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Favorite Overall Promotion EVER
What is your favorite overall promotion?
Simple as that. Please vote, and preferably, then explain why. |
I have to go with WCW. The nWo storyline was the hottest angle ever. It had me wanting to tune in every monday night, I remember I was looking forward to Nitro more than anything in the world. Sting coming down from the rafters, the whole "WE GOTTA GO, WE GOTTA GO" at the end of Nitro. Fucking amazing shit.
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I too voted for WCW.
WCW was indeed the developing point for nearly all of the hottest stars of the 1990's and today. Steve Austin, Mankind, Booker T, Chris Jericho, Eddie Guerrero, etc. - Not to mention WCW's ability to do what WWE could not & would not do, blend international styles on their broadcasts and roster. WCW always kept me entertained, from the time of the Diamond Studd and DDP and The Freebirds, etc. to Johnny B Badd, Arn Anderson, Steven Regal, etc. to Hogan, Sting, Savage, etc. to the very final days of the company & many great prospects. Not saying that WWF wasn't just as good, WCW was just FAR better in many aspects - like cruiserweights, international styles and definitely my favorite - tag team wrestling. WCW was also overall more wrestling based than WWE. |
WCW had amazing tag team wrestling. Steiner Brothers, Harlem Heat, the Outsiders... great matches. High Voltage... VICIOUS N DELICIOUS. Luger and Sting too. Stables/ Tag teams kicked ass in WCW.
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WCW, I never saw ECW, and WWF was shit.
WCW had amazing workers who were given a chance to shine, especially in the ring. Despite the opinion of Hogan etc holding them down, which was probably right in most senses, but with the main eventers they had I could see why. Guys like DDP, Rey, Jericho, were amazing, and shit, I could even stomach Luger in WCW. Loved it, watched it every week, and was gutted when it was sold to the WWE. Especially considering vince blew it. Also, everyone seemed credible in WCW, guys like Alex wright, Disco Inferno, may of seemed like jobbers, but you believed the matches could go either way. |
I liked the original ECW. The stuff on that show was mindblowing. The show had a combination of violent brawls and excellent wrestling. What got me hooked on ECW was the matches The Eliminators and RVD/Sabu used to have. And the first sick bump I seen in ECW was when Brian Lee choke slammed Dreamer through a stack of tables.
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Kayfabeman, I wouldn't say WCW was the developing point for Eddie Guerrero Jericho Benoit Austin and Foley.
The first 3 wrestled in ECW first, and the last two, although they wrestled in WCW were treated like complete shit, hated it, left and in ECW were allowed to show themselves and get signed with WWF, who made them into household names. I guess its all opinion, but I hate WCW. I rank it behind WWF by a mile, and though it had its high points and better "quality" than ECW, I'd prob put it right behind ECW. It's certainly better than TNA though, by a mile. And I'm not gonna lie and say I'm extremely familiar with Indy feds. I've seen a handful of ROH and Japan matches. |
Oh and pre WCW NWA was the goods too, but still doesnt touch WWF to me. I know it's cool to hate McMahon and WWE now, but come on.
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I too would choose WWF/E.
I know the promotion sucks as of late. But they have done some good in the past. I think people wouldn't be answering WCW to this question if they won the Monday Night Wars and WWE wasn't around. |
Benoit, Jericho, Guerrero, Malenko, Saturn, Foley....all these guys were put into the spotlight with WCW. I had no clue who the first five were until they arrived on WCW programming, as did most wrestling fans. ECW and Japan may of gave them thier first opportunities, but let's be real here, WCW Made them. With Foley, I recognized him first as Cactus Jack in WCW. And he was given a decent push, so it's not like he was a jobber.
Yes, I agree WWF did make Austin into a Major Star, but he was one of the prime time players in WCW. He won the TV, Tag, and US Title in a span of like 3 years. I wouldn't really call that being treated like shit. Gonna say WWF is/was/ever will be my favorite. |
WWF made them
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except for saturn and malenko
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As far as WWF/E Making those guys? I find it hard to agree as well, Benoit was always steady Mid-Card from the minute he walked into WCW, from his Fueds with Sullivan over Woman. Fueds with the NWO. He was always up there. Eddie, also got it well, (Mind you, the idea itself was a bit silly) As leader of the LwO. Etc. Etc. Keeping in mind, this is only an opinion :). |
tbh, nobody made Jericho. He did his thing everywhere he went and he got over on his own merit. I may be wrong, but in my opinion nobody ever really made or put over Jericho. I can think of more wrestlers who hindered his career than made it.
I've always respected the fact that he wasn't given much in WCW, but he allowed himself to get over pretty big. WWE didn't give him the world either, they just gave him the freedom to do his thing, and he was over pretty well. They made him champion, but they really never gave him much other than a working microphone and tv time. note: with that being said I feel the WWE was great in how they handled it. They let him be a star. In WCW he was a star on a smaller level, despite them not wanting to allow him to be. He was never their champ or even their US champ. He was a cruiserweight who was getting over and they didn't have any interest in despite that. In WWE, they wanted to allow him to become a star. So they did. So although at times he was equally as entertaining in WCW, those moments were few. In WWE they gave him the stage and the oppurtunity to apply his craft, and did it with all the intentions of him being all that he could be. He didn't have to perform knowing he wasn't going anywhere. Yes, the WWE didn't make Jericho what I think he could have been. But he had one of the greatest careers of anyone in WWE regardless. He became a solid draw, wrestled in meaningful fueds and matches, was given great segments and creative freedom, and main evented. Held all the major titles, and was treated as a major star. He was in many ways, the Roddy Piper of our generation. A legend nonetheless. I think Chris Irvine would share similar sentiments as mine about WWF when compared to WCW, by any stretch of the imagination. And just about every wrestler ever who worked for both companies with the exception of maybe Hulk Hogan and the money grubbing strip miners on top from day one. |
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Very well put, and i will have to agree. Regardless, Jericho = Ratings. |
NWA isn't a promotion. The NWA was, and continues to be today and collection of various different promotions around the country and world. Having said that, Jim Crockett Promotions/Mid-Alantic (a NWA territory) will always be the best promotion in my mind. Nothing can beat the work they were pumping out through the mid to late 80s. The Horsemen, Ricky Steamboat, Harley Race, Roddy Piper, Terry Funk, Barry Windham, Dusty Rhodes, Ronnie Garvin, Magnum TA, Road Warriors, Les Lugar, Nikita Koloff, Kerry Von Erich, Sting, Wahoo McDaniel, Ted DiBiase, Larry Zbyszko, Paul Orndorff, The Steiners, Rock'n'Roll Express, Fabulous Freebirds, Brian Pillman...I mean literally, that promotion through the 80s was the who's who of professional wrestling. While WWE was banking on Hogan's pythons, Jim Crockett/Mid-Atlantic was doing some of the best wrestling in history. Nothing in the world of professional wrestling will ever be able to touch, hell not even compare to JCP. Nothing.
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banking on Hogan's pythons is something I highly doubt WWE or any wrestling promotion would be ashamed to have done.
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Hogan is a hack. He's a charismatic, black hole of talent. My point is, while he was running around flexxing for 10 minutes and actually wrestling for none, Ric Flair was leading the charge of JCP with some of the greatest wrestlers ever under him. Did WWE make a boat load of money? Yeah they did, but as far as personal taste, I simply can't see how any logical wrestling fan with half a brain can look back at all promotions that there have ever been and not say that JCP during the 80s was the best. And let's not forget, there were times when JCP was out drawing WWE. It's just that their goal was never world wide dominance. It was a territory, WWE was atempting to become a global company. WWE was successful, and eventually JCP/Mid Atlantic and Georgia was bought up by Turner to make WCW. WCW then had to play catch up, but during the actualy mid 80s and into the later part of the decade, JCP was the bigger promotion.
I suspect you wern't even a wrestling fan back then, nor have you seen much from the time outside of maybe a few lair matches here and there or a couple of Dusty Rhodes' from his DVD. Trust me, you simply can not compare the climate and aura of JCP from the 80s to any other time in wrestling. It was simply incredible. |
Yea he sucks, I'm not defending crazy Hogan and how much he sucks, I'm just defending the WWE and what they did with him. It was needless to say the right decision. I'm defending their business moves and success as a promotion, not the quality of matches and how enjoyable it was to a smark.
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Oh I'll admit, they made a boat load of money. I'm happy to say that Hogan has never in any way received a single dollar of my money. I didn't watch WWE during his Hulkamania period, never bought anything associated with Hogan (not even the nWo shirt which I am now kind of sad about), and even stopped watching WWE when they gave him his incredibly offensive and pathedic last reign. I hope Hogan dies today.
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I've never liked Hogan or spent a dime on him either.
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I'm just a WWF guy. Thats where my allegiance has always lied, and I'm sure you can understand that. Never watched in Hogan's WWF time, always preferred it over WCW, and though I know how badly Hogan sucks and sucked, I still "respect" what was done in the late 80s. It was key. I probably never would have been a wrestling fan if it weren't from the things that came out of that era. So for that I have respect. Not for Hogan, since he was lucky enough to be plugged into the machine, but Vince is who I give that credit.
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Just figured I'd list all the divisions of NWA collectively, as someone would've possibly said "I grew up on Championship Wrestling from Florida", etc. So any of them, as you said, would fall into that category. |
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It's hard to tell the direction any promotion, or wrestler for that matter, would have taken had it continued or a performer not died. Would people praise WCW if it were still around? Depends on what happened. WWF/E was many people's favorite promotion for a long time, and now they bash them; change in direction, etc. lead to that. Just like performers, let's say Owen Hart, or someone, remained alive, would people be as favorable of him as they are now that he's dead? It's hard to say. His in-ring skills or ability may have decreased, or people may have tired of him, and people would knock him ala Ric Flair or anyone else. |
The truth is probably no. Everyday a wrestler dies, and its always someone people mourn the loss of, but didn't give two shits about whether they lived or died the day before. In some cases, like Mike Awesome, its the type of guy that fans in the past have probably wished death upon because he "betrayed them". But many of them probably feel the need to type R.I.P and put a sad face for their "loss".
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WCW did nothing for him. He did it for himself. Granted WCW gave him a place to apply his craft for a time, but he got over on his own in a short time. He was given now upward room for growth. He was buried for a year before coming to WWE as well. Just because he was on programming for 5 minutes in the first hour of 3 and getting himself over at a time where WCW was on top of the ratings, doesn't mean the WCW was helping him out.
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This may sound cold and hard, yet never during any point of Owen's life was he that big of a player, and truly, he was never going to be a World Champion/ Since his death, he's praised as the greatest to never get that honor and many people's favorite. Nothing boosts popularity quite like an unexpected death...
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its true
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A lot of guys wrestled in WWF/E first too and then jumped to WCW, and had greater success there than in WWF. Randy Savage is an example of this. The prime of his career was arguably in WCW, where overall, he made the most of his stay and the bigger impact. |
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no I do, but I dont' credit them. They held down all of their young talent. He got over their, thanks to their TV time. But come on, he was a cruiserweight they gave a stick. I don't credit WCW at all for his success. They naturally played a part because that was the show he was on. But they did nothign to help him
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Randy Savage's career highpoint was CLEARLY in WWF. I didn't even think it was possible to argue that. |
I want to know who went to WCW that had greater sucess. Come on, Savage went their past his prime and got another run. Everyone they got was getting a new lease on life when they should have been putting guys over and shopping for retirement homes.
With the exception of Nash and Hall, they signed few wrestlers in their primes. Nash and Hall had great sucess in WCW, maybe even greater success, but they had great success in WWE before that too. So who comes up as being someone who went the other direction and was pushed? Jeff Jarret? I really can't think of many so maybe someone can help me out. But Savage, Luger, Hogan, Warrior, Bret were all examples of guys who came over to WCW and were pushed due to past success in WWE and were quite simply, past their prime. |
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Maybe I was a little rash to say "nothing". I just feel they didn't give him much, they hindered him more than they helped him. He flourished and got over on their program but I dont' credit them with helping that, at least not as much as they were hurting it. Yes, they gave him a job and tv time so thats worth something. I just can't even compare his use in WCW to how he was used in WWF, and the same goes for Benoit Eddie Rey and ESPECIALLY Foley and Austin. Even the Big Show and Booker T.
But 4 time Cruiserweight and Television champion, yes thats something. But if he was 4 time lightheavyweight champion and european champion, and then went over there to WCW and was World Champion, US champion and tag champion and headlining PPVs, would you use a double standard against WWE because they're "so evil" now? I'm not saying you would, but a lot of people would. |
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Besides, Luger was pushed in WWE due only to his former success during his first run with WCW. One could argue that Benoit by the time he made it to WWE, was past his prime. As far as matches go, I would argue that Jericho was as well. Mysterio, Goldberg, Booker...all guys who did enjoy success in WWE based of of their best work in WCW. It's just reversed for guys like Hogan and Savage who went from WWE in their prime to WCW to collect big pay checks. |
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