Tuesday, July 23, 2013

The Future Was Stamped Out in 2005 by the WWE's Own Boot.



            The current WWE product has featured the same major players for years.  The top wrestler and face of the company is John Cena.  He has been on top since 2005 when he won his first WWE championship at WrestleMania 21.  It has been 8 years with Cena as the top of card with little new blood injected into the main event scene.  I recently watched every Pay Per Event offered by WWE during the year 2005.  I watched every match from Edge vs. Shawn Michaels at the Royal Rumble to Orton and Undertaker battling inside Hell in a Cell at Armageddon.  I wanted to look back on the year that Cena became the MAN.  I came across an interesting trend about that showed how WWE failed to create new stars during that year. 
            The year was the known as the ascension of Cena and Batista.  Early in the year Batista was the focus of the show as he won the Royal Rumble and his title win headlined WrestleMania over Cena’s.  The brand split was in full effect so each television show, Raw and Smackdown, had their own PPV’s.  This led to the many matches that made the PPV that never would have seen the light of day in years past or today.  This made it hard to sit through some of the undercards but it also gave me a chance to see a wide array of talent that was on the roster in 2005. 
            The focus of many of those undercards was on the young talent and many older wrestlers brought back to take some spotlight.  This is where the WWE didn’t give their younger talent the benefit of the doubt and focused on the older stars. The current and former main event stars owned the young guns. 
            Young stars like Carlito, Shelton Benjamin, Chris Masters, Gene Snitsky, Maven, Tyson Tomko, Mercury, Nitro and Rob Conway all had poor records on Pay Per View in 2005.  Blasts from the pasts like Hulk Hogan, Mick Foley, Jimmy Snuka, and Bob Orton were all undefeated.  A guy with tons of promise, Carlito, lost to both Foley and Ric Flair on the big stage.  The young guys were beaten down before they had a chance to grow and become stars.  None of the young guys are still with the company and none ever had a one on one PPV World Title match, let alone win the big one.  This lost generation has cost the WWE a lot of money over the years as fans tire of the same match-ups over and over again.  This trend continues over the next few years.  No new stars were elevated to the main events and most eventually left the company.  Each new batch of young guys fell by the wayside. 
            The guys who piled up wins in 2005 have definitely made their mark in WWE, as Cena, Batista, JBL, Kane, Big Show, Kurt Angle, Shawn Michaels Randy Orton and Undertaker have made tons of money for Vince McMahon.  Those guys were all established stars at this point having won multiple titles and sold tons of tickets and Pay Per View buys.  The only stars that were used to really put over other talent were Jericho, Christian andEddie Guerrero who went a combined and very Barry Horrowitz like 1-16. The only wrestlers that were built towards the main event scene during 2005 were Edge and Rey Mysterio.  These two would go on to headline many shows and win plenty of matches, but in a business where careers can be short and attention spans even shorter, only two superstars taking the steps from also ran to main event stars is not the way to grow your company. 
            The WWE is just now spending the time to develop young stars and debut them strongly and give the fans a reason to care about them.  The Shield, Fandango, Damien Sandow, Daniel Bryan, Dolph Ziggler and others have been given plenty of big wins over established stars and showing that the future of the business is bright.  Too many years the WWE ignored the future and buried its young talent under mountain of losses.  This caused the company to enter a period of staleness that began in 2005 and did not end until this year.  Hopefully new stars being made the right way means that the product will improve greatly.  This is great news for someone who loves this “fake” sport enough to write this blog post and say watch every Pay Per View from 2005 in succession. 
Please check out my other posts and feedback in appreciated below or at MattFerrell75@gmail.com or on Twitter @Ferrellcomedy
Below are the win loss records of every superstar to have a match on Pay-Per-View in 2005.  The Bonus points were racked up for being in main events, intial title wins which I gave more credo to then title retentions, and wins at WrestleMania or special matches like Money in the Bank, and the Royal Rumble. 
win  loss  B/C Title win BONUS
Rey 8 2 80% 1 3
Batista 8 3 73% 6 13
Cena 7 1 88% 7 9
JBL 6 2 75% 2 4
Benoit 6 3 67% 2 2
Kane 5 2 71% 1 2
Taker  5 2 71% 0 2
Edge 4 3 57% 0 3
Benjamin 3 2 60% 2 0
Booker 3 3 50% 0 0
Triple H 3 4 43% 2 5
Big Show 3 4 43% 1 3
Orton 3 4 43% 0 5
Angle 3 5 38% 0 3
Animal 2 0 100% 1 1
Hogan 2 0 100% 0 1
Lashley 2 0 100% 0 1
Flair 2 1 67% 2 1
Juventud 2 1 67% 1 1
Eugene 2 1 67% 1 0
Super Crazy 2 1 67% 0 0
Jordan 2 2 50% 2 0
Mercury 2 2 50% 0 0
Nitro 2 2 50% 0 0
Heidenreich 2 3 40% 1 1
Hardy 2 3 40% 0 0
HBK 2 6 25% 0 3
Bob Orton 1 0 100% 0 1
Kash 1 0 100% 1 1
Bubba 1 0 100% 0 1
Devon 1 0 100% 0 1
Storm 1 0 100% 0 0
Sabu 1 0 100% 0 0
Awesome 1 0 100% 0 0
Kennedy 1 0 100% 0 0
Long 1 0 100% 0 0
Rosey 1 1 50% 1 1
Hurricane 1 1 50% 1 1
Cade 1 1 50% 1 1
Murdoch 1 1 50% 1 1
London 1 1 50% 1 0
Chavo 1 2 33% 1 1
Regal 1 2 33% 1 0
Hassan 1 2 33% 0 0
Psychosis 1 2 33% 0 0
Carlito 1 3 25% 1 1
Eddie 1 6 14% 1 1
Jericho  0 6 0% 0 1
Christian 0 4 0% 0 0
Masters 0 3 0% 0 1
Tomko 0 2 0% 0 0
Maven 0 2 0% 0 0
Snitsky 0 2 0% 0 0
Dean 0 2 0% 0 0
Conway 0 2 0% 0 0
Holly 0 2 0% 0 0
Nunzio 0 2 0% 0 0
Dreamer 0 1 0% 0 1
Sandman 0 1 0% 0 1
Doug 0 1 0% 0 0
Danny 0 1 0% 0 0
Funaki 0 1 0% 0 0
Spike 0 1 0% 0 0
Moore 0 1 0% 0 0
Akio 0 1 0% 0 0
Reigns 0 1 0% 0 0
Lawler 0 1 0% 0 0
Tajiri 0 1 0% 0 0
Antonio 0 1 0% 0 0
Romeo 0 1 0% 0 0
Grenier 0 1 0% 0 0
Viscera 0 1 0% 0 0
Davari 0 1 0% 0 0
Haas 0 1 0% 0 0
Rhyno 0 1 0% 0 0
Tanaka 0 1 0% 0 0
Richards 0 1 0% 0 0
Meanie 0 1 0% 0 0
Foley 0 1 0% 0 0
Snuka 0 1 0% 0 0
Coach 0 1 0% 0 0
Bischoff 0 1 0% 0 0
Burchill 0 1 0% 0 0