#7 Fastlane
Fastlane may be the forgotten hit of 2019. This year saw a vast improvement from previous versions of the event, which has recently been the last PPV on the road to WrestleMania. There were multi-man matches galore, as the likes of Samoa Joe, Aleister Black, Ricochet, Andrade, and The Revival among others showcased their skills. Daniel Bryan defended his WWE Championship against Kevin Owens and Mustafa Ali in an incredible triple threat match before KofiMania would take storm.
The New Day member would face The Bar in a handicap match at the event, after being tricked by Vince McMahon into thinking he was added to the WWE Title match. Despite the dominance of the heels on the show, Fastlane ended with a feel-good moment. The Shield reunited once to take on the heavyweight squad of Baron Corbin, Bobby Lashley and Drew McIntyre. It would be their final televised match as a 3-person tandem, with emotions running high within modern WWE fans.
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Roman Reigns returning after a battle with leukaemia as well as Dean Ambrose leaving WWE in a couple of months, made this a truly special moment.
#6 Money In The Bank
The first pay-per-view after WrestleMania 35 was a good show. The Miz lost to Shane McMahon once again, Roman Reigns squashed Elias within seconds and Rey Mysterio vs. Samoa Joe had to end quickly following a supposed broken nose for Joe, causing to have a short PPV match for the second show in a row (Joe beat Mysterio in one minute at WrestleMania). One of the more compelling stories of the night was Becky Lynch's back-to-back title defenses against Lacey Evans and Charlotte Flair.
The Man retained the RAW Women's Championship but fell to the Queen and lost the SmackDown Women's Championship. Sadly for Charlotte, she would end up losing her newly-won title to Ms. Money in the Bank, Bayley, just moments after defeating Lynch. The night's main events, though, were what impressed the most. Seth Rollins and AJ Styles brought the house down with an epic encounter for the Universal Championship, while Brock Lesnar crashed what may have been the greatest Money in the Bank Ladder Match of all time. Some of the spots in the match were insane, particularly involving Andrade and Finn Balor.
Money in the Bank was living proof that mediocre TV does not lead to bad pay-per-views, as the Wildcard Rule began a couple of weeks before this show.