Wrestling has always been fractured, from the days of the territories, to, arguably, even now. Yes, WWE is the accepted "major league" of the sport/art form, at least in this country, but there is somewhat of a rebirth of what at first glance almost appears to be territories in the U.S. From Chikara to ROH to PWG to 3XW...it doesn't take much to see that there is an appetite for wrestling at least at the local/regional level.
These independent feds, at least some of them, all proclaim to have a "World Champion". Really, as we all know, its just the champion of that promotion.
WWE tries to give us the facade of having 2 different promotions under one banner, but doesn't really sell it well. We have 2 World Champions under one promotion in reality, which may in fact help explain the fact that they've lost a lot of their "seasoned" audience.
Wouldn't wrestling promote itself better if it somehow banded the promotions together under one umbrella (which, will never happen again), and recognized one true World Champion?
The NWA worked, at least for a while, because there was one true standard bearer. The WWF worked best, when it was becoming accepted as the major league of the sport in the U.S., when it had one World Champion.
I would tend to think that, overall, wrestling would benefit by an organized system of territories, all working together, promoting and accepting one true World Champion.
Or, as I hypothesized in my title, does wrestling work best when there are 2-3 major companies, and we all argue over who is the greatest champion of the sport? I can remember the days of arguing would Flair go over Hogan, or vice versa, and who was truly the "real" champion of the squared circle. Does this arguing lend itself to making the sport more popular?
Again, right now, due to really not having a true #2, we can't truly argue who the best World Champ is (from a performance standpoint now...as kids, it was all too real!).
Just interested in hearing people's opinions on the topic, and thanks for your time.