Buddy Matthews makes surprise return outside of AEW

AEW’s Buddy Matthews made his return to a wrestling ring after nearly 15 months away and confirmed his official comeback timeline.

Matthews returned to the ring on the first day of the World Series Wrestling’s Rise Against tour at the Adelaide Entertainment Centre, Australia. He attacked Donovan Dijak after his victory in a four-way match against Moose, Matt Hayter and Matt Riddle for the WSW Championship. He entered the ring in a black hoodie and steel chair in hand, striking multiple blows to Dijak. He then proceeded to address fans and announce he will be medically cleared to compete in October.

“In case you’ve forgotten my name is Buddy Matthews! And I’m the guy that kicked down the door for every Australian to make it overseas. Now let’s get one thing straight, I might not be cleared now but in October I will be. And I might just take all the gold because hell’s frozen over and you just can’t stop the unstoppable,” stated Matthews.

Matthews suffered an ankle injury during his entrance at AEW Grand Slam Australia in February 2025. Despite subsequent ligament and nerve damage to his foot, Matthews competed in his match against Kazuchika Okada for the AEW Continental Championship.

February 23, 2026 Observer Newsletter: WWE WrestleMania ticket sales, AEW Grand Slam Australia review, Rousey vs. Carano news

Image: AEW

The new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter has arrived.

Dave Meltzer leads off with an early look at next weekend’s WWE Elimination Chamber and an update on WWE WrestleMania 42 ticket sales.

He also recaps last weekend’s AEW Grand Slam Australia as well as a very early look at next month’s AEW Revolution.

He dives deep into the big fight announcement this week of Gina Carano vs. Ronda Rousey, but not for the UFC.

Dave also does a follow-up obit of sorts for The Great Mephisto with more information.

All that, plus the news of the pro wrestling & MMA weeks awaits.

Click here to read (sub needed)

AEW Grand Slam Australia ratings see big increase

Image: AEW

Last Saturday’s AEW Grand Slam Australia was a big ratings success despite strong competition from both the Olympics and the Slam Dunk competition as part of NBA All-Star Weekend.

According to Dave Meltzer, the extended edition from Sydney brought in 561,000 viewers, up 173,000 from the previous week’s regular edition of Collision. The show was two-and-a-half hours vs. the usual two hours.

The 18-49 demo was a .10 which was AEW’s largest number in that time slot in more than two months as was the total overall viewership.

The show was aired on tape delay and was headlined by AEW World Champion MJF defending against Brody King in addition to a World title eliminator, a ladder match for the TNT title, and more.

The data doesn’t include HBO Max viewers and is also following the latest updated Nielsen Data+Big Panel changes that took effect on January 23.

Last 10 weeks of AEW Collision ratings

Date18-49Viewers
11/27/20250.06285,000
12/6/20250.03267,000
12/13/2025UnavailableUnavailable
12/17/20250.05333,000
12/25/20250.04217,000
1/3/20260.03241,000
1/10/20260.03271,000
1/17/2026UnavailableUnavailable
1/24/20260.02253,000
1/31/20260.07492,000
2/7/20260.07388,000
2/14/2026*0.10561,000
Last 10 weeks of reported data0.05330,800

*Grand Slam edition

WOL: Weekend news & notes, ‘Highland Games & Hippodromes’ author interview

Image: AEW

With Bryan Alvarez away on vacation, “Filthy” Tom Lawlor hosts the Monday edition of Wrestling Observer Live.

Tom talks about all the results and happenings from Saturday’s AEW Grand Slam Australia, and Friday’s WWE SmackDown & TNA No Surrender.

Also, author Ian Douglass joins Tom to talk all about his latest book, Highland Games & Hippodromes: Scottish Identity and Influence at the Dawn of the American Pro Wrestling Industry.

A fun show as always so check it out~!

Click below to listen (sub needed)

WOR: AEW Grand Slam recap, Cain Velasquez

Garrett Gonzales is back with Dave Meltzer, subbing for Bryan Alvarez who is on vacation. My Fight Game Podcast co-host John LaRocca also joined us for the very first WOR + Fight Game collaboration.

We recapped AEW Grand Slam and Friday Night’s SmackDown.

We also discussed the weekend news including the following:

  • CNN Business covering AEW and Brody King
  • Cain Velasquez out of jail
  • Mistico discussing winning the WON Wrestler of the Year
  • Bianca Belair’s surgery

Click here to listen (sub needed) or watch on YouTube

The IInspiration make AEW debut at House Rules in Australia

Former WWE and TNA Tag Team Champions The IInspiration made their AEW debut at Sunday’s House Rules event in Brisbane, Australia.

Following their departure from TNA last month, speculation began around Cassie Lee & Jessie McKay potentially joining AEW and possibly appearing at Saturday’s Grand Slam Australia given they are from Australia. That did not happen, but it did on Sunday.

The two defeated Frankie B and Aysha after which former TNA Knockouts tag team champions officially announced themselves as “officially All Elite.” Their last match occurred on the January 15 episode of TNA Impact.

As of this writing, AEW head Tony Khan has not officially announced they have been signed.

The 33-year-old Lee first started in 2009 in PWA with the 36-year-old McKay whose career began in 2007. The two began their WWE NXT run in 2015, eventually adopting their new names of Peyton Royce and Billie Kay, and were called up to the main roster in 2018 where they remained until March 2021.

Identity of woman who kissed Andrade at AEW Grand Slam Australia

At the recently concluded AEW Grand Slam Australia, Andrade El Idolo became a talking point when he stole a kiss from a woman present ringside.

Midway through his match with Hangman Adam Page, fans caught the 36-year-old walking up to the ringside barricades to click selfies with fans. While doing so, a woman requested El Idolo to click a selfie with her. However, while he clicked the picture, the woman proceeded to kiss him on his cheeks.

Shortly after, a report from Fightful Select emerged, which confirmed the identity of the woman. The woman who kissed El Idolo was revealed to be Aysha, an Australian indie wrestler.

According to Cagematch and her social media, the 26-year-old Aysha was trained at Flatbacks Wrestling School, which is run by Shawn Spears and Tyler Breeze.

She performs as both a singles and tag-team wrestler, with her latest match occurring on February 13th at PWA Black Label Colosseum 2026. She has also won multiple titles across different independent wrestling promotions. She was also recently in a tag team match against the Sisters of Sin (Julia Hart & Skye Blue) on a ROH TV Taping in Australia, as well as in a tag team match against the debuting IInspiration.

The Australian wrestler is next set to be in a match involving Indi Hartwell and Tarlee, later this month on February 28th, 2026.

The former WWE NXT Champion spending moments or clicking photos with fans has become a running gag in AEW recently. With it occurring several times before on Dynamite, things took a different turn at Grand Slam Australia. Page also joined the sequence when he proceeded to push El Idolo away and click a photo with Aysha as well.

New signee aligns with Megabad at AEW Grand Slam Australia

More than two months after signing her, AEW finally unveiled Lena Kross at Saturday’s Grand Slam Australia.

The 30-year-old appeared after the Babes of Wrath successfully defended their AEW Women’s Tag Team titles against Megabad’s Megan Bayne and Penelope Ford. After the match, Kross ran in and laid out Cameron and then assisted Bayne and Ford in a post-match attack on the champions. She and Bayne had a staredown before Ford brought them together with the title belt which they posed with.

Kross is from Australia and has been a pro since 2017. She made her AEW debut on a July 2025 edition of Collision, losing to Kris Statlander in just 90 seconds. She then appeared on an ROH dark match in September 2025, defeating fellow new signee Lacey Lane.

AEW head Tony Khan later made the signing official on X.

Kross wrestled once for TNA back in July 2025 who reportedly had interest in signing her before AEW got her first. She hasn’t wrestled anywhere since last December, losing to Gabby Forza at a JCW event. She has both competed against and teamed with Bayne in the past.

AEW Grand Slam Australia live results: MJF vs. Brody King

Tonight’s episode of AEW Collision will be Grand Slam Australia, taped earlier in the day from Sydney, Australia.

Jon Moxley will defend the AEW Continental Championship against Konosuke Takeshita.

The AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championships will also be on the line, as the Babes of Wrath, Harley Cameron and Willow Nightingale, defend against MegaBad’s Megan Bayne and Penelope Ford.

Hangman Adam Page will face Andrade El Idolo, with the winner earning an AEW World Championship match at Revolution.

In a mixed tornado tag team match, Orange Cassidy and Toni Storm will team up against Wheeler Yuta and Marina Shafir of the Death Riders. The stipulation states that whoever takes the fall for their team will be shaved bald.

Kyle Fletcher will defend the TNT Championship against Mark Briscoe in a ladder match.

In the main event, AEW World Champion MJF will defend the title against Brody King.

Our live coverage begins at 8 p.m. Eastern.

Not quite live, but taped earlier today in Sydney, Australia. 

Tony Schiavone & Excalibur were on commentary.

Jon Moxley vs. Konosuke Takeshita for the AEW Continental Championship 

The participants in the match soaked up dueling “Let’s Go Moxley/Takeshita” chants for the first 30 seconds of the match. Moxley went to an armbar, but Takeshita took Moxley’s legs out from under him and locked in a side headlock. Moxley escaped and went back to the arm. Takeshita countered a wrist lock with one of his own. 

Moxley escaped and hit Takeshita with a chop, and that set off an exchange of chops between them. Moxley ended that with a kick to the gut and went for a piledriver, but Takeshita escaped. Takeshita went for a flying clothesline which Moxley ducked, and Takeshita tumbled to the floor. Moxley followed Takeshita out with a tope, almost overshooting Takeshita but still taking him down.

They brawled on the floor, where Moxley whipped Takeshita into the barricades. Takeshita whipped Moxley into the barricade and charged into him with a big boot. 

Back in the ring, Moxley caught Takeshita with a boot and drove him down to the mat with a piledriver. Takeshita battled back, so Moxley thumbed him in the eye and dropkicked him to the floor. 

After a commercial, Takeshita hit Moxley with a a boot and the flying lariat. A Blue Thunder Bomb got Takeshita a near fall. Takeshita raked Moxley’s back while the battled on the top turnbuckle. Takeshita went for a powerbomb out of the corner, but Moxley blocked it. Moxley let up, and the Takeshita walked him out of the corner with a Last Ride style powerbomb for a near fall. 

Moxley caught Takeshita with a cutter out of nowhere. Moxley curb stomped Takeshita on the apron dn waited for the ref to count Takeshita out. Takeshita barley beat the count, sliding into the ring and into a another curb stomp. Moxley locked in the bulldog choke with five minutes remaining. 

Takeshita started to fade, and Moxley added a body scissors. Moxley transitioned to an cross-arm breaker, but Takeshita got to the ropes. Excalibur clarified on commentary that a Continental title match has a 20 minute time limit on TV,  but a 60 minute time limit on ppv. 

Takeshita hit an exploder suplex and a knee strike  for a near fall. Takeshita hit a another exploder suplex for another near fall. Takeshita missed a knee and both guys exchanged sleeper attempts until Moxley spiked Takeshita down with a Death Rider for a near fall. 

Takeshita escaped a second Death Rider DDT and exchanged headbutts with Moxley with one minute remaining. Moxley was bleeding from the nose, and they were both staggered by the headbutts momentarily. Moxley hit a lariat for a near fall. Takeshita hit a forearm for a near fall, then followed up with a knee strike to the back of the head for another near fall just as the time limit expired. 

Match Result: Moxley DREW with Takeshita, 20:00 minute time limit (17:05 aired on HBO Max). 

That was tremendous.

After the match, Moxley and Takeshita went nose to nose and started brawling again. Takeshita gave Moxley the raging fire, and I suspect this will continue at Revolution. Probably why Excalibur dropped the nugget on commentary that a Continental title match can be 60 minutes on pay-per-view.

— In a pretaped segment, Thekla and Kris Statlander cut promos on each other covered in blood from Wednesday’s strap match. 

The Babes of Wrath (Harley Cameron & Willow Nightingale) vs. Megabad (Penelope Ford & Megan Bayne) for the AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship

The was a not great looking spot early on where Ford was supposed to get her knees up when Harley splashed her, but it looked really bad. Nonetheless, Cameron got trapped in the heel corner and worked over by Bayne while Ford taunted the crowd. Cameron dodged a charge from Bayne and tagged in Nightingale. Nightingale suplexed Ford and Bayne. They dropped to the floor, and Nightingale followed them out with a cannonball. 

Back in the ring, Nightingale came off the middle rope with a dropkick on both her opponents. 

After a break, Cameron tried for a German suplex on Ford. Bayne stopped her, so Cameron hit her with a spinning DDT. Cameron came off the top with a crossbody on both her opponents.

Bayne set up Cameron on her shoulders for the Doomsday Device. Nightingale stopped Ford from climbing the ropes, so Ford hit her with a Asai Moonsault. Cameron cradled Bayne. Cameron locked Bayne in a half crab, but Ford broke that up. All four women were brawling in the ring, then Cameron hit Bayne with a Canadian Destroyer! 

While all four women brawled in the ring, Nightingale sent Bayne into Ford. Cameron and Nightingale dropped on Bayne with a backpack senton for two. Nightingale hit Bayne with a death valley driver. Cameron missed a swanton bomb. Ford caught Cameron with a stunner, and Bayne het her with a lariat. Ford went for a moonsault on Cameron. Cameron got out of the way of the moonsault, then caught Ford with a backslide to get the pinfall. 

Match Result: The Babes of Wrath beat Megabad when Cameron pinned Ford. 

After the match, Australian independent wrestler Lena Kross (who might be bigger than Bayne) ran in and dropped Cameron. Kross and Megabad laid out the Babes of Wrath and stood tall with all their title belts. I’d be all in on Lena Kross and Megan Bayne as a power team.

Andrade El Idolo (w/ Don Callis) vs. “Hangman” Adam Pagen for a World Title Match at AEW Revolution.

Of course, Callis joined the commentary team. Both guys started out exchanging hard chops, and Page got the advantage with a forearm. Andrade tried for a something with a handspring, but Page kicked him in the gut. El Idolo avoided a Buckshot Lariat and taunted Page while being “el traquilo” in the ropes. The fight went to the floor, where Andrade stopped to get a selfie with a young lady. Page then hit El Idolo with a boot and got a selfie with the young lady as well. 

Back in the ring, El Idolo backed Page into the corner with chops. Page came back with a fallaway slam for a near fall. Page went for a superplex, but El Idolo blocked it and went for a sunset flip out of the corner. Page blocked that and tried for a tombstone which El Idolo blocked. Page went for a springboard off the middle rope, but El Idolo jumped onto the ropes with him, then yanked him down with a Spanish Fly. 

After a break, Andrade was firmly in control. Page came back and exchanged forearms with Andrade. Andrade went for a suplex, but Page landed on his feet and caught El Idolo with a lariat. 

Page charged into the corner with a lariat. Page dropped El Idolo with a popup powerbomb and El Idolo almost came down head first. They brawled onto the ring apron, where Page went for a Dead Eye. El Idolo countered that into a sunset flip, but Page rolled through and hit a lariat. 

Page came off the top with a lariat for a near fall. Andrade came back with the Three Amigos rolling vertical suplexes and got a near fall. The crowd broke out in an “Eddie!” chant.  El Idolo took too long going for a moonsault and Page rolled out of the way, but Andrade landed on his feet and hit a standing moonsault for two. Page caught Andrande with a  springboard lariat. Andrade tried for a springboard tornio on the floor, but Page caught him and threw him backwards into the ring barricade.  

Back in the ring, Page went for the Buckshot Lariat. Andrade was too far away and caught Page with a back elbow for two. Andrade hit a meteora in the corner, then the hammerlock DDT, but only got a two count. Andrade went for the DDT a second time, but Page countered and eventually got Andrade with a  Dead Eye. 

Don Callis left the commentary table and got the attention of Aubrey Edwards (the referee). Andrade went for a low blow, but Page blocked it and hit a low blow of his own. Page then hit the Buckshot Lariat and got the pinfall. 

Match Result: Adam Page pinned El Idolo after a Buckshot Lariat (13:31 aired). 

The rare AEW match for me where I felt like they went home too early. Nonetheless, this was great and now it’s Hangman vs. ???? for the World Title at AEW Revolution

— “The First Test” by Speed is the official theme song for Grand Slam Australia, and Speed is in the audience tonight! 

Orange Cassidy & “Timeless” Toni Storm vs. Wheeler Yuta & Marina Shafir

Somebody has a sense of humor going from a band called “Speed” to Orange Cassidy’s sloth-like entrance. Cassidy and Strom attacked Yuta and Shafir in the crowd as they made their entrance, and they paired off and fought in the stands. Yuta piledrove Storm on a platform where some television equipment was set up, making the match two on one. 

Luther carried Storm to the back, while the remaining competitors in the match made it to the ring. Since the match was no-dq, it was now two on one. Yuta got a near fall after a German supelx. 

After a commercial, Storm stormed back to the ring and kicked Wheeler in the Yutas, then suplexed Shafir in the ring. Storm and Cassidy celebrate with a dance while simultaneously backhanding Shafir. Shafir fought back but walked into an Air Raid Crash from Cassidy. Wheeler let Cassidy cover Shafir to save his own hair, but Shafir kicked out. 

Cassidy caught Yuta with Stundog Millionaire and a tornado DDT. Shafir almost caught Cassidy with a quick pin, then went to work on his ankle. Storm caught Yuta with a crossface chicken wing. Soon, both women broke their holds to go after each other. Shafir caught Storm square in the face with a kick, and Yuta hit Storm with a Busaiku Knee for two. 

The crowd was chanting something I couldn’t make out, but it was disparaging towards Yuta. Yuta went for the knee on Cassidy, but he ducked and Yuta took out Shafir. Storm suplexed Yuta, then nailed him with the hip attack in the corner. Cassidy hit the Orange Punch, Storm hit the Storm Zero and the match ended the only way it could have. 

Match Result: Cassidy and Storm were victorious when Storm pinned Yuta, and Storm got his head shaved (8:24 aired) 

After the match, Mina Shirakawa brought out a stool as the crowd chanted “Bald!” at Yuta. Luther was dressed as a barber. Yuta tried to leave, but Jon Moxley came through the crowd to send Yuta back to the ring and take his medicine. Crowd chanted “You deserve it!” Shirawaka got the honor of taking some of Yuta’s hair off first (as revenege for Yuta cutting her hair earlier), then Storm clipped some off of Yuta’s head as well. Cassidy got electric clippers to shave his head.

“I’m sorry.” “No you’re not.” “You’re right, I’m not.”

Cassidy then handed the clippers off to Luther. Storm finished up with the clippers and asked “how do you like that, you bald b@st@rd?” They left Wheeler with some of his hair, but he’s going to need to shave it all off. Although I do think a funny bit would be stranding the now-bald Yuta in Sydney doesn’t match his passport photo.

Mark Briscoe vs. Kyle Fletcher (w/ Don Callis) for the TNT Championship in a Ladder Match 

It took about 37 seconds for the fight to go to the floor. Briscoe hit Fletcher with a sommersault cannonball. They brawled around ringside, and Fletcher caught Briscoe with a half-and-half suplex. 

Fletcher was the first to grab a ladder, but Briscoe cut him off with a dropkick. Briscoe suplexed Fletcher on the floor. Briscoe climbed the ladder (set up on the floor), but Fletcher caught up to him and slammed Briscoe onto the apron (Briscoe actually hit the ropes and kind of bounced off the apron to the floor, which ironically looked safer). Fletcher then came off the ladder with a moonsault. 

Back in the ring, Fletcher lawn-darted Briscoe headfirst into the top of a ladder set up in the turnbuckle. Briscoe came up bleeding. Fetcher tried to climb the ladder to get the belt, but Briscoe caught up to him and more or less gave him a leg sweep off the ladder. 

After a break, a ladder bridge was set up on the floor between the ring apron and another ladder. Fletcher fell backwards onto it, and Briscoe came off the top with a Froggie Bow onto the ladder, which didn’t break. 

Briscoe went for the belt (which was up there very high), but Fletcher caught up to him. Fletcher was also bleeding. Fletcher powerbombed Briscoe off the ladder and through another ladder. 

Fletcher caught Briscoe with a superkick. Fletcher set up another ladder bridge in the ring between a ladder and the turnbuckles. Briscoe took a bite out of Fletcher and shouted “it tasted like shrimp on the barbie!” Callis (on commentary) deemed this culturally insensitive. Briscoe then put Fletcher through the ladder bridge with a Jay Driller. 

Briscoe climbed the ladder and got his hand on the belt, but Fletcher caught up to him. Fletcher gave Briscoe a twisting brainbuster off the top of the ladder. There were no referees holding the base of the ladder which made it doubly crazy. 

Fletcher started to climb, but Briscoe caught up to him. Briscoe set up a second ladder and both men fought on top of their respective ladders. Fletcher pushed over Briscoe’s ladder, and Briscoe took a not completely insane bump into the ropes and to the mat. Fletcher then pulled down the belt to retain the title. 

Match Result: Fletcher defeated Briscoe by grabbing the belt to retain the TNT Championship (13:03)

This show has been tremendous all night long.

Brody King v. Maxwell Jacob Friedman for the AEW World Championship

Arkady Aura is a great ring announcer. I just felt the need to point that out.  So to answer the question the world has been waiting for: yes the Australian crowd chanted, and you could hear it on TV, but it wasn’t as prominent as it was in Las Vegas. 

MJF got a headlock for a bit, but King came back with a clothesline. King chopped MJF in the corner. King press-slammed MJF out of the corner. King went for a cannonball in the corner, but MJF got out of the way. MJF took to working on King’s leg by rapping it against the ringpost. 

MJF tried of a knee bar, but King escaped. MJF clipped King in the knee, then busted out the kangaroo kick. The crowd popped, so MJF flipped them off. MJF followed King out to the floor with a tope suicida. 

Back in the ring, MJF avoided a senton and went to an ankle lock, MJF tied up King with a knee bar, but King broke the hold by getting to the ropes. 

After a break, King kicked MJF out of the ring and then hit him with a tope. Back in the ring, MJF went for a clothesline that King no-sold. King gave MJF a big back body drop. King tried for the cannonball again, but MJF rolled out of the way. King stopped himself and caught MJF with a sleeper, but MJF dropped down to the floor. 

On the floor, King set MJF up on a chair, then squashed him with a crossbody. Back in the ring, King finally hit the cannonball in the corner. But MJF kicked out at two. 

King went for the Gonzo Bomb, but MJF slipped out of it and locked in a sleeper. Referee Bryce Remsberg checked Brody’s arm. Bandido ran out to cheer on his partner, reminding him never to give up. King got back to his feet and fell back with MJF on his back. 

MJF tumbled to the floor. King ran the ropes for a dive, but MJF caught him and gave him a reverse hanging DDT, driving King into the edge of the ring apron. MJF went for a dive, but King caught him and sent him crashing into the barricade with a death valley driver. 

Both men were down on the floor, and the ref started to count them out. King drug MJF back into the ring at nine. MJF dug into his tights and found the Dynamite Diamond Ring. He went to use it, but Remberg caught him. They argued, and King leveled MJF with a right hand. MJF got back to his feet on the apron and King choked him out again with a hanging sleeper. MJF dropped to the floor “unconscious.” 

Back in the ring, King hit MJF with the Gonzo Bomb, but MJF kicked out at two. King charged at MJF, but he dropped down and tripped King into the ropes. MJF went after the knee again, yanking off King’s knee brace. MJF exposed King’s knee and bit it. 

King fought back and tried for a Gonzo Bomb on the apron, but couldn’t hold up MJF. King went for a hanging choke while sitting on the turnbuckle, but MJF broke that by going after the knee. MJF then pulled King into a tombstone and drove him into the ring apron. 

MJF pulled King back into the ring with a Heat Seeker and got the pinfall. 

Match Result: MJF pinned Brody King to retain the AEW World Championship (19:01 aired) 

Now it’s officially MJF v. Hangman Page for the AEW World Title at Revolution, and Page came out after the match with a contract. Page signed the contract and threw it at MJF’s feet. Page and MJF had a stand off. Page threatened to hit MJF, who dropped down. Page threw the pen down at MJF to sign the contract. 

Next Wednesday on Dynamite: Adam Page and MJF face off! Omega v. Strickland and the Brawling Birds debut! 

The main event was a bit of let down compared to the rest of the show, although the storytelling and psychology were spot on. It was by no means a bad match, but might have been hurt by its placement on the card. It felt like the crowd was burnt out by the end. 

Overall, this show was great and well worth going out of your way to check out if you had better Valentine’s Day plans than sitting in front of your television.

AEW Grand Slam Australia spoilers from Sydney

AEW Grand Slam took place today in Sydney, Australia.

Spoilers from the show were posted by various users on Reddit.

AEW Grand Slam Australia 2026 Spoilers

  • Jon Moxley vs. Konosuke Takeshita for the AEW Continental Championship went to a time-limit draw
  • The Babes of Wrath (Harley Cameron & Willow Nightingale) defeated MegaBad (Penelope Ford & Megan Bayne)
    • Lena Kross ran in after and joined MegaBad in an attack on the Babes of Wrath
  • Hangman Page defeated Andrade El Idolo to earn the number one contendership for the AEW World Championship
  • Toni Storm & Orange Cassidy defeated Wheeler Yuta & Marina Shafir
  • Kyle Fletcher defeated Mark Briscoe in a ladder match to retain his TNT Championship
    • Clips from after the match appear to show Fletcher with a new custom pink-strapped TNT title belt
  • MJF defeated Brody King to retain the AEW World Championship
    • The Sydney crowd chanted an anti-ICE message at the start of the match.

Ring of Honor matches:

  • Dalton Castle & The Outrunners (Turbo Floyd & Truth Magnum) defeated North Shore Wrestling
  • Mina Shirakawa defeated Charli Evans
  • Mark Davis defeated The Tuckman

WOR: 2025 WON Awards, Brody King, AEW Grand Slam Australia preview

Dave Meltzer and I are back with the Friday edition of Wrestling Observer Radio, talking about the big news from today’s issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

We dove into part one of our look at the 2025 WON Awards in addition to hitting on some other topics including:

  • Brody King
  • AEW Grand Slam Australia
  • Ratings
  • Brock Lesnar at WrestleMania
  • WrestleMania tickets

Click here to listen (sub needed) or watch on YouTube

Wrestling Weekly: WrestleMania ticket woes, AEW’s big weekend down under

TKO is apparently concerned about ticket sales for WrestleMania 42 and on the new Wrestling Weekly, Les Thatcher and Vic Sosa talk about what should be the real concern which is more than just ticket prices.

We’ll also look at this past week’s AEW Dynamite and look ahead to what should be a tremendous Grand Slam Australia show.

Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!

Click here to listen (sub needed)

WOR: WWE WrestleMania 42 changes, AEW Grand Slam Australia takes shape

Dave Meltzer and I are back with the Friday edition of Wrestling Observer Radio, talking about the big news from today’s issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

Here were some of the things we discussed:

  • Changes to the WWE WrestleMania 42 card
  • AJ Styles and whether or not he’s really retired
  • Wrestlers on radio row for the Super Bowl
  • The AEW Grand Slam Australia card
  • Dave’s interaction with John Stossel in 1985

Click here to listen (sub needed) or watch on YouTube

MJF vs. Brody King World title match set for AEW Grand Slam Australia

After a shocking squash match, AEW World Champion MJF will defend against Brody King at this month’s Grand Slam Australia in Sydney.

King defeated MJF in a World title eliminator that headlined Wednesday’s Dynamite, one that King won in mere minutes thanks to a distraction assist from Hangman Page. King took advantage with his apron sleeper and after getting MJF back in the ring, he hit his gonzo bomb for the quick victory and the title shot.

Page and Andrade El Idolo will also square off on the card for the right to challenge the World Champion at March’s Revolution. Those two men, MJF and King were all part of the show’s final segment that saw King standing tall.

It will be the third title defense for MJF and the first appearance in the country for the champion. King is looking for his first AEW singles title in this, his first AEW World title shot.

Current AEW Grand Slam Australia card | February 14 | Sydney, Australia

  • AEW World Champion MJF defends against Brody King
  • Hangman Page vs. Andrade El Idolo World title eliminator
  • Toni Storm & Orange Cassidy vs. Wheeler Yuta & Marina Shafir in a hair vs. hair tornado tag match
  • AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Konosuke Takeshita
  • AEW Women’s Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) defend against MegaBad (Penelope Ford & Megan Bayne)

Continental & Women’s Tag Team title defenses added to AEW Grand Slam Australia

Image: AEW

AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley will defend against former IWGP World Champion and former AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita at this month’s Grand Slam Australia — one of two new title matches announced Wednesday.

The Moxley vs. Takeshita match was announced during AEW Dynamite shortly after both men were on opposite ends of a trios match as part of the ongoing feud between the Death Riders and the Don Callis Family.

It will be Moxley’s first defense of the title he won at last December’s Worlds End in the Continental Classic.

This will be their fourth-ever singles meeting dating back to July 2022 when Moxley beat Takeshita in a then-interim World title eliminator match. The two rematched five months later on Rampage with Moxley again winning.

Moxley defeated Takeshita in an then-IWGP World title eliminator at 2024’s Forbidden Door with Takeshita finally defeating Moxley in last year’s Continental Classic in Blue league action.

**********

Another title match added for Sydney will see AEW Women’s World Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath defending against Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford.

The match came about during Wednesday’s Dynamite when Bayne and Ford picked up a rare title eliminator victory, defeating the champions to earn the title shot. It will the third defense for Willow Nightingale and Harley Cameron

The two teams have been feuding in various forms since last fall.

Current AEW Grand Slam Australia card | February 14 | Sydney, Australia

  • Hangman Page vs. Andrade El Idolo World title eliminator
  • Toni Storm & Orange Cassidy vs. Wheeler Yuta & Marina Shafir in a hair vs. hair tornado tag match
  • AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Konosuke Takeshita
  • AEW Women’s Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) defend against MegaBad (Penelope Ford & Megan Bayne)