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Arn Anderson or Sean Waltman


JerryvonKramer

  

57 members have voted

  1. 1. Who was better?

    • Arn Anderson
      51
    • Sean Waltman
      6


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Waltman was great, and really shone in TV formula matches against a multitude of opponents, for me. However, he's against Double A, who shone even more in TV formula matches. For me, that was both their major strength. You could throw either of them out against pretty much anyone on TV, give them 6 minutes, and you've a decent match. However, i think Anderson shades him on that. I'd take Waltman over about 90% of pro wrestlers, but not in this one. And, for me, while Waltman was a tremendous worker he just doesn't have the CV consisting of sheer volume of standout matches that Anderson does. If Waltman ever had a run like Anderson's TV title runs though, where he's given a featured spot to put on solid 10 minute matches on company programming every week for an extended period of time though, and we could be having a different conversation,

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What a weird thread. Would love to know what inspired it.

 

It's almost impossible to compare the two.

 

Waltman is definitely underrated, and in a way, Arn is overrated, just because he gets SO much love. I love Arn myself, but a new fan who has never seen either of them may wonder what the hoopla surrounding Arn is all about.

 

But like PeteF3 said, this is closer than you'd think.

 

Waltman was actually used as Vince's barometer to test how good another worker was. When Jericho had bad matches with Waltman, Vince said something like, "You can't even have good matches with Pac. You ain't shit!" I'm wildly paraphrasing and probably grossly misremembering the quote, but that was the basic gist of it. It's in one of Jericho's books (I think the second one) if you want to check for yourself.

 

Waltman's best was pretty damn good, but his worst is a slog to get through. Maybe he was always decent in the ring, but his character was SO stale for a while. Fair or not, that affected my enjoyment of his matches.

 

I think Arn wins this round because he has always been consistent - in the ring, as a character, everything.

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What a weird thread. Would love to know what inspired it.

See the thread for the latest WTBBP.

 

My argument for Waltman is that he is the greatest wrestler ever at timing high spots. His selling was absolutely top notch. Had an amazing move set and was great in a variety or roles.

 

Arn is great, but was more steady while Waltman brings the variety.

 

It's not a blow away win for Watlman, but I think it's damn close. Also he was pretty awesome from 1990 to 2002. That's not that short.

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I can't think of a better timed spot in the history of pro wrestling than Arn's spinebutser(especially the one on Taker). As for variety Arn has incredible bloody brawls, some of the best tag work ever, and plenty of great straight up wrestling matches on his resume.

 

Waltman would rank high on my best of the 90's list, and he was the best underdog high flyer around until Rey came on the scene. If Arn vs Waltman had happened sometime in the early 90's it would've no doubt been a great match. Just think if Waltman was in Bagwell's role in 1992 WCW it would've been an even more incredible year for them.

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It's not a blow away win for Watlman, but I think it's damn close. Also he was pretty awesome from 1990 to 2002. That's not that short.

 

I'd argue that Waltman was stale long before 2002 - for at least a good year or two.

 

Also, his last six months to a year as a heel 123 Kid was pretty dull because he never won or factored into any storylines. I'm talking about when he grew the goatee and jobbed to everyone. While that lack of push certainly wasn't his fault, it is what it is. For better or worse, Arn was always pushed. (Granted, losing to Renegade is probably worse than anything Waltman was put through, but Arn was still a title contender or champion before and after that feud.)

 

Still, in general, you are correct - Waltman had pretty long stretches of greatness. I just think Arn had a longer stretch, and unlike Waltman, an uninterrupted stretch. Maybe it comes down to the push? Arn always had it - Waltman didn't. Is that fair? Maybe not, but that's life.

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One other thing for Waltman that doesn't put him above Arn but should be mentioned:

 

If he's put in a slightly different era from his own, he could be a consistent singles main eventer. Can this really be said about Arn?

 

Can it really be said about Waltman? I don't see him main eventing in any era, even the current one. That doesn't make him bad - he's still great - but not everyone can be a main eventer. If he came around today or even ten years ago, there's no way he'd be picked ahead of Daniel Bryan, CM Punk, or even Rey Mysterio and Eddy Guerrero. Yeah, he was in WCW with Mysterio and Guerrero, but they all had comparable midcard pushes back then.

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Heel 123 Kid had a pretty high profile program with Razor that was only two months before he departed WWF. It is nothing to really hang your hat on for him as an overall worker but I think it is unfair to say he didn't play into any big storylines in early 1996 as that program was positioned as third from the top and he had house show matches vs. Piper third from the top in March. Anderson was pinning Hogan in early 1996 but was seen as Flair's clear #2 by this point as he was winding down. In ring for 1996, I would say Kid has the edge rather easily.

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Waltman's career left a lot on the table in terms of booking, I'm not sure I see the same potential for Arn. From the inception of the 123 Kid gimmick, he could absolutely have been a main eventer within a year if pushed correctly. Instead, he was used as Vince's barometer, which isn't in-it-of-itself a terrible spot, but Waltman was an uber talent and deserved better. His match against Bret and the tag with the Kliq proved he could deliver top notch WWE main event-style matches. It's a damn shame he wasn't put in that spot more often. Once he left and became Syxx (and then X-Pac) all hope was lost, even if some of the work was still up to par. The Kid gimmick was gold though. He absolutely could have been as over as Bryan if booked right. Instead, the feud with Razor never had a blow off and they turned Hall face.

 

With Arn, the fans never would have bought him as a headliner partly because he was always second fiddle to Flair, even when they didn't work in the same company. "The Enforcer" was never gonna be World Champion. But of course he was great at everything he did in the ring.

 

Just for argument's sake, we should look at peak vs. peak, top five matches for both guys.

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If Ziggler could be a WHC, I think Waltman could have, too.

 

 

Also, it wasn't too long ago that Jack Swagger was a World Heavyweight Champion.

 

Ziggler had far more credibility with the fans as a main eventer than Waltman.

 

Swagger wasn't credible or over at all, but if we use him as a barometer, we can make a case for pretty much anyone. Repo Man looks promising compared to Swagger back then.

 

It hasn't been until much more recently - Real Americans, Rusev feud, etc. - that Swagger has really become interesting.

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Funny this thread comes up when I was just watching 95-96 Raws and thinking about what Waltman's career would have been like if he wasn't injured.

 

Both guys were capable of great matches, but Arn was a top five promo of all time so that will give him the edge in my book.

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Funny this thread comes up when I was just watching 95-96 Raws and thinking about what Waltman's career would have been like if he wasn't injured.

 

Both guys were capable of great matches, but Arn was a top five promo of all time so that will give him the edge in my book.

Totally. When we talk about "who was better?" when discussing pro wrestlers , all aspects of being a pro wrestler should come into play. And while Waltman eventually became a pretty good promo, Arn's one of the elite.

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