Why does tna copy wwe




















When Jeff Hardy started his career in the WWE, he quickly rose as one of the best tag team wrestlers, but struggled when it came to singles competition. He was a mid-card underdog at best and never reached his true potential. His push quickly came to a halt in , when Brock Lesnar debuted and destroyed Jeff Hardy in several singles matches. After many memorable feuds with Jeff Jarrett, Abyss, and Raven, Hardy was a main event staple and showcased his ability to be the top star.

Apparently, WWE saw this and decided to bring him back. Three African-American wrestlers united together to go against TNA and give themselves a boost on the roster. Kofi Kingston, Big E, and Xavier Woods would team up to become a faction that was very much hated for several months. As The Beat Down Clan became cluttered and eventually withered away, the copycat group known as the New Day rose up and are now one of the most popular stables in the WWE.

Open challenges are nothing new in pro-wrestling. A wrestler comes to the ring and issues a challenge for anyone in the locker room to come out and face-off. The timing of the open challenges in are what makes it seem like the WWE just copied TNA and thought they could get away with it. After defeating much of the Knockout roster in TNA, champion Gail Kim decided to issue an open challenge to anyone who wanted a shot at the title.

If only Gail Kim came out to answer the challenge and put Ryback in his place. The TNA Gut Check was a unique segment that allowed new stars to tryout for a roster spot in front of the live audience.

The process included a panel of judges that would vote on whether the talent deserved a contract. The segment dragged on, fell flat, and was a lame imitation of the original Gut Check concept, which at least some included some interesting wrestling spots. Vince McMahon clearly has an ego problem. Not only does he want to crush the pro-wrestling competition, but he wants to mock them and use his resources to showcase how he can do it better. One of the best examples of this comes from show production changes that were made to WWE Raw.

Shortly after TNA Impact started using voice-over narrations and unique camera shots to open the show, WWE Raw debuted with the same style and concept. The Samoan warrior had a brutal style and created amazing feuds with wrestlers like AJ Styles and Christopher Daniels. WWE obviously took notice of his impact as less than a year later, fans were introduced to the Samoan warrior known as Umaga.

Umaga was clearly inspired by Joe. They were fast and agile in the ring and destroyed opponents with no mercy. While Umaga would win the Intercontinental Championship, he reached nowhere near the same status as Joe, who would win multiple titles in TNA, including their World Heavyweight Championship and Television Championship.

Luckily for the WWE, they now have Joe on the roster and can use him at their leisure. Until the past couple of months, the Cruiserweight division in the WWE has been nothing but a distant memory. Trying to bring in viewers with recognizable names is smart, but Carter should have used more logic when deciding which talents to sign.

Getting guys such as Christian, Kurt Angle and Bobby Lashley helped, but for every Superstars worthy of being world champion, TNA also hired 10 guys who were either past their prime or weren't that good to begin with. To save time, we won't even get into how bad a decision it was to bring in Hulk Hogan and Eric Bischoff just when the company was starting to do well for itself. Double J is a great wrestler who has done a lot for the business, but he is no Flair.

At one point, it almost seemed like he created a promotion just so he could make himself a world champion, something he never achieved in WWE. The original roster was filled with incredible talents such as AJ Styles, Christopher Daniels and Low Ki, but all of those guys have either left for greener pastures or quit the wrestling business altogether.

TNA just didn't have the star power it needed early on to succeed, and when big names finally showed up, interest from the general public had already started to wane. Many wrestling promoters have come and gone over the years, but the one constant has always been Vince McMahon. Carter isn't the first person to go after the WWE empire, but like everyone before her, McMahon was able to survive and persevere. The main difference between them, other than age and gender, is experience.

McMahon grew up in the business watching his father run the company, while Carter chose to get into the wrestling business in She surrounded herself with former WWE employees such as John Gaburick, but her own inexperience prevented her from running a successful promotion. TNA has produced some great wrestling over the years, but good matches aren't enough to make a company profitable. WWE understood this and diversified itself into a multimedia conglomerate.

If the rumors are true and Corgan does end up becoming the majority owner of TNA, let's hope he finds a way to keep it afloat because the wrestling world needs more than one major promotion.

Enjoy our content? Join our newsletter to get the latest in sports news delivered straight to your inbox! Your sports. Join Newsletter. But no, Hogan was also involved heavily in a behind-the-scenes role in TNA, and while nobody was going to let him book himself as the World Champion or anything, his influence did still lead to many decisions that helped cripple TNA in a variety of ways.

But Hogan also pushed for TNA to leave the Impact Zone and start touring, incurring massive production expenses that the company was unable to offset with ticket sales, and which also left them without a home once the experiment failed, thanks to Universal Studios giving the building to someone else in the interim. The problem was, TNA saw ratings from the original Monday Night Wars and assumed that by being an alternative to WWE, they had cornered the market on disaffected WCW fans who had stopped watching wrestling altogether when WWE bought the company, and that formed the majority of their fanbase and television viewership.

In order to compete with WWE, you have to offer a wrestling product that is somehow unique, and different from what they provide. However, after leaning on those divisions to build the company, when TNA decided to go up against WWE directly, they stopped trying to be unique and instead tried to emulate their competitors.

However, the real problem was that almost without exception, whenever a former WWE Superstar came into the company, they were instantly portrayed as being far more important and better than wrestlers that had been with TNA since the beginning.

By the time TNA figured this out and turned to their homegrown stars i. Points were tracked, with a leaderboard displayed regularly during Impact, and most of the weekly programming was devoted to the Series.

Many fans, over the years, have begged wrestling companies to occasionally treat their product somewhat like a legitimate sport, and the Bound For Glory series did exactly that. Plus, because wrestling is pre-determined, and thanks to a high level of parity and talent on the roster, things were always interesting, as people moved up and down on a weekly basis, and things stayed tight right up until the final show, trying to make the Top 4. It was a unique and enjoyable yearly event that truly set TNA apart.

And then, for no reason, they just stopped doing it. WCW only showed a profit for two years of its entire existence, and those profits were wiped out almost instantly when the company started going downhill. WWE is the exception, not the rule, and it took ruthless business practices, getting into the PPV market before anyone else knew how lucrative it was going to be, and about sixteen other factors, including an incredible amount of luck, to get to where it is today.

And when Dixie Carter was suddenly forced to make her vanity side project profitable on its own, the fact that the company actually had no real ways to make any money became a huge issue.



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