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News On Sting And Hulk Hogan Possibly Wrestling ‘Retirement Matches’ At WrestleMania

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Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

The Wrestling Observer reports that there’s a possibility that Hulk Hogan and Sting could both wrestle their last matches at WrestleMania 31. Hogan has still been pushing for a match against John Cena next year and if he could pass a physical, Hogan may wrestle his retirement match. Cena’s WrestleMania 31 match may be locked in already but they could always come up with something else for Hogan.

Sting has indicated that he is looking to do one more match as well. Hogan and Sting both wrestling their last matches could be a big sell for WrestleMania tickets and buys. Hogan will be almost 61 at that time and Sting turns 56 the week of the show. It’s a long shot but possible, although both likely wouldn’t be branded as retirement matches.

Reliving A Feud – Issue #1: The Undertaker vs. Mankind

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Wrestling Recaps

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Ever since debuting at the 1990 WWF Survivor Series, the Undertaker had been on a roll in the WWF. There weren’t many men that were able to defeat the Phenom in his first six years with the promotion, but little did anyone know that on April 1st, 1996 the Reaper would finally meet his match. The Undertaker would come face to face with his greatest opponent – a man who would give him issues for the next several years, the diabolical Mankind.

The night after WrestleMania XII saw the debut of the deranged Mankind character. He wore a leather mask, had hair missing from his head and didn’t have a right ear. It took Mankind less than an hour into his time with the company to get his hands on the Undertaker. Mankind attacked the Undertaker during the main event of the April 1st edition of RAW and shoved his fingers down his throat, using the Mandible Claw to render the Deadman unconscious. People were in shock to see a man smaller than the Undertaker control him with such dominance.

It would be over a month later before Mankind attacked the Undertaker again. It would happen during the May 13th edition of RAW. The attack was during a confrontation the Undertaker was having with WWF Intercontinental Champion Goldust. Mankind would actually lock Taker into a casket and bash it in with a steel pole. This was the formation of an odd partnership between Mankind and Goldust. At the eighth edition of In Your House, Mankind helped Goldust go on to beat the Undertaker in his own casket match. This would cause a shift in the feud and lead to Mankind and Undertaker feuding one-on-one.

The two men would have their first major televised singles match at King of the Ring 1996. In what had to be considered an upset, Mankind was able to beat the Undertaker at the event and it cemented Mankind as a threat to not only the Undertaker but also to anyone else in the WWF. The following month the feud would continue, the Undertaker was attacked by Mankind during a match with Goldust. During the match, Mankind popped up, ripping through the canvas, from under the ring, and caused a disqualification. Things would get very interesting and violent come SummerSlam ’96.

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At SummerSlam they would compete in the first ever ‘Boiler Room Brawl’. A match that would start in the Boiler Room of Cleveland’s then Gund Arena, with the object to win being the first man making it to ringside and procuring the Urn from the Undertaker’s longtime manager, Paul Bearer. They brawled for nearly a half hour until they reached the ring where in a shocking turn of events, Bearer would turn on the Undertaker by hitting him in the skull with the urn and handing it to Mankind to give him the victory. Mankind not only had Undertaker’s number, but he now had Taker’s manager!

The following month at the September ‘In Your House’ PPV, we would see the Undertaker finally win his feud with Goldust, while Mankind would get a shot at the WWF World Champion, Shawn Michaels. The match between Michaels and Mankind is considered to be one of the best matches of the 1990s. Shawn would manage to retain the title, and the feud between Mankind and the Undertaker would resume the next month.

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Any kind of normal match would not resolve anything between the Undertaker and Mankind, so on October 20th, 1996 they squared off in the first ever ‘Buried Alive’ match. While the Undertaker technically won the match by putting Mankind in the grave, Mankind was able to literally bury Taker underneath pounds of dirt with the help of several heels. However, the Undertaker made it clear he wasn’t going to be going anywhere, as in a very memorable moment he raised his hand through the dirt to close the program. The issues between Taker and Mankind were not far from over.

They would have another showdown at the 1996 Survivor Series, this time with Paul Bearer being inside a small shark cage above the ring. If the Undertaker was able to win the match, he would get five minutes alone with his former manager. Taker won the match cleanly after hitting a Tombstone, but after the match, Taker was attacked by a masked man we’d learn to be named the Executioner (Terry Gordy), which would lead to a Taker vs. Executioner match at the December IYH show, which Taker would also win.

For the first few months of 1997, Mankind and the Undertaker would go in different directions. Mankind would team with Vader and fail in winning the WWF World Tag Team Championships, while the Undertaker would main event WrestleMania XIII and win the WWF World Championship from Sycho Sid.

The two men collided again at In Your House #14 on April 20th, 1997. Mankind would be the first challenger for the newly crowned champion. Leading into the match, Mankind tossed a fireball into Taker’s face and seemed to be obsessed with lighting him on fire. The Undertaker was able to survive the attack and successfully defend his championship after hitting a Tombstone piledriver. Their feud would end for the time being but they would engage in a memorable match in June 1998. I’m sure you’ve heard of it.

The reason for their most memorable showdown started when Mankind screwed the Undertaker out of a number one contender’s match against his onscreen brother, Kane. So, the Undertaker got his wish, to get revenge against Mankind, and it would take place inside Hell in a Cell at the 1998 King of the Ring. Mankind was then tossed off the top of the cage through the announce table and moments later then chokeslammed through the top of the cage into the ring where a chair bounced off of his face and sent a loose tooth into his throat and out through his nose. After seventeen minutes of insane bumps and thumbtacks, Taker was able to win the match and put the final nail into their memorable feud.

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In my opinion, this was a great feud with longevity we don’t see today. Having a new wrestler come in and manhandle a well-known and well-loved character like the Undertaker was a risk that paid off. For a long time the Undertaker was stuck feuding with guys who didn’t have any strong in-ring ability and these feuds usually ended with lackluster matches. So, when Mankind came in and showcased skills that worked very well with the Undertaker’s style, it was refreshing to see.

Their feud was lengthy and intense for 1996 standards. It didn’t feel like it dragged on and Mankind was a legitimate threat to the Undertaker in every match they had because of how strong he was presented in the early stages of his career in the WWF.

These two never failed in having a quality match. Yes, the KOTR 1998 match was more of a match based off of a few crazy spots, but it is still memorable and entertaining. It would be time well spent if people went back and watched this feud from the beginning. It was one of the few bright spots that the WWF had in 1996, honestly.

What are your memories of the feud between Mankind and the Undertaker? Did you enjoy it or did you dislike it? Feel free to share your thoughts!

Bob Colling Of Wrestling Recaps

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Spoilers: WWE Smackdown Results for 10/10/14

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– Thanks to Shawn Prez, Barry, Carlos Johnson, Robbie In Allentown and Greg Scott for the following WWE SmackDown spoilers from tonight’s tapings in Philadelphia:

– Stephanie McMahon kicks off the SmackDown 15th anniversary show. She talks about SmackDown’s history but is interrupted by John Laurinaitis. Laurinaitis says he created the best era in the history of SmackDown – People Power. Teddy Long interrupts and has words with Laurinaitis. They go back and forth on who can make the biggest tag team match. Teddy calls for a 15 man match – 7 Superstars and a mini gator vs. 7 Superstars and a mini bull. It will be Team Teddy vs. Team Johnny tonight. The winner will be the greatest General Manager of all-time.

– Stephanie announces The Miz will host a face off between John Cena and Dean Ambrose tonight. Adam Rose comes out and tells Stephanie to not be a lemon. Rose wishes SmackDown a happy birthday, saying it’s party time all the time. He invites Stephanie to the party. She shuts down the Exotic Express and books Rose vs. Kane for tonight.

* Kane comes out and says he’s a party pooper tonight. Kane squashes Rose and wins with a chokeslam. Kane goes after The Bunny but he runs away. Kane destroyed all the Rosebuds as they tried to protect The Bunny.

* AJ Lee vs. Alicia Fox is up next. Paige came out with Alicia. AJ wins with the Black Widow. Paige runs in and hits AJ after the match but AJ fights them off with a double clothesline.

– Rusev vs. Dolph Ziggler is announced for later.

* Kofi Kingston vs. Seth Rollins is next. Jamie Noble and Joey Mercury came out with Rollins. They are watching out for Dean Ambrose at ringside. Rollins gets the win with a Curb Stomp.

– They air a Wyatt Family vignette.

* Rusev vs. Dolph Ziggler is next. Ziggler fought hard but Rusev got the non-title win with The Accolade. Lana cuts a promo on The Rock after the match. She says he will pay. Rusev challenges Big Show to a match on RAW.

– Backstage segment with The Rock, Triple H and Stephanie McMahon that appeared to be taped at RAW.

* Booker T comes out for the main event. Team Teddy is Mark Henry, Los Matadores, Sheamus, The Usos, Jack Swagger and El Torito. Team Johnny is Heath Slater, Titus O’Neil, Goldust, Stardust, Bo Dallas, Damien Sandow, The Miz and Hornswoggle. Slater and Sandow got big chants during the match. This was said to be an incredible and excellent match with lots of spots. One of The Usos got the pin for Team Teddy.

NXT Results 9/10/14 – Zayn vs. O’Neil

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Credit: Sean Ross Sapp

NXT kicks off with Tyler Breeze making his way to the ring followed by Mojo Rawley. This match stems from Breeze attacking Rawley 2 weeks ago.

Tyler Breeze vs. Mojo Rawley

Mojo intimidates Breeze early on, running him from the ring until Breeze taunts Rowley. Rowley doesn’t take too kindly and goes on the offensive, but Breeze kicks Mojo in his injured shoulder. Breeze follows up with stomps and a Fujiwara Armbar, which causes the referee to stop the contest in a total squash match.

Winner: Tyler Breeze

Enzo and Big Cass track down William Regal and try to get him to give Camrella a tryout. She’s shown in the ring landing a shoulder block, dropkick and a head scissors. William Regal agrees to give her a tryout next week.

A video recap of the Ascension/Hideo Itami feud is shown, Funaki says he’ll have Itami’s back.

Viktor vs. Hideo Itami

Off the bat, Viktor grounds Itami and claws at his face before slamming Itami to the mat with a snap suplex for a 2 count. Viktor remains aggressive, clubbing away at Itami with punches, chops and a European uppercut for another 2 count.

Itami flips out of a belly to back suplex and lands a big series of kicks followed by a springboard dropkick. The crowd is completely silent for this match. Itami tries to get them into it, but it doesn’t work.

Konor drags Funaki to the stage, who is laid out. Despite the distraction, Itami lands a single leg dropkick for the win.

Winner: Hideo Itami

After the match the Ascension beat him down as Funaki tries to save him, failing. Itami is tied up in the ropes and beaten as the Ascension hits Funaki with the Fall of Man. Itami is bleeding from the mouth from the beating, visibly upset about Funaki being attacked.

The Vaudevillains vs. Enzo Amore and Big Cass

Enzo and Big Cass come out cutting a promo on the Vaudevillians, calling them time travelers. There’s also a solid “Hey Arnold” reference in there.

Aiden English and Enzo start, with English taking the upper hand, laying down a thorough beating on Enzo. Finally Enzo reverses a belly to back suplex and makes the tag to Big Cass, who is a house of fire landing a high knee on English.

English makes the tag to Simon Gotch, who catches a Big Boot for a 2 count. Big Cass tags to Enzo and he lands an assisted splash, which also hurt Enzo. Cass is knocked from the apron, and the Vaudevillains take advantage, hitting their finish on Enzo for the win.

Winners: The Vaudevillains

Sami Zayn is shown backstage. He trashes Titus O’Neil for being in a feud with a bunny. This segment was obviously taped along with his comments about Tyson Kidd last week, and NXT didn’t bother hiding that.

Becky Lynch vs. Sasha Banks

Becky Lynch has control early on, but it doesn’t last long as Banks gets aggressive and starts to dominate Lynch. Banks stretches the arms of Lynch, but Lynch works her way up and tries to pin Banks with a schoolboy roll up, which is unsuccessful.

Back on the feet, Lynch comes up big with a series of kicks, a legdrop, and a springboard kick but can’t capitalize as Banks hits a clothesline on the rebound and then submits Lynch with the Bank Statement crossface.

Winner: Sasha Banks

Next up is a grudge match between Sami Zayn and Titus O’Neil.

Titus O’Neil vs. Sami Zayn

The size discrepancy is gargantuan and obvious as the two lock up, with O’Neil towering over Zayn. O’Neil powers Zayn into the corner multiple times, but can’t retain control over the smaller superstar. Zayn hits several forearms to the face of O’Neil, but is caught with a huge body slam that cuts him off.

O’Neil stalks Zayn, connecting with heavy strikes and working methodically in the corners. O’Neil chokes Zayn with his boot, and then punishes his opponent with another big body slam before tossing him from the ring completely which leads to a commercial break.

Back from the commercial O’Neil is still dominant as he has Zayn in a big bear hug which Zayn struggles to get out of. O’Neil rag dolls Zayn before another vicious slame, and has been on the offensive for what seems like an eternity, probably going on ten minutes straight.

O’Neil screams for Zayn to quit, but Zayn responds by slapping O’Neil, which only serves to make the larger opponent furious. Titus and Sami are back in the corner, with Titus keeping the pace of the match slow with punches, kicks, and headbutts. Titus grabs another bear hug but Zayn headbutts his way out.

Titus charges Zayn, but goes over the top rope and Zayn flies through the air with a tope con hilo. Back inside the ring Zayn also hits a flying body press but only gets a two count. He tries to hit his signature Helluva Kick, but Titus boots him in the face. Zayn hangs on for dear life with a sleeper, which O’Neil gets out of.

Zayn hits a big kick, but is in the ropes when he tries to pin O’Neil and it gives Titus time to recover. Titus drops Zayn with a clothesline and gets a 2 count. Eventually Zayn is crotched on the top rope, and Titus hits the Sky High on Zayn for the clean victory.

Winner: Titus O’Neil

O’Neil comes back in the ring and drags Zayn to the apron. He’s about to drop a knee on Zayn, but Adrian Neville makes the save to close the show.

The Rock On If He Will Wrestle At WrestleMania 31

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Credit: TMZ

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson’s surprise appearance on Raw and confrontation with Rusev has again sparked rumors that he could be competing at WrestleMania next year. TMZ caught up with Johnson on Wednesday in New York City and he was asked whether he’s coming back to wrestle at the event.
His response: “I don’t think so (smiling). I might get hit in the mouth.”

Despite his statement, a backstage segment airs on this Friday’s episode of SmackDown where Johnson teases a match at WrestleMania.

Colling’s Corner: Are You Ready For a Revolution? WCW Wasn’t

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Bob Colling Of Wrestling Recaps

From 1994 to 1998, World Championship Wrestling relied on wrestlers who, for the most part, made a name for themselves in the competitive promotion, the World Wrestling Federation. They signed Hulk Hogan and Randy Savage during the year of 1994 and the signings of Kevin Nash (Diesel) and Scott Hall (Razor Ramon) in 1996 propelled WCW to never before seen popularity.

Riding the wave of the New World Order, which all four of the aforementioned men were a part of at one point or another, WCW was making money hand over fist. By late 1997, WCW signed Bret Hart and looked to be untouchable.

That was until Steve Austin was inserted into the main event scene of the WWF, and the company that had seemingly been left for dead two years earlier was striving, while WCW was slowly but surely dying off.

That death of WCW was rapidly approaching as they couldn’t stop themselves from going back to the same old acts while WWF continued to reinvent itself.

By the summer of 1999, a new faction in WCW was developed and consisted of some of the companies best in-ring wrestlers. The group consisted of four men who had a past in Extreme Championship Wrestling, but had been held back in WCW. They wanted to be in the spot that guys like Hogan, Savage, Nash, Hall and Ric Flair had kept for over a decade.

The group I’m referring to was named ‘Revolution’ and consisted of Shane Douglas as the leader, along with Chris Benoit, Perry Saturn, and Dean Malenko rounding out the quartet.

Shane Douglas was very successful in ECW having won the ECW World Championship on four occasions and the ECW Television Championship on another two other occasions. He had also formed the original triple threat with Chris Benoit and Dean Malenko in the land of extreme. During his run with the Philadelphia based company, Douglas was given the nickname of being “The Franchise.

Shane left ECW one other time to jump ship to the WWF in mid 1995 where he was given the infamous character Dean Douglas. He wouldn’t even last a year before jumping back to ECW to continue his memorable run with the company. He stayed there until early 1999 when he signed with WCW.

Dean Douglas.. a failed teacher gimmick.

Perry Saturn found success in ECW as part of the Eliminators with the late John Kronus. The team would win the ECW World Tag Team Championships on three different occasions. He jumped to WCW in 1997 and his popularity really showed in late 1998 while feuding with Raven. The peak of his popularity came in early 1999 when he was in a feud with Chris Jericho and ended up wearing a dress after a loss at Souled Out in January.

Dean Malenko won the ECW Television Championship on two occasions and the ECW World Tag Team Championship once during his time with the company. He also had a memorable series of matches with Eddie Guerrero. Those matches got both men signed to WCW where Malenko would win the WCW Cruiserweight Championship four times, WCW United States Championship one time and the WCW World Tag Team Championships one time with Benoit.

Malenko was always recognized as being a great wrestler and his feud with Jericho in the spring of 1998 catapulted Malenko as a babyface. However, by 1999 Malenko was again lost in the shuffle.

After breaking in for Stu Hart’s Stampede Wrestling in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, Chris Benoit made his name in Japan and had minor championship success with ECW winning the tag titles on one occasion. It didn’t take long for the WCW fan base to get behind Benoit as he had memorable feuds with Kevin Sullivan and Booker T from 1996 to 1998. By 1998, many fans were getting frustrated that Benoit had not won a championship in the company. While he would actually win the WCW Television Championship twice in 1998, they went virtually unrecognized as they happened on house shows.

Along with Malenko, Benoit finally won WCW gold and had it recognized on television when they won the WCW World Tag Team Championships at Uncensored. The reign didn’t even last a month, though. By the summer of 1999, all four men were lost in the shuffle at WCW.

After Saturn, Benoit and Malenko lost a six man tag match to Flair, DDP and Kanyon on the 7/29 Thunder, Douglas came out and officially formed the Revolution. He made it clear that they were sick of being overlooked for the old timers that WCW had relied on for quite some time.

At the time, this was exactly what WCW needed to do. In order to combat the WWF, they needed to focus on creating their own, younger stars, much like WWF had done after being raided by WCW numerous times over the years. A foundation of Douglas, Benoit, Malenko and Saturn would be a good start.

Unfortunately, WCW was never quite committed to the idea. Sure, Benoit won the WCW United States Championship on the August 9th over the undeserving David Flair and the Revolution won their pay-per-view matches at Road Wild where Benoit retained over Page and the other members beat the West Texas Rednecks but it was all downhill from there.

At the September PPV ‘Fall Brawl’, Benoit lost the WCW United States Championship to Sid Vicious, who was preparing for a feud against Goldberg and really had no reason to be champion since the feud had more than enough drawing power without a title. Even more surprising, the Revolution lost their other two matches on the card. Dean Malenko and Shane Douglas lost to career mid-carders Hugh Morrus and Brian Knobs. Perry Saturn failed to win the WCW Television Championship from Rick Steiner. I should note, Benoit would win the TV Championship from Rick Steiner on the following Nitro, only to lose it back at Halloween Havoc.

Over the course of the next several months, the group would actually disband with Benoit leaving and becoming a babyface. Douglas, Saturn and Malenko would feud with the Filthy Animals and have an Un-American gimmick, even though the entire group was actually from the United States.

Benoit would get his greatest success while not in the group when he beat Sid Vicious at Souled Out in January of 2000 to win the vacant WCW World Heavyweight Championship, but he left the company along with Saturn, Malenko and non-Revolution member Eddie Guerrero later that same week.

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A stable that was to have changed the landscape of WCW lasted all of two and a half months before splitting up. But, looking back… were they even believable as main eventers?

Sure, Chris Benoit was, without question, a sure fire main event guy and the matches he had with Bret Hart proved that. The same goes with matches with Flair and Sting. I don’t recall Benoit wrestling Hogan, but even if he had, he wouldn’t have likely been able to do the moves or work the style that helped make him popular to begin with.

But, would a guy like Dean Malenko be believable? He made a career of having outstanding matches with guys his size like Rey, Juventud and Eddie. Would a Malenko vs. Hogan or Malenko vs. Sting bring out thousands of people? I don’t see it happening.

What about Perry Saturn and Shane Douglas? Shane was a main event caliber wrestler in his own mind, a great talker, but honestly can you think of a memorable match he was involved in? It takes me a minute to think of a good match that doesn’t involve Ricky Steamboat as his tag team partner.

Saturn never screamed main event material to me, either. At most, he would have been a great WCW United States Champion but anything more than that just wouldn’t be realistic. So, really, Benoit was the only worthwhile Revolution main event member.

Maybe it’s just me having been use to seeing those guys in mid-card level matches, but this was a Revolution that I didn’t want to be part of.

What are your memories of the Revolution? Would you have bought them all as main event wrestlers? Do you agree or disagree with my opinions? Let me know below!

Thanks for reading.

Bob Colling Of Wrestling Recaps

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WWE Superstars Results for 10/9/14

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WWE Superstars Results from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn to be aired on 10/9/14 (taped 10/6/14)

* Zack Ryder defeated Heath Slater with the Ruff Ryder. Fun match with the crowd gradually getting more into it as it went on.

* Naomi defeated Cameron.

The Soap Box: Five Ways WWE Can Make The Intercontinental Title Relevant Again

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Brock Lesnar is the current WWE World Heavyweight Champion and there are rumors that he will be wearing the gold until next year’s WrestleMania 31. Some fans love the idea of a champion who only shows up on special occasions while others feel it is the champion’s duty to wrestle on every pay-per-view as well as Raw, Smackdown. There are valid points on both sides of the argument.

Old school fans who grew up with Hulkamania won’t even bat an eyelash at a part-time wrestler carrying the belt. Those who were raised in the Attitude Era and beyond have been spoiled, in a sense, because a weekly appearance by the champion is the norm. There really is no right or wrong answer to the part-time Lesnar equation. However, in order to appeal to those who want a top-tier champion on a consistent basis, WWE already has the answer, they just need to pull the trigger and use it. It’s a prop that weights 15 lbs., bears gold plates and is held together by a white leather strap. It’s called the Intercontinental Championship.

Back in the day, the world title matches sold the show and the IC title match often stole it. Being the Intercontinental champion meant you were the second best wrestler in the company and the next in line to be the guy. Unfortunately, the once prestigious championship that produced bouts such as Randy Savage vs. Ricky Steamboat, Bret Hart vs. Davey Boy Smith, and Shawn Michaels vs. Razor Ramon is now nothing more than a hollow badge of honor where the title holder experiences defeat more often than triumph. The current generation of fans has been conditioned to not take the IC title seriously, just like they are used to having the world champion appear on a regular basis.

If there is any validity to the reports that Brock Lesnar won’t appear again in 2014, making the IC title relevant again could fill the void of a sparsely used world champion and here are five ways to make this happen.

5. A Main Eventer As Intercontinental Champion

In order to make the Intercontinental title relevant again, you need to put it on someone important, such as a main eventer. Doing so at first will create that mixture of enthusiasm and confusion. The excitement will come from the fact that a wrestler who is thought to have outgrown the Intercontinental ranks is now sporting the gold. Confusion will be derived from the notion that a top guy as an I.C. champion is a demotion, a downgrade, a one way ticket to the Sarlacc pit of mid card status. However, booking the right guy in the right situation could pay creative dividends.

Bray Wyatt would be the perfect heel candidate for this endeavor. To date, the twisted prophet has never won a championship. He is pushed as a heel and is over with the fans because he is highly entertaining in the ring and on the microphone. The heart and soul of professional wrestling storytelling lies in the chase. We are led to believe that it’s all about the babyface’s moment of conquest, but it is his pursuit of glory against the heel that fuels our enthusiasm for the product. The most interesting thing about Daniel Bryan’s time in the main event spotlight were all the obstacles he faced on the road to WrestleMania. Wyatt becoming IC champion would create buzz since it’s something different.

If you decide the chase is not the way to start such an initiative, Dean Ambrose fits the bill. He is the most over guy on the roster right now and has never held a singles title. Ambrose is a special type of wrestler that comes around once in a blue moon. The nuances of his performances resonates strongly with fans to an increasing degree which makes the lunatic fringe a sure fire investment. It’s gotten to the point where the creative team has booked from a storyline perspective to have wherever Ambrose goes, John Cena goes. The creative delusions of being stuck in the wrestling bubble would lead one to believe that Ambrose is getting the rub from John Cena, but in reality it is the leader of the Cenation who is trying to get some much needed street credit by association.

4. IC Title Main Events Are A Must

At Night of Champions, the Intercontinental title match between The Miz and Dolph Ziggler was nothing more than a promotional vehicle to endorse the country group Florida Georgia Line’s new album. That needs to change. Booking the IC champion in matches that matter would get the reign and the belt over as a viable commodity to the audience.

With Lesnar most likely skipping the B pay-per-views, this is the perfect opportunity to have the Intercontinental title fill that big match void. Using the Bray Wyatt example listed above while keeping him in his main event trajectory will send a subliminal message stating that the title’s prestige and merit is highly desired. Michael Cole and JBL hyping an IC title fight as the last bout of the evening throughout a three hour Raw or a two hour Smackdown will induce the importance of sticking around for the shows final act.

3. Consistency Is Key

The ideology that wins and losses don’t matter has plagued WWE creative for quite some time. With all the start and stop pushes over the years, several wrestlers have had their stock damaged beyond repair. Kofi Kingston is very talented performer but he is a prime example of someone that could beat Brock Lesnar, clean, and in the middle of the ring for the WWE title tomorrow and no one would buy it or be excited.

Big E, Dolph Ziggler, The Miz, Wade Barrett and others all lost more often than they won and were made to look like jabronies in the process. Winning is everything and having the champion win title and non-title matches in high profile situations will increase the value of the role, championship and wrestler.

2. Get Rid Of The White Strap

This may seem insignificant and minute, but having anything besides a black strap makes the belt look second rate and will make it a little harder to market it as a coveted prize. In fact, changing it right before this initiative begins and putting it on someone like an Ambrose or Wyatt would be a slight of hand way of saying this title matters now. Out with the old, in with the new.

Professional wrestling lends itself to having different and over the top theatrics and props but some things need to maintain a level of seriousness in order to get them over to their desired result. Boxing’s highly recognized championships have different color straps and they are rather ugly. Someone once told me that it doesn’t matter what the belt looks like because it’s the fact that you are the champion that matters. Titles mean zilch in boxing these days as it is all about the “moneyweight” fights instead of championship glory.

There are plenty of former Intercontinental champions who have changed the color of the belt over the years. Goldust often switched between white and gold and Ultimate Warrior constantly used a variety colors to match his ring attire. While being color coordinated, never hurt anyone and would normally be cool for a secondary title, you don’t want the centerpiece of a major initiative to look like a fashion accessory.

1. Capitalize On The Nostalgia

The one thing the Intercontinental championship has always had over any other title is nostalgia. Fans associate the WWE title for the dramatic moments such as the genesis of the Hulk Hogan or the Stone Cold Steve Austin era while those same people have a deep fondness towards legendary nights like Bret Hart vs. Mr. Perfect at Summer Slam 1991 or Randy Orton vs. Mick Foley at Backlash 2004.

I’m willing to bet that it is easier for a diehard wrestling fan to list their favorite IC title matches than it is to recite their favorite WWE title matches because that is what the IC title speaks to. Matches, titanic clashes, hard fought battles where getting the 1-2-3 was paramount over obtaining bragging rights for a night or simply getting one up on an opponent because you have the authoritative backing of the powers that be.

Air specials on the belt’s legacy and historic matches on the WWE Network. Have established and respected veterans come on television and share their war stories over a title that meant something to them because it symbolizes that you are an elite professional wrestler. WWE’s decade’s long push towards being sports entertainment won’t allow them to highlight the sport over spectacle, but the narrative doesn’t have to change. Just switch out certain words and spin it a little differently to maintain the promotional status quo while sending the same message.

If these five objectives can be executed to their fullest, while adding the dramatic flair of angles revolving around the main story lines, not only will fans no longer condemn Lesnar with such vitriol for his part time status, but we will have two well-placed and highly established commodities for the roster vie for when the WWE championship reverts back to its regularly scheduled programming.

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