8 Times WWE's Triple H Was A GOD-TIER Booker

WWE's Chief Content Officer occasionally goes full God Mode. These are some of his best moments.

By Terry Bezer /

Triple H has one of the biggest jobs in professional wrestling. As Chief Content Officer for WWE, he's in charge of the crucial booking decisions for the highest-profile company in wrestling, juggling the egos and aspirations of the most notable roster in the world. It's not an easy position to be in, but his stewardship has given WWE some of their best moments of the 21st century.

Advertisement

It is natural that not everything will go to plan, and if you take a look online, The Game has as many detractors as he does supporters. That's natural in a position as enormous as his, but his understanding of the wrestling landscape and what's best for his superstars has largely provided fans with fresh optimism in the wake of Vince McMahon leaving the company back in 2022. 

These great moments from WWE's recent past cover every aspect of the company. 

Reinvigorating both the men's and women's locker rooms, reconnecting with older superstars and giving NXT's new blood the opportunities that they deserve, Triple H has provided plenty of electrifying moments, leaving only one question: Are you ready?

8. Kevin Owens Unleashed

Kevin Owens has always been great. Let's get that on the record. Triple H is not solely responsible for 'The Prizefighter's greatness. KO has been giving audiences engaging character work and killer matches, even when having to serve the creative whims of Vince McMahon during his worst years. 

Advertisement

That being said, Kevin Owens's feud with Cody Rhodes for the WWE Championship at the end of 2024, going into 2025, was some of his career's best work. It's on record that Triple H suggested that Owens should attack Cody outside his tour bus, away from WWE televised programming, and let the internet do its thing in amplifying the incident and cementing his heel turn. It was unconventional, but felt exciting as hell to behold. Fans love feeling like they're peaking behind the curtain of reality, and to play that out in a storyline was a genius move.

From there, Owens took the ball and ran with it. His promos from inside his car, refusing to do them in the arena, were electrifying. His hatred for Cody Rhodes felt real, and his gripes with WWE screwing him out of the world title were easy for fans to understand, because there's always been an underlying feeling that KO is one of the most under-appreciated people on WWE's roster.

Advertisement