ALL IN: The spirit of All In


Posted on 5/14/123 by Colin Vassallo



’s crazy to think how All In came to be.

On May 16, 2017, a Twitter user by the handle @TheWWEGuy_
asked Wrestling Observer editor Dave Meltzer if he thinks
Ring of Honor can ever sell out an arena with 10,000+ fans.

“Not anytime soon,” responded Meltzer six minutes later.

Cody Rhodes must have been scrolling Twitter at the right
place and at the right time because 11 minutes later, Rhodes
accepted the challenge.

“I’ll take that bet Dave,” Rhodes wrote. “I already gave
them their biggest buyrate…put The Bucks & I on the card &
3-months to promote.”

It took just 17 minutes from the first question to the
challenge accepted tweet. It did take a bit longer for the
event to take place, but Cody won that bet, and how!

The event went from an ROH-backed show to a self-funded show
between Cody Rhodes, The Young Bucks, and Kenny Omega but
still with ROH’s blessing and promotion.

On January 10, 2018, the group announced that the show would
take place on September 1 and a few months later, the Sears
Center, now called the NOW Arena, in Hoffman Estates,
Illinois, was chosen as the host of All In. Tickets for the
show went on sale in mid-May and within 30 minutes, all
tickets were gone.

Total tickets and attendance? 11,263.

All In was the preview of what eventually became All Elite
Wrestling. Just a few months after All In took place, Cody
Rhodes, The Young Bucks, and Kenny Omega along with Tony
Khan officially launched All Elite Wrestling, and that’s
just after all those involved, plus Hangman Page, turned
down deals from WWE.

All In was a name owned by Ring of Honor but the spirit of
All In continued as AEW produced All Out, every year during
the same weekend in the same location ever since. ROH never
used the name again and All In remained that one and only
show that was created from a simple tweet.

Rhodes eventually left AEW and Tony Khan bought Ring of
Honor and all of its intellectual property rights, and that
included the name All In.

It was just a matter of time before All In made its
triumphant return.

Now, five years almost to the exact date of the original All
In, the event is making its grand return on August 27, 2023.
Under the AEW banner, President Tony Khan announced that All
In would be held at the world famous Wembley Stadium in
London, England, the first event outside North America for
All Elite Wrestling.

Wembley Stadium held one other wrestling show before – WWE
SummerSlam – 31 years ago at the old Wembley. The announced
attendance for that show was 80,355, but just like all WWE
attendances, the actual number is questioned since the
company always inflates their numbers.

Many fans did question if AEW can fill enough seats in a
place such as Wembley Stadium. After all, that stadium holds
over 90,000 fans and AEW’s highest-attended event was just
over 20,000 and it only happened once and never attempted
again.

The original seating chart for All In showed that a quarter
of the stadium would be curtained off. But then a few weeks
later, all bets were off. The powers that be at AEW opened
up pretty much the majority of the stadium, removing the
large set and opting for an entrance way instead, freeing up
more seats.

The task was now even bigger, especially with no matches
announced yet.

On May 2, on the first day of pre-sale, over 36,000 tickets
were sold. On May 3, that number went over 43,000 and on May
5, the first day of general sale, it rocketed to over
60,000.

By the time August 27 rolls around, we could be looking at
around 75,000 tickets sold, making the show one of the
biggest wrestling events in the history of the sport.

One thing is for sure: do not bet against a show that is
called All In.

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