WWE And TNA: 7 Worst Moments Of The Week (Nov 1)

By Andrew Soucek /

1. Ignored Domination

John Cena has lost 11 one-on-one matches cleanly since 2005. Only one person has beat him faster than Del Rio did at Hell in a Cell. That man? The Great Khali. But, hey, let€™s forget about that one, and chalk it up to Vince McMahon suffering a night of temporary insanity (which seems to be happening more and more often these days). As fans know, Cena rarely loses, and when he does, it takes a long time to put him away. Think back to his battles with The Rock and Randy Orton. Even Kevin Owens needed 20 minutes to pin him at Elimination Chamber earlier this year. Del Rio did it in seven minutes. If WWE treated their product more sports-like, instead of campy comedy, that would have been a monumental achievement. Imagine someone putting Ronda Rousey away in 30 seconds, or Floyd Mayweather in three rounds. It would be talked about as one of the great achievements in their respective sports in recent memory. In WWE, it€™s just a thing. Not a thing to talk about or be celebrated, or discussed. No, just a thing. It can be moved away from as soon as possible. When WWE does something big like a Cena loss, they should make it mean something. The announcers didn€™t bother to put over what a huge, dominant win this was. Del Rio didn€™t brag about how easily he pinned the face of the company for the past decade. Cena just didn€™t show up, and Del Rio was tossed into the ring to fill up some TV time. Another waste on WWEs part. The company doesn't know how to take advantage of anything they do. They don't know how to create stars. And yet, they stumble their way into making more money. But imagine how much more they could make if the product wasn€™t so bad. TIme to kick out.