Ronda Rousey is incredible business for AEW, whether fans agree or not

“The D’Amore Drop” is a weekly guest column on Uncrowned written by Canadian professional wrestling promoter, executive producer, trainer and former wrestler Scott D’Amore, best known for his long-time role as creative executive at TNA/IMPACT Wrestling. D’Amore is the current owner of Canada’s leading promotion maple leaf pro wrestling.

AEW reached a major milestone last Sunday when 12,000 tickets were sold for its AEW Revolution pay-per-view at the Crypto.com Center (formerly Staples Center) in Los Angeles.

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This isn’t AEW All Out, their biggest show of the year, and it’s not in the UK, a market starved for big shows. This is a regularly scheduled AEW pay-per-view show in one of the toughest markets in North America, drawing huge crowds.

This show is the pinnacle of AEW. Tony Khan’s promotion brought a lot of wrestling and intensity to the audience. AEW knows exactly what type of product it is and what it’s for.

There was a lot of blood and it might be a bit too much for some, but AEW made it clear that they are an adult product and will continue to be an adult product.

At this point, if you watch AEW and support it, you know what you’re getting.

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Some people won’t like the ultraviolence, that’s fair enough, but AEW doesn’t pretend to be what it is. I think some people want AEW to be family friendly purely because they’re tired of WWE’s sky-high ticket prices, but AEW should always do what’s good for AEW and try not to react to WWE.

Hardcore stuff, spectacle, violence, gore, these are all part of AEW, and for many of their viewers, that’s exactly what they exist for.

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MJF continues to impress and have a great run as a heel champion. It will be interesting to see what happens next for “Hangman” Adam Page, especially after his loss at AEW Revolution, which stipulated that Page could never challenge for the AEW World Championship again.

I’m sure this will be fulfilled for the foreseeable future, but I think we’re all interested in how AEW addresses this issue in the next year or two.

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John Moxley went on to become the MVP of AEW. He goes out and delivers every time.

Konosuke Takeshita is a great all-around professional wrestler, and he and Moxley had a great run at Revolution. I want to see more of these two together.

On the women’s side, there’s a lot going on, too, which ties into what we’ve discussed before in this column. Megan Bayne and Lena Kross winning the Tag Team Championship gives you a look at an impressive pair of female talents.

Megan Bayne came in and made a strong impression, then maybe treaded water a bit, but she feels like someone who’s really found her footing.

Ronda Rousey’s jump to AEW is surprising, especially since she’s training to take on Gina Carano in what is sure to be one of the most-watched MMA matches of all time (as the fight will air on Netflix on May 16).

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Ronda has broken into the mainstream in a way that very few wrestlers have, and any kind of promotional friction AEW gets from Ronda vs. Gina, which airs on Netflix, is huge.

What’s especially interesting is that if AEW could devote any attention, even a little bit, to this, it would give them a real chance. Ronda’s real-life best friend Marina Shafir is there to give you a natural connection point, storyline-wise, and if Ronda stays around the AEW product between now and May, suddenly you’ll have mainstream eyeballs and curiosity going into AEW.

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Toni “Eternal” Storm is a generational talent at the peak of her powers. If Ronda Rousey can bring Toni new attention, it would be incredible for Toni, Tony Khan and AEW as a whole. I hope fans understand that.

The AEW women’s division is ready for mainstream attention, and Ronda will bring that attention.

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