Ripped from the 420chan boards
The news from this week's Wrestling Observer Newsletter and much more. Bear with me as I post the sheets.
> The original booking of WWE Roadblock was to be HHH vs. Ambrose vs. Lesnar, with HHH pinning Ambrose to win. The main event booking is interesting. The kneejerk reaction is HHH has to retain for his title defense at WrestleMania against Roman Reigns. They believe that they are going to get Ambrose over as a never quits babyface by constantly beating him down and beating him but he keeps coming back. After HHH beat him down with the pedigree and left the ring, and Ambrose, still lying on his back, said “Thanks,” HHH came back and gave him another beating, throwing him over the announcers table and pounding on him on the table until officials tried to break it up. While Ambrose will likely always get a reaction because the crowd likes him and he’s got a great promo delivery, at some point, unless he scores a big win that this is building toward, people may lose faith in him since he constantly gets beaten up in fights he starts and always loses to the top guys.
> Right now there are no plans on the table for Ambrose to turn heel, but they badly need contenders ready for Reigns with personal issues over the summer. If they run with Sheamus and Wyatt as his post-Mania foes, or turn Show or Kane, it’ll be a bad start to a tough reign for him. Reigns as a heel makes all the sense in the world, but that would undo years of work in planning on him for being the face of the company. But all of his “money” contenders or best personal issues would come on the face side, most notably Lesnar, Ambrose, Undertaker and John Cena.
> With four weeks of television left, we’re told there is a complete WrestleMania card, although at this point only three matches are announced. The three, which are expected to be the show’s top three bouts, are HHH vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE title, Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon in a Hell in a Cell match for the control of Monday Night Raw, and Brock Lesnar vs. Dean Ambrose in a street fight. Raw this week was built more around setting up HHH vs. Ambrose for 3/12 in Toronto, and the 3/7 show in Chicago will have the dual purpose of building both Toronto and WrestleMania.
> At this point, there has been no mention of celebrities on the show. They haven’t even mentioned The Rock, although he is in a promotional videotape commercial for the show. But his being there has not been brought up in commentary since his last appearance on Raw in Miami. As noted, Rock, Steve Austin, Shawn Michaels and at least as of a week ago, Mick Foley, are all scheduled to have parts in the show at this point. The roles of all but Rock have been defined but whether all or some of the others will be announced ahead of time or do a cameo role similar to DX and the NWO last year is unknown.
> Charlotte defending the Divas title against Becky Lynch and Sasha Banks in a three-way is currently scheduled, after two straight non-endings in Lynch vs. Banks matches to get the title shot. There will be a New Day vs. League of Nations match in some form, either a tag team or a six-man match. The hints we’ve had indicate more likely the latter. The New Day vs. A.J. Styles & Chris Jericho program is not scheduled to be part of WrestleMania. They have been pushing Sheamus & Rusev as a tag team of late. King Barrett is fully cleared and Alberto Del Rio is still being linked with Kalisto, which could lead to a blow-off match over the U.S. title but we haven’t been told of that yet.
> There will also be a multiple person match of sorts. That is likely for Kevin Owens’ IC title although that hasn’t been confirmed. The idea is similar to last year’s IC title ladder match to load up on good workers (and The Miz). Also on the show include another singles match with top guys with an angle expected to be shot over the next two weeks, a second women’s match as well as the Andre the Giant Battle Royal for everyone else not slotted in. Aside from Shane McMahon, no surprise wrestlers are scheduled for the show, as all the legends will be in cameo roles, interview roles or as seconds or referees.
> Vince McMahon’s 2016 salary is listed as $1,325,000 and he is listed as being able to be bonused an equal amount this year if the year-end financials reach certain levels. The salaries of some of the top executives were released by WWE this past week. The bulk of McMahon’s income for the year will come in the form of company dividends, which would have been $18,850,867 this past year. Unless he sells stock, it would be the same amount this year. The value of his company stock at press time is approximately $792 million. In 2015, McMahon actually earned $3,308,998 between salary and bonuses, based on a salary of $1,239,923, incentive plan compensation of $2,050,000 and $19,075 in life insurance and 401 K payments. He was not paid as a performer after having a performers deal for many years.
> Michelle Wilson, the Chief Revenue and Marketing Officer, earned $4,507,801, with the bulk of that, $3,099,994 coming in stock awards. George Barrios, the Chief Strategy and Financial Officer earned $4,494,878, with identical money coming from stock awards.
> Paul Levesque earned $3,112,654 which was broken down as a $573,269 salary as Executive Vice President of Live Events and Creative, $299,995 in stock awards, $26,000 in incentive plan compensation and $1,713,360 for his work as a performer. Levesque earned, through all sources, $2,775,186 in 2014, and $2,511,311 in 2013. Levesque has a $1 million downside guarantee, which is generally the top downside in the company, with a few notable exceptions. His payments for appearing on Raw and doing PPV matches in 2015 greatly exceeded his downside.
> Kevin Dunn, the Executive Producer, earned $4,758,170, earning the same $3,099,994 in stock awards as Wilson and Barrios. The stock awards of Dunn, Wilson and Barrios, based on the company’s financial performance this past year, saw all of the earnings multiply over 2014 levels. Dunn, for a comparison, earned $1,791,492 in 2014 and $1,744,184 in 2013.
> Vince McMahon is the company’s leading stockholder, owning 39,272,641 shares, or about 51 percent of the company. Lindsell Train Limited of London, with 5,572,681 shares (7.3 percent) would be the second leading shareholder. Linda McMahon would be third largest shareholder with 4,306,036 shares (5.7 percent). Stephanie McMahon owns 1,904,210 shares (2.5 percent), making her the eighth largest shareholder in the company, also behind The Vanguard Group (4.8 percent), Eminence Capital (4.5 percent), Morgan Stanley (3.5 percent) and BlackRock Inc. (2.7 percent). Levesque owns 53,636 shares. What’s notable is that Shane McMahon no longer has a significant amount of stock, so he must have sold all or almost all of his stock that he and Stephanie were granted years ago. Stephanie had sold a significant amount of her stock a few years back to fund building a house.
> Shane McMahon has not signed a contract with the company as a performer nor has he been hired for an executive position. The company noted that he is expected to be paid in excess of $120,000 for his role as a performer this year leading to WrestleMania. At this point, nobody seems to have been told anything but he’s returning short-term as a performer.
The news from this week's Wrestling Observer Newsletter and much more. Bear with me as I post the sheets.
> The original booking of WWE Roadblock was to be HHH vs. Ambrose vs. Lesnar, with HHH pinning Ambrose to win. The main event booking is interesting. The kneejerk reaction is HHH has to retain for his title defense at WrestleMania against Roman Reigns. They believe that they are going to get Ambrose over as a never quits babyface by constantly beating him down and beating him but he keeps coming back. After HHH beat him down with the pedigree and left the ring, and Ambrose, still lying on his back, said “Thanks,” HHH came back and gave him another beating, throwing him over the announcers table and pounding on him on the table until officials tried to break it up. While Ambrose will likely always get a reaction because the crowd likes him and he’s got a great promo delivery, at some point, unless he scores a big win that this is building toward, people may lose faith in him since he constantly gets beaten up in fights he starts and always loses to the top guys.
> Right now there are no plans on the table for Ambrose to turn heel, but they badly need contenders ready for Reigns with personal issues over the summer. If they run with Sheamus and Wyatt as his post-Mania foes, or turn Show or Kane, it’ll be a bad start to a tough reign for him. Reigns as a heel makes all the sense in the world, but that would undo years of work in planning on him for being the face of the company. But all of his “money” contenders or best personal issues would come on the face side, most notably Lesnar, Ambrose, Undertaker and John Cena.
> With four weeks of television left, we’re told there is a complete WrestleMania card, although at this point only three matches are announced. The three, which are expected to be the show’s top three bouts, are HHH vs. Roman Reigns for the WWE title, Undertaker vs. Shane McMahon in a Hell in a Cell match for the control of Monday Night Raw, and Brock Lesnar vs. Dean Ambrose in a street fight. Raw this week was built more around setting up HHH vs. Ambrose for 3/12 in Toronto, and the 3/7 show in Chicago will have the dual purpose of building both Toronto and WrestleMania.
> At this point, there has been no mention of celebrities on the show. They haven’t even mentioned The Rock, although he is in a promotional videotape commercial for the show. But his being there has not been brought up in commentary since his last appearance on Raw in Miami. As noted, Rock, Steve Austin, Shawn Michaels and at least as of a week ago, Mick Foley, are all scheduled to have parts in the show at this point. The roles of all but Rock have been defined but whether all or some of the others will be announced ahead of time or do a cameo role similar to DX and the NWO last year is unknown.
> Charlotte defending the Divas title against Becky Lynch and Sasha Banks in a three-way is currently scheduled, after two straight non-endings in Lynch vs. Banks matches to get the title shot. There will be a New Day vs. League of Nations match in some form, either a tag team or a six-man match. The hints we’ve had indicate more likely the latter. The New Day vs. A.J. Styles & Chris Jericho program is not scheduled to be part of WrestleMania. They have been pushing Sheamus & Rusev as a tag team of late. King Barrett is fully cleared and Alberto Del Rio is still being linked with Kalisto, which could lead to a blow-off match over the U.S. title but we haven’t been told of that yet.
> There will also be a multiple person match of sorts. That is likely for Kevin Owens’ IC title although that hasn’t been confirmed. The idea is similar to last year’s IC title ladder match to load up on good workers (and The Miz). Also on the show include another singles match with top guys with an angle expected to be shot over the next two weeks, a second women’s match as well as the Andre the Giant Battle Royal for everyone else not slotted in. Aside from Shane McMahon, no surprise wrestlers are scheduled for the show, as all the legends will be in cameo roles, interview roles or as seconds or referees.
> Vince McMahon’s 2016 salary is listed as $1,325,000 and he is listed as being able to be bonused an equal amount this year if the year-end financials reach certain levels. The salaries of some of the top executives were released by WWE this past week. The bulk of McMahon’s income for the year will come in the form of company dividends, which would have been $18,850,867 this past year. Unless he sells stock, it would be the same amount this year. The value of his company stock at press time is approximately $792 million. In 2015, McMahon actually earned $3,308,998 between salary and bonuses, based on a salary of $1,239,923, incentive plan compensation of $2,050,000 and $19,075 in life insurance and 401 K payments. He was not paid as a performer after having a performers deal for many years.
> Michelle Wilson, the Chief Revenue and Marketing Officer, earned $4,507,801, with the bulk of that, $3,099,994 coming in stock awards. George Barrios, the Chief Strategy and Financial Officer earned $4,494,878, with identical money coming from stock awards.
> Paul Levesque earned $3,112,654 which was broken down as a $573,269 salary as Executive Vice President of Live Events and Creative, $299,995 in stock awards, $26,000 in incentive plan compensation and $1,713,360 for his work as a performer. Levesque earned, through all sources, $2,775,186 in 2014, and $2,511,311 in 2013. Levesque has a $1 million downside guarantee, which is generally the top downside in the company, with a few notable exceptions. His payments for appearing on Raw and doing PPV matches in 2015 greatly exceeded his downside.
> Kevin Dunn, the Executive Producer, earned $4,758,170, earning the same $3,099,994 in stock awards as Wilson and Barrios. The stock awards of Dunn, Wilson and Barrios, based on the company’s financial performance this past year, saw all of the earnings multiply over 2014 levels. Dunn, for a comparison, earned $1,791,492 in 2014 and $1,744,184 in 2013.
> Vince McMahon is the company’s leading stockholder, owning 39,272,641 shares, or about 51 percent of the company. Lindsell Train Limited of London, with 5,572,681 shares (7.3 percent) would be the second leading shareholder. Linda McMahon would be third largest shareholder with 4,306,036 shares (5.7 percent). Stephanie McMahon owns 1,904,210 shares (2.5 percent), making her the eighth largest shareholder in the company, also behind The Vanguard Group (4.8 percent), Eminence Capital (4.5 percent), Morgan Stanley (3.5 percent) and BlackRock Inc. (2.7 percent). Levesque owns 53,636 shares. What’s notable is that Shane McMahon no longer has a significant amount of stock, so he must have sold all or almost all of his stock that he and Stephanie were granted years ago. Stephanie had sold a significant amount of her stock a few years back to fund building a house.
> Shane McMahon has not signed a contract with the company as a performer nor has he been hired for an executive position. The company noted that he is expected to be paid in excess of $120,000 for his role as a performer this year leading to WrestleMania. At this point, nobody seems to have been told anything but he’s returning short-term as a performer.
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Meltz being Meltz
