10 WWE Champions Who Weren't Ready For The Belt

10. Jinder Mahal

Jinder Mahal was less ripen-at-home avocado, more profoundly basic performer who absolutely did not belong anywhere near the once-prestigious WWE Championship.

Advertisement

He was the most ill-equipped performer ever to hold it; dry in physique and in every other criteria, Mahal entered methodical, dull performances in the ring and desperate, quasi-controversial performances on the stick. That wasn't a problem specific to the Maharaja, but he wasn't over. He arrived in the main event suddenly and inexplicably. Transparent, cynical, and destructive to beloved fan concepts like lineage and narrative, Mahal's run introduced an era of tedium and apathy.

And yet, he was the depressingly perfect representative of a new era. He was the face of the company, in a strange and damning way. Those beloved fan concepts are immaterial because WWE is no longer a business driven by fan revenue: Saudi Arabia riyal and billions of TV dollars shape the success of a company micromanaged by a madman stuck in time.

Mahal did not burn down the House That AJ Styles Built; SmackDown attendances continued to stagnate. Those eye-watering pictures of empty hard camera sides still flood SquaredCircle, irrespective of whether an estimated experiment like Mahal, or a G.O.A.T in Best In The World form, like Daniel Bryan, holds the belt.

The brand is creatively bankrupt, but those debts are covered.

Advertisement