The main aspect of wrestling is, of course, wrestling. As far as a worker can get on looks, size and charisma alone, he'll never be judged as a great unless he can go in the ring. Cena has been mercilessly mocked for years over his relatively basic, occasionally clumsy style, but it is perhaps the most unfair (and inaccurate) of the various arguments against him. Sure, he's no Ric Flair, but he's no Great Khali either. Given the right opponent and a sense of occasion, Cena is capable of putting on a legitimate classic. Money In The Bank 2011 is the obvious example, but he's also captivated audiences with the help of Edge, Rob Van Dam, Shawn Michaels and more. What he lacks in innovative or technically superior wrestling ability, he more than makes up for with his ability to tell a story. Wrestling is often referred to - strangely euphemistically - as 'storytelling' by its greatest practitioners, and if this is true, there are surely few better than Cena.