BUTT
Kreese
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I don’t think it was even an option to bring in those high-priced WCW guys. You can’t just force someone to perform for the WWF after they’ve signed a WCW contract. All the wrestlers whose contracts they picked up were young wrestlers, not making that much money and on a 90 day cycle. They wanted to keep working in the business, they wanted to work for the WWF and so they were willing to let Vince terminate their WCW deals (which would not obligate them to perform for the WWF) in exchange for a new WWF contract. But if any of them hadn’t wanted to work for WWF, their contracts just would have been terminated at the end of the 90 day cycle.
So the only way to get those top guys would have been if they, like Booker and DDP, were willing to take Time Warner’s buyout offer of roughly 50% of monies owed and then sign a WWF contract with a downside guarantee. Goldberg didn’t want to go, neither did Sting. Nash was on a $1.6 million per year deal and wasn’t going to pass up getting paid 30k a week to sit at home. Hogan is an interesting case because his contract technically ended in May 2002 but the last year was just as a consultant with the provision that a deal for him to wrestle would be negotiated later. So he actually wasn’t being paid that much under his contract, and that’s before we speculate on how his lawsuit affected things. (Though obviously he got out of the deal early since he was wrestling for XWF in November.)
But they could have got Flair. He was highly paid but not making seven figures, he always wanted to be one of the boys. He would have taken the buyout if they offered him a decent deal, and the WCW side needed him as a mouthpiece more than anyone. And when he was ready to wrestle he could have drawn a good buyrate with Austin, assuming that in this alternate universe they don’t kill Austin’s drawing power by turning him heel.
So the only way to get those top guys would have been if they, like Booker and DDP, were willing to take Time Warner’s buyout offer of roughly 50% of monies owed and then sign a WWF contract with a downside guarantee. Goldberg didn’t want to go, neither did Sting. Nash was on a $1.6 million per year deal and wasn’t going to pass up getting paid 30k a week to sit at home. Hogan is an interesting case because his contract technically ended in May 2002 but the last year was just as a consultant with the provision that a deal for him to wrestle would be negotiated later. So he actually wasn’t being paid that much under his contract, and that’s before we speculate on how his lawsuit affected things. (Though obviously he got out of the deal early since he was wrestling for XWF in November.)
But they could have got Flair. He was highly paid but not making seven figures, he always wanted to be one of the boys. He would have taken the buyout if they offered him a decent deal, and the WCW side needed him as a mouthpiece more than anyone. And when he was ready to wrestle he could have drawn a good buyrate with Austin, assuming that in this alternate universe they don’t kill Austin’s drawing power by turning him heel.