4 Ups And Downs From WWE Survivor Series 2014

Well, that was eventful.

Well, that was eventful. The landscape of WWE changed forever Sunday night at the 28th annual Survivor Series. No, not because Triple H and Stephanie McMahon are out of power forever (read: until WWE decides that Raw needs more McMahon to boost ratings). That will have about as much impact as when John Cena was fired during the Nexus feud and showed up the next night. We all know it€™s a temporary move and if there€™s a desire to get Triple H and Stephanie back on our screens, they€™ll do it post-haste. The big development was the arrival of the one WCW holdout who had never set foot inside a WWE ring€ until Sunday night. Think about all the major superstars who competed in World Championship Wrestling. Damn near every one of them spent time in WWF/E: Lex Luger, Steiner Brothers, Road Warriors, Barry Windham, Ric Flair and Goldberg. But there was one guy who never jumped, even when WCW was no more and the only big game in town was based out of Stamford, CT. All of that changed Sunday when Sting walked out at the end of Survivor Series. As a free PPV, Survivor Series certainly delivered, with the Sting debut (how often can you say a 55-year-old debuted?) alone being worthwhile. But how did the rest of the event do? This was free on the WWE Network to try to entice more fans to watch and hopefully subscribe to the Network (for $9.99!), so the idea had to be to put together a blockbuster show to make it a no-brainer. Did WWE deliver? Let€™s find out.
Contributor
Contributor

Scott is a former journalist and longtime wrestling fan who was smart enough to abandon WCW during the Monday Night Wars the same time as the Radicalz. He fortunately became a fan in time for WrestleMania III and came back as a fan after a long high school hiatus before WM XIV. Monday nights in the Carlson household are reserved for viewing Raw -- for better or worse.