


WRESTLING STATBOOK HOW TO
The book was appropriately named Listen, You Pencil Neck Geeks, a popular phrase Blassie used as a heel to enrage the crowd.īlassie sure knew how to get the crowd to hate him, literally starting riots and getting physical damage over the years from it. The legendary "Classy" Freddie Blassie had a book written about him that spanned his entire wrestling career.

To be perfectly honest, that's exactly how it happened. This book does build up the good parts of WCW, only to tear them all down in the end. Since the man responsible for Wrestlecrap is involved, you know that the lowest points of the company are the funniest parts of the book. The best parts of this book comes toward the end of the line for WCW. Eventually, WCW kept being innovative, prompting WWE to step their game up and overtake them. With Bischoff, the promotion thrived and was spanking WWE in the ratings war. The era before Eric Bischoff was hired was a pretty boring time where WCW was without much of an identity. Instead, it breaks the company's history into different eras. This is much more than a soapbox to butcher all of the negative things WCW has ever done. Reynolds, who created, joined forces to break down the major question that bothers wrestling fans from the 1990s: how could WCW have failed? Bryan Alvarez, editor of Figure Four Weekly, and R.D. The Death of WCW was written by two men responsible for great dirt sheets.
