• 7 months ago
The build to Kofi Mania was pretty great, yeah? The title reign after it? Well... not so much.
How would Adam book Kofi Kingston's WWE Championship run? Let's find out!

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Transcript
00:00 "I love the new day in all respects but one, don't you tell me not to be sour. I was born
00:05 sour then I became a wrestling fan. It got worse since then."
00:09 Kofi Mania was one of those flukes of wrestling, the kind of accidental, lightning in a bottle
00:16 events that reminds you that a) wrestling is a living, breathing product that still
00:22 has the capacity to evolve in surprising and emotionally resonant ways and b) WWE really
00:30 doesn't like it when that happens.
00:34 WWE is like a parent who books a really nice holiday for themselves but then their kid
00:40 brings an adorable puppy home and then suddenly they have to make all these new plans on the
00:46 fly and so the parents just try to subtly and quietly drown the puppy and then the kid
00:53 starts crying so they towel the puppy off. I say okay there you go, play with it. We
01:00 do have to catch that plane though. Hey look over there. Why, why, keep looking. Why won't
01:06 you die?
01:07 In one sense I understand Ryanair doesn't do refunds but also Kofi Kingston first debuted
01:14 in WWE in 2008 on ECW as a man committed to Jamaica's crazy and wouldn't let the fact
01:21 that he was African rather than Jamaican stop him from doing that. Now to be fair to the
01:25 big dub and spoilers I won't be fair to the big dub a lot in this video, that was actually
01:32 the gimmick that Kofi had on the independent circuit. He was, being Jamaican was his idea
01:38 before joining the company. So in 2009 he got hit on the head probably and became from
01:44 Ghana, it's always happening, and was promoted to an upper midcard fighting for Raw on bragging
01:50 rights eating the pin sure but then getting involved in the main event of John Cena vs
01:55 Randy Orton which translated into a feud between the Viper and Kofi which was a big deal. Kofi
02:02 was feuding with a former WWE Champion having big hero segments like that huge boom drop
02:09 from the railing in November and then the push ended in a way that could best be described
02:15 as stupid. In a triple threat match between John Cena, Randy Orton and Kofi Kingston,
02:19 again look at him in the mix with those two. Kofi botched the finish of the match, Orton
02:23 blew his top and so the story goes. The real life heat cost Kingston a pencilled Money
02:30 in the Bank victory that year and over the next decade Kofi became an entrenched midcarder.
02:37 A charismatic midcarder absolutely but a midcarder seemingly for life. He became part of the
02:43 New Day in 2015, they got over like crazy as obnoxious heels before Kofi settled into
02:49 a reliably lucrative comedy act with easy, utterly convincing friendship chemistry with
02:55 Big E Langston, now called Big E, and Xavier Woods, now called King Woods. They could pull
03:02 match of the night tag matches out of their arse with minimal prep, New Day vs The Usos
03:06 was the best feud of 2017 and people didn't expect more from Kofi and that was fine. A
03:14 position in the company that worked that no one really questioned until February 2019
03:20 and the lightning in the bottle. Elimination Chamber was fast approaching featuring a Chamber
03:25 match for Daniel Bryan's WWE Championship. In that match Samoa Joe, Randy Orton, Jeff
03:33 Hardy, AJ Styles, The New Daniel Bryan and Mustafa Ali. On the February 12th episode
03:40 of Smackdown a gauntlet match was to be held to determine who would enter the Elimination
03:46 Chamber last with one issue was that Ali suffered a bad concussion at a house show in Indiana
03:54 and was pulled from Smackdown and Elimination Chamber entirely. It was announced he'd
03:58 be replaced by a member of the New Day and when that was first announced, be honest now,
04:03 no one cared. Then the gauntlet match happened, Kofi wrestled Daniel Bryan with time to spare
04:08 which by the way is a really good way to make someone look good. He held his own against
04:13 D-Bry, wrestled a style we hadn't seen from him in quite a while before holy s*** pinning
04:19 the WWE Champion. Absolutely huge. He went on to wrestle for ages after that pinning
04:26 Jeff Hardy, Samoa Joe, AJ Styles with commentary asking "Is this the best Kofi Kingston of
04:34 his career that we are seeing?" The best bit of that match, AJ Styles telling an exhausted
04:39 Kofi to just stop. It's alright, it's over and Kofi shoving AJ away saying "No, I've
04:46 waited too long. I've waited 11 years." And everyone at home realising that's right.
04:53 That he's right. On one night, Kofi's survival allowed WWE to tell an organic story, one
05:00 steeped in actual tangible history where the pieces just fell into their lap. A story that
05:06 shifted the audience's perspective of someone who'd been a mid-carder for a full decade.
05:11 It was an exhilarating moment. Again, a moment of living, adapting, wrestling and the audience
05:19 thought, "You know what? We're not going to let this one go." KofiMania built steam
05:26 with perfect, un-zogged booking at the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view before falling off the
05:31 rails a little bit on the road to WrestleMania itself. It was mostly fine. It wasn't exactly
05:38 Daniel Bryan's run to the top in 2014 where the plans literally changed at the last possible
05:44 moment. Even before Fastlane, KofiMania was the plan going into WrestleMania 35. It's
05:49 just that the way they went about it was a bit weird. "Vince didn't like Kofi."
05:56 "Why don't you like Kofi, Vince?" Vince said. And honestly, the lack of cogent reasoning
06:04 behind Vince repeatedly stripping Kofi of opportunities just made the whole thing look
06:10 like Vince was an old Karen shouting at an African man in the street whilst also reassuring
06:17 everyone that "I'm not racist. I've got one black friend and his name is Dwayne 'The
06:23 Rock' Johnson." However you look at it, not explaining why the villain is doing things
06:28 beyond sheer villainy is not great. A few months and many gauntlet matches later, Kofi
06:34 got his Daniel Bryan branded WrestleMania moment against, quite appropriately, Daniel
06:40 Bryan himself. Wrestling the new Daniel Bryan with time to spare, which by the way is a
06:45 really good way to have a great WrestleMania match. Kofi pinned him, was crowned WWE Champion
06:51 and it was genuinely, unutterably lovely. And then… just… like Kofi held the title,
07:02 the WWE title, I'll remind you, for 180 days. 1-8-0. And the number of pay-per-views
07:12 that he may have entered as champion, well it was one of those three numbers. And it
07:17 wasn't the eight. It wasn't the one. Kofi Kingston, WWE Champion, closed the show on
07:23 pay-per-view zero times. Like not once. He beat KO at Money in the Bank, didn't main
07:30 event. Then because of Saudi ethics, KO was shoved out of the way and downgraded to Dolph
07:34 Ziggler at Super Showdown. And then again at Stomping Ground. Like Dolph Ziggler, Dolph
07:41 Ziggler, I like Dolph Ziggler. I'm not one of those people that hates Dolph. Like he's
07:47 good. But he's also like the angel of death for new exciting stars isn't he? Nakamura.
07:54 At Extreme Rules, Kofi retained against Samoa Joe. Again, fair enough, but didn't main
08:01 event. It was pretty good. And then they finally moved onto a feud with a bit of weight and
08:07 reason for being behind it. Ten years after his push was derailed at the hands of the
08:12 Viper, Kofi and Randy Orton fought at SummerSlam and the match, oh, the match ended because
08:21 Randy looked at Kofi's kids and Kofi went into a pancake panic and they fought to a
08:29 double count out and it was the worst f***ing thing. Fun fact, at SummerSlam the year before
08:35 the WWE Championship match also didn't main event. Had a deeply personal feud end with
08:41 a rubbish non-finish when the champion got a rage on when his family were mentioned and
08:45 kicked too much ass and everyone hated that as well. It's just the same mistakes over
08:52 and over again. What's the f***ing point of being alive? At Clash of Champions, Kofi
08:57 beat Randy Orton in a slow match, by which point no one really cared because the SummerSlam
09:01 thing was so sh*t. And then, on the October 4th episode of Smackdown, the debut of Smackdown
09:08 on Fox to pop the Network Execs and set up a Saudi Arabia blood money past its prime
09:14 UFC feud, which would result in one single terrible match, Brock Lesnar defeated Kofi
09:20 Kingston in 8 seconds to win the WWE Championship, ending Kingston's 180 day reign in a single
09:28 move. And look, I understand why they did it. I know they wanted to do a big thing for
09:34 Smackdown's big day. They were using the title change to promote for the future. And I've
09:40 been pretty public about the fact that I do quite like the presentation of Brock Lesnar
09:46 as this unassailable evil twat with a belt, but it was how they did it which is just so
09:54 f*cking insulting. Yes, 8 seconds, one move. That sucks. But what sucks more was literally
10:01 the next week on Smackdown, 7 days later, Kofi immediately slid down the card, appearing
10:08 in a segment with New Day, holding pancakes and smiling, promoting Susan G. Combs and
10:14 having a meaningless 6 man tag with the New Day vs the OC. And at no point, literally
10:21 no point, Kofi cut a promo on the show, he cut a promo on that Smackdown, at no point
10:26 did Kofi mention the fact that he was WWE Champion 7 f*cking days earlier. Nor did he
10:31 even slightly express an interest in getting the championship, the high point of an 11
10:37 year career he's waited too long back. There was a brief reference to it at the Royal Rumble
10:42 when he turned up to a big bloody f*cking pop, lest we forget, to challenge Brock in
10:47 the Rumble match before being soundly defeated yet again. It's maddening. Genuinely Jinder
10:54 Mahal got more aftercare when his WWE Championship reign ended. And that was something that,
10:59 well, I and some other people, that's something we actually want to forget. Not everyone though,
11:06 because some of you are wankers. But no, Kofi was done, his character suffered overnight
11:12 amnesia and his aspirations were never mentioned again. After suffering with the puppy that
11:18 their kid brought home for almost a full calendar year, WWE, the parents finally managed to
11:24 put a bullet in the puppy's head. And when their kid got upset about it, they were like,
11:29 I mean, you're lucky you even had a puppy at all. And also, you never had a puppy. Now
11:35 how about Cain Velasquez? Should we go on holiday with him? It'll be short. Bollocks.
11:44 Bollocks to it all. Let me have a go. Now look, let's not look at things with rose
11:52 tinted glasses. Kofi's WWE Championship reign wasn't very good. Some of that is down to
12:00 the fact that like AJ Styles' long run with the WWE Championship the year before, and
12:05 to some extent CM Punk's 434 day title reign before that, during his tenure, the WWE title
12:12 was treated as an upper mid card belt. A combination of lesser opponents, in some cases. I do like
12:21 you, Dolph. WWE non-finishers to sell the next pay-per-view booking. But also, in the
12:27 ring, Kofi wasn't that dynamic a champion. Sorry, sorry. It wasn't very good for a combination
12:36 of reasons. See, after the Daniel Bryan match at Mania, the matches didn't reach the same
12:41 quality. Kofi's great. He really is. But the chase was over. The magical moment had been
12:48 achieved. And without that contentious relationship between WWE and its fans, without the fans
12:53 feeling like WWE was denying them something that they'd always wanted, which is when the
12:57 fans are most vocal in this era anyway, the enthusiasm for Kofi Kingston, WWE Champion,
13:05 just gradually ebbed away. I understand that. But that also shouldn't be treated like an
13:10 inevitability because Kofi is great, for one. And second, it doesn't excuse the fact that
13:16 Kofi got no follow-up. Like, you've made a new WWE Champion. He was champion for 180
13:23 days. And even without the racial optics, which a lot of people will reject, of the
13:28 whitest, most Aryan man you can find reclaiming the belt on Fox, and the black guy just immediately
13:35 going back to knowing his place with a smile. Even without that lens, it's just objectively
13:42 sh*t storytelling. WWE, you are asking us to watch your show every single week based
13:48 on the consequences of people's actions and how the characters you're presenting to us
13:53 are going to react to their circumstances. No matter how you look at it, this kind of
13:58 booking actively hurts the audience's desire to tune in to see what their favorite characters
14:02 are up to because their favorite characters don't act like people. I mean, honestly, sh*t
14:06 like this is why most of the audience doesn't stick around. So that's the point of this
14:10 booking. Give Kofi more opponents to play into his strengths. Have the WWE Championship
14:14 main event some f*cking pay-per-views. And have the reign end in a way that treats the
14:18 character of Kofi Kingston with a little bloody dignity. We start on the build up to WrestleMania
14:23 35. The only things that change here are, one, Mustafa Ali does not compete for the
14:28 WWE Championship at Fastlane. Instead, it's just Kevin Owens versus Daniel Bryan. And
14:32 two, let's clear up Vince's motivations a little, shall we? Instead of just avoiding
14:36 the issues and just relying on B+ Player to take care of it, have Vince actually make
14:42 it clear that, "Look, Kofi, I like you. You've been great over the last 10 years.
14:47 You know, thanks for your service. But if you were going to be a main event star, we're
14:51 looking at a decade, Kofi. You would have done it already." Now, you don't seem to
14:55 understand. I'm all for opportunities, pal. But this is WrestleMania we're talking about.
15:02 The biggest show of the year. We're talking about the WWE Championship match at WrestleMania.
15:10 I'm sorry, but it is too big a spotlight, and I am not willing to risk you challenging
15:17 for that title, making my show lesser than. I'm sorry. There you go. Simple as that. The
15:24 logical reasoning is, you will hurt WrestleMania with this crusade of yours, so know your place.
15:31 Let's move on. And Kofi says, "No. After 11 years of doing just that, this might be
15:37 my only chance. I won't let it go." So then we have Kofi winning the bell at WrestleMania
15:44 like it happened. Lovely moment. Not changing a thing. Except that in the aftermath of the
15:48 show, Daniel Bryan takes out all of his aggression on Erick Rowan. Fires him from his retinue.
15:57 Kicks his arm. Loses the plot. After WrestleMania, big celebration for Kofi with the New Day.
16:04 And instead of immediately going into a champion versus champion match, a unification match
16:13 no less with Seth Rollins on Raw, which is incredibly dumb because A, we've just seen
16:19 two babyfaces win their belts and we don't want to see either of them lose their belt
16:23 just yet, and B, there's absolutely zero chance of that match ending any other way
16:29 than disappointingly, and hey look, a disappointing finish. Just a bad old thing. Like straight
16:37 out of the gate for Kofi's title reign. Completely unnecessary. Instead, let's do the interesting
16:42 story that for some reason WWE never really attempted to do except super briefly two years
16:50 later via the turd smeared filter of retribution, which was bad. And that's Kofi versus Mustafa
16:58 Ali. Kofi's out there with the New Day. There's pancakes in the shape of the WWE Championship.
17:05 There are tearful words from Big E and Xavier Woods about how this is the proudest moment
17:12 of their lives. It's an honor to stand here and watch someone who deserves this so much.
17:19 Achieving their dream. And when Kofi finally gets a chance to hold the mic to say a few
17:25 words Ali's music hits. Mustafa Ali comes down and says, "Look, first of all, I just
17:33 want to say congratulations. You deserve it." Gets a "You deserve it" chant going. But here's
17:40 the thing. I deserved it too. Woods and Big E are like, "Dude, like, we get it, but read
17:48 the room. This isn't your moment." And Ali responds, "It should have been. It should
17:53 have been. Kofi, I'm talking to you, not your boys. You talked about waiting for this. Waiting
17:59 too long. Well, I'm not going to make that mistake, Kofi. I'm not waiting. I was kicked
18:05 in the head and through no fault of my own. I was taken out of the chamber. I wanted to
18:11 keep going. I wrestled with my concussion because this was my dream too. I would have
18:18 won the Elimination Chamber and then I would have gone on to beat you at WrestleMania.
18:23 I should be WWE Champion right now. So I'm coming out here with the chance for you to
18:30 do the right thing." Turns to the crowd, asks, "Why are you booing me? I'm right." And he
18:36 is, kind of, but he's just being a dick about it, which is the perfect heel reasoning. A
18:41 quirk of fate took something from Mustafa Ali and gave it to Kofi, and if Kofi doesn't
18:46 realize that he's lucky, Kofi should do the gracious thing and let Ali have next. And
18:54 Kofi realizes Mustafa Ali's being a bit of a dick about this, but he accepts. The match
19:00 is made for Money in the Bank. In the build to Money in the Bank, Xavier Woods and Big
19:04 E win the right to compete against The Usos for the SmackDown Tag Championships, and Ali
19:08 slowly turns to the dark side before finally snapping. On an episode of SmackDown before
19:14 the show, The Usos blindside The New Day, take them out, Kofi runs down to help out
19:19 where he's attacked by Mustafa Ali. Ali takes Kofi, puts his head between the stairs and
19:25 the ring post, and kicks it as hard as he can. He's trying to give Kofi a concussion,
19:32 the injury that robbed him of his WWE Championship opportunity. Kofi is cleared to compete, just,
19:40 but he's banged up. So at Money in the Bank, we've got the following matches. Daniel
19:44 Bryan defeats Eric Rowan by capitalizing on the injured arm. Big E and Xavier Woods defeat
19:51 The Usos to win the SmackDown Tag Team Championships, and Kofi successfully defends in a 15 minute,
19:59 hopefully barnstormer match against Ali, a top level worker. Kofi fights out from underneath
20:06 an injured head to beat him. New Day at the end of the night, hold all the gold.
20:15 The next PPV is stomping grounds, because I really truly don't give a shit about Super
20:19 Showdown or booking around it. In order to keep the Kofi Kingston having top quality
20:24 PPV matches as champion train going, let's just reinsert Daniel Bryan into Kofi's life,
20:30 shall we? New Day are in the ring after Money in the Bank, when Daniel Bryan comes out to
20:37 confront them. Don't think that I forgot what you stole from me. I had a bit of business
20:44 to take care of last month, but now I am putting you on notice. The fairy tale is coming to
20:53 an end. I know why you won, Kofi. I know why you won. Power of friendship, right? Positivity.
21:01 Because of course, there's never going to be a fair fight, was it with your cheerleaders
21:09 in your corner watching your back? It's unfair. It's unworthy of a WWE champion. So I decided
21:17 to make some new friends of my own. And that is when Woods and Big E are attacked from
21:23 behind by the men now known as FTR, The Revival. Daniel Bryan beats down Kofi Kingston. Daniel
21:30 Bryan and The Revival form a super group, a super worker super group, and stand tall.
21:37 This leads to a winner take all six man tag team match at stomping grounds. Daniel Bryan
21:43 and The Revival versus The New Day for both the WWE Championship and the Smackdown Tag
21:50 Titles. I just want to see that. Don't you want to see that? I want to see that. I mean,
21:57 did you watch Stomping Grounds? That was main evented by Seth Rollins versus Baron Corbin.
22:04 Just a thought. How about this? With three belts on the line, main events instead. It's
22:09 just a thought. At the pay-per-view, Kofi pins Dash Wilder and The New Day retain all
22:14 of their belts as the brotherhood of best friends. Obviously, Daniel Bryan wasn't pinned
22:20 in that match, so he's still got a massive cob on about the whole thing. No, no. Which
22:27 sends us to extreme rules. And instead of one match between New Day and the super group,
22:33 what should we call them? I genuinely haven't written this in the script. What should we
22:35 call Daniel Bryan and The Revival? Dad's on tour. At Extreme Rules, there's two matches
22:41 featuring those teams. A ladder match for the Smackdown Tag Team Titles, The Revival
22:45 versus New Day. And in the show's main event, not Seth and Becky versus Baron Corbin and
22:51 Lacey Evans. Shock horror. That can open the show, please. It can also end with Brock's
22:56 cash in. You know, whatever. That's fine. But instead, the main event of Extreme Rules
23:00 is a 30 minute Iron Man match, Kofi Kingston versus Daniel Bryan. With Bryan making it
23:07 his mission to expose Kofi Kingston as a fluke champion that just relies on his friends.
23:14 At Extreme Rules, The Revival beat The New Day to be crowned the new Smackdown Tag Team
23:20 Champion, setting up the vibe of "Oh no, the New Day's world is crumbling". In the
23:26 first 15 minutes of the Iron Man match, Daniel Bryan cheats to go 2-0 up on Kofi. Really
23:34 booking to get the crowd behind him. There's parallels here with the Gauntlet match that
23:39 started all of this. Kofi struggling to get to his feet. Time running out on him. Kofi
23:46 mania ending how it began. But of course, Kofi fights back to equalise before hitting
23:52 one last Trouble in Paradise at the 10 second mark to snag a 3-2 victory, definitively beating
24:00 the new Daniel Bryan. And then after this is where you have the Orton match. And note
24:05 the use of the singular there. Match. Kofi Kingston versus Randy Orton at SummerSlam,
24:11 one and done. Absolutely do the feud. It's a great story. And so far in this booking,
24:16 every feud for Kofi has made sense. Ali's lost opportunity, Daniel Bryan's quest for
24:21 revenge after Mania, and now we escalate it with a feud 10 years in the making. All the
24:28 stuff worked that WWE put into it. I succeeded not because of you, but despite you, Randy.
24:35 And Randy, see, you weren't good enough, Kofi, back then. And the thing that will really
24:40 break your heart, not just losing the title, not just losing it in front of the world,
24:46 but the fact that after 11 years of the grind, as you put it, you're still not good enough
24:53 to beat me. So SummerSlam, Kofi versus Orton, good. It's a good story. Let's just provide
24:59 it with an ending. On the biggest stage, SummerSlam, when the focal point of the entire match is
25:04 Randy is better than Kofi and one RKO will end everything, have Kofi manage to keep avoiding
25:11 the RKO, keep slipping out of it, driving Randy Orton increasingly mad to the point
25:16 where Randy gets angry so that it mirrors that famous match back in 2009. He is beside
25:23 himself with rage. Have him run back for the punch, run in, trouble in paradise. F***
25:29 you, pin, done. Story over. When it mattered, while people were most interested in the story,
25:35 Orton puts Kofi over on the biggest stage he can, everything tied off, nice and neat.
25:41 Wrestling, it's just not that hard. You don't have to make it this hard. Is Kofi versus
25:46 Orton going to main event SummerSlam over Lesnar versus Rollins? No, probably not. So
25:51 let's put the WWE Championship back in the spotlight at Clash of Champions. And in line
25:57 with that event being all about titles, champions, what it's like to hold a championship, the
26:02 concept of putting the champion under the biggest amount of threat, main event the show
26:09 with a six pack challenge for the WWE Championship. Kofi defending the belt against Randy Orton,
26:19 Daniel Bryan, Kevin Owens, Roman Reigns and Aleister Black. You don't want to do a match
26:26 like this all the time, absolutely, because it can make the title picture seem a little
26:32 undefined, unfocused. But once in a while, if you want to really nail down that this
26:39 belt is important and this champion is important, it also gives you the chance to have an atmosphere
26:45 so chaotic that if Kofi retained, which he does here, by the way, then he's sure he's
26:51 technically beaten everyone. But also no one really loses anything in defeat because there's
26:57 just so much madness going on at the pay-per-view. Kofi wins, stands tall in ultimate victory
27:05 as the head of the SmackDown roster. And that is when Brock Lesnar's music hits. He heads
27:13 up to the ring. He plants Kofi with an F5 and this sets up Kofi versus Brock Lesnar,
27:19 not on a random ass episode of SmackDown. OK, it wasn't a random ass episode of SmackDown,
27:24 I'll grant you, but also, f*** Fox, no special treats for you. Instead, the two square off
27:30 inside hell and Brock spends the entire month leading up to that match killing the New Day,
27:40 destroying Big E and Xavier Woods, delivering F5s on the outside of the ring to both men,
27:46 destroying Kofi's friends, all as Paul Heyman outlines there. Kofi is a fantastic physical
27:55 champion, but mentally, he's weak. All it took was taking out your little buds, your
28:04 annoying brittle little besties, and you've completely lost your edge. And Brock Lesnar
28:12 will tangle you up in your rage and he will choke you with it. Brock has been through
28:21 hell and on Sunday, he will be your guide. I'm sorry to say it, I really am, but Brock
28:29 Lesnar at Hell in a Cell beats Kofi Kingston to become new WWE champion. But at least this
28:36 way it happens in a match rather than in a gif. After the match, Brock takes a steel
28:41 chair to Kofi's leg, the one that earlier in the match caught him with a trouble in
28:45 Paradise for a close two, he repeatedly smashes the chair over Kofi's leg, over and over
28:53 and over, putting Kofi out for months. While he's gone around TLC time, WWE conduct interviews
29:01 with Kofi Kingston in his house, talking about Kofi's rehab and how this has been the worst
29:08 few months of Kofi Kingston's life. The WWE Championship was everything to him and failing
29:16 like that, maybe, just maybe, Kofi's lost the power of positivity. This takes us to
29:24 the Royal Rumble where Brock is doing his Brock thing and by the way, I do want it on
29:30 the record that the stretch of Brock Lesnar in the 2020 Rumble is legit one of my favourite
29:35 Rumble memories. Brock's brilliant, gang, sorry about that, but he is. At number 10
29:42 out comes Kofi Kingston, making his first appearance on WWE programming in more than
29:48 two months. He is back and he f***ing goes for Brock Lesnar and basically, Kofi just
29:55 replaces Ricochet in the real life booking of How I Went. He gets Brock in the balls,
30:01 leading to the Claymore from McIntyre eliminating Brock Lesnar. Kofi then goes on to last in
30:06 the Rumble, doing more of his crazy spots until late in the match, maybe fifth or sixth
30:12 from the end before being eliminated by Roman Reigns. Again, heat Roman up before Drew scoops
30:17 all that adulation for eventually eliminating Roman for the win. Which leads to our final
30:22 stop in this story. Elimination Chamber 2020. One year on from the birthplace of Kofi Mania,
30:31 where he came up so desperately short against the new Daniel Bryan, Kofi challenges Brock
30:38 Lesnar for the WWE Championship. He is not afraid. He wants this more than he's wanted
30:47 anything. And that will fuel him to do what no one believes that he can do. He will beat
30:56 Brock Lesnar. And at Elimination Chamber, he does not do that. Sorry. Kofi puts up a
31:05 great fight, but Lesnar beats Kingston one more time. All the heat in the world ready
31:11 and waiting for Drew McIntyre, the new star to take his turn in the spotlight and conquer
31:17 the beast at WrestleMania 36. Admittedly, in total silence, in an empty room. That's
31:24 a shame. And that is how Kofi Mania ends. Not ultimately in victory, no. But at least
31:30 it ends in a way that makes sense. Kofi loses the title, gets crushed, fights back, keeps
31:35 his sights set on the title and comes up short. That's fine. But at least he doesn't lose
31:40 that underdog drive, that ambition, that purpose that drove us all to get behind him on the
31:47 road to WrestleMania 35. And that is how I would book Kofi Mania and, I guess, more how
31:54 I would book Kofi Kingston's WWE title run. Do you disagree? Am I a bastard for having
32:01 Brock win? Sorry, I guess. Sorry. Please subscribe to Parts of Unknown. And also let me know
32:07 in the comments what else you'd like me to book. Because it's hard to come up with these
32:11 ideas. I've booked most things. So if you could help me out, that would be appreciated.
32:18 We'll see you soon. Jam that jam.

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