5 WWE Superstars with bad entrance themes

Connecting with fans has long been a complaint with Cesaro.

Entrances have become more and more elaborate over the years.As important as the action in the ring is for professional wrestling, the whole match experience starts with the entrance. Some entrance themes have become iconic on its own, like the shattering glass at the start of Stone Cold Steve Austin’s music or even Val Venis’ “Hello Ladies.” Yet other superstars, by either their own choosing or someone else’s mistake, have music that leaves a lot to be desired. While some have overcome this issue, others may have seen their fan reaction hampered because of a low response to the theme

#1 Cesaro

Connecting with fans has long been a complaint with Cesaro.

Cesaro may be one of the most physically gifted WWE superstars, but his persona has been criticized frequently. Specifically, it's been said that he doesn't seem to connect with fans, although that has gotten better lately

One factor that may contribute to this disconnect is his entrance music. The sirens that start it off seem cheesy, and nothing after that is distinguishable from any other generic music. It certainly doesn't get fans excited for his arrival in the ring, and no wrestler wants to perform in front of a flat or disinterested crowd.

#2 Macho Man Randy Savage

Macho Man Randy Savage died in 2011.

There can be no doubting that the late Macho Man Randy Savage was a legend, beloved by fans even after his tragic death in 2011. There's also little doubt that his persona is one of the most iconic characters in professional wrestling history.

All that makes his entrance music even more baffling. Watching such a colorful personality with a name like Macho Man enter the arena to “Pomp and Circumstance” – the song commonly played at U.S. graduations – was odd to say the least.

Macho Man certainly overcame that oddity in his entrance, though

#3 Triple H

Triple H has kept a role in WWE for the last two decades.

Triple H has done a little bit of everything. He suffered through a terrible gimmick prior to the Attitude Era, as did most superstars. From there, he was part of one of the most beloved factions in WWE history, won multiple titles and married the boss’ daughter on the way to an executive position.

All that has left him with far too many entrance themes, though. A man who will most certainly be a WWE Hall of Famer one day has no song that is automatically associated with his name, and that's a real shame

#4 Erick Rowan

Erick Rowan hasn't been really relevant since he left the Wyatt Family.

Erick Rowan is a fairly bland character since the Wyatt Family broke up. He is one of the worst superstars on the microphone, and he isn't really skilled enough in the ring to hold his own as a consistent singles competitor.

What makes all that even worse is that Rowan’s entrance music is absolutely atrocious. It really sounds like one of the generic theme songs available for created wrestlers on the Nintendo 64 game “Raw is War.” While that was a great game, that isn't a compliment to his song, which definitely doesn't match such a big guy

#5 Seth Rollins

Seth Rollins has experienced a meteoric rise through the WWE ranks in the last year or so.

Seth Rollins may have gotten the Authority push, Money in the Bank briefcase and world title in the Shield breakup, but he got shortchanged in the entrance music department.

Roman Reigns got to keep the Shield theme minus the group name, and Ambrose got a fitting engine rev to start his new song. Meanwhile, Rollins got a generic guitar-heavy song with no real tie to The Architect.

Nothing about it seems fitting for a wrestler getting the kind of push and attention Rollins has gotten this year, and it certainly won't inspire fans to get on their fee if he turns face.