Why AEW Is Beating WWE At Its Own Game

By Michael Sidgwick /

WWE

AEW won the battle for the heart of the wrestling fandom between October 2, 2019 and April 7, 2021 because Triple was spent as a creative force when he was asked to compete with a game plan that could only fail against AEW's full embrace of the artistic platform. The "as much a pro wrestling product as Triple H could get away with" strategy lacked badly in comparison, with its synthetic melodrama and corporate-speak promos, and after almost two years of reactionary booking and snide moves that turned the old cult favourite heel, that was that.

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As a result of this humiliating slaughter, Triple H was the corporate executive equivalent of punishment-booked as NXT 2.0 was reimagined, amusingly, as the complete antithesis to NXT 'Black and Gold'. The Capitol Wrestling Center was a dank, dingy pit. The NXT 2.0 Arena or whatever it's called is a multi-colour kid's TV show set. NXT 1.0 treated kick pads like a 7th degree black belt; NXT 2.0 treats kick pads like they are a terroristic threat to the company's values. The CWC played host to aspirational ****+ matches that invariably went five minutes too long; the NXT 2.0 Arena is a backdrop to romance angles, poker games and problematic Asian gimmicks.

Beyond everything else - subjectively received match quality, storylines, angles - the ultimate success of any pro wrestling promoter is in their ability to create new stars. This is where AEW and WWE are exactly alike: their main objective.

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All indications suggest that AEW is also winning the battle of pro wrestling's future.

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