JNPO: December 2025 wrestling year in review | John Cena literally calls it quits, AEW Worlds End controversy, TNA’s new TV deal

Image: WWE

The grand finale of the 2025 pro wrestling year in review series on Josh Nason’s Punch-Out has arrived with a stop in December and not one, but two debuting guests.

We kick off with Mike McGuire of ⁠CelebrateWrestling.com⁠ to talk the month in WWE and everything surrounding John Cena’s final match.

Then, Josh talks with Case Lowe of ⁠VoicesofWrestling.com⁠ and Q101 out of Chicago about the month in AEW and Japan.

Josh then takes it home with all the NXTNAAA and junk drawer happenings.

It’s two hours of audio power to close out the series — all of which are available on this very feed for free.

Click here to listen for free or stream for free on either Spotify or Apple Podcasts.

Dave Meltzer’s top-rated matches of 2025

Image: Ring of Honor

With the year officially wrapped up and with the posting of last week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter, we now have Dave Meltzer’s complete set of match ratings for the entirety of 2025.

Of the thousands of matches that took place over the year, Dave rated 40 of them as either five stars or above — the full list of which can be found below. From AEW to NJPW to Ring of Honor to WWE, you’ll find them all here. (Big thanks to Cagematch for making them very sortable for exercises like this.)

And, as a personal editor’s note, ratings and reviews are subjective and shouldn’t affect your ability to enjoy what you like from wherever you like. Keep that in mind the next time you log into your social media platform of choice.

And now, Dave Meltzer’s top-rated pro wrestling matches of 2025:

5 stars:

40) Jon Moxley vs. Kyle Fletcher Continental Classic finals | AEW Worlds End | December 27

39) Komander vs. World Historic Welterweight Champion Mascara Dorada | CMLL Domingo Familiar | November 23

38) TNT Champion Kyle Fletcher vs. Mark Briscoe no DQ | AEW Full Gear | November 22

37) AEW World Tag Team Champions Brodido vs. FTR | AEW Full Gear | November 22

36) Men’s Blood & Guts match | AEW Dynamite | November 12

35) AEW World Tag Team Champions Brodido vs. Kazuchika Okada & Konosuke Takeshita | AEW WrestleDream | October 18

34) Torneo Cibernetico | CMLL Grand Prix International | August 29

33) Death Riders & Young Bucks vs. Darby Allin, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Kenny Omega, Will Ospreay & Kota Ibushi Lights Out cage match | AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door | August 24

32) Cody Rhodes vs. WWE Champion John Cena street fight | WWE SummerSlam | August 3

31) TNT Champion Dustin Rhodes vs. Kyle Fletcher street fight | AEW Collision | July 31

30) Mascara Dorada vs. Neon Torneo La Leyenda De Plata finals | CMLL Viernes Espectacular | July 25

29) Bandido & Hologram vs. Mascara Dorada & Mistico | CMLL Fantastica Mania | June 20

28) ROH World Champion Bandido vs. Mascara Dorada | CMLL Martes Populares | June 17

27) Anarchy in the Arena | AEW Double or Nothing | May 25

26) Motor City Machine Guns vs. WWE Tag Team Champions Street Profits vs. DIY TLC match | WWE SmackDown | April 25

25) WWE Women’s Champion IYO SKY vs. Rhea Ripley vs. Bianca Belair | WWE WrestleMania 41 | April 20

24) Will Ospreay vs. Kyle Fletcher steel cage match | AEW Revolution | March 9

23) AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita vs. Kenny Omega | AEW Revolution | March 9

22) AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm vs. Mariah May Hollywood Ending match | AEW Revolution | March 9

21) Saya Kamitani vs. Tam Nakano loser leaves town | Stardom Nighter in Korakuen | March 3

20) Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn unsanctioned match | WWE Elimination Chamber | March 1

19) Kenny Omega & Will Ospreay vs. Konosuke Takeshita & Kyle Fletcher | AEW Grand Slam Australia | February 15

18) IWGP Global Champion Yota Tsuji vs. Gabe Kidd | NJPW New Beginning in Osaka | February 11

17) AZM, Miyu Amasaki & Starlight Kid vs. Natsupoi, Saori Anou & Tam Nakano | Stardom 14th Anniversary Supreme Fight | February 2 | *****

More than 5 stars:

16) Kyle Fletcher vs. Mike Bailey | AEW Dynamite: Winter is Coming | December 10 | ***** 1/4

15) AEW World Champion Hangman Page vs. Kyle Fletcher | AEW All Out | September 20 | ***** 1/4

14) AEW Unified Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. Konosuke Takeshita vs. Mascara Dorada | AEW All Out | September 20 | ***** 1/4

13) Sareee vs. IWGP Women’s Champion Syuri | Stardom The Conversion | June 21 | ***** 1/4

12) Swerve Strickland vs. Will Ospreay | AEW Dynamite: Summer Blockbuster | June 11 | ***** 1/4

11) Kosei Fujita vs. YOH | NJPW Best of the Super Juniors finals | June 1 | ***** 1/4

10) Saya Kamitani vs. Tam Nakano career vs. career | Stardom All-Star Grand Queendom | April 27 | ***** 1/4

9) Kenny Omega vs. Gabe Kidd | NJPW Wrestle Dynasty | January 5 | ***** 1/4

8) IWGP World Champion Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Konosuke Takeshita | NJPW King of Pro Wrestling | October 13 | ***** 1/2

7) Mistico vs. MJF mask vs. title | CMLL 92nd Anniversario | September 19 | ***** 1/2

6) ROH World Champion Bandido vs. Hechicero | ROH Death Before Dishonor | August 29 | ***** 1/2

5) AEW World Champion Jon Moxley vs. Hangman Page Texas Death Match | AEW All In | July 12 | ***** 1/2

4) Young Bucks vs. Swerve Strickland & Will Ospreay | AEW All In | July 12 | ***** 1/2

3) Hangman Page vs. Will Ospreay Owen Hart tournament finals | AEW Double or Nothing | May 25 | ***** 1/2

2) Konosuke Takeshita vs. Will Ospreay Owen Hart tournament semifinals | AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru | April 16 | ***** 1/2

And Dave Meltzer’s top-rated match of 2025 is…

ROH World Champion Bandido vs. Konosuke Takeshita | July 11 | ROH Supercard of Honor | ***** 3/4

From that week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter:

“With all the great wrestling from this past weekend in the U.S., which had two other very legit match of the year contenders, the match of the weekend was Bandido retaining his ROH title over Konosuke Takeshita on the 7/11 Supercard of Honor show.

The show wasn’t going to have a lot of impact given all the other higher profile events, but that match was among the best bouts I’ve ever seen. Takeshita is always great and the two showed excellent chemistry in their television tag match. I do worry about Takeshita working a harder schedule than most, especially with G-1 coming, and with all the stuff he does at his size. Bandido clearly got his confidence back working as a headliner in Mexico and it’s transferred to the U.S. He lost prime years of his career with a broken wrist that required two surgeries, and then got a concussion as soon as he was cleared.

It was great from start-to-finish, built well and the last few minutes were unreal. This was basically the ultimate in the modern style with everything fans who like that style love and everything people who hate the style complain about.”

    JNPO: November 2025 wrestling year in review | AEW, WWE, Ridge & The Walkout

    Image: WWE

    It’s a special weekend edition of Josh Nason’s Punch-Out as Josh’s pro wrestling year in review series is nearly complete.

    Josh and returning guest Paul Fontaine of this website and Fight Game Media talk all about the month of November and over 600 topics like:

    • Samoa Joe winning the AEW World title at Full Gear and all the happenings from the PPV
    • John Cena’s final PPV/PLE match as part of WWE Survivor Series
    • A month where both WWE and AEW held double cage matches
    • The announcement of Hiroshi Tanahashi’s final ever opponent
    • Ridge Holland speaking out about his WWE release and financial situation
    • Nixon Newell and Miranda Alize walking out of AEW Collision and the fallout
    • The best of WWE, AEW, CMLL, TNA, AAA and more

    Click here to listen for free or stream for free on either Spotify or Apple Podcasts

    The Wrestling Observer/Figure Four Online top ten most viewed news stories of 2025

    Image: WWE

    With 2025 officially in the books, let’s take a look back at our most viewed news stories of last year — a list that featured a lot of WWE news and some quotable quotes.

    What’s interesting to me is that these weren’t the biggest stories of the wrestling year (Hulk Hogan’s death, John Cena’s final match, the ESPN/Peacock changes, Brock Lesnar’s surprise return, etc.). Rather, these were stories coming out of those stories, showing how powerful social media has become when breaking big news and garnering immediate reaction.

    Note that none of these are live event posts, but just straight news.

    Number 10

    John Cena’s final opponent confirmed for WWE Saturday Night’s Main Event

    This was a pretty straightforward December post: Gunther winning The Last Time is Now tournament to earn the shot at beating John Cena in his final match. Cena’s final run was newsworthy enough, but the confirmation of who he would be facing making our list.

    Number 9

    Report: Natural Disasters to be inducted into WWE Hall of Fame

    This one was a surprise to me to make our top ten: a March report about the late Earthquake and Typhoon (aka the Natural Disasters) being set for induction into the WWE Hall of Fame class. Who knew 1990s tag team were that popular, huh?

    Number 8

    Karrion Kross and Scarlett’s first post-WWE appearance announced

    A big story during the middle part of the year was the plight of Karrion Kross & Scarlett after their departure from WWE and whether the whole thing was a work. Apparently, it wasn’t and the announcement of their first post-WWE appearance got a lot of attention.

    Number 7

    WWE & Vince McMahon file appeal to prevent discovery in Janel Grant lawsuit

    The Janel Grant lawsuit against Vince McMahon and WWE continued to progress throughout 2025 with one specific story in June standing out: McMahon and WWE filing an appeal to prevent discovery, claiming Grant “has failed to meet the legal standard for pre-arbitration discovery and is also trying to seek unrelated documents relating to the question if Grant signed the NDA under duress.”

    Number 6

    Subscriber exclusive: John Cena’s final opponent revealed

    This was an October Dave Meltzer exclusive for our subscribers that Gunther would be Cena’s final opponent, determined via a yet to be announced tournament.

    Number 5

    Stephanie McMahon confirms role for John Cena’s final WWE match

    With Cena’s final match date official, Stephanie McMahon wanted the WWE fans to know she would be in attendance, revealing in a November interview with Megan Morant that she was going to be co-hosting Saturday Night’s Main Event alongside Joe Tessitore.

    Number 4

    Triple H says he’s ‘incredibly proud’ of CM Punk for apologizing to Saudi Arabia

    In case you didn’t hear, CM Punk made his first appearance in Saudi Arabia in June, competing against then-WWE Champion John Cena at Night of Champions. He also apologized to their fans for his “mean tweet” during a pre-event pep rally of sorts in the country — all of which made headlines considering how opposed Punk had publicly been in the past about WWE and the Saudi shows.

    His boss, however, was impressed with what Punk did and said as much after the event ended.

    Number 3

    WWE star announces break from social media following Hulk Hogan comments

    That star was Chelsea Green who got some heat in July after making some positive comments about Hulk Hogan during a media appearance to promote WWE Unreal when she was asked about his death. She later apologizing on X after saying she got death threats and that she was taking a break from social media.

    Number 2

    Stephanie McMahon says Vince McMahon is probably his own ‘biggest nemesis’

    The runner-up for the most viewed story was Stephanie McMahon talking about her dad on her ‘What’s Your Story?’ podcast in June while chatting with WWE president Nick Khan. In talking about Vince’s legacy and in response to a Khan statement about how “Family’s complicated. And, you know, obviously, we don’t need to get into any of that,” Stephanie somewhat did get into it without going any deeper.

    “Absolutely he is [an empire builder],” she responded. “And no one can take that away from him, no matter what, including himself, who is probably his biggest nemesis — is himself.”

    And our most viewed story of 2025 was:

    Bret Hart says Vince McMahon ‘used wrestling as a backdrop for all of his evil’

    Bret Hart made a podcast appearance back in June where he was asked about his old boss Vince McMahon possibly returning to the business.

    Among his various quotes was this one where he was asked about the allegations against Vince and John Laurinaitis as part of the Janel Grant lawsuit:

    “Shame on all of them. I mean, that’s just terrible. I’ve had ups and downs with Vince McMahon, and in a lot of ways I have a lot of respect for him, but at the same time I find what happened there inexcusable. There’s no place for that. I think Vince McMahon became a predator and used wrestling as his backdrop for all of his, sort of, evil. And it just tells me that too much money can turn you into a bad person.”

    Our top viewed AEW news story (#17) was from December where Chris Jericho addressed some of the WWE move rumors, saying he was “pretty sure” he’d be wrestling somewhere in 2026 without saying WWE. After that, it was another Jericho story (his upcoming cruise not featuring any AEW talent), the announcement of an ROH Women’s TV title unification match, Matt Jackson talking about a revival of Being The Elite, and the Young Bucks returning to aid Jon Moxley at April’s Dynasty.

    JNPO: October 2025 wrestling year in review | Real injuries & not-so non-competes

    Image: WWE

    The Josh Nason’s Punch-Out 2025 pro wrestling year in review series begins its descent with a stop in October and returning guest Mike Gilbert of The Mike & JD Show and Brace For Impact.

    Mike and Josh go over a ton of stuff during this 31-day stretch including:

    • Months after Seth Rollins feigned an injury as part of a storyline, he actually got badly hurt at WWE Crown Jewel
    • AEW WrestleDream featured a heel turn and a match that got one ex-AEW employee talking on X afterward
    • TNA holding their biggest event of the year, capped by a title win that would be erased two months later
    • The best in Japan, Mexico, the indies, and more

    If it happened in October, it’s all here.

    Click here to listen for free or stream free on Spotify or Apple Podcasts (search Wrestling Observer).

    JNPO: August 2025 wrestling year in review | WWE’s big year continues as Will Ospreay’s ends

    Image: AEW

    On a brand-new Josh Nason’s Punch-Out, Josh continues with his 12-part pro wrestling year in review series with a stop in August 2025 and returning guest Andrew Thompson of Fightful.

    Josh and Andrew talk about another big month in WWE which saw the first-ever two-night SummerSlam which saw the return of Brock Lesnar after two years and the subsequent PR sh*tshow. Seth Rollins also made his *surprise* return after his “injury” to both cash in his Money in the Bank briefcase and win the WWE World Heavyweight title.

    On the AEW side of the street, Will Ospreay wrestled his final match prior to undergoing neck surgery, competing in an unsanctioned multi-man steel cage match to close Forbidden Door in London, England.

    Oh, and there was WWE announcing their PLEs were heading to ESPN in April 2026…only to bump that timeframe up to September and introduce Wrestlepalooza that would go head-to-head with AEW All Out.

    Oh, and John Cena turned babyface about 48 hours before losing the WWE title back to Cody Rhodes.

    Between all that, the rest of the AEW and WWE news, Ring of Honor, NJPW, Mexico and the indies, we go through roughly 400 headlines and news items.

    Click here to listen on our site or listen on either Spotify or Apple Podcasts (just search Wrestling Observer).