9 Scary Reasons WWE History Says We’ll Hate Roman Reigns By Next Year

19:43 ubaid 0 Comments



WWE.com

It's inexorable that if the WWE needs the fans to love somebody, inside the one year from now, they're going to despise that individual. It simply happens. It's the opposite of advising somebody not to consume cake. They're going to consume cake. In the event that they tell the WWE Universe they shouldn't boo somebody, they've effectively done what needs to be done that they will be booed.

On the off chance that there isn't motivation to detest somebody yet, they'll make one up, it doesn't make a difference. That is what's so unnerving when the WWE pushes somebody as the top babyface in the organization, you never know when the swarm will turn on them, and once that happens, its an unwinnable difficult task to get them back in great support. One wrong venture along the way, and blast, their vocation as a babyface could be over. Can the WWE gain from history? Since here comes Roman Reigns!

We're now on an extremely perilous way with Roman Reigns. Is it accurate to say that they are pushing him excessively quick? Excessively hard? Is it true that it is alright that each show for as far back as month has finished with him remaining over others? Will the WWE energy the fans to loathe him? History says yes. Unquestionably, yes.


9. 5 Moves of Doom 2.0 (“Hogan Knows…” Only Five Moves)

WWE.com


History doesn’t lie, and it will tell you that when a wrestler starts to hit the same five moves every single match, the fans will react accordingly. At first, they’ll erupt. Yay, Hogan is hulking up and who knows what will happen? Then, they become complacent. Oh, Hogan is hulking up and next will be a few punches, a boot to the face, and the leg drop of doom. Finally, the audience will adapt the “you can’t wrestle” mentality of every match Hogan is in. Ah, Hogan is hulking up, guess they can flip the channel back to the Food Network now.
When John Cena took the Hulk Hogan approach to using the same moves every match as a babyface, it was the end of 2003, but he really gained momentum in early 2004 when he defeated the Big Show to win the United States title. By the time John Cena was drafted to Monday Night Raw at the beginning of 2005, the fans already hated him. In a feud with Chris Jericho as the heel, the WWE universe favored Jericho over the babyface John Cena, and a lot of that was contributed to the fact that John Cena’s matches were always the exact same match every night. This trend never, EVAR ended still to this day.
Now, today, how long will it take before they turn on Roman Reigns having a running superpunch, a running spear, and literally no other moves? History says not long.

0 comments: