CR: Well, I did a moonsault off a less stable cage in Madison Square Garden in a really wonderful moment in my career. I had done it with Cesaro, and I was able to pin Cesaro one, two, three off of the moonsault. It gave me an unreal expectation [and] confidence as to it being a game changer, it being a home run for me. On Raw, I didn't connect with the moonsault in the fashion that I wanted to connect with the moonsault so it kind of ruled it null and void as far as me being able to win with it. The underlying question [is that] — and I'm not saying you're asking this — people look at the moonsault and think that something might have gone wrong, and that's not the case. As far as what other people thought about it, and I don't mean to sound too cool for school, but I don't care what management thought about it, and I don't care what everybody in the ring thought about it necessarily. All I cared about is what our fans thought about it, and if our fans saw me, who has a fear of heights, go to the top rope and not even look back — I even pop when I see the smile on my face right before — and give myself to them for the moment. I'm not saying you always have to put your body on the line, I'm just saying I was feeling it that night, and that's what I did, and I have no regrets about it. It seems that the fans really enjoyed it. I wish it was as successful as the one in the Garden, but I wouldn't say it was the last time you'd see it either. (See related video above.)