5. Tradition
Vince McMahon is a man of tradition. When it comes to company legacy and pride there's nothing that McMahon enjoys more than reminding people of his success. Unfortunately, due to obvious reasons, the Benoit achieved win at Wrestlemania 20 in Madison Square Garden is not something that can be forever enshrined in WWE history books. Wrestlemania 30 has already broken with tradition and will not be held, as the first, tenth and twentieth events were, in Madison Square Garden. Vince will be eager to remind people that this event can still be as special and sacred as those previous anniversary events and that they are all interconnected. Older WWE fans will purposely return, perhaps for the first time in nearly two decades, to order this event on PPV and celebrate a movement that represents a large part of their life. When we consider the collection of wrestlers involved in the WWE today, for reasons of both the physical toll of the Sport to their body and the demand for their time, the lifespan of the average superstar is not expected (beyond a few notable examples) to last more than a dozen years at it's peak. Due to the very real fact that a lot of the more recognizable main event wrestlers of the late 80's and early 90's ( among them Andre The Giant, Randy Savage and Yokozuna) are now dead there is little competition in Hulk Hogan (a man who single handedly headlined the first 8 Wrestlemania's) stepping up to remind people of that legacy. Hogan has kept himself in tremendous physical shape and is one of the few wrestlers who, 30 years removed from that first headline match, could actually compete in a WWE match on the grandest stage of them all!