Block 2:
Taz says that WWE put The New Day and The Usos in a tough spot by having them go out first for their Hell in A Cell match. Regardless, all four men delivered and he thought the match was fantastic. He thought that these guys came up with some very fresh, creative looking spots, and the physicality of the match was something unlike most of WWE’s current programming.
He points out that it’s also very tough for talents to work in Hell in A Cell matches without being able to bleed. Taz knows that the performers have no problem ‘getting colour’ if they’re asked to do so, but WWE is in no position to promote that type of thing nowadays. WWE is a publicly traded company with advertisers who market toward children, and blood is something that WWE has really avoided over the last decade.
Taz feels that last night’s leap from the top of the cell was Shane McMahon’s last big bump. McMahon came back to his family’s business two years ago, and Taz thinks he wanted to prove to himself that he could still compete in the ring. McMahon is still a competitor at heart and he has certainly showed us all that he still has what it takes to entertain the WWE Universe.