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3 WWE matches that were difficult to watch

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This match was not for the faint-hearted

Wrestling is a ghoulish, stomach-beating business in which the wrestlers are terribly abused as "independent contractors," demise is trivialized for storylines, and every wrestler is given homage after their death in real life, yet the viciousness depicted in its kayfabe world isn't normally part of this. 

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Outwith the rest of the bunch of deathmatch advancements, video nasties aren't the game's objective. Matches are aligned to produce dramatization and incite a range of feelings from its groups of onlookers.

Stunned, wonderment, and at times, aversion, are all pieces of this, however, matches shouldn't be so gruesome that it leaves the audience tuning out from it and worse, developing a cringe feeling about the content.

Be that as it may, it happens. A game that consistently stretches the limits so far we definitely traverse to the wrong side of the line occasionally, and whether purposely or something else, the matches inside left watchers jumping.

We look at three such bouts that happened when PG was probably something denoted with cartoons jumping here and there.

But that's not just it, blood and violence is something attributed to wrestling when the bout was actually amazing, chairs here and there simply makes no sense.


#1 Eddie Guerrero vs. JBL (Judgment Day 2004)

Despite the fact that phlebotomy has to a great extent gone in the method for the dodo in WWE's PG time, drawing shading remains a viable in-coordinate instrument, adding spoons of awful fierceness to any warmed session, regardless of whether purposeful or something else. 

Eddie Guerrero, the thoughtful babyface legend, was hit by a steel seat, at that point bladed as he hit the deck. Blood gushed from the injury.

In his scramble, Guerrero had cut too profound, got a corridor, and put forward a dark red downpour that wouldn't be stemmed until Latino Heat, JBL, and their condition was covered in claret. 

For the individuals who could stomach them, the visuals were convincing. Layfield and Guerrero's fight turned into a bloodbath, including an additional layer of disdain to what had just been a stormy competition, amidst which JBL had probably given Eddie's mom a heart assault through his jokes.

All things considered, it was marginal stomach-beating at focuses. Seeing blood actually spurting from Guerrero's skull will remain with you perpetually.

Obviously, Eddie went into stun after the match. Reasonable play to him for working through it, however.

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