The main card of the PPV started with a good video package building up the Orton vs Cena rematch and the Rumble. It was too little too late in the case of Cena and Orton, but it was a well-produced video nonetheless. We got the big pyro and first out was Daniel Bryan to a thunderous ovation. Right away the YES and Daniel Bryan chants got in full swing, before Bray Wyatt came out. The action from the get go was strong. Bryan nailed a tope to the outside on Luke Harper before the ref ordered both Harper and Rowan to the back. What a relief. We now had two solid wrestlers going at it one on one. The action was hard hitting back and forth, and you could tell both guys were really enjoying themselves Wyatt in particular was really into it, with all his mannerisms and character work. The action built. Wyatt went for the Sister Abigail only for Bryan to roll it into a schoolboy. The coolest spot of the match was undoubtedly Bryan doing a tope to the outside, only to be caught by Wyatt who nailed the Sister Abigail into the barricade. Ouch. Wyatt then pushed Bryan back into the ring, nailed another finisher, and covered for the clean win. Winner: Bray WyattAnalysis: 89% This was a fantastic one-on-one contest that went over 20 minutes. It wouldn't surprise me if we are still talking about this one at the end of the year as one of 2014's best matches it was that good. Both men were out to prove a point, with impeccable timing and delivery of their varied athletic skillset. Wyatt sometimes went into overkill with his mannerisms, but it didn't detract from the spectacle. The tope to the outside into the Sister Abigail barricade spot was brutal. A flying swinging DDT from Bryan to Wyatt on the outside also stood out. Brilliant. Loud chants of "this is awesome" spelt out just how good this one was. The problem for many people will be the result. Bryan lost again on PPV, this time clean. It makes for possibly the most unusual treatment of the most over star in years. You would have thought this result was done to elevate Wyatt for a Cena feud, with Bryan getting his momentum back in the Rumble later. Only half of that theory would prove true, sadly.