[quote name='VanillaGorilla']This is why women have no business in the ring. I don't care who the hell you are, you will never do it nearly as well as the men, so don't bother trying. I'm sure Myke will dig up some obscure Japanese broad who had a mean Satellite Head Scissors, and use that as an example of how women can be just as good as the men, but I still don't care, they never will do it nearly as well as the men, in terms of the suspension of belief.[/QUOTE]
No, the video is hand selected footage, so it's not indicative of anything, except the WWE's pushing of looks ahead of talent. There are a number of talented female wrestlers out there, and there always have been. The difference between them and the WWE women?
Training. Nothing more, nothing less. You know that very well, so don't come out accusing me of all people of being a wrestling snob. You know goddamned well that there are plenty of people who post here, you included, who could name that Japanese broad.
Manami Toyota, BTW.
Roughly about the same time WWF became WWE, you saw the same trend for men and women: the WWE seems to have decided that wrestling training doesn't matter, and performers can train on the fly and work that night on TV. They've brought up countless men before they were ready (Masters, Khali, Lashley, Cryme Tyme, etc.). Just because it's more obvious with women (b/c their utility on WWE tv is evident before they even begin training, so I imagine it's more likely they know less about wrestling, on the whole, than men) doesn't make it exclusive to women. Stop being a prat just for the sake of being a prat.
EDIT: What timing! Luna Vachon was just added to the WWE "Where are they now?" subsite. She explains it quite perfectly:
In a career full of unlikely triumphs, Luna cites her loss at WrestleMania XIV as the highlight of her professional career.
“Sable wasn’t a wrestler until I made her one,” said Luna. “A real wrestler can wrestle a mop, and make it look like the mop is kicking their ass, and that’s what happened that night. She beat us, and when we got to the back, there was champagne and confetti, and everyone wanted to celebrate with Sable. I kept walking until Owen Hart came up to me and told me I had just put on the match of my life. It meant a lot to have someone like him say that to me.”