You're welcome Nell.
To clarify my stance on guys getting put over, the first thing for me is dependent on who the guy is, for instance there are young guys who need big wins in the company to establish them, wrestling is a work but even in a movie you have to put in events to make someone seem important.
However with a guy like Cena it's a different dynamic, he is already a huge star and the result won't alter things in any way, shape or form, I doubt if he wins the fans will tune out because the company has shoveled more crap than that at us and kept their viewers, nor will his kiddie fanbase stop buying his merch if he loses.
Now is it a good look if a guy who hasn't wrestled a singles match in 8 years comes back and beats the companies top man? No, especially if all that Cena does to react to this is come out the next night with his "gee shucks" crap. However The Rock beats Cena because he got in his head and the fans got in his head, thus leading to Cena snapping, beating the Rock bloody and finding his edge? you get buyrate + Happy crowd + Long term benefit = Win!
I would say that you and I can agree on that (shocking, I know!


)
And I've also come to notice something too - it at least seems to be a trend.
I notice that people are always going on and on and on about a lot of guys, and at the time, I'm just like



, cuz I don't see them as main event type players, but people are talking about them as future champions.
Guys like CM Punk, Dolph Ziggler, Cody Rhodes, Zack Ryder, those are a few who instantly come to mind.
But as time progresses, I become more and more into these guys, they've slowly built up that cred in my book, and all of a sudden, I can see them being worthy of the praise.
As of now, I believe CM Punk as a legitimate -TOP- guy. Not even just main eventer, but TOP guy. As far as I'm concerned, he's the most interesting top tier main eventer on the roster (as a disclaimer - by "top tier" I'm talking about the Randy Orton, John Cena, CM Punk caliber guys, and Miz not in those ranks, as I think we know who my favorite is

).
Ziggler and Rhodes, I actually like now. I've stated before that I'm not quite ready to see them in the main event scene (permanently - this Dolph Ziggler title match at Royal Rumble is fine by me), and I'm not, but I believe they deserve the pushes they've been given, and established themselves as credible, and in time, I could see them being top card guys.
Ryder, well I don't see him as main event talent, but I do think he fits in very well with the mid card as a title holder. It's hard to explain, but Ryder just "feels" right in that spot.
Another example, that nobody around here ever did, and probably never will praise, is The Miz, who at one point I looked at as "See,
THIS is why I hate WWE now, because they have guys like this on the roster", but now, is my current favorite in the company and an arguable top 10 favorite ever.
For me, it's not so much about guys getting "over" via winning matches (CM Punk was starting to win me over during a run where he was getting constantly "buried" PPV after PPV by Randy Orton, but still came out more "credible" in my eyes), but rather just showing that they belong by being good performers and making believable characters.
I actually -believe- Ziggler as a character now. And to be honest, even if he is talking better than he used to, I hope they keep him paired up with Vickie, because I think the pairing just works. I also like the little mini semi-stable between Vickie, Ziggler, Swagger, and Rhodes.
But Del Rio is probably about the only guy that came in and right away I was like "Yea, this guy in the main event? It just "feels" right", and I still do feel that way, even if he's showing that he's not on the same level as the truly top guys.
So I guess that's why it's not always about wins and losses to me, it's about how a guy does in the role and makes me believe that he belongs. That's why I've said in the past (and continue to believe) that wins and losses ultimately don't matter.
There is an importance that they have, to be sure, but the storyline progression to me is what builds the character, not giving guys a bunch of wins.
Like people say that Daniel Bryan isn't credible cuz he was booked as a loser leading up to his cash in, and I say Daniel Bryan isn't credible because he is not a believable character as a world champion, and it's not because of his "size", it's because he doesn't have the whole package.