J. Marston wrote: » I think they'll main event, they wouldn't keep talking about it otherwise. But I think Charlotte could win, they showed last year they're not really bothered about going against the fans in the Mania main event. I just hope they don't do a shìtty screwjob angle.
sirmanga wrote: » If/when Becky wins at Mania, I hope to God she doesn't do that most annoying thing that this generation of wrestlers all seem to do... crying after winning the belt. Get over it and show some respect for your character. Have a cry backstage if you want
Bounty Hunter wrote: » Get what your saying but I wouldn't blame her if she did and tbh I think the reason people like Becky is because of the likable person she is not her character of The Man in a similar vein to how Daniel Bryan got over in many ways because he was just such a naturally likable person that people wanted to see do well. If she did cry it'd probably just again make her seem real and like someone you can associate with. Afterall as a youg girl from Dublin who loved wrestling she probably didn't even dream she could win the main event of Wrestlemania.
sirmanga wrote: » Oh I'm sure she'll be an emotional wreck if she wins. What a feat for a Dublin lass. But we won't be watching Rebecca Quin win the belt, it's Becky Lynch. The Man. 2019's Steve Austin. Stone Cold didn't cry after winning the belt, he just went to each corner and said fcuk yeah. Everyone is doing the breaking down crying thing now. Heel and face. It worked for someone like HBK because his storyline was the boyhood dream etc. But when I saw super heel Kevin Owens break down and cry after winning the Universal Title (with outside interference no less) I just couldn't believe what I was seeing. Yes, Kevin Steen had achieved something that he never thought would, but that's for him to reflect on in the back. The whole crying thing might be a Triple H directive. He knows the smart fans will love it. "Show them how much this means to you. Don't be a afraid to well up.... then I'll take a picture with you when you come through the curtain and post it to Instagram..."
Mr.Nice Guy wrote: » I find this bizarre tbh. She's not a heel and she's not Austin so I fail to see the problem if she does get emotional. At one stage she thought she wouldn't wrestle again. For her to possibly be the first woman to main event Mania and win the title would be an incredible accomplishment and the idea that they'd have to TELL her to be emotional about that is laughable really. You say it worked for Michaels because it was the boyhood dream. Well, this is the girlhood dream so why shouldn't she cry? I'd agree Kevin Owens shouldn't have cried winning the title as a heel due to interference on Raw - that's hardly the same as winning the title as a babyface in the first ever women's main event of Wrestlemania having been on the pre-show a year earlier and having thought at one point you'd never have even made it to WWE. I mean, come on. And what's this about people crying only being a recent thing in this generation? Edge was in tears when he won the title cashing in the MITB briefcase (and he was also a heel). Benoit cried at Mania 20. Mysterio cried. Flair's promo at the Rumble when he won the title: "With a tear in my eye, this is the greatest day of my life." (And Flair cried about everything really and it hardly hurt him). Furthermore, why would I as a fan want Becky to cry quietly backstage? I want to see her emotional. I want this sh*t to mean something. Why would anyone want genuine feelings to be kept quiet? You'd rather more of the robotic pouting of her character in recent weeks? Seriously? I don't want a celebration involving 'The Man'. Save that for Smackdown if it's needed. If she wins at Wrestlemania I want a celebration involving Rebecca Quin.
CastorTroy wrote: » If she gets emotional I can't blame her. Even though she's told in advance, it actually happening will hit hard. Look at someone like Lesnar who wins a title and it means nothing to him.
sirmanga wrote: » I hate the crying thing because it's like the wrestler who is crying is saying "this is a real moment." So it lets us know that everything before that wasn't real. It just takes me out of the illusion that is wrestling. Most of the wrestlers who cried in the past had a reason to, or it fit their character. Edge was a feral, passionate sociopath. Mysterio was doing it for his dead best friend (cashing in on his dead best friend more like). But why would Becky cry.? Why would anyone want to see her cry? This is a fictional show, and she's playing a character. Not to take away from her personal accomplishment. But if she wants to show us how much it meant to the real Rebecca Quin, wait until the WWE 24 episode of this Mania comes out. Also, she IS being portrayed as a female Austin. At least she was until last night when she apologised. They are basically rehashing the Austin broken neck storyline from late 97. Just as when I'm watching any Christian Bale movie where he's lost a massive amount of weight or put a massive amount on, I don't want to think about how much effort has gone into his role, and it has no bearing on how I feel about the character he's playing. I just want to get caught up in the film. A great actor gets you involved in the performance to the point that you forget it's a performance. Of course, I know that wrestling is different to acting, but there's no denying that wrestling is a form of acting. I mean, what's next? At the end of Mania, will the entire roster, faces and heels, stand at the entrance way stage and all hold hands and bow?
Mr.Nice Guy wrote: » I can see where you're coming from but I think you're looking at this from an acting perspective too literally. I get the point that we want a character to remain true to its roots, but as you say yourself this is not strictly acting. This is a weird analogy but imagine if at the Academy Awards, the actors had to show up as the characters they portrayed in the films. If in this scenario, Bale won the Best Actor award would it really ruin your view of the character if the man himself got choked up accepting the accolade?
PTH2009 wrote: christ imagine if we got Becky vs Nia at mania instead
Necro wrote: » Not happening. Maybe at Fastlane. Maybe. Becky is definitely going to be in that match, I'd eat my hat and an assortment of other hats if she isn't.
sirmanga wrote: » It either is a fictional TV show or it isn't. We can't have it both ways.
Monokne wrote: » This is one of the more curious sentiments I've ever seen from a wrestling fan. If wrestling were real, as we are supposed to think when watching it, then winning a championship - in the main event of Wrestlemania - would be the pinnacle of anyone's career, a sure fire reason to get emotional. You see competitors in UFC cry after big wins all the time, regardless of whether they're heels like Jones or McGregor or babyfaces like Cormier. Emotional responses to big wins in pro wrestling is sorely missing. Why you'd would want to eliminate the emotional peak from the story is a mystery to me.
sirmanga wrote: » Because wrestling isn't a sport. The reactions from the wrestlers are supposed to be, and should be, scripted. It's more comparable with a film or TV show than sport.
Monokne wrote: » This makes absolutely no sense. Within the body of the show, it is a sport. What you're saying is analogous to me saying "Rocky shouldn't get emotional at the end of Rocky 2 when he wins the world title because it's scripted". It's not supposed to be scripted to Rocky. It's also not scripted to Becky Lynch.
sirmanga wrote: » And Becky shouldn't cry because she's supposed to be a hard nut. Also, when they cry, it is the real person crying, not the character. That's what makes it so stupid.
Monokne wrote: » Ah, I was unaware her character now has only one dimension. Perhaps there should be a PSA revealing this information. My impression was that she was still a multi faceted human being because that seemed to be more realistic and well rounded.
RopeDrink wrote: » I'm not a wrestler, but I don't need to be one to know that if Vince pulled me aside and told me I was getting the belt tonight, after months or years of career build from the mids to an upper card (you'd be lucky to even get that far), then I'm not just going to poker-face the audience after the 1-2-3 and all the adrenaline of a match going through me, or ignore any thoughts of 'making it', or just the fact that it's likely I get to keep my job longer. You have no idea what can go through your head when you achieve something, even if that something is invariably in-ring fake - there is still meaning to it that the wrestler(s) themselves will feel more than Joe Soap viewer who is expecting it all to be a work.