10 Wrestlers Who Had No Business Being Inside Hell In A Cell
4. Rikishi
If you blinked, you likely missed Rikishi's main event run in 2000. In a strange turn of events, he was revealed to be the one who ran over Stone Cold Steve Austin with his car one year earlier, but the problem was that next to no one took him seriously as a main event threat. WWE gave him new music and a new attitude, but it didn't change people's perception of him as a dancing fool. Although his feud with Stone Cold flopped miserably, he was relevant long enough to be included in the first and only six-man Hell in a Cell match at the Armageddon pay-per-view. The match itself was actually entertaining as all six competitors brought their A-game and delivered strong performances. Even Rikishi fared well in the bout, but the only moment he'll be remembered for will be when he was tossed off the top off the cell onto a truck parked on the outside. But that was where the buck stopped with Rikishi inside Hell in a Cell. He was extremely out of place among the legendary likes of Stone Cold, The Rock, Triple H, The Undertaker and Kurt Angle. It was a "who's who" cast of competitors in that iconic Cell match, except for Rikishi, that is.
Since 2008, Graham has been a diehard pro wrestling fan and, in 2010, he combined his passions for WWE and writing when he joined Bleacher Report. Equipped with a master's in journalism, Graham has contributed to WhatCulture, FanSided's Daily DDT, Sports Betting Dime, and GateHouse Media. Along the way, he has conducted interviews with wrestling superstars like Chris Jericho, Edge, Goldberg, Christian, Diamond Dallas Page, Jim Ross, Adam Cole, Tessa Blanchard, Ryback, and Nick Aldis among others.