This is why I hate these fucking nerds as much as the dolts who argue hard-line for football metrics. There's so many things going on at different times in wrestling, that you can't point to one number and argue it as a stand-alone. That first quote is a joke. WCW was getting to a point where the roster was pretty loaded, and it could draw with Sting off the card or Macho Man injured as he often was or Hogan filming a movie. They were deeper than one guy. But Sting got such a reaction every time he showed up for a split second, it's hard to believe that people bought tickets to see Flair outside of the south, being that he was pretty stale at the time, not to mention always a heel. If somebody wants to downplay Sting for not being on a poster, and JUST the most crazy over guy in the business at a couple points that year, that's kind of a jackass idea though. Everybody whowent to Nitro around that time, did so hoping to see Sting come down and clean house. Crowds would crane their necks during good matches with big names, trying to catch a glimpse of the guy pacing on a catwalk.
Him being a lackluster merch seller is on WCW. Outside of the mask, there wasn't much to sell on him. SCSA had a different shirt or hat every month or so, much like Cena now. Sting just hung out in the rafters in his ring gear and with a bat. You can't really sell bats, so he's left with one, cheap piece of merchandise that is geared more towards kids. It's pretty niche.
Him being a lackluster merch seller is on WCW. Outside of the mask, there wasn't much to sell on him. SCSA had a different shirt or hat every month or so, much like Cena now. Sting just hung out in the rafters in his ring gear and with a bat. You can't really sell bats, so he's left with one, cheap piece of merchandise that is geared more towards kids. It's pretty niche.
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