A Modest Blog on the Next HBK
by Aaron Glazer on July 23, 2009

Apparently, John Morrison is the next Shawn Michaels. Wow, that’s certainly inspiring to know. All time greats are so rarely found this early, that figuring this out now certainly saves us a lot of trouble down the line.

Might we, perhaps, note that this is pure hyperbole for Morrison at this point. Michaels is one of the top 5 wrestlers of the past 25 years and perhaps the top ever in ring, with a unique style, star presence and undeniable flair for the dramatic, but it seems every young star who breaks out from a tag team is dubbed the next HBK and no one has ever really caught up to Michaels in that regard.

The most recent “Next HBK” was Brian Kendrick. Part of the successful London and Kendrick team, the former Spanky was actually trained by Michaels and given a similar gimmick, complete with Diesel light bodyguard, Ezekiel. Of course, being a small guy, the WWE quickly lost confidence and depushed Kendrick to near oblivion.

A tag wrestler with far more success, the “next HBK” for nearly a decade before he began realizing his potential, Jeff Hardy has become a true main eventer. Of course, he’s been a main eventer for around a year and already burned out, performing nowhere near at the level of current HBK, let alone what Michaels was capable of in his prime. This “next HBK” at least became a main eventer though, if not an all time legend.

It’s now forgotten, but another young tag wrestler around the time Jeff broke onto the scene got the “next HBK” status bestowed upon him. That man is Edge. A cocky heel, Edge has lead stables and become the most hated man in the company for years. On his way to likely becoming an all time great if the injuries don’t get in the way, Edge has lost most of his similarities with Shawn, becoming a star in his own right, which is the point, as we’ll see in more detail momentarily.

Two guys who have tags in their background, but were not primarily tag wrestlers have also become superstars. The first of these is Chris Jericho, perhaps the first to don the “next HBK” moniker. Through lots of poor booking and strange eras, Jericho has had an astonishing career, becoming a true all time great, though while falling just short of Michaels, he’s clearly the next best thing to the point where there was even a storyline about it.

The second man mentioned above is Rob Van Damn. RVD had the cocky persona and fan support, but never really measured up as a character with depth to HBK, never being able to pull off the heel role with the same ability, or really stray from his main, high flying, fan friendly role. Due to his importance in ECW and rise in WWE, that still leaves him with an extremely impressive career, but one not near that of Shawn Michaels.

Of course, Shawn himself was merely one of a group once compared to the previous top flashy heel worker in the business, Ric Flair. In a group that once included Curt Hennig, Terry Taylor, Steve Austin, Tommy Rich, Magnum TA, and many, many more.

The “next HBK” will simply not exist. Someone will need to be amazing enough for long enough to become the first of whomever they are, making the designation, “next HBK” meaningless. For Morrison to truly live up to this designation, we’ll need to be spending the next 10 years looking for the “next Morrison.” That’s a lot of pressure. Instead, let’s enjoy one of the best young talents to come up in quite awhile and hope he reaches his prodigious potential as a main eventer, if not an all time superstar.


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Aaron Glazer

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  • Buzz

    I dont think that Jeff Hardy, or actually, CM Punk are true main eventers yet, at least in the eyes of the WWE, because they have yet to compete and be successful in the main event slot of the flagship show, RAW. Edge, however, has, and so he has cemeted that role for himself.

  • http://comicsnexus.com/author/gmguity/ Greg Manuel

    I don’t know how much of a compliment “The Next HBK” is, considering how much of a tainted mystique he has. There’s no escaping your past, no matter how many dunks you take in a body of water and Michaels didn’t even bother hiding from the cameras the fact that he such a power dick that he came with batteries.

    And if we’re honest, when it comes to finding that Next Superstar in the WWE that carries their proverbial ball, there are three main types:

    1) The Real Deal (the one accepted almost instantly by both upper management and the fans),

    2) The Accident (usually someone the fans accept, that upper management can’t ignore; usually a placeholder til the next Real Deal is found), and

    3) The Manufactured Failure (the one chosen by upper management, but rejected by the fans in some capacity).

    Most anybody that we can think of that was given a shot at the top of the WWE falls under one of those categories or somewhere in that spectrum, and during those prime years, HBK was more Manufactured Failure than anything, after defeating Accident Bret Hart at WrestleMania III. It took quite a bit of prolonged exposure to get him into the realm of Real Deal Lite.

    A lot of the guys mentioned here are more or less Accidents, (I’d include C.M. Punk here) if only because the WWE doesn’t (or didn’t) want to take the chance on them but had to throw the fans a bone.

    If John Morrison’s lucky, he just might fall into the Accident category. But I’d say that’s the most he could hope for, because the WWE is more interested in shoving guys like John Cena (Accident/Manufactured Failure hybrid), Randy Orton (Real Deal Lite/Manufactured Failure), Batista (Manufactured Failure) and HHH (Manufactured Failure in disguise) down our throats.

  • http://comicsnexus.com/author/gmguity/ Greg Manuel

    Whoops! WrestleMania XIII!

  • http://comicsnexus.com/author/gmguity/ Greg Manuel

    DANGIT! WrestleMania XII!

  • Aaron Glazer

    I think Smackdown gives other guys a chance. If it were all Raw, I’d agree totally.

  • http://comicsnexus.com/author/gmguity/ Greg Manuel

    Smackdown: Where Accidents Happen.

  • Aaron Glazer

    Oh and I could personally care less about Shawn as a draw- the dude is one of the best performers ever. Naitch wasn’t much of a draw either outside of the 80s, nor was Steamer, or a ton of other greats. The discussion is mostly performance based.

  • http://comicsnexus.com/author/gmguity/ Greg Manuel

    If we’re talking in-ring performance, then far as I’m concerned HBK still falls short. Performance alone didn’t propel him into the main event – his lack of shame and/or regard for kayfabe is what got Vince thinking he could have (ahem) “The Next Hulk Hogan” on his hands.

  • Aaron Glazer

    I don’t think that was what had Vince push HBK, I think it was that here was a good looking blonde guy with great hair (never underestimate hair to a McMahon) who could be Vince’s own Ric Flair, with a twist of Hogan.

  • http://insidepulse.com Matthew Michaels

    But who’s the next Vladamir Kozlov?

  • Aaron Glazer

    Ezekiel! Next!

  • Danny D

    You forgot to mention how well Billy Gunn pulled off being the next HBK

  • http://insidepulse Big Steve Philly

    True main event talent is a thing of the past in wrestling today.The Hogan’s, Rock’s, Austin’s ,etc. are basically non existant in today’s wrestling world.
    HBK had a good run along with Bret Hart because the main eventers had left the WWF and somebody had to take their places.
    HBK’S flair and controversy helped him pull off status as a WWF main eventer at the time but he did not measure up to the status of Hogan,Andre etc. and Austin out ran him big time during his main event run.HBK did help keep the company together and the WWF’S bills getting paid(barely) during his main event run, however I think his main event status , though good ,is over played as being great by some in comparison to the big main eventers that came before and after him.
    I believe the question should be rephrased from “who’s the next HBK?” to “Who’s the next real deal?” because without them wrestling’s near and far future doesn’t look to bright.

  • Michael Crow

    I think you’re all being a bit harsh on Michaels here. OK, so it’s coming from a biased source as I personally feel Michaels is the best in the industry past and present as far as showmanship is concerned.

    When I think “the next HBK”, I don’t think of that tag team guy who could move into the main event. I think of a midcarder who just has something about them that makes you think he might be something special. And probably someone who when you consider the WWE’s love of having power wrestlers as world champion, probably has no business is the main event.

    Jericho fits the bill. As does C.M. Punk, Christian (to a degree)….

    basically, if you’re a techincal wizard who can entertain the crowd but aren’t the best on the mic, you’re the next Bret Hart. If you’re the guy who’s pretty good on the stick and can wrestle better than your peers, you’re the next Shawn Michaels.

  • Aaron Glazer

    Bret was great on the mic. I don’t know where the modern hate of his mic work came from, but he was top notch even in his IC Champion days.

  • erik

    The short sighted nature and ignorance of history of the vast majority of online critics (call them IWC if you must) is astounding. Look at the bigger picture. Pro wrestling as a national and international phenomenon has only been around for 30 years at best. To say who is the next so and so is an asinine argument and one without any possible conclusion either good or bad. To compare an evan bourne with a bobby eaton (both considered high flyers) is barely an argument worth having. The so called Legends of this sport are not going to be duplicated, due to time, location, cultural landscape, and scope of the overall industry. There will always be wrestling, but the conditions of such don’t guarantee another Bruiser Brody or Ric Flair. In a few years someone may come along and captivate a crowd like The Rock or Hulk Hogan but it will be on different terms. It will happen upon terms that the WWE can neither create nor control. So while they look for the next hogan, the next austin, the next rock, the next hart, the next HBK, they continually miss the basic principle of maintaining a business: give the core fans what they want and build word of mouth from there. Instead of giving lip service and saying they give the fans what they want, man up and actually do it. Stop being so god damn ashamed of the word WRESTLING. Don’t give me 15 min of chavo getting owned by hornswaggle cuz you think its funny. Give me 10 to 15 min of Kendrick and Kingston putting on a match that would make ROHbots blush. My words will fall on deaf ears, but the final point is that when I think of WWE, I see it as world WRESTLING entertainment. I’d just like VKM to understand that too.

  • http://jeshuadhikam@yahoo.in jeshu

    frankly speaking,hbk is a superstar who can never be replaced. there are many high flyers, there are many power houses and there are many showmans but not altogether like shawnmichaels. the resiliency of michaels made me to watch his matches since i was 11 years old. i’d be amazed when hbk kicks out of a count many times in a match. so, if there would be “next hbk”, he should have resiliency factor to put a fan sitting at the edge of the seat. i miss u hbk very badly, but i know that you won’t be back.

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