10 Big Concerns Heading Into WWE Hell In A Cell 2020

9. A Card Potentially Full Of Last-Minute Additions

Randy Orton Hell in a Cell
WWE.com

Hell In A Cell will see three matches wrestled inside the steel structure and since all of them actually feel worthy of it, it's safe to say they're going to be respectably long bouts. With that in mind, we shouldn't be expecting the card to be full of matches. And yet, it's pretty clear that the next few days (and SmackDown itself) will see at least a few more matches added to the event.

That's fine in theory because we need some normal action to break up the cell matches, but the problem here is the fact that these matches will serve as little more than filler; last-minute additions to pad out a card because creative didn't think about adding them earlier.

The Hell In A Cell match was crafted as a solution to lengthy rivalries between superstars whose hatred for each had boiled over, so it's so incredibly disheartening to see that the PPV named after it will undoubtedly be full of last-minute additions with no planning whatsoever. That right there is the antithesis of what Hell In A Cell is all about.

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Contributor

Michael Patterson is an experienced writer with an affinity for all things film and TV. He may or may not have spent his childhood obsessing over WWE.