WWE's scouting department is back at it
Stop me if you have heard this one before. Triple H and his scouting team are reportedly kicking the tires on names outside the current bubble. This latest backstage report suggests that the company is looking at talent like Richard Holliday and the man formerly known as Big Cass to potentially bolster their rosters.
It feels like a massive game of musical chairs that never actually ends. We are currently sitting in mid-July of 2026, and the rumor mill is spinning faster than a Cesaro Swing. If you have been following the circuit, Richard Holliday has been grinding for years. He has that classic, polished look that fits the WWE mold perfectly. He is the kind of guy who could eat a few pins in the mid-card before realizing he is just another cog in the machine.
The return of the massive?
Then we have the chatter surrounding Big Cass. I love a good redemption story as much as the next guy who has had one too many IPAs. We all remember the chaotic energy of the Enzo and Cass run. It was lightning in a bottle until the plug got pulled. Bringing that back feels like a desperate attempt to recapture 2016 magic, which, let's be honest, is a dangerous habit for any promotion.
Bringing back former talent is a move as old as time. It is the wrestling equivalent of a studio greenlighting a direct-to-streaming remake of a mid-tier action flick. Does it work? Sometimes. Does it excite the fanbase that remembers how things imploded the first time? That is the 64,000 dollar question. These guys have a history, and in this business, history has a tendency to repeat itself—usually in the form of bad booking decisions.
Is the roster actually thin?
Here is where I get pedantic because I have eyes. Does WWE actually need more bodies? The main roster is already so bloated that half the mid-card guys are fighting for scraps on the second hour of television. Adding more talent just because they had a good showing on the indies or a decent run in MLW feels like hoarding toys you are never going to take out of the box.
Look at the way they handled the last influx of signings. We saw guys with legitimate buzz get relegated to a random match against a local talent that lasted 3 minutes and 42 seconds. Talent development is not just about signing names; it is about knowing what to do with them once the contract ink dries. If they pick up Holliday or Cass, are they going to give them a real path, or are they just clearing the board to make sure nobody else has access to the pieces?
The reality check
I am tired of the "wait and see" approach toward roster construction. We deserve more than just recycled name value. If the company is looking to shake things up, they need to focus on elevating the gems they have currently sitting in the catering line playing on their phones. There is a real risk here of turning the product into a graveyard for guys who had potential somewhere else.
I will give them credit if they actually find a way to make these potential additions feel special. If Holliday shows up as a major threat instead of a guy named "Rick H" in a generic set of trunks, I will be the first to walk back my cynicism. But until I see a coherent plan that doesn't rely on nostalgia or signing people just to keep them away from competitors, I am keepin' my guard up. This isn't professional wrestling; it is a game of corporate keep-away, and the fans are usually the ones left holding the short end of the stick. If this is where the money is going, at least make sure the show is worth the ticket price.