10 Booking Steps For WWE Queen Of The Ring

6. Develop An Actual Story

Sonya Deville Mandy Rose
WWE.com

WWE is incapable of producing a women's division with such depth. All Elite Wrestling has struggled with this, too, though they're able to counteract this with banging in-ring outings.

For Queen Of The Ring, WWE has to get the story right. Pro wrestling tournaments in general are a mundane affair in general if there isn't a story. Why should you care about a bunch of random matches if there isn't a story to correlate them, after all?

Take Mandy Rose and Sonya Deville's epic summer 2020 story as a core example of what WWE's creative team can do. They were, at one point, a hot topic of WWE programming. You found yourself invested the entire time because Rose and Deville put everything into the story. The culminating contest - a mini-banger of a loser leaves WWE match at SummerSlam - was a corker of a contest during a time when WWE's product was failing tremendously.

With the roster that they currently have, WWE could easily produce a tournament of this magnitude with a decent story to it. Hell, this could even be Deville's return to in-ring competition, having not wrestled since that loss to Rose. To an extent, you could reignite that story for a brief period in the tournament. They'd produce some killer content to keep the tourney compelling.

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Can be found raving about the latest IMPACT Wrestling signing, the Saints Row franchise, and King Shark in The Suicide Squad.