WWE Superstar Shakeup 2019: Full Predictions For Call-Ups, Trades

Charlotte Flair walks to the ring during WrestleMania 33 on Sunday, April 2, 2017 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/TNS via Getty Images)
Charlotte Flair walks to the ring during WrestleMania 33 on Sunday, April 2, 2017 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, Fla. (Stephen M. Dowell/Orlando Sentinel/TNS via Getty Images) /
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Raw to SmackDown – Alexa Bliss

Alexa Bliss is another one who’s been on an absolute tear across both women’s divisions, winning championship after championship and actually doing so even faster than Charlotte Flair since their respective debuts. She’s another one too popular to keep out of the spotlight but too overpowering to have in the top feuds.

So what else can she do? That’s easy. Fresh matches, high quality entertainment and the development of other talent. There’s plenty that she can be getting on with.

Bliss is on quite the fence at the moment; almost trapped between face and heel to an almost damaging degree. Let’s finish off everything she can do as a heel and then move on to babyfacedom proper.

There’s a lot of good work that Bliss can do. Lining up verbally against Carmella and R-Truth could be fun, though I suspect we’re more likely to see Carmella and Bliss as a tag team in the long run. That could be an exciting feud against either The Iiconics or Rose and Deville. That’s before considering going further of course, where we have The Sky Pirates and, in the long term, Nox and Kai coming through.

At any point, Bliss can be moved smoothly back into the main event, even potentially for only a short term. Bliss and Banks are rumored to not be fans of each other but that hasn’t stopped them from putting on very impressive matches. Bliss has also delivered against Asuka and, should that be where they’re headed, Lynch.

To be clear, there’s not much that Alexa Bliss can’t do. Except maybe on Raw.