10 Lessons WWE WrestleMania 36 Needs To Learn From WrestleMania 35

1. We Don't Need Happy Endings Across The Board

Bayley Sasha Banks
Instagram

When fans left the stadium off the back of one of the most crowd-pleasing WrestleManias in WWE history last year, they were overcome with a sense of sincere optimism.

If Becky Lynch, Kofi Kingston and Seth Rollins could all do the unthinkable and become babyface champions of the world on the night, then perhaps WWE were about to welcome in a new era where they genuinely listened to their audience and gave them what they wanted.

That lasted for about ten minutes and all that heady optimism was soon replaced by the all too familiar feeling of dread, when WWE decided to introduce Baron Corbin to the Universal title picture, Lacey Evans to the women's title scene and Kofi Kingston was stuck feuding with Dolph bloody Ziggler.

The thing is, in giving us such a euphoric climax on the Show of Shows, WWE didn't really give themselves anywhere else to go but downhill. The feel-good factor soon wore off and fans quickly realised that these top babyfaces had all hit their peak on the Grandest Stage.

So, despite fans consistently feeling as though we know what is best for the company and who should win on any given night, perhaps WWE should stick to their guns and give us a few more villainous triumphs.

A couple of marquee heel victories would give the company's top babyfaces something to continually battle against post-Mania and help avoid another short-sighted positivity overload like the one we experienced at the end of 'Mania 35.

Sometimes a few boos are ok, just as long as they're not being thrown at Roman Reigns in the main event, again.

Contributor
Contributor

Lifts rubber and metal. Watches people flip in spandex and pretends to be other individuals from time to time...