Roman Reigns is accustomed to being booed, mocked and heckled by WWE fans - both on social media and especially by live crowds, and Sunday's Money in the Bank pay-per-view was no different.

The Big Dog faced Jinder Mahal in Rosemont, Illinois, and the thousands in attendance made their dissatisfaction with the match very clear. Chants such as "CM Punk," "Boring," and "Rusev Day," broke out, which set the tone for a dull and uninspiring match between Reigns and Mahal - won by the latter.

But even though Reigns has sometimes taken his jabs at fans during promos and outside of the ring, he seemingly embraced the hostile Chicago crowd on Sunday:

Reigns' push as the main superstar has been the biggest story in WWE since 2015, as the fans and many wrestling pundits continue to reject him. But give Reigns credit. He's supposed to be a babyface that brings crowd eruptions every day, but he deals with non-stop backlash and boos instead. Yet in times like this, he was able to embrace it and not let it get to him.

For the most part, Reigns is able to have a good time while being booed and heckled by fans, brushing it off and reminding the WWE Universe that it's "his yard." That's better than what Batista did at the 2014 Royal Rumble - when he flipped off fans and threatened to snap a spectator in half. Brock Lesnar also fingered the crowd after being heckled aplenty at WrestleMania XX.

via Wrestling-Edge

But Reigns is using the bad fan reaction as motivation to fuel himself and continue to get better every day. Love him or hate him, Reigns has handled the situation perfectly, even though he deals with fan backlash on a non-stop basis.

Perhaps his positive attitude will one day win over the vast majority of WWE fans once and for all. And even if that's not the case, at least he won't let the millions of doubters let him down.

NEXT: WHY ROMAN REIGNS WILL NEVER TURN HEEL