Seth Rollins looks back on a night he won’t forget.

To tell Rollins career correctly, you have to start with The Shield, which is a group that will always live in the minds and hearts of the WWE Universe.

When the group first made their way onto WWE television, they were an instant hit with the fans. From the way that they looked to how they worked in the ring to their promos.

They got over big time with the fans, which is something that a group had not done in years. Stables will be created from time to time but not have the success that acts like The Four Horsemen, DX, NWO and other classic groups had.

The Shield, who featured Rollins, Dean Ambrose, and Roman Reigns, was a different kind of stable that was created with NXT Superstars.

The group teamed together until June 2014, after which Reigns entered singles competition. Ever since the group split up, fans have turned on Reigns despite him being portrayed as a babyface.

Rollins is slated to challenge Dolph Ziggler for the Intercontinental Title at the upcoming SummerSlam pay-per-view event that takes place this Sunday (August 19, 2018) in Brooklyn, New York at the Barclays Center.

The event will air on the WWE Network and some traditional pay-per-view outlets. Both Raw and SmackDown brands will be featured.

Rollins recently spoke to CBS' In This Corner about the Extreme Rules crowd and how it actually made him sad during his Intercontinental Title match against Dolph Ziggler. Here is what he had to say:

"I think upset is the right way to put it," Rollins said when asked how the crowd during Extreme Rules made him feel. "People are like, 'did you get mad?' Naw dude, I just get sad because I love performing and I love having that synergy with the crowd and when they're, you know paying attention to something else, inexplicably really, it's frustrating from a performance perspective.

Especially when you know you're in the main event of a pay-per-view for the Intercontinental Championship, it hasn't been done in twenty-odd years and it's the match that you know, most people in the building paid money to see, to begin with.

"So it still doesn't make sense to me. I don't get it. I can't imagine myself paying money to go to some sort of show or game or concert or something and you know and not paying attention to what's going on.

Again, you know they did buy their tickets they're allowed to do whatever they wanna do with their time. So it's sort of a double-edged sword in that sense. They can do what they want, but yeah it definitely makes you question your own validity in that spot."

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