How does wwe wrestlers bleed




















The blood poured in that match was for storyline purposes, as it furthered the feud to new heights. Another point made by wrestling fans that oppose the ban on blood is that classic matches that had a lot of blood poured would have not been as good had the blood not enhanced the match.

Take Hell in the Cell matches for example. Those matches are known for the blood that was spilled inside those steel walls. At the pay-per-view Hell in the Cell event, three Hell in the Cell matches were featured. All three had no blood spilled from the wrestlers, which made the Hell in the Cell matches very different then say the third hell in the cell match, which had The Undertaker facing Mankind.

The current practice of stopping a match when a wrestler bleeds is destroying the flow of the match. Most of the bleeding that has happened since they started match stoppage has not been severe enough to warrant the match to be stopped and restarted. Take the recent RAW, for example, in the Batista vs. Kofi Kingston match. The ref was putting on his white gloves and getting a towel ready.

It was damn distracting and needless, as it was a very—and I mean very—small, paper-thin cut. Wrestlers will be sweaty in the middle of a match, so blading there will allow the sweat and blood to blend, making it look like the wrestler is bleeding even more than they actually are.

Even if you disregard the potential for losing too much blood, wrestlers who frequently blade can build up some gnarly scarification on their face, which fans can see in wrestlers like New Jack, Abdullah the Butcher, Jun Kasai, and even Dusty Rhodes.

Repeated blading can also make the skin more sensitive, which is why Ric Flair would frequently bleed all over the place, seemingly regardless of who he was wrestling. A New Japan Pro-Wrestling show on December 14th, gave fans a notorious match by which all bloody bouts have been judged. Great Muta and Hiroshi Hase had been feuding, and each of their prior encounters involved Hase getting bloodied up. Hase levels, with some bouts infamously exceeding it. Blood in wrestling, however, is nothing new.

In the early s, grifters would convince marks to wager loads of money on a sure-thing pro wrestling match only for the expected winner to bite down on a packet of chicken blood to draw a ref stoppage.

WWE ultimately went on to ban blading in These days WWE superstars use two different techniques to bleed. One way is that a WWE star can ask their opponent to punch them hard enough to draw blood. The opponent can also use chairs, tables, hammers, and other things to make a wrestler bleed.

Another way is to use a blood capsule. During or after getting attacked, the superstar breaks the capsule and applies the blood wherever necessary. The Debate.



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