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Elimination Chamber

Professional wrestling match type


Professional wrestling match type

The Elimination Chamber is a professional wrestling elimination-based match held in the WWE. The match was created by Triple H, and introduced by Eric Bischoff in November 2002. It features a large chain-linked circular steel structure which encloses the ring. The chamber's floor is platformed over the ringside area which elevates it to ring level. Within the chamber are four inner enclosures outside each ring corner.

Although similar in profile and nature to WWE's original large scale steel-structured match Hell in a Cell, the Elimination Chamber match is a multiple-participant match wherein two participants begin the match in the ring as the remaining four are held within each inner enclosure and are released into the match at five-minute intervals (in the event of a seven-person match, three participants begin, and in the event of a tag-team match, two teams begin for a total of four participants starting). The objective is to eliminate each opponent from the match via pinfall or submission (which usually can only occur in the ring and not on the chamber floor surrounding the ring.) The winner is the last remaining participant (or team) after all others have been eliminated. As in the Hell in a Cell match, there are no disqualifications or count-outs during an elimination chamber match. The original structure was 16 ft high, 36 ft in diameter, weighed over 10 ST, and comprised 2 mi and 6 ST of chain.

Before the establishment of the yearly Elimination Chamber pay-per-view (PPV) in 2010, the match was contested at other PPV events. There have been 36 Elimination Chamber matches in WWE since the concept's inception in November 2002. Every Elimination Chamber match has had a stipulation that the winner would win a championship or a future match for a championship (usually at WrestleMania, though one time the championship match occurred immediately after the Elimination Chamber match).

History

Origin

Before the introduction of the Elimination Chamber match, WWE only promoted two matches in a caged environment, namely the steel cage and Hell in a Cell matches. The steel cage was the first type of cage-based match in professional wrestling and consisted of four fenced walls of steel surrounding the ring apron while the Hell in a Cell was a taller roofed version that surrounded the ring and ringside area on the ground rather than the apron. In 2002, WWE announced the creation of the Elimination Chamber, a match that combined elements of WWE's Hell in a Cell matches, Royal Rumble match, Survivor Series match, and World Championship Wrestling's (WCW) WarGames matches, such as the countdown timer and time intervals from the Royal Rumble and War Games matches, the large enclosed cage format of both Hell in a Cell and WarGames and the elimination process from the Survivor Series contest and the Royal Rumble.

Brand and pay-per-view designation

To exploit additional on-screen talent after buying World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in March 2001, the following year WWE began a brand extension that divided the roster between the two brands of WWE, namely Raw and SmackDown. Former WCW President and then Raw General Manager Eric Bischoff formally announced the creation of the chamber during the October 21 episode of Raw and scheduled the match to feature participants from the Raw brand roster at the Survivor Series in November 2002. The match was exclusive to the Raw brand for the first four matches and at joint-branded pay-per-view events, but upon the creation of the ECW brand in 2006 the match was instead promoted for the newly created brand at December to Dismember. Beginning in 2008, the match became exclusive to the No Way Out event and two Elimination Chamber matches were featured annually for two years among the three brands. In 2010, WWE replaced their No Way Out event with the self-titled Elimination Chamber, a new event which continued the tradition of its predecessor. From 2008 to 2014, the match had been featured in February events only. An Elimination Chamber event took place on May 31, 2015 exclusively on the WWE Network. After the second brand extension in 2016, it was announced that the brands would return to having separate events. In late 2016, it was announced that Elimination Chamber would return as a SmackDown-exclusive event in February 2017, but it switched to being Raw-exclusive in February 2018, which was the last brand-exclusive Elimination Chamber event, as following WrestleMania 34 that year, brand-exclusive pay-per-views were discontinued.

Injuries

Triple H suffered an injury during the 2002 Survivor Series match with swelling on the inside of his throat which put pressure on his esophagus and trachea. This was caused after Rob Van Dam performed the Five Star Frog Splash off the top of one of the chambers. Triple H also expressed concern that he might have broken his wrist and noted anything could have caused it. Sheamus reportedly suffered a concussion during the Raw Elimination Chamber match in 2010. Also in 2010, The Undertaker was involved in a pyrotechnics accident during his ring entrance. He was temporarily engulfed in flames on three occasions when the pyrotechnics were mistimed and his jacket briefly caught on fire. He suffered first and second-degree burns to his neck and chest and according to a WWE spokesperson the injury "looked like a bad sunburn". He was only allowed to participate in the match after being cleared by a ringside doctor and was given bottles of water throughout the match to douse himself with to alleviate the discomfort. Acknowledging the concern, WWE now had padded the steel floor of the chamber.

Match

Rules

The Elimination Chamber match is a variation of elimination-based matches which draws elements from steel cage and Hell in a Cell matches in that the wrestling ring is surrounded by a large steel-fenced cage supported by girders. Originally, its design was a circular-like chain-linked structure, but since 2017 it is now square and encloses the ring. Its floor is platformed over the ringside area around the ring which elevates and levels it with the ring mat. Within the Elimination Chamber, four enclosures, referred to as inner chambers or pods, are encased in plexiglass and face the outside of each ring post. The match is contested by six or seven participants: two or three starting in the ring, while the other four are held within each inner chamber. The Elimination Chamber in February 2018 featured a seven-man chamber match in which three participants began. At regular intervals, one of the four participants within an inner chamber enters the match. This continues until all four have been released. The entrance intervals are typically five minutes, though four and three minute gaps have also been used.

The objective of the match is to eliminate each opponent from the match by scoring a pinfall or a submission. These can occur in the ring or on the chamber's elevated floor, but starting with the 2010 event all pinfalls and submissions must take place within the ring. Disqualifications and count-outs do not apply in the process of elimination. The winner of the match is the last remaining participant after all others have been eliminated (or after all members of the opposing tag team are eliminated in either the tag team matches or the twelve-on-twelve tornado tag team elimination matches). The same rules apply when the match involves six tag teams, where two teams start in the ring and a new team leaves the pod and enters the ring at regular intervals.

Structure

According to a WWE Magazine article in 2009 by WWE's production designer Jason Robinson, who co-designed the structure, several designs for the Elimination Chamber were considered. The structure was manufactured in Colorado Springs, Colorado and took six to eight weeks to make from design blueprints. It cost US$ 250,000 to construct.

The structure is made of black-painted steel with an outer structure of 16 frames, each weighing 300 lb. The chamber is 16 ft high and 36 ft in diameter and weighs a total of 16 ST, 10 of which consists of steel. Each inner chamber consists of three large steel framed sheets of plexiglass, costing US$225 per sheet. The chains that surround the chamber stretch 2 mi long and weigh 6 ST.

A 50 ft flatbed truck is needed to transport the chamber. Assembly in the arena takes eight hours to complete and eight motors are used to suspend the structure over the ring before each event. When not in use, the structure is stored at a dock in Newark, New Jersey. Unlike standard steel cage matches and Hell in a Cell matches, Elimination Chamber matches cannot be held at several arenas due to the structure's massive size and weight, similar to how WarGames matches could only be held at certain arenas. This would play a factor in WWE dropping the annual Elimination Chamber event.

In 2017, the Elimination Chamber event returned (2017's event was SmackDown-exclusive while 2018's was Raw-exclusive). In addition, the chamber structure was redesigned, becoming square instead of circular. The pods were also changed from circular to square and feature sliding doors that referees slide open from outside the chamber. At the top of the chamber at its center which is now 26 ft tall is a large cutout of the WWE logo. The steel grates between the ring and the cage were also replaced with padding. LED lights also line the corners of the structure. The redesign was for practical purposes due to certain venues only being able to house the previous structure, allowing most venues to host the Chamber.

Variations

The fifth match, held by the ECW brand at December to Dismember, was a slight variation called the Extreme Elimination Chamber. In this variation, each chamber had one of four weapons for the competitors locked inside to hold on to. When each competitor's chamber opened, their weapon entered the match with them. The four weapons used in the match were a crowbar, a table, a steel folding chair, and a barbed wire-wrapped baseball bat.

The 2015 Elimination Chamber event saw another slight variation of the match, namely the tag team chamber match. Both team members were inside of their respective pods, for a total of six tag teams in the match. Two teams, totaling four individual participants, started the match. This match was for the WWE Tag Team Championship. This variation was repeated in 2019, but for women and to determine the inaugural holders of the WWE Women's Tag Team Championship. Another tag team chamber match happened in 2020 for the WWE SmackDown Tag Team Championship.

The 2018 Elimination Chamber featured the first seven-man chamber match. Due to the extra person, three competitors started the match instead of two. The 2018 event also featured the first women's chamber match, but there were no variations in the rules.

Interference

Despite the structure, interference has become common inside the Elimination Chamber. At New Year's Revolution in January 2005, Ric Flair distracted guest referee Shawn Michaels allowing Batista (who had been eliminated) to attack Randy Orton so Triple H could win the match. At No Way Out in February 2009, Edge attacked Kofi Kingston during his entrance and locked himself in one of the pods becoming a participant in the match for the World Heavyweight Championship after losing the WWE Championship earlier in the night. At Elimination Chamber in February 2010, Cody Rhodes passed Ted DiBiase Jr. a metal pipe which he used to eliminate Randy Orton in the match for the WWE Championship. Later in the night, Shawn Michaels broke into the chamber to cost The Undertaker his World Heavyweight Championship to Chris Jericho. At the Elimination Chamber event in February 2013, Mark Henry took out the remaining participants in the chamber for a World Heavyweight Championship match at WrestleMania 29 after being eliminated until SmackDown General Manager Booker T broke it up. At the Elimination Chamber for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship in February 2014, The Wyatt Family interfered by attacking John Cena, leading to his eventual elimination by Randy Orton. Kane would then come out to help escort The Wyatt Family out of the chamber, but would then interfere to cost Daniel Bryan the match to Orton. At the Elimination Chamber event in February 2023, Logan Paul interfered by sneaking into the chamber and attacking Seth "Freakin" Rollins, which subsequently allowed Austin Theory to retain the WWE United States Championship.

Match history

The Elimination Chamber debuted at WWE's event Survivor Series at Madison Square Garden in November 2002. Since the inaugural match, there have been 35 other matches (36 overall) as of Elimination Chamber in March 2025. The Raw brand has been featured the most with 21 matches, including six joint-branded matches with SmackDown. ECW has been featured in two matches, including its joint-branded match with SmackDown. The SmackDown brand has been featured in 14 matches, including the joint-branded matches with both ECW and Raw. The Elimination Chamber event has featured more Elimination Chamber matches than any other WWE pay-per-view event, with 27 matches being held. Triple H and John Cena have the most victories with 4. Randy Orton holds the distinction of being involved in the most Elimination Chamber matches to date with 9. Chris Jericho has eliminated the most wrestlers with 10. Braun Strowman and Shayna Baszler have the most eliminations in a single Elimination Chamber match (5); Baszler is also the only winner to eliminate all other opponents in a single match (Strowman's five eliminations occurred during the seven-man Chamber match).

The majority of matches have been contested for a top-tier championship with the WWE Championship (once as the WWE World Heavyweight Championship) being contested for the most in nine matches. The original World Heavyweight Championship was contested the second-most in seven matches, while the ECW World Championship, WWE Tag Team Championship, SmackDown Tag Team Championship, Intercontinental Championship, Raw Women's Championship, and United States Championship were contested in one match each. Twelve matches (two in 2008, one in 2011, 2013, 2018, 2020, 2022, and 2023, two in 2024, and two in 2025) have awarded the winners the number-one contendership for the WWE Championship, original World Heavyweight Championship, WWE Universal Championship, Raw Women's Championship, current World Heavyweight Championship, and Women's World Championship, respectively, at those years' WrestleMania; in 2021, SmackDown's Chamber match awarded the winner the number-one contendership for the Universal Championship that same night, which happened immediately after the Chamber match itself.

The Elimination Chamber match has been contested only in indoor arenas in the United States, twice in Canada and once each in Puerto Rico and Saudi Arabia, with the 2024 event in Australia being the first to be held in an outdoor venue. From 2008 to 2014, the match had been featured in February pay-per-view events only. An Elimination Chamber pay-per-view event took place on May 31, 2015, exclusively on the WWE Network and would also mark the first time the Chamber was used for a match that was not for a world championship or a future world championship match (although it would include the first ever tag team Elimination Chamber match). The Elimination Chamber in February 2018 featured the first seven-man Elimination Chamber match as well as the first Elimination Chamber match for women with the Raw Women's Championship contested. The Elimination Chamber in February 2019 featured a tag team Elimination Chamber match, the second overall tag team chamber match, but this time for women to determine the inaugural holders of the WWE Women's Tag Team Championship.

List of Elimination Chamber matches

Raw brandSmackDown brandNXT brandECW brand
No.EventDateWinnerOther participantsWrestlerPrize(c) – the champion heading into the match
Survivor SeriesWorld Heavyweight ChampionshipTriple H (c), Booker T, Chris Jericho, Kane, Rob Van Dam
SummerSlam(c)World Heavyweight ChampionshipChris Jericho, Goldberg, Kevin Nash, Randy Orton, Shawn Michaels
New Year's RevolutionVacant World Heavyweight ChampionshipBatista, Chris Benoit, Chris Jericho, Edge, Randy Orton
New Year's Revolution(c)WWE ChampionshipCarlito, Chris Masters, Kane, Kurt Angle, Shawn Michaels
December to DismemberECW World ChampionshipBig Show (c), CM Punk, Hardcore Holly, Rob Van Dam, Test
No Way OutWorld Heavyweight Championship match at WrestleMania XXIVBatista, Finlay, The Great Khali, MVP
Big Daddy V
WWE Championship match at WrestleMania XXIVChris Jericho, JBL, Jeff Hardy, Shawn Michaels, Umaga
No Way OutWWE ChampionshipEdge (c), Big Show, Jeff Hardy, The Undertaker, Vladimir Kozlov
{{sortnameEdgedab=wrestler}}World Heavyweight ChampionshipJohn Cena (c), Chris Jericho Kane, Mike Knox, Rey Mysterio
Elimination ChamberWWE ChampionshipSheamus (c), Kofi Kingston, Randy Orton, Ted Dibiase, Triple H
World Heavyweight ChampionshipThe Undertaker (c), CM Punk, John Morrison, R-Truth, Rey Mysterio
Elimination Chamber{{sortnameEdgedab=wrestler}} (c)World Heavyweight ChampionshipBig Show, Drew McIntyre, Kane, Rey Mysterio, Wade Barrett
WWE Championship match at WrestleMania XXVIICM Punk, John Morrison, King Sheamus, R-Truth, Randy Orton
Elimination Chamber(c)WWE ChampionshipChris Jericho, Dolph Ziggler, Kofi Kingston, The Miz, R-Truth
(c)World Heavyweight ChampionshipBig Show, Cody Rhodes, The Great Khali, Santino Marella, Wade Barrett
Elimination ChamberWorld Heavyweight Championship match at WrestleMania 29Chris Jericho, Daniel Bryan, Kane, Mark Henry, Randy Orton
Elimination Chamber(c)WWE World Heavyweight ChampionshipCesaro, Christian, Daniel Bryan, John Cena, Sheamus
Elimination Chamber
(Big E, Kofi Kingston, and Xavier Woods)WWE Tag Team ChampionshipThe Ascension (Konnor and Viktor), Los Matadores (Diego and Fernando), The Lucha Dragons (Kalisto and Sin Cara), The Prime Time Players (Darren Young and Titus O'Neil), Tyson Kidd and Cesaro
{{sortnameRyback}}Vacant WWE Intercontinental ChampionshipDolph Ziggler, King Barrett, Mark Henry, R-Truth, Sheamus
Elimination ChamberWWE ChampionshipJohn Cena (c), AJ Styles, Baron Corbin, Dean Ambrose, The Miz
Elimination Chamber(c)WWE Raw Women's ChampionshipBayley, Mandy Rose, Mickie James, Sasha Banks, Sonya Deville
WWE Universal Championship match at WrestleMania 34Braun Strowman, Elias, Finn Bálor, John Cena, The Miz, Seth Rollins
Elimination Chamber
(Bayley and Sasha Banks)Inaugural WWE Women's Tag Team ChampionshipNia Jax and Tamina, The Riott Squad (Liv Morgan and Sarah Logan)
Carmella and Naomi, Fire and Desire (Mandy Rose and Sonya Deville), The IIconics (Billie Kay and Peyton Royce)
(c)WWE ChampionshipAJ Styles, Jeff Hardy, Kofi Kingston, Randy Orton, Samoa Joe
Elimination Chamber(c)WWE SmackDown Tag Team ChampionshipDolph Ziggler and Robert Roode, Heavy Machinery (Otis and Tucker), Lucha House Party (Gran Metalik and Lince Dorado), The New Day (Big E and Kofi Kingston), The Usos (Jey Uso and Jimmy Uso)
WWE Raw Women's Championship match at WrestleMania 36Asuka, Liv Morgan, Natalya, Ruby Riott, Sarah Logan
Elimination ChamberImmediate WWE Universal Championship matchCesaro, Jey Uso, Kevin Owens, King Corbin, Sami Zayn
(c)WWE ChampionshipAJ Styles, Jeff Hardy, Kofi Kingston, Randy Orton, Sheamus
Elimination ChamberWWE Raw Women's Championship at WrestleMania 38Alexa Bliss, Doudrop, Liv Morgan, Nikki A.S.H., Rhea Ripley
WWE ChampionshipBobby Lashley (c), AJ Styles, Austin Theory, Riddle, Seth "Freakin" Rollins
Elimination Chamber{{sortnameAsukadab=wrestler}}WWE Raw Women's Championship match at WrestleMania 39Carmella, Nikki Cross
Liv Morgan, Natalya, Raquel Rodriguez
(c)WWE United States ChampionshipBronson Reed, Damian Priest, Johnny Gargano, Montez Ford, Seth "Freakin" Rollins
Elimination Chamber: PerthWomen's World Championship match at WrestleMania XLLiv Morgan, Raquel Rodriguez
Bianca Belair, Naomi, Tiffany Stratton
World Heavyweight Championship match at WrestleMania XLBobby Lashley, Kevin Owens, LA Knight, Logan Paul, Randy Orton
Elimination Chamber: TorontoWomen's World Championship match at WrestleMania 41Bayley, Liv Morgan
Alexa Bliss, Naomi
Roxanne Perez
Undisputed WWE Championship match at WrestleMania 41CM Punk, Logan Paul, Seth "Freakin" Rollins
Damian Priest, Drew McIntyre
Elimination Chamber{{dts}}{{sortname}}
{{sortname}}

Participant list

Males

WrestlerVictoriesAppearancesEliminations
Triple H467
John Cena486
Daniel Bryan355
Drew McIntyre245
Edge244
Brock Lesnar114
Ryback112
Bray Wyatt112
Jack Swagger111
Xavier Woods111
Roman Reigns111
Austin Theory122
Big E121
The Undertaker136
John Morrison134
Bobby Lashley132
Shawn Michaels143
The Miz143
CM Punk157
Kofi Kingston164
Chris Jericho1810
Randy Orton198
Braun Strowman015
Goldberg013
Carlito013
Test012
Santino Marella012
Konnor012
Darren Young012
Montez Ford012
Booker T011
Chris Masters011
Finlay011
Ted DiBiase011
Cody Rhodes011
Christian011
Viktor011
Dean Ambrose011
Otis011
Robert Roode011
Jimmy Uso011
Kevin Nash010
Chris Benoit010
Kurt Angle010
Hardcore Holly010
Big Daddy V010
Montel Vontavious Porter010
John "Bradshaw" Layfield010
Umaga010
Vladimir Kozlov010
Mike Knox010
Diego010
Fernando010
Kalisto010
Sin Cara010
Tyson Kidd010
Titus O'Neil010
Elias010
Finn Bálor010
Samoa Joe010
Lince Dorado010
Gran Metalik010
Tucker010
Sami Zayn010
Riddle010
Bronson Reed010
Johnny Gargano010
LA Knight010
Batista023
Jey Uso023
Mark Henry022
Damian Priest022
Rob Van Dam021
Kevin Owens021
Logan Paul021
The Great Khali020
Baron Corbin020
Rey Mysterio033
Dolph Ziggler031
Cesaro031
Wade Barrett030
Big Show042
Jeff Hardy042
AJ Styles042
R-Truth041
Seth Rollins040
Sheamus055
Kane052

Females

WrestlerVictoriesAppearancesEliminations
Bianca Belair234
Shayna Baszler115
Becky Lynch111
Sasha Banks123
Asuka123
Alexa Bliss134
Bayley132
Tamina012
Mickie James011
Billie Kay011
Peyton Royce011
Nia Jax011
Rhea Ripley011
Tiffany Stratton011
Ruby Riott010
Doudrop010
Roxanne Perez010
Carmella022
Mandy Rose021
Sonya Deville021
Natalya021
Raquel Rodriguez021
Sarah Logan020
Nikki Cross020
Naomi030
Liv Morgan065

Compilation release

In July 2010, WWE released Satan's Prison: The Anthology of the Elimination Chamber, a DVD featuring every Elimination Chamber match as of the 2010 Elimination Chamber. The European release of the DVD is titled Iron Will, primarily over the name change of the structure, match type and pay-per-view in Germany to avoid a brand blunder with the Elimination Chamber name as it may create imagery of gas chambers during The Holocaust (the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view, structure and match are called No Escape in Germany).

Notes

References

References

  1. Giri, Raj. (2014-02-19). "Eric Bischoff On Who Created Elimination Chamber, Shane Helms Announces Jeff Hardy Match At OMEGA".
  2. "Elimination Chamber Description". World Wrestling Entertainment.
  3. Andy. "WWE Elimination Chamber History: Match List, Rules & Stats".
  4. McAvennie, Mike. (21 May 2007). "The painful process of Elimination". World Wrestling Entertainment.
  5. DiFino, Lennie. (21 April 2009). "Ragin' Cagin' at War Games". World Wrestling Entertainment.
  6. Robinson, Jon. (9 October 2003). "WWE Smackdown Top 10: #10: The Elimination Chamber.". [[IGN]].
  7. (27 March 2002). "WWE To Make RAW and SMACKDOWN Distinct Television Brands". [[WWE]].
  8. Ouellette, Christopher. (22 October 2002). "Full WWE RAW Results - 10/21/02 (24 hours after No Mercy)". Wrestleview.com.
  9. Martin, Adam. (4 December 2006). "December to Dismember PPV Results - 12/3/06 (New ECW Champ...)". Wrestleview.com.
  10. Martin, Adam. (17 February 2008). "No Way Out PPV Results - 2/17 - Las Vegas (Two Chambers, & more)". Wrestleview.com.
  11. Martin, Adam. (15 February 2009). "WWE No Way Out Results - 2/15/09". Wrestleview.com.
  12. Martin, Adam. (9 October 2009). "Name change for another WWE PPV". Wrestleview.com.
  13. "WWE Elimination Chamber 2017 tickets available now". WWE.
  14. Powell, Jason. (20 November 2002). "Triple H details his throat injury, doesn't blame Rob Van Dam". Pro Wrestling Torch.
  15. Powell, Jason. (18 November 2002). "Triple H expected to be at Raw, update on his neck condition". Pro Wrestling Torch.
  16. Powell, Jason. (20 November 2002). "Afternoon Update: Triple H injury, Jericho's schedule, Flair's daughter". Pro Wrestling Torch.
  17. Martin, Adam. (23 February 2010). "Report: Sheamus suffers concussion". Wrestleview.com.
  18. "Specialty Matches: Elimination Chamber". World Wrestling Entertainment.
  19. Robinson, Jason. (January 2009). "Cold Steel". [[WWE Magazine]].
  20. (2007). "2007 Wrestling Almanac & Book of Facts". Kappa Publishing.
  21. Paglino, Nick. (January 15, 2015). "Stephanie McMahon Reveals the Real Reason Why WWE Dropped the Elimination Chamber PPV". Evolve Media.
  22. Morrow, Brendan. (February 12, 2017). "How the New WWE Elimination Chamber Design Compares to the Old One". [[Heavy.com]].
  23. Tello, Craig. (3 December 2006). "Mission Accomplished". World Wrestling Entertainment.
  24. Tello, Craig. (29 November 2006). "Chamber of Horrors". World Wrestling Entertainment.
  25. (2018-03-11). "TJR Retro: WWE New Year’s Revolution 2005 Review (Elimination Chamber) – TJR Wrestling".
  26. (2022-02-06). "WWE Elimination Chamber Match Review #9: No Way Out 2009 – World Heavyweight Title (Raw) – TJR Wrestling".
  27. (2009-02-21). "The John Report: WWE Elimination Chamber 2010 Recap – TJR Wrestling".
  28. (2009-02-21). "The John Report: WWE Elimination Chamber 2010 Recap – TJR Wrestling".
  29. (2013-02-17). "The John Report: WWE Elimination Chamber 2013 Review – TJR Wrestling".
  30. Hanstock, Bill. (2014-02-24). "What we learned from WWE Elimination Chamber".
  31. Powell, Jason. (February 18, 2023). "WWE Elimination Chamber results: Powell's live review of Roman Reigns vs. Sami Zayn for the Undisputed WWE Universal Championship, Brock Lesnar vs. Bobby Lashley, two Elimination Chamber matches, Edge and Beth Phoenix vs. Rhea Ripley and Finn Balor". Pro Wrestling Dot Net.
  32. "Which brutal Elimination Chamber Match stands above the rest?".
  33. "Elimination Chamber: by the numbers".
  34. "Satan's Prison- The Anthology of the Elimination Chamber DVD". WWE Shop.com.
  35. (24 June 2010). "Iron Will: The Anthology of WWE's Toughest Match DVD". Silver Vision.
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