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The next match was a New York City Parking Lot Brawl between John Cena and John "Bradshaw" Layfield (JBL). They both performed extreme moves including Cena using JBL's body to smash a car door off its hinges. In a planned spot, JBL set fire to a car with Cena inside. Cena destroyed a car with JBL in it with a forklift.
John "Bradshaw" Layfield (JBL) went on to face John Cena at WrestleMania. [20] [28] On the SmackDown! after No Way Out, Cena and The Big Show defeated JBL and Orlando Jordan. [15] The following week, JBL cut a promo and Cena, and insulted him, while Cena defended his United States title against Jordan. [16]
Shortly after, JBL struck Cena with a steel chair which caused Cena to bleed from his forehead. JBL performed a Clothesline from Hell on Cena, who later performed an FU on JBL. Later in the match, in the ramp area, Cena threw JBL through a television monitor, causing JBL to bleed. JBL quit as Cena prepared to attacked him with an exhaust pipe ...
The first Parking Lot Brawl was between Jerry Lawler and Eddie Gilbert in Memphis, Tennessee in 1988, which was fought all over the arena and its outside parking lot. More well-known examples of a Parking Lot Brawl both involved John Cena, where he faced Eddie Guerrero in 2003 and JBL in 2008. [105]
The first televised match was between John Cena and John "Bradshaw" Layfield (JBL). JBL dominated most of the match, as he began to work on Cena's surgically-repaired right pectoral muscle. Mid-way in the match, Cena attempted a powerbomb, but Cena collapsed and could not execute the move. JBL controlled most of the match, as Cena tried to ...
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JBL lost the WWE Championship to John Cena at WrestleMania 21. [65] Layfield's unbroken nine-month reign was billed as the longest in a decade, lasting 280 days. On the April 28 episode of SmackDown! , JBL defeated Big Show, Booker T, and Kurt Angle in a fatal four-way elimination match to earn a rematch for the WWE Championship, [ 66 ] but ...
"That's a lot of money," she said. "That's more money than I can imagine." But these policies brought a different kind of heartache for Dede Ruel, a retired school psychologist in Illinois.