WWE house shows are back, but not for the reason they should be | Opinion

WWE is bringing back house shows to get talent more reps in the ring, but there is another reason they should never have been taken away in the first place.

WWE added 10 house show stops to its schedule for July and August this summer.

In Friday’s edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, Dave Meltzer reported that the reason WWE is adding these shows to its schedule is because the company wants to get younger talent more experience in the ring.

But there is another reason house shows can be a good financial move for the company, even if the individual shows themselves lose money.

WWE house shows and the problem with short-term thinking

There used to be a saying in business that went something along the lines of, “Don’t be penny wise, but pound foolish.”

Basically, what this saying conveyed was: don’t do anything stupid that makes you money short-term, but costs you money long-term.

Nobody says this anymore. It’s not considered good advice because in 2026 corporate culture, it does pay to be penny wise and pound foolish, so long as it makes your next quarter’s results look good.

In a world where companies buy other companies daily, sell companies just as fast, and are owned by investment portfolios, nobody has a vision or a dream for what their product looks like. They just have a dream of numbers going up in their bank account.

Cutting WWE house shows might have been a penny wise move, but it’s very pound-foolish if you care about where the industry will be in 20 years.

WWE house shows and live events are where wrestling fans are made

House shows are money losers, so TKO got rid of them.

Why would you do anything that loses money?

Well, the idea is that it would grow your fan base in the long term.

Wrestling, like baseball, like other sports, and like many other things, is something that is passed down to someone from an older generation. A parent, an older sibling, or somebody else takes them to wrestling, and at a young age, that person forms a connection with it that is countless times deeper than the connection they form with it through a television screen.

They’re surrounded by thousands of people who also like this same ridiculous thing that they like. The performers from the television screen are right in front of them. It becomes a much bigger deal.

That young fan is far more likely, in theory, to become a diehard fan throughout their life and, even more importantly, pass down their wrestling fandom to their kids when the time comes.

When you cut out house shows, you cut out the creation of fans through this method. It’s a poor long-term strategy for your business.

Cutting house shows because they’re money losers is penny wise but pound foolish.

Why WWE house shows continued for so long even though they lost money

So when Vince McMahon continued running house shows, even though they lost money, there was a reason for it. It wasn’t just that Vince liked to throw away money. It was that he saw house shows as a pivotal part of growing the audience.

And he was right.

But in 2026, what’s the point in doing something that will be good for your business 20 years from now if there’s a chance you’re not even going to hold any stock in that company 20 years from now?

The only people within an industry trying to improve that industry are people who intend on passing down a business to their kids. Well, when it came time to do that, Vince wasn’t willing, and now TKO is running the company. And we got what we got: a make-money-now, who-cares-about-tomorrow approach.

WWE house shows are fan development, not just talent development

So WWE bringing back house shows because they are good for talent development is part of the equation, but not the full story.

This is not just talent development. It is also fan development.

But does TKO Group Holdings care about the state the wrestling industry will be in the 2040s or 2050s?

They don’t.

Because everyone involved with that company right now will have cashed out by then.

There’s another saying, a more unofficial one that takes place in business: “You’ll be gone, I’ll be gone.”

It’s basically what someone says before they do something penny wise, very pound foolish, and usually pretty unethical. I have a feeling it gets said a lot around TKO’s offices.

WWE running increased house show schedule this summer

Domestic house shows have largely been a thing of the past for WWE, but that will be changing a bit this summer.

The company announced today that it has added 10 main roster house shows to its schedule for July-August. Branded as part of WWE’s “2026 Summer Tour,” they include stops in New Mexico, Pennsylvania, California, Illinois, Virginia, New Hampshire, Georgia, and South Carolina.

Here is the full list of dates, with all of the shows happening on Thursdays or weekends:

2026 WWE Summer Tour —

  • Saturday, July 11: WWE Summer Tour at Pan American Center in Las Cruces, New Mexico
  • Sunday, July 12: WWE Summer Tour at The Pit in Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Thursday, July 16: WWE Summer Tour at PPL Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania
  • Saturday, July 25: WWE Summer Tour at Adventist Health Arena in Stockton, California
  • Sunday, July 26: WWE Summer Tour at Dignity Health Arena in Bakersfield, California
  • Thursday, July 30: WWE Summer Tour at Bank of Springfield Center in Springfield, Illinois
  • Thursday, August 6: WWE Summer Tour at EagleBank Arena in Fairfax, Virginia
  • Thursday, August 13: WWE Summer Tour at SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Saturday, August 29: WWE Summer Tour at Enmarket Arena in Savannah, Georgia
  • Sunday, August 30: WWE Summer Tour at North Charleston Coliseum in Charleston, South Carolina

A mix of talent from Raw and SmackDown are advertised, with Cody Rhodes, Oba Femi, Rhea Ripley, Seth Rollins, Jade Cargill, Trick Williams, and Drew McIntyre featured on WWE’s graphic for the tour. Tickets are going on sale to the general public next Wednesday (May 20) at 10 a.m. local time.

Rhodes has been vocal about wanting WWE to run more house shows, feeling like they would help wrestlers get in reps while creating a team-like atmosphere in the locker room.

It’s unknown whether this will continue into the fall. Internationally, WWE has live event dates coming up in Europe, South America, and one in Canada. House shows in the United States were mostly phased out in the post-pandemic era aside from the annual Christmas-season WWE Holiday Tour.

AJ Styles links wrestlers’ struggles to call matches in real time to lack of live events 

AJ Styles believes WWE wrestlers are unable to call matches and improvise in the ring due to a decline in live events.

On the latest edition of the Phenomenally Retro Podcast, Styles discussed why wrestlers have a difficult time calling matches on the fly in the ring. He implicated the lack of live events being a major factor. 

“Here’s what’s hard with that now, I think a lot of the older guys who said ‘Nah, we’ll call it the ring, kid’, well, a lot of times they had the ability to wrestle so many different guys and they were able to call it in the ring because they weren’t sidelined by time limits or whatever. You have to hit your times or they’ve wrestled the guy so many times before. Of course you can call it, I could call a lot of things. the more I wrestle one guy ‘Hey man,we’ll just do what we did here’ and boom and it’s that quick but we’re not having live events like that anymore so guys aren’t getting any reps with each other.”

“So I think that it’s going to be a lot harder to call, yeah sure, we can call the basic stuff but sometimes basic isn’t very entertaining and that’s our job is to be as entertaining as we possibly can so I think that’s going to be more difficult as time goes on.”

Styles emphasized the diversity and development of in-ring styles and move sets the new talents are bringing in. 

“There’s a lot of different styles that we now bring to the ring. It’s not the same. It’s not just shoulder tackles, grab hold, suplex, power slams, not a finish, there’s a lot of different things that, and a lot of different moves that guys and girls do. It’s pretty unbelievable. In fact, when you think about it diving out of the ring and stuff all these things have to take place I don’t know that it could be done like that as well and as flawless as it was back then because it was so basic back then.” 

“And that’s another thing that once you get to the ring, there will be some things where we’ll rehearse. And by rehearse, we’re not rehearsing the wrestling. We’re not doing that. We want to see what cameras are going to be in the position that we’re doing a certain thing so we get the best shot on the finish. That’s kind of what we rehearse or maybe somebody does a run in, want to see how everything’s done so that we get the best shot. So those things happen.” 

Styles retired from wrestling after a 26-year career at the Royal Rumble this year. He was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame and has taken on backstage duties at the Performance Center post-retirement. 

Column: The slow death of WWE house shows and why ‘C & D’ towns still matter

The following reflects the opinion of the author and not of the website.

Image: Josh Nason

When it comes to WWE & UFC business, TKO chief operating officer Mark Shapiro says a lot of things. As one of the people that covers the TKO quarterly earning calls and his various other speaking engagements, I hear A LOT of those things over and over and over again.

Last December, Shapiro first dropped the news that WWE would be reducing their live touring schedule in 2024 as part of cost-cutting initiatives, referring to cities they would be phasing out as “C and D counties” in a bit of a misphrase.

Just a few months ago, Shapiro said their schedule would be cut back even more in 2025 while strongly hinting at increasing ticket prices for the WWE shows that were happening. While weekly TV and PLEs remain intact, the near-extinction of domestic WWE house shows appears imminent which puts their more infrequent appearances at a premium, something the first slate of domestic events for 2025 bears out.

Look, I get it. WWE house shows aren’t as profitable as TKO wants them to be, especially when traveling to venues that aren’t as big as those in “A” cities like New York, Boston, Los Angeles, Chicago, etc. Non-televised events are a different animal in the current day where TV rights mean everything and inevitably, they were going to get whittled down. While talent seems to enjoy working on them from a creative and athletic standpoint, TKO doesn’t love how much they cost to run with Shapiro once noting they were a favorite of Vince McMahon.

Nearly a year later, the impending impact of Shapiro’s comments for wrestling fans really hit me as I walked up to cover this past Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite in Manchester, New Hampshire.

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Like many of you reading these words, I have never lived in an “A” city but I did live in Manchester for 15 years. It’s where I both met my wife and grew up professionally. I was part of the front office for the hockey team that helped launch the SNHU Arena (then Verizon Wireless Arena) in 2001 – the same venue AEW debuted at on Wednesday. I was at the first WWE show in the building which drew more than 11,000 fans in 2002, headlined by New Hampshire native Triple H. In that same arena, I attended Raw and SmackDown tapings, Backlash, and even a few house shows. The city’s population is roughly 115,000 and has featured WWE wrestling since 1967 according to Cagematch.

By WWE’s metrics, Manchester is not an “A” city, but to myself and plenty of others, it felt like one a lot of the time. Now likely in the “C” or “D” column, the city with the longest dead end street in America probably won’t see live WWE action anytime soon given its proximity to Boston. Same goes for Portland, Maine, where I first attended a WWE live show as a kid and saw Hulk Hogan for the first time. Same goes for Bangor, Maine, where I attended my lone WCW show and was lucky to see the then-upstart phenom known as Goldberg with a few thousand other people.

Those experiences are part of what made me a fan and why I work for this website, why I attend indies, why I nearly started an indie in a different life, and why I have met a lot of great people that both work in the business and love wrestling like you and I do. Those experiences are also why so many of your favorite pro wrestlers got into the business and thought, “I’d like to do that someday.” It was the WWE NIL program in an extremely different form: cultivating the future by simply immersing people into the live experience.

I’m sure many of you could take the names Manchester, Portland and Bangor, insert your own city or town, and our experiences would be pretty similar. That’s why it’s somewhat depressing that the WWE house show era for smaller cities is coming to an end for the largest and most successful wrestling company ever. It’s the price of progress, I reckon.

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That’s why pro wrestling like AEW coming to Manchester and other smaller cities is important. Walking through the city on an unseasonably warm November midweek night, there was that buzz you feel walking up to a venue for any kind of show. In talking with a friend that isn’t really a wrestling fan and that still works at the arena two decades later, he was thrilled to have AEW there, specifically citing how it was going to be aired live on national TV. To those who write for websites and are monitoring social media 24/7, that doesn’t mean as much to us as we are desensitized, but to people who live and work in the smaller cities, that does matter. For a night, their corner of the world is the focus of someone else’s world for a few hours and that’s a good feeling to have.

It’s not just AEW that can potentially take advantage of the void. TNA has been doing more touring around smaller U.S. cities (including this past weekend) and NJPW returned to Lowell, Massachusetts, on Friday. There are countless indies running all around the country looking to scratch that itch for those who are unable to travel to see WWE in a bigger city due to budgets, proximity or other reasons.

All of this is certainly no reason to weep for WWE and if I was a higher-up there, I’d probably make the same decision even if they are potentially freezing out those who can’t afford the higher prices and the potential travel costs in visiting larger cities. Perhaps WWE was always destined to become like big touring acts who come through once every few years. I just wasn’t ready for it to happen this quickly.

While C and D cities may not be a destination for WWE anymore, that doesn’t mean the people that live there should be forgotten by wrestling at large. Now, it’s up to the promotions that do run there to remind fans that they are worth remembering.

Josh Nason has been a contributing editor to F4WOnline.com since 2012.

WWE to hold fewer live events in 2025, potentially increase ticket prices

On the eve of their first anniversary after merging both WWE and UFC into the publicly-traded TKO, the brand’s president revealed some news on the live event front for WWE fans.

The full audio for the call can be found below.

Speaking at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia & Technology Conference Wednesday, Shapiro said they are continuing to trim “marginally profitable” non-televised live events that Vince McMahon liked to run when he was trying to expand the brand name in smaller cities and regions.

Going from what Shapiro said was 300 events in 2023, he said they will put on 250 shows this year and then drop down to “close to 200” in 2025 in the effort of “margin expansion” which is financial speak for an increase in a company’s profit rate.

He did not specify whether the 200 number included NXT shows as well.

As he has done in the past, Shapiro said that they remain underpriced on WWE tickets and joked that he yells at the WWE team about not making prices higher when they are selling out so fast. He mentioned they didn’t have dynamic pricing tools in the past, indicating the trend of ticket prices increasing as demand increases that has taken over the concert industry could be coming to WWE.

He said with the current Peacock deal for their PLEs/archive content coming up in 2026, they feel “incredible” about that deal coming up and that it’s “beautiful” they have all the deals in place for Raw, SmackDown and NXT, putting over Netflix strongly as a “battleship” that will help them grow their brand and audience.

On the PLE deal, Shapiro said the 12 monthly events are “exciting and that people know” all about the shows. He said the WWE fanbase is a casual sports fan, an entertainment fan, lots of women, and very, very young. He said they are in a “really strong place” and plan on doing a lot of listening with all the potential suitors for the PLEs.

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Shapiro also talked about the impending UFC TV & PPV rights negotiations that are coming up in 2025. He revealed that the exclusive negotiating window with ESPN/Disney is between January 15 through April 15 and that their preference is to re-sign with the incumbent.

He said there have been no negotiations with ESPN as of now and that other platforms remain interested in having conversations about UFC programming. He reiterated they are going to remain flexible with the negotiations and with any partners who align with what they are trying to do like grow revenue in addition to both the audience and brand.

That extends to what they do with pay-per-views and revealed that Dana White initially didn’t like releasing control of sales to ESPN as he loves being a promoter. Shapiro said when it comes to either splitting the package or taking PPV sales back in house, they are up for all of it.

Click here to listen (no sub needed)

TKO merges WWE & UFC live events teams

The post-merger departmental changes continue for TKO as the company has combined the WWE and UFC live events teams.

Announced via a press release Thursday, the newly-named live events strategy team “will drive revenue growth strategies across key areas, including live event development and scheduling, tourism incentive programs, ticketing, and fan experiences. This new structure aligns with TKO’s efforts to leverage the power and expertise of both UFC and WWE to maximize event revenue potential and pursue growth opportunities and cost synergies.”

A major effort for both entities is to drive site fees to host shows, even extending to weekly TV like Raw and SmackDown events.

Longtime UFC executive Peter Dropick will head up the group. He will work with TKO leadership as well as Dana White, Nick Khan and Paul Levesque to help bolster the efforts.

Both companies have been on fire at the box office for some time. The release noted that in Q1 alone, WWE “set 54 individual market records for both gross and paid tickets across all event types, including 17 consecutive sellouts for televised events.”

WWE cancels August 8 Gainesville, Florida, house show

A WWE Supershow event set for Gainesville, Florida, featuring both Raw and SmackDown talents has been canceled according to the venue’s website.

The Sunday, August 8th event was set to be part of a four-night Florida run, kicking off with a Friday SmackDown in Tampa; a Supershow in Fort Myers on Saturday; the Gainesville event; and then Raw in Orlando on Monday.

No reason was given for the cancelation and WWE has yet to respond to a request for further details. A rescheduled date was not announced and refunds are being offered at the point of purchase.

WWE kicked off their return to shows in front of live fans in Houston, Texas, Friday with SmackDown which continues this Sunday with Money in the Bank in Fort Worth, Texas. From there, WWE has events nearly every Monday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday through September. They will also return to the UK in September for the first time in nearly two years with four mid-month events.

Daily Update: WarnerMedia shake-up, WWE live tapings, MMA weigh-ins

DAILY UPDATE

Latest News:

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WON NEWSLETTER: August 10, 2020 Observer: The Rock & Dany Garcia buy XFL, new WWE president, more

The Rock & Dany Garcia purchase the XFL, WWE hires a new president, plus tons of news.

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FRIDAY NEWS UPDATE

As it relates to wrestling, the biggest news of the week by far is that Kevin Reilly, who greenlit AEW as one of his pet projects and actually was one of the keys in the creation of the organization, is out at WarnerMedia. Reilly and Bob Greenblatt were announced as being out today and Casey Bloys and Ann Sarnoff have been promoted to oversee content.  Bloys was the President of HBO Programming and will now oversee HBO Max, TNT, TBS and truTV.  Bloys, by coincidence, went to Freedom High in Bethlehem, PA at the same time as Dwayne Johnson and greenlit “Ballers,” although he and Johnson were not friends in high school. 

It is far too early to know what this means for AEW going forward. It may not be bad news, but it is most definitely not good news in the sense Reilly was strongly behind AEW. In fact, the entire idea of AEW came from a conversation Tony Khan ad Reilly had in the spring of 2018 when Reilly told Khan how much money WWE programming rights were going for and Khan had seen the business and interest level of the Kenny Omega vs. Chris Jericho match at the Tokyo Dome and knew both were free agents, and that a lot of key contracts would be expiring at the end of 2018 in wrestling. The stuff with Cody Rhodes and me with the tweet before that time did lead to All In, and the success of All In was definitely a huge part of the equation as well as Khan talking about the success of that show, and his ability to sign the key people, was a key factor in Reilly agreeing to take the chance on giving them a prime time show on TNT. But Khan thinking of getting into wrestling was prior to All In.

The new Observer out today, besides the most detailed story on the hiring of Nick Khan as WWE President, has an in-depth story on the ratings patterns for Raw, Smackdown Dynamite, NXT and Impact during the pandemic and there is a ton of major information that tells you about things going up and down, lines intersecting this week regarding huge changes in viewing habits of wrestling. We also have the most details on this past week and where new viewers came from, as well as the first week in history where the most-watched show in 18-34 was not a WWE show since 1998. Actually this is a major underplayed story, not because it happened this week, but that it had been building for months and what it means if things continue in this direction.  

The 8/21 Smackdown show will be airing live from Orlando. Mike Johnson at PW Insider reported WWE will be doing Raw and Smackdown live going forward after that point. We know that has been discussed and we haven’t had it confirmed. If this is the case, it means more expense and more travel and only makes sense if they feel live helps ratings, which today, it is very clear it doesn’t make a difference at all. 

UFC has a show tomorrow on ESPN+ from Las Vegas at the Apex Arena starting at 6 p.m. Eastern:

  • Irwin Rivera (136) vs. Ali Al Qaisi (136)
  • Youssef Zalal (146) vs Peter Barrett (145.5)
  • Gavin Tucker (146) vs; Justin Jaynes (146)
  • Andrew Sanchez (185.5) vs. Wellington Turman (185.5)
  • Nasrat Haqparast (156) vs. Alex Munoz (156)
  • Kevin Holland (183.5) vs. Joaquin Buckley (185)
  • Tim Means (171) vs. Laureano Staropoli (174.5)
  • Beniel Dariush (158) vs. Scott Holtzman (156)
  • Yana Kunitskaya (135.5) vs. Julija Stoliarenko (136)
  • Darren Stewart (186) vs. Maki Pitolo (186)
  • Chris Weidman (186) vs. Omari Akhmedov (185.75)
  • Derrick Lewis (265) vs. Aleksei Oleinik (227)

Due to Dariush missing weight, he has to forfeit 20 percent of his purse. Staropoli also has to forfeit 20 percent of his purse for missing weight.

Weigh-ins for Bellator tonight from the empty Mohegan Sun Casino Arena at 10 p.m. Eastern on Paramount & DAZN:

  • Sabah Homasi (175) vs. Curtis Millender (174)
  • Myles Jury (155.6) vs. Georgi Karakhanyan (155.5)
  • Matt Mitrione (262.6) vs. Timothy Johnson (263.2)
  • Michael Chandler (155.9) vs. Benson Henderson (155.6)

Chandler’s contract expires with this fight and he’s talked about becoming a free agent. So he has a lot riding on this outcome.

Yuki Miyazaki of Pro Wrestling WAVE tested positive for COVID-19 and WAVE has postponed all of its shows over the next several days including the 8/16 show at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo.  Sunday’s Oz Academy show was also canceled because Hiroyo Matsumoto, Yumi Ohka and others worked on the same show at Miyazaki. (thanks to Shannon Walsh)

CMLL returns to streaming tonight on the Capital 21 website with matches taped last week at an empty Arena Mexico. 

WWE

  • 205 Live Tonight has Danny Burch vs. Tony Nese and a tag team match featuring Matt Martel & Chase Parker. Announced for Smackdown is Sheamus vs. Matt Riddle.
  • DC Entertainment is hosting a virtual celebration on the weekend of 8/22 (SummerSlam weekend)  for free to break news of upcoming movie and comic book projects. Dwayne Johnson and John Cena will both be taking part in this.
  • The WWE announced episodes of WWE Timeline, a new show on the WWE Network which will cover major historical feuds. Sunday’s debut episode is on Daniel Bryan vs. The Miz. 8/12 has Bret Hart vs. Owen Hart.  8/19 has John Cena vs, A.J. Styles and 8/26 has Randy Orton vs. Christian.

UFC

  • UFC announced an 11/21 PPV show with Deiveson Figueiredo vs. Cody Garbrandt for the flyweight title and Valentina Shevchenko vs. Jennifer Maia for the women’s flyweight title.  Garbrandt has never fought before at flyweight, dropping from 135 to 125.
  • Corey Anderson of UFC, even though he had  several fights left on his contract, was able to get a release and has signed with Bellator.  Normally UFC doesn’t do things like that.
  • After missing his second straight fight at the last minute, UFC has released Ray Borg. Borg missed his fight with Nathan Maness on Saturday, pulling out with no public explanation. He had missed weight three times and had a lot of problems due to the health of his son which caused him to pull out of a previous fight and also take time off.
  • Mirsad Bektic vs. Eduardo Garagorri has been added to the 9/26 show in Las Vegas.
  • A story on someone sued for pirating UFC events. (thanks to James Ryder)

AEW

  • Brandi Rhodes quit Twitter after people complained regarding her AEW Heels project, basically a booster club idea for women fans.   

MISCELLANEOUS

  • U.S. District Court Judge Laurie Silverstein approved the sale of Alpha Entertainment (XFL) to Alpha Acquico, the new company formed and headed by Dwayne Johnson, Dany Garcia and Gerry Cardinale.
  • Kenny Omega & Michael Nakazawa are doing a live stream tonight at 11:30 p.m. Eastern teaching an English language college class at Tokai University in Japan about the U.S.pro wrestling industry.  It will be in English and you can watch it by signing up here.
  • Dragon Gate’s streaming network will be airing a show at 5 a.m. Eastern tomorrow morning from Kyoto as well as a show from Osaka at 5 a.m. Eastern Sunday morning.
  • Matt Sydal will be returning to ROH based on a podcast interview on the ROHStrong Podcast.  He was going to be part of an ROH then vs. now show that ended up cancelled in March, but that was just a one-shot deal.
  • Kevin Eck’s weekly ROH update.
  • The biggest wrestling show in months in the Chicago area takes place tonight at Marian Catholic High School outdoors on the football field for Warrior Wrestling:
    Brian Cage vs. Jeff Cobb
    Lance Archer vs. Sam Adonis
    Joey Janela vs. Jake Something  
    Brian Pillman Jr. vs. Robert Anthony w/ Frank the Clown for the Warrior Wrestling Championship
    The Rascalz vs. Alex Zayne, Blake Christian, and Benjamin Carter
    Kylie Rae vs. Ray Lyn
    Isaias Velazquez vs. Tre’ LeMar
    Spartan Stadium Stampede Scramble: Warhorse vs. Dan the Dad vs. Matt Knicks vs. Beast Man vs. Elayna Black vs. Cornbelt Cowboy vs. The Chicago Sideshow
  • Wrestle Rampage on 8/28 in Adelaide, Australia has been postponed due to changes in rules for licensed premises involving alcohol service (thanks to Kevin Chiat)
  • The World Series Wrestling promotion in Australia which is built around importing foreign stars has canceled its scheduled November tour for obvious reasons, since getting people into the country from the U.S. won’t be easy.
  • Jimmy Jacobs returns to CWE provided governmental regulations will allow him to come to Canada and leave, for shows from 10/27 to 11/9 in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario.
  • CWE tonight in Winnipeg at Rookie’s Sports Bar with only 100 seats available.
  • AIW announced a return on 9/6 at Noon at the Celebration Plaza Amphitheater at White River State Park in Indianapolis.
  • Famous Mexican wrestling exotico Cassandro has signed with Masked Republic for representation. Academy Award winning director Roger Ross Williams is working on a film on his life that will star Golden Globe winner Gael Garcia Bernal.
  • Bellator announced 8/21 from the Mohegan Sun on Paramount and DAZN with Ryan Bader (22-5, 1 no contest) vs. Vadim Nemkov (11-2) for the light heavyweight title, Julia Budd (13-3) vs. Jessy Miele (9-3) and Roy Nelson (23-19) vs. Valentin Moldavksy (9-1.)
  • The NFC returns on 8/29 at District Atlanta as Atlanta’s first sports event with fans. It will be at 35 percent capacity with 15 fights and all tickets priced at $100.
  • Interview with Raven and with Taeler Hendrix talking about ROH from Hannibal.
  • An interview with Homicide at SlamWrestling.

Daily Pro Wrestling History: Kurt Angle wins TNA title at Hard Justice 2011

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