#2. A win against The Undertaker doesn't mean as much anymore
![Does a win against The Undertaker even mean anything anymore?](https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=190 190w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=720 720w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=640 640w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=1045 1045w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=1200 1200w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=1460 1460w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg?w=1600 1600w, https://statico.sportskeeda.com/editor/2020/11/07f56-16059320318287-800.jpg 1920w)
If The Undertaker were to come out of retirement, what would be the point of it? What does Undertaker have left to conquer in the wrestling industry that constitutes him coming out of retirement for one more match? Furthermore, doesn't that make his retirement at WrestleMania 36 meaningless?
Now, some will say that The Undertaker working a program with The Fiend would be worth The Deadman coming out of retirement, but would it really? What does The Fiend really gain against an Undertaker that can barely prop himself up anymore and just had the curtain pulled back on his character?
In the end, a win against The Undertaker doesn't mean what it used to, and it's not going to help The Fiend. What would help The Fiend, however, is if The Deadman could do a segment with Wyatt's new character, and give his seal of approval. This would do wonders for The Fiend's career and wouldn't hurt The Undertaker's legacy.