I saw something similar in regards to baseball, and it got me thinking about what makes a good career. Would you rather be a:
A Wrestler who wrestlers for 10 years for one promotion and for 300 nights a year, he wrestles 3000 incredible four start matches or better. He puts up amazing performance at a house shows for 100 people, and he puts up the same great performance for 50,000 at a main pay per view. Always increasing his skill, he continues to get better. There is only one problem. He has never won a match in his life, going 0-3000.
Or would you rather be a wrestler who is pushed to the moon, winning 3000 matches, while wrestling the same length career as his counterpart. throughout that time, he wins multiple world titles, but for every title he wins, he injures twice as many wrestlers, ending their career's with botched moves after horrendous botched move. That is not all, those 5 minute matches he puts on at pay per views, are twice as long as he would ever do at a house show.
So who has the better career? An excellent star who is a career jobber, or the guy who is pushed to the stars and has little to no talent?
I would unfortunately probably pick the botchtastic wrestler, because like most wrestling fans, I remember title wins, and main events. A guy might have incredible work, but if he is wrestling dark matches and curtain jerking, I may think hes great, but never think anything of it.
A Wrestler who wrestlers for 10 years for one promotion and for 300 nights a year, he wrestles 3000 incredible four start matches or better. He puts up amazing performance at a house shows for 100 people, and he puts up the same great performance for 50,000 at a main pay per view. Always increasing his skill, he continues to get better. There is only one problem. He has never won a match in his life, going 0-3000.
Or would you rather be a wrestler who is pushed to the moon, winning 3000 matches, while wrestling the same length career as his counterpart. throughout that time, he wins multiple world titles, but for every title he wins, he injures twice as many wrestlers, ending their career's with botched moves after horrendous botched move. That is not all, those 5 minute matches he puts on at pay per views, are twice as long as he would ever do at a house show.
So who has the better career? An excellent star who is a career jobber, or the guy who is pushed to the stars and has little to no talent?
I would unfortunately probably pick the botchtastic wrestler, because like most wrestling fans, I remember title wins, and main events. A guy might have incredible work, but if he is wrestling dark matches and curtain jerking, I may think hes great, but never think anything of it.