It's Damn Real!
The undisputed, undefeated TNA &
As the opening lyrics to Ted DiBiase's theme would say — "Money, money, money, money, moneyyyyyyyyyyy..."
Did ya get that?
No?
I'll try one more time, this time with visual aid:
One thing you all have to understand, or learn, is that at the end of the day, TNA is in the money-making business, not the "pleasing fans" one, because the latter is a money pit, not a money-maker, as fans rarely know what they actually want.
So why Hardy over Ray? Quite simply because Jeff Hardy supersedes TNA. He supersedes wrestling. I wrote about this after the calamity that was Victory Road 2011 when TNA began his redemption angle to bring him back to the forefront and what I said then still stands as far as I'm concerned.
He is a major, major drawing name on a ticket that TNA is going to want to sell to the heavens. Hardy v. Aries at BFG (if it is indeed going to happen as planned) is a sure-fire way to assure yourself as a company promoting the match that people will buy tickets, merchandise, plane tickets, etc. to see Jeff compete for a chance at the World Heavyweight Championship again.
You can say whatever you will about Jeff, about his personality, about his tumultuous history with Pay-Per-View main events, etc, but at the end of the day, he makes TNA a fuck ton of money, and as such any decision TNA makes to continue that trend IS THE RIGHT DECISION.
Bully Ray had a fantastic run and we almost certainly have not heard the last of him, but at the end of the day, Bound For Glory is the biggest show of the year, and the logic of making money always trumps the desire to see one particular wrestler come full circle. This is the same reason James Storm—who lead the BFG series through it's entirety—is also not main eventing the show, and the same goes for Samoa Joe.
Jeff Hardy may not be the best story answer, but he is the money answer, and the money answer is always the RIGHT answer.
Did ya get that?
No?
I'll try one more time, this time with visual aid:

One thing you all have to understand, or learn, is that at the end of the day, TNA is in the money-making business, not the "pleasing fans" one, because the latter is a money pit, not a money-maker, as fans rarely know what they actually want.
So why Hardy over Ray? Quite simply because Jeff Hardy supersedes TNA. He supersedes wrestling. I wrote about this after the calamity that was Victory Road 2011 when TNA began his redemption angle to bring him back to the forefront and what I said then still stands as far as I'm concerned.
He is a major, major drawing name on a ticket that TNA is going to want to sell to the heavens. Hardy v. Aries at BFG (if it is indeed going to happen as planned) is a sure-fire way to assure yourself as a company promoting the match that people will buy tickets, merchandise, plane tickets, etc. to see Jeff compete for a chance at the World Heavyweight Championship again.
You can say whatever you will about Jeff, about his personality, about his tumultuous history with Pay-Per-View main events, etc, but at the end of the day, he makes TNA a fuck ton of money, and as such any decision TNA makes to continue that trend IS THE RIGHT DECISION.
Bully Ray had a fantastic run and we almost certainly have not heard the last of him, but at the end of the day, Bound For Glory is the biggest show of the year, and the logic of making money always trumps the desire to see one particular wrestler come full circle. This is the same reason James Storm—who lead the BFG series through it's entirety—is also not main eventing the show, and the same goes for Samoa Joe.
Jeff Hardy may not be the best story answer, but he is the money answer, and the money answer is always the RIGHT answer.