13 World title reigns, 5 Intercontinental title reigns, a Royal Rumble win, the 2nd ever Grand Slam champion, ranked as PWI's wrestler of the decade and leading two of the greatest factions in the history of pro wrestling. That is not a "solid career", that is a career worthy of the Hall of Fame. As a headliner. He is one of the most consistently good ring workers ever, is my personal favorite promo man ever, and has made a ton of money and had success as both a heel and face. I will agree that he's better at being a villain though.
The number of title reigns he's had comes nowhere close to the impact that Austin, Rock, Hogan had. Neither does his PWI ranking or his running two great factions. Austin, Rock, HHH and Foley could all wrestle for 3 years, give HHH the title that entire time, and two more factions to lead and he still would be the shadow of Austin, Rock, and Foley. Hogan, Austin, Rock, Bruno Sammartino didn't have 13 world title reigns and I think they're more significant than H. And you said it yourself, 'he is one of the most consistently good workers ever ....'
At first, he was definitely a fill-in for main event talents. Aren't most guys when they first start to show up at the top of the roster? Everyone has to be replaced eventually. But I outright reject the idea that he was just thrown into the main event, and wasn't useful or need. He was the dominant heel of Monday Night Raw for almost two years. He lead Evolution to capturing all the gold on Raw, and participated in some of the greatest rivalries with all three of his Evolution partners. And that's to say nothing of his time with DX. Triple H made guys like Randy Orton, Chris Benoit, Batista; in smaller ways, even John Cena. He was a big deal, for a long time. To relegate him to unimportant or unnecessary is just ignorant.
When Austin was gone, Rock, Foley and H were there. The Rock was the better option not H, yet he held the title more often than Rock did. The company didn't need that. He carried the title after Rock Austin and Foley were gone and he did an okay job, but there were a number of people who were over and denied the opportunity to get the title because H played the politics. He puts over Benoit, who loses the title to Orton, who loses the title back to H. He puts over Batista, a friend or member of Evolution. There was no one else who was better in the ring or just as over as Batista ? Doubt that's the case. To ignore the role politics played in his career and his number of reigns isn't just ignorant, it's delusional.
He was given the nickname "cerebral assassin" because he was a smart heel who liked to get in his opponent's heads. Is he really the "king of kings"? No, he's god damn pro wrestlers. Suspend your disbelief a bit. Of course it doens't make them true.
He was given the nicknames to make him cool to his fans. To make him more marketable to their base. To sell more t-shirts, more posters, etc. Some of you just think that makes him better than he really is.
I think it was great, albeit very predictable. Bret talks about being able to call every moment of that match in his head, and I get that. It was textbook. That doesn't make it 3 or 4 stars though. I'd say at worst it gets an average rating of 7/10.
I wish you'd given me grades in school, if you think that match was a 7 out of 10. It had some good moments but it really could have been better.
Very few people are innovators. Kurt ANgle is fantastic, maybe the best wrestler ever, but he's just perfecting what other people have done as well. He's a suplex machine and submission specialist; did he create or invent any of his holds or throws? Shawn Michaels took the little man idea and brought it to the main event; wasn't the first small guy to wrestle, just the first to make it to the very top, and bust open the door for a lot of other people. And technically, Bret did it first. A lot of those guys you listed are just as innovative as Triple H, but all recognized for different things. So maybe he's not in the Top 5 of all time. Maybe he's not Shawn Michaels. But not being HBK doesn't mean he isn't still great.
He isn't the athlete that HBK, not as charismatic as the Rock, not as profitable as Hogan, Austin or Rock, not as technically sound as Bret, Benoit or Angle, not as great on the mike as Rock, not as innovative as Hardy, Savage, or others, so what is he great at ? Politics, is the only thing I can think of.
He never carried the company? Evolution. Triple H. World Heavyweight Champion. Feuds with Shawn Micahels, Chris Benoit, then on to Randy Orton, Batista, John Cena. He was, if not the sole company carrier for at least two years, a part of one or two other guys who you can credit. He was also only on Raw for a very long time; you can't fault him for the brand split. If it weren't for Triple H post-Attitude Era, I would have stopped watching Raw all together.
H did carry the Raw brand and the company but nowhere as well as others and when Cena came to Raw and he outperformed H. Now Evolution was good but if H didn't have political clout it might have been even better. Evolution having a stranglehold on the Raw brand wasn't helpful when more over performers were denied the shot to unseat him. Maybe RVD, Booket T, Jeff Hardy -performers rumoured to take the belt from H - may have flopped, they might have succeeded, but it could have been tried. Evolution's run had as much to do with H's politicking as much as their ability to draw or perform in the ring.
H is good, one of the all time greats ? Far from it. Bruno carried WWWF to success in his era. Hogan carried the 80s through the cartoon era. Bret had nowhere near the same success during his era as top of the company, even H made more more money, but few could compete with Hogan or Bruno. Austin carried the attitude era with Rock a close second and honourable mention to Foley and DX. Triple H had his run but it was short, Cena was the one who really carried the Post Attitude Era more than any one else.