2023 women’s wrestling stats: Examining how WWE, AEW and more booked women in 2023

An examination of how WWE, AEW and other promotions booked women in 2023 found no one offender but no shining star, either.

Women in sports, and more specifically women in wrestling, face a long path to equality and equity when compared to their counterparts. Progress depends greatly on willing promoters. Promoters need the willingness, fans need patience.

Slow progress is still progress, but in a time when other women’s sports are seeing an increase in attendance and viewership, the positioning of women’s wrestling stays relatively fixed and constant.

Diario AS shared that 4.85 million people watched the 2022 women’s NCAA final game; an 18% increase from the previous year. When considering “traditional” sports, 49% of fans are women.

The numbers for WWE’s audience don’t stray too far, according to PlayToday; 40% of WWE’s audience in 2020 were women.

Surely wrestling companies with weekly programming would want to tap into this audience and follow this trend, right? If more fans are watching women’s sports, it would be safe to assume promotions would respond by featuring their women’s divisions more.

Over the last few years, numbers tell another story.

Before diving into the meat of the analysis, it must be addressed that not everyone is a fan of women’s wrestling. While it’s certainly behind the times to completely avoid women’s sports, it’s not unheard of. Fans are entitled to like what they like and watch what they want to watch.

For women’s wrestling fans, the issue arises when promoters and bookers relay trust and faith in their women’s divisions but fail to deliver results. Women’s wrestling fans, too, are allowed to clamor for the type of wrestling they want. Both advocates and fans want to see a systematic change in how women athletes are presented in media, how much of them we see in the ring and an increase in opportunities that properly represent the talent that exists.

With all of this in mind, in an attempt to see where wrestling waivers, women’s wrestling stats were collected on promotions with weekly or consistent programming that is viewable on television, online subscriptions, streaming platforms or on pay-per-view. To get a proper look at women’s progress in comparison to their male counterparts, the wrestling promotions must have both a women’s division and a men’s division.

  • Areas where data was collected spells out where, when and how many women were used: wrestling shows, PPVs, rosters, titles and main events.
  • Show measurements: what percentage of total matches and match time had women, show cards that had zero women’s matches and show cards that had more than two women’s matches.
  • PPV measurements: what percentage of total PPV matches and PPV match time had women. PPV time and match stats include pre-shows.

Other percentages include how many titles a women can hold in a promotion and how many women were on their roster. The number of main events featuring women for both PPVs and shows were tallied as well. Rosters were pulled from official websites, and a title was added to the women’s percentage if at least one woman has competed for it.

Data was pulled from cagematch.net and profightdb.com, along with rewatches for any data not found.

Let’s start the breakdown with a side-by-side comparison between 2022 and 2023 for shows that ran both years. Below are graphs representing yearly changes in percentage of matches and match time that had women present.

From year-to-year, brands stay consistently low. If the goal is 50%, the percentages don’t come close. There’s not much change in either category for any brand. Sure, a year is a short amount of time when creating huge shifts in booking, but stagnant numbers are not promising for the future.

Even more interesting is looking at the two graphs together. NWA increased how many women’s matches it had but the time they got was the same. In 2022 and 2023, the AEW women’s division had, on average, more matches than it had time from bell-to-bell on Dynamite.

Now, what you’re undoubtedly waiting for: a brand-to-brand comparison. The quick comparison graphic below lists stats not shown in the above graphs.

There’s a lot to unpack here. It’s clear from the get-go that no one brand or show is the top dog in women’s wrestling. NXT has a roster to brag about, TNA lets women compete for most of its titles, and ROH has featured at least two women’s matches on every single show card. ROH and Rampage both have a high number of women’s main events on weekly shows. PPV stats are bleaker.

AEW brands all share the same PPV stats because there is no clear brand split. They give women 16.8% of PPV matches and only 9.8% of PPV match time. They’re painful numbers, but they aren’t the only ones. TNA has a women’s roster that makes up 25.4% of its total roster, but are only giving them 16% of total PPV matches.

SmackDown had four shows in 2023 that had zero women’s matches. For a brand that has preached a women’s revolution, the expectation is that it would have women on every show.

MLW says it’s working on building a women’s featherweight division, but besides a few titleholders, has failed to create an actual division — or give the women time on their shows. Twenty-five shows out of 47 had zero women’s matches. MLW would do well to tap into the talent it does have, like current champ Janai Kai, and focus on outreach.

AEW has a well-known issue of failing to book more than one women’s match on a show, and it’s nearly the same for their PPVs. Out of its eight PPVs, five had only one women’s match. For a company with two women’s titles, it’s hard to believe those titles can’t be defended more.

For the most part, the numbers from brand-to-brand are not so different that it would reveal an incredibly problematic company, or a shining example of what a promotion should do with their women.

The real issue stands out like a sore thumb: Women’s wrestling is treated nowhere near equal. Treading around the 25-33% mark, or worse, is not advancing women in sports.

Promotions will argue that the stories outside of the ring matter, too. That’s true — to a point. Many fans want to care about the wrestlers in the ring; they need story and a reason to cheer or boo. As a kayfabe sport, that makes sense. But without women in the ring, we can’t really argue that a company is advancing a women’s sport. At the heart of every fan is a person who wants to see competition: blood, sweat, and a story finished.

The issue carries over year-to-year. How long can we hear promotions boast about their women’s division, their greatness, their talent, and then not give them time? Creating a 50/50 environment for men and women is not easy, especially when a promoter has booked themselves into a brick wall.

How does WWE create opportunities for a healthy 15 women if they can’t book 35 men? How can AEW create room on a card for their women’s division that only makes up 21.8% of their total roster? How does MLW move forward with eight women to their 39 men? It’s not an overnight change, but the changes need to be made if women are to be treated equal.

Why is creating equality in wrestling important? Besides the desire for fairness, sports have a long-reaching influence.

If you’ve ever watched a wrestling show and the camera scans over to a young person smiling bright and big, you’ve seen the reach wrestling has. Young girls have openly told Bianca Belair she’s a role model and they’re happy someone on TV looks like them.

Representation, equality and equity in women’s wrestling starts in the ring. It’s up to the promoters to make that a priority and book with those goals in mind. Sometimes, that means teaching your audience. If they only present what they’ve always presented, the numbers will never increase.

When women are treated as the sideshow, like women in wrestling were for so many years, it communicates that women are not strong and not worthy. Gone are the years of panties and bras matches, but there’s still work to do. Safety, pay, energy, time and faith are the ingredients needed to grow an industry for women in all areas of wrestling. Ingredients we can all share.

It takes patience to see real growth and positive progress. Mindsets and systematic issues don’t improve overnight. Women’s wrestling fans have patience, but are growing restless. It’s time for the revolution to really knock on the door.

The fans will wait, if the promoters are willing.

Madi Wrenkowski on being an NWA champion: ‘It’s all very surreal’

Madi Wrenkowski talked to Under the Ring about her start in the business, training under some famous names, and her Side Character Spotlight series.

Sometimes, working your way up through the ranks of pro wrestling can be a thankless job. Other times, like those that Madi Wrenkowski is currently experiencing, you end up as a champion in one of the most storied promotions in North America run by a literal rock star.

Such is life for Wrenkowski, as the Texan is one half of the NWA World Women’s Tag Team Champions with her M95 partner, Missa Kate. The hard work in places like Thunder Rosa’s Mission Pro Wrestling and Natalya and TJ Wilson’s “Dungeon 20” is definitely paying off, but sometimes it surprises even her.

As she told Under the Ring host Phil Strum ahead of the NWA’s HP Cares for Cooper benefit show in Highland Park, Ill. on July 8, the wrestler who calls herself Miss Reality is still letting actual reality sink in.

“It honestly doesn’t hit you right away, it’s kind of in the weird moments that it hits you,” Wrenkowski said. “Just the other day, I was at the River Walk and we went to Hard Rock Cafe. And we were sitting at the bar, and I looked on the television screen and was like, ‘Why does this man who has hair look familiar?’ And then it registered to me, oh my God, that is my boss, that is Billy Corgan with hair. … It kind of hits you that your boss is a rock star when you’re eating in the middle of a restaurant.

“So it’s kind of a whirlwind that’s slowly starting to hit me. Every time we do these podcasts and people are like, ‘oh, what’s it like being one half of the NWA Women’s Champions?’ It kind of takes me aback every time and I’m like, ‘oh yeah, that’s me!’ It’s all very surreal, it what it’s sounding like I’m saying.”

Listen to Strum’s full conversation with this rising star above for Wrenkowski talking more about:

  • How she feels about being part of the HP Cares for Cooper event
  • Why both of the two tag teams she’s in work — though in very different ways
  • The creation of her Side Character Spotlight series on social media, and who she’d most like to have as a guest
  • Her personal journey into pro wrestling, beginning with watching shows with her brother
  • Why a background in competitive sports is helpful to a pro wrestler
  • Who she looks up to most in the business … including a current WWE champion

Under the Ring drops new episodes every week, with Strum utilizing contacts gleaned from years of pro wrestling fandom and coverage to have an in-depth conversation with a wrestler or other notable personality. Recent guests have included legendary wrestling journalist Bill Apter, veteran grappler Barry Horowitz, and NXT star Bron Breakker.

To make sure you don’t miss an episode, subscribe to Under the Ring on Apple Podcasts or your podcast provider of choice, or check out the Under the Ring YouTube channel to see all of the interviews in video form.

Billy Corgan says veteran talent has ‘a fresh opportunity’ in NWA

NWA president Billy Corgan defined the opportunity that wrestling veterans have with NWA they may not have had elsewhere.

Some of the top performers in the NWA right now are familiar faces to longtime wrestling fans. NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Tyrus had a WWE run as Brodus Clay. So did his challenger at this past weekend’s NWA 312 event, Chris Adonis, when he was known as Chris Masters.

There’s plenty of talent with stories like theirs on the current NWA roster, wrestlers who have found themselves higher up the card than in previous stops. During his talk with Under the Ring host Phil Strum ahead of NWA 312, NWA president (and Smashing Pumpkins frontman) Billy Corgan explained that the reason for that is that veteran performers come into his company with a blank slate.

“I say this to a lot of veteran talent who are coming in to NWA, with me you have a fresh opportunity,” Corgan said. “I don’t care what’s happened before. Like people are still on Tyrus for being the dancing guy, right? I think Tyrus has shown that he was always a top guy. And the reason he got the dancing is over is because he was a top guy, right?

“So just because you come in with a particular gimmick, or even a rep, doesn’t mean anything to me. Everybody comes in from a veteran side with me has a fresh start.”

Corgan added that some wrestlers have come into the company with great reputations and backed them up or exceeded them with NWA, naming Adonis as a prime example.

Listen to Strum’s complete interview with Corgan above to get his thoughts on:

  • NWA’s events that benefit the victims of the mass shooting in Highland Park, Illinois
  • How NWA provides a platform for great talent that simply hasn’t had the opportunity to be seen
  • The job Tyrus has done as champion
  • The logistics involved in combining wrestling with a music festival, as NWA did in its The World is a Vampire event with Mexican promotion AAA
  • What advice he gives to young talent in the pro wrestling industry

Under the Ring drops new episodes every week, usually on Mondays, with Strum calling upon his longtime love for and coverage of pro wrestling to have an in-depth conversation with a wrestler or other notable personality. Recent guests have included ECW legend and Impact Wrestling Hall of Famer Raven, recently crowned NXT Champion Carmelo Hayes, and WWE Hall of Famer Booker T.

To make sure you don’t miss an episode, subscribe to Under the Ring on Apple Podcasts or your podcast provider of choice, or check out the Under the Ring YouTube channel to see all of the interviews in video form.

Gibson, Gammill throw first pitch at Naturals game

The best 1B/3B combo in College Softball last season teamed up one last time in Springdale on Saturday.

The best 1B/3B combination in College Softball last season worked together one last time on Saturday night.

Prior to the Northwest Arkansas Naturals’ 6-3 win over the Tulsa Drillers on Saturday, current Arkansas Softball third baseman [autotag]Hannah Gammill[/autotag] and former Razorback first baseman [autotag]Danielle Gibson[/autotag] teamed up to throw out the first pitch.

Gibson had one of the most illustrious careers in Arkansas history. In 2022, Gibson broke the program record for home runs (48) and RBI (180). In five total years as a collegiate athlete, Gibson hit .366 with 60 career home runs and 220 RBI. This summer, she is competing with Athletes Unlimited softball. In eight games, Gibson is batting .259 with two home runs.

In her second season at Arkansas, Gammill nearly doubled all of her stats. The sophomore totaled 58 hits with 18 home runs and 51 RBI.

Together, Gibson and Gamill formed one of the best fielding combinations in the game according to D1Softball.com, as they were constantly among the top of the best 1B/3B power rankings. At season’s end, Gammill was at the top of D1Softball’s third base power rankings.

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Matt Cardona loves that NWA has no script

NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Matt Cardona joined the Under the Ring Podcast to talk about what he loves about NWA and how he keeps grinding at a furious pace.

When NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Matt Cardona made his first NWA appearance, it wasn’t exactly a match made in heaven between wrestler and promotion.

In fact, as Cardona explained as the guest on this week’s episode of Under the Ring with Phil Strum (recorded prior to his recent injury), he did the opposite of endearing himself to the locker room when he first arrived.

“I was saying things like, ‘I thought NWA sucked as a kid,’ I thought it was old and dated and boring then, and I was saying I still think it sucks now,” Cardona said. “It’s still old and dated and boring, and I could tell a lot of people were not happy about that.”

Things have improved since then, with Cardona noting that as he’s now the top champ in the promotion, “I’m doing something right.”

One of the things Cardona says suits him best about NWA is that no one is telling him what to say.

“What I love about NWA, there is no script,” he said. “There are no writers, there wasn’t even an outline. It was, ‘OK, Matt, you’re going to talk in this segment … go!'”

Listen to the entire episode above to hear Cardona talk about:

  • What’s helped his career longevity, and why he thinks he’s better than ever today
  • Why the constant travel is actually “the easy part” of his fast-paced life
  • How he changed his future when he was unhappy with his place in WWE by figuring out how to use the internet to his advantage

Under the Ring drops new episodes every Monday, as Strum uses the connections he’s made from decades covering pro wrestling to speak with a different but always fascinating personality from the industry. Recent guests have included WWE Superstar Sonya Deville, as well as AEW star Serena Deeb and AEW Women’s World Champion Thunder Rosa.

Subscribe to Under the Ring via Apple Music or your favorite podcast provider, or check out Strum’s interviews in video form on the Under the Ring YouTube channel.