The WWE got mixed news and I don’t have any kind of an explanation
for why the 7/15 Money in the Bank PPV, from Philadelphia, was way up
domestically and way down overseas.
The show did 192,000 buys worldwide, but 146,000 of them were
domestic for a show built around two Money in the Bank matches, as well
as a WWE title match of John Cena vs. Mark Henry and a world title match
with heel Alberto Del Rio vs. Dolph Ziggler. The domestic number was
excellent. The overseas number was less so. The WWE title Money in the
Bank match was billed as the All-Star match with Randy Orton winning
over Daniel Bryan, Rob Van Dam (whose return was a major selling point
of the show to the point he was kept off television until the show),
Sheamus, Christian and C.M. Punk. The World title Money in the Bank
match had Damien Sandow winning over Jack Swagger, Antonio Cesaro, Wade
Barrett, Cody Rhodes, Dean Ambrose and Fandango.
In comparison, the 2012 version of the show did 114,000 domestic
buys, but had 92,000 overseas buys for 206,000 in total. That show had
Punk vs. Bryan as the WWE title match, Sheamus vs. Del Rio as the world
title match, Cena winning the WWE title Money in the Bank over Kane, Big
Show, Miz and Chris Jericho; and Ziggler winning the World title Money
in the Bank match over Christian, Rhodes, Sandow, Santino Marella, Sin
Cara, Tensai and Tyson Kidd.
The show was up 28.1% domestically but down 50.0% outside North
America, which in the end was a 6.8% drop overall. To put into
perspective how impressive this year’s domestic total is, two years ago,
for the John Cena vs. C.M. Punk match, the domestic buys ended up at
146,000, and at the same stage of reporting was only at 132,000.
I don’t see the increase being from the Money in the Bank
matches, given the star power in them was stronger last year with the
big push of Cena being in the WWE title MITB match. I think the only
thing that was out of the ordinary that could have been a difference to
this degree is the Mark Henry promo, which set up that main event, was a
big-time money promo, and perhaps the return of RVD, but there have
been plenty of returns of characters at the same level or much higher
than RVD that didn’t make that kind of a difference. And why North
America would be way up and international would be way down would
indicate that whatever was so compelling in North America was something
that didn’t translate outside. And I’ve got no idea what that would be.
In other business comparisons for July, domestic attendance for
the month minus the PPV event was 5,544, almost identical to the 5,464
average last year (up 1.5%). Two years ago the July average was 4,694.
DVD shipments were down from 357,000 last year to 231,000 this
year, but that’s kind of a meaningless stat. The most shipped DVD’s
over the past nine months, which is not the most sold, are WrestleMania
29 at 162,000, Best of Nitro at 136,000, The Attitude Era at 134,000,
NWO Revolution at 120,000 and Top 100 Moments in Raw history at 101,000.
The WrestleMania number is down 24.3% from last year’s DVD as of the
same time frame.
Web site unique visitors were 14.0 million, up 8.5% from the 12.9 million last July.
They averaged 774 web site merchandise orders per day this year in July, up 41.2% from 548 per day last year.
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