CM Punk: What Happened WWE Chicago Raw (And What Does The Future Hold?)

We Got Plan B Monday Night

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SoEqx9XT4Qs For anyone claiming that the WWE doesn€™t pay attention to its fanbase, Monday night was a prime example of just how wrong they are. They knew going in that the crowd would be boisterous, they knew of online movements to hijack RAW, and they knew that without CM Punk, they had to mitigate crowd reaction in every way possible. So what did they do? They gave us Plan B. Before I get to that, let me explain what Plan A was in the most simplistic terms. Plan A was CM Punk returning to RAW. That€™s it. The kind of storyline he would have been involved in is irrelevant. That was their best case scenario, and it didn€™t happen. But RAW had the look and feel of a show that was set up for his return, and to me, that indicates it was a very fluidic writing process. Sure, staples for the show were set, such as the Wyatts and the Shield, the Usos, etc. But that was already built in. My guess is they tried to get Punk to come back, possibly up until the day before RAW. When it didn€™t happen, we got Plan B. We got Heyman, and we got Bryan getting attacked at the end without anyone coming to his aid. I€™m aware of the internet rumor stating that Punk was never part of any plans for RAW, and I€™m certainly not discounting it. All I€™m saying is that what happened on Monday was not the ideal scenario, and the show had to be structured around him being absent. Part of me is in awe of just how well Plan B worked out from an execution standpoint. The first hour had such a frenetic and determined pace, the crowd was more or less worn out by the second hour. And make no mistake, this was the plan. Pack the first hour with a Punk tease, a Heyman promo, a tag-team title change, and a colossal Wyatt/Shield match, and you get an emotionally drawn crowd. The hope was that following such a wild first hour, the WWE could then shift the focus to building up Wrestlemania storylines without the crowd having the energy to hijack them. To an extent, this worked. Certain matches were still overrun with crowd chants, but for the most part, it probably wasn€™t as bad as some thought it might be. Granted, during the bigger segments such as Daniel Bryan€™s confrontation with the Authority, the crowd was reinvigorated, and showered thunderous boos down upon Stephanie and Triple H, while simultaneously supporting Bryan. But that€™s okay. That€™s the reaction they wanted anyway. All in all, those who create the shows will probably tell you that last night was as much of a success as it could have been sans Punk. But I maintain that the table was set for him to return, and possibly up until hours before the show. So now that we€™ve examined what happened during the RAW in Chicago and WWE€™s handling of Punk€™s absence, it€™s time to see if we can make sense of why he left in the first place.
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I like to write about stuff. If you like the stuff I write, follow me on twitter @danemamula. Or, for my wrestling thoughts, @smartwrestling.