With the arrival of JBL into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2020, the time has come for wrestling fans to fondly (and perhaps not-so-fondly) remember the best of times and the worst of times throughout the big Texan's career.

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For over three decades, JBL fought the best that the company had to offer, sometimes in exciting and engaging feuds that took advantage of his ability on the mic and in the ring, but other times in boring snooze-fests that made fans wonder how they got here. Let's take a look at the 5 best (and 5 worst) JBL feuds in his career.

10 Best: Blue Meanie

With the rise of ECW as a WWE brand in the mid-2000s, the renegade brand needed a system to rage against and no one represented that better than the large-and-in-charge JBL. At the end of ECW One Night Stand 2005, JBL ended up making headlines by serving up stiff shots to fan-favorite The Blue Meanie, who vented his feelings online about JBL and turned an on-screen rivalry very personal. JBL got his storyline comeuppance on Smackdown when he was pinned by Meanie, but their bitter real-life feud continued until recently when they mended fences.

9 Worst: Chris Jericho

The feud that took JBL from behind the commentary desk to back in the ring was nothing to write home about. During a title match against Randy Orton at Armageddon 2007, Jericho ended up shoving JBL out of the way which led to him attacking Jericho for a disqualification in the main event. From there, Jericho and JBL engaged in a lukewarm feud that led to another DQ decision at Royal Rumble 2008 before being ultimately ended on Raw and summarily forgotten to time, serving only to get both men back to action.

8 Best: The Hardy Boyz

JBL has always been best known as a hulking bully (for better or worse), which made his in-ring clashes with smaller opponents much more harrowing. When he and Faarooq fought with The Hardy Boyz in the late 1990s, it ended up making Matt & Jeff seem much more sympathetic in comparison and enhanced their underdog appeal as WWE's youngest tag team.

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A big win over the Acolytes strengthened The Hardyz' fortunes and was a great use of Bradshaw's natural strengths and reputation, leading to several memorable tag team matches for many years.

7 Worst: Big Show

When you put two giants against one another, you either get a colossal war or an absolute snore. Unfortunately, the (thankfully) short-lived feud between JBL and Big Show was more of the latter, featuring ploddingly slow matches and forgettable segments (save for one in Japan where JBL squared up to a Godzilla blowup doll). The two even had a barbed wire steel cage match at No Way Out 2005 that saw JBL win by heel chicanery, with the feud destined to be remembered as a place-holder intended to kill time.

6 Best: Rey Mysterio

JBL vs Rey Mysterio in career match

Another case of JBL playing the bully to a smaller wrestler, this time to even greater success.

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The perpetual underdog Rey Mysterio needed to be able to beat the much bigger competition on Smackdown after becoming World Heavyweight Champion in 2006, so JBL was an ideal candidate who could rile up the crowd and put them solidly behind the heroic Mysterio. Rey would best JBL at most every turn and would even do so years later at Wrestlemania 25, holding the distinction as JBL's final opponent at that event to date.

5 Worst: The Boogeyman

In the effort to push The Boogeyman as a force to be feared in WWE, many established wrestlers had to act scared of the oddball gimmick, including JBL himself. The two had a feud that mainly involved Boogeyman scaring JBL at every turn and even led to Boogeyman biting off the unsightly mole from the face of JBL's secretary, Jillian. The feud was laughable and a bit embarrassing to watch, with Boogeyman even pinning the former WWE Champion at Royal Rumble 2006 to no further rebuke from JBL at all!

4 Best: Shawn Michaels

In the last year of JBL's wrestling career, a feud came to a head between him and Shawn Michaels that showed how well JBL could fill the role of the dastardly villain. Due to the financial crisis in the late 2000s, Michaels was forced to become JBL's servant, helping him win matches dubiously.

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Michaels eventually could take no more and challenged JBL to an "All Or Nothing" match at No Way Out 2009 with the valiant Michaels being set free. A classic story of good vs evil that worked surprisingly well in modern time.

3 Worst: The Undertaker

Despite close ties in both their wrestling careers and personal lives, Undertaker and JBL couldn't scare up a watchable feud. During his reign as WWE Champion, JBL defended the title against Undertaker in two singles matches that served to do little but bore the fans to tears. Both men wrestled a very slow and cumbersome style which was not inspiring to watch and, for his part, all JBL could do from a character standpoint was act scared of Undertaker's spooky charades. A lowlight of both men's career that went on far too long.

2 Best: Eddie Guerrero

The feud that made JBL a top heel and cemented Eddie as one of his all-time rivals. JBL rose to prominence in 2004 as a new challenger to Guerrero's WWE Championship, immediately emphasizing a contrast between the flashy Guerrero and the hard-nosed JBL. The feud incorporated Eddie's family and even played off racist sentiments from the conservative character to add fuel to the flame, resulting in hot PPV matches and a new hateable heel to put against the beloved Guerrero. Without Eddie Guerrero, there would be no JBL (as he himself has admitted).

1 Worst: Batista

JBL served as one of the first major feuds for the newly-crowned World Heavyweight Champion, Batista. However, as much as Eddie Guerrero helped an up-and-coming wrestler shine, JBL was not much help in exciting audiences in his wars against Batista. Over the course of three matches, JBL and Batista showed they had little to no chemistry together and bored audiences to tears with lethargic, forgettable matches that did nothing to inject life into the Smackdown product. At this point in his career, JBL's stock was significantly lowered due in no small part to this dud feud.

NEXT: WWE: 5 Wrestlers Who Should Be In The Hall Of Fame (& 5 Who Never Deserved It)