When wrestling historians look back at this generation of Superstars and try to decipher who was used correctly, who was not and who simply was screwed over by booking on a regular basis, they will use a dark red pen to circle Dolph Ziggler's name. The most gifted and giving Superstar on the roster, Ziggler has built a reputation for himself as a show stealing performer. On any given night, he is capable of delivering the best match on the show. The spots he devises, the transitions and counters he thinks up, are some of the best in the industry. He bumps like no other, making the simplest thing such as a punch look absolutely devastating. As a result, his opponent looks ten-times better for having watched Ziggler. Despite having all the tools, including underutilized promo skills, Ziggler finds himself losing matches more often than winning them and putting over guys who have no right succeeding at a level higher than him. One of the best workers of his generation, he has constantly been passed over for pushes or seen said pushes evaporate before they could gain any real traction with the audience. A multiple-time United States and Intercontinental champion, Ziggler built his reputation on the backs of matches with Kofi Kingston, Evan Bourne, Rey Mysterio, Zack Ryder and Alberto Del Rio. His first real main event opportunity came on SmackDown in 2010 when he worked with World Heavyweight champion Edge. He has a documented World title reign that came from that feud but it was merely a plot devise that lasted mere minutes. From there, he wasted away in the midcard once more. In 2013, he enjoyed the greatest moment of his career when he cashed in Money in the Bank and won the World title from Del Rio the night after WrestleMania 29. The crowd responded with great excitement and adoration, finally witnessing one of WWE's hardest worker achieve the prize he so rightfully deserved. A serious concussion suffered at the hands of Jack Swagger would sideline him, however, and he would lose the title in his first defense against Del Rio in June. A series of rematches seemed to indicate that Ziggler would remain in the title picture but that was not the case. After making remarks about top WWE stars during radio shows, none of which were all that controversial or mean spirited, Ziggler was shoved down the card and endured a losing streak to end the year. Since then, he has remained a valuable asset to WWE when it comes to work rate and putting other Superstars over but Ziggler's hard work and determination to be the best has not been backed up by anything resembling good booking. More than any Superstar in WWE today, he has been screwed over by bad booking and backstage politics.