What seems likeliest to me is that Neville, Breeze, Zayn
and Kidd, or a combination from that group, will be put out in front of the RAW
crowd in the usually uneventful second hour. That’s generally where the
lengthier, more enjoyable matches with no particular storyline motive for
happening get put. The audience have been sitting around for a while by that
point and need to be perked up to stop them from dying a death before the
final, action-packed hour of John Cena, Authority and-or Paul Heyman plus
hatever the main event is.
Is this guy coming to a RAW near you? |
Any combo from amongst that four can have a great match
and would fit snugly into the hour two approach. The Ascension could have a
good showing too, either against a pairing of Neville and Zayn or an
established jobber tandem from the big boy roster. The NXT guys actually have
storylines to develop, carried over from NXT, which gives them an edge on the
likes of Kofi Kingston, Fandango and Slater Gator. Given a backstage interview
segment and-or a brief in-ring promo and they could actually make people care
about their match and encourage interest in their brand.
The decision to give a batch of guys a call-up, instead
of bringing them up individually over a course of months, is a nice change of
pace from WWE. Four of the six guys come in with a readymade feud while The
Ascension have an easy to understand gimmick and a rough ‘n’ ready style that
isn’t especially common in WWE and will help them stand out. The influx of new
talent will highlight to people unaware of NXT that it’s worth watching for
quality wrestling and engaging, uncomplicated plots. That in turn may convince
a few people to sign up to the Network to check the show out, which I’m sure is
one of WWE’s reasons for taking this approach.
But the talk of making NXT the next WCW feels a step too
far. It implies a level of expansion that could remove what makes NXT so
enjoyable: specifically touring and an extended running time. Right now NXT
runs live events in small venues around the state of Florida and returns to
Full Sail University to tape television every four weeks or so, with a pattern
of two hour live supershows every three months having emerged since the launch
of the WWE Network. It’s a pace that works very well for the smaller, more
wrestling-focused league and one WWE should be wary of tampering with too much.
An expanded touring schedule would be nice to see
(especially an overseas one taking in small venues in southern England – just
saying) but tapings outside of Full Sail would run the risk of robbing the
televised product of a crowd familiar with and passionate about the entire
roster. That’s a problem that could be overcome by finding another town that
consistently attracts a similarly enthusiastic and positive crowd. But that
shouldn’t be rushed into, especially with the regular NXT audience being so
good.
The prospect of NXT gaining more TV time is more of a
concern. A large part of why it’s as enjoyable as it is is its one hour running
time, perfected over the last two years to the point where the writing team
understand how to best use the minutes they have to expose the key members of
their roster on a mostly weekly basis while integrating lesser acts at suitable
intervals. Going to two hours would require an alternate approach, immediately
ruining part of the existing appeal and risking the show feeling bloated. With
the NXT TV show less is certainly more.
This said it is positive that Triple H is so passionate
about the developmental show. And the talk of it becoming its own brand is nice to hear. It’s just the idea of
expanding it beyond its means that concerns me. Had he stopped at drawing a
parallel with ECW I’d feel far more confident, because ECW operated on a scale
more in line with NXT than did WCW. Also, ECW primarily went out of business
because of one man’s inability to manage finances whilst WCW went out of
business because it became a toxic brand nobody with money wanted to associate
with.
Back to NXT. Breeze, Neville, and Zayn (and maybe The
Ascension) getting regular exposure on RAW while still being officially
assigned to NXT is interesting and something I think will work well. Viewers
can get used to the new guys gradually, rather than being expected to take them
as they’re thrust into a feud with a longstanding mid-card no-hoper nobody has
any reason to care about. But expanding NXT as a whole is something WWE
shouldn’t rush into. And the WCW comparisons should definitely be avoided in
future.
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