>>9750343Never stop working on fundamentals.
Study old wrestlers from the 70-80s even if you find their style boring. Look at the little details. Moves they sell differently, how they do the filler moves and basics like drop-downs, Irish whips, rope runs, actually pinning a guys shoulders, actually making him have to kick out or actually kicking out yourself rather than just popping off, throwing tight punches.
Maximising the time you're given out there is about making every little thing you do look meaningful and purposeful, rather than just trying to fit as much in as possible.
Believe in all those details and the crowd will.
Learn to work on the fly, not just sequences.
Learn some actual martial arts or shoot grappling so you know how the body moves and how things move and feel legitimately.
Practice being in character from ten seconds before you go out to ten seconds after, practice switching it on in different scenarios.
Speak to veterans, take what works for you.
Watch everything on a show you're on, watch the guys before to know what you're following and what not to repeat, watch the guy after so you know who you're trying to catch. Don't sit around on your phone at shows waiting for your bit then sodding off.