On September 27, WWE presented Clash of Champions. Fans were treated to a relatively packed card, with almost every major championship on the line at the event. The show itself was full of strong segments and has set WWE up in a great way coming out of the pay-per-view.

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The eight-match card was well-paced and featured tons of great action, with fans being treated to a couple of truly phenomenal matches along the way. But still, for all its strengths, the event was far from perfect. While the pay-per-view got a lot of things right, it also got its fair share wrong.

10 Got Right: The Opening Match

Cesaro vs Gran Metalik

The first match of the night saw the Lucha House Party take on the team of Cesaro and Shinsuke Nakamura for the SmackDown Tag Team Championships. Even though both teams have met each other several times on SmackDown in singles competition, they went all out in this pre-show match.

The action was fast-paced and featured some truly breath-taking feats of athleticism from the luchadors, while Nakamura and Cesaro were great as the heel champions. The opening match of the night is often tasked with setting the tone for the rest of the event. If this match was anything to go by, fans were in for an entertaining pay-per-view, full of great action and big matches.

9 Got Wrong: No Cedric Alexander

Cedric Alexander face

WWE had spent a few weeks teasing Cedric Alexander turning heel and aligning himself with The Hurt Business. Once he did, the promotion ran through three weeks' worth of character development and storytelling over the course of one show.

At Clash of Champions, Bobby Lashley, accompanied by MVP and Shelton Benjamin defended his United States Championship against Apollo Crews, who was flanked by Ricochet. However, Benjamin quickly went to the back after making a brief appearance on the entrance ramp prior to the match. Cedric Alexander was conspicuous by his absence, as the promotion offered little in terms of an explanation. It was strange, to say the least. If Alexander was going to be absent anyway, WWE should have had Crews and Lashley make their way to the ring alone, instead of leaving fans wondering about the status of Alexander.

8 Got Right: Sami Zayn Wins

Sami Zayn IC Champion Clash of Champions

One of the most exciting matches of the night saw Sami Zayn, Jeff Hardy and AJ Styles wage war over the Intercontinental Championship in a Ladder match. Considering the talent involved and the hardcore stipulation, the match had all the ingredients to be a Match of the Year candidate, which it was.

Not only was the action fantastic, but the right man also won, as Sami Zayn ascended the ladder to retrieve the gold. It wasn't a fluke either, as Zayn out-smarted his opponents to win back the championship he never lost. Hardy and Styles don't need the gold nearly as much as Zayn does right now, and the nature of his victory sets him up for a great run as the Intercontinental Champion.

7 Got Wrong: Bayley Vs. Asuka Again

Asuka vs Bayley

WWE had originally booked Bayley to defend her SmackDown Women's Championship against Nikki Cross at Clash of Champions, but that match never happened. As Bayley gloated about her win via forfeit, Asuka emerged to challenge the Golden Role Model. They had a decent match that ended via disqualification when Bayley grabbed a steel chair to attack Asuka.

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After the match, Sasha Banks took down Bayley with another chair, and while that was effective, having Bayley wrestle Asuka once more was a bit of a waste. While the SmackDown Women's Division is struggling right now, if WWE was going to book a DQ finish anyway, why not have Bayley take on someone like Lacey Evans? Or even let her take on Alexa Bliss, who ends up getting distracted by The Fiend and leaves, thereby protecting both stars? Bayley vs. Asuka was a bit of a waste.

6 Got Right: Vega Set For Another Title Shot

Zelina Vega vs Asuka

Asuka defended her Raw Women's Championship against Zelina Vega. Vega, who has spent most of her time in WWE as a manager, finally got the opportunity to prove what she could go against one of the promotion's finest performers. The two wrestled a match that felt a little incomplete but ended the right way, with Asuka retaining, sparking some life into her reign.

Vega's post-match attack means that these two will clearly face off again, ideally on pay-per-view. This was the right call, as Vega is a breath of fresh air in the Raw Women's Division which has become increasingly stale ever since Becky Lynch stepped away from programming. Vega working a marquee feud with Asuka is what is best for business.

5 Got Wrong: The Street Profits Retain

The Street Profits Raw Tag Team Champions

In one of the least exciting matches of the night, The Street Profits took on the team of Andrade and Angel Garza, once again with their championships on the line. With the Raw Tag Team Division painfully bare, WWE hasn't really had any other teams to turn to, leaving The Street Profits feeling stale and ineffective as champions, after a hot start.

This was the perfect time to make a switch, and while WWE had to call an audible because of a potential injury to Garza, it looked like The Profits were going to pick up the win anyway. The Raw tag-team division isn't even much of a division anymore, but a championship change could have been the exact shot in the arm Raw needed to make the belts mean something again.

4 Got Right: Drew McIntyre Retains The WWE Championship

Randy Orton vs Drew McIntyre Clash of Champions

Drew McIntyre defended the WWE Championship against Randy Orton once more, this time in an Ambulance match. When the promotion first announced the stipulation, fans began wondering whether WWE was prepping McIntyre for a loss without actually letting him get pinned.

But somehow, McIntyre bested the Legend Killer once more, throwing him into the ambulance and finally putting The Viper in his rear-view mirror. McIntyre has been phenomenal as champion, and while Orton has been great too, his feud with Edge does not need the championship when the latter returns. This was most definitely the correct call.

3 Got Wrong: No Lucha House Party Breakup

Lucha House Party argument

Lucha House Party had spent the last several weeks feuding with Cesaro and Shinsuke Nakamura. But while they were focused on the heels, issues between all three men led to a number of fans believing that WWE was going to break up the team of high-fliers.

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While they managed to stick together at Clash of Champions, they lost to the champions anyway and that should have been the straw that broke the camel's back. While WWE may want to hold off on breaking them up till the next episode of SmackDown, it should have happened at the pay-per-view, right after a big loss that robbed them of the chance to become SmackDown Tag Team Champions.

2 Got Right: Everything About Jey Uso Vs. Roman Reigns

Reigns Vs Uso

The most heavily anticipated match of the night saw Roman Reigns defend the Universal Championship against his cousin, Jey Uso. Both men had been truly phenomenal in the build to the match, so expectations were high.

Everything about the match was perfect; Uso was amazing as the fiery babyface, Reigns outdid himself as the arrogant prizefighter. The booking of the match, which saw Reigns destroy Jey, forcing Jimmy to throw in the towel was amazing, as Reigns turned his back on his family and solidified his position as the top heel on the blue brand. Every second of this match was absolutely perfect.

1 Got Wrong: All The Legends

Shawn Michaels Randy Orton Clash of Champions

Drew McIntyre has beaten Randy Orton once more, but he did so with a little help. Over the last several months, Orton has taken out numerous legends with brutal attacks. On Sunday night, that came back to haunt him as they banded together to help the Scotsman take down The Viper.

While it made sense from a storyline point of view, it was unnecessary and it made McIntyre look a little weak. Orton would have been just fine losing clean. The stipulation meant that McIntyre could have been booked to outsmart The Viper before putting him away, and that would have been far more effective than what WWE cooked up on Sunday night.

NEXT: All Title Reigns Of Roman Reigns' Career, Ranked