I wasn't really sure where this was or is going with Punk being brought up I was just commenting on what part of what you said, lol. And ad far as when Punk is gonna main event a PPV NOC which I think has been the plan for a little while now given a year ago it was Cena in Punk's house and now it's Punk in Cena house (which Cena will get booed in no matter how hard they try and use Punk to get him support)I was talking about WrestleMania XXVII (you could still argue that The Rock had a big hand in selling this) and Capitol Punishment 2011, not Survivor Series. Sorry if I was unclear about that. I also forgot to mention John Morrison at Extreme Rules 2011. Neither of those three had main evented Pay Per Views before those events and wouldn't have main evented if they weren't facing Cena.
Punk did main event against Del Rio and The Miz (who had both main evented Pay Per Views that year) at TLC, but it was in a TLC match. It being a TLC match made it much more interesting and main event worthy. Not to mention that the WHC match was Mark Henry vs. Big Show and there was no way in hell that they would let those two main event a Pay Per View together. The only other option would have been Nash vs. Triple H and people would have flipped out it was the main event.
Basically, what I'm saying is that Cena can main event a Pay Per View with pretty much anybody, Punk can't do that (yet). This is because a lot of people who bought the Pay Per View or have tickets care more about Cena than Punk, WWE title or not.
Daniel Bryan being "The Guy"?
The Guy is supposed to be larger than life. The business is on a downward spiral if this is the future. Sorry they tried midget wrestling and it didn't work.
I totally agree that at the moment Punk is coming off as insecure and unoriginal at the moment, but they've spent too much time working on him to let him fall into a state of obscurity which is exactly what would happen to him if he wasn't champion and wasn't with Cena. People seem to constantly complain that Punk isn't main eventing shows and Pay Per Views and the last few weeks have made the reason obvious - Punk still isn't doesn't have a big enough fanbase to headline any show by himself. Cena has headlined Pay Per Views with R-Truth, The Miz etc. I'm not saying that they were good headline acts, but Cena could sell them to his fans. Do you think that anyone would be willing to pay for a WrestleMania with CM Punk vs. The Miz as the main event? Hell no. As big as Punk is, he's not at a level where he can be trusted to successfully lead the company. If CM Punk was pulling this bullshit respect gimmick with anybody else on the roster bar Lesnar or Triple H nobody would even care. If Cena was facing anybody going through Punk's transition, people would care because Cena has a frickin' huge fanbase. I'm not saying that this is Punk's fault, he can't help the fact that not as many fans buy into him as Cena because after all it is Cena's house and everybody else is just a guest.
I've kind of gone off track there, just something that I feel that I should put out there because too many people are whining about Punk not being 'that guy' in the WWE.
I don't really think that you can compare Punk's push last year to Bryan's push now. Punk's push was perfectly executed, he got a lot of attention because of what he said and how he went about getting the title. Going into Money In The Bank, nobody could call what way that match was going to go and be confident about it. They made him into a legitimate main eventer, then it all started to wear away when he came back. If he still had that momentum now, he would be, or at least should be, main eventing Pay Per Views. At the moment, Bryan's just over. He hasn't been pushed in any way that makes his character stronger, his push is for entertainment purposes. Just because someone is over doesn't mean that it's the right time to make him into something bigger than they already are. His time will come though, I'm almost certain of that.
Actually to be fair Truth and Miz main evented cause of Rock more than anything else and Punk actually main evented a PPV against Del Rio and Miz with no Cena on the show.
As for Bryan I like what he's been doing lately and how over he's gotten though I think this article is going a little too far calling him "the guy" in sports entertainment.
Daniel Bryan will never be "the guy" in sports entertaiment. Although, for me he is "the guy" in professional wrestling. He is so over with everything that it makes me smile.
It's true that in past few weeks he was really entertaining. Wether it's in ring (Pfff, of course), on the mic or just in some creative segments.
The thing is though, they have to take that leap of faith sooner or later because if the guy doesn't get to close a PPV while being on a streak of 9 months being champion, when the fuck does he because I honestly can't see him getting any bigger than he already is really.
But anyways back to Bryan while I don't feel like some in the sense of give him the WWE title now they do need to capitalize on how over he has become a lot better than they have been doing. Doesn't have to be a title but a well built and thought out feud.
Daniel Bryan being "The Guy"?
The Guy is supposed to be larger than life. The business is on a downward spiral if this is the future. Sorry they tried midget wrestling and it didn't work.
^ I said Michaels was one of biggest stars and certainly as far WWF/WWE goes he was. Bret Hart is a tricky one because often the ratings or buyrates wouldn't back up that he was that big but to be fair he was the top star in a very difficult period for wrestling so maybe unfair to judge him on that. To carry the WWF the way he did during the 90s when some many let them down was impressive and if you go on crowd and looked at his mercindise sales I bet Bret was right up there.
Bret Hart was the epitome of vanilla midget and if it wasn't for Michaels carrying their feuds, the Hart family would be still working indy shows in Calgary against Kevin Steen and Sylvain Grenier.
As for Danielson, he needs acting lessons to try and carve a personality for himself. Saying one word over in succession doesn't qualify as godly mic skills, people made the same mistake with Ken Anderson.
He also needs to stop watching too many Chuck Norris films and drop the puro style, kicks and chops isn't omfg technical wrestling genius.
Bret Hart was the epitome of vanilla midget and if it wasn't for Michaels carrying their feuds, the Hart family would be still working indy shows in Calgary against Kevin Steen and Sylvain Grenier.
As for Danielson, he needs acting lessons to try and carve a personality for himself. Saying one word over in succession doesn't qualify as godly mic skills, people made the same mistake with Ken Anderson.
He also needs to stop watching too many Chuck Norris films and drop the puro style, kicks and chops isn't omfg technical wrestling genius.
The term "vanilla midget" is truly as "fan boy" as opinions get. A guy's physical size means absolutely nothing. Just because previous eras were dependent on them doesn't mean all future generations have to be. Buddy Rogers, Frank Gotch, Ed Lewis, Ric Flair... none of those guys were "big guys" by any means and they carried the bulk of the wrestling business throughout each of their respective eras. Even Steve Austin wasn't humongous and he's arguably the most important wrestler in the history of the company.
As for Bryan, the guy is as over as over gets. He's easily the most charismatic performer in the company, arguably the best wrestler in the world, and is ridiculously marketable. He's not The Rock on the mic, but jesus christ, why does everyone have to expect that from everyone? He's selling merchandise regardless, and if's selling merch, he can sell tickets as well. The two go practically hand-in-hand.
And I've said it numerous times in recent months, to me personally he's the most interesting and entertaining wrestler in the company right now. The guy got a superb match out of Kane... KANE for fucks sake. Name me one other wrestler in the company who has done that lately. Fucking no one, that's who.
WWE doesn't have to give him the belt to get him to put butts in the seats, but they aren't going to have a choice but to put the belt on him once in a while. He will likely have short reigns and be considered a "transitional champion" eventually, but I'm okay with that as long as they keep feeding him lots of air time. The upcoming "anger management classes" that AJ announced on Twitter only further proves my point. That's an extra Daniel Bryan segment each week, so apparently someone at WWE agrees with me.