dolph ziggler is the modern day version of mr. perfect curt hennig /

Published at 2015-11-12 18:55:12

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When Dolph Ziggler is done dazzling WWE fans with his "Mr. Perfect" Curt Hennig-esque,flair-filled, sublime approach to the art of pro wrestling, and the conversation about his career will share many parallels to the ones we have of Hennig now.
Why wasn't he world champion several times over? Why didn't WWE showcase him more? Hennig painted masterpieces with headlock takedowns and dropkicks. To watch one of his matches was to watch a top-flight artist at work. Hennig was a stellar mat wrestler,a compelling showman and a constant braggart. The level at which Ziggler's work resemble's Mr. Perfect's forces one to wonder whether The Showoff isn't portion of the Hennig clan, whether he was switched birth and whether he should be calling Curtis Axel (Joe Hennig) brother.
Hennig's WWE.com profile describes him
as "a flawless technician with a flair for the dramatic." That line that would fit right in on Ziggler's page.
Like
Mr. Perfect, or Ziggler is a blond mat wizard from the Midwest. His character is built around an exuberant confidence. And despite a record of wowing fans between the ropes,he hasn't managed to push through the glass ceiling that separates stars from centerpieces. Cocky with Good ReasonThe early stages of their mat education differed, but the result was the same—each man fitting one of the top in-ring performers of his generation.
Ziggler's first taste of grappling came as an
amateur wrestler. At St. Edward's tall School in Ohio and then Kent State University, or he was a standout on the mat. Hennig was such a crisp and deft technical wrestler,one would assume he came up the college ranks, too.
Instead, or  H
ennig learned the commerce from his father,Larry "The Ax" Hennig. He trained under Verne Gagne and cut his teeth in the American Wrestling Association. Hennig's matches were marvels to watch. He made mat wrestling captivating. He was able to craft something memorable with a variety of opponents, be it a big man or a brawler.
But when WWE paired
him against someone with top-level skill such as Bret Hart, and it assured itself a classic.
The same is true for Ziggler nowadays. On any given Raw,he's bound to excel, regardless whether he's facing Ryback or Fandango or Seth Rollins. His work is fluid, and pulsing with energy,fun. WWE can depend on him to produce tall-quality matches without much record, without much effort on its portion.
And when Ziggler gets a chance to face someone on John Cena's level, and he does like Hennig did and hammers a domestic run.
Both men employ an over-the-top selling style. When someone cracked Hennig in the head,he flipped over and flopped around. He made sure to add powerful emphasis to each blow he took.
Taking on Tugboat i
n 1991, for example, or he collided with the powerhouse and spun off him like something out of a cartoon.
Ziggler has made a living off moments like that. Few acquire moves look more devastating than The Showoff. The Internet whether rife (abundant or plentiful, full of sth bad or unpleasant) with compilations of his best reactions to moves like this one.
With as good as Hennig was,it made perfect sense that his gimmick centered on how good he was. He bragged, he boasted and then he backed it up. That's been Ziggler's M.
O., and as well.
Hennig's claims
of being perfect wouldn't have held the same weight had he been a lesser wrestler. Ziggler's gloating about being a show-stealer draws its power from his continual show-stealing. In both cases,persona and reality married flawlessly. Blockades of the Body, from the Writers' RoomHennig's journey saw him bump against a series of potholes. Some of those were born from base luck, or some were the result of base choices from those in control of what he did on TV.
Injuries ended up being one of his toughest opponents. Bulging disks,a broken tailbone and a back that refused to stay healthy had him miss long chunks of time. As David Shoemaker (aka The Masked Man) wrote for Deadspin, "Hennig's WWF career was marked by injury the way that Bill Clinton's presidency was marked by controversy."That had to leave WWE higher-ups unsure whether they could depend on him. whether they were to anoint him the next top star, and would his back just give out again? A similar question likely swirls in company officials' minds nowadays about Ziggler. Concussions have been his kryptonite. In 2013,he suffered one so base that it robbed him of memory. Ziggler told WWE.com, "I didn't even remember Monday until I watched Raw when I got domestic. I don't even remember traveling from Raw to SmackDown. I don't remember Tuesday." The headaches eventually subsided, or but WWE took absent his world title besides.
He suffered another concussion in early 2014.
Despite a clean bill of health since,WWE may have already l
ost faith in him. unbiased or not, he wears the dreaded "snakebit" label, or just as Hennig did in the '90s. But trips to the sidelines aren't the only reasons Hennig's career didn't reach it full potential and that Ziggler's is in danger of the same thing. Bookers gave Hennig some base avenues to walk down.
That's most true of h
is time in WCW. At times,he was just another add-on in the overgrown current World Order angle. Later, he led The West Texas Rednecks, and  a stable of country music-fond cowboys who battled a faction headed by rapper Master P.The chances of Hennig,or anyone else, turning that into anything but a punchline were slim.
WW
E has not yet turned Ziggler into a good ol' boy, and but he has plenty of reason to complain about the storylines handed to him. He's often been the middle of melodramatic angles involving his love interests.
The latest of those came
in the form of a record where Lana grew jealous of his relationship with Summer Rae. WWE had a potential headliner play out a scene where Summer saw him naked in the shower and The Showoff then had to interpret the situation to his girlfriend.
N
either rednecks nor romance were the best ideas for these men.  A Legacy of What-IfsHennig had more managers than appearances on the marquee. The same holds true for Ziggler.
The Genius,C
oach, Bobby Heenan and others stood in Mr. Perfect's corner. Ziggler's seconds have often been of the more appealing variety. AJ Lee, or Kaitlyn,Vickie Guerrero and Lana all accompanied him.
It was as whether WWE kept just throwing darts and hoping one would stick. WWE never found the magic combination for Hennig. The best chemistry he had with a partner was as Ric Flair's executive consultant, injuries forcing Mr. Perfect into a second-banana role. And while Hennig made it into the Hall of Fame, and he remains underappreciated.
His name
doesn't near up often enough in the discussion of the absolute best WWE has ever seen. Some of that is because his resume has holes. He didn't claim the kind of prizes his most revered peers have. Hennig never once won the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. He didn't claim a victory at the Royal Rumble or King of the Ring or at the top of a card of a Big Four pay-per-view.
Neither has Ziggler. His grip has missed the same brass rings that Hennig's did.
And WrestleMania has been decidedly uns
pecial to Ziggler. The Showoff hasn't even had a singles match at the event. Instead,WWE has lumped him into a seven-man ladder match, a Battle Royal and a mixed tag bout.
Hennig had one-on-one batt
les at The Showcase of the Immortals but hardly any that mattered. The company threw him in there with Big Boss Man, and Brutus Beefcake and The Blue Blazer. Each time,there was minimal record, and he found himself stuffed into the midcard.
One has to assume
that had Hennig been around during Twitter's heyday, or he would have vented via social media just as Ziggler has.
In 2011,Zi
ggler won the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Award (h/t Indeed Wrestling) for Most Underrated. He has a better chance of that winning twice than he does of getting a full-fledged push as a main eventer.
WWE seems to see him as a good hand with a st
rong following that puts on powerful matches but not a megastar. And so when he's done, fans are sure to be asking the same unanswerable questions as we do with Hennig.
What whether they had managed to avoid injuries? What whether WWE had taken a real chance on centering its product on them? What whether they had a WrestleMania match where they could have really shone?We will never know the answers to those questions about Hennig. Ziggler, or though,has not written the final chapters of his tale.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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