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by Eric
Szulczewski
People who remember my run at Emzee know that I did a column there
called The Mirror, which focused on some of the irrationalities going around in
the Internet wrestling scene. I retired The Mirror at the end of
Emzee (although I've been asked to bring it back by some webmasters for their
sites), but that doesn't mean that I'm still not keeping my eye out for
silliness going on at various sites. I mourn the loss of Scoops; that
place was a mountain with a rich vein of stupidity begging to be strip-mined.
It was recently that I ran across a statement that just about defined
"silly" in terms of wrestling commentary. I made a few
comments about it in my news column on The Shooters, but it begged to be
commented on in detail. Here it is in full:
It wouldn't be that difficult for the WWF to come up with a way to make the outcome
of the Rumble less predictable. Instead of the winner automatically moving on to
WrestleMania as the number one contender, the winner should be given a match at the
Feb. PPV to determine who will earn the title match at WrestleMania.
Perhaps the Rumble winner should face the Intercontinental Champion or King of the
Ring winner at the Feb. PPV with the winner moving onto WrestleMania's title match.
At the same time, the WWF Champion should defend his title against another top contender which would also set up the WrestleMania main
event.
- Jason Powell, The Torch, January 22, 2001
If this had been put up at some whiteboard somewhere, it would have garnered
no attention. Readers would have simply disregarded it as the raving
of some ninny and blew it off. But coming from Jason Powell, and
being put up on the Torch, gives this statement a much greater aura of
importance and significance.
Yes, I could go along with all of you and say that Jason Powell is a
moron. I came to that conclusion a long time ago. But it's
not enough in this case. It'd be a shame to miss out on an
opportunity to slam the Torch on something other than spelling and syntax
errors. The chance to make one of Wade's right-hand flunkies look
like a fool...like I'm going to pass that up.
So let's start deconstructing his argument. Let me rephrase
that. Let's start destroying his argument:
Premise: The Royal Rumble winner is not much of a mystery anymore, so let's put some uncertainty into it.
No argument from me on that one. The reason I've soured on Royal
Rumble is the fact that the best single match the WWF has on its schedule has
been turned into a showcase of the obvious. The possible winners are
always one or two in number nowadays, with the occasional weird wildcard thrown
in to make certain that the smarks start wondering how they'd get out of it if
they booked this guy to win (example: 1999). There's a
need to get some uncertainty back into the mix.
1) No automatic title shot at Wrestlemania should be given to the Royal
Rumble winner.
Then what's the whole point of the Royal Rumble? Ever since the
automatic title provision was put into place, it's become the reason why the
Rumble's been conducted. If you want to abandon the automatic title
shot at WM in its place, then you have to substitute something
else. Here's some suggestions:
a) The winner of the Rumble gets an automatic title shot at the next night's
Raw. This opens up the booking completely. You can give
anyone you want to have a push a nice little boost by having them win the
Rumble.
b) The title is up for grabs in the Rumble match itself, and the title
holder gets #30 (or #27, or #24, if you want to play to the
smarts). This idea has been presented by a number of
people. Its merits are quite obvious. It restores the
atmosphere of mystery and importance to the Rumble, and it makes for a more
competitive match.
c) Have nothing on the line and just have it be a showcase
match. Then it becomes a push-fest. The Royal Rumble has
worked out very well for some wrestlers who need to be given a
push. They're the ones who normally land up with the Kevin Nash
Booking (Rikishi, Kane, etc.).
d) Get rid of No Way Out. This PPV is the red-headed stepchild of
the WWF. Its placement in between Royal Rumble and Wrestlemania
guarantees limited, uncreative booking and/or something out of the Twilight Zone
in order to get the proper matches settled for WM. Eliminating it
entirely would be the best solution for the WWF, who would have more time to
hype WM and get it back to being something more special. Of course,
asking the WWF to eliminate a PPV would be treated like taking food out of a
baby's mouth.
2) The winner of the Rumble will have a match at No Way Out for the title.
This pumps No Way Out far beyond what it should be. If the WWF
persists in this fiction of having "major" PPVs, then Royal Rumble has
to be considered one of them. With the Rumble simply being a
preliminary match for a non-title contest at No Way Out, the value of Royal
Rumble seriously decreases, and the match just becomes another battle royal.
Of course, now the hypocrisy charge can get called on me. I
suggested that the Rumble winner should get a title shot on Raw the next
night. Isn't that deflating the importance of the
Rumble? No, it isn't. PPVs have long been just a set-up
for the next night's show rather than something important in and of
themselves. This would just continue that trend.
3) The Rumble winner should face either the IC title holder or the King of the Ring at No Way Out for the automatic title shot.
Oh, dear God...
This deserves a complete deconstruction and examples. First of
all, the purpose behind the suggestion is to free up the booking for the Royal
Rumble. So, instead, you're going to restrict the booking of the
Intercontinental title in return. Any hot-shot of the title prior to
Royal Rumble or No Way Out will be seen as a setup. And then you want
to throw the King of the Ring into this mix? You want to book ahead
nine months in advance and hope that your KOTR winner gets over and stays over,
just for a match at an off-month PPV? If he hadn't included the King
of the Ring, maybe I could have let this one get by. But that
suggestion throws this into the town square of Idiotville.
As a practical exercise, let's do a little time travel and see what the
ramifications of this would be, shall we?
2001: Royal Rumble winner Steve Austin versus Intercontinental
Champion Chris Jericho (King of the Ring winner Kurt Angle, as WWF champion, is
disqualified). This is the match that Powell was probably thinking
about when he thought of this idiocy. Yeah, it works for
me. But they couldn't avoid an Austin squash in the No Way Out match.
2000: Royal Rumble winner The Rock versus Intercontinental
Champion Chris Jericho or King of the Ring Billy Gunn. The thought of
either of these matches, especially the second, makes me want to get out a
cattle prod and do things to my genitals that aren't very
pleasant. The only one of the three that I enjoy watching, Jericho,
would again be the victim of a squash.
1999: Royal Rumble winner Vince McMahon versus Intercontinental
Champion and King of the Ring Ken Shamrock. Anyone want to run this
one through TNM to see how many negative stars it would get? Yes,
let's give the main event of a PPV over to a shootfighter with no sense of
self-control in the ring and a guy in his mid-fifties. Actually,
that's almost what we got at St. Valentines' Day Massacre with Austin and VKM,
and it wasn't too painful. But Shamrock's no Austin.
1998: Royal Rumble winner Steve Austin versus Intercontinental
Champion The Rock or King of the Ring HHH. Hmmm, this sounds awfully
familiar, doesn't it?
In retrospect, of course, the decision made here would affect the entire
future of the WWF. It was at Royal Rumble that Shawn Michaels
suffered the back injury that would put him out until later this year
(read: Wrestlemania). Thus, the other person in the WM
match would have been the man who he would pass the torch to at WMXIV (in real
life, this was Austin, of course). Could you imagine the cries of
"Clique Conspiracy" if that other person had been Trip? And
if it had been the Rock, could you imagine...well, you don't have to
imagine. Just cut and paste the criticisms that were laid on the WWF
when Trip won at WM last year. Remember, Flex was still a heel (and I
still liked him). So the only rational solution to who would get the
automatic title match was the one that the WWF made in real
life. There would have been no need for the obfuscation of this
solution other than to elevate Trip.
1997: Royal Rumble winner Steve Austin (I should have put that on
macro) versus Intercontinental Champion HHH (Steve Austin, of course, was the
reigning King of the Ring; the first Austin 3:16 speech,
remember?). Four years and nothing's changed. The WWF has
been officially diagnosed with sclerosis of the book.
1996: Royal Rumble winner Shawn Michaels versus Intercontinental
Champion Goldust or King of the Ring Mabel. This is where any
arguments in favor of this really start to break down, for obvious
reasons. One more just to prove it...
1995: Royal Rumble winner Shawn Michaels versus Intercontinental
Champion Jeff Jarrett or King of the Ring Owen Hart. Okay, this
doesn't prove it. As Pat Barker told me when I hit him with this, you
can't go wrong with either match (and wouldn't a three-way dance have been
something to see?). But it's still an exception, and the fact that
you have to go back six years to find a match combo that we smarks would be
thrilled to death over shows a great deal (the 1998 combo would certainly have
thrilled the marks in the audience, even three years ago when Trip wasn't Trip
yet).
It does prove the point about predictability. Either Austin or
Michaels has won the Rumble five years out of the last seven, and considering
that the other two winners were non-wrestlers (obligatory anti-Rock shot
accomplished), it isn't saying much about the importance these days of the
Rumble match. Powell's solution just doesn't work given the nature of
WWF booking. The restrictions imposed would drive the bookers insane,
and make the Rumble match even more predictable in order to get something
together that would make people buy No Way Out.
4) The WWF champion should defend his title against an opponent of someone's choice at No Way Out in order to finalize booking for
Wrestlemania.
The WWF champion should be defending at every PPV
regardless. They're trying this particular tactic this year with
Austin and Trip. But it's just not working. The WWF knows
that their only big-money matches for Wrestlemania are some combination of
Austin, Rock, or Trip, and I have this feeling they're going to book an
inconclusive ending to this one so they can set up a repeat of that death march
from last year sans Foley (who I feel will somehow get involved along with
Michaels).
The booking of the main event of Wrestlemania is the main culprit behind the
predictability of Royal Rumble. The WWF feels that they have to
deliver in spades in the main event at Wrestlemania, and the linkage between the
Royal Rumble match and the main event at Wrestlemania can't help but instill an
element of predictability. The problem is that there isn't en masse
complaining about this situation. Fans are just accepting it and
thrilled to death that Austin or the Rock are going over in the
Rumble. Some fans, though, are aware of that situation, but the
suggestions seem to be worse than what we have right now.
Jason Powell's an idiot, but he's an idiot with his heart in the right
place. The bigger idiots are the people just sitting there accepting
dull, predictable Rumble matches.
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