Showing WWE really is worried about the ratings and seemingly ignoring that the company held a Superstar Shake-up, a wild-card rule is now in place.

As was anticipated, Roman Reigns migrated over from SmackDown Live to open Raw this week. He wasn't supposed to be there and WWE said he wasn't welcome, but he showed up anyways. He met Vince McMahon in the ring, said he didn't listen to McMahon, but the WWE Universe. He wasn't alone.

It didn't take long for Reigns to be joined by Daniel Bryan who said he'd been sitting back for a month and pondering the robbery that took place when he lost the title at WrestleMania 35. He said, if Reigns was coming to Raw, there was no reason he shouldn't be there. That brought out Kofi Kingston. Kingston told Bryan he didn't need to appeal to McMahon. He just needed to ask for a rematch.

Vince cut everyone off saying he had an epiphany.

From here on in, he was going to allow three WWE Superstars to come over from SmackDown to Raw each week and the same would happen on the blue brand where Raw Superstars could show up on SmackDown. This way, no one would know what to expect.

What This Means

While Vince called himself a genius for coming up with such a good idea, fans everywhere will know and understand this was just Vince in scramble mode. With sinking ratings, Vince needed to do something. This seems to mean letting his top stars float between brands. And, for the record, there were way more than three SmackDown stars on Raw this week.

The bad news for the rest of the roster is that, essentially, if you're not a top star, opportunities are going to be even harder to come by than they already were. And, it means fewer chances to gain any momentum.

One has to ask, 'What was the point of having a Superstar Shake-up at all?'

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