These are not
good times for the WWE.
On Monday night,
WWE Raw attracted its smallest
audience of 2014. This is especially troubling because we are only a month
past WrestleMania – things should not be this bad.
The WWE stock is hovering around $18. From a high of
around $30, that means that the WWE has shed 40 percent of its value in a
little over a month.
The WWE Network
has proved to be much
ado about nothing as it is currently sits more than 300,000 subscribers away
from even breaking even.
My last piece
took a look at why
the Network is failing and how it fix it. It could be summed up in one
thought – “They need to get people to care about the matches that haven’t
happened yet.” That is not happening. There is little to no incentive to watch
the WWE on a regular basis anymore.
That is an almost
insane statement to write because the very foundation of pro wrestling is
present something that will get people to come back for more. It should be
very, very easy to book a pro wrestling show. In fact, the WWE has done so
successfully, almost continuously, for 30 years.
How the heck did
they forget how? In short, it’s because they went Hollywood. They have tried to
turn pro wrestling into a television show. It’s not working. It hasn’t been
working. And the news that Daniel Bryan – aka the guy who was single-handedly
keeping Raw afloat for 9 months – is out
with a neck injury could be the bottom falling out.
So let’s see why
the WWE is broken...
There are never any payoffs
This month, the
Extreme Rules pay-per-view/special featured these three matches on top: Kane
vs. Daniel Bryan, Evolution vs. Shield and John Cena vs. Bray Wyatt.
Next month, the
Payback pay-per-view/special was to feature these three matches on top:
Kane vs. Daniel Bryan, Evolution vs. Shield and John Cena vs. Bray Wyatt. Only
Bryan’s injury prevented that from happening.
So I ask you –
what was the point of watching Extreme Rules? This has been a pattern for years
but it has escalated to the point that WWE is essentially running the same show
twice in a month and expecting you to pay for it with the WWE Network. Why
would you?
Pro wrestling is
built upon a really simple formula – a feud begins, a feud happens and a feud
ends. It’s called a blowoff. The first two happen all the time on WWE
television. The last one never happens.
Even when it does
happen, it feels like you were cheated. The Daniel
Bryan saga dominated the WWE from
last summer through this
year’s Royal Rumble to headlining WrestleMania. So after Bryan finally –
and I mean, finally – wins the WWE
Title, what happens? He is immediately shunted off to feud with Kane while the
Triple H-led Evolution faction grabs the Main Event spotlight against the
Shield.
Huh? If you’ve
been rooting for Daniel Bryan for the past year and you finally get to see his
moment – don’t you think you should be rewarded with more than a feud with Kane? It
shouldn’t be that hard to build to big matches and have there be consequences
from the results of said matches.
The announcers are terrible
When it comes to
sports, the announcers are largely immaterial. Even if you, say, really, really
hate Dick Vitale but you’re a big UConn
basketball fan, you’re going to watch them play regardless. You may not
like it but such is life. Then you can go on Twitter and complain.
That doesn’t
apply in pro wrestling. The announcers need to be good. No one has ever watched
pro wrestling because of announcer but they have certainly changed the
channel because of one.
What the WWE has
now on Raw is arguably the worst announce team in pro wrestling history – the
very least, in the past 20 years. Jerry Lawler is a billion years old and adds
nothing. JBL is a nominally a heel but shouts in hyperbole about everything and
respects the faces way too much. And Michael Cole is simply a shill, who spouts
off cliché phrases and expounds on the virtues of the WWE Universe.
The worst aspect
is that the announcers liking something is essentially giving it the kiss of
death. Adam Rose’s debut has been
instantly killed by Cole “dancing” in appreciation of it. It’s tough to be
cool if your weird Uncle likes it, ya know?
Everything looks the same
This isn’t all
the WWE’s fault. The buildings have changed. There was a time that arenas all
looked different and unique so the WWE could show up with the same set and you
could tell they had changed towns. That’s not the case anymore. Nearly every
arena the WWE currently runs has been built in the past 10-20 years and look
exactly the same.
So when you
combine arenas that look the same with the same set for every show and it adds
to the feeling that the WWE is on a treadmill to nowhere. It speaks volume that
Raw’s Old School shows have been so well-received in part because they
look different. It helps explain why WrestleMania remains the signature
event while former stalwarts like the Royal Rumble and SummerSlam recede into
the background.
Maybe the WWE
leaves the TitanTron at home once a month?
Michael Jordan
attended a Bobcats/Heat playoff game. It became note-worthy when LeBron threw
down a monster dunk and glared
at Jordan. If this were the WWE, Jordan would have shown up in uniform and
allowed LeBron to dunk over him three times despite Jordan being 51 years old.
Think that’s
absurd? Well that is exactly what happened Monday night when 60-year old
Hacksaw Jim Duggan came to get his ass kicked by newcomer Rusev. Way to put over
the new guy, right? Having him beat up an AARP member.
It could be
worse. The New Age Outlaws – average age, 47 – showed up out of nowhere and
became Tag Team Champions of the World.
There is no midcard
One of the
reasons I think the WWE never wanted to push Daniel Bryan to the main event is
that he was the entirety of their mid-card. With Raw clocking in a bloated
three hours every week, the WWE could send out Bryan to eat up 30 minutes by
being the best wrestler in the world.
With Bryan gone –
and the team of Cody Rhodes and Goldust, another minutes-eater, inexplicably
breaking up – the midcard does not exist. The WWE is so focused on the main
eventers that the midcard, and this is a trend that has developed for years,
has become nothing more than a bathroom break.
It’s a huge
problem because it’s impossible to create new stars and leads to our next two
issues…
Titles mean nothing
In 2002, the WWE
consciously did away with its midcard titles because they wanted to make the
matches about more than titles. That plan lasted
about six months before the stupidity and short-sightedness of that was
revealed.
Since then, the
WWE has rarely taken the opportunity to build up the value of these titles and
give midcarders – who are predominantly younger stars and presumably the future
– something meaningful to feud over.
Young talent does not look strong
Bray Wyatt,
leader of the Wyatt Family, has had two high-profile matches with John Cena. He’s
looked weak in both, losing at WrestleMania and needing a child actor to scare Cena into losing.
The previous two
problems manifest here when young talent gets a big debut but has nowhere to
go. Wyatt can feud with Cena but isn’t on a level to beat him. Big E Langston
can get the Intercontinental Title but it means nothing.
The WWE has done
a great job with NXT, making it a true minor league system where talent can
experience working in front of a live audience and tape television before being
brought up to the big leagues. Yet these debuts have mostly failed, or not
lived up to potential, because they get stuck in the vacuum of the WWE midcard.
Look at Emma –
she was a star in NXT but was paired immediately with midcard comedy act
Santino Marella and her heat is gone.
Look at Adam Rose
– his big entrance gets the seal of approval from Michael Cole, which essentially
kills it on arrival.
Look at Rusev –
the big Russian monster gets to beat up a senior citizen. Now imagine if he
beat up John Cena instead?
The old guard never goes away
In 2004, John
Cena, Batista, Randy Orton, Triple H, Kane and Stephanie McMahon played huge
roles on television.
In 2014, John
Cena, Batista, Randy Orton, Triple H, Kane and Stephanie McMahon play huge
roles on television.
Think about the
Austin/Rock era – how many prominent stars of the WWF in 1998 were also
prominent WWF stars from 1988? WrestleMania 14
featured a grand total of zero wrestlers from WrestleMania 4.
The WWE needs an
injection of life. And it’ll start when there is air at the top for the next generation
of stars to breathe from.
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Umm...Bray Wyatt beat John Cena at Extreme Rules.
ReplyDeleteThank you for catching, I edited. Meant to say he looked weak in both.
DeleteExcellent piece
ReplyDeleteThat article made some good points but pretty much lost all credibility with me when it stated that the Bryan payoff was ruined because of Kane and the Shield. Really?
ReplyDeleteAnd like previous articles on that same site it completely ignores the excellent job WWE has done lately with the aforementioned Shield and Wyatt family to push it's own agenda. How have they and others not succeeded? And who cares if certain talent are still featured today that were around 10 years ago?