I've been hearing about Ring of Honor for a few years now and stared watching a few months ago. I think it's a great little promotion that puts on a good wrestling show. They have some great talent and the story lines are very well written. Unfortunately, I think their best days are already behind them. Its due to something called the ECW syndrome.
To understand this we have to take a look back at ECW. Twelve years ago there were three major wrestling companies on TV. WWF was at the top of the heap, WCW was good but considered second best by many, and ECW was an exciting small promotion with hardcore fans that got almost zero mainstream press and was hard to even find of TV. ECW had four types of wrestlers: guys that were going to leave for the WWF, guys that were going to leave for WCW, guys that the fans liked but didnt have the talent or appeal to wrestle elsewhere, and guys past there prime that had been in the WWF or WCW before. Paul Heyman ran ECW, and from a purely wrestling standpoint he ran it very well. He obviously had problems with business, but thats an issue I'm not going to focus on here. Pauls problem was simple, he was always going to be the little guy, and there was nothing he could do about it. He was in one of the worst situations in the history of the wrestling business. As soon as he got someone over with the fans, they left. It got to the point were the ECW champion was always on borrowed time. Over a five year period, of the top 20 or so guys in his company, maybe 3 guys with something to offer didn't jump. Three years after ECW really exploded on the wrestling scene, almost every guy that got them there had left. In the end he hardly had a single ECW star that people wanted to see and the company went out of business with a wimper.
Today things are basically the same. The WWF is now WWE, WCW is TNA, and ECW is ROH. ROH has the exact same four types of wrestlers as ECW did. As I said earlier, almost every star I read about in ROH is gone now. CM Punk, Bryan Danielson, Nigel McGuiness, Samoa Joe, Kaval, and Evan Bourne are some of the biggest names in pro wrestling today. All of them got started in ROH. All of them left ROH. I first heard that people were worried about ring of honor when Danielson and McGuiness left last year. With their departure, ROH did the same thing ECW did and realized it had to make new stars. Tyler Black was the man they choose to put the company behind. He had the look, the talent, was over with the crowd, and just like in ECW, he signed a WWE contract while still the ROH champion. I belive that is the straw that will break ROH's back. At this point they know that whoever is best is next to leave. Sadly, its not their fault and theres nothing they can do about it. Any wrestler making probley 800 dollars a match in ROH wouldn't be able to say no to a six figure contract if it was dropped in their lap.
Since things do change with time, I'll give you a couple reasons why things might be diffrent. First, wrestling as a whole isn't nearly as popular as it was twelve years ago. The big two certainy have their eye out for talent, but they aren't snatching up every wrestler that has a few good matches. Secondly, the WWE already has its own developmental teritory. Back in the 90's Vince had Paul Heyman on the payroll because he knew he was using ECW as his farm team. With this being the case, they are more likely to see who they already have in training before they start snatching up all the wrestlers from other organizations.
So what do you think, is ROH on a downward path? Will they get better, stay the same, or eventually fold from lack of top talent and fan intrest.
To understand this we have to take a look back at ECW. Twelve years ago there were three major wrestling companies on TV. WWF was at the top of the heap, WCW was good but considered second best by many, and ECW was an exciting small promotion with hardcore fans that got almost zero mainstream press and was hard to even find of TV. ECW had four types of wrestlers: guys that were going to leave for the WWF, guys that were going to leave for WCW, guys that the fans liked but didnt have the talent or appeal to wrestle elsewhere, and guys past there prime that had been in the WWF or WCW before. Paul Heyman ran ECW, and from a purely wrestling standpoint he ran it very well. He obviously had problems with business, but thats an issue I'm not going to focus on here. Pauls problem was simple, he was always going to be the little guy, and there was nothing he could do about it. He was in one of the worst situations in the history of the wrestling business. As soon as he got someone over with the fans, they left. It got to the point were the ECW champion was always on borrowed time. Over a five year period, of the top 20 or so guys in his company, maybe 3 guys with something to offer didn't jump. Three years after ECW really exploded on the wrestling scene, almost every guy that got them there had left. In the end he hardly had a single ECW star that people wanted to see and the company went out of business with a wimper.
Today things are basically the same. The WWF is now WWE, WCW is TNA, and ECW is ROH. ROH has the exact same four types of wrestlers as ECW did. As I said earlier, almost every star I read about in ROH is gone now. CM Punk, Bryan Danielson, Nigel McGuiness, Samoa Joe, Kaval, and Evan Bourne are some of the biggest names in pro wrestling today. All of them got started in ROH. All of them left ROH. I first heard that people were worried about ring of honor when Danielson and McGuiness left last year. With their departure, ROH did the same thing ECW did and realized it had to make new stars. Tyler Black was the man they choose to put the company behind. He had the look, the talent, was over with the crowd, and just like in ECW, he signed a WWE contract while still the ROH champion. I belive that is the straw that will break ROH's back. At this point they know that whoever is best is next to leave. Sadly, its not their fault and theres nothing they can do about it. Any wrestler making probley 800 dollars a match in ROH wouldn't be able to say no to a six figure contract if it was dropped in their lap.
Since things do change with time, I'll give you a couple reasons why things might be diffrent. First, wrestling as a whole isn't nearly as popular as it was twelve years ago. The big two certainy have their eye out for talent, but they aren't snatching up every wrestler that has a few good matches. Secondly, the WWE already has its own developmental teritory. Back in the 90's Vince had Paul Heyman on the payroll because he knew he was using ECW as his farm team. With this being the case, they are more likely to see who they already have in training before they start snatching up all the wrestlers from other organizations.
So what do you think, is ROH on a downward path? Will they get better, stay the same, or eventually fold from lack of top talent and fan intrest.