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Joe Babinsack Looks At TNA, Sting and RVD

Joe Babinsack Looks At TNA, Sting and RVD

Posted: Mar 15th 2010 By: CMBurnham

It is painfully obvious how much the professional wrestling product has changed

It is painfully obvious how much the professional wrestling product has changed in fifteen years. It is also painfully obvious how entrenched decision makers are, in the belief that they are promoting to the same ten million fans that existed a decade ago.

Both the WWE and TNA are guilty of that error, but even ROH and the bulk of the independent scene cater to a mentality that the formulas, approach and sensibilities established by the height of the cable TV wars are the proven path of success for the industry.

And yet the creative efforts today pale in comparison.

At the height of the success of the NWO, a proven invasion angle played out to perfection, but ultimately without an endgame, one figure emerged to capture the emotions of the long time fans, and the dynamics of the Hogan/Hall/Nash dominance, and the patchwork of legends, fanbases and regionally established traditions that the whole angle was founded upon.

That figure was Sting.

As the lone holdout to the NWO domination, Sting was the embodiment of traditional fans and their hope for someone to stem the tide of the invasion. Sure, the NWO was triumphant, but the establishment of a super-cool, disrespectful and mean-spirited heel faction, wrapped in a veneer of the ?tweener? and pretending to be everything that professional wrestling wasn?t, was doomed to over-reach, and doomed WCW to its destruction, based on dynamics alone.

But Sting?s character played out at the time, to build up one of the biggest matches of the era, and to capture the faint and fading hope of fans that someone would stand up to the bullies.

That, my friends, is part of the established emotional dynamics of professional wrestling itself.

If the heels dominate, and cannot be bested, what is the future of the company? History, in the form of Buddy Rogers and his crew, bore that out in the 1950?s. Having a faction of cronies around to squeeze the life out of the fanbase, to suck up the profits, and to bleed a promotion dry?

ATM Eric anyone?

WCW was well on its way to what would happen a few years later, but Sting was there to draw a line in the sand. And while the crashing waves of coolness, of an ever-increasing heel faction, of an irresistible force of legends and in-their-prime names that captured anyone of interest from WCW?s past, well, that was the perfect enemy, if only one man would stand up.

This wasn?t the Millionaire?s Club and the Young Blood, this wasn?t TNA?s abortive and all but foolish recreation of last year, and this wasn?t a trite and tired attempt to put up a half-hearted effort of an impotent face faction.

Heck, it wasn?t even the death-throes of AWA and the emergence of the cult figure known as Jake ?The Milkman? Milliken to capture sentimentality of fans who knew it was almost over, so enjoy it while it lasts.

But Sting didn?t just stand up one day and beat people down with a baseball bat.

This wasn?t a one night stand, a sudden turn of events, nor a blink if your dare to miss it moment.

Sting wasn?t the same wrestler by the time he appeared fully on screen. Gone were the day-glo colors, the iconic image of a scorpion on his gear, and event the spiked hair and cartoonishly painted face.

No, Sting captured the essence of the era, and pushed it further. ?The Crow? was a cathartic comic book story made into a movie, featuring the rising star Brandon Lee, and was steeped in an awesome display of gothic darkness, storyline and real life tragedy, and soon to be iconic imagery that would inspire various wrestling gimmicks for years.

For a while, Sting was a ghostly figure, shrouded in darkness, obviously observing the reality of WCW, obviously dismayed by it all, obviously being affected by it all.

While I don?t know who?s to credit for the storyline, the look and the unveiling of the storyline, this period of time was an investment in the character, an investment in the ultimate confrontations, and a work that resulted in an awesome payoff for the company.

Sting versus Hogan.

WCW?s lone avenger against the power that brought about its ruin.

Meanwhile, at or around that same era, and centered mostly in the City of Brotherly Love, another angle was unfolding with a heated passion.

Rob Van Dam had emerged on the scene in Extreme Championship Wrestling. He was making a name for his high-flying, high-impact and high-ly egotistical attitude. Striding to the ring with Pantera?s ?Walk? stoking the crowd, RVD proved himself to be the whole ?F?N? show.

But the storyline that cemented him wasn?t a spectacular dive or a table crash or, really, just one moment.

It began, that?s for sure, with a lack of respect, and the refusal of a handshake.

But this wasn?t a one night stand, either. This was a confrontation that had to happen, but one that would play out over many months. This was an investment of time, effort and stroking of emotions. It was the crafting, by truly creative individuals and a mastermind behind the scenes, of a match that everyone wanted to happen.

So much so that it would launch ECW into the PPV era, and perhaps save the company from itself, from its completion (and, as we know today, from the purse-strings of a higher power.) And yeah, there?s probably some other lines converging in here, whether it was Tazz or Sabu, and concerning Sabu and his unfortunate contractual situation, but the essence remains the same: establishing something that people want to see means establishing it and drawing out the storyline, so everyone ?understands? it and everyone tells their friends about it, and thus it grows instead of diminishes, and thus it becomes meaningful and not meaningless.

Would ECW capture the clamor of its fans without doling out the disrespect, heightening the desire for the physical confrontation, creating a ?you must want to see this? match?

####

But last week, what did TNA do with two historically proven characters, two guys who have captured the interest of the fans through multiple promotions, through multiple eras, and who still have ?it? when you consider ?it? to be that certain connection to the audience?

They rolled them out with little advance warning, put them in a match that lasted 9 seconds, and completely blurred the primary angle with enough secondary angles that there?s no way in hell that anyone could care about what happens next, because for one, there is no followup that can tie up all these loose ends, and for another, because there?s no faith in TNA?s current creative department to even begin to think that they may attempt to make an effort of it.

When the NWO played out, at least there was a few years of establishment, before the lack of ?what?s next?? began to crumble the concept.

With TNA?s Monday Night ?debut? as a serious competitor to the WWE, we established the lack of ?what?s next?? before the show even ended.

And even there, the debut of Rob Van Dam was dissipated, because he couldn?t even re-appear at the end of the program, because someone obviously realized that debuting Jeff Hardy at the end of the program made much more sense.

As if setting up Hogan/Flair, Hogan/Sting, Sting/RVD and ? as an afterthought ? feebly establishing Abyss and A. J. Styles as credible current and championship level wrestlers wasn?t enough of a train wreck!

Today, in TNA, it?s not just that they expect that name value is going to drive viewership, it?s that they simply cannot comprehend the reality that the wrestling business has changed, that the ten million fans who watched ?once upon a time? are no longer bothering to participate.

More so, even though the internet age has sped up communications, I just don?t see how fans today are that caught up in wrestling such that they?d immediately text their friends or even jump on the phone to tell someone to turn on Spike.

Time is needed to establish things.

I mean, wasn?t that the concept of the ?water-cooler? focus, to get people talking the next day, to get people to want to watch the show the next week so they could see it first hand? But the problem is that the fans aren?t at the water-coolers. That fanbase needs to be rebuilt.

This isn't the professional wrestling world that existed in the mid to late 1990's. ECW is dead. WCW is long forgotten. That ten or eleven million is at best a third, arguably a half. People who watched religiously now don't care, and the same tired formula, and the same frantic hotshotting is keeping the old fans away, no matter what lies and deceptions and self-delusions Creative comes up with.

Legendary names still exist, but they shouldn't be wrestling in the ring; those that can be wrestling in the ring, should be doing so with a purpose, not just an unadvertised appearance.

There is an economic concept call the law of diminishing returns.

Today, we?re seeing that in action, as TNA chases fans that have already long left the business

 

Tags: WWE, TNA, Sting, WCW, ECW, Ric Flair, A. J. Styles

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Spotlight in History

  • 1937 Hugh Nichols def. Bobby Chick for the NWA World Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 1980 Gino Hernandez def. Kevin Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 1984 The Super Destroyers (Super Destroyer 1 & Super Destroyer 2) def. The Rock & Soul Connection (Buck Zumhofe & King Parsons) for the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 1989 Super Zodiac & Cactus Jack def. Jeff Jarrett & Kerry Von Erich for the WCCW World Tag Team Champion
  • 1989 Super Zodiac def. Eric Embry for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 2007 Brent Albright def. Rocco Valentino for the NWA-U Universal Heavyweight Champion
  • 2007 Texas, Inc. (Tim Rockwell & Bernard Funk) def. Mass Destruction (Spoiler 2000 & The Bounty Hunter) for the NWA-U Universal Tag Team Champion
  • 2012 Ignition def. Steven Sterling for the ComPro Showtime Champion
  • 2012 Super Skunk Ape, Jr. def. Se7en for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Champion
  • 2018 Jerry Dean/Jerry Storm became the BPW Lion Heart Champion
  • 2018 Aaron Anders def. Michael Wolf for the ComPro Heavyweight Champion
  • 2023 Brody Wortman def. Skidz for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Skidz def. Brody Wortman for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Jason Simon def. Skidz for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Drake Gallows def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Punk Synister def. Drake Gallows for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Jason Simon def. Punk Synister for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Brandon Groom def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Punk Synister def. Brandon Groom for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Jason Simon def. Punk Synister for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Nibira def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 2023 Mikey O'Shea def. Nibira for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion

Week of Sun 05-19 to Sat: 05-25

  • 05-19 1937 Hugh Nichols def. Bobby Chick for the NWA World Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 1980 Gino Hernandez def. Kevin Von Erich for the WCCW American Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 1984 The Super Destroyers (Super Destroyer 1 & Super Destroyer 2) def. The Rock & Soul Connection (Buck Zumhofe & King Parsons) for the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 05-19 1989 Super Zodiac & Cactus Jack def. Jeff Jarrett & Kerry Von Erich for the WCCW World Tag Team Champion
  • 05-19 1989 Super Zodiac def. Eric Embry for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 2007 Brent Albright def. Rocco Valentino for the NWA-U Universal Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 2007 Texas, Inc. (Tim Rockwell & Bernard Funk) def. Mass Destruction (Spoiler 2000 & The Bounty Hunter) for the NWA-U Universal Tag Team Champion
  • 05-19 2012 Ignition def. Steven Sterling for the ComPro Showtime Champion
  • 05-19 2012 Super Skunk Ape, Jr. def. Se7en for the ComPro Oklahoma X Division Champion
  • 05-19 2018 Jerry Dean/Jerry Storm became the BPW Lion Heart Champion
  • 05-19 2018 Aaron Anders def. Michael Wolf for the ComPro Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Brody Wortman def. Skidz for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Skidz def. Brody Wortman for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Jason Simon def. Skidz for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Drake Gallows def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Punk Synister def. Drake Gallows for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Jason Simon def. Punk Synister for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Brandon Groom def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Punk Synister def. Brandon Groom for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Jason Simon def. Punk Synister for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Nibira def. Jason Simon for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-19 2023 Mikey O'Shea def. Nibira for the MajCW 24/7 On Call Champion
  • 05-20 1980 Junkyard Dog def. Terry Gordy for the MSW Louisiana Champion
  • 05-20 2006 Impact Inc. (John Zorthos & Bernie Donderwitz) def. The Old School Assassins (Brad Michaels & Seth Allen) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-20 2006 John O'Malley became the IZW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-20 2017 Robyn Reid def. Erica for the IZW Womens Champion
  • 05-20 2017 Beach Bod Gods (Angel Camacho & Ray the Bae) def. Nemesis (Rage Logan & Damien Morte) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-20 2017 Kevin Morgan def. Johnny Z for the IZW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-20 2017 Riker def. Mr. Nasty for the UWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-20 2022 Wesley Crane def. Anarchy [2nd] for the UWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-20 2023 Royal Pimpin' (Alex Royal & Mr. Nasty) def. Southern Aristocracy (Eddie LeVaughn & Anthony Wild) for the UWE Tag Team Champions
  • 05-20 2023 Cappuccino Jones def. Dan Webber for the UWE Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-21 1971 Dusty Rhodes def. Bill Watts for the TSW North American Champion
  • 05-21 1984 Kevin Von Erich def. Killer Khan for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 05-21 2004 Cade Sydal def. X-Cal for the SRPW Light Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-21 2004 Michael Faith def. Butch Dalton for the TPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-21 2004 New Canada (AWOL & Jon Davis) def. Sexy Bologna (Anthony Jackson & Sudden Impact) for the TPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-21 2016 Skylar Slice def. Athena for the IZW Queens Champion
  • 05-21 2017 Von Erichs (Marshall Von Erich & Ross Von Erich) def. The Arrow Club (Kyle Hawk & Ky-Ote) for the IWR Tag Team Champions
  • 05-21 2017 Von Erichs (Marshall Von Erich & Ross Von Erich) def. The Arrow Club (Kyle Hawk & Ky-Ote) for the TCW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-22 1955 Mike Clancy def. Ricki Starr for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-22 1985 The Nightmare [1st]/The Masked Champion/The Champion def. Terry Taylor for the MSW North American Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-22 2009 Texas Outlaws, Inc. (Tim Rockwell & Bernard Funk & Bobby Burns & J. W. Hardin) became the TAP Tag Team Champions
  • 05-22 2021 DNR (Drake Gallows & Revan) def. Rejecs LM (Elijah Sparks & Dr. Corvus) for the EPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-22 2021 Father Padge def. Revan for the BCW Buzzsaw Champion
  • 05-22 2021 Paul Puertorico became the XDWF New GenX Champion
  • 05-23 1984 The Midnight Express (Dennis Condrey & Bobby Eaton) def. The Rock-N-Roll Express (Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson) for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 05-23 2004 Se7en & Li'l Joe def. Bernie Donderwitz & Mr. Brown for the ACW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-23 2004 Li'l Joe def. Bernie Donderwitz for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-23 2009 Maniac Mike def. Kareem Sadat for the SWCW Hardcore Champion
  • 05-23 2009 Sage def. Rage Logan for the SWCW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-23 2010 Damien Morte def. Crisstopher Crow for the SWCW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-23 2015 Brad Michaels def. Jermaine Johnson for the IZW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-23 2020 Cody Burns def. Drake Gallows for the BCW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-23 2021 Luke Savage def. Garcia for the ASP Mid-American Champion
  • 05-23 2021 Malik Mayfield became the ASP Livestream Champion
  • 05-24 1954 Rocco Perez def. Frenchy Roy for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-24 2020 Shawn Sanders became the ASP Mid-American Champion
  • 05-25 1986 Terry Taylor def. Buzz Sawyer for the UWF Television Champion
  • 05-25 2013 Brock Landers became the SWCW All-American Champion
  • 05-25 2013 The American Pitbulls (Craig Stevens & Jason Jaxon) def. The Investment (Jason Noal & Jay Sinn) for the ACW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-25 2019 Zakk Sinizter def. Anarchy [2nd] for the UWE Apex Champion
  • 05-25 2019 Simply the Future (Alex Royal & J. D.) became the UWE Tag Team Champions
  • 05-25 2019 Proclamation (Ethan Cole & Reed) def. Simply the Future (Alex Royal & J. D.) for the UWE Tag Team Champions
05-19
  • Will Chambers May 19th Today!
  • Dick Slater May 19th Today!
  • Andre the Giant May 19th Today!
  • Bateman May 19th Today!
  • Buzz Markley May 19th Today!
  • Mongol May 19th Today!
  • Dale Veasey May 20th
  • Chuey Martinez May 21st
  • Ivan Kalmikoff May 21st
  • Donna Christanello May 23rd
  • Santana Jackson May 23rd
  • Babyface D'Amanti May 23rd
  • Slash May 23rd
  • Gemini [2nd] May 24th
  • Shane Rawls May 24th
  • Ricky Romero May 24th
  • Lucas May 24th
  • Dark Journey May 25th
  • Michael York May 25th
  • Dominique Lereaux May 25th
  • Quarky Storm May 25th
  • Guy Atticus May 25th
  • Reggie Lincoln May 26th
  • Tank Bryson May 26th
  • Justin Adams May 26th
  • Michael Duplanti May 26th
  • Kelly Kiniski May 27th
  • Crucifer May 27th
  • Jim Thorpe May 28th
  • Kamala May 28th
  • Edge Stone May 28th
  • Maria Star May 28th
  • Dean Lambert May 28th
  • Max McGuirk May 29th
  • Jimmy Kane May 29th
  • Samu May 29th
  • Psycho Mike May 29th
  • Jesse Storm May 30th
  • Boss Hardzog May 30th
  • Jake Roberts May 30th
  • Fuel May 31st
  • Mascara Purpura May 31st
  • Anna Jackson Jun 1st
  • Ross Von Erich Jun 1st
  • James Storm Jun 1st
  • Violet Payne Jun 1st
  • Bobby Burns Jun 1st

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Current Champions

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  • Rose Champion: Killa Kate
  • Tag Team Champions: K. O. A.
  • Oklahoma Champion: Tim Storm
  • Texas Champion: Gorilla Militia
  • Dynasty Champion: Kari Wright