10 Awesome Wrestling Moves WWE Wrestlers Are Secretly Sitting On
1. AJ Styles - Hollow Point
A new finisher developed by necessity rather than desire, AJ Styles' long-awaited return to the independent scene in 2014 meant that a whole new generation of talent was going to be on the receiving end of the Styles Clash. The only problem here, was that some of them weren't taking it properly.
The short version of this is that when suspended upside down, the natural instinct for wrestlers (and I mean, well, anyone) would be to tuck your head into your chest, to mitigate the impending impact on your back and shoulders. However, in the Styles Clash, you're about to be dropped in the opposite direction, meaning that you need to tilt your head the other way. Anyone getting mixed up was getting their neck crunched on impact, and it was leading to a string of injuries.
So he devised a simple solution, just dropping them on their head in some sort of inverted tombstone piledriver. Dubbed The Hollow Point, it looked great, worked safer, and ended up as a staple part of his moveset.
Sadly WWE hates piledrivers, so it's been on a banned list during his time in the company. However, they do make exceptions for performers who can execute them safely - and, also, The Undertaker - so don't rule out seeing it again somewhere down the line.