What I would do with WWE's PPV Schedule, and WHY
Posted: Mar 12th, '12, 15:29
Okay, so I've put quite a bit of thought into this, but I know that one of you (or some of you xD) is gonna poke holes in this anyway. But that's what makes it fun!
Anyway, so my WWE PPV schedule is as follows:
January: Royal Rumble
February: No Way Out
April: Wrestlemania
May: Backlash
June: The Great American Bash
July: Money In The Bank
August: Summerslam
September: Vengeance
October/November: Survivor Series
December: Unforgiven
Okay, so to begin, the shows I've replaced/axed.
Elimination Chamber has been replaced by No Way Out. I feel that a gimmick pay per view right in between Royal Rumble and Wrestlemania isn't a good idea. For one, Royal Rumble is the ultimate gimmick pay per view, and then you've got Wrestlemania, the biggest spectacle in professional wrestling. A gimmick pay per view isn't needed in between those two. What needs to happen there, is for a normal PPV like No Way Out to take place, simply to exist merely as part of the build to Wrestlemania. Instead of having a load of pay-offs at the February pay per view, book them so they can pay off at the Rumble, and then start fresh (with exceptions) in February. It's the perfect point to wipe the slate, so to speak, and start delivering something new. Use No Way Out as the gateway PPV, and have the fueds reach their high point at Wrestlemania. Have a couple of return matches at the PPV, and you're good. The fans aren't left feeling like there hasn't been enough build for the fueds and you get some well timed pay offs.
Next, Extreme Rules has been replaced by Backlash. The reasoning here is simple; a PPV where the focus is on weapons isn't necessary. It was brilliant for ECW, because it was focused on resurrecting ECW for one night a year. What I don't like is that now every fued needs to accommodate a violence driven match because of the PPV. Violent matches should be there for when the fued gets personal enough that it calls for them, not happen just because. For that reason, Backlash is perfect for some nice Mania return matches, and some new fueds.
In June, Capitol Punishment is replaced by The Great American Bash. Because I miss The Great American Bash. Note that it is TGAB, NOT The Bash.
In December, TLC gets replaced with Unforgiven. Simply, I don't think we need two ladder based Pay Per Views, nor do we need PPVs where every match is a gimmick. Money In The Bank is good, because only two of the matches are gimmick based. Although, I would give it only one MITB match, have it be all rosters included, have qualifying matches in the weeks beforehand, and have it be the main event.
Now, we move onto the timing of each PPV. It'll sound odd at first, but just keep reading and it'll work itself out.
Royal Rumble will take place in mid-January rather than at the end of January. The same applies to No Way Out being in mid-Feb. This leaves us with an adequate amount of small build time between Rumble and NWO, and gives us enough time to turn it all up to eleven between NWO and Wrestlemania. Make people wait for it, the suspense gets bigger, and there'll be a better buzz going into Mania.
After Mania, we have all PPVs taking place at the end of the month, until we get to October. This one will either take place on the final Sunday of October, or the first Sunday of November. Whichever one falls closest to November 1st. This is so that we can then have Unforgiven take place in early December, giving us adequate time to get some decent story build in while accommodating the holiday specials in the build to the Royal Rumble.
This way, we're one PPV down, but we've got adequate time to build angles between PPVs. Feel free to begin poking holes... NOW
Anyway, so my WWE PPV schedule is as follows:
January: Royal Rumble
February: No Way Out
April: Wrestlemania
May: Backlash
June: The Great American Bash
July: Money In The Bank
August: Summerslam
September: Vengeance
October/November: Survivor Series
December: Unforgiven
Okay, so to begin, the shows I've replaced/axed.
Elimination Chamber has been replaced by No Way Out. I feel that a gimmick pay per view right in between Royal Rumble and Wrestlemania isn't a good idea. For one, Royal Rumble is the ultimate gimmick pay per view, and then you've got Wrestlemania, the biggest spectacle in professional wrestling. A gimmick pay per view isn't needed in between those two. What needs to happen there, is for a normal PPV like No Way Out to take place, simply to exist merely as part of the build to Wrestlemania. Instead of having a load of pay-offs at the February pay per view, book them so they can pay off at the Rumble, and then start fresh (with exceptions) in February. It's the perfect point to wipe the slate, so to speak, and start delivering something new. Use No Way Out as the gateway PPV, and have the fueds reach their high point at Wrestlemania. Have a couple of return matches at the PPV, and you're good. The fans aren't left feeling like there hasn't been enough build for the fueds and you get some well timed pay offs.
Next, Extreme Rules has been replaced by Backlash. The reasoning here is simple; a PPV where the focus is on weapons isn't necessary. It was brilliant for ECW, because it was focused on resurrecting ECW for one night a year. What I don't like is that now every fued needs to accommodate a violence driven match because of the PPV. Violent matches should be there for when the fued gets personal enough that it calls for them, not happen just because. For that reason, Backlash is perfect for some nice Mania return matches, and some new fueds.
In June, Capitol Punishment is replaced by The Great American Bash. Because I miss The Great American Bash. Note that it is TGAB, NOT The Bash.
In December, TLC gets replaced with Unforgiven. Simply, I don't think we need two ladder based Pay Per Views, nor do we need PPVs where every match is a gimmick. Money In The Bank is good, because only two of the matches are gimmick based. Although, I would give it only one MITB match, have it be all rosters included, have qualifying matches in the weeks beforehand, and have it be the main event.
Now, we move onto the timing of each PPV. It'll sound odd at first, but just keep reading and it'll work itself out.
Royal Rumble will take place in mid-January rather than at the end of January. The same applies to No Way Out being in mid-Feb. This leaves us with an adequate amount of small build time between Rumble and NWO, and gives us enough time to turn it all up to eleven between NWO and Wrestlemania. Make people wait for it, the suspense gets bigger, and there'll be a better buzz going into Mania.
After Mania, we have all PPVs taking place at the end of the month, until we get to October. This one will either take place on the final Sunday of October, or the first Sunday of November. Whichever one falls closest to November 1st. This is so that we can then have Unforgiven take place in early December, giving us adequate time to get some decent story build in while accommodating the holiday specials in the build to the Royal Rumble.
This way, we're one PPV down, but we've got adequate time to build angles between PPVs. Feel free to begin poking holes... NOW