D-Von Dudley has a clear diagnosis for why so many independent wrestlers never make it to WWE — and it has nothing to do with athleticism or move sets. Speaking on the Krazy Train podcast, the WWE Hall of Famer argued that too many modern wrestlers have lost sight of the foundational skill that separates a good performer from a great one: the ability to tell a story inside the ring.
“This is why so many indie wrestlers don’t make it to NXT or the main roster — because they have no knowledge of how this business works. And if you have no knowledge, you’re not really going to go anywhere,” D-Von said. He used his own career alongside Bully Ray as Exhibit A, pointing out that The Dudley Boyz built one of the most decorated tag team careers in wrestling history without relying on flashy, high-risk offense.
D-Von Dudley Warns That Spot-Heavy Matches Burn Out Audiences and Kill Emotional Investment
“Bubba and myself never did anything spectacular in that ring — to the point that we didn’t do flips and flies. We didn’t do any hurricanranas. We didn’t do any of that crap. We took basic wrestling moves and made it into a story, but made it mean something,” he said. D-Von also warned about the consequences of overstuffing matches with spots. “The minute you start jumbling a match with all sorts of spots, they short circuit. They already don’t have a long attention span as it is — and now you’re burning them out so that they can’t even enjoy the show.” D-Von’s career included tag team championship reigns in WWE, WCW, ECW, and TNA, making him one of the most decorated tag team wrestlers in the history of the sport — all built on the principle of simplicity and storytelling over spectacle.
