Triple H's WWE Vs. Tony Khan's AEW: Which Is Better?

8. Ratings

WWE is the obvious winner of what, ultimately, is the most important battle in the pro wrestling war: the Nielsen ratings. Without TV, both leagues are knackered.

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Now, WWE's head-start has much to do with this - but it's a win that can't just be attributed to it being good once upon a time and retaining just enough undiscerning viewers to eke out victory by a small margin. AEW had a chance to overtake Raw amid the incredible hype generated by the awesome, almost impossible dream-like promise of the All Out '22 pay-per-view, and for two weeks, they did.

If the goal was to actually beat the WWE flagship, they f*cked their best opportunity to do it because there'll never again be a situation in which stars the level of CM Punk, Bryan Danielson and Adam Cole become available within months of one another.

AEW books its rotating cast patiently, on slow-burn arcs, as part of which CM Punk worked very close matches with relative unknowns to get the point across that he wasn't yet as sharp as he'd like to be. Because he was inactive for seven years. This, perhaps, is where that momentum was lost. WWE, even if they don't book satisfying finishes, book all-star matches in which the fixed core of name acts known to the audience interact exclusively with one another. AEW thought WWE would run out of matches, but evidently, the instant gratification of WWE booking, in which very little is teased and saved, works as a ratings tactic.

WWE is simply better at giving their fans what they want more of the time than AEW. That is a demonstrable fact proven time and time again.

Winner: WWE

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