10 Defences Of Horrible Wrestling Moments

10. John Cena Going Over The Nexus

At SummerSlam 2010, John Cena, one minute and 30 seconds after taking a DDT onto exposed concrete, won a handicap match within a match. He steamrolled over Justin Gabriel and Wade Barrett so definitively that their careers all but ended there and then.

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It was excruciating watching that version of John Cena every week in real time. WWE, meanwhile, was both incompetent at and apathetic about creating new stars. The finish to the SummerSlam 2010 main event was dire on principle, and wasn't exactly a good idea, but realistically, how many great, promising careers were truly ruined?

Wade Barrett had something - presence, confidence - but was he so great that this one finish stigmatised him as a loser forever? Or was he just not quite "it" as a main event-level talent?

Darren Young has done magnificently well to reinvent himself, but a superstar? No. David Otunga and Michael Tarver were actively bad. Heath Slater was at least an amusing, knowing geek. Justin Gabriel was fun for that company in that era, but as a high-flier was lapped several times over throughout the 2010s. Skip Sheffield had a go as Ryback in 2012, but he most certainly benefitted from there being so few other options to get behind.

The Nexus weren't a group of future megastars; even at the time, it was a rare victory for hide-the-negatives booking. And, for all his many well-earned faults, it's not out of the realms of possibility that Vince McMahon did not in fact view Justin Gabriel as the next Stone Cold Steve Austin.

They were a Monster Of The Week-calibre opponent for a man who was the hero to the most important members of the demo.

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