10 Worst WWE Roads To WWE WrestleMania

5. WrestleMania 22

The title picture leading into WrestleMania 22 was muddied by heat of the counterproductive and cheap variety.

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Rey Mysterio won the 2006 Royal Rumble match because Eddie Guerrero died the previous November and WWE, a company as ghoulish as it is successful, wished to honour his memory by having Rey Mysterio inhabit his ghost. This was an almost literal phenomenon; Rey adopted Eddie's mannerisms in an oddly herky-jerky, Weekend At Bernies manner. In isolation, it might have been a touching, if on-the-nose tribute - but Randy Orton was scripted to inform the bereaving Mysterio that his good friend was "in hell". He also said that there was a better chance of Eddie coming back to life than there was of Rey beating him for his World Heavyweight Title. It didn't inspire sympathy for Rey - just unadulterated discomfort.

Meanwhile, over on RAW, Triple H won a tournament to cement his contendership for John Cena's WWE Championship - a prospect he savoured, given that John Cena "happened to not be a very good wrestler". There's lampshading, and there's burying. Triple H, in the early 2000s, was hardly helping the audience to swallow their suspension of disbelief. He did do the job - cleanly, and with conviction - but by that point, the damage had been done. He massaged the smark ego of the Chicago crowd so expertly in the build-up that they jeered Cena en masse.

Triple H was not solely responsible for that polarised crowd dynamic, which became the norm - but he fanned the flames for no discernible reason other than to reassure his own fragile ego.

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