Welcome to the Halloween edition of the Wrap Up. The spookiest, spider-iest, Wrap of the year.

Sure, I know a lot of folks wanted to see Ambrose handily defeat Rollins in the Hell in a Cell. I was one of them. It seemed like their feud needed that epic moment before Ambrose got shuffled off into a totally different feud. The consensus seems to be, in the very least, that Bray's attack - complete with "Help Me Obi-Wan" Leia hologram - could have been held until Monday's RAW , allowing Ambrose to get the big PPV win.The upside to this is that Ambrose is loss-proof. He somehow manages to get more over every time he takes the dive. Another element to it is that they're setting up Orton's face turn (I wonder who'll wind up joining Team Cena...?) and for that to happen Orton needed to lose and Rollins needed to win. Side note: Remember how, about a year ago, we were all worried that Rollins' career was at risk of suffering the most from an eventual Shield breakup? And now he's the top heel in the company aside from Hunter and Steph?Also, thinking more about it, Rollins needed the win because they still need him to be the top heel at Survivor Series. He needs to captain the team that faces Cena, who's now been elevated back up to the top slot once again. Because Cena's going to face Brock, some day, and needs to stay on top until he does.Bottom line: Ambrose lost at Hell in a Cell because Brock's not wrestling until - I dunno - the Rumble? Some ridiculous amount of time far off in the future. So Rollins needs to remain on top and Cena needs to remain in his usual orbit. It's not an ideal situation. We're all well aware. Though I do enjoy Rollins' ascension and I will always remember the time when Rollins and Ambrose headlined a WWE PPV. Hopefully it'll happen again sometime again in the next five years.Another silver lining? We got to see a spoooookety scaaaaary ghost in the middle of the ring. I was there at Hell in a Cell live so I actually got to see the little lantern being shoved up through the middle of the mat (one of the reasons the blackout lasted so long). I don't even know what image was or what it had to do with Bray's repackaging, but my daughter was with me and it was her first wrestling show and she enjoys ghosts. So there's my bias. Little girl saw a ghost so daddy's happy. Actually she's not so little now. Almost a teenager. THEY GROW UP SO FAST. ♪"And the cat's in the cradle and the silver spoon..."Speaking of live Hell in a Cell...fun show. Did not expect Ziggler to go over Cesaro the way he did, or even get paired up with Cena last night on RAW as the second official member of Team Cena. And everything else was great from a selfish "Everyone I wanted to win, won" aspect. If you count Ambrose's performance as a win, which I do. It's not official, but he "beat" Rollins there. And sure, I could have done without Cena winning, but Orton doesn't excite me either other than him being "not-Cena."Though that was all before we were introduced to motor-mouth Orton last night on RAW. Dude came out and spoke a mile a minute. I didn't know he could put words together so fast. Guy was like a ferret on a double-espresso. It was like he'd just finished making snow angels in a pile of angel dust. It was actually a little alarming. Guy was sweating and twitching and RKO'ing outta nowhere. In fact, I refuse to accept slow, methodical Orton ever again. No more five minute walks to the ring, man. Now that we know you have different factory settings.Anyhow, both Cell matches were good. And I think we're years past complaining about how no one can bleed anymore or how no one falls off the top anymore. What we're looking for now is just one or two steps beyond a regular street fight and/or cage match. And Cena/Orton delivered that in the final third of the bout. And a couple of Orton's RKO's were magically timed. Especially the one he snatched out of that BS Cena shoulder tackle.The Rollins/Ambrose match was exceptional though, if you're willing to momentarily drop your complaints about the finish. Some nasty, fun spots with an exciting story. Made even better by the fact that I didn't have to listen to any commentary while watching it. I could just sit back, enjoy, and snap a few pictures.People said the crowd seemed dead at one point, which is true if they're referring to the drawn-out medical attention/stretcher time. I think a lot of the crowd actually thought that might be the finish (I suppose, in their weak defense, Ambrose/Rollins matches have ended in no contests before) so they were a little miffed. Some in my section were like "That's it? Bulls***!" And so on. So some of the Dallasites got goosed there.Aside from that however, AJ won, Rusev won (which I silently, quietly enjoyed among thousands of people chanting "USA!"), and Mizdow was amazing. He just freakin' steals the spotlight every time. And I know they're setting up a face turn. I get that. He's starting to say things that make Miz angry. And he's starting to accidentally hit Miz. It's all in the works. But why rush it? Mizdow mimicking Miz is the draw here. That's what's getting Mizdow over. Without the actual mimicking part, I'm not sure how invested people will be in a straight one-on-one feud. I mean, it's an eventual certainty, but let's let it be for the meantime.And yes, I'll attest to the fact that seeing Mizdow live is better than TV because he's constantly doing things when the camera's not on him. He never stops. So on TV there's always stuff you're not seeing.

AJ Lee, Cena and Steph, and more on Page 2...