1. Big Stables Are Often Boring Stables
The nWo was an amazingly cool concept in its inception that rocketed WCW to new heights when it first came on the scene in mid-1996. Arrogant, cocky and brash, the trio of Kevin Nash, Scott Hall and Hulk Hogan began tearing up WCW and causing mayhem wherever they went. However as the group grew out from the three founding members it soon became clear that what once was the golden goose for WCW had now become incredibly unwieldy and even dull to both the other wrestlers as well as the WCW universe as a whole. The anti-establishment group had recruited so many wrestlers that by 1998 they practically were the establishment and it wasn't long before the stable and the story collapsed under its own weight. The best stables in wrestling history have revolved around three, four people or five people at most- the Four Horsemen, D-Generation X, Evolution and now the Shield have that in common. This is because the stable can then still focus on the individuals with in the storyline and give everyone a role. Individuals in the nWo would soon become generic simply because there was little for them to do. So that's my views. Please feel free to add your own!