Court Bauer Says Other Wrestling Companies Have Struggled With Weight Classes, Touts MLW Understanding The Concept

MLW CEO Court Bauer recently spoke with The Ringer to promote the launch of MLW Underground on REELZ, as well as discuss a wide range of topics, including his thoughts on other wrestling companies having weight classes and why MLW does it all better. Highlights from the interview can be found below.

Talks MLW Underground’s raw feel:

We are a raw, unvarnished, ultra-realistic product. [Underground] is the fastest, quickest hour in wrestling, and it’s damn good. All of our competitors think having more hours means they’re better. MLW Underground is all killer, no filler, and I think that’s what’s going to make people enjoy it when we come to REELZ with Underground. The other companies are going to keep running the same plays and have their identity be that they’re going to keep signing random wrestlers to make big splashes for one or two weeks, and then they’ll vanish into the witness relocation program. Everyone on the MLW roster has a focus, and we make sure it counts. There’s no politics here, just damn good wrestling.

Says other wrestling companies have struggled to properly present weight classes, adding that MLW has excelled in that area:

When I was in WWE, if you were the cruiserweight champion, that was basically a death knell. You were given a ceiling. Even if you lost the belt, you were now pigeonholed into being a cruiserweight. It’s something a lot of wrestling promoters have struggled with because they never worked in boxing or never worked in MMA, so they don’t have a real understanding for how it works and how it could work. That has helped to differentiate us from our competitors as well; they don’t have real weight classes. They might have a token thing like in WWE with the 205 Live division. It’s a fad for them, like with the hardcore title. In MLW, it’s the essence of what we are at our core. We have weight classes. I think that feels more here and now than dragging along a brand title and having it be the name-of-your-show championship. You can’t draw fans more out of a fight experience than to do something like that.

The post Court Bauer Says Other Wrestling Companies Have Struggled With Weight Classes, Touts MLW Understanding The Concept appeared first on Wrestling Headlines.

MLW CEO Court Bauer recently spoke with The Ringer to promote the launch of MLW Underground on REELZ, as well as discuss a wide range of topics, including his thoughts on other wrestling companies having weight classes and why MLW does it all better. Highlights from the interview can be found below.

Talks MLW Underground’s raw feel:

We are a raw, unvarnished, ultra-realistic product. [Underground] is the fastest, quickest hour in wrestling, and it’s damn good. All of our competitors think having more hours means they’re better. MLW Underground is all killer, no filler, and I think that’s what’s going to make people enjoy it when we come to REELZ with Underground. The other companies are going to keep running the same plays and have their identity be that they’re going to keep signing random wrestlers to make big splashes for one or two weeks, and then they’ll vanish into the witness relocation program. Everyone on the MLW roster has a focus, and we make sure it counts. There’s no politics here, just damn good wrestling.

Says other wrestling companies have struggled to properly present weight classes, adding that MLW has excelled in that area:

When I was in WWE, if you were the cruiserweight champion, that was basically a death knell. You were given a ceiling. Even if you lost the belt, you were now pigeonholed into being a cruiserweight. It’s something a lot of wrestling promoters have struggled with because they never worked in boxing or never worked in MMA, so they don’t have a real understanding for how it works and how it could work. That has helped to differentiate us from our competitors as well; they don’t have real weight classes. They might have a token thing like in WWE with the 205 Live division. It’s a fad for them, like with the hardcore title. In MLW, it’s the essence of what we are at our core. We have weight classes. I think that feels more here and now than dragging along a brand title and having it be the name-of-your-show championship. You can’t draw fans more out of a fight experience than to do something like that.

 

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