There are some little things that are done in WWE that may not seem like a big deal but to me, and maybe others, they make a BIG difference in the overall presentation of the show.
What really bugs me is wrestlers not selling the impact of the finisher done to them after they get pinned!
There's some bad selling in general but it really breaks the illusion for me when, for example, someone gets KO punched, gets pinned and then because the show calls for someone else to run in or something else to happen in the ring that the guy who just got apparently KNOCKED OUT is able to roll himself quickly out of the ring just one second after he was KNOCKED OUT!
Man, that really bugs me. It's like, okay, do WHY did that guy get pinned since he clearly wasn't knocked out because he was conscious 1 second after.
And it's just a attention to detail thing. I don't mind it so much if the finisher is a move where the guy gets hit in the body and then gets pinned and rolls away (as long as it's relatively SLOW rolling) because I can believe that a move like a spear or a chokeslam would be more of a temporary shock and once the opponent rolls off of you then you can start to move again.
I certainly don't mind it when the win comes from a roll-up or a submission. I understand the logic behind that where if you lose to a roll-up you are usually fully conscious but just got 'caught' in a pin or if you get submitted you just couldn't take the locational pain and once the opponent lets go you can at least move out of the way.
But I can't stand seeing someone getting KO punched, kneed in the face, RKO'd, Brogue Kicked, DDT'd or any move where we are supposed to believe the blow is to the head ... have them get pinned in 3 seconds and then be fully conscious and able to roll 1 second later.
I want to see those people SELLING the fact that they should be unaware of their surroundings or knocked out almost cold. They could move their arms a bit and the have the referee, a trainer or a teammate/manager have to roll them or drag them out of the way. Or AT LEAST they need 5-10 seconds to get oriented again. Not 1 second later, not 2 or 3.
What do you guys think? Agree with me or are you fine with how this is done?
I doubt WWE will change this. They do it right sometimes but in Elimination matches is where it's the worst because they want to jump from one thing to another but forget to have the previous guy SELL what just happened to him.
And do you have any other small things that make a big difference to share?
What really bugs me is wrestlers not selling the impact of the finisher done to them after they get pinned!
There's some bad selling in general but it really breaks the illusion for me when, for example, someone gets KO punched, gets pinned and then because the show calls for someone else to run in or something else to happen in the ring that the guy who just got apparently KNOCKED OUT is able to roll himself quickly out of the ring just one second after he was KNOCKED OUT!
Man, that really bugs me. It's like, okay, do WHY did that guy get pinned since he clearly wasn't knocked out because he was conscious 1 second after.
And it's just a attention to detail thing. I don't mind it so much if the finisher is a move where the guy gets hit in the body and then gets pinned and rolls away (as long as it's relatively SLOW rolling) because I can believe that a move like a spear or a chokeslam would be more of a temporary shock and once the opponent rolls off of you then you can start to move again.
I certainly don't mind it when the win comes from a roll-up or a submission. I understand the logic behind that where if you lose to a roll-up you are usually fully conscious but just got 'caught' in a pin or if you get submitted you just couldn't take the locational pain and once the opponent lets go you can at least move out of the way.
But I can't stand seeing someone getting KO punched, kneed in the face, RKO'd, Brogue Kicked, DDT'd or any move where we are supposed to believe the blow is to the head ... have them get pinned in 3 seconds and then be fully conscious and able to roll 1 second later.
I want to see those people SELLING the fact that they should be unaware of their surroundings or knocked out almost cold. They could move their arms a bit and the have the referee, a trainer or a teammate/manager have to roll them or drag them out of the way. Or AT LEAST they need 5-10 seconds to get oriented again. Not 1 second later, not 2 or 3.
What do you guys think? Agree with me or are you fine with how this is done?
I doubt WWE will change this. They do it right sometimes but in Elimination matches is where it's the worst because they want to jump from one thing to another but forget to have the previous guy SELL what just happened to him.
And do you have any other small things that make a big difference to share?