Ring of Honor sold to Sinclair Broadcasting.

Cowboy Brian

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So, due to this ROH will undoubtedly be back on TV, for the fall season.

http://pwinsider.com/article/58211/complete-details-on-roh-sale-and-return-to-television.html?p=1

RING OF HONOR ANNOUNCES SALE TO SINCLAIR BROADCAST GROUP

BRISTOL, PA. (MAY 21, 2011)--Ring of Honor Wrestling owner, Cary Silkin, announced today the sale of the promotion to Sinclair Broadcast Group, Inc., one of the largest television broadcasters in the country and which owns and operates, programs, or provides sales services to 58 television stations in 35 markets across the United States.

ROH, currently the third largest wrestling promotion in the country, just celebrated its ninth anniversary, and Mr. Silkin is excited about taking the next step towards increasing the company's visibility and expanding its operations.

"We have been waiting for and working for this opportunity for quite some time", he said, "and of our 9 years in business, there has been no better roster of wrestlers than this one to expose the ROH product to the masses. With Sinclair's resources and many avenues of distribution, we believe many new fans around the world will be as captivated as those who have followed Ring of Honor over the years."

The month of September will see the debut of the new Ring of Honor television program which will be syndicated across the Sinclair network of stations, and with it, ROH will become the only wrestling promotion in the United States with a major, multi-market presence on broadcast TV. But if you don't live in a market with a Sinclair station, fear not, says Mr. Silkin. "Through our revamped website we will be able to make the TV show available to anyone in the world with internet access."

Sinclair officials are enthused about the project as well.

"We are very excited about this acquisition," commented Steve Marks, COO of Sinclair's Television Group. "Television and professional wrestling have a long history of successful partnerships and driving viewership. Unfortunately, the broadcast networks have not protected that relationship, allowing professional wrestling to migrate to cable network distribution. We believe that the powerful promotional platform that our TV stations provide, coupled with our 22% share of the U.S. TV households, will allow ROH to achieve name brand recognition and grow its share of the wrestling market. When you consider the makeup of our station mix and the number of CW, MYTV and FOX affiliates we operate, this is a perfect fit for our viewer demographics." Mr. Marks also noted, "Longer-term, we can envision syndicating ROH wrestling to broadcasters in markets where Sinclair does not have a presence, and even internationally."

Mr. Silkin assures the ROH fans worldwide that they will be seeing the same exciting, hard-hitting style of pro wrestling that they have become accustomed to. "We have established the name Ring of Honor as synonymous with the best in-ring action in the sport. The only thing that will change is that it will now be easier for fans around the world to follow. Our visibility will increase greatly--our production will be upgraded--but the work ethic of our incredible talent roster and our athletic style of wrestling will remain the same. This is what our fans have told us they want, and we will continue to give it to them."

The current front office staff, including Cary Silkin, Syd Eick, and Ross Abrams, will remain with ROH going forward. Hunter Johnston, a favorite of ROH fans for years as the masked grappler Delirious, will still handle matchmaking, Jim Cornette will remain as executive producer, and other familiar faces like ring announcer Bobby Cruise and senior referee Todd Sinclair will be in place."

Additionally, longtime wrestling broadcaster Kevin Kelly, already the voice of ROH internet pay-per-views, will assume the TV play-by-play chair this fall. Veteran NWA and WCW promoter Gary Juster will come aboard to be in charge of live event operations, which are planned to continue in current ROH markets as well as expanding into new locations concurrent with the increased TV exposure.

Mr. Cornette, who along with Mr. Johnston, will be in charge of talent and matchmaking, sees this as a new beginning for pro wrestling. "This is not old-school wrestling, and it's not sports entertainment," said Mr. Cornette. "This is wrestling for the 21st century, a new style developed by fresh, young stars that incorporates wrestling, mixed martial arts and high-flying, high-risk action with unique personalities, and it's showcased by a sports-based presentation completely different from any other product out there. In my 30 years in the sport, it's the most exciting live-event wrestling experience I've seen, and I'm thrilled to help bring it to broadcast TV."

A major press conference, open to wrestling press and mainstream media alike, is being planned for Baltimore on Friday, June 24th. This event will feature a number of the ROH staff and wrestlers both announcing news about ROH's future and answering questions. The media event will be presided over by new ROH COO, Joe Koff. Mr. Koff, a longtime Sinclair executive with an extensive background in TV sales and management, also has experience in pro wrestling television production and syndication. Most visible of his projects may have been the first-ever live, prime time syndicated pro wrestling events, the Battle of the Belts, which aired from 1985 to 1987. These Championship Wrestling from Florida-based cards were broadcast live to a syndicated network of stations and may be best-remembered for the classic Ric Flair vs. Barry Windham NWA World Title contest from St. Petersburg.

The press event will kick off a weekend which includes ROH's next internet pay-per-view event, "Best In The World 2011," live from the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City on Sunday, June 26th at 4PM EST. In addition to all the top stars on the ROH roster, this event will feature the return of some favorite stars from Ring of Honor's past, and can be ordered by anyone in the world with internet access through Gofightlive.tv for only $14.95. More information about Ring of Honor can be obtained through their website, www.rohwrestling.com.
 
Well, good for them.

Pro Wrestling is a terrible business model because these days the only way to get the wrestlers over is thru TV, which usually costs way too much. IIRC, to pay a TV station these days to air a weekly wrestling show costs about $30K. So with Sinclair Broadcasting now owning them, that's not as big of a factor.

I hate to disagree with Cornette...but I do think going back to more of an 'old school wrestling' would be a good idea. Although he can't really say that because the fans don't like to hear the word 'old school.' But they need to practically eliminate vignettes which are too goofy and the wrestlers struggle to execute them and do other things...like bringing back squash matches to get the main talent over.

I think if they can take Cornette's knowledge and add some new age flavor ideas as far as character development and marketing, they could beat out TNA. But, that remains to be seen.









YR
 
WWE gets upwards of 900k a week for raw from USA, and upwards of 600k for SD from Syfy, TNA reportedly(not public) gets over 500k a week for impact along with other incentives such as spike pays part of hogan sting flair rvd salaries aswell as promote the show.


And then there's international markets, which for England TNA draws much bigger audiences than WWE(averages around 170k viewers while WWE 140k for raw and 120k for SD). Tv revenue is the main source of income for both TNA and wwe now adays, you may be talking about putting a very low rated show on the air... ROH on hdnet got paid a few thousand per episode but hdnet paid to record it and edit it, plus ROH paid the talent less for those shows as they said the exposure would helP get the talent more bookings... So even a show pulling .9-.11 ratings was profitable for the company.
Yakuza Rich;3956613 said:
Well, good for them.

Pro Wrestling is a terrible business model because these days the only way to get the wrestlers over is thru TV, which usually costs way too much. IIRC, to pay a TV station these days to air a weekly wrestling show costs about $30K. So with Sinclair Broadcasting now owning them, that's not as big of a factor.

I hate to disagree with Cornette...but I do think going back to more of an 'old school wrestling' would be a good idea. Although he can't really say that because the fans don't like to hear the word 'old school.' But they need to practically eliminate vignettes which are too goofy and the wrestlers struggle to execute them and do other things...like bringing back squash matches to get the main talent over.

I think if they can take Cornette's knowledge and add some new age flavor ideas as far as character development and marketing, they could beat out TNA. But, that remains to be seen.









YR
 
zrinkill;3956686 said:
Its TNA's competition.

Which tells ya a lot.

Not competition at all... One draws 800-1000 people to shows and drew a .9 rating, one draws 2000-8000 on the road and gets 1.1-1.4 ratings


It's a bigger disparity than WWE and TNA. nice try putting TNA down though
 
Mick Foley Takes Shot At TNA House Show Attendance

http://www.lordsofpain.net/news/tna/Mick_Foley_Takes_Shot_At_TNA_House_Show_Attendance_NC_Live_Event_Canceled.html

Mick Foley engaged in a Twitter exchange with The Rock regarding their "I Quit" Match at the 1999 Royal Rumble.

"In the famous 'I Quit' match, I handcuffed Mick Foley and bashed his face 14 (times) with a steel chair," The Rock wrote. "He bled. I won."

Foley wrote in response to The Rock: "Maybe so, but two days later, I trapped The Rock under a pallet of beer kegs to win the WWE strap in an Empty Arena match a/k/a TNA house show."


Foley is crazy .... :laugh2:
 
zrinkill;3956696 said:
Mick Foley Takes Shot At TNA House Show Attendance

http://www.lordsofpain.net/news/tna/Mick_Foley_Takes_Shot_At_TNA_House_Show_Attendance_NC_Live_Event_Canceled.html

Mick Foley engaged in a Twitter exchange with The Rock regarding their "I Quit" Match at the 1999 Royal Rumble.

"In the famous 'I Quit' match, I handcuffed Mick Foley and bashed his face 14 (times) with a steel chair," The Rock wrote. "He bled. I won."

Foley wrote in response to The Rock: "Maybe so, but two days later, I trapped The Rock under a pallet of beer kegs to win the WWE strap in an Empty Arena match a/k/a TNA house show."


Foley is crazy .... :laugh2:

he is nuts...when it comes to abusing his body. He's great friends with Rock. That comment is funny though.
 
Romo 2 Austin;3956690 said:
Not competition at all... One draws 800-1000 people to shows and drew a .9 rating, one draws 2000-8000 on the road and gets 1.1-1.4 ratings


It's a bigger disparity than WWE and TNA. nice try putting TNA down though


You're trying to claim that anything from a .9 to a 1.4 (top end for TNA) or that the difference of 1200-8200 is a bigger distance than the distance between TNA and WWE?

Last I checked WWE shows, on the road every week, draw anything from 15000-18000 people. That means that they're over 10,000 more people at a WWE show than are at a TNA show. 10,000 more. That's more than the 1200 to 7200 difference you claim up there.

Also WWE shows draw, on average, double the ratings that TNA does. Now check your numbers again cause double what TNA is drawing is ALSO a bigger gap then the gap you're claiming between TNA and ROH.

So, yeah, he wasn't trying to slight TNA but stating a fact. ROH is a much closer competition to TNA than TNA is to the WWE.

You slighted them, however, once again by showing how ignorant you can be when you go to posting.
 
As for the original point of this topic...good for ROH. I'd like to see them get on some bigger TV exposure. If they can continue to grow, and stay away from making all the same mistakes that TNA routinely makes, maybe in the next handful of years they could be some real competition to the WWE and help make wrestling more worth while again.


That would be a erally great thing for all wrestling fans if that could happen.
 
BraveHeartFan;3956819 said:
You're trying to claim that anything from a .9 to a 1.4 (top end for TNA) or that the difference of 1200-8200 is a bigger distance than the distance between TNA and WWE?

Last I checked WWE shows, on the road every week, draw anything from 15000-18000 people. That means that they're over 10,000 more people at a WWE show than are at a TNA show. 10,000 more. That's more than the 1200 to 7200 difference you claim up there.

Also WWE shows draw, on average, double the ratings that TNA does. Now check your numbers again cause double what TNA is drawing is ALSO a bigger gap then the gap you're claiming between TNA and ROH.

So, yeah, he wasn't trying to slight TNA but stating a fact. ROH is a much closer competition to TNA than TNA is to the WWE.

You slighted them, however, once again by showing how ignorant you can be when you go to posting.

Well .9 is like 8% of TNA's ratings?

While TNA is almost 80% of SD some weeks (it drew a 1.76 last week)?

35% of RAW


also SD had drawn as low as 5000 before, and RAW has not been that high in a long time. Thats why it was such a shock when they drew 20k down in mexico.
 
Romo 2 Austin;3956962 said:
Well .9 is like 8% of TNA's ratings?

While TNA is almost 80% of SD some weeks (it drew a 1.76 last week)?

35% of RAW


also SD had drawn as low as 5000 before, and RAW has not been that high in a long time. Thats why it was such a shock when they drew 20k down in mexico.


Maybe so. The math all seems very off to me. Maybe I'm off on my math. It happens.

Either way he's completely correct in saying that ROH is the closer competition for TNA. TNA is absolutely ZERO competition to the WWE at this point.

Which is sad. I had hoped, years ago, that by now they'd be at least a partial threat to them and they're not even what WCW was to the WWE in WCW's dying days.
 

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