AEW Full Gear generates 145,000 PPV buys, $4 million in revenue

Image: AEW

Last Saturday’s AEW Full Gear is trending to become the second most purchased pay-per-view in company history with more than 145,000 buys worldwide and an estimated $4 million in total event revenue.

The numbers were first reported by Wrestlenomics’ Brandon Thurston and discussed on last night’s Wrestling Observer Radio. Dave Meltzer said he believes the number will come in around 150,000. Meltzer said that while cable and satellite numbers have yet to be finalized, streaming numbers were up from March’s AEW Revolution which did 145,000 buys and that a cable industry source said the early numbers looked strong.

The $4 million is a combination of PPV revenue and ticket sales and merchandise in Minneapolis.

From Thurston specifically on PPV revenue:

“Sales of 145,000 buys worldwide for Full Gear would mean about $7 million in pay-per-view revenue before AEW’s split with distributors. If the average split to AEW is about 45%, then AEW would take about $3 million in pay-per-view revenue.”

In the U.S., Bleacher Report was the exclusive streaming distributor and there were complaints about the availability to buy the replay which necessitated the event being made available for purchase on FITE.tv the next day. Fans had the option to buy through FITE and Bleacher Report for September’s All Out.

FITE remained the international distributor while fans were also able to buy through Facebook. However, Thurston said the latter’s sales were minor.

September’s All Out is the AEW’s most purchased PPV at 205,000 buys, buoyed by the return of CM Punk.

WOL: AEW Full Gear review, Dave Meltzer appearance

On Sunday’s Wrestling Observer Live, Andrew Zarian is back in studio with Harry Terjanian.

The guys break down all the results and aftermath of AEW Full Gear and wrestling news of the week. In the second hour, they are joined by Dave Meltzer for a discussion about Full Gear, where AEW goes from here and more.

Click below to listen for free or watch on YouTube.

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Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Mike Sempervive is on the air live and free on Sports Byline USA, Twitch.tv, YouTube, and THE MIGHTIER 1090 AM across all of Southern California. This hour-long show airs free and worldwide every weekday at 3 PM Eastern/12 PM Pacific and every Sunday at 6 PM Eastern/3 PM Pacific, hosted by Mat Men’s Andrew Zarian. WOL is the largest, longest running, and most listened to pro wrestling and mixed martial arts radio show in the world, debuting in 1998.

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Speak Now: AEW Full Gear weekend recap show

Join me live from Minnesota as I shares my live experience attending AEW Full Gear in Minneapolis, Minnesota, including my complete and honest review of the show.

The Rundown: 

  • My weekend in Minnesota
  • MJF vs. Darby Allin 
  • The bad finish in the FTR/ Lucha Bros match
  • Did Bryan Danielson and Miro have a good match? 
  • Falls Count Anywhere…lots of fun!
  • Cody and PAC defeat Black and Andrade 
  • Crowd Reactions, Britt Baker defeats Tay Conti
  • How AEW got everything right between CM Punk and Eddie Kingston 
  • Inner Circle vs. Men of the Year & American Top Team
  • Jay Lethal in AEW 
  • Matches announced for Dynamite 
  • Hangman Page becomes new AEW World Champion
  • Post-event media scrum notes

I return next week to cover NXT on Tuesdays, AEW on Wednesdays and AEW Rampage/WWE SmackDown on Friday! 

Click below to listen or watch on YouTube.

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Hangman Page defeats Kenny Omega for AEW World title at Full Gear

Image: JJ Williams

In a storyline that lasted well over a year, “Hangman” Adam Page defeated Kenny Omega at AEW Full Gear for the company’s world title, ending Omega’s 11-month run as champion.

With the win, Page becomes AEW’s fourth World champion in company history following Chris Jericho, Jon Moxley and Omega. Page lost to Jericho in the inaugural title match at 2019’s All Out and had been on a path of redemption ever since.

The match went more than 20 minutes and ended following two buckshot lariats from Page to Omega as the Young Bucks watched at ringside as they happened. They came out late in the match with Matt Jackson simply nodding at Page before he delivered the second one.

The match was competitive one that saw Page bleed from the head, both a terminator dive and springboard Liger bomb from Omega, a One-Winged Angel from Page, and a Page lariat from the ringpost to the outside that partially put Omega through a ringside table.

Don Callis interfered plenty as he looked to nail Page with the title belt after the referee was knocked out following Omega pulling him into the way of a buckshot lariat. Page took out Callis, Omega missed with a belt shot of his own, and Page nearly won the title after a deadeye after Aubrey Edwards ran out to take over.

Page earned the title shot by winning an October Casino Ladder match on Dynamite as a surprise participant due to him taking several months off due to the birth of his first child. He was thought to be getting a shot at Omega at September’s All Out, but things had to be changed because he was gone.

At last year’s Full Gear, he lost to Omega in the World title eliminator tournament final and the build to the match was based around him being unable to win the big one dating back to the aforementioned first-ever title match. The two were also former AEW Tag Team Champions which helped play into last year’s Full Gear match.

The loss leaves Omega with just the AAA Mega title after he held that, the AEW title and the Impact World title as recently as August. He defended the title six times after defeating Jon Moxley last December. 

Unless the company decides to do an Omega rematch, Page’s next opponent will be Bryan Danielson who won this year’s World title eliminator tournament Saturday with a victory over Miro.

Bryan Danielson earns future World title shot at AEW Full Gear

In the finals of the AEW World title eliminator tournament at Saturday’s Full Gear, Bryan Danielson defeated Miro to earn a future title shot.

What was expected to be a physical match was indeed just that. Near the end, both men exchanged elbows and kicks, taunting each other to throw them harder. Both men also escaped each other’s submission finisher in the course of the action.

The end came when Danielson caught Miro with a DDT when he was coming off the top rope, knocking him out. He ensnared Miro in a guillotine, but referee Aubrey Edwards called for the stoppage when Miro was out.

With the win, Danielson remains undefeated in his short AEW run and will await the winner of Saturday’s match between World Champion Kenny Omega and Hangman Page. Danielson and Omega went to a 30-minute non-title draw at September’s Grand Slam show in Queens, New York.

Danielson advanced to the finals with wins over Dustin Rhodes and Eddie Kingston while Miro took Jon Moxley’s spot after he pulled out. He defeated Orange Cassidy to get into the finals.

Despite their crossover in WWE, this was only their second-ever singles meeting. The first was a Money in the Bank qualifying match in 2018 that Miro (then Rusev) won.

AEW Full Gear preview: The coronation of a cowboy

Image: AEW

Editor’s Note: The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the writer and not of our website.

When was the last time you were compelled to watch WWE? Aside from the individual bright spots (the career best work of Roman Reigns and otherworldly talent of Bianca Belair, mainly), what is there that is truly can’t miss? When’s the last time you felt a buzz around WWE like there is with AEW right now? This entire card is filled with storylines and matches that will fill up Wrestling Twitter™ and its collective wrestling heart. That heart is everything.

The passion of AEW and the people who wrestle for them set it apart from WWE. Much like a Kraft single is a disgustingly delicious cheese product, WWE is a homogenized wrestling product. And much like a Kraft single, it has extremely limited uses. To say that they don’t make individual moments would be disingenuous. The moments are certainly here and there, but they exist in an emotionless vacuum — done so they can be included in video packages down the road.

There are no stakes and nothing of substance ever really happens. If it does, it’s usually immediately undone. It’s an old abandoned church with empty pews and empty aisles, haunted by the ghost of what used to fill it up. That’s why WWE leans on nostalgia acts so much. They remind us of what we used to feel, but also puts a spotlight on the fact that we don’t feel those things anymore.

The intentionality of AEW calling itself a professional wrestling company is notable. They lean into the emotion of pro wrestling by creating storylines and characters that are evocative. Everyone is created to make the audience feel something…or somethings…or many, many somethings. They aren’t afraid to tell layered stories and allow their audience to feel complex emotions. It is all done while not forgetting what they are at their heart: a pro wrestling company.

Nine matches. 3000 words. My parents are so proud. Let’s preview Saturday’s AEW Full Gear from Minneapolis, Minnesota:

Bryan Danielson vs. Miro | AEW World title eliminator tournament final

People ease into existence slowly; mere blips in the universe. They can be even slower trying to find their purpose. Finding meaning on this big blue marble is tough! It can be tough to figure out what your purpose in life is or what purpose even means. For people like Danielson, it is clear what that purpose is and clear what he was put on this earth to do.

Bryan Danielson was put on this earth to f*cking wrestle, man.

It’s impossible to imagine him doing anything else. And he wrestles better than anyone alive and maybe better than anyone who has ever even lived. Jon Moxley called Danielson the best wrestler of all time and who am I to correct him? Wrestling, like all art, is subjective. There is no “correct” way to rank wrestlers, no matter what the hellscape of r/squaredcircle will have you believe, but Danielson is on any short list for the best of all time.

Seeing an unshackled Danielson again is a sight to behold. At his peak, he was one of the most popular acts in wrestling history. Even then, he was holding back a bit in the ring. Just check his comments from this week about being on autopilot. He still had the restrictor plates on. Now? Those are gone and he’s free to be The American Dragon again. And what a treat that is for us and what a delight it is for him.

You can see just how much this means to him. He absolutely loves this. He lives for this. Danielson never has to work another day in his life, let alone get his chest turned an uncomfortable shade of purple. Yet here he is, willingly doing that because this is the only thing he wants to do. He’s been in AEW for barely a hiccup and he’s already put on two of the best matches of the year. I’m so happy he’s back, for however long he decides to do this.

In the beginning, there was Alexander Rusev: a greasy-haired Bulgarian who broke boards (?) with his opponent’s name on them (??). Now, there is only Miro, the best thing going in AEW. All of his promos are absolute must-sees. His matches are brutally frantic and his character work is spectacular. The fact that all of this was inside him isn’t surprising. What is surprising is that this was inside him and WWE thought the best use of him was to get cucked on live television — truly a breathtaking work of staggering genius.

Miro is angry about being forsaken by his god. He gets the chance to take his anger out on the real god of pro wrestling. Apologies to Kenny Omega and super not apologies to JBL and Moose, but that’s exactly what Bryan Danielson is. It kills me that he’s going to lose, but there is no one better to hand him an L. Bryan wins while Miro continues to look for his redemption.

CM Punk vs. Eddie Kingston

I was watching Rampage with a native New Yorker and told them that they might like Eddie because of how, you know, New York he is. When Eddie steamed down to the ring, they barely looked up from their phone to say “Ehh, I don’t like him.” But then he started to talk and everything changed. Eddie connects like no other. One promo is all he needs. One video package is all he needs. No one in pro wrestling makes you feel their words like he does. We can feel his passion and his desperation — the type of desperation that can drive people to do incredible things.

Eddie significantly outclasses most everyone on the microphone, so it’s just wonderful to see him paired up with someone on his level. Punk was gone for such a long time and his return has been mostly happy — so much so that I forgot what an engaged and on-edge Punk sounds like. It was never his ring work that made him the star he was and now once again seems to be. Rather, it was the character and mic work that took him to the stratosphere. Leave it to Eddie Kingston to let this version of Punk begin to show himself. Make no mistake that Punk is the heel here. Calling someone a bum to their face in an arena full of people is extremely good heeling, pal.

Beating Punk here wouldn’t just be Eddie’s signature moment in AEW, but arguably the most significant moment of his entire career. Eddie has made it clear that he doesn’t care if he wins or loses. He’s only concerned with hurting Punk. This normally would reek of a Punk roll-up win followed by a post-match beatdown or something like that, but the timing of the incredible Player’s Tribune article from earlier this week (if you haven’t read it please do and if you have read it, read it again) makes me wonder if it’s time to put the rocket on the King’s back?

The upset special: Eddie goes over.

Christian Cage and Jurassic Express (Jungle Boy & Luchasaurus) (w/ Marko Stunt) vs. SuperKliq (Adam Cole and The Young Bucks) in a falls count anywhere match

Is this the match where Luchasaurus finally, finally proves he’s more than just a guy in a dinosaur mask that doesn’t hit his cues? Dear readers, I assure you, it is not. If it’s not there now, it certainly never will be. I fully acknowledge the gimmick is not for me and the gimmick is really all he is. He’s hidden behind Jungle Boy and kept largely to “hot” tags, but the constant overexposure is confusing. He is significantly outclassed by the other five participants in this match and there is no hiding a talent gap like that on a PPV. The rest of them will be wrestling a PWG main event while he counts to three before completely whiffing on a spin kick.

Look, this is going to be fun and probably good but Cole has been in AEW for three months and has only really engaged with Jurassic Express. This is rapidly approaching Kofi Kingston/Dolph Ziggler levels of repetition here. Understanding that not everyone can do everything and that there is only so much room at the top of the card, this is still a story that has significantly overstayed its welcome. I’m done with it, you are done with it, we are all done with it. The SuperKliq wins. Can we please move on?

Cody and PAC vs. Andrade El Idolo and Malakai Black

Silly me thinking I could make it through an AEW preview without writing about yet another Cody match. I had this largely done and ready to file when I saw that, yes, this had been announced for Full Gear.

In a way, I am conflicted. On one hand, I’m never going to get really upset at something that gets PAC, Andrade and Malakai on the card. On the other hand, Cody. But, hey, whatever. Life remains a slow march into the sea, nothing matters, etc., etc., etc.

This would be one heck of a main event segment on Dynamite, but is clearly forced into this card. Hopefully, Andrade and Black get the win so Malakai can move past Cody, but the more likely case is Cody and PAC taking this to even the Cody and Black score at 2-2 so they can blow it off in a tiebreaker. Cool. Yay.

Darby Allin (w/ Sting) vs. MJF (w/ Wardlow)

These are two of the supposed four pillars of AEW. (Big LOLs by including Sammy Guevara in that group and the biggest possible LOLs to anyone who bought that egregiously bad t-shirt.) This match has had a simple, by the book build — something we all can appreciate. Not everything needs to be complex and layered. Easy stories can be good and this is as easy as it gets: rich, cocky guy from New York who doesn’t get along with a melancholic SK8R BOI from the Pacific Northwest. Not everything needs to be a reflection on confidence, self worth, and identity. Sometimes it can just be “I don’t like you.”

I used a lot of my internet pixels on the first two matches in the column, so this one stays short. Allin is a rare type of wrestler in that he’s never really hurt by his losses. The crowd still loves him and they kind of add to his character, in a way. That, combined with the fact that MJF would be a perfect foil for (spoiler alert) one of Page’s first title defenses, means he gets the win on Saturday and moves toward that.

The Inner Circle (Chris Jericho, Jake Hager, TNT Champion Sammy Guevara, Santana & Ortiz) vs. Men of the Year (Scorpio Sky & Ethan Page) and American Top Team (Junior dos Santos, Andrei Arlovski, Dan Lambert)

As an unbiased, national wrestling writer who is in no way on the AEW payroll, I must speak the truth. I speak for the trees, for the trees have no tongues and I must unburden myself, and burden you, my wonderful and beautiful readers, with my truth. The truth that The Inner Circle has long since served its purpose and is past its expiration date. I know that everyone in AEW needs to be in a faction, or associated with a group or whatever, but this particular one can’t end soon enough.

When AEW first started, this group was necessary. They existed to be the foil for any babyface on the roster and now, what are they doing? I’s either at best, doing nothing for the individual (Hager, Jericho) or, in the case of Santana & Ortiz, actively hampering them. They don’t get enough of a chance to shine which is a real shame. They are so much more than the requisite tag team in a mid-card faction.

Your mileage may vary on Lambert, but it would be an outright lie to say the man can’t work a microphone. I didn’t know who he was when he first spoke on AEW, but I immediately hated (and kind of loved) him. But wow, is this just not it. I don’t really understand the weird obsession wrestling seems to have with current and former MMA guys. What is the cross-section of the audience that both loves Jericho and Dos Santos? That is a genuine question and not sarcasm veiled in a rhetorical one. I truly don’t know and don’t get it. I love wrestling and have almost no interest in MMA so I just don’t understand why these guys get long TV segments every week, especially at the expense of *checks notes* literally anyone else.

This is the “Paul Wight Memorial catch up on your Twitter timeline special” match of the evening. Inner Circle wins.

AEW Tag Team Champions The Lucha Bros vs. FTR title match

When I say I can’t wait for this, my pals, I am excited. This is a level of excitement that is usually reserved for when I see the late night food arrive at a wedding reception. FTR calls themselves the greatest tag team of all time. I’m not going to argue the validity of that statement because doing so is nothing but shouting into the void. What I will use this space to do is to submit the following hot take to the academy: the Lucha Bros are the best big match tag team in the world. When the stakes are the highest, they show up. Of course they’ve been aided by having some incredible dance partners, but Fenix and Penta constantly put on historically memorable performances on the biggest stages.

Their affinity for the bright lights pairs them perfectly with FTR, a tag team that made their name wrestling in some of the best tag team matches in NXT history. Their no frills, grounded offense is the ideal complement to the Lucha Bros flying around the ring. No one is better at building heat for big spots like FTR and no one is better at delivering in those big spots than the Lucha Bros. Two great tastes that go great together. We really do love to see it.

FTR has all of the heat in this match and the Bros just won the belts. There’s no way they lose them Saturday.

AEW Women’s Champion Dr. Britt Baker, DMD vs. Tay Conti title match

A good thing: your champion is a bonafide star. A slightly less good thing: your champion is such a star that she dwarfs everyone else in her division. A significantly less good thing: your company hasn’t dedicated enough time to building up credible challengers. The simplest solution is to make more stars. And if it were me, I would simply put women on TV more and build those stars :). The top five “ranked” women in AEW are:

  1. Tay Conti: We’ll get to her
  2. Jade Cargill: Not quite there yet
  3. Thunder Rosa: Coming off of injury
  4. Nyla Rose: We know who and what she is and we’ve done this already
  5. Kris Statlander: Hasn’t had a non-Dark singles match since May

That is, in order, the no. 1 contender, someone who is not ready in the ring, someone coming off an injury, someone who isn’t quite good enough, and someone who hasn’t wrestled a non-Dark singles match since May. So, yeah. This is not a reflection of the talent on the roster, but a reflection of AEW not providing enough screen time to create a challenger with enough gravitas to take down the dentist. Lord knows that there has to be a 15-minute Inner Circle segment every week instead of building towards that, so I get it (I super don’t get it).

That aside, Conti is the complete package. She’s someone AEW should be throwing their full weight behind. She’s going to have this title one day. But that day is not coming this Saturday. It is emphatically NOT coming this Saturday because Baker is still doing it whenever she gets screen time. With a little more time and a little better build, Tay could do the damn thing. Oh well, maybe next time. Once again, Baker retains.

AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. Hangman Page title match

“You better hold on tight to it. You got ten days.”

With eleven words, Adam Page showed he’s ready for this. Talent-wise, he’s been ready. But character wise? That had been an entirely different story. Recapping his character arc since AEW’s inception has already been done elsewhere and been done far better than I ever could so I’m not going to do that here.

Hangman returned emboldened and complete with the most powerful strength there is: dad strength. This is a different Adam Page. One that is focused, and, more importantly, one that finally, finally believes in himself and believes he is worthy of top billing. He believes he is worthy of being champion. The confidence is oozing out of him. At no other point in his AEW career could he have pulled off the ten days line. He is fully actualized and fully realized.

Kenny is the only person he can take the title from. Not just based on their unique and intertwined history, but because he’s such a slime puppy. It’s a testament to his character work that someone who people usually are dying to cheer for are completely turned off. There will be no split crowd. There will be no “both these guys” chant. Kenny Omega has created the perfect foil for the returning hero to conquer. He has created the perfect environment to make Page’s ascension to the top as impactful as it can be.

One of the clips making the rounds on the world wide web this week is Bully Ray saying Hangman needs more heat on him before he gets strapped up. Miss me with that garbage. The egregiousness of that take can not be overstated. Should Daniel Bryan’s coronation not have come at WrestleMania because there was a chance it could be 3% bigger? Please, bro. The crowd comes unglued as soon as Hangman’s music hits and the only thing they want more than him winning the title is for Bully Ray’s antiquated takes to go away.

The title of this column gave it away, but here it is. For the annals of Wrestling Observer dot com history: Hangman Adam Page leaves Minneapolis as AEW World champion.

November 15, 2021 Observer Newsletter: Death of Angelo Mosca, Full Gear & Survivor Series previews

It was November 30, 1963, nearly 58 years ago, but in Canadian Football lore, it was a moment that has more than stood the test of time.

It was the 51st Grey Cup game, Canadian Football’s version of the Super Bowl, although years before there was a such thing as the Super Bowl. It was held at Empire Field in Vancouver, the first time the city ever hosted the game. The local Western Conference champion British Columbia Lions were facing the Eastern Conference champions, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

The Lions were led by quarterback Joe Kapp, who in college at the University of California was the roommate of future wrestling Hall of Famer King Curtis Iaukea, and years later would become a major NFL star, leading the Minnesota Vikings to the Super Bowl. But the star of the team, the player Lions fans of that era remember above all others, was running back Willie “The Wisp” Fleming.

Current subscribers click here to continue reading.

Fight Game: Oliver Copp previews AEW Full Gear

Joining me on a bonus episode of the Fight Game Podcast is Oliver Copp, someone who is very familiar to longtime fans of this website as the co-host of Tough Talk, part of the commentary team for AEW in Germany and the TNM wrestling simulator.

Oliver talks about how AEW brought him back to wrestling before we run down all the storylines leading into Saturday’s Full Gear along with a full preview of the card.

Click below to listen.

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Speak Now: Lance Storm & Denise Salcedo’s AEW Full Gear prediction show

Join on-air personality Denise Salcedo on a very special edition of Speak Now Pro Wrestling as she is joined by very special guest, pro wrestling legend and member of the Empire, Lance Storm!

Together, they run down the entire card for AEW Full Gear, share their honest thoughts and opinions, and try and predict some of the outcomes. 

AEW Full Gear card:

  • Pre-show match: Nyla Rose and Jamie Hayter vs. Hikaru Shida and Thunder Rosa
  • PAC and Cody Rhodes vs. Malakai Black and Andrade El Idolo
  • Christian Cage & Jurassic Express vs. SuperKliq (Adam Cole & The Young Bucks) in a falls count anywhere match
  • Darby Allin vs. MJF
  • AEW Tag Team Champions Lucha Brothers vs. FTR title match
  • The Inner Circle (Chris Jericho, Jake Hager, Sammy Guevara, Santana & Ortiz) vs. Men of the Year (Ethan Page & Scorpio Sky) and American Top Team (Junior dos Santos, Andrei Arlovski & Dan Lambert) in a street fight
  • CM Punk vs. Eddie Kingston
  • Bryan Danielson vs. Miro in the finals of the AEW World title eliminator tournament
  • AEW Women’s Champion Britt Baker vs. Tay Conti title match
  • AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. Hangman Page title match

Denise will be returning on Sunday to do an AEW Full Gear post-show which you can watch on YouTube along with this show.

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Mat Men Podcast: Full speed to AEW Full Gear

Today on Mat Men, Andrew Zarian and Rich Stambolian are back to discuss all of this week’s biggest pro wrestling news ahead of AEW Full Gear this Saturday.

Last week, WWE released a large amount of talent and some of the reasons for the releases will surprise you. We do a deep dive into this and what it means for the company, plus the ramifications it has on NXT and what we think the next move should be with that brand. 

WWE is heading into Survivor Series and we have all the latest match lineups along with the possible break-up of Rey Mysterio and his son, Dominik. 

AEW is heading into Full Gear with a packed show. We break down the matches and give you our predictions for this Saturday night. We also break down all the possible scenarios involving the World title.  

We also answer your mailbag questions on the latest Mat Men!

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Tony Khan AEW media call: NWA frustration, Owen Cup, Bray Wyatt

AEW head Tony Khan talked to the media for an hour Thursday to help hype up Saturday’s Full Gear pay-per-view — a call that included him airing some frustrations with the NWA on not recognizing him enough for what he did for their Empower pay-per-view.

When asked about his own women’s division, Khan said he “doesn’t get enough credit” for both sending AEW talent to the show and paying them, adding that he insinuated to the company that they should make that known. 

“It’s kind of like when you pay for a dinner and no one thanks you,” he said before later bringing up again that he has made great contributions to all women’s shows and “they should have done a better job in telling people that.”

Khan was asked again about any announcements regarding the Owen Hart Memorial Cup with him saying he plans on announcing some news on the Dynamite or Rampage after Full Gear as he didn’t want to distract away from the card. He reiterated that winning the tournament and the cup was going to be treated as something big.

Other notable news and quotes:

  • He likes the four-hour length of the pay-per-view main cards.
  • The last time he saw Windham Rotunda/Bray Wyatt, it was briefly at last year at Chris Jericho’s birthday party. He called him both a “wonderful person and great talent,” but was non-committal on whether he would be coming to AEW.
  • He said AEW is planning on coming to the West Coast in 2022 for both Dynamite and Rampage. The goal is to have Double or Nothing in Las Vegas once again.
  • He said that if he sees things on BTE that he likes, he will work to bring it over to Dynamite, citing the John Silver/Adam Cole interactions and Hangman Page’s “flawed hero” drinking character.
  • He didn’t say whether he was interested in signing any Ring of Honor talent or buying the tape library but to stay tuned to his product because you never know.
  • He said there will likely be some visual tweaks when Dynamite moves to TBS in January.
  • He confirmed that they will hold a Battle of the Belts show and said they are going to kick off 2022 strong.
  • He credited Sonjay Dutt with helping put together the Lio Rush/Dante Martin vs. Matt Sydal/Lee Moriarty match Wednesday. He loves Rush and after he retired, he was in his ear to get him to return.
  • He said his relationship with New Japan is great and likely that more talent is to come as a result.
  • He reiterated the importance of the TBS title and to think of it as a sibling title to the TNT title.

To listen to the entire media call below, click below.

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Rhodes & PAC vs. Andrade & Black set for AEW Full Gear

Two tag team matches were added to Saturday’s AEW Full Gear during Wednesday’s Dynamite, including the featured match for The Buy-In pre-show.

The main card will now see Cody Rhodes and PAC against Andrade El Idolo and Malakai Black in a match that has been brewing for a few weeks.

Rhodes and Black recently wrapped up a three-match series of singles matches while Andrade and PAC have gone to battle twice. After the last match, Black appeared and blew mist in PAC’s face which drew out Rhodes to run them off. All four men came to blows Wednesday on Dynamite after PAC’s win over Dax Harwood — a brawl that also included FTR and the Lucha Bros.

In the other newly-added match that will act as a preview for the next round of the TBS title tournament, former AEW Women’s Champion Hikaru Shida will team with Thunder Rosa to take on former AEW Women’s Champion Nyla Rose and Jamie Hayter. Shida will square off with Rose while Rosa will battle Hayter in the tournament’s second round.

Here’s the current card:

  • AEW World Champion Kenny Omega vs. Hangman Page title match
  • AEW Women’s Champion Britt Baker vs. Tay Conti title match
  • AEW Tag Team Champions Lucha Bros vs. FTR title match
  • AEW World title eliminator tournament finals: Miro vs. Bryan Danielson
  • MJF vs. Darby Allin
  • CM Punk vs. Eddie Kingston
  • SuperKliq (Adam Cole and The Young Bucks) vs. Jurassic Express and Christian Cage
  • Minneapolis street fight: Inner Circle vs. American Top Team
  • Cody Rhodes and PAC vs. Andrade El Idolo and Malakai Black
  • Buy-In pre-show: Nyla Rose and Jamie Hayter vs. Hikaru Shida and Thunder Rosa

Inner Circle makes ATT selections for AEW Full Gear street fight

Fulfilling a stipulation stemming out of last week, The Inner Circle selected five members of American Top Team during Wednesday’s Dynamite to face them in a Minneapolis street fight at AEW Full Gear — one of which will be ATT founder Dan Lambert.

It will be Lambert, Ethan Page, Scorpio Sky and former UFC heavyweight champions Junior Dos Santos and Andrei Arlovski against Chris Jericho, TNT Champion Sammy Guevara, Santana, Ortiz and Jake Hager at the Saturday, November 13th pay-per-view.

This will not be Lambert’s first match as he competed in two 2017 matches for Impact Wrestling. In one, he teamed with Bobby Lashley to defeat James Storm and Moose followed by a singles win over Storm in a career vs. career match. Arlovski will be making his pro wrestling debut.

Last week, Guevara defended his title against Page where the stipulation was that the Circle could select the team members if Guevara won. Had he lost, Guevara would have had to leave the team forever.

Dos Santos, a former UFC heavyweight champion, made his pro wrestling debut teaming with Sky and Page against Jericho, Hager and Guevara on the October 15th Rampage from Miami, Florida.

The two factions have been at odds since September.

Three matches added to AEW Full Gear

Three matches have been added to the Saturday, November 13 AEW Full Gear pay-per-view lineup. 

The AEW World Tag Team Championships will be on the line, as The Lucha Bros (Penta El Zero Miedo and Rey Fenix) defend against FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler). Penta and Fenix agreed to put the titles on the line at Full Gear in a backstage promo on this week’s episode of Dynamite. 

The Inner Circle will face American Top Team in a ten-man tag Minneapolis street fight. Sammy Guevara defeated ATT’s Ethan Page on Dynamite to retain the TNT Championship, retain his place in The Inner Circle, plus secure the match against ATT at Full Gear. Following Guevara’s win, Chris Jericho challenged ATT’s Dan Lambert to declare which members of ATT will compete in the match. 

After weeks of being called out by MJF, Darby Allin responded on Dynamite. Allin and Sting attacked MJF and his The Pinnacle stablemates Shawn Spears and Wardlow. Allin said that it was time for him to make MJF pay physically at Full Gear. 

Here is the Full Gear lineup so far: 

AEW Full Gear, Saturday, November 13, Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 7 p.m. Eastern time —

  • AEW World Championship: Kenny Omega (c) vs. Hangman Page
  • AEW Women’s World Championship: Britt Baker (c) vs. Tay Conti
  • AEW World Tag Team Championship: Lucha Brothers vs. FTR
  • AEW World title eliminator tournament finals: Jon Moxley or Orange Cassidy vs. Bryan Danielson or Eddie Kingston
  • Minneapolis street fight: Inner Circle vs. American Top Team
  • Darby Allin vs. MJF