2. Hell in a Cell
Presently the focal point of it’s own annual pay-per-view extravaganza, WWE’s Hell in a Cell started its life in the head of professional wrestling legend Jim Cornette – an excitable, foul-mouthed manager, writer, and promoter over several decades. Cornette drew inspiration for the design of the Hell in a Cell from cage designs he had seen in Memphis and the cage used for WCW’s Wargames match.
At WWE Summerslam 1997, The Undertaker’s WWE Championship Title match was ruined when special guest referee Shawn Michaels interfered in the bout. A simple one-on-one matchup wasn’t enough to satiate The Undertaker’s hunger for revenge. And so the Hell in a Cell superstructure was designed to keep the two men in the ring and everyone else locked outside.
At WWE King of the Ring 1998, Mick Foley (as Mankind) decided to start the third Hell in a Cell match by climbing the exterior of the cage and waiting for The Undertaker on the roof. What happened next set a new precedent for violence and surrounded the Hell in a Cell with an unshakable cloud of dread.
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