CM Punk: 10 Ways He Could Still Appear At WrestleMania 30

3. Unfinished Business

The Undertaker and Brock Lesnar are going toe-to-toe in one of the most physical contests in the Deadman's WrestleMania career. Yes, he's been down before, but he's never faced a tank like Brock €“ a man who can absorb everything 'Taker dishes out, then fire back with several good shots of his own. Still, Undertaker doesn't fold; he stays in the fight and keeps alert €“ and when Brock mounts him in the corner to deliver punches, Undertaker seizes the opportunity and hits a Last Ride powerbomb. 'Taker follows up with the cover... but Paul Heyman pulls the referee out of the ring and slugs him before he can register the three. A furious Undertaker shoots Heyman a look that terrifies the portly manager, then leaves the ring and gives chase. Heyman circles the ring and slides in on the other side, but when Undertaker follows him back in, Brock levels him with a clothesline. Heyman regains his bearings, then rolls out of the ring. He slides a chair to his charge, who wallops Undertaker across the back with it. Heyman re-enters the ring and shouts at Undertaker as Brock sets him up for the F5. Before he can deliver the move, though, the opening bars of "Cult of Personality" blare over the loudspeaker! Heyman and Lesnar both stare in disbelief as "The Best in the World" sprints down the aisle, chair in hand! Punk enters the ring and jams the chair into the ribs of Lesnar, who drops Undertaker. He then slams the chair over Brock's back, bending the steel. With the beast subdued, Punk turns his attention to the sniveling, sobbing Paul Heyman. He flashes a shark-like smile at Heyman, then hoists him on his shoulders and nails him with the GTS. Punk steps out of the ring as Undertaker sits up, the crowd delighted. Undertaker catches a stumbling Lesnar and Tombstones him into the mat. Punk rouses the referee and tosses him back in the ring, allowing him to make the three count. Not only does the streak live, but it claims another soul.
Contributor
Contributor

Scott Fried is a Slammy Award-winning* writer living and working in New York City. He has been following/writing about professional wrestling for many years and is a graduate of Lance Storm's Storm Wrestling Academy. Follow him on Twitter at https://twitter.com/scottfried. *Best Crowd of the Year, 2013