One of the most exciting pay per view events in the WWE history; Elimination Chamber will take place by tonight. Since it’s very beginning in 2002, The Elimination Chamber match is one of the destructive match type.
The stuffs of WWE.com recently viewed the top 10 Elimination Chamber matches in the history of WWE;
#10 Batista vs. Big Daddy V vs. The Undertaker vs. Finlay vs. The Great Khali vs. MVP (No Way Out 2008)
Big lugs like The Great Khali rarely get their due, but that’s because the landscape of sports-entertainment has changed in a way that has lessened the impact of giants. When you see a 7-footer week in and week out, your ability to be awed by their stature naturally diminishes. Luckily, the Elimination Chamber Match has a way of putting the fright back in monsters.
That’s why this bout — which featured three superheavyweights in Khali, the 500-pound Big Daddy V and The Undertaker — was such a trip. Sure, it had all the expected “Satan’s Prison” mayhem, with The Deadman chucking MVP off the top of a pod and Ranjin Singh shattering his leg on the concrete floor. However, the real appeal was in all those low-angle shots of towering beasts that made this brawl feel less like a sports-entertainment contest and more like a Godzilla movie. Just epic.
#9 Daniel Bryan vs. Big Show vs. Wade Barrett vs. Cody Rhodes vs. Santino Marella vs. The Great Khali (Elimination Chamber 2012)
Want to see something really weird? Peep the SmackDown Elimination Chamber Match from 2012. It’s like stepping into an alternate WWE Universe for today’s fans: King Barrett was still a commoner; Daniel Bryan was the sniveling World Heavyweight Champion that everybody hated; and Santino Marella, of all Superstars, came within a Cobra’s length of winning the title and facing Sheamus at WrestleMania.
The match offers plenty of excitement even beyond that. Big Show spearing Khali into the ozone plays like a “Pacific Rim” outtake, and the giant punching his way into Bryan’s pod to get at his then-enemy is still one of the most remarkable moments in WWE history. And what about Santino? Just a year and change after nearly winning the Royal Rumble Match, Marella channeled the original Italian Stallion, Rocky Balboa, and nearly went the distance in “Satan’s Prison,” pinning Barrett en route to a final showdown against the champion.
Bryan didn’t think The Milan Miracle had a hope in hell of beating him, and even made a show of toying with the fan favorite (man, he was a jerk back then) before Santino almost roared his way to a match-ending comeback. Alas, he ended up tapping to the LeBell Lock — which was soon rechristened the “YES!” Lock – and Bryan went onto The Show of Shows.
#8 John Cena vs. Sheamus vs. CM Punk vs. Randy Orton vs. John Morrison vs. R-Truth (Elimination Chamber 2011)
John Cena may have emerged from the 2011 Raw Elimination Chamber Match with the opportunity to challenge for the WWE Title at WrestleMania XXVII, but his triumph came at a price. Locked inside the steel structure with then-King Sheamus, CM Punk, Randy Orton, John Morrison and R-Truth, Cena rose above a brutal and potentially career-altering battle.
With Sheamus and Morrison already engaged in combat, Orton entered the fray like a man on fire. Cena entered the match fifth, yet before his pod door could open, Sheamus rushed in and battered The Champ on the inside. Cena weathered the storm and battled his way back into the bout, but when the Viper struck with an RKO on the steel grate, things looked bleak.
The highlight of the bout came as both Sheamus and Morrison climbed to the top of an empty pod. The Guru of Greatness, after dumping Sheamus to the mat, made his way to the very center of the dome before launching himself onto The Celtic Warrior for the three-count. Suffering a knee injury for his continued risk-taking over the course of the match, Morrison would be eliminated after a GTS, leaving Punk and Cena in the middle of the ring. An Attitude Adjustment delivered on the unforgiving steel grate then spelled the end for Punk, not to mention a WrestleMania main event for John Cena.
#7 The Undertaker vs. R-Truth vs. John Morrison vs. Rey Mysterio vs. Chris Jericho vs. CM Punk (Elimination Chamber 2010)
It seemed unfathomable that a Superstar would find a way to actually break into the Elimination Chamber, mid-match, to influence the outcome of a bout. Sure, outside parties had slipped weapons to their friends inside the Chamber before, and Edge once stole Kofi Kingston’s spot in the match before it began. But to actually sneak into the Chamber after the bell rang? Inconceivable! Or, so we thought, until Shawn Michaels appeared from beneath the steel grates to play Sweet Chin Music for The Undertaker in 2010.
Before HBK emerged above ground with Ninja Turtle flair, there was stellar Elimination Chamber action featuring a dynamic cross-section of styles and presided over by the defending World Heavyweight Champion Undertaker, who watched ominously from his pod until he was unleashed as the final entrant. Once The Deadman joined the festivities, only two combatants, John Morrison and Chris Jericho, remained. Ever the wily veteran, Jericho avoided The Phenom like the plague, opting to seek refuge inside a pod, before picking his spot and running The Undertaker through the Lexan glass.
WWE’s Deadman recovered enough to chokeslam Jo-Mo onto the steel floor and pin The Prince of Parkour, giving way to a thrilling exchange where The Undertaker and Jericho each tried to lock in his signature submission hold. The Undertaker eventually delivered a Last Ride, but thanks to the intrusion by HBK, it didn’t matter. Jericho left the Chamber the new World Heavyweight Champion.
#6 Edge vs. Rey Mysterio vs. Kane vs. Big Show vs. Bad News Barrett vs. Drew McIntyre (Elimination Chamber 2011)
The World Heavyweight Championship Elimination Chamber Match in 2011 was the perfect mix of the present and future of WWE colliding inside the hellacious structure. To make it to WrestleMania, World Heavyweight Champion Edge had to survive a battle with Wade Barrett, Rey Mysterio, Kane, Drew McIntyre and Big Show.
Barrett and McIntyre, the two youngest competitors in the bout, would have made that difficult enough. The calculating Brit picked his spots wisely, doing as much damage as possible before slinking away to recover. McIntyre, on the other hand, came into the match in a frenzy. The fiery Scot hurled Mysterio into a pod before brutally tossing Barrett through the Lexan glass.
However, in the end, it was Mysterio and The Rated-R Superstar who were battling for the chance to headline WrestleMania. In an epic struggle that had the WWE Universe on the edge of its seat, Edge recovered from the 619, nailing Mysterio with a Spear as the luchador dove off the top rope to retain his coveted championship.
#5 Jeff Hardy vs. Chris Jericho vs. JBL vs. Shawn Michaels vs. Triple H vs. Umaga (No Way Out 2008)
With a golden opportunity to challenge for the WWE Championship at WrestleMania XXIV hanging in the balance, six WWE Superstars laid everything on the line in one of the most intense, hardest-hitting Elimination Chamber Matches in WWE history at No Way Out 2008. Combining the high-flying, high-risk styles of Chris Jericho, Shawn Michaels and Jeff Hardy with the bruising, overpowering force of Umaga, JBL and Triple H, this free-for-all contest had something for everyone.