- 08/12/2015 (12:46:51 pm)
- Bob Mulrenin
…
On
WWE’s Cut-Throat Practices in the 1980s:
One of the biggest mistakes
[WWE] made, among others, was going to inordinate lengths to get rid of these
promotions. I’m not sure if they were insecure or afraid of them being a threat
to them or whatever. The promotions like Stampede Wrestling – and there were a
number of other ones that I was fortunate enough to visit … – that was, and
still is, one of the things that jeopardized the future of the wrestling
business. Them going out of their way to eliminate the smaller promotions,
that’s where all of the … talent was coming from.
On
WWE’s Developmental System vs. The Indies
If you’ve got the best trainers
and training facility in the world, which they don’t, I might add … in any other
sport you still have to take raw material. In hockey, [you] develop it in junior
hockey, in football you develop it in college or university or the CFL or
wherever, in any other sport, even if you have the best talent at your disposal,
and I might add that they don’t. Half the guys that I see them developing are
crap … You show me the place for people to hone their craft and learn how to do
the subtle things: learn how to interact with each other, learn how to interact
with fans, all this other, they don’t have that. You take these NXT guys and
it’s laughable that you always see guys who have come up supposedly from NXT or
from the minors in the last decade or so. You do a little research and find out
that they were kicking around … training or wrestling in small indie circuits
before they went to NXT. That’s where they learned how to work.



