10 Things I Hate About WrestleMania

By Jack Morrell /

10. It's Dependent On The Nostalgia Buck

Okay, so WrestleMania has always been about courting celebrity involvement and mainstream indulgence. In recent years, however, Vince McMahon€™s relied on an entirely different kind of special guest star to enhance the pedigree of the card.

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That€™s right, I€™m about to crack that hoary old chestnut again: the infamous part-timers.

For a change, let€™s not dive into the specifics of each case where a middle-aged, part-time wrestling legend has been given a key spot on the card which could - and should - have been saved for a contemporary wrestler who works for the company year-round.

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Let€™s not even get into the mire of quibbling over Brock Lesnar€™s status as a €˜special attraction€™ performer, and whether he€™s worth the money he takes off the company and the shine he takes off the rest of the roster.

No, let€™s find some easy common ground here. This is a company that€™s sunk millions into securing its future with its state-of-the-art Performance Centre training facility and the NXT brand. Let€™s agree that WWE should probably rethink how it presents the performers of that future, and how they€™re seen by the fans.

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In basic business-speak: if current and future generations of WWE performers are products - carefully selected, invested in, and released to the consumer with a view to maximising their revenue potential - then WWE€™s marketing of that product is childish, counterproductive and frivolous, not to mention inconsistent and shortsighted.

Nowhere is that more evident than at WrestleMania, when previous highly successful products that are clearly past their best are trotted out and promoted as still being far superior to the current batch on sale.

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What does that tell the consumer about the company€™s future?