WWE
News

Chris Jericho: The Negatives Of Vince McMahon Leaving WWE Won't Be Felt For A Few Months

Chris Jericho on Vince McMahon's WWE exit

After 40 years at the top, Vince McMahon resigned from WWE on July 22 amidst sexual misconduct and hush money allegations. 

Changes since Vince's exit have been plentiful so far, with more wrestling on TV and the return of several talents but Chris Jericho thinks the negatives of losing Vince will eventually be revealed. 

"I think the pros, if that's the right word, the pros of Vince leaving WWE will be seen very quickly. There are a lot of changes right off the bat, very refreshing. Lots of in-ring time. The cons of Vince leaving won't be felt for a few months, maybe more, six months, a year. There are a lot of things that Vince did, little things, and I know people bag on him for his recent booking, and obviously there was a habit he had, but the guys who are true main event stars are legit stars. Legit stars. You can spot them from a mile away," Jericho said on the Swerve City Podcast.

"Look at the difference between Drew McIntyre now, prior to the last run he had. Vince worked with him to make him a top guy and top star. Same with Roman (Reigns). Completely different now than it was before he turned heel. Brock as a babyface, I can tell Vince worked with him as being a babyface. You can spot it. I can see it. Tough guys usually don't want to smile. Triple H never really wanted to smile. Babyfaces smile. That's part of being a badass, you open that door of personality," he continued.

"A lot of those guys are working in Vince's image. Steph [Stephanie McMahon] has obviously been trained from day one. Hunter has been trained from day one. All of Vince's principles will probably still be used, but there is something to be said, I can be in a band with Eddie Van Halen and we're in Van Halen, he's the greatest guitar player in the world. He quits Van Halen, I bring in Steve Vai, who is just as good of a player, but he's not Eddie Van Halen, he's not a genius in the same way. Vince is a once-in-a-generation genius. People can watch this and say, 'You're standing up for him,' I'm not saying anything outside the ring or whatever, I'm just saying, from what I learned about the business from him and Pat Patterson, another genius. Vince learned from Pat too. Learning in that era, it's something that will end up hurting in the long run, by no fault of anybody's own, just time moves on. That's one of those guys that saw the business differently from anybody else. 

"It'd be great if he would still be able to be there to consult, but I don't think Vince is going to consult anything. When he decided to leave or was asked to leave, whatever the story is, I don't think he can be a guy that can hang around on the outskirts. He's gonna have to go and find something else he loves to do."

Following Vince McMahon's resignation, Stephanie McMahon and Nick Khan were installed as Co-CEOs. Triple H is also the new head of creative. 

H/T to Fightful

Share this post

John Cena Pitched As Member Of Evolution

Ric Flair Asked Diamond Dallas Page To Be In His Last Match

Aidan Gibbons

Written by Aidan Gibbons

Editor-in-Chief of Cultaholic.com Twitter: @theaidangibbons