She’s not just a champion—Adrienne Palmer, known to the ring as Athena (formerly Ember Moon), is the kind of fighter who wears scars like medals. Born Adrienne Reese on August 31, 1988, in Garland, Texas, she once faced bullies for liking video games and wrestling—like leeches to a bright spark. Now? She’s the longest-reigning ROH Women’s World Champion, hitting a staggering 935 days and counting, leading the ruthless M.I.T. stable while clutching history like a bitter lover.
Athena stands 5’5″ and 145 pounds of sheer will, wrestling’s version of a short story loaded with more punch than length. She didn’t stroll into this world on velvet ropes; she stormed in.
Beginnings in Texas Dust
High school tennis nets and chessboards didn’t prepare her for being slammed into steel. But they forged something—the ability to think fast, fight long, and calculate risk under fire. Chess club one day, ring bell the next.
In 2007, her grandfather spun her a yarn about wrestling. She decided that was no yarn—so she trained under Skandor Akbar, later sharpening her steel at Booker T’s crew. She was “Trouble” turned “Athena”, working Texas indie shows, grabbing titles in Anarchy Championship Wrestling, Shimmer, and WSU—little belts that marked bruised beginnings.
From Tag Teams to Title Reigns
She bounced through the indie circuit, picking up championships like she’d pick up bruised ribs. Plenty of belts, a few KO sob stories, and always a finger on the pulse of what wrestling meant: fight, survive, dominate.
In 2015, WWE tapped her—renaming her Ember Moon. She exploded onto NXT TakeOver in Brooklyn II, beating Billie Kay like she owed Kay money. She collected wins, then got cut down by Asuka, her first taste of heartbreak in the ring. A shoulder injury nearly ended her spark—but she came back, grabbed the NXT Women’s Championship, and tangled with legends like Shayna Baszler. She was queen for 140 days, rose, and fell again—because wrestling isn’t about taste, it’s about stamina.
She cracked the WWE main roster: Royal Rumble, Money in the Bank, WrestleMania. But the glow faded: nagging injuries, an empty winning streak, and a backstage promise that died. Display went dark; in 2021, WWE let her go, leaving her standing in the wreckage when the lights clicked off.
Resurrection in ROH and AEW
She returned—reborn as Athena—on the independent circuit and in AEW. She crashed into Double or Nothing 2022, saving friends and earning her stripes. Her path led her straight into ROH’s elite by December 2022, when she pinned Mercedes Martinez and claimed the ROH Women’s World Championship.
Then the shackles snapped.
She turned heel, tore throats out, and built the M.I.T. stable, molding new warriors like Billie Starkz and Lexy Nair. She opened a Pandora’s box, running open challenges, stunning veterans, and etching her name deeper.
She held off Willow Nightingale, headlined Death Before Dishonor, defended against Hikaru Shida, Red Velvet, Queen Aminata. She smashed ankles, fended off Ronda Rousey and Marina Shafir, and thumped Billie Starkz at Final Battle. She stood undefeated, unmoved, unending—until MAJOR milestones struck: 800 days, 900 days.
A Wrestler’s Wrestler in the Making
Athena’s record now reads like an iron gauntlet—seven-plus years from debut, a journey through every zone of pain and pride. Her style is hydraulic: limbs lurch, elbows explode, and circular hate floats through the air until it slams into flesh. She moves with purpose. Every strike says you should’ve seen it coming.
Freed from fear or favour, she’s set to invade Stardom, wrestling legends like Thekla and Mina Shirakawa. No flying in on goodwill—just fists.
The Book Isn’t Closed
Her marriage to fellow wrestler Matthew Palmer keeps the flame lit. She’s a comic book fan who believes backflips are better than bullet points and memory is measured in motion.
Athena’s climb isn’t nostalgia. It’s momentum. Rivalries aren’t setup—they’re war rooms. Every tape-burned injury, every tainted title bout, every disrespect shown leads to this: the ring isn’t her workplace, it’s her manifesto.
She’s broken records, defied brands, and stared at pain until it blinked first. Now, she straddles ROH and AEW, threatening Stardom in Japan—and she doesn’t just want to run with the giants; she intends to sink them into submission.
The Takeaway:
Athena isn’t a champion by chance. She’s a champion by conviction—the kind forged in broken promises and midnight training rooms. Buckle up: she’s not only made history. She is history.
