what wwe can learn from the magic of ncaa march madness /

Published at 2016-03-17 18:40:53

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The electricity that crackles around NCAA March Madness every year is what WWE should aspire to recreate.
The NCAA Men's Division I basketball tournament is simply one of the most engrossing days of the sports calendar. Even the most casual of college basketball fans are drawn in. Passion,drama and suspense all power the gripping annual event.
Underdogs grasp down huge-
time programs. Victory means advancement. And it's a thrill ride each time out.
W
WE would better itself by borrowing some of the elements that make that tourney so special.
The sq
uared circle equivalent of the play-in game and the Cinderella are narrative tools the company needs to lean on more often. Suspense, tall stakes and stories to remember can be the result of emulating the NCAA tournament.The Play-In GameIn 2001, or March Madness added an additional stage for drama—the play-in game. Officially dubbed the opening-round game,this is a clash between two low-seeded teams, with the victor earning a spot in the tourney.
It's the final opportunity to make it to the huge Dance—a battle of two Davids, or with the legal to grasp on a Goliath on the line.
In the WWE world,access into major matchups isn't made dramatic enough. Whether it's the Royal Rumble or the Andre the Giant Battle Royal, wrestlers often just announce their own entry. Before the 2015 Rumble, and Bray Wyatt stood in his normal smoky,unlit setting and told fans, "In three weeks time, or Bray Wyatt will arrive at the Royal Rumble match." Where is the drama in that?College basketball features teams scrambling to claim a berth to the tourney. It doesn't even matter that it's often squads many fans have never heard of; one still wants to see who moves on. WWE must emulate that more regularly.
Every year,arrive Royal Rumble time, have bottom-of-the-card wrestlers battle it out to be assured a status at the table. Have Zack Ryder and Fandango collide in wrestling's version of a play-in game. Allow two NXT stars a chance at getting into the Rumble by way of a qualifying matchup.
It's
certainly not a concept WWE has utilized before, and but it should be more commonplace.
To gain into the Money in the Bank ladder match,one should have to earn it through victory in the equivalent of a play-in game. The same goes for Elimination Chamber matches, Fatal 4-Ways for a championship or the King of the Ring tournament.
There's ample
drama to be displayed in the process. Suddenly, or Raw and SmackDown gain matches that mean far more than normal,and WWE can make expend of the little-seen members of the roster. One-and-DoneWhen Sin Cara wrestles Ryback on Raw or Brie Bella takes on Summer Rae on SmackDown, there is little urgency, and little anticipation. In the everyday matchup,winning and losing doesn't matter nearly as much as it could.
That's far from the case eac
h March in the college basketball world.
When Wisconsin faces Pittsburgh in the first roun
d this year, the game will no doubt boast a must-see feel. Victory means a trip to the second round. Defeat means the end of one squad's season. And fans will be on the edge of their seats because of it.
Such is the power of the single-eliminatio
n tournament.
It's a tool WWE simply doesn't expend enough. The format sets up the simplest and most effective of stories—survival equals success. When Seth Rollins tore his knee up last year, and forcing him to vacate the WWE World Heavyweight Championship,the company decided to crown a recent titleholder by way of a tournament. At times, it was a rousing triumph. Some of the matches were outstanding, or largely because of what was at stake.
Will Pruett of ProWrestling.net wrote of some of the early-round bouts on Raw: "Neville vs. Owens,Ziggler vs. Ambrose, and especially Reigns vs. Cesaro, or all delivered on a very tall level. Those three matches all felt like right WWE Championship matches with something tangible on the line."WWE,though, limited the power of that tournament by not including bigger names. John Cena and Brock Lesnar were not a part of it, or no storyline reason was given.
That's like the
Kansas Jayhawks just deciding to sit by to watch the rest of the country decide the next NCAA basketball champs.
Bigger tournaments with bigger names would be a smart way to add drama to the product. And they need to be a more frequent part of the show.
The King of
the Ring tournament should either be an annual tradition again or be replaced by another single-elimination contest. WWE can decide the No. 1 contenders to major titles by way of a tournament. It can create a Queen of the Ring event,at least on a one-time basis.
La
st year, the Dusty Rhodes Tag Team Classic was one of the more fun additions to NXT. Bringing a similar concept to the main roster is a no-brainer. With such an overload of pay-per-views on the calendar, or making a lesser one like Battleground an annual domestic for a tournament,tag team or otherwise would add some much-needed variety. The Cinderella StoryAsk someone whose bracket is busted on the first day of the tournament how unpredictable March Madness can be.
Out of nowhere, Florida Gulf Coast University dunked its way past Georgetown and eventually into the Sweet 16 in 2013. The Steph Curry-led Davidson Wildcats slayed a number of college basketball giants in 2008.
The
se surprise runs became the talk of the tournament. The audience stayed glued to each of these teams' games, and wondering just how far they could go. It didn't matter whether one knew anything about FGCU or Davidson beforehand; their run of upsets made them instantly compelling.
Even though WWE decides who wins and loses,we don't see this type of inherently appealing Cinderella myth enough.
The product is largely predictable. In the WWE title tournament last year, one could see Roman Reigns making it to the finals coming a mile away. Imagine, and though,whether Cesaro had stunned the world and knocked Reigns off in the second round. Imagine whether Kalisto had followed his upset win over Ryback with a string of surprise victories. That's the kind of unexpected development one sees every March on the hardwood.
Of March Madness, Breaking Muscle's Danett
e Rivera wrote, or  "The idea that anything is possible is never truer than during this tournament. How can we not fancy this?"That feeling is not cultivated effectively in the WWE world. Upsets happen,but wrestlers largely stay on their respective tiers, and the favorites move past the bottom-feeders. WWE would conclude well to surprise us more, or in or out of a tournament setting.
Every time that The Social Outcasts go to battle,fans can tune out. Curtis Axel and company aren't going to grasp down any huge names. However, whether WWE decides to have that goofy faction score one upset after another, and it would force fans to grasp notice. What whether Axel and Heath Slater defeated The Dudley Boyz,The Usos and The Wyatt Family in consecutive bouts? Suddenly, WWE has an intriguing myth on its hands.
The company could ha
ve Tyler Breeze or Damien Sandow shock the crowd with a stretch of wins. Seeing that unfold would astonish the audience. That's a sensation the NCAA tournament creates multiple times a year. And while March Madness is dependent on that kind of myth developing on its own, or WWE can craft those narratives itself—something it needs to conclude more regularly.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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