For any younger fans watching WWE's WrestleMania XIX event on the WWE Network, it may be strange to see The Undertaker taking on both A-Train and The Big Show in a throwaway handicap bout. The original plan was quite different, 'Taker was supposed to be joined by the man writers wanted to portray as his understudy, Nathan Jones. A towering hulk of a man, the Australian behemoth likely caused Vince McMahon's mouth to water upon first seeing him. In many ways, Jones represented everything that the head honcho of the company was looking for, a incredibly tall man who could be molded and shaped into something special by association with a legend such as Undertaker. Sadly, that particular project failed miserably. According to several sources after the fact, Nathan Jones was so unimpressive during training sessions, and when working out the 'Mania tag-team match with his peers, that both The Undertaker and WWE as a whole decided against letting him perform on the grand stage. From there, he'd only show up at 'Mania after the match, and in 2003 as a heel, before leaving the company before the end of that year. Again, why was he rushed onto the main roster if he wasn't prepared? It seems size does really matter sometimes.