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JBL recalls the brutality of the oldest WWE elimination room matches

JBL recalls the brutality of the oldest WWE elimination room matches

During a recent appearance on the podcast “something to fight with”, JBL discussed the elimination room being the most dangerous match in WWE.

You can consult some important aspects on the podcast below:

On the elimination room being the most dangerous match: “No doubt about it. When they built it for the first time, there was nothing on that structure that would not hurt. I mean, nothing. It seemed like a great idea. I don’t know if – I think Jerihon may have come up with the original idea. I’m not sure. Anyway, the initial idea was nothing about it that seemed safe. Everything on that thing hurt and nothing made noise. It’s the worst of all. You hit a Freaking floor, it’s just a noise. No noise but almost breaks your back.

“It was like the match of the prison in Punjabi. When they first built that thing, it seemed bamboo, but it was solid steel. When you hit that thing, it hurt. Anything that touched this has hurt. But it seemed false. So, when you hit it, it is the worst of all. You fight in hell and the crowd does not react because it doesn’t look real. That was the room when it first started. Since then they have done much better. I was glad I was in one, but I didn’t want to be in two. “

On Aew Grand Slam: Australia: “Yes, you know, I got the socializing things. You know, I rarely follow the payment on complete visions or full shows. Catch a lot of social clips and that’s how I keep up with it. It seemed like it was a wonderful show. I know they are disappointed because they went from a stages to an arena, but you still sell something big. And you still put a lot of people there.

They went with less matches, which I think is essential. You know, I was surprised by WWE, you know, how few matches they have and work. You leave these guys to tell magnificent stories for 20 to 30 minutes. And maybe from here, from where he raises it, instead of giving him everything. “