#2 The Fiend vs The Undertaker
Despite WrestleMania 30 marking the end of The Undertaker's legendary WrestleMania streak at the hands of Brock Lesnar, that didn't stop The Deadman from returning to WrestleMania 31 to face The Fiend Bray Wyatt.
Bray Wyatt was touting himself as "the new face of fear" and claiming that he will lay The Undertaker to rest and inherit the mantle of being the dominant supernatural force in WWE.
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Instead, in an underwhelming clash, Wyatt became the next notch in Taker's impressive record at 22-1. If the Undertaker had some kind of stakes in the match, like his career, then the loss wouldn't have been so harmful but there was nothing to be gained by Undertaker winning the contest.
This wasn't the final interaction between the characters either, with Bray Wyatt and Luke Harper taking on the Brothers of Destruction, Undertaker and his brother Kane, at Survivor Series 2015.
He would lose once more at the event and that would be the conclusion to their rivalry. It can't be expected for Bray Wyatt to have gone over The Undertaker on both occasions, especially since the Survivor Series marked the 25th anniversary of the Deadman.
But at the same time, losing on both occasions with little to redeem him made it clear how the company saw Wyatt. The Fiend vs Undertaker would have served as an excellent way of transferring the heat of Undertaker to Wyatt on the former's way out of wrestling. The Fiend could have been the necessary evil to slay the Undertaker and rid Wyatt of one of his most damaging defeats.
#1 The Fiend vs Mr McMahon
During the Firefly Funhouse era of Bray Wyatt, we were treated to several references to the harmful booking and treatment of Wyatt throughout his WWE run. One name that was routinely referenced was none other than Mr McMahon, the owner and CEO of WWE.
Mr McMahon is the on-screen persona of the wrestling promoter, made famous by the Montreal Screwjob and his feud with Steve Austin throughout the Attitude Era.
When all is said and done, the person who has damaged Wyatt the most throughout his career is McMahon. His booking of Wyatt, where he was only ever allowed momentum when he had to give someone else the rub was disappointing to a lot of fans.
Wyatt was perpetually treated like a yo-yo and always felt like he had a ceiling held over his progress. That would serve as the central component to a feud between The Fiend and the boss.
The rise of cinematic matches would have served as the perfect delivery mechanism for this feud, as it goes without saying someone of McMahon's age should not be expected to compete in a physical match.
Much like what the Firefly Funhouse Match did with John Cena, The Fiend vs Mr McMahon could be a cinematic journey through his indiscretions both in the past and towards Wyatt.
WWE has a history of being self-aware and playing to their mistakes, as seen when Paul Heyman ripped into McMahon during the Invasion storyline. The Fiend vs Mr McMahon in a Firefly Funhouse Match would have been the perfect interaction for The Fiend character.
Addressing the mis-steps taken previously and putting Mr McMahon's character on trial with The Fiend as judge, jury and executioner.