10 Step Guide To Surviving A Hell In A Cell Match

3. Make Sure Your Opponent Really Is Finished

Let's assume you've taken all of our advice so far. You've avoided the conquering Triple H, told your dad to stay at home, and taken care of any grudges which might come back to haunt you. You've hit your finisher and your opponent is motionless on the canvas. You should make a cover, right? Absolutely not. Pay Per Views seem to grant their participants with magical powers of resilience far beyond their usual capabilities, particularly if they're babyfaces or competing in a match with a special stipulation. Hell in a Cell is the king of such stipulations. Rarely will three finishers be enough to see match to its conclusion, let alone one. To win the match, wrestlers must get inventive. Weapons, interfering allies, and the use of the cage itself can all be brought into the mix to try and wear down an opponent. And even then it may not be enough. In what is widely regarded as one of the best Cell matches ever, Triple H displayed his fantastic storytelling ability at No Way Out 2000. Having just backdropped Mick Foley from the top of the cell - through a steel roof panel - all the way to the mat below, he seemed to have the match won. But the Game wasn't taking anything for granted, brilliantly prodding at Foley with his toe until he was absolutely certain his opponent was out for the count. He still decided to hit the pedigree anyway. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9NSEgDPL-E
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