Ranking WWE Judgment Day PPVs - From Worst To Best

1. 2000

Triple H Chris Jericho Judgement Day 2002 HEll in a Cell
WWE.com

The Good

Pretty much all of this was good stuff, as Judgment Day 2000 was one of WWE's finest PPVs during their hottest period. The characters were over, the storylines well thought out and the wrestling great. What's not to love here?

Credit must first go to the main event and Triple H and The Rock, who busted their backsides for sixty minutes in a hugely enjoyable Iron Man match. The great in-ring work was capped off by the return of The Undertaker, now in his American Badass phase.

The night got off to a great start with a red-hot six-man pitting Too Cool & Rikishi against Edge, Christian & Kurt Angle. As far as openers go, this one was pretty much perfect. It was followed up with a technically sound triple threat match pitting European Champion Eddie Guerrero against his Radicalz brethren Dean Malenko and Perry Saturn.

The other radical, Chris Benoit, retained his Intercontinental Title against Chris Jericho in a phenomenal and very stiff Submission Match. These two clashed many times on PPV around this time, but it was always welcome because they always delivered the goods.

Although they weren't quite on the same level as the aforementioned contests, Shane McMahon versus Big Show (Falls Count Anywhere) and the Dudley Boys versus Road Dogg & X-Pac (Table Match) were a lot of fun and served their purpose.

The Bad

Nothing. The show wasn't perfect but it was remarkably consistent.

The Rest

Throughout the night new WWF Hardcore Champion Gerald Brisco tried to escape the show with the title around his waist and was so paranoid that he ended up running away from referees and attacking concession vendors.

Hey, it's funnier than it sounds...

Contributor
Contributor

Student of film. Former professional wrestler. Supporter of Newcastle United. Don't cry for me, I'm already dead...