Tuesday 22 October 2013

The Purple Butterfly That Couldn’t: Why the WWE Divas Division Is A Disaster



Current Divas Champ AJ Lee, one of the few true performers on TV currently. Courtesy:wwe.com

They’re strong and they’re sexy, but their wrestling skills are about as flawless as Tim Tebow’s passing game. Today’s Divas division in the WWE is easily the most lackluster the company has ever seen. Long gone are the days of having 100% Stratus-faction in each Diva’s match or the jaw-dropping ring entrance by Melina. Sex may sell, but real fans want more.

Since the inception of the “Divas Championship” in 2008, the WWE had already begun phasing out former Divas in an effort to shake things up. Some of the pushed talent came from some unexpected faces, like Michelle McCool and Kelly Kelly. The new wave sparked more competition, with the now-defunct Women’s Championship still making its rounds. The problem is, you can’t have TWO singles titles for a division that has maybe six actual wrestlers, and 15 bottom-feeders.

The Women’s Championship prestige was being compromised by a marketing ploy to exploit the new and improved “Divas” brand. For die-hard fans, the integrity for the championship remained, with the Mickie James’, Melina’s and Beth Phoenix’s duking it out for the gold, while the Layla’s, Kelly Kelly’s and Bella’s were fighting for a purple butterfly they had the audacity to call a championship.

Don’t get me wrong, there are true performers in the division today. AJ Lee is a great champion and her personality through vignettes is something to be encouraged. Kaitlyn, Alicia Fox and Natalya are all phenomenal wrestlers, and I think these four women are all championship material. This is what drives me nuts: when you have a log-jam at the top, and everything after that is a significant drop. The Bella Twins have looks that would give any guy whiplash if they walked by. Their 8-move arsenal however is almost laughable. A bulldog, a face buster, a drop-kick. Lather, rinse, repeat. The same can be said for 80% of the Divas that walk through that locker room. We can’t keep accepting mediocrity so long as there are a few good wrestlers in the bunch. A division should not be carried by a handful wrestlers, men or female. The Cruiserweight Division was on life-support before WWE finally realized they couldn’t deliver anymore.

I think anyone who watched WWE from 1999-2009 would say the Divas division has been in good hands. In fact, I would say almost an embarrassment of riches stepped through that curtain in that 10-year span. Isn’t that what a business wants, promotion from within? More incentives for the wrestler, save money, and you know what you’re getting. I think Triple H would agree that is good for business.

My best suggestion would be quality not quantity. Take Alicia Fox, for example. She has the look, the skill and the tenacity to be a consistent champion.

This match is from September, 2012. The overall fight was not bad, but both Natalya and Alicia Fox showed off their athleticism and actually were able to have a match longer than 90 seconds.

The key to being a good wrestler is not being good yourself, but making your opponent look better than you. I think Alicia made Natalya look superb by selling her flips and not being choppy in the ring. Of course, Natalya is already a great performer, but Alicia was able to make herself look a little less dominant than she is. Her legs are her strength, and Natalya was able to return the favour by allowing Alicia to take control. If they put a match half as good as this every week, then they’re on their way. The whole 6-person tag just to have face time is a real snore-fest when the pin fall happens within the opening minute. If they need more work, save it for Smackdown before coming over to Raw.

The talent is there, but the supporting cast remains in the water without a paddle. Sex will always be the selling point in women’s wrestling, just remember the wresting part.


**This article is also featured on That's my Quarterback.com**

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