|
by Tom
the Actuary
People think that Kevin Nash has been unimportant in the great history of
the sport of wrestling because he has been a "poor draw" as both WWF
and WCW champion. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth. Well maybe
something could be. Come to think of it, I guess I don't know enough about
everything, ever, to say that something might not be further from the truth.
Let me try this whole thing again: People think that Kevin Nash has been unimportant in the great history of
the sport of wrestling because he has been a "poor draw" as both WWF
and WCW champion. In fact, this statement is some indeterminate distance,
which I will arbitrarily denote as "large", from the truth. There. Here is an outline of my argument. Nash left the WWF for WCW, and: · His entrance sparked the nWo angle, which would never have worked
with just Hall. All because of Kevin Nash. Why do I think the (nWo) angle would never have
worked with just Scott Hall? Well, Kevin Nash had some things going for him
that Scott Hall never had: · He was a bigger, more impressive physical specimen. So, sports entertainment as we know it owes a tremendous debt to Kevin
Nash, because without him, none of the reshaping of the sport in the US from
1996 on might have happened. Now, there are those who judge him by things like match ratings, workrate,
or his success while a booker, I say: you're missing the point. Kevin Nash got
booked (sometimes by himself) to beat people up and look good doing it. This
may not have been wrestling, in the pure sense, but people liked to see it. If Kevin Nash doesn't jump to WCW... the Hogan heel turn would have been
different, or never tried... Steve Austin might have had DiBiase speaking for
him until he died the inevitable "Million-Dollar Corporation" career
death... the WWF might not have ever tried boosting their match quality or
reality-based, edgier characters, because without ever losing to WCW in the
ratings, the WWF would not have ever changed. Without the roster shakeups that came from WCW's new found competitiveness,
the general stagnation of the mid-nineties might have continued. And the WWF
wouldn't have made back to network television, or become publicly held... so
WWF stockholders might owe Kevin Nash a little thanks, as well. The entire hierarchy of successful wrestlers, the legacy of modern
storylines, the advent of both network contracts and public holding of
wrestling organizations may all ultimately be traced to Kevin Nash leaving to
go to WCW. Well, that proves that - kind of. I read years ago that Nash got into wrestling when Dustin Rhodes saw him
while Nash was serving as a bouncer at a bar. Rhodes invited Nash to come try
out at WCW, and the rest is history... Say... you know... People think that Dustin Rhodes has been unimportant in the great history
of the sport of wrestling because he never became the star his father was, or
became one of the top few names in the business. But he and Big Sexy might just have saved wrestling. | |||
![]() | |||
copyright © 2001 TheSmarks.com - all rights reserved Copyright and Legal Information - Terms of Service | |||