moments such as the synchronized table crashing of Dean Ambrose and Seth Rollins, the return of Bray Wyatt, great pacing in a near-half hour match between John Cena and Randy Orton, and yet another great tag team title match with Gold & Stardust v. The Usos. But with the good comes the bad, and this article is going to take a look at ten things the WWE did wrong at this past Sunday's Hell In A Cell pay per view.
Contributor
Contributor

Jeremy Bennett has been a wrestling fan since he was a Little Stinger watching Saturdays at 5:05 at his Grandma's house. His past, present, and future favorites in the business are Ric Flair / Dean Ambrose / Finn Balor. He is a co-owner of the gaming website TheGamingTailgate.com. You can also find him on Twitter - @JBHuskers