Triple H recently spoke with NBC Sports to promote WWE NXT “Takeover: Orlando” and WrestleMania 33. The full interview is at this link and below are highlights:
When youโre scouting someone, what do you specifically look for?
โLook, I mean there are other factors as well. I donโt want to make it sound like โOh, look at this guy he has a big personality and forget all of the rest of it.โ Obviously athleticism, the willingness to do this, the desire to work hard, but then thereโs leadership qualities that we really look for. When guys go to a camp, sometimes people watch them and go, โYouโre just making these people throw-up in garbage can because youโre working them so hard.โ I want to push them to where theyโre really outside of their comfort range and then see what they do with it.
Itโs really easy to be nice and be the perfect professional when you feel great, but when youโre on the verge of puking in barrel and youโre exhausted and thereโs someone barking at you to do more and the guy next to you just fell on you because heโs at the same place you are, do you help pick him up or do you curse at him and go about your own business? There are differences in how people react to things. Iโm looking for leaders. Iโm looking for someone that can be a professional. Iโm looking for the consummate athlete on all aspects.
Itโs not just one thing, but if you ask me the one thing I look for, charisma is king.โ
…It seemed as though there was and still is a certain look that a talent needs in order to reach a certain level of success in WWE. Now, obviously there have been exceptions to the rule, but it seems like over the past few years youโve bucked that trend. How did that transition happen?
โSo, Iโm a big believer in talent is talent. It comes in all shapes, sizes, looks, feels, everything. I think sometimes thereโs been a bad rap of like take this as the thing thatโs most successful, so thatโs what weโre going to give. I think thatโs happen here in the past. People can say whatever about WWE and look, is there a particular style of athlete [we look for]? Sure, itโs like that in anything. If youโre shown steak all of the time, itโs no surprise that youโre going to eat steak. So when everybody coming to you with the same look and feel, a certain pattern begins to develop because thatโs what being put in front of you and thatโs what you have to select from.
My selection process is different. Yes, I understand what Vince likes and what Vince sees in an ideal archetype performer, but I also know him well enough to know that he likes a lot of different archetypes, so Iโm not going to give him one; Iโm going to give him a little bit of everything. Heโs going to see a Bray Wyatt and go (Vince voice) โThatโs great!โ Heโs going to see a Braun Strowman and go โAh yeah, thatโs my wheelhouse right there. I love that.โ Heโs going to see Finn Balor and hear the girls going nuts and then see the paint and go โGeez look at that, I love that!โ Thatโs something that I donโt think would have been put in front of him eight years ago.
I sometimes wonder if Bray Wyatt would have been put in front of him 10 years ago. I donโt know that he wouldโve. That doesnโt mean that Vince wouldnโt have loved him back then. I want there to be so much diversity on every level. I want it to be international diversity. I want there to be something for everybody within WWE so you can gravitate towards characters that you can relate to. Thatโs still a work in progress. Itโs a work in progress when you look at the Performance Center and you look at the talent there and see that 40 percent of the talent is international now, thereโs 17 countries represented. A quarter of the talent there is women. The diversity level is at an all-time high and thatโs on purpose. Weโve done that for desired effect.
Is it showing right now on the main roster? Nah, not necessarily because itโs going to take a little bit of time to percolate up, but itโs there. I want that diversity. When you talk about the women, I want there to be a Sasha Banks; the smaller, run her mouth, cocky, arrogant, little athlete. I want there to be a bigger, dominant athlete like a Charlotte. I want there to be a Nia Jax that brings a whole different danger component. I want there to be a Bayley that is this naรฏve, fan-friendly, little girl centric character that everybody loves. Then you still want there to be the Bellas, who are like the Kardashians of the womenโs division. You want that variety. Itโs the same with the guys. I want there to be a Cena, I want there to be a Randy Orton. But I also want there to be a Bray Wyatt. I want there to be a Braun Strowman. I want there to be a Finn Balor. I want there to be a Samoa Joe or a Kevin Owens. Big Cass and then a little guy like Enzo that can run his mouth nonstop.
I want that diversity.โ
Can you describe what it feels like to see a talent that has had success in NXT, but struggles to find their footing on the main roster?
โItโs hard for me. Itโs hard for them. Itโs a difficult situation. I say this to talent all of the time, careers are marathons, they are not sprints. Even though we say itโs a third brand, it really is and you might never make it out of NXT and youโll do really well in your career, but if you do get the chance to go to Raw or SmackDown, itโs like starting over. Youโre starting over with new management and new everything. The job is the same, but youโre starting over and you have to re-earn your stripes. Itโs a slightly different product.
It used to be that way in the territory days. You might be over in one territory and take the gamble to go to another territory and sometimes it works and sometimes it doesnโt. It can be frustrating for them. They ask a lot of questions and we try to give them as much guidance as we can.
The other thing though that everybody has to remember is that in todayโs world if youโre not โThe Guy or The Girlโ at the very top, the number one draw, you can still be a talent on Raw or SmackDown and working all of the time and be doing very, very well for yourself. Do you always want more? Yes. Will that come over time? Maybe. You reinvent yourself, you work hard. You continue to do the things youโre doing.
Back to the career being a marathon and not a sprint; when youโre a few years in, being on Raw or SmackDown and youโve only been in the business for four years or whatever, itโs not a bad place to be. If two years down the line you get that ride up to a much higher level, itโs a pretty good run.โ
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