Mark Briscoe doesn’t think ROH World Championship ‘gets the credit it deserves’

Mark Briscoe says he almost quit after losing brother Jay, but resumed wrestling for AEW and ROH and is glad he did.

When Mark Briscoe tragically lost his brother Jay in a car accident early last year, his first thought was a simple one: “I’m never wrestling again.” But after a little time to reconsider and feeling it was what Jay would want him to do, Mark resumed wrestling as a singles competitor in AEW and Ring of Honor.

Now, Mark stands only a few days away from potentially becoming ROH World Champion if he can defeat Eddie Kingston, a longtime friend, at ROH Supercard of Honor April 5 in Philadelphia. It’s a title Jay held twice, in-between runs with Mark as one of the greatest tag teams of this century.

The Briscoes are as synonymous with Ring of Honor as any of the wrestlers who came through the company, both in its original incarnation and as a subsidiary of AEW, so it’s not hard to understand why holding its top prize would mean a lot to Mark. Yet as he told Under the Ring host Phil Strum, it’s a championship that still may not get its proper due.

“It’s mean a lot, man, it’d be cool,” Mark Briscoe said about the prospect of becoming ROH World Champion. “Ring of Honor, from 2002, and the stages and the ages and eras of Ring of Honor, it’s amazing.

“I don’t think the Ring of Honor world title gets the credit it deserves for its significance in the history of professional wrestling.”

It’s not hard to see where he’s coming from. Along with Kingston, the ROH World Championship has been held by an incredible array of talent that includes CM Punk, Cody Rhodes, Seth Rollins (when he was known as Tyler Black), Bryan Danielson, Kevin Owens (as Kevin Steen), Samoa Joe and Adam Cole.

That’s a virtual who’s who of top stars across several different companies. While Mark has never been able to count himself among them during two-plus decades in the pro wrestling business — many of them in ROH — he might be able to come Friday night.

“Obviously, it’d be a total honor and it’d be really cool, especially after being here from day one,” Mark Briscoe said. “Singles gold has eluded me to this point, but you know, I’m feeling real good about this. I’m training hard, I got my mind right. You know, I’ve been watching tapes, I’ve been studying Eddie, I know Eddie. And I know he’s gonna try and bring it, but I got something for him.”

You can hear the entire interview between Strum and Mark Briscoe above, or check out the latest episode of Under the Ring on YouTube.

ROH Supercard of Honor is set to take place Friday, April 5 at the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia, and will be streamed live on HonorClub.

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.

What’s going under Tony Khan’s tree? 6 gifts for AEW this holiday season

In the spirit of giving, here’s a half-dozen things that would help AEW in 2024 and beyond.

Despite breaking world records, releasing a video game, and adding major names to its roster, AEW went through a lot in 2023.

It lost its top star and saw its ticket and television ratings decline. Even the video game game garnered middling reviews from critics and drew the ire of fans for its lack of depth and price.

So if there is any entity in professional wrestling that is in need of some holiday cheer, it is the good folks based out of Jacksonville. So while I was doing my holiday shopping, I made sure to save some imaginary cash for AEW.

Here are the six gifts AEW could use this holiday season.

Tony Khan is ‘open to Athena appearing in AEW’ … and she agrees

Should ROH Women’s World Champion Athena be on AEW TV more often? Both she and Tony Khan seem to think so.

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Currently in the midst of the longest ROH Women’s World Championship reign of all time, Athena has had one heck of a year. The only caveat to that is how relatively few wrestling fans have experienced it.

Despite the fact that other ROH titles are routinely defended on AEW programming, Athena hasn’t had a title defense on any of the parent promotion’s weekly shows in 2023. She did have a non-title match against Willow Nightingale on a July episode of Rampage (which she lost), and performed in multi-person tag matches at All Out and WrestleDream. But that’s it.

This suggests that Tony Khan is unwilling to have Athena on AEW shows, but he insisted during his media call ahead of ROH Final Battle — where Athena will put her championship on the line against Billie Starkz — that he’s in favor of using her wherever it makes sense.

I’m certainly open to Athena appearing in AEW and other places. I think it’s really great to have somebody who is a great ambassador for the company like Athena. One thing that has been consistent and great about ROH is that Athena has been very much a part of that show and focused on that show. Her work has been one of the strongest things about the show. If Athena is focused on ROH and AEW, that’s great too.

Khan noted that Starkz, should she win at Final Battle, would also bring a lot to ROH and AEW as champion. He also put over the work of both women in their current program, as well as that of Lexy Nair, on another part of the call.

What does Athena think? She told Wrestling Junkie’s Phil Strum, host of the Under the Ring podcast, that she’s more than ready to be back on AEW TV.

I think the next step for me would be to take a crack at AEW TV again. My first time around was not great, and I lost to the all powerful Jade Cargill. I think now, with me being the forever ROH Women’s Champion, I want to be a triple crown champion by the end of 2024. I’m going after all of the belts, the TBS Championship, Julia Hart. the AEW Women’s Championship, Toni Storm. I’m not content with just beating up these fragile broads left and right.

We’ll see if 2024 sees Athena, win or lose, on AEW broadcasts more often. Check out more from Athena with Under the Ring in the video above, or listen to the entire podcast episode below.

ROH Final Battle 2023 card: Matches confirmed for Texas

Athena vs. Billie Starkz and a six-man Jay Briscoe Memorial match will be highlights of ROH Final Battle 2023.

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There’s something pretty fitting about a wrestling show called Final Battle taking place toward the very end of the year. ROH Final Battle has done exactly that for years, from the first edition in Philadelphia in 2002 all the way to the present.

And while Ring of Honor has undergone its ups and downs over that time, there’s no question that keeping the event on the calendar was something Tony Khan was invested in doing once he acquired ROH. This year’s show is being offered exclusively on HonorClub, making it something of a test for that streaming service and a way to potentially drive more subscriptions.

An even bigger question surrounding this show is whether it shows ROH at a crossroads moment. For one of the few times in Final Battle history, the show will not feature the ROH World Championship in its main event, as that title is currently wrapped up in AEW’s Continental Classic tournament. The ROH World Tag Team Championship, held by MJF (and the injured Adam Cole), will also not be defended in Garland, Texas.

But that could allow a greater share of the spotlight to fall on one of the top women’s wrestling stars in any promotion, as Athena defends the ROH Women’s World Championship in the culmination of a long-running storyline with challenger Billie Starkz. Other highlights include FTR teaming with Mark Briscoe to face the Blackpool Combat Club in a match to honor the late Jay Briscoe, as well as a six-man Survival of the Fittest showdown to crown a new ROH World Television Champion.

While there could still be additional matches added before the show, here’s how the card looks right now.

Last update: Dec. 13, 10:15 p.m. ET.

ROH Final Battle 2023 card:

  • Dalton Castle vs. Komander vs. Kyle Fletcher vs. Lee Johnson vs. Lee Moriarty vs. TBD – Survival of the Fittest Finals for the vacant ROH World Television Championship
  • Keith Lee vs. Shane Taylor
  • Ethan Page vs. Tony Nese – “I Quit” match
  • FTR and Mark Briscoe vs. Blackpool Combat Club (Bryan Danielson, Claudio Castagnoli and Jon Moxley) – Jay Briscoe Memorial Fight Without Honor
  • Athena (c) vs. Billie Starkz – ROH Women’s World Championship match
  • El Hijo del Vikingo (c) vs. Black Taurus – AAA Mega Championship match

Ronda Rousey makes surprise ROH debut

Has Ronda Rousey just jumped to the top of the candidate list for AEW’s new signing at Full Gear?

While the wrestling world waits to see who the mystery signing is that Tony Khan has teased for AEW Full Gear, a very well-known former WWE star snuck up and surprised everyone by showing up at the Ring of Honor taping in Inglewood.

As captured by Justin Ashton on X, Ronda Rousey made her ROH debut on Friday night.

Rousey was there to team with her friends Marina Shafir to take on ROH Women’s World Champion Athena and Billie Starkz. It’s expected that the match could air on the next episode of ROH on HonorClub, which will air on Thursday, Nov. 23.

Rousey’s appearance followed multiple reports earlier in the night that she was backstage for the AEW Collision/Rampage taping.

The fact that the ROH episode was taped for later broadcast adds credence to the idea that Rousey could be the big name signing Khan referred to during the week. That said, Khan would also know that word would get out about Rousey appearing on ROH, so he may still have someone else in his back pocket for Full Gear.

Rousey’s last WWE appearance was at SummerSlam in early August, where she lost to Shayna Baszler (also a close friend of hers) in an MMA Rules match. It was widely expected that she might leave the wrestling business altogether.

But her ROH debut puts a definite monkey wrench into things, and despite her sometimes divisive nature among pro wrestling fans, there’s bound to be plenty of interest to see if she has signed with AEW to appear on either that brand or ROH going forward.

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Why AEW Dark, Dark Elevation are both done for now

It’s not hard to imagine some of the talent who appeared mostly on Dark and Dark Elevation popping up in Ring of Honor.

AEW Dark and AEW Dark: Elevation have both been canceled — at least for now.

AEW used its two YouTube shows to give more reps to talent who was too green or at least too unknown for matches on Dynamite or Rampage. Along with those talents wrestling each other, bigger names from the roster would also be featured in (generally quick) victories, something that has been the subject of much debate since Dark first launched in 2019.

But those discussions can cease, as both shows have been shelved. Andrew Zarian of Wrestling Observer and the Mat Men podcast today tweeted out the reason, which has to do with AEW’s upcoming Saturday night show and its associated deal with broadcast partner Warner Bros Discovery.

The exception for Ring of Honor means that its show can keep broadcasting on AEW’s Honor Club streaming service. It also makes sense as a logical landing spot for some of the wrestlers who were appearing on Dark or Dark Elevation regularly, though that’s not guaranteed.

The Saturday night show is expected to be called AEW Collision and debut this summer on TNT. Most notably, it’s expected to serve as a vehicle for CM Punk’s return to the company and feature him as a focal point.

Claudio Castagnoli doesn’t believe in dream matches but admits ‘Bret Hart would be pretty cool’

Claudio Castagnoli joined the Under the Ring podcast to talk dream matches, versatility, jaw-dropping moments, Eddie Kingston and more.

ROH World Champion Claudio Castagnoli is a wrestler’s wrestler, the type who never stops learning, admires (and incorporates) styles from all over the world and won’t back down from any challenge.

So surely, he must have a list of dream matches he’d still like to be in, right?

The answer may surprise you. Castagnoli sat down this week to chat with Under the Ring host Phil Strum and explained why the concept of dream matches depends on the setting, and most of all, on the fans.

“I’m not the dream match kind of guy, I’ll let the fans decide that,” Castagnoli said when asked who he’d like to face from any era of pro wrestling if he could. “To me, a dream match is usually determined by the time, the place and which two guys are on top of their game.

“It’s usually something that just organically happens.”

After taking a moment to let that sink in, the Swiss strongman added, “I mean, Bret Hart would be pretty cool,”

Yes, yes he would.

Check out the entire interview above for Castagnoli’s thoughts on:

  • What attracted him most about signing with AEW last year
  • What the original ROH meant to his career
  • The possibility of facing Eddie Kingston at Supercard of Honor, and how he feels about Kingston at the current time
  • Who he studies and why it’s important that “you never stop learning”
  • How the members of the Blackpool Combat Club push each other to be better, and why is like an uncle or stepdad to Wheeler Yuta
  • Why it’s important to him that he still do at least one “jaw-dropping” thing in every match
  • The one word that makes for good tag teams
  • What goes into a great cup of coffee

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 pioneering women’s wrestler Madusa, entertaining and mercurial MLW wrestler Real1 and the current AEW World Tag Team Champions, The Gunns.

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.

Eddie Kingston says ‘I quit AEW’ after Dynamite loss

Goodbye AEW, hello ROH?

Eddie Kingston had a chance to become the Face of the Revolution during the Ladder match this week on AEW Dynamite. He didn’t manage to capture the (literal) brass ring, watching Powerhouse Hobbs do it instead while he spent his time brawling with Ortiz instead.

Kingston didn’t take that development too well: He quit AEW.

At least that’s what AEW will have us believe. In a video posted to social media after the show (one that would have probably have been a lot more effective had it aired during the show, but hey), Kingston was asked for his comments and said simply, “I quit AEW, thanks” before throwing up the deuces on his way out the door.

So what gives? It’s likely that with Ring of Honor starting up its own weekly TV again — the first episode drops on HonorClub tonight, March 2 — Kingston is making the move to that brand. He’d provide an instant, legitimate challenger to ROH World Champion Claudio Castagnoli, as well as simply injecting some extra star power to ROH’s newest incarnation.

It’s worth noting that there’s also a ROH pay-per-view card, Supercard of Honor, coming up at the end of the month in Los Angeles. Only one match has been announced for that show so far, leaving plenty of time for Kingston to be worked into the mix.

While it’s inevitable that some talent will continue to cross over between AEW and ROH going forward, it would probably do the latter brand some good to have at least a few stars it can call its own. Kingston has a history with the promotion but has never really had an extended run as one of its focal points despite his status as an indie star.

He might be on his way to change that now, but at the very least, we shouldn’t expect too much of him on Dynamite or Rampage for a bit.

ROH weekly TV will return March 2 on HonorClub

ROH TV tapings begin before the end of the month, and tickets are on sale now.

Of all the questions that AEW boss Tony Khan has been asked over the past year or so, one has come up more consistently than any other: When is Ring of Honor going to gets its own television show again?

Khan has always said a weekly ROH show was a priority, but he didn’t want to jump the gun before the specifics were worked out. Now, as revealed in an interview with Sports Illustrated, he has an answer.

“Ring of Honor TV is coming Thursday, March 2 on HonorClub,” Khan said to SI. “We’ll have our first tapings on Feb. 25 and 26 at Universal Studios in Orlando, and we’re going to put tickets on sale for the inaugural taping on Thursday. Those will be the first-ever tapings of the new Ring of Honor.”

Those tickets are on sale now at AEWTix.com and include a taping on Saturday, Feb. 25 and two different sessions on Sunday, Feb. 26.

Under its previous ownership, Sinclair Broadcast Group, ROH had its own TV show, “Ring of Honor Wrestling,” though its broadcast day and time varied according to the schedules of Sinclair affiliates. The promotion was hit hard by the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, however, and went on hiatus in October 2021.

Khan purchased the company in March 2022, but to date has only held pay-per-view events — one edition each of Supercard of Honor, Death Before Dishonor and Final Battle. ROH championships have been defended on AEW programming as well, and the rosters have been pretty fluid for the most part. Current ROH World Champion Claudio Castagnoli, for example, is a regular on AEW TV.

That could change with the weekly ROH shows, which promise to give more of the spotlight to talent who hasn’t been on Dynamite or Rampage much. It will be interesting to see if the titles gradually migrate to wrestlers who are featured primarily on Ring of Honor.

Khan was quick to point out that HonorClub subscribers also have access to the full 20-year history of past ROH content, perhaps to calm any qualms about fans paying for weekly shows when AEW and WWE have their regular content on broadcast TV. For the time being, he’s probably just happy to not have to answer the same question about when ROH TV was coming back, and fans, hopefully, will be happy to see it.