Considering the state of the roster WWE should really
just be planning on the one. There just aren’t enough guys to present the
traditional two worthwhile matches at this year’s show. As Money in the Bank is
a star making tool regular main eventers always feel like peculiar inclusions
in these bouts. It’s a match designed to elevate mid-carders, and because the
mid-card has been neglected for so long WWE only has enough guys to put
together one decent match.
Promoting two would dilute the quality. Presenting one would
allow WWE to use only the best talent and avoid sticking guys in just to keep
the numbers up. I’d rather watch one very good match than two average ones. It
would also allow a fresh scenario to be presented: the winner being allowed to
cash-in their case against either of the company’s two world champions. It
would make things far more unpredictable and give the company more for booking
the cash-in.
What’s interesting now, over a month before the show, is
how there aren’t any obvious candidates to win. Someone could still be plucked
from the pack and given a push before the event but that’s probably not going
to happen. The last few years have shown that WWE is much happier using a Money
in the Bank victory as a starting point for a push to the top than as the
culmination of months of work.
There are several guys who could be picked to win the
match (or one of the matches). Kofi
Kingston is not amongst them. ‘The Wildcat’ has been given time off to get
elbow surgery and is expected to return in early August, weeks after the Money
show. He’s used every year to make up the numbers so he would certainly have
competed in a ladder match this year had he been healthy. WWE having exhausted
most of their other options for new stars he would have stood a slight chance
of winning too.
Cody Rhodes is
someone who could be pushed to the top. He’s a reliable member of the roster
and has enjoyed a couple of reigns with a mid-card championship. That’s the
established background of several previous MITB inners, including Dolph
Ziggler, Edge and Daniel Bryan. Also in Rhodes’ favour is that he can work as
either a heel or a face. He’s been a bad guy for years now but he was effective
as a fan favourite when he was first introduced. A face turn could be what he
needs to help him make the leap to main events.
Is this Cody's year to grab a case?
Sticking with heels who could win (because there aren’t
really very many credible faces outside of the main event in WWE) there’s Wade Barrett. The former king of bare
knuckle boxing (or whatever his gimmick is) has seemed on the cusp of getting a
tryout as a headliner for a while. He may be saddled with the IC strap right
now but his feud with The Miz and Fandango (and no Curtis Axel) could see him free
himself of the mid-card trinket before heading on to bigger things with a
briefcase.
Barrett has the promo skills, look and ring ability to
work as a main event wrestler in WWE. If the company can bring themselves to
keep a push going for more than a few weeks he’d prove he’s ready for better
things.
If WWE wanted to create a new face star they could have Big E Langston win a briefcase at this
year’s show. He’s the sort of wrestler they like to have as a lead babyface (basically,
he’s a strong dude). That’s in his favour, as is his affiliation with current
World Heavyweight champion Dolph Ziggler. Big E could win the MITB case and
then tease turning on ‘The Show Off’. If planned and timed correctly that could
be an enjoyable story that turns Langston into a huge face when he finally
flattens Ziggy.
Of course it could also backfire and result in Langston
being booed in favour of the already over and far more tenured World champ.
That’d be fine too: the feud could continue with ‘The Heel’ in the babyface
role, perhaps with AJ turning on her man to side with Langston.
The only current babyface that strikes me as having a
realistic chance of being entered into a Money in the Bank match and winning is
Daniel Bryan. ‘The Dazzler’ has been
one of the company’s most popular wrestlers since the yes and no craze took off
at the beginning of last year, despite WWE trying to bury him at times. The
weak link storyline he’s heading into at the moment could culminate with him
winning Money in the Bank for the second time, thus “proving” to everyone that
he’s a credible wrestler.
Could he be a two time 'Mr Money in the Bank'? Yes! Yes! Yes!
The final guy I think has a reasonable chance at becoming
‘Mr Money in the Bank’ is Antonio Cesaro.
He’s been on a well-documented losing spree since the start of the year, falling
to fellow mid-carders and high card talent alike, having to satisfy himself
with wins on weekend shows and NXT.
That’s part of WWE’s standard approach when using someone
who was popular in the indies. The same thing happened to both CM Punk and
Daniel Bryan. They’re both doing okay now. By the time Money in the Bank comes
around WWE may have stopped the nonsense with ‘The Swiss Sensation’ and be
prepared to start positioning him for a top spot.
Even if that doesn’t happen I’m confident Cesaro will be
in Money in the Bank as a reliable hand to make up the numbers. And he won’t be
the only one. We can also expect the likes of Sin Cara, R-Truth and Christian
to flesh out the Money matches (especially if WWE goes ahead with two). It’s
possible we’ll see former champs like Jack Swagger, The Miz and Alberto Del Rio
getting in on the act too. The former champs could win I suppose, but it would
be a bad decision on WWE’s part. As I said above, Money in the Bank is a
star-making tool. Former world champions winning just helps to maintain the
status quo. And that’s the last thing WWE should be doing.
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