Comparisons:
Promos:
Austin: Fantastic, sharp badass wit, while driving his point home with ease simplicity, and never sugarcoated a thing. The "What?" thing teetered on a VERY thin line, between silly and amusing.
Cena: At first, was really creative, funny, and sold his feuds well, and put a lot of dynamic emotion. Now, he comes out as Mr. Happy go lucky every single week, not at all selling what's been going on! Some could say, "He does his talking in the ring". Well then why talk at all then? This has caused Cena to lose appeal with the very little older demographic he reached.
Moveset:
Austin: A solid worker for most of his career, after the neck injury, he had to tweak his style ever so slightly, to be able to work in a way that hides his limitations, and produced classic matches.
Cena: While it didn't take an injury for it to happen, Cena seemed to find a style that worked for him, and was able too find a style for himself that worked.
Overall Ring Psychology:
Austin: Always great at telling a story, as the rebellious babyface who had to overcome the odds when the chips were down, made you wonder just how he was going to overcome them. All his marquee matches were built on that.
Cena: Cena's timing is tremendous, no doubt, his comebacks are dead on, and he can really sell hard...that was until recently, he just seems like superman! Which I know what Hogan did all the time, but for some reason, I can't put my finger on it, it seems...different.
Classic Matches:
Austin: Austin has had some great matches with the likes of, Bret Hart, The Undertaker, Owen Hart, Shawn Michaels, The Rock, Mick Foley, Triple H, Kurt Angle and Chris Benoit. He's also had some nice little TV gems with Ken Shamrock, RVD, Ric Flair & Chris Jericho, among a few others. But some of his stuff with 'Taker wasn't that good, he didn't seem to have any chemistry with Kane, the Rikishi stuff was a MESS!
Cena: Cena's true classics in my opinion came against Edge, Umaga (who he had wicked chemistry with), his '07 stuff with Orton, some solid matches with Triple H, he and Batista seemed to click very well (I really liked the Summerslam '08 match). And the man who got the best of John...was Shawn! That match with him and Shawn on "Raw" back in April '07, TOPPED 'Mania which was quite epic in its own right. Now here's where you gotta be careful with John, keep in mind when he became champion, he was mad over, but still finding his identity as an in ring worker. I think his control of his matches, were evident in his feud with Khali, which produced the best matches of Khali's career to date. And like Austin...some guys Cena just doesen't have chemistry with....it happens!
CLASSIC FEUDS:
Austin: Austin's true classic feuds were something to behold. I don't just mean good feuds, he very rarely had a bad one! But I'm talking CLASSICS! Obviously the two that stand out primarily....Mr. McMahon and The Rock, with The Undertaker being 3rd. The epicness and emotional investment in those feuds were truly spectacular and brought something back to the business that had been lacking for quite awhile. Despite not getting much attention at the time due to the one sided Monday Night Wars, the WWF loyal were into the dramatic feud between Steve & Bret. Much like a Leonard Cohen or Tom Waits album, nobody really went out of there way to buy it, but as time has gone on, it's sustained a legacy of truly being a classic rivalry. Most of Austin's feuds in his WWF run were decent at the very least.
Cena: Bearing in mind we're talking about two guys from completely different eras, Cena did have the feuds that fans of this generation will remember. With Edge being his biggest (and best) rival, as well as the early years of the Orton feud, I even think teh Barrett/NEXUS feud will be remembered, and perhaps the one with Batista, and I think the feud with Triple H will also be remembered because that's where Cena really started working the style that helped him pull of an entertaining match, and he basically shocked the world by beating him. While I do think those feuds will be remembered, I do not believe they will sustain the staying power of many of Austin's.
DRAWING POWER (PPV):
Austin: Now here's where the differences between the two devulge quite a bit. Outside of his early PPV main events in 1997, which were hovering in the 200 000 buys range, Austin has never...ever drawn under 300 000 buys on PPV! Now that's saying something, and under Ausitn's watch, the B-PPV's actually became profitable, and the WWF was able to raise prices because people were willing to order them. Austin set a PPV record along with HBK at WM 14....then broke it with The Rock a year later....then again with The Rock TWO years later. Austin shattered records for Summerslam, with his main event with 'Taker, his first true sanctioned battle with McMahon at the Rumble in '99 drew HUGE, the subsuquent Cage Match the next month broke the record for most bought "In Your House" PPV. His return at Unforgiven 2000 helped draw an astonishing figure as well. Austin isn't primarily to blame for the decline of buys that began in 2001, but again, the Invasion played a major role in that.
Cena: Now Cena became champion at a time where PPV's were fluctuating. It all became a matter of getting technical about it. "Well at lesat it didn't better than last month's PPV", "Oh it drew better than last year's Unforgiven" or whatever. And this day and age, that really is how you have to look at it. Cena's impact on the modern Wrestlemania's is definitely felt, especially the ones featuring HHH and HBK. Cena's feuds with Angle didn't draw all that much, but he seemed to hit a stride with Edge, and the two drew some of the better PPV numbers in 2006. The early incarnation of the Orton feud did pretty good, and the stuff with Khali drew better than it had any right too, despite a really low number at the One Night Stand PPV in '07. Other than that, Cena has not made the significant dent in PPV that Austin has, I mean we can go on about the impressive 'Mania numbers I mentioned, but these days the WWE is LUCKY if they can get 200 000 buys for a show these days! Like Austin and the decline in '01...Cena isn't FULLY to blame for this, but he certainly aint helping matters much.
DRAWING POWER: (Arena Gate).
Austin: The WWF was running shows out of siginificantly smaller venues in 1997, but by mid 1998, the company got so hot, that they were back in the bigger venues again, and Raw was packed it seemed with more signs than people. The PPV's were legit sellouts, and after papering crowds heavily for quite a while, the atmosphere was legit. The house show business was the best it had been since the Hogan days. Austin thrived on the house show business during its resurgance in 1998. Austin also appealed to all demographics..yes, even women loved Austin.
Cena: Cena has his loyal following, but really, the WWE can't fill an arena for a house show if there life depends on it (or if it isn't called MSG). These days, rather than paper crowds, they just tarp the empty seats off. I'll give an example..."Breaking Point" in September of '09, in Montreal only drew 12 000 people. Not a bad crowd by any means, but for what's normally a hotbed for pro wrestling, that's kind of disappointing. The Screwjob match during '97, drew over 20 000, with just over 17 000 paid. Cena has the ability to attract fans, but he appeals to a demographic that's limited. When it comes to house shows, this is also the comapny's fault (See your favourite superstar....even though nothing will happen).
DRAWING POWER (Merchandising).
Austin: Again, need I really explain, the guy had a new T-shirt every month, and the 4 that preceeded it would still be selling like hotcakes. Plus they went beyond T-Shirts, with the likes of Hats, waterbottles, towels, drinking glasses, and with the influx of Internet, Austin was a prime candidate to lead the way for the WWF's selling mechanism, and SMASHED records because of it.
Cena: I'd say John is almost on par here, even though Steve may have appealed to more demos, again, John has enough appeal to have his merch sell, the shirts, hats, wristbands, people don't stop at anything with him. Every kid has to have EVERYTHING John has. Plus again, with the way the WWE pushes there product, merchandising is a key draw for the company, more then ever, with PPV suffering, and John is still delivering in that aspect!
So in closing....will Cena be considered greater than Austin! NO! To be quite honest, despite my comparisons, I think the notion of that is a downright JOKE! Ausitn is the BIGGEST draw of all time! That wins it there for him! I could've summed up everything I said, with that, and not having to do all this...but what's the fun in that?
That said however, Cena will have a legacy all his own! Much like Bret did, he'll be knwon for doing great things for the company at a time where they desperately needed good things to happen!