El Dorado News-Times

WWE flexes sports entertainm­ent muscle.

- By Dan Gelston AP Sports Writer

The World Series never would have a 52-year-old pitch in Game 7.

But Major League Baseball doesn't have a dead man like the Undertaker.

Could a 50-year-old NBA star return after a 13-year layoff and become the MVP in the Finals?

No, but the NBA didn't sign Bill Goldberg.

Imagine a hot NFL prospect, a No. 1 draft pick, billed as a franchise savior that has all the tools to win over fans, only to find him voraciousl­y booed even as big wins pile up.

Pushed as WWE's ultimate good guy, Roman Reigns has instead become the wrestler fans love to hate.

Reigns, Goldberg and the Undertaker have fueled WWE to ratings numbers and attendance marks most major sports would envy, and the company is set to flex its sports entertainm­ent muscle Sunday at WrestleMan­ia. WWE is headed to Orlando, Florida, for the outdoor extravagan­za that will see the culminatio­n of feuds built on "Raw," ''Smackdown Live," and, well, a reality show on E! Entertainm­ent Television.

Hey, it can't be wrestling without a good old-fashioned catfight.

John Cena, long the WWE's biggest star, competes in a mixed tag team match with girlfriend Nikki Bella (star of "Total Bellas" on E!) against The Miz and his wife, Maryse. The Miz, once a fixture on MTV's reality-show circuit, crafting his future character on "The Real World," has become one of WWE's more reliable top acts, with mouthy promos that have him taking shots at Cena and Bella's seemingly madefor-TV relationsh­ip.

"We're just going to smack the crap out of Cena and Nikki Bella," The Miz said.

There are signs that Cena, used to championsh­ip gold around his waist in the wrestling ring, may put a diamond ring on Bella's finger after the match. One more hint this could be a match made in heaven: "Today" show co-host Al Roker is the guest ring announcer for the mixed tag bout.

So to recap, the guy from "The Real World" and his wife from "Total Divas" fight the co-star of "Trainwreck" and the girl from "Total Bellas" while the weatherman from "Today" announces the participan­ts.

WWE pulled back the curtain on its operation decades ago, and yet it still packs a punch at the box office for WrestleMan­ia. The roughly six-hour card has a few matches worthy of the main event: The Undertaker, in what could be his final match, wrestles Reigns; Goldberg fights former UFC champion Brock Lesnar; "Triple H" Hunter Hearst Helmsley fights Seth Rollins in an unsanction­ed bout; Shane McMahon takes on A.J. Styles; and Bray Wyatt defends the WWE championsh­ip against Royal Rumble winner Randy Orton.

Musical performers include Pitbull, Flo Rida, Stephen Marley and LunchMoney Lewis.

But — putting the sports terminolog­y in sports entertainm­ent — WWE seemingly underseede­d its biggest stars.

Cena vs. the Undertaker and A.J. Styles vs. The Miz were the bouts fans wanted to headline the card, with the former seen as a dream bout and the latter worthy for the men who carried "Smackdown" to its most critically acclaimed season in years. Styles instead gets demoted into a match against the 47-year-old McMahon, who will take a beating, take an insane stunt dive (off the roller coaster prop, perhaps) and take the 1-2-3 like he does in every match. WWE fans have long grown accustomed to Shane-O-Mac stealing a spot from a deserving star in a main event match.

The Miz, who pinned Cena in a 1-on-1 WrestleMan­ia bout in 2011, said he was happy with his more mainstream bout.

"I do whenever something is there and people are talking about it and making noise about it. Why deny the magic," he asked. "It's funny, when it was announced as a mixed-tag match, people were like, you're kidding me. Cena deserves to go against the Undertaker, Miz deserves to go against the WWE champion. This is below them. And then, once it started, people started going, 'Oh wait a second,' people are telling me this is the match people are looking forward to most. People care."

Fans care — and fork over cash to catch the action. WWE makes the show available on its own network for $9.99 a month — it's $64.99 on pay-per-view — and new subscriber­s this week got WrestleMan­ia for free as part of a promotiona­l trial at WWENe twork . com. The final "Raw" before WrestleMan­ia peaked at 3.426 million viewers in the second hour of the show. More than 80,000 fans attended last year's WrestleMan­ia in Dallas.

WWE fans invaded Orlando for a variety of events this week.

Diamond Dallas Page, 1996 Olympic gold medalist and former WWE champ Kurt Angle, and "Ravishing" Rick Rude were among the wrestlers inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame on Friday night. The NXT feeder system holds a live card on the network Saturday night and the weekend is capped by WrestleMan­ia — which runs its card miles away from Hogan's Beach Shop off Internatio­nal Drive. Hogan, as in, Hulk Hogan, the wrestler who used his 24-inch pythons to stamp the first WrestleMan­ia on the sports map in 1985.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States