AEW Collision live results: International Title four-way qualifiers

The final two entrants into this Wednesday’s four-way match for Kenny Omega’s International title will be decided on tonight’s AEW Collision from El Paso, Texas.

The show will air late Eastern Standard Time on TNT due to the NBA playoffs, approximately at 11 or 11:30 PM.

In one match, Claudio Castagnoli will face rival Komander while in the other, Mascara Dorada takes on Hechicero in a CMLL showcase. The two will join Brody King in challenging Omega at Wednesday’s Fyter Fest in Denver, Colorado.

AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada will face Anthony Bowens in a title eliminator.

The Don Callis Family’s Rocky Romero, Trent and Konosuke Takeshita will battle Kyle O’Reilly and Roderick Strong of Paragon & Tomohiro Ishii in a trios bout.

Another trios match features LFI’s Rush, Dralistico & The Beast Mortos against Top Flight & AR Fox.

Mina Shirakawa will look to rebound from her loss to AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm at Double or Nothing when she faces Skye Blue, competing in her first singles match in more than 300 days.

The show is rounded by The Gates of Agony in action, and a promo segment featuring FTR and Stokely Hathaway.

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Claudio Castagnoli defeated Komander (w/ Alex Abrahantes) to advance to the International Title Match

There was a helpful recap video of the last time Komander and Castagnoli faced off one-on-one in December, when Komander eliminated Castagnoli from the Continental Classic. Castagnoli did not forget that loss, and immediately started attacking Komander with heavy strikes, and shrugged off a shoulder tackle. Komander hit a head scissors quickly though, and ran across the top rope into an arm wringer across the ropes on Castagnoli. Castagnoli caught Komander on a spring board and transitioned smoothly into a giant swing before beating on Komander at ringside.

Castagnoli hit a big back suplex on the guard rail, which had to suck to take. Komander leaped up onto the shoulders of Castagnoli, standing vertically on it, jumping onto the ropes into a springboard moonsault, and caught Castagnoli in an armdrag before hitting a tope con giro on the floor. That was absolutely incredible. Komander went to run across the ropes, but Castagnoli ran into the ring as Komander was cross the ropes, so he decided to jump with a crossbody on Castagnoli, but Castagnoli caught him and hit a tilt-a-whirl backbreaker out of midair.

Komander did try for a shooting star press, but Castagnoli countered, put Komander in a fireman’s carry, and walked up the ropes, which was impressive enough, but Komander transitioned into a hurricanrana off the ropes on Castagnoli before hitting a sunset bomb for a 2-count. Komander missed a twisting senton and Castagnoli hit the Neutralizer for the pinfall. This was a quick match, but it was tons of fun.

–A recap aired of the opening segment from Dynamite, where Hangman Adam Page, Swerve Strickland, and Will Ospreay had a confrontation. They really drove home that Ospreay is trying to build bridges between Swerve and Hangman, but it had frequent cuts to all the terrible things Page and Strickland did to each other. This video ruled.

–Strickland was walking backstage at Dynamite, and Swerve wanted to clarify his relationship with Hangman, saying that he owned up to what he did, and that he did deserve what Hangman did to him, but that didn’t mean they were friends. Ospreay walked up and asked the question, “Who’s the bigger threat right now? The Death Riders or Hangman Page?” Swerve didn’t like this, and he really didn’t like when Ospreay said that Hangman Page was the best wrestler in the world right now. Swerve reminded Ospreay that he beat Ospreay too. Ospreay and Swerve broke into a brawl and were separated by security. This was an awesome segment.

The Don Callis Family (Konosuke Takeshita, Rocky Romero, & Trent Beretta) (w/ Don Callis) defeated Paragon (Kyle O’Reilly & Roderick Strong) & Tomohiro Ishii

The Don Callis family attacked early, brawling around ringside. Ishii and Strong chopped Beretta, setting him on a chair at ringside. They also set Takeshita on the chair, and O’Reilly flew off the apron with a kick that knocked both men over. Ishii chopped Romero in the corner while Don Callis went on about how much he hated Roderick Strong on commentary, and it was great. Takeshita hit a huge forearm on Strong and distracted the referee, allowing Callis attack Strong behind the referee’s back.

Strong hit an Olympic Slam on Takeshita before tagging out to O’Reilly, hitting some hard kicks, sweeping the legs of Rocky Romero and working over the arm of Beretta before hitting a German suplex. O’Reilly countered a dead lift suplex by Takeshita and hit a kitchen sink before tagging in Ishii who dared Beretta to hit him before destroying Beretta with a forearm. Takeshita tagged in and both men immediately started to hit clotheslines on each other. Takeshita finally dropped him with a German suplex, but Paragon ran in to cut off the heels from further offence.

Takeshita hit a Blue Thunder Bomb on Ishii, but was kicked in the face by O’Reilly. Beretta hit a half-and-half suplex on O’Reilly, and Takeshita and Ishii exchanged hard strikes. Romero sneaked in after when the referee was bumped and hit a low blow on Ishii, letting Takeshita hit a falcon arrow on Ishii for the win. Good match.

Kazuchika Okada defeated Anthony Bowens

Okada got a superstar reaction coming out, and while no one believed Bowens was winning this match, he tried his best to get them to believe, with Okada selling for him well when he was on offence as well. Okada went to the floor after some of that offence, and slowed things down, hitting a DDT on Bowens on the floor. When the came back from break, Okada was hitting an elbow drop off the top rope.

When Okada posed to flip off the audience, Bowens reached up and scissored the finger with his index and middle finger, standing up and chopping Okada. Bowens ducked a Rainmaker and hit a neckbreaker. Bowens hit a superkick to the knee of Okada, who was on the middle ropes, before hitting a DDT on Okada who was caught in the tree of woe, twisting him into it. That looked cool.

Bowens dodged the dropkick from Okada and they went into a few near falls before Okada hit a neckbreaker across his knee, and locked on the Money Clip. Bowens shoved Okada back into the corner and hit a chop, but Okada only got angry and hit a series of strikes into the ropes. Bowens hit a pump kick and elbows to the back of Okada’s head. Bowens hit a superkick and called for the Mollywhop, but Okada hit a dropkick and a Rainmaker for the pin. This was a good match.

–Lexy Nair was with Daniel Garcia was backstage, and they talked about the difficult loss he faced at Double or Nothing. Don Callis walked up as Matt Menard was trying to encourage him, and Callis offered Garcia a spot in the Don Callis family, saying that Garcia has not been mentored well by Menard. Garcia said he was tired of old men trying to tell him how to handle his career. Callis said that he was an old man, but he was a rich old man, and that he wanted Garcia to do something he hadn’t done for a long time – think.

–Tony Schiavone was in the ring and invited FTR out with Stokely Hathaway. Nigel McGuinness put the Shatter Machine over, saying that he had difficulty breathing for 4 days after the match at AEW Double or Nothing. McGuinness hoped they would honour their agreement that their grudge was over, and they wouldn’t touch Tony Schiavone or McGuinness again. Hathaway buried McGuinness saying that he belonged behind the announcer’s desk before challenging any team from Mexico to a match on Dynamite since they were in El Paso.

Atlantis Jr. and Templario answered the challenge, coming down to the ring. FTR said they respected the luchadors, but they were lucha libre legends themselves, having won titles in Mexico before. They then said that maybe they needed to go down to CMLL and win some gold. FTR said they had no issue with Altantis Jr. & Templario, but had a question for them. Harwood said that no one recognized them, saying the lucha masks were “Stupid Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers masks,” which was a good line for heat. Harwood didn’t give Atlantis Jr. a chance to respond, which got more and more heat the more he did it.

Harwood said that he liked Atlantis Sr., but that the old man should keep himself at home and stay away from FTR. Atlantis Jr. did not take to that kindly, saying that his dad was not there to defend himself, but that he would fight them. Harwood and Wheeler attacked Atlantis Jr. & Templario, but the luchadors fought back, and drove FTR from the ring. Atlantis Jr. made the challenge official for the joint CMLL/AEW show at Arena Mexico in June. This was a great segment.

–A hype video aired for Toni Storm and Mercedes Moné. This was excellent.

Mina Shirakawa defeated Skye Blue

Blue mocked Shirakawa early on, and it broke down into a striking battle that saw forearms exchanged. Shirakawa ducked under a clothesline and posed, but Blue kicked her in the back and continued her attack. Shirakawa hit a sole butt and then ran up the ropes before hitting a knee to the arm of Blue for a 2-count. Shirakawa hit a tornado DDT out of the corner as they came back from an ad break and a then a rolling elbow.

Shirakawa hit a dragon screw on the right leg of Blue, but Blue blocked a kick and hit a forearm in the corner before hitting a cheeky Nando’s kick and a powerbomb out of the corner for a 2-count. Blue hit a superkick on Shirakawa and hit the ropes to go for Code Blue, but Shirakawa responded with a spinning backfist and went to the top rope to hit a flying neckbreaker off the ropes for a 2-count. Blue countered out of the Mina Driver, but Shirakawa hit another rolling elbow before hitting the Mina Driver for the win.

–As Shirakawa was celebrating, Julia Hart attacked ran in and attacked her from behind, locking in Heartless. Toni Storm ran down to make the save and drove Hart from the ring, while Hart then pulled Blue from the ring to save her from further assault.

–A Gates of Agony hype video aired, building them up like they are unstoppable monsters. I really liked this. I think it’s time to do something with these guys. They are good workers, and it is always fun seeing two big wrestlers destroy people.

The Gates of Agony (Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona) defeated Aerospace (GMO Kaminari & Cosmo Orion)

These poor young wrestlers were utterly crushed by the Gates of Agony, and I loved every second of it. Poor Kaminari got killed by Liona, while Kaun killed Orion, and they stacked them up and pinned them after a double team crucifix bomb. It was great.

–Max Caster was in a room with a bunch of fans, trying to get them to chant for him. A few did. He offered to take pictures with everyone once they signed his petition saying he was the best wrestler alive. As fans lined up for the pictures after signing, he ran out of the room and down the hall. Okay.

La Facción Ingobernable (Rush, Dralistico, & The Beast Mortos) defeated Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin) & AR Fox (w/ Leyla Grey)

Rush immediately ripped of the turnbuckle pad on his side of the ring and tried to send AR Fox into it. This did not go well for Rush, as Top Flight and AR Fox were soon hitting dives on everyone after Fox blocked the turnbuckle smash. Poor Paul Turner, the referee, could only stand there as bodies were flying all over the ring, hitting kicks, dives, and suplexes back and forth with no sense of proper tag team wrestling, so I’m just calling this a lucha libre rules six man at this point based on that.

Rush did a tranquilo pose after kicking Fox in the face, which got a huge pop from this lucha libre knowledgeable audience. Mortos hit some hard kicks and strikes in the corner before hitting a powerslam on Fox. Rush threw Dante Martin into the guardrail viciously, with Martin bouncing off it like he was a rubber ball. When they came back from the ad break, Top Flight hit a shotgun dropkick into a German suplex on Mortos, before sending Dralistico flying across the ring into a cutter from AR Fox. That was awesome.

Dralistico hit a springboard into a Canadian Destroyer on Darius Martin for a 2-count. Mortos and Rush double teamed Fox, allowing Dralistico to hit a springboard into a code breaker on Dante Martin and a tope con giro on Fox. Mortos hit a through the middle ropes torneo to the floor on Dante Martin, before Rush finally hit The Horns on Darius Martin in the corner for the win. This was a great party match.

–La Facción Ingobernable attacked Top Flight and Fox after the bell, but Mike Bailey and Komander ran down to make the save, driving LFI from the ring.

–Mark Briscoe was cutting a promo back in his home with his ring, saying that his son thought he quit on Dynamite when he passed out in the bulldog choke. Briscoe said that he couldn’t take that, saying that he would never quit, and that he wanted Moxley in a one-on-one match, not for the title, but for pride, and proving to his kids that he not a quitter. He told Moxley to man up. This was reminiscent of those great Briscoe promos in ROH, and I loved this.

Mascara Dorada defeated Hechicero

Before the match began, a short highlight video of Herchicero aired as he made his way down to the ring, showing him holding his own against MJF and Orange Cassidy as the announcers put over hoe dangerous he is. A video also aired for Mascara Dorada, doing the same. This is great. I have greatly enjoyed when AEW does this, even when I am familiar with the talent because it often reminds me of things I forget.

A lot of mat work was done in the early parts of this match, with Dorada trying to fight out of a surfboard stretch and then trying one of his own, getting it to applause from the crowd. However, Dorada, may have paid for that attempt, as Hechicero kept baiting him into doing what he wanted, dodging to the floor, and frustrating Dorada. Dorada ran at the ring post while on the apron, grabbing it, swinging around it, and hit a hurricanrana on Hechicero. Fantastic spot.

Hechicero hit the ropes and hit a spiking headscissors take over that planted Dorada on his head. That was got a lot of reaction from the audience. Hechicero attempted to remove the mask of Dorada, which the fans gave him a lot of boos for. Hechicero hit a pumphandle throw, sending Dorada flying across the ring and a hard chop in the corner. Dorada popped out of the corner with a hurricanrana, but Hechicero hit a lariat to go back to slowing it down and working over Dorada.

Dorada hit an enziguri from the apron and sent Hechicero to the floor, hitting a torneo over the top ropes to the floor, getting a great reaction from the crowd as they chanted “Mascara!” Dorada hit a crossbody, but Hechicero launched Dorada into the air and back into a sleeper in a way that I can’t possible explain unless you see it. Both wrestlers exchanged pinfall attempts. Dorada hit a Code Red for a nearfall. Hechicero wrapped Dorada’s knee in the ropes and stomped on them before hitting a flying elbow off the ropes for a 2-count.

Both men exchanged chops, hitting each other hard, before Dorada did a tilt-a-whirl back stabber on Hechicero. Dorada went for a dive off the top ropes, but he slipped after the knee work from Hechicero. Hechicero placed Dorada on the ropes, but Dorada slipped out and hit a super poisonrana from the ropes and a shooting star press to follow it for the pinfall. That was an awesome match.

Final Thoughts

This was a tremendous episode of Collision. While definitely not an A-show in the way Dynamite is, the wrestling on this show was so good. I am all for more lucha libre being on Collision to make it stand out as different from Dynamite. The major angle that went down was Swerve and Ospreay, and I hope they replay that extensively on Dynamite as well, especially as the show is four hours next week.

AEW Fyter Fest Card

Jon Moxley vs. Mark Briscoe
La Facción Ingobernable vs. Kevin Knight, Mike Bailey, & Komander
Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa vs. Julia Hart & Skye Blue
FTR vs. Atlantis Jr. & Templario
Thekla’s in ring debut
AEW International Championship: Kenny Omega (c) vs. Claudio Castagnoli vs. Brody King vs. Mascara Dorada

AEW Double or Nothing live results: Will Ospreay vs. Hangman Page

AEW heads to Glendale, Arizona, for Double or Nothing — the first time the show has been outside Las Vegas since 2021.

The event is headlined by Will Ospreay vs. Hangman Page and Mercedes Mone vs. Jamie Hayter in the finals of their respective Owen Hart Foundation tournaments. The winners will challenge for their divisions’ respective World titles at July’s All In.

Anarchy in the Arena returns with The Death Riders & The Young Bucks against Swerve Strickland, Kenny Omega, The Opps & Willow Nightingale.

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against Mina Shirakawa; AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Mike Bailey; and AEW Tag Team Champions Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin defend against Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara.

In a stretcher match, Ricochet takes on Mark Briscoe.

The card is rounded out by Paragon vs. The Don Callis Family in trios action; FTR vs. Nigel McGuinness & Daniel Garcia; and Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford vs. Anna Jay & Harley Cameron on the pre-show.

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The Buy In

The WrestleAunts (Renee Paquette & RJ City) & Jeff Jarrett welcome us to The Buy In and run down the card for tonight’s show and give well wishes and prayers to Jim Ross after his recent cancer announcement. They run down how to order the show tonight, which are as follows…

  • In the US: Prime Video, YouTube, PPV.com. Fubo, Cable & Satellite and select Dave & Busters
  • Canada: Prime Video
  • UK: Prime Video
  • International: YouTube, PPV.com, TrillerPPV

Prince Nana joins the crew, as RJ City mentions The Young Bucks are like corrupt mayors handing over the town to the outlaws leaving a lot of bodies in their paths. Nana showed off Swerve Strickland’s new shoes he’s rocking before doing his dance, saying he has faith in Strickland tonight.

Madison Rayne is up next to join the panel to discuss the women’s Owen Hart Foundation Finals, saying there’s a nervous energy backstage. It’s difficult for her to bet against Mercedes Mone, as RJ brings up Mone losing her New Japan Strong Women’s Title a few weeks ago to AZM as Mone was shown walking into the arena. They switched to Toni Storm vs. Mina Shirakawa and Rayne mentioned Storm putting a nail in a former rival’s coffin, can she do it again? Once again, zero mention of Mariah May, but during the video package for the match, May was shown.

FTR vs. Nigel McGuinness & Daniel Garcia is brought up, as Daddy Magic joins the panel and Paquette immediately asks why McGuinness is teaming with Garcia and not Menard? Daddy Magic said it’s nothing personal, despite FTR making him bleed, as tonight McGuinness & Garcia will get the job done. Jeff Jarrett said FTR with a win tonight, will become the winningest team in AEW history.

An ambulance is shown outside, as we see paramedics (or poor schmucks as RJ City called them) bring a stretcher out and wheel it into the arena ahead of tonight’s Stretcher Match. Jeff Jarrett said this will be the sleeper match of the night between Ricochet & Mark Briscoe. Jarrett said Ricochet had a deer in the headlight look, while Briscoe looked insane, as RJ said Ricochet will absolutely have scissors on him, who are we kidding?

Lexy Nair is backstage and welcomes Ricochet, who said Nair is smarter than Renee Paquette & Tony Schiavone combined, which isn’t saying much. Ricochet explained rule #1 of the Stretcher Match, placing Briscoe on the stretcher and wheel him into the ambulance. Rule #2 is there are no rules, expect for rule #1. He did his cackle and walked away.

-An advertisement for Swerve Strickland’s new shoes and collaboration with Allen Iverson is shown. Reebok “Swerve” Answer, available May 28th via Champs Sports.

Harley Cameron & Anna Jay vs. Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford

(These ladies got a lot of time and had a fun opener to get the crowd going, as there were a lot in attendance already. Jay & Cameron worked well together as a duo, as once Cameron ramped up for the hot tag, they were behind the babyface duo going forward. I assume Bayne will get her win back eventually, but I’m happy we got a little bit of an upset to kick off the show.)

Excalibur, Tony Schiavone & Taz on the call, as Bayne showed her power off early against Cameron. After regrouping, repeated knees to the midsection from Cameron, but Bayne drove her into the corner, allowing Ford to get in some cheap shots. Blind tag by Jay, who cracked Ford with a corner wheel kick and rolling Blockbuster before she laid down, as Cameron drove Ford’s face into Jay’s rear end, baffling Taz, who said he’s never seen that before. Enzugiri connects just enough by Cameron, as Jay follows with a snap dropkick for two. Ford tags Bayne, who powered Jay into the corner, but missed a charge. Jay hit a Stunner between the ropes, but she played to the crowd, not realizing Bayne no sold and back suplexed her into the ring. Locomotion corner strikes from Ford & Bayne, who hit an overhead suplex, as Jay remained isolated.

Jay finally was able to hit a neckbreaker out of the corner on Bayne, allowing Cameron to clean house off a hot tag. Multiple corner splashes, as Cameron turned a double suplex into a pendulum DDT on both Bayne & Ford for a near fall. Bayne cut off a double suplex attempt into a double German suplex, sending Jay & Cameron outside before launching her own partner over the top onto the pile. Back inside, Cameron hit a Satellite DDT on Bayne, Ford did her Matrix Stunner, as Jay answered with the Gory Bomb. Bayne flew in with a wild lariat for the reset. Bayne was cut off by Jay & Cameron in the corner, leading to a double superplex for two. Bayne recovered and mowed both down with a double clothesline before Ford went up top for a Doomsday Device, missed, as Cameron rolled through. Bayne was low bridged by Jay, as Cameron hit Her Finishing Move (which the camera missed), pinning Ford.

Match Result: Harley Cameron & Anna Jay defeated Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford when Cameron pinned Ford

-Alex Marvez is backstage with Sammy Guevara & Dustin Rhodes, bringing up they’re all Day 1 guys and mentions how things have changed for Guevara since being involved in the first Dynamite match 6 years ago and Rhodes being in an all-time classic against his brother at the first Double or Nothing. Rhodes says if The Hurt Syndicate want to hurt them, bring it on, but it just won’t be enough.

-Lance Archer joins the panel to talk about the Don Callis Family vs. Paragon later tonight, but he doesn’t need to give his stablemates advice, they’re going to get work done. Archer is looking forward to catering tonight and a few drinks. I should point out a random light shown above RJ City’s head and his reaction was hysterical, but no one else on the panel noticed it. Nice pivot from Archer’s “Everybody Dies” catchphrase into his thoughts on Anarchy in the Arena saying it’s his kind of match. Archer finally puts over Kyle Fletcher & Konosuke Takeshita as the future of this business.

-RJ City tells us Mercedes Mone vs. Jamie Hayter will open the PPV tonight. The Owen Hart Foundation Finals will open and close the show.

RPG Vice (Trent Beretta & Rocky Romero) & CRU (Action Andretti & Lio Rush) vs. ROH Champion Bandido, AR Fox & Los Titanes Del Aire (Komander & Hologram w/Alex Abrahantes)

(A wild action-packed party match to really set the stage for the night. Everyone had their chance to shine in this, but there was a scary spot involving Hologram & Andretti, who appeared to bust his face opened pretty badly as a result.)

CRU are wearing their puffy red jackets that make them look like spiky Koopa Shells. Heels attack before the bell and single out Bandido, who suffers locomotion corner splashes until dodging Romero, who had the tables turned and took a series of splashes of his own. Triple snap dropkick by the luchadores, as Romero was isolated with a double Shining Wizard by Komander & Hologram, a spinning suplex by Fox and stalling suplex attempt by Bandido, but was cut-off by Beretta. Bandido easily dispatched of Beretta and did a one-armed Gorilla Press on Romero onto his partner outside. CRU jump in and fire off fast offense, but just as quick, Komander & Hologram in with dropkicks to the floor. RPG cut-off a double dive attempt, leading to a successful low tope from Rush, but Andretti helped Rush hit a nasty suplex on the edge of the ring on Komander.

Bandido was worked over back in the ring by Beretta, but managed to hit a spinning cross body off the top and make the hot tag to Fox. Crowd was amped up, as Fox skinned the cat into a corner double stomp on Andretti and rolling Cutter on Rush. Andretti missed a slingshot, Fox connected on a slingshot senton and wild double dives on both sides of the ring before being mowed down by Beretta. Fox remained isolated, as RPG hit Strong Zero, but Bandido made the save. Hot tag finally made to Hologram, who hit a neckbreaker/DDT combo on CRU before Komander made a blind tag, rope walk into a springboard hurricanrana. Hologram tried a Collision Course, but didn’t get much of it and we got an awkward pin attempt on Andretti, who nose was busted opened badly.

The match breaks down, as Bandido & Komander did stereo moonsaults, while Hologram & Fox did dueling dives. Everyone was back inside, as the babyfaces all went to the top and hit 3 Shooting Star Presses with a 450 Splash by Fox, but only managed two. Bandido then had help with an assisted 21-Plex and got the pin on Andretti.

Match Result: Bandido, Komander, Hologram & AR Fox defeated Trent Beretta, Rocky Romero, Lio Rush & Action Andretti when Bandido pinned Andretti

-The pre-show panel puts over the match, as RJ City called the Four Post Massacre, shades of Ready to Rumble, as Excalibur missed the call.

AEW Double or Nothing

Mercedes Mone vs. Jamie Hayter in the Finals of the Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament

(This was one hell of an opener and hands down the best match in the women’s tournament. The ending really came out of nowhere, as I’m sure there were a lot of people expecting Hayter to take this one. I’m not exactly sure where Hayter goes from here, not to mention when Mone will ever lose in AEW, but it’s at least not yet. Mone’s streak of incredible PPV matches continues in my book, as she now awaits the winner of Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa later tonight.)

Dueling chants from the crowd during the feeling out process, as Mone used her speed, while Hayter showed off the power game. Mone zones in on the back, as we’re again told by commentary the 15 month lay-off Hayter had due to back issues. Short lariats and pump kick launched Mone across the ring, as both ladies trade reversals until Mone got a Prawn Hold for two. Both exchange leg submission attempts, as Hayter got the Half Crab, but Mone rolled Hayter into the ropes, hit charging knees and Meteora as Hayter crashed hard on the floor. Back in the ring, Mone locks in a surfboard stretch before delivering a hard side suplex for two, as Mone has fully targeted the back. Backstabber into the Straightjacket Camel Clutch, which Taz said is damn near impossible to get out of. Hayter escaped in about 10 seconds, backing Mone to the corner with forearms, but Mone violently slammed her down by the hair into another Meteora out of the corner for two. Hayter exploded up with a shotgun dropkick, went to the corner, but had her legs swept out and her back smacked hard, her head also whiplashing.

Mone took time to do her dance, ultimately missing a corner double knees, as Hayter hit a back suplex before delivering a picture-perfect missile dropkick followed by a John Woo dropkick. Meteora of Hayter’s own, but Mone escaped a fireman’s carry into a Three Amigos. Mone took way too long to follow-up, allowing Hayter to cut her off in the corner for a superplex, held on, but Mone floated over into another Backstabber. Hayter avoided Mone Maker with a brutal thrust kick, Mone responded with a knee lift flush, only for Hayter to fire off a lariat into a double down in a great sequence leaving the crowd doing more dueling chants.

The ladies fight to the floor, where Hayter stumbled initially on the steps, but got enough to launch off into another lariat. Back inside, a pump kick got Hayter two, but once again, Mone floated over into three Backstabbers into the Statement Maker, but Hayter powered out. Mone Maker again avoided, as Hayter just drove Mone repeatedly into the corner, until Mone answered by slamming Hayter face first into the corner. Mone wanted an Avalanche Mone Maker, Hayter slid out, but Mone held on and hit a sit-out slam for two. Both ladies miss finisher attempts, Mone tried an O’Connor Roll, but Hayter countered into a Rear Naked Choke, Mone rolled through into a two count. Hayter tried a springboard lariat, but Mone dodged into the Statement Maker once more. Hayter escaped, powering up, Mone tried a crucifix, but Hayter hit a Hayt-Breaker and sliding lariat for the closest two of the match.

Mone dodged Hayter-ade three times, wanted a Tombstone, Hayter floated over and hit one of her own for two, but Mone somehow got a shoulder up by less than half an inch. Hayter wound up for a home run Hayter-ade, but Mone spun out and spiked Hayter with a DDT into a cradle for a flash pin. Mone immediately sprinted up the ramp to the trophy and Owen Hart title, as Hayter was left dejected.

Match Result: Mercedes Mone defeated Jamie Hayter to win the Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament

-Commentary brings up Jim Ross and wish him well after his recent cancer diagnosis and surgery. Excalibur puts over JR working and helping him as a commentator over the past six years, as Schiavone & Taz bring up JR being a mentor to both. They all want him back at the commentary table soon.

FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler w/Stokely Hathaway) vs. Daniel Garcia & Nigel McGuinness (w/Daddy Magic)

(I didn’t realize this match would get as much time as it did, but it was an excellent story told by both. Despite this being McGuinness’ third match back (four if you count the Casino Gauntlet), he more than held his own with FTR in this. Obviously FTR had to win this one if they’re going to continue to climb their way back to the Tag Team Titles, as they played the perfect heels in this. Harwood & Wheeler always seem like they’re having a lot more fun as the villains and that’s only furthered by the addition of Hathaway by their side.)

I should point out McGuinness unfortunately didn’t get his Oasis “F*ckin in the Bushes” theme like at All In last year. Garcia scrapped with Wheeler in a fast-opening sequence, leaving Garcia to do his dance and send Wheeler scrambling to his partner. Harwood demanded McGuinness to tag and Garcia obliged. Harwood faked a clean break in the corner and instead just punched McGuinness square in the jaw before firing off chops (McGuinness’ chest is already beat red). Thrust chops to the throat by McGuinness, who switched to uppercuts until Wheeler tried to make the save and suffered the same fate. Double arm wringers from Garcia & McGuinness, who scramble for dueling submissions, but FTR bail outside with Hathaway.

McGuinness did his corner handstand into a punt and clubbing blow combo on Wheeler for two. After one successful corner charge, Harwood saved his partner, leaving McGuiness to crash and burn outside. Harwood ate a stiff back elbow, but Wheeler saved his partner from a Tower of London and violently sent McGuinness repeatedly into the commentary table. Wheeler trash talked Tony Schiavone, as Hathaway screamed that he caused this. McGuinness tried his comeback lariat, but Wheeler cut him off and delivered a Tower of London off the apron. McGuinness remained isolated until he finally was able to hit the comeback lariat into the double down.

Garcia made the hot tag and ran wild, trapping both FTR in the corner the ten punches before sending Wheeler outside and flattening Harwood with a flying lariat. Nice series of reversals led to Garcia finally getting his back suplex for two, as the Dragon Tamer was applied, but Wheeler took Garcia’s head off with a lariat. McGuinness snapped Wheeler down by the shoulder, traded Tower of London attempts with Harwood before finally hitting it with a Garcia assist for two. Wheeler saved his partner from Shatter Machine, but both tried a comeback lariat, only to collide with each other. Dragon Tamer/London Dungeon applied, but Hathaway made enough of a save until Menard cut him off. McGuinness brought Wheeler over to Schiavone while in a submission, as Wheeler pleaded he was sorry to Mr. Schiavone. The match broke down around ringside, as Wheeler recovered and said his fingers were crossed and wasn’t sorry to Schiavone about sh*t.

Garcia hit two superplexes on Harwood back inside, but Wheeler saved his partner from the third and drove McGuinness off the apron. Harwood hit a twisting superplex on Garcia, as Wheeler flew off the top to complete the Power-Plex for two, as Taz pointed out Wheeler’s knee could be hurt after the landing. McGuinness tried Tower of London off the apron again, but FTR countered into Shatter Machine on the floor. Tony Schiavone left commentary to check on McGuinness, despite being trash talked by FTR & Hathaway. Garcia was left 2 on 1, battling back initially, only to be dropped by a Harwood piledriver for two. Spike Piledriver connected, but Garcia got his foot on the ropes. Sharpshooter applied, as Menard got up on the apron, but Wheeler dropped him with a right hand and Tope. Wheeler took out McGuinness again, as he & Hathaway kept yelling at Garcia to tap, but he eventually passed out.

Match Result: FTR defeated Daniel Garcia & Nigel McGuinness when Garcia passed out to Harwood’s Sharpshooter

Ricochet vs. Mark Briscoe in a Stretcher Match

(With Anarchy in the Arena later on tonight, I was not expecting this to be as violent and bloody as it was, but this was an all-out brawl. For being the first stretcher match in AEW history, it certainly set a blue print for what others will have to try and follow. Briscoe had the crowd behind him the entire way (per usual, it’s impossible to boo Mark Briscoe) and nearly pulled it off, but Ricochet had too many tricks up his sleeve and continues one of the best runs of his career since turning heel last year.)

The ambulance was backed into the arena, as there’s a stretcher ringside and also one next to the ambulance. Briscoe was attacked at the bell, but quickly turned the tide, dragging Ricochet to the ambulance, nearly placing him on the stretcher, but Ricochet ran like a cartoon character back to the ring. Briscoe drove a stretcher into the ribs, placed Ricochet onto it, teased a Cactus elbow off the apron, but Ricochet dodged into a pump knee flush. Briscoe set up on the stretcher, as Ricochet tried a Shooting Star off the apron, but crashed and burned. Briscoe successfully hit the Cactus elbow the second go around off the apron and again off the barricade. Chair chucked into Ricochet’s face, as Taz gives a shout-out to the late Sabu, suffering many of those in his career.

Briscoe brought out a bucket full of cleaning products, hooked Ricochet in a headlock and shined up the bald head of Ricochet, which completely broke Taz. Briscoe walloped Ricochet in the head with the bucket to the floor, as Briscoe did the Sabu pose, wanted a Triple Jump, but Ricochet launched a chair into his face. Briscoe battled back with an Exploder, but Ricochet got the cleaning spray and misted Briscoe in the eyes. Briscoe driven repeatedly face first into the exposed stretcher, busting him opened badly in the process. Ricochet pushed Briscoe on a stretcher back to the ambulance, nearly loaded him in, but Briscoe stuck a crutch out the door to save the match, then sprayed Ricochet with a fire extinguisher and brought back to the ring.

Briscoe is bleeding buckets, but still hit a Jay Driller before setting a table up ringside and delivering a massive Froggy Bow off the top through it. Both go up the ramp, where Briscoe wanted another Jay Driller, but Ricochet got a back drop. Briscoe recovered first and was in hot pursuit, but Ricochet stabbed Briscoe in the head with the golden scissors. He tried again, but Briscoe got a thrust chop and possession of the scissors. Ricochet went to the ambulance where he had a second pair of scissors, stabbed Briscoe in the head again, but Briscoe initially no sold, so Ricochet kicked him low, a third scissors shot, Spirit Gun connects before loading Briscoe on the stretcher inside the ambulance and closing the door.

Match Result: Ricochet defeated Mark Briscoe

The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin w/MVP & MJF) vs. ROH Tag Team Champions The Sons of Texas (Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara for the AEW Tag Team Titles

(This was an ok match, but like many of the Hurt Syndicate matches, no one believed for a second they were losing. This had a lot of moving parts down the stretch and despite Rhodes & Guevara putting up a good fight, with MJF added to the fold, it’s going to take a hell of a lot to get the tag titles off Lashley & Benjamin, who are just unstoppable.)

Tony Schiavone rejoins commentary, informing us Nigel McGuinness believes he has some cracked ribs, but is in good spirits, despite the loss. A new graphic is shown for the Hurt Syndicate entrance, as MJF’s name is officially listed with the crew. The crowd is as loud as they’ve been all night chanting We Hurt People for the supposed heels, Lashley & Benjamin. Rhodes was almost immediately worked over in the corner and hit with rolling Benjamin German suplexes for two. Guevara tagged in, hitting his leap frog dropkick, but Benjamin recovered and also took him to Suplex City before tagging Lashley. Guevara dodged Spear into a pump knee, as he avoided a corner charge, only to run into a massive spinebuster. Guevara remained worked over, as MJF is jaw jacking with fans in the process. Lashley caught a Guevara float over from a powerslam position spinning into an impressive Dominator for two. Benjamin tagged in and tried a pop-up, but Guevara countered into a Cutter for a double down.

Rhodes made the hot tag and cleaned house with a snap powerslam and Code Red on Benjamin for two. Rhodes wanted his Unnatural Kick, as MJF took the ref, allowing Rhodes to hit the low kick to get a near fall. Lashley tumbled to the ring with Guevara, as Benjamin rolled through a Rhodes suplex attempt into an Ankle Lock. Guevara made the save with a snap hurricanrana, as Rhodes hit a Cross Rhodes while Guevara took out Lashley with a Shooting Star off the post to the floor. Lashley ultimately recovered and launched Guevara clear across the floor, as Benjamin hit a top rope throw on Rhodes for two.

MJF again got up on the apron and tried to hand Benjamin the Dynamite Diamond Ring, saying this was taking too long, but Lashley put a stop to it. MVP calmed MJF down, as Guevara tried a springboard Cutter on Lashley, who side-stepped and hit a huge Spear, but Rhodes made the save. MVP took the ref, as MJF tried to use the ring again on Rhodes, but Lashley stopped him once more, only to smile and Spear Rhodes through the barricade. MJF hugs Lashley, as Guevara wanted a dive, but just narrowly cut off by Benjamin, who hit the step-up knee in the corner and thrust kick for the win.

Match Result: The Hurt Syndicate defeated The Sons of Texas to retain the AEW Tag Team Titles when Benjamin pinned Guevara

Kazuchika Okada vs. Speedball Mike Bailey for the AEW Continental Title

(You never really know which Okada you’re going to get, as we haven’t seen that New Japan Okada in AEW very much in his run so far. The second half of this match, I’d say that Okada showed up and Bailey had some great near falls. The final few minutes of this was fantastic and the accuracy Okada needed to pull off the finish was very impressive. This was another case where, despite not being actually pinned in AEW up to this point, I’m not sure many thought Bailey had a shot, but unlike the previous match, he got a lot of fans to bite at the false finishes down the stretch..)

Okada got pyro for his entrance and did his signature mind games clean break in the ropes to start. Bailey answered with a handspring into a snap hurricanrana, sending Okada to the floor, as he dodged a slingshot dive from Bailey, teased a DDT, but Bailey drove him into the steps. Bailey wound up for a home run kick, but Okada moved and Bailey kicked the steps. Okada thought he had time to recover, but Bailey had the kick pads on, rose into the Crane Kick position and booted Okada’s head off before following with a Triangle Moonsault. Back inside, rapid fire kicks were cut-off by an Okada dragon screw, as Okada followed with a flapjack and DDT on the floor, then another back in the ring for two.

Bailey tried chopping his way back into it, but a snapmare into a sprinting low dropkick sent Bailey to the floor. Baseball slide by Okada, who tried it again, but Bailey hopped up on the apron and hit a huge springboard moonsault. Okada rolled back into the ring right into a missile dropkick, as Bailey fired off stiff kicks and running Shooting Star for a near fall. Okada answered catching a charging Bailey in the corner with an Air Raid Crash on the knee and stalling top rope elbow that led to the Rainmaker Flip Off. Bailey nearly stole it off a roll-up, popped up and almost hit a thrust kick, but Okada did a Matrix into flipping Bailey off. Bailey lit up Okada with kicks, went to the top for a Shooting Star Press, but Okada got the knees up.

Dueling chants, as both trade forearms until Okada fired off a body shot. Bailey responded with a thrust kick, went for Time Adventure, Okada initially dodged, but Bailey threw a wild kick. Going up to the corner, Bailey wanted an Ultimate Weapon, but Okada dropkicked him off the ropes to the floor. Bailey avoided an apron Tombstone, swept the legs and hit his moonsault double knees. Back inside, Bailey hit a corner Time Adventure, but missed Ultimate Weapon, as Okada hit a shotgun dropkick. Bailey put on the brakes for an Okada dropkick and hit another double knee. Time Adventure attempted again, but Okada hit a dropkick in mid-air. Okada went for a Rainmaker, but Bailey finally hit Time Adventure, only for Okada to get his hand on the ropes, despite referee Rick Knox counting three, no one bought the count, as they all saw the rope break.

Bailey brought Okada up by the wrist and fired off kicks, but Okada answered with a series of lariats. Okada went for a Rainmaker, but Bailey wrapped him up into a straightjacket pin for a close near fall. Bailey went for Ultimate Weapon once again, but Okada managed to dropkick him in mid-air and hit a Rainmaker flush for an incredible finishing sequence.

Match Result: Kazuchika Okada defeated Speedball Mike Bailey to retain the AEW Continental Title

Timeless Toni Storm (w/Luther) vs. Mina Shirakawa for the AEW Women’s Title

(By far and away Shirakawa’s best match in AEW so far, as I really enjoyed the story these two told, especially after Dynamite last week and Shirakawa going after the leg. The repeated attempts for the Figure Four played into the finish, so Shirakawa going back to it one too many times led to her downfall. I’d also call this one of Storm’s best title defenses as well, as both ladies worked incredibly well together. Similar to Hayter in the opener, I’m not sure where Shirakawa goes from here, especially with the Women’s Champion & TBS Champion on the same road to All In.)

Storm pranced to the ring wearing a mini top hat, as Excalibur brings up this isn’t the first time these two have faced each other and questions if the sequel will be different than the original. Taz brings up Luther is wearing cowboy boots and he’s simply baffled and wasn’t sure why he noticed that. Another match with dueling chants to start, as Shirakawa quickly zoned on the leg that she targeted last Wednesday night. Storm wiggled out of a head scissors and did a dance, offering a hand to bring Shirakawa, who thrusted her way into a pin attempt, catching Storm off guard for two. Thrust chop to the throat by Storm, as Shirakawa responded with a leg lock, slapping Storm, who got the ropes. Thesz Press fired off by Storm, but Shirakawa quickly dropkicked out the leg. Shirakawa tried a Figure Four on the post, but Storm pulled her face first into the post.

Back in the ring, Storm worked over Shirakawa with a Fisherman’s Suplex for two before trying to shake out her injured leg. Shirakawa answered with a Tornado DDT off the ropes, snap dropkick, rolling elbow and dragon screw combo, delivering another between the ropes. Luther tended to Storm ringside, stepping in front of her, only for Shirakawa to boot him and fire off a forearm, also giving one to Storm. Shirakawa managed an impressive Tornillo off the back of Luther onto Storm before wiping out Luther with a dive off the top. The distraction allowed Storm to recover enough to hit a DDT on the floor, but Shirakawa got another dragon screw back in the ring. Figure Four finally applied, but Storm quickly rolled to the ropes. Storm threw a desperation headbutt, but Shirakawa fired off a backfist before both collapsed into the reset.

Both slugged it out to their feet, as Shirakawa kept kicking out the leg, until Storm countered into a snap back suplex into multiple release Germans. Storm wanted Sweet Cheek Music, but her leg gave out, as Shirakawa dropkicked it out into a rolling elbow, tried again, but Storm hit a Sky High. Storm wanted another out of the corner, but Shirakawa countered into a hurricanrana into an Inverted Figure Four. Storm got the ropes, as Shirakawa went up top and hit the Sling Blade for two. Glamorous Driver MINA connected, but Storm again kicked out. Storm kicked free of a Figure Four and hit Sweet Cheek Music, but couldn’t get Storm Zero. Shirakawa rolled through Sky High into the Figure Four yet again, this time deep, but got the ropes. Shirakawa went back to it, but Storm hooked a Big Package, they trade pin attempts until Storm gets up, hit a headbutt and quick Storm Zero to retain.

Post-match, Storm helped Shirakawa up and planted a smooch on her, as Taz said it’s Phoenix, sometimes friends kiss. Shirakawa thanked Storm before leaving and we get an official match graphic for Storm vs. Mercedes Mone at All In for the Women’s Title.

Match Result: Timeless Toni Storm defeated Mina Shirakawa to retain the AEW Women’s Title

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, Wheeler Yuta, Marina Shafir & The Young Bucks (Matthew & Nicholas Jackson) vs. AEW International Champion Kenny Omega, Swerve Strickland, Samoa Joe, Powerhouse Hobbs, Katsuyori Shibata & Willow Nightingale in Anarchy in the Arena

(Well, like most Anarchy in the Arena matches, I wrote a small novel in trying to cover just about everything that went down. I’ll give everyone credit, the creativity they continue to have for this match every year is just amazing. This had just about everything you could’ve asked for and then some. I’m surprised Team Strickland won the match, but we got some all timer moments that will undoubtedly be part of video packages for years going forward. From the music choices, the addition of Shafir & Nightingale being in such a big match and the finish, this was obviously a go out of your way type of spectacle match to see.)

Justin Roberts said aw sh*t, it’s about to be Anarchy, as Excalibur wondered why he put $20 in the swear jar earlier today. Strickland is dressed as Predator, as it’s time to go Buck hunting. Hobbs & Shibata made their entrance together without Joe, while Omega had a trash can lid with a Captain America design and Omega logo to go with his gear. Death Riders pulled up to the arena in their pickup truck, as Castagnoli & Yuta went one direction as Moxley & Shafir went the other. The Young Bucks entrance saw Justin Roberts read a Gettysburg Address in something that needs to be seen or heard to be believed. A fife played over the address, as he said evil shall not prosper as Matthew & Nicholas walk out dressed as founding fathers and Mount Rushmore (Matt Rushmore for PWG fans?) on the big screen. The match is on, as Omega & Strickland sprint up the ropes, as Samoa Joe appears behind Castagnoli in the crowd and out of the arena.

We have 4 split screens, as the fife music actually continues to play as the ladies have paired off with Shafir hitting a suplex on the barricade before flipping the crowd off. Omega orders the music to cut off and then I’m So Excited hits, Taz turns into Remix Jones, as Omega & Strickland do a little snap of their fingers before beating the hell out of everyone in the ring along with Shibata. The Bucks & Yuta are sent outside, as Omega took the mic while Shafir & Nightingale and Joe & Castagnoli keep fighting. Omega said how about some early 2000s alternative rock music and play that sh*t. Drowning Pool “Let the Bodies Hit the Floor” hits and this definitely isn’t ECWWE, it’s Anarchy in the Arena, as Strickland hit a Fosbury Flop onto a pile as Moxley & Hobbs brawl into the crowd. This is surreal, as the crowd is singing their hearts out.

Moxley is stabbing Hobbs with I think a pen, busting him open, as Omega politely asked a fan by the balcony for his seat to jump off of, but Yuta cut him off, teased a superplex, but Hobbs appeared and chucked Yuta off the balcony onto the pile. Omega used Hobbs as a launch pad off the balcony with a Golden Triangle moonsault, standing tall. Moxley caught Hobbs coming back into the ring, as he repeatedly stabbed Hobbs with the fork once again. Strickland drove Nicholas through a chair with a backbreaker, as Moxley brought a table into the ring, but took too long setting it up and Hobbs Speared Moxley through it. The Bucks continued their brawl with Strickland & Omega, who hit You Can’t Escape, while Strickland did his corner uppercut and hit the Griddy.

Shafir & Nightingale brawled to the parking lot, where Nightingale chucked bottles at Shafir, ultimately busting one across the head and slamming her on a table. Shibata & Yuta spill out close by, as Shibata tossed him in a trash can and rolled him repeatedly into the garage door before wrapping barbed wire around his leg and delivering a violent PK to Yuta’s chest. The Bucks dropped Strickland with a double DDT and mocked the Griddy, not realizing Omega was behind them, successfully waffling them with a trash can. They all take turns throwing trash can shots at one another until Strickland hit a rolling Flatliner on Matthew, Nicholas flew in with a Destroyer, which Strickland no sold into a House Call. Strickland leapt off the stage at Castagnoli, who hit an uppercut in mid-air before delivering a Giant Swing into a speaker. Hobbs sprinted in and Pounced Castagnoli clear into a stack of cases, as Matthew leapt off the stage for a dive. Joe is shown down, but there’s not a chance we see how it happened.

The music stops playing after about the fourth time, as Nightingale & Shafir (who is bleeding now) spill back down the ramp, where Shafir hits a Judo throws before wrapping a chain around the ring post while her ear piercing had a deadbolt lock through it, which is an insane visual (crowd is chanting Please Help Willow). Back in the ring, Omega wanted a Terminator Dive, but Nicholas cut him off with a superkick. Omega was hung up on the top, as Nicholas did a double stomp and Omega flew to the floor through a table. The Bucks delivered a running Tombstone off the apron, as Hobbs is brought up to the top of the ramp, where Nicholas sprinted off one of the big screens with a Swanton through a table. Joe was choked out with one of the Bucks’ flags, as Hobbs fights off a 3 on 1 attack initially, but as The Bucks signaled for an EVP Trigger, Prince Nana drove Strickland in on a fork lift and he did a Swerve Stomp off it onto The Bucks. Nana had a key and was able to get Nightingale free, as back in the ring, Hobbs dished out Spinebusters in droves.

Shafir & Castagnoli tried chair shots to the back of Hobbs, who turned no sold, leading to a double spinebuster with Nightingale. We get a four way Rear Naked Choke, as Strickland & Matthew went up top and hit stereo 450 Splashes to break Moxley & Joe’s chokes. Nicholas brought out a staple gun and stapled Hobbs, who laughed, so Nicholas stapled the side of his head, which pissed Hobbs off, so he sent him to Strickland, who got the staple gun and caught Nicholas, Moxley to the throat, casually popping Yuta with one and Castagnoli to the head. Matthew got another staple gun, but Strickland stapled him low and Schiavone felt sorry for his wife.

Shafir got a staple gun and actually stapled Strickland’s tongue until Nightingale sprinted in and hit Spears on everyone in her path until Moxley took her out with a Cutter. Omega was in with Snap Dragons all around, even to Shafir, who spat in Omega’s face as the place erupted. Superkick Party from The Bucks, even Nana and referee Rick Knox getting one. Nightingale took one as well, as The Bucks wanted a TK Driver, but Strickland launched Nicholas off the top through a table, as Nightingale turned the table on Matthew and her & Strickland hit a TK Driver for a close two that had the crowd lose their minds. Joe flattened Moxley with a Uranage, as Castagnoli was about to go after Joe with a chair when a hooded figure showed up and popped Castagnoli with a golf club, it was HOOK, who went to the back. Moxley was hooked in a Coquina Clutch by Joe, until Gabe Kidd showed up with the briefcase and took out Omega with a piledriver.

The Bucks were about to do an EVP Trigger, but Yuta put tacks in Omega’s mouth and The Bucks hit it. Giant Swing from Castagnoli into a dropkick by Yuta. Moxley slapped on the Bulldog Choke, but Joe made the save. Numbers were too much, as they all bring Joe out by the ambulance from earlier in the night when Mark Briscoe flips off the stage onto the pile and brawls with Kidd. Everyone in the match brawls into the ambulance until it’s just the Death Riders & Kidd trapped inside. Leaving The Opps & Nightingale standing as guards and The Bucks alone with Omega & Strickland. V-Trigger/House Call combo as Nana provides thumbtack covered Swerve Answers to Strickland. Almost simultaneously Omega hit a One Winged Angel on Matthew off the stage through a table that literally exploded, as Strickland did a Swerve Stomp with the tack covered shoes onto Nicholas for the win. Strickland looked into the camera and stuck his tongue out and you can see the staple Shafir gave him earlier, which is so wild.

Post-match, Team Strickland stands tall in the ring and on all four corners as jus the sight of Briscoe alone, still wildly bloody from earlier in the night, is a sight to see.

Match Result: Swerve Strickland, Kenny Omega, Willow Nightingale & The Opps (Samoa Joe, Katsuyori Shibata & Powerhouse Hobbs) defeated Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, Wheeler Yuta, Marina Shafir & The Young Bucks (Matthew & Nicholas Jackson) when Strickland pinned Nicholas

Paragon (TNT Champion Adam Cole, Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly) vs. The Don Callis Family (Kyle Fletcher, Konosuke Takeshita & Josh Alexander w/Don Callis & Lance Archer)

(Despite being some of the best wrestlers in the business, these 6 were stuck with the impossible task of following such a wild war. This was a very good match, but aside from the surprise appearance in the post-match by The Ace, the crowd was very tired. You can definitely see Kyle Fletcher getting a future TNT Title coming out of this and I wouldn’t be shocked if that happens at All In.)

Cole & Takeshita kicked things off for an equal back and forth, as O’Reilly & Alexander tagged in for much of the same before a diving knee off the second from Strong got a near fall. Alexander rushed Strong into his corner, as Fletcher tagged in, but quickly found himself lit up with Paragon kicks and fast tags. Strong was blindsided and picked apart by the Callis Family, as he was sent outside by Takeshita and swarmed by Fletcher & Alexander as Callis directed traffic, even getting in a cheap shot, selling his foot like crazy, thus having Taz hope he was seriously hurt. Strong tried to sprint to his corner, nearly got planted with a Blue   Thunder Bomb, but broke free into a nice back breaker, but was cut-off by Alexander.

Cole made the hot tag and ran wild, pump kick to Alexander getting a near fall, as Archer took over Callis’ spot on commentary. O’Reilly flew off the apron onto Fletcher, as Ushigoroshi from Cole led to a combo of kicks and rolling elbow from O’Reilly into a cross-arm breaker, until both traded Ankle Locks. Inside cradle from O’Reilly got two, as both popped up, trade kicks into a double down. Cole made the tag, but found himself triple teamed in the corner, as an assisted corner powerbomb by Takeshita got a near fall, as Strong & O’Reilly made the save. Takeshita was taken out with a running O’Reilly dropkick off the apron, as Alexander ate a backbreaker on the barricade by Strong, as back inside, Paragon flattened Fletcher with a triple strike combo. The match really broke down, as O’Reilly saved Cole from a Fletcher brainbuster until Fletcher dodged a high kick, tried a powerbomb, but O’Reilly floated through into a Guillotine. This left O’Reilly as an open target, as Takeshita popped him with a hard right hand, leading to Fletcher powering into his brainbuster for the win.

Post-match, Archer & RPG Vice joined their crew by attacking Paragon and standing tall until out walks Brody King & Tomohiro Ishii and they wait as Hiroshi Tanahashi’s music hits and he joins the party. The fight is on and we get Holy Sh*t chants for Tanahashi, as Fletcher was last man standing, suffering a Sling Blade before Cole lowered The Boom.

Match Result: The Don Callis Family defeated Paragon when Fletcher pinned O’Reilly

-We’re told Kenny Omega will defend the AEW International Title at Fyter Fest June 4th in the 4-hour broadcast. The qualifying matches will be this week on Dynamite & Collision.

  • Brody King vs. Josh Alexander (on Dynamite)
  • Mascara Dorada vs. Hechicero (on Collision)
  • Claudio Castagnoli vs. Komander (on Collision)

Will Ospreay vs. Hangman Adam Page in the Finals of the Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament

(An all timer of an AEW main event, as these two delivered the classic you would’ve hoped for and then some. Credit the crowd for getting their second wind after Anarchy in the Arena, as they bit on every false finish and high impact move throughout. The callbacks to their old rivals were a nice touch, as both were trying anything they could to win the match, even if the move wasn’t in their arsenal. This is certainly a Match of the Year candidate and a great way to end a really excellent PPV.)

An excellent pre-match video package for Page was shown as the shot zoomed in on his eyes saying “I Need This” before power walking to the ring with new pink and black gear fitting for the Owen Final, giving one last glance at the trophy. A piano version of Ospreay’s music plays as we hear audio of his promo cut last week talking about this isn’t about Page’s redemption, it’s about his ascension. Very even feeling out process, as Ospreay kipped up from a shoulder tackle and Page pulled him to the corner by the hair, realizing it was somewhat heelish, so pulled back. Page avoided a monkey flip, catches a springing Ospreay, tried a German suplex, Ospreay landed on his feet, dodged a Buckshot, swung wildly for Hidden Blade, but Page ducked into a stalemate. Snap hurricanrana by Ospreay followed by a Standing Sky Twister Press for a one count. After corner chops delivered from Ospreay, Page starched him with a wild forearm. Taz put over Page’s strikes, saying back in the pandemic days, they scouted him for Team Taz, which is a nice little reference from those days. Ospreay fought back with Pip, Pip, Cheerio, sending Page to the outside, tried a slingshot dive, got caught, as Page hit a Fall Away Slam into the LED barricade.

Back inside, Page launched Ospreay into the middle buckle and gave a long stare out to the crowd. Ospreay attempted a counter into a Stundog, but Page delivered a snap back suplex and kept Ospreay grounded. Page ramped up the kicks at Ospreay’s request to sort of wake him up, as a forearm battle ensued until Ospreay switched to a chop, so Page waffled him with a forearm. Stundog Millionaire led to a Corkscrew Kick sending Page outside, where Ospreay met him with a Sasuke Special. Torture Rack applied by Ospreay, who swung into a Blue Thunder Bomb for a near fall. Page was low bridged, as Ospreay teased a dive, but was shoved off and Page hit his springboard lariat followed by an Orihara Moonsault. Back inside, powerbomb high stack got Page two before applying a Sharpshooter. Ospreay fought for the ropes, got to his feet and threw chops, but Page no sold and hit a Saito Suplex. Page hit one big boot, but went for another, allowing Ospreay to connect on a wall walk enzugiri. Ospreay wanted Oscutter, but Page clotheslined him in mid-air. Ospreay didn’t go down, hit a Hook Kick flush, but Page folded him up with a lariat. Page charged, but Ospreay hit a Standing Spanish Fly into the double down as the crowd went nuts.

Ospreay woke himself up, but the delay allowed Page to crotch him in the corner. Ospreay slid out, trapped Page with a Cheeky Nandos kick and went up the ropes, but Page headbutt free and hit a Buckshot variation. Page went for a proper one, but Ospreay hit a Hook Kick, draping Page over the top, where he followed with a Shooting Star Press for a close two. Page cut off a corner charge and did a moonsault out of the corner into a Tombstone for two of his own. Ospreay tried a Styles Clash, but Page floated over into an Angels Wings for a near fall. Excalibur questions if that was instinct or an homage to Christopher Daniels, as nice callback to their storyline. Page tried a Best Moonsault Ever, but missed and Ospreay threw a wild Hidden Blade, only Page rolled to the ropes. They fight to the apron and trade forearms, but Ospreay blocks a big boot into a powerbomb followed by a wild Styles Clash off the apron. The replay showed Page landing nearly head first and Ospreay’s leg jammed under the both of them, but referee Bryce checked on both and ultimately put the count on, so I guess both are fine, as Page broke the count, but Ospreay was ready for an Oscutter for two.

Ospreay hit a Hidden Blade flush, but again, Page managed to kick out at two and Taz mentioned the granite jaw of Page. Ospreay lit up Page with strikes and had to be pulled back by Bryce, but as his back was turned arguing, Page teased a Buckshot, but was booted out to the Spanish Announce Table, where Ospreay slammed his face repeatedly, getting boos from the crowd. Ospreay cleared the table off, as he wanted a Tiger Driver 91, Page fought, was about to try Dead Eye, but the table collapsed before he could really do it in a scary spot. Page said screw it and hit a Dead Eye on the remnants of the table anyway, as back inside, he slowly rose and looked for the Buckshot, but Ospreay stumbled to the opposing side. Ospreay pulled himself up, lowered his elbow pad, as did Page and it’s the shootout Ospreay promised on Dynamite last week. Ospreay flipped Page off, charged and Page hit the Buckshot first, but only got two in the closest near fall of the match.

Page wanted another Buckshot, but this time, Ospreay took his head off with a Hidden Blade and quickly followed with a Storm Breaker, but Page managed to kick out. Ospreay went for a final Hidden Blade, but Page collapsed and Ospreay missed wildly. In a great camera shot, Ospreay slowly signaled for a V-Trigger and connected, but as he went for One Winged Angel, Page countered into Swerve Strickland’s Big Pressure finisher, but Ospreay got a toe on the rope. Page wanted a Buckshot, but Ospreay floated over into a Storm Breaker attempt, which Page flipped out of into a lariat. Page ran to the ropes, hit a proper Buckshot flush and got the win in an epic.

Post-match, referee Bryce put the Owen Hart Foundation title belt around Page’s waist as confetti rained and pyro went off as the graphic is official for All In, Jon Moxley vs. Hangman Adam Page for the AEW World Title. Page went up the ramp and stared at the Owen Hart Cup before walking back to the ring standing above a dejected Ospreay, who got to his feet. Page extended a handshake and Ospreay accepted, as Taz brought up even in defeat, you build a whole new level of respect for your opponent. Excalibur said it’s back to the drawing board for Ospreay to find his way to the AEW World Title as the show goes off the air with Page raising the Owen Title in the air before collapsing to his knees.

Match Result: Hangman Adam Page defeated Will Ospreay to win the Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament

AEW Collision live results: Tag Team title eliminator, Ric Flair honors ‘Mongo’ McMichael

Tonight’s Beach Break edition of AEW Collision will feature some implications for the upcoming Double or Nothing in addition to Ric Flair honoring his late friend, Steve “Mongo” McMichael.

The WWE Hall of Famer will be on hand in Chicago to pay tribute to the former WCW announcer, wrestler and Pro Football Hall of Fame member after his recent passing.

ROH Tag Team Champions Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara will take on CRU’s Lio Rush & Action Andretti with the winners challenging AEW World Tag Team Champions The Hurt Syndicate at Double or Nothing.

The Don Callis Family will be represented as Kyle Fletcher takes on AR Fox while Rocky Romero, Trent & Lance Archer battle Brody King, Tomohiro Ishii & ROH World Champion Bandido.

Big Bill & Bryan Keith will challenge the Gates of Agony in a street fight.

Megan Bayne will take on Anna Jay, “Speedball” Mike Bailey faces Blake Christian, and Powerhouse Hobbs goes one-on-one with Wheeler Yuta to round out the show.

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Live Coverage of the show will begin at 9 PM ET due to Triller delaying the airing until then.

Megan Bayne (w/ Penelope Ford) defeated Anna Jay (w/ Harley Cameron)

Bayne drove Jay back into the corner, attacking with shoulder blocks and a chop. Jay got distracted by Ford on the floor and Bayne hit a kick that caused her to fall to ringside. Bayne hit a back suplex on the apron on Jay while blowing a kiss to the camera and waving. Bayne hit a belly to belly suplex out of a bear hug, which was impressive. Bayne missed a senton on the apron and her and Jay exchanged strikes until Jay hit a back stabber. Jay low bridged Bayne, forcing her to fall to the floor, and followed with a crossbody off the apron onto both Ford and Bayne.

Jay hit a blockbuster off the middle rope, but Bayne responded by holding onto Jay as she hit the neckbreaker and rolled into a falcon arrow on Jay. Jay countered Fate’s Descent with DDT and tried to lock on a sleeper, but Bayne fought out. Ford pulled a turnbuckle pad off, but Harley Cameron pulled Ford out of the ring and they brawled to the back. Jay hit a drop toe hold into the exposed buckle on Bayne, but Bayne kicked out of the school boy roll up. Jay locked on the sleeper again, but Bayne drove Jay into the exposed buckle back first, and then powered Jay up into Fate’s Descent. This was fine, but the crowd was pretty dead for the match. A lot of the women are struggling with taking Fate’s Descent (the F5), so this looked a little rough. Jay is way better than she was even just a year ago, and Bayne is very good, and this match was better than the crowd reaction would dictate.

Kyle Fletcher (w/ Don Callis) defeated AR Fox

Fletcher rushed Fox to start the match, hitting a Yakuza kick in the corner. Fox hit a jumping kick on Fletcher and ran up the ropes and did a bunch of springs into a wheelbarrow bulldog on Fletcher. Fletcher ran back into the ring before Fox could dive and hit a pop-up eye of the storm, which was a cool twist on the old James Storm move. The graphics AEW showed throughout this match were glitched on screen, and I’m not sure if this was a Triller issue or something with the file they sent to Triller to air. Regardless, it was a bit distracting.

While TNT was on break Callis commented that his desire for the Hangman Page vs. Will Ospreay match was that they both get injured and Fletcher comes in and wins it. Fox hit a school boy into a cutter, which was really cool. Fletcher fought off a piledriver and hit a half nelson suplex. Fox tripped Fletcher on the apron and hit a stomp to him while rolling over the ropes, and then hitting a tope con giro to the floor. That was really cool. Fox missed a 450 splash and Fletcher picked him up and hit a Michinoku driver for a two count. Fletcher hit another Yakuza kick, but Fox hit a cradle for a 2-count. Fox dodged a kick to a great reaction from the crowd, but Fletcher took control again, hitting the kick he just missed, and hit a vertical drop brainbuster for the win. The crowd was getting into this one by the end, and Fletcher did take most of the match. Good match.

–A short recap video aired for Hangman Adam Page and Will Ospreay. Good way to drive the story home.

Brody King, Tomohiro Ishii, & Bandido defeated Lance Archer & Roppongi Vice (Trent Beretta & Rocky Romero) (w/ Don Callis)

Ishii immediately went after Romero, angry that he betrayed CHAOS, but Beretta pulled Romero from the ring, allowing Lance Archer and Brody King battle to the delight of the crowd. Both big men hit hard strikes, but King hit a big boot and a tope suicidia to the floor on Archer. Great start to this match. King tried to hit a running attack on Archer on the floor but Beretta cut him off with a busaiku knee on King. Archer hit a chokeslam on King onto the apron and it broke down into a ringside brawl between everyone.

The graphics continued to be washed out like someone used the fill function in photoshop to paint them all white while they advertised several matches before going to break. Romero and Beretta almost hit Strong Zero, but Bandido superkicked Beretta to break it. Brody King and Ishii helped launch a running shotgun dropkick on Rocky Romero, which almost went through Romero at the speed he hit, and King hit a cannonball in the corner for the win.

–Lance Archer attacked King after the match and the Don Callis family started beating on the babyfaces, but the Outrunners ran down to make the save and cleared the ring. The Outrunners, sadly, got very little reaction.

–We saw the Paragon talking to Lexy Nair while the Grizzled Young Veterans walked up to them, and I am having déjà vu as this angle was almost exactly the same as last week, except this time, we now have a date for their match – next week on Collision.

Mike Bailey defeated Blake Christian (w/ Lee Johnson)

As one would expect with these two, it did not start slow, with Blake Christian hitting a lowpe on Bailey, followed by a 450 double stomp on Bailey. That had to suck. Christian and Bailey exchanged kicks in the middle of the ring until Christian went for a springboard until Baily hit a superkick on the incoming Christian that dropped him. Christian and Bailey exchanged chops in the middle of the ring, ending with Bailey firing up and demanding Christian chop him. Christian stomped his foot instead, but Bailey hit a crane kick and a triangle moonsault to the floor on Christian.

Lee Johnson distracted Bailey on the floor, allowing Christian to hit his fosbury flop through the middle rope. However, this did not last long, and Bailey hit a top rope hurricanrana and a spinning heel kick for the win. This was very fast, both in time, and actual moves done in such a short period of time.

–Mike Bailey grabbed a mic and challenged Kazuchika Okada to come out and fight him. Okada’s music hit and he made his way to the ramp. As Okada was talking, Rush and Dralistico came in from the crowd and laid Bailey out. Rush eyed Okada, and Okada feigned great sadness at Bailey getting beat down. It seems we’re heading for a multi-man match for Double or Nothing.

–A short recap video aired for The Gates of Agony vs. The Learning Tree for their street fight that is coming up next.

–A post match promo from Dynamite with Jon Moxley aired, as he was still covered in blood, as he said that no one will ever make him flinch, and that Gabe Kidd worked for him now. Kidd ended the promo with the words, “Abandon all hope.” Truly awesome promo from Moxley here. One of the best he has done in awhile.

The Learning Tree (Big Bill & Bryan Keith) defeated The Gates of Agony (Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona)

As expected, this was a wild brawl. Keith was driven through a table in the corner by Kaun hitting a spear. Toa Liona Big Bill went into the middle of the ring, and Liona broke a pool cue over his own head, tossed the other half to Bill, and then they started wailing on each other with the broke pieces of the pool cues. That was awesome. Eventually they got tired of doing that, dropped the broken cue, and started charging at each other repeatedly without falling.

Bishop Kaun started choking out Bill with a cut cable of sorts, and smashed him with a garbage can. Keith hit Liona with the broken pool cue and Liona smacked Keith with a garbage can lid. Kaun and Liona started getting over in this match with their violence against Bill and Keith. There is definitely something they could do with these two.

Liona and Kaun put a garbage can over Keith’s head and put him in a tree of woe, hitting dropkicks in the corner. Liona then hit a Banzai Drop on Keith but Bill ran in and laid him out to make the save. Bill grabbed a backpack from ringside that was filled with bricks, and a fan in the front row audibly yelled “Oh man! Bricks!” That was hilarious. Bill went to hit Kaun with the brick against the ringpost, and Kaun ducked and Bill broke the brick against the ring post with an awesome loud sound. Liona dumped Bill over the announce table, taking out some of the crew, as Nigel jumped into the front row to avoid getting hit.

Keith hit Liona with a garbage can lid but Liona no sold it and hit Keith before hitting a crossbody over the barricade, onto Keith, who was propped up on the barricade, and they destroyed the timekeeper’s area. Liona picked up Keith and attempted to put him through two tables at ringside, but Keith countered out of it. Big Bill ran in and hit a big boot that sent Liona crashing through the tables. Keith grabbed a piece of drywall and broke it over Kaun’s head, who just laughed about it. Keith hit a knee and Big Bill hit a chokeslam as the fans chanted “We want drywall!” a chant I never expected to hear. Bill pinned Kaun in this wild brawl that was tons of fun.

–A hype video aired for Mina Shirakawa and Toni Storm, with Shirakawa saying that her time was now, and she was going to take Toni Storm’s title.

–The tribute for Steve ‘Mongo’ McMichael was next, with his widow, Misty, and Dean Malenko there. Tony Schiavone ran down the story of Mongo’s football career and his start in wrestling, being on TNT on Monday Nitro as a commentator, and joining the Four Horsemen. Flair said a lot of very nice things about Mongo here, talking about the six year battle Mongo faced with ALS, and the fans started chanting Mongo’s name. Flair thanked all the fans as Schiavone announced AEW working with an ALS charity. This was really nice.

The Sons of Texas (Sammy Guevara & Dustin Rhodes) defeated Cru (Action Andretti & Lio Rush)

Nigel McGuinness said that he never saw a team look so sharp, referring to the points on Rush and Andretti’s jackets, and I laughed. I do love a good pun. However, them wearing actual spikes instead of stuffing filled ones on a jacket would have made it better. Andretti mocked Rhode’s old Goldust gimmick, and Rhodes quickly made him pay for that, then tagged out to Guevara who hit a standing moonsault. Guevara hit a dive onto Cru, and Guevara then asked Rhodes to do it, and the fans cheered him on. He hit the ropes, told them to suck it, then did a spinaroonine. Not sure what I expected, as it wasn’t that, but it was hilarious.

Rush worked over the bigger Rhodes while he was grounded, and it reminded me of how good Leo Rush actually is, as he was so smooth in everything he did, right down to clipping the knee of Rhodes, letting Andretti tag in and continue the heat. I liked how they did this, as they are significantly smaller than Rhodes, but were able to make it seem believable as they cut down the bigger man. Rhodes got the foot up on a corner charge, hit a classic Rhodes style powerslam on Rush, and tagged in Guevara for the hot tag. Guevara flew over the ropes onto Andretti, hit a crossbody into the ring on both, and hit Rush with a cutter.

Guevara hit a second cutter on Andretti for a 2-count. Guevara called for a top rope move, but missed a 450 splash. Andretti and Rush then hit a seamless series of moves. Rush taunted Guevara, and Cru both hit kicks and a suplex on Guevara for a 2-count as Rhodes broke it up. Rhodes hit a Canadian Destroyer on Rush, but Andretti hit a superkick on Rhodes and dropped him. Guevara flipped out of a burning hammer and hit a GTH on Andretti and pinned him before Rush could come in to make the save. The finish seemed a little weird, like Rush was late getting there, but regardless, The Sons of Texas will face the Hurt Syndicate at Double or Nothing. Good match, though we spent weeks watching Cru in the crowd for nothing, it seems.

–Willow Nightingale & Kris Statlander were arguing backstage, and both of them said “When you’re done with the Death Riders, you know where to find me,” with Willow insinuating that Statlander was joining them and Statlander was commenting on Willow’s ongoing feud with them.

–Tony Schiavone ran down a few of the matches we will see over the next week, including a stretcher match being added to Double or Nothing between Ricochet and Mark Briscoe. That seems a little out of nowhere for the stip, but not for the match, at least. I list the full announcements below the main event! Schiavone noted that we should see the promo that Ricochet did on social media. While I have no problem watching a promo on social media, the majority of fans that watch the show do not watch social media promos, so a clip of it would have been nice here.

Powerhouse Hobbs defeated Wheeler Yuta

Yuta hit some forearms that Hobbs no sold, but got Hobbs necked on the ropes. It didn’t do much good though, as Yuta ran into Hobbs and nearly killed himself as Hobbs hit a shoulder tackle. Yuta poked Hobbs in the eyes and went for a crossbody, but Hobbs caught him and hit an Oklahoma Stampede. Hobbs slammed Yuta repeatedly on the apron then hit a massive superplex. Hobbs looked insulted that Yuta had the audacity to kick out.

Yuta slipped out of another middle rope move attempt from Hobbs, and hit a dropkick to the knee of Hobbs. Yuta ripped the kneepad off Hobbs’ right knee, screamed “What is all this tape for?” before stomping Hobbs and announcing he had to five, echoing Bryan Danielson in ROH, as the referee tried to break the hold and resuming stomping the knee. Yuta was incredible in this match as a heel.

Hobbs refused to give up, as he and Yuta ended up back on the ropes again, and Yuta bit Hobbs and shoved him from the ropes and hit a big splash for a 2-count. Yuta mocked the ‘Yes’ chants of Danielson, going for a busaiku knee, but Hobbs hit a clothesline and a powerslam to cut him off, and the fans chanted, “Meat!” for Hobbs. Yuta ended up caught in the corner, and he ate several lariats which McGuiness dubbed a series of t-bones and a ribeye. Yuta went to the knee again, and for the busaiku knee once more, but Hobbs popped up and hit a big spinebuster to pin Yuta. The crowd was not overly hot for this match, but Yuta was an incredible heel.

–Marina Shafir ran down to the ring from the crowd and hit a chopblock on Hobbs. Willow Nightingale ran down to make the save, hitting Shafir with a spinebuster. Yuta grabbed Willow by the hair to stop her beating on Shafir, but Willow shoved him into a forearm from Hobbs. Nightingale went to hit a powerbomb on Yuta, but Shafir pulled him from the ring, and the camera showed Statlander at the entrance tunnels watching the events as the show went off the air.

Final Thoughts

This was a decent episode of Collision, though largely uneventful. No match was a blow away match, but that street fight was tons of fun. The Moxley promo was awesome.

Announced for Dynamite:

Will Ospreay and Hangman Page face-to-face
MJF signs a Hurt Syndicate Contract
Mina Shirakawa vs. Julia Hart
Mercedes Mone and Jamie Hayter face-to-face

Announced for Collision:

The Grizzled Young Veterans vs. Paragon

AEW Double or Nothing Card:

Owen Hart Tournament Finals: Mercedes Mone vs. Jamie Hayter
AEW World Women’s Championship: Toni Storm (c) vs. Mina Shirakawa
Nigel McGuinness & Daniel Garcia vs. FTR
Ricochet vs. Mark Briscoe in a Stretcher Match
AEW World Tag Team Championship: The Hurt Syndicate (c) vs. The Sons of Texas
Anarchy in the Arena (no official competitor list yet)
Owen Hart Tournament Finals: Hangman Adam Page vs. Will Ospreay

AEW Collision live results: FTR vs. Paragon two-out-of-three falls

The rivalry between the newly-turned FTR and Paragon’s Kyle O’Reilly & Roderick Strong continues on tonight’s live AEW Collision as the two teams battle in a two out of three falls match.

Tonight’s show airs on TBS due to NBA playoff coverage on TNT.

In a $100,000 “high speed collision” four-way, it will be Rush vs. Kevin Knight vs. AR Fox vs. ROH Tag Team Champion Sammy Guevara.

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm takes on Lady Frost in a title eliminator bout while Megan Bayne goes one-on-one with Harley Cameron.

In a highly-anticipated singles match, Josh Alexander looks for his first AEW singles win as he battles Brody King.

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– It’s Saturday and you know what that means. Time for Collision on “The Mothership” for Saturday night wrestling, just like old times. Adam Cole made his entrance as he walked to commentary to join Tony Schiavone and Nigel McGuinness on the call.

Women’s World Championship Eliminator: “Timeless” Toni Storm versus Lady Frost

Frost looked impressive early as she had Storm on the ropes outside with a dive to the outside. In the ring, Storm bounced back with a Lou Thesz Press on Frost. After a rollup attempt, Frost caught Storm with a shoulder charge, followed by a cannonball in the corner.

Frost headed up top and dropped Storm with a cross-body for the two. Storm answered with a sitdown powerbomb for the near fall. She tried for the hip drop, but Frost intercepted and caught her for the Chiller Driller for another near-fall. Storm recovered and managed to connect with the hip drop in the corner. Storm eventually prevailed with the TCM Chickenwing submission, as Frost passed out.

Timeless” Toni Storm def. Lady Frost via submission

After the match, Storm got on the mic and addressed that while everyone’s coming for her, Storm said that she’s be coming for them instead. She headed out the ring and all around the crowd, and outside the arena in the Atlantic City boardwalk. She said that she’d be here, queer and always timeless as she wrapped her promo.

A solid enough opener and Frost did get her shots in, so really can’t complain. Storm’s post-match promo was entertaining as usual, and her remarks about being here and queer are very much welcomed, especially in the current climate of our world today.

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– We got backstage remarks from Jon Moxley ahead of his steel cage match against Samoa Joe for the AEW Title at Beach Break on May 14th. Moxley said that his affairs were in order, and that if we subscribe to the notion that he’s scared, Joe should think things through better.

$100,000 High-Speed Collision: Rush versus Sammy Guevara versus Kevin Knight versus A.R. Fox

Things started off with the four men facing off before we were left with Knight and Rush mixing it up in the ring. The two men traded chops and strikes before Rush got the edge on Knight with a fierce headbutt. Knight recovered to deliver a scoop slam on Rush as we then got a stalemate of armdrags and dropkicks from the two. Guevara and Fox soon re-entered the match and had their turn of the action as they dispatched of Knight and Rush.

Guevara flipped over Fox as he then floored his foe with a dropkick. Fox reversed Guevara in the corner and hit a splash on the apron. As Knight and Rush re-entered the ring, things quickened right as Knight missed on a running corner attack after Rush dodged at the last second. We went to break at this point.

We returned to Collision with Hologram keeping an eye on the match from the crowd as Fox and Knight exchanged pleasantries. From the apron, Fox soared with a springboard inverted moonsault on Knight. Guevara soon took down both Knight and Fox with a shooting star press. Rush aggressively reasserted himself as he threw everyone into the barricade. Knight fought out of an attempted suplex on the steps by Rush, as he blasted him with a stairs-assisted leaping dropkick. As Knight tried to run at Rush, he got thrown right onto the ramp back first, which made for a rough landing. Rush and Knight then brawled their way up the stage as Guevara and Fox were left in the ring.

Fox countered Guevara’s GTH as he then caught him with a Spanish Fly, followed by a splash for the close near fall. Fox left a prone Guevara in the middle of the ring and looked to hit a senton. Fox again countered out of a GTH attempt, but he couldn’t avoid the knee from one half of the ROH Tag Champions. Third time’s the charm for Guevara as he finished off Fox with the GTH to earn the $100,000.

After the match, Guevara pointed towards Adam Cole, making it clear he wanted a shot at Cole’s TNT Championship.

Sammy Guevara def. A.R. Fox, Kevin Knight, and Rush via pinfall (Guevara pinned Fox)

Just a fun four-way match, something that AEW has really excelled in as of late with four high-flying stars. Lots to like here.

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– We got a pretape promo from Samoa Joe ahead of his Steel Cage match against Jon Moxley at Beach Break. Joe said that while he understands that Moxley has the ruthless streak to go after him, and that he had to put this match in the cage because he felt that the the Jon Moxley he sees today doesn’t have the courage to face him like a man.

– A hype video from The Paragon’s Kyle O’Reilly and Roderick Strong, and FTR for their 2/3 Falls Match was shown before our next match.

Megan Bayne versus Harley Cameron

Cameron caught Bayne flatfooted as the bell rang with a charge into the corner, which gave her the early advantage. Cameron battered Bayne from the corner as she continued to set the tone early on, at least until Bayne turned the tide with an overhead throw. This gave Bayne the opportunity to take over with repeated attacks in the corner, followed by a suplex right on the AEW logo in the middle of the ring. Bayne maintained command with a butterfly suplex, followed by a spear from the corner as we headed to a break in the action.

Collision returned with Cameron having made a brief comeback as she fought off Bayne up the top rope with a bite. When Penelope Ford tried to get involved, she got dropped by Cameron for her troubles. A spinning tornado DDT from Cameron nearly had the match won for her, but Bayne kicked out. Bayne blocked a Cameron suplex attempt before she delivered a Falcon Arrow for the two-count. Cameron escaped a Fate’s Descent attempt, but that couldn’t translate to anything substantial as Bayne dropped her with a sit-out powerbomb. That only got a near-fall, however.

Cameron blasted Bayne with a running knee, but her attempt at a dive was caught by Bayne, who then propped her up for Fate’s Descent and the victory.

Following the match, Cameron and Ford put in the beatdown on Cameron, up until Anna Jay ran in and hit Bayne with the two-by-four to no effect. Jay goaded Bayne to attack her, but that sent her flying out of the ring.

Megan Bayne def. Harley Cameron via pinfall

Quite the impressive showing for Harley Cameron, even in defeat. She continues to be a great talent that just gets better and better every time I see her in action. As for Megan Bayne, what else can be said? She is a dominant force and booked accordingly by AEW.

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Jon Moxley speaks again

The AEW World Champion and Marina Shafir stormed the ring from the crowd, as Moxley took the mic. He asked just what exactly it was according to Samoa Joe that he didn’t understand, and wondered what it was that Joe was going to do inside the steel cage. Moxley said that he had faced the baddest competitors on the planet — all of whom were saying the same things that Joe were saying — and that they all ended up the same way.

Moxley said that Joe should look at his parntners and realize that they’ve been in a real firefight this whole time.

– After a recap of Roppongi Vice assaulting The Outrunners last week, we got remarks from The Youngest Men Alive backstage. Truth Magnum and Turbo Floyd issued a challenge to Rocky Romero and Trent Beretta for a match.

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Brody King versus Josh Alexander

Lock-up in the middle of the ring to start as King held the advantage early on to start. Alexander eventually tried to keep pace, but found himself hit hard with a King chop. In the corner, King teed off on Alexander with repeated strikes before referee Bryce Remsburg told him to back off. King placed Alexander across the top turnbuckle and chopped him hard.

On the apron, Alexander thought he had King stun, but he was caught with a Death Valley Driver onto the floor outside the ring. King threw Alexander over the barricade before he threw him for the suplex right on the floor. King had Alexander stunned as he sat him onto a chair against the barricade. He looked for a running charge, but Alexander wisely dropped to the floor, as he then kicked King’s leg against the steel steps. Alexander trapped King on the apron with a leg tied on the bottom rope as he followed that with a neckbreaker right onto the apron.

Collision returned to live action with King looking to deliver a high-risk maneuver from the top rope, but Alexander fought out of it. The Canadian had King lifted up, but couldn’t get anything as King escaped a grisly fate. A battle of chops saw King get the best of Alexander in the ensuing duel. Alexander put the straps down and had King rocked with repeated running boots to the head. Alexander again hoisted King and dropped him with an Argentine Powerbomb for the two count.

A big back body drop by King allowed for the big man to follow that up with a Black Hole Slam on Alexander for the near-fall. Alexander shoved King onto the ropes for a follow-up snap German suplex, but he got absolutely crushed by King’s lariat afterwards. With Alexander prone in the corner, King barreled onto his foe with a cannonball, but that only got a two-count once more.

With Alexander on the apron, King lifted him onto the top rope for an attempt at a titanic superplex that he got all of with maximum force. As both King and Alexander got up, we got a warning that one minute was left on this match. Alexander targeted King’s leg as he applied the ankle lock. King got on his feet somehow and hit a German suplex, followed by the lariat. King connected with the Ganso Bomb, but Alexander rolled out of the ring as time expired on the match.

After the match, as Lance Archer tended to Alexander, King flew onto the two with a dive. King placed Archer onto a chair, as well as some security men for the running dive against the barricade. Alexander clipped King’s leg, which allowed Archer to recover and lay out King.

Brody King vs. Josh Alexander ended in a Time-Limit Draw

Hell of a match and you can never go wrong with big meaty men slapping meat, and it was certainly on the menu in Atlantic City. Just nothing but hard-hitting action. What more can you ask for? The post-match with Lance Archer certainly guarantees we’ll be in for more meaty action in the near future.

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Max Caster’s Best Wrestler Alive Challenge

Max Caster, the so-called Best Wrestler Alive, was in the ring as he asked for a five-minute timer to be up, so he can prove that nobody can survive five minutes in the ring with him. He then asked for the fans to do his chant correctly.

Daniel Garcia appeared to answer Caster’s challenge.

As the bell rang, Garcia had the early advantage as he dropped Caster with a swinging neckbreaker. He did his signature dance, followed by the shotgun dropkick and the piledriver for the quick win in under a minute.

After the match, Garcia said he just handled his business and told FTR to handle their business so he can talk to them afterwards.

Daniel Garcia def. Max Caster

Caster’s act is getting over quite well, to the point that he seemed to be struggling to hide his laughter as the crowd was doing his “Best Wrestler Alive” chant with him, so that’s nice to see.

**********

– Backstage, Lexy Nair interviewed Anthony Bowens before Blake Christian rudely interrupted the interview. Christian claimed that while Bowens won when they faced, the people were talking about how Christian outshined Bowens in that encounter. Bowens challenged Christian and Lee Johnson to step up to him anytime, anywhere.

The Gates of Agony (Bishop Kaun and Toa Liona) versus Ray Jazz and Goldy

Kaun held the advantage early on Jazz with a pair of suplexes before he tagged in Liona to get his pound of flesh. Goldy got sent to the outside with a fierce pounce from Liona. The Gates of Agony then put Jazz away in short order with a double slam.

After the match, the Cru were in the crowd and tried to get in, before Big Bill and Bryan Keith challenged Kaun and Liona to meet them in the parking lot for a fight.

The Gates of Agony def. Ray Jazz and Goldy (Toa Liona pinned Jazz)

Short and sweet squash, not much else to say.

**********

This Week on Dynamite:

  • Swerve Strickland/Speedball Mike Bailey/Mark Briscoe vs. The Young Bucks & Ricochet
  • Jamie Hayter sits down with Renee Paquette
  • Samoa Joe vs. Claudio Castagnoli

– In the parking lot, Big Bill and Bryan Keith brawled it out with the Gates of Agony, as a hapless local competitor found himself in the crossfiire of Toa Liona and Big Bill’s brawl. The action cut away as the brawl seemed like it was far from over.

2/3 Falls Match: FTR (Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler) vs. Paragon (Kyle O’Reilly and Roderick Strong)

O’Reilly and Wheeler started things off for their two teams as the latter escaped an omoplata attempt from the former. O’Reilly countered Wheeler into an armbar as Harwood entered the match for his team. In the corner, Strong was the legal man as he chopped Harwood with vicious force. This led to a skirmish of chops and strikes between Harwood and Strong, which ended with a dropkick by Strong and the tag to O’Reilly.

Wheeler tagged back in as FTR looked to have the upper hand on O’Reilly, but not for long. O’Reilly had Wheeler and Harwood dead to rights with a series of kicks to each men. FTR attempted the Shatter Machine on O’Reilly, but Strong broke it up. Strong took out Wheeler with a dropkick to the outside as O’Reilly locked in an ankle lock on Harwood. On Stokely Hathaway’s instruction, Wheeler tapped out to give Paragon the 1-0 lead, and a breather for FTR.

Paragon scores the first fall via submission (K. O’Reilly via submission on D. Harwood)

The action returned after a quick break with O’Reilly getting floored by a double clothesline from FTR. The diving elbow by Wheeler kept O’Reilly grounded as FTR held control of the match at this juncture. O’Reilly tried to create space by escaping Wheeler’s chinlock, and then avoiding a dropkick in the corner. Hot tag to Strong gave the Messiah of the Backbreaker a surge of momentum on both Wheeler and Harwood, which naturally made Adam Cole proud on commentary.

Outside the ring, both teams were fighting it out as Strong stacked Wheeler and Harwood onto a chair — which broke the chair — as O’Reilly then took flight with a Canadian missile dropkick onto both FTR members from the apron. The brawl entered into the crowd as Harwood threw O’Reilly onto the apron, which left Strong alone in the ring with FTR as we had our final commercial break of the evening at this point.

Our main event returned with O’Reilly having made it back to his corner and the tag being made. Like a blaze of fire, O’Reilly went on the attack against both Harwood and Wheeler. Ankle lock applied on Wheeler, but Harwood broke the hold. WIth Harwood tagged in, O’Reilly and Strong appeared to have him trapped for a double team move, but Wheeler stepped in at the last minute to shove O’Reilly away. This allowed FTR to deliver Shatter Machine on Strong for the 1, 2, 3, and the match tied.

FTR scores the second fall via pinfall (D. Harwood pinned R. Strong)

With the action now in sudden death overtime, FTR attempted to hit the Shatter Machine again, but O’Reilly and Strong hit High and Low on Harwood. The cover was made, but Stokely put Harwood’s foot on the rope as things broke down. By match’s end, FTR would get the final fall with a rake to the eye of O’Reilly and the Shatter Machine.

After the match, Daniel Garcia walked down the ramp, armed with a crowbar and a microphone, to confront FTR as promised. Garcia said that there’s nothing more that he’d like to do but hit the three of them with a crowbar, but he has too much love for FTR to do that. He said that after what FTR did to Cope, Daddy Magic, and Garcia himself, he was looking for answers. Garcia challenged either one of Wheeler or Harwood to meet him in the ring next week, and that it didn’t matter if there was ten of them, fifteen of them, fifty of them, or one hundred of them, He was going to beat the answers out of them next week.

FTR def. Paragon via pinfall (2-1)

A very fun 2/3 Falls main event match to cap off another solid edition of Collision, which maintains its streak of being a breeze to watch from start to finish. The absolute war that was King vs. Alexander and this main event were the standouts of a great show that I enjoyed.

AEW Collision Playoff Palooza live results: FTR vs. The Paragon, Toni Storm in action

After they laid out the Rock ‘n’ Roll Express Wednesday and formally aligned with Stokely Hathaway, the new-attitude FTR will take on The Paragon’s Kyle O’Reilly & Roderick Strong on tonight’s AEW Collision.

Live coverage begins shortly after the NBA playoff action ends on TNT.

In a title eliminator match, AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm will put a future title shot up against Queen Aminata.

ROH World Champion Bandido will have the first defense of his title reign as he takes on Dralistico. The challenger’s brother Rush will go one-on-one with AR Fox.

Former AEW World Champion Swerve Strickland will face Blake Christian while Max Caster will host yet another open challenge in search of his first win.

In a tornado tag team match, Cru (Lio Rush & Action Andretti) will take on rivals Top Flight (Darius & Dante Martin).

Past title challenger Anna Jay returns to AEW for the first time since December against an opponent to be named.

**********

AEW Collision opened with Swerve Strickland and Prince Nana coming down to the ring. Before Swerve could say anything, The Young Bucks came out with mics to confront him. Nick Jackson was deeply offended at the crowd booing him, and Matt Jackson said Nick was a hot head, but Swerve’s match, which was scheduled for later, was now moved up to be the opener and Swerve had to wrestle without his gear on.

Swerve Strickland defeated Blake Christian (w/ Lee Moriarty)

Swerve hit the ropes and Moriarty tripped him, allowing Christian to get a jump on him at the start of the match. Christian hit his backflipping suicide dive on Swerve, but Swerve raked the eyes of Christian and threw him into the barricade. Christian, however, drove Swerve into the ring post and continued his short heat segment. Christian tried to hit a spear on the apron to Strickland, but he caught Christian and placed him on middle ropes before hitting aneckbreaker as Christian was draped between the ropes. That was a really cool spot.
Swerve rolled out of the way of 450 splash and popped up, hitting a House Call that immediately ceased all of Christian’s offence. Swerve hit a JML Driver for the pinfall.

Lee Moriarty attacked Swerve after the bell, but Swerve fought him off. However, the Young Bucks ran in and hit the EVP Trigger, leaving Swerve laid out as Nick Jackson did a dance to mock Swerve and Prince Nana. The Bucks went for the Meltzer Driver on Swerve, but Kenny Omega ran down to make the save. The Bucks immediately started stomping him but Omega managed to hit a snap dragon suplex on Nick Jackson, but before he could hit V-Trigger, the Matt Jackson pulled Nick from the ring. AEW then announced Mark Briscoe, Mike Bailey, Kevin Knight, and Kenny Omega against Kazuchika Okada, Ricochet, and The Young Bucks for Dynamite next Wednesday. That match is going to rule.

–Samoa Joe talked about Jon Moxley in a backstage promo, saying Moxley was not unpredictable. He was always looking to create chaos, but Samoa Joe was not someone that would be bothered by it, and he was coming for Moxley. This promo was awesome. Samoa Joe is still one of the best promos in the business.

Toni Storm (w/ Luther) defeated Queen Aminata

Aminata overwhelmed Storm in the early part of the match, but Storm was able to hit a shoulder tackle and a basement dropkick. The fans did not believe Aminata could win, so this hurt the heat a bit, but the fans sung Storm’s theme throughout, so at least there was that. Storm ended up with a bloody nose, and Aminata knocked Storm to the floor. Aminata has a lot of potential and is improving a lot, but she does need to work a little bit on being less stiff.

Aminata and Storm exchanged… hip attacks? Posterior battles? Either way, they started hitting each other that way are some snapmares. Aminata locked in a submission attempt, but Storm leaned back for a 2-count, and then both women hit headbutts and dropped to the mat. Storm hit a Thesz Press and several punches and forearms on Aminata, hitting a few heavy shots before hitting a DDT and locked on a STF. Nigel claimed that Toni taught the move to Lou Thesz.

Aminata hit a facewash kick in the corner, sending Storm to the floor. Storm hit a drop toe hold on Aminata into a chair, but Aminata dodged the hip attack against the guardrail. Storm hit a flying body press for a 2-count, but Aminata kicked out and powered Storm up into a Beach Break for a 2-count. Storm hit a chokebomb for a 2-count, and went for Storm Zero, but Aminata cradled Storm then hit a twist and shout. Aminata missed a splash, ate a German suplex, and hit her running hip attack and a Storm Zero for the pinfall. This turned into a really good match, and the crowd got into it the harder and harder the women worked. Props to them, as this ended up being very good by the end.

–Jeff Jarrett and his crew showed up, and they were questioning where Sonjay Dutt has been of late. Dutt showed up, and they dismissed Lexy Nair. Jarrett pointed out that he wanted AEW gold in 2025, and that Sonjay was supposed to help them get there as their manager (I think?), and Jarrett said he was listening to the wrong voices. Lethal agreed, and Jarrett, Karen Jarrett, Satnam Singh, and Lethal all left Sonjay Dutt looking said. I really have no idea what was going on in this, and had no idea Dutt was gone or not around them. Was this something that was happening in ROH? Or was it just something that happened now? Either way, I feel like we missed at least a week or two of storytelling here.

–Max Caster was in the ring, and apparently he is just continuing his gimmick after losing to Anthony Bowens. Tony Schiavone expressed disgust when a sign said, “Let’s go Max, you’re the best wrestler alive!” which the highlight of this segment. Caster accused the streets of smelling like horse urine, and a guy in the front row nodded, knowingly. That was hilarious.

Hologram defeated Max Caster

Caster tried to attack, but Hologram hit a Spanish Fly and then a tope suicida headbutt and a portal bomb for the 3-count. The crowd was really into Hologram in this match, popping big for his moves. Come on, Tony, it’s time to do something with this guy, even an ROH title.

–A recap video aired of Master P on Dynamite, and he was interviewed backstage by Renee Paquette and he talked about his charity work and how he was not impressed by the Death Riders attacking from behind. This was a nice segment, especially for promoting the charity.

Cru (Action Andretti & Leo Rush) defeated Top Flight (Darius & Dante Martin) (w/ Leila Grey) in a Tornado Tag Match

Cru grabbed kendo sticks from under the ring to start an attack on Top Flight, but Top Flight stepped on them and took them away. Cru refused to get in the ring, so Top Flight put them down, baited them in, and immediately started hitting a series of double team moves on Andretti and Rush. Andretti chased Grey around the ring, and Rush managed to hit a dive on Darius Martin as he was distracted by Andretti. Cru put a garbage can over the head of Darius Martin and hit it with kendo sticks, before choking Darius Martin with the stick.

Cru beat down on both Martin brothers for the next few minutes. The match came back from the ad break as Dante Martin hit a garbage can lid on Andretti and then Lio Rush, as they started their comeback. The fans were chanting for tables, but Dante Martin grabbed a black bag of something from under the ring, and the fans booed. Just grab the table, man, then grab the bag. Lio Rush hit a stunner on Darius Martin and Andretti picked up the bag and it was filled with Mardi Gras beads, which actually popped the crowd. Dante Martin slammed Rush on the beads for a two count,.

Rush hit a drop toe hold on Darius Martin onto a chair, and Andretti followed with a dropkick. Cru suplexed Darius Martin on the chair that was setup, which looked absolutely brutal as the chair shot out from under Martin and across the ring. Leila Grey tried to stop Cru from hitting Top Flight, but she got knocked off the apron the process, with Rush then hitting a frog splash on Darius Martin, followed by a 450 Splash from Andretti for the win. This was a fun match.

Anna Jay defeated Taylor Gainey

Anna Jay hit a hook kick on Gainey, followed by a hard forearm in the corner and a spinning kick. Jay hit the Gory Bomb for the win very quickly.

Penelope Ford came down to the ring, and it seems Anna Jay will be facing Ford and Bayne for a little while, at least on TV. Bayne’s music hit, and Jay looked away, leading to Ford attacking and brawling with Jay as Bayne slowly came down to the ring. Ford held Jay in the ring so Bayne could hit a F5, leaving Jay laid out.

–A hype video aired for Mercedes Moné and Jamie Hayter for the finals of the Owen Hart Foundation Women’s Tournament. This was very good.

Bandido defeated Dralistico to retain the ROH World Championship

Dralistico flipped of the fans when they wouldn’t cheer him, and he rolled to the floor to yell at the fans and threaten to leave. Given that this is a world title match, that is not very wise. Bandido tried to honour the Code of Honor, but Dralistico refused. Bandido and Dralistico went to it with some awesome lucha to open the match, exchanging some very fast paced offence. Both men exchanged hard chops on the apron before Dralistico hit a hurricanrana to the floor on Bandido.

Dralistico did his Los Ingobernables pose, and the crowd popped. As they came back from an ad break, Bandido hit a tope suicida on Dralistico before went back into the ring and hit a Fosbury Flop and the crowd roared in approval. Bandido hit a frog splash for a two count. After an exchange, Bandido hit a kick and both men were down. Dralistico hit a code breaker off the middle rope to Bandido for a two count. Bandido managed to counter a corner charge, and then hit the 21-Plex on Dralistico for the 3-count. Good match.

–The Learning Tree was backstage, and Big Bill & Bryan Keith were talking about how they needed to start beating people up and winning for their own benefit, and not just to please Chris Jericho. They called out the Gates of Agony, saying that they were offering to let them try to make a name for themselves against the Learning Tree. This was a good promo. Simple, to the point, and sets up a match for Dynamite.

Rush defeated AR Fox

Fox got a brief moment of offence in this one, hitting a dive over the top rope, but soon defeated fox with the corner dropkick for the win.

–RPG Vice were backstage, and Trent Beretta and Rockey Romero were insulted because people were calling them underrated. Romero said he was tired of the disrespect he has faced, including not being on the Conglomeration T-shirt, and they attacked and laid out the Outrunners. Good segment here too.

–Kyle Fletcher was featured in a promo video, talking about how he wasn’t sure what was more important – winning the Owen Hart Foundation Tournament, or stopping Will Ospreay from winning. Fletcher promised to make Hangman choke and lose, and Hangman said he was going to violently fight Fletcher in a way that he has never felt before, and that he needed to win the tournament so he could get the title back. AEW is keenly aware that the long term story needs to be Hangman chasing the world title, but might have Ospreay win it first. Either way, we are in for a great match with Hangman and Fletcher, and a great finals is either faces Ospreay.

The Paragon (Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly) defeated FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) (w/ Stokely Hathaway)

Strong and O’Reilly spend the start of the match isolating FTR, sending them to the floor. FTR started arguing with the announcers, and Nigel McGuinness told them off for losing their focus, and said they needed to focus on the match in the ring, as he tried to maintain being unbiased, as they are clearly starting to get under his skin. I really like this aspect of the story, as Nigel is a tremendous wrestler, and two heels going after him is intriguing, especially as he is usually the heel announcer.

FTR performed an illegal tag, not holding onto the ring rope, and Harwood complained to the referee, but this only opened Wheeler to get his hands stepped on repeatedly by O’Reilly. When they came back from the break, FTR was finally able to get some offence in, throwing O’Reilly into the ring steps while beating down Strong nearby. Harwood hit a slingshot suplex on O’Reilly for a two count, calling back to Tully Blanchard. O’Reilly broke away and went for a tag, but Strong was still on the floor. Wheeler went for a bulldog but quickly switched direction and hit a lariat on and dropped O’Reilly.

O’Reilly hit a kitchen sink as Wheeler hit the ropes and tried to tag out again, but Strong was still on the floor. O’Reilly steeled himself, and hit a leg sweep on Wheeler and hard kicks on both members of FTR and both Harwood and O’Reilly went down after a double clothesline. O’Reilly went for a tag again, but Wheeler had rolled to the floor and dropped Strong on the stairs knee first, keeping him down again. O’Reilly went for a guillotine choke on Wheeler, but Harwood hit an axe handle to break the submission.

FTR continued to isolate O’Reilly, as Strong stood up again, but got thrown into the barricade by Harwood, while O’Reilly was catapulted into the bottom rope by Wheeler. O’Reilly finally managed to tag Strong in, who continued to sell his leg with every move he did, making a comeback on one leg. Strong couldn’t run from teh corner at one point, so he just turned around and went back to punches. As he came back again, Harwood grabbed him and went for a cover with his feet on the ropes.

Tony Schiavone was disgusted with Stokley Hathaway cheering FTR, calling him one of the worst human beings he knows, which was great. Harwood did a figure four around the ring post on Strong, breaking before the 5 count, but continuing to work the knee of Strong. Harwood locked on the figure four leglock in the ring, this time going for the official submission. O’Reilly came in with a flying basement dropkick to Harwood to break the hold before hitting a plancha to the floor on Wheeler. Strong tagged out to O’Reilly, who started kick and brawling with Harwood.

O’Reilly shot on Harwood and took him down into a leglock, but Wheeler broke it up with a big splash on O’Reilly. Harwood went for a piledriver, and FTR succeeded in the spike piledriver on O’Reilly for the win. What a fantastic tag match. That was a tremendous main event match and about as good as a tag team match you will see this week, if it wasn’t for the Young Bucks and Knight & Ospreay on Dynamite.

Adam Cole came down to check on his friends, and was about to be taken out by FTR and Hathaway, but Daniel Garcia ran down with a crowbar to chase the heels off to close the show. Good main event, and good closing angle that continues to build this feud with FTR and Paragon/Garcia. Daniel Garcia called out FTR, saying they couldn’t finish the job against him. Garcia said that no matter how long it took, he was going after them each week until he made them pay. Good promo.

Final Thoughts

A good, if uneventful, AEW Collision, with some stories advancing slowly, and an awesome tag team main match in the main event. This was definitely a thumbs up show, and I like the stories they are developing slowly as they move towards Double or Nothing and All In.

AEW Collision live results: Mercedes Mone & Harley Cameron team up, TNT title match

A night after delivering a memorable performance in the Owen Hart Foundation tournament, reigning TBS Champion Mercedes Mone will compete in tag team action on tonight’s live AEW Collision.

The Boston native returns home for the second consecutive night, this time teaming with Harley Cameron against Kris Statlander and Julia Hart with AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm on commentary. Mone will face the winner of Statlander vs. Hayter in the finals of the women’s Owen tourney next month.

After making his promotional debut Wednesday, Josh Alexander will team with Konosuke Takeshita against Rocky Romero & Tomohiro Ishii. Alexander fell in defeat to Hangman Page and attacked him afterward at Don Callis’ behest.

After winning the title at Dynasty, TNT Champion Adam Cole will put his newly-won gold on the line for the first time in an open challenge.

Nick Wayne will challenge for Komander’s Ring of Honor men’s TV title while Kevin Knight will battle Lance Archer.

**********

THE DEATH RIDERS TAKE OVER THE SHOW

Sir Elton John welcomed us to the Spring Break Thru edition of Collision. Tony Schiavone and Nigel McGuinness were on the stage to welcome us to the show, where they recapped last night’s Dynamite and ran down the card for tonight’s Collision before getting cut off by Marina Shafir attacking a stagehand. She took the mic from Arkady Aura as The Death Riders made their way to the ring.

Claudio Castagnoli destroyed a camera before destroying a cameraman by putting him through a table at ringside. The crowd cursed out Wheeler Yuta as they destroyed the ringside area. The crowd chanted You Tapped Out at Moxley before he told the babyface army to enjoy their celebration as it’s the last one they would be having for a long time. Moxley said that he didn’t want help from The Young Bucks and warned them not to cross him or they would never be seen in pro wrestling again.

Moxley moved onto Samoa Joe, who choked him out last night on Dynamite. He treated Joe with reverence and gave him his space, but Joe started something that Moxley had to finish. He wouldn’t hide and would fight Joe to the death for the AEW World Title because he didn’t know any other way. Moxley officially challenged Samoa Joe and said that Joe knew exactly what he was dealing with. The Death Riders left the scene, allowing the announcers to finish running down tonight’s card.

(A hot start to the show, with a clear direction for the World Title set after Samoa Joe choked out the World Champion last night.)

Kevin Knight vs. Lance Archer (w/ Don Callis)

Archer got a jump start on Knight and dragged him up to the stage to pinball him off the video board and down the ramp. Archer went for a chokeslam from the ramp to the ring, but Knight spun to his feet and dropkicked Archer. Knight hit a springboard moonsault to Archer on the ramp before following with a high cross. Archer shot out of the corner with a lariat to shut Knight down.

A short-arm clothesline from Archer, reminiscent of Archer’s former manager Jake Roberts, laid out Knight as Archer took full control. Knight got Archer to his knees and hit a shoulder block to send Archer to the floor. Callis cut off Knight as he climbed to the top rope, allowing Archer to pull Knight from the ring and swing him into the ring steps as we went to a commercial.

Archer squashed Knight in the corner as we came back from commercial. Archer teased Knight to fight back before drilling him with a forearm. Knight pulled Archer down for a small package for a nearfall, but Archer kicked out and hit a release German suplex. Archer set Knight up for the Blackout, but Knight flipped through to his feet. Knight countered a chokeslam with a dropkick and evaded Archer but ran into a boot from Archer in the corner. Archer set up a chokeslam from the second rope, but Knight pulled Archer down with a headscissors and hit the UFO Splash for a nearfall.

Archer came back with a buckle bomb and a chokeslam for a nearfall. Archer went for a ropewalk, but Knight swiped Archer’s legs out from under him and hit a springboard lariat to the floor. Knight hit another springboard lariat in the ring for the win.

(This was a fantastic match as far as giving Knight some shine against a credible name in Archer. The crowd was fully behind him as he eventually took the big man down for the win. An effective TV match in terms of building Knight as a future star.)

Match Result: Kevin Knight def. Lance Archer

We got video from the new AEW Trios Champions Samoa Joe, Katsuyori Shibata, & Powerhouse Hobbs. Samoa Joe said that The Death Riders learned that predators can be hunted too. They were The Opps, they were men just looking for a fight, and they were coming for so much more. Joe indicated that Hobbs was now an official Opp.

(This is the energy I want these Trios Titles to have. Groups of people coming together to fight anybody. A guy who has issues with Samoa Joe personally can find partners to fight them, or a guy who has history with Hobbs. These titles can be vibrant showcases of the roster instead of shackled by the need for a dedicated Trios division.)

Kris Statlander & Jamie Hayter were backstage ahead of their Owen Hart Foundation Tournament semifinal. Statlander said that there were other women in the division worthy of praise. They got in each other’s faces and said that whoever won had better go all the way.

At the desk, Tony Schiavone read a letter from FTR, who were suspended without pay for the week for their actions on last week’s Collision. They apologized for their actions and claimed that their punishment wasn’t strong enough. Harwood claimed that he wouldn’t have gone through with a piledriver to Schiavone, but he felt justified in scaring him for what he said. They gave a disingenuous apology to Nigel McGuinness as well, making it clear that they didn’t think McGuinness could beat them up if they wanted to. Schiavone & McGuinness were nonplussed.

(I enjoy the disingenuous nature of FTR’s characters right now.)

Josh Alexander & Konosuke Takeshita vs. Rocky Romero & Tomohiro Ishii

Don Callis joined commentary as his newest charge took the ring with Takeshita. Ishii and Takeshita got after it while McGuinness announced that Mark Briscoe would be adding a ninth child to the Briscoe Family. There may be more Briscoes than Bullet Club members at this point, congratulations to the Briscoe family. Callis explained that he gave former TNA World Champion Alexander his first contract in the US and stayed in touch with him over the years. Takeshita and Alexander teamed up on Romero, with Alexander hitting his sick car crash crossbody off the apron as we went to commercial.

After the break, Romero hit a top rope Sliced Bread to Takeshita before tagging in Ishii, who ran wild on Alexander. The match broke down into a Pier Six brawl as bodies flew everywhere. Takeshita shoved Romero onto Ishii’s cover, and the two argued before they got shoved into each other. Alexander got Ishii in an ankle lock before Romero broke it up.

Alexander scored with a German suplex for a nearfall before Romero broke it up. A double team got broken up by Alexander, and Ishii accidentally caught Romero with a lariat before Alexander rolled up Ishii for a nearfall. Ishii scored with a headbutt and went for the tag, but Romero hopped off the apron and left Ishii to the dogs. The Callis Family hit a pair of forearms before Alexander hit a powerbomb for the win.

The crowd chanted Rocky Sucks like it was 1997 as Romero got back into the ring looking apologetic. He went to help Ishii up before Ishii shoved him. From behind Ishii emerged Trent Beretta, and the seemingly reformed Roppongi Vice laid the boots to Ishii. The Callis Family came back to ringside to welcome Beretta back. Callis handed Beretta a giant wrench, and Beretta drilled Ishii in the back of the head. The Callis Family stood hand in hand with Roppongi Vice to end the segment.

(A solid match, but the story is the return of Trent Beretta after another long injury layoff and the addition of Roppongi Vice to the Callis Family. The Romero turn was done well, as Rocky fought hard but got tired of the miscommunication. RPG Vice is a hell of an addition to the tag team ranks and will be a great addition to AEW TV going forward.)

Match Result: Josh Alexander & Konosuke Takeshita def. Tomohiro Ishii & Rocky Romero

Lexy Nair’s guest at this time was Mercedes Mone. After reminding Nair that she’s beaten Kris Statlander twice, Mini Mone entered the frame. This was some more comedy with Harley Cameron.

Megan Bayne (w/ Penelope Ford) vs. Rebecca Scott & Ashley Vox

The locals had a decent idea of getting a jumpstart on Bayne, but Bayne took them down with a double German suplex. Bayne took Vox down with three powerbombs, dropped Scott with a jumping clothesline, then dropped Scott on top of Vox with Fate’s Descent for the quick win. Bayne made them both bow down before standing tall.

Match Result: Megan Bayne def. Rebecca Scott & Ashley Vox

We got a video package for Anthony Bowens, where he repeated the five tools he had and hit all of his catchphrases.

Adam Cole came out for a TNT Title Open Challenge. Cole was listed as representing “Paragon,” which might be the new name of the Undisputed Kingdom. The challenge was answered by Claudio Castagnoli.

AEW TNT Title Match – Adam Cole (c) vs. Claudio Castagnoli

Cole took the fight to Castagnoli, but Castagnoli took him down with a slam and a boot out of the corner. Cole fought Castagnoli off and took him down with a neckbreaker for a one count. Cole caught Castagnoli with a superkick to the knee and a shining wizard for a nearfall, then sent Castagnoli to the floor with bicycle kicks. Castagnoli brought Cole to the floor, where they fought around ringside before Castagnoli dropped Cole back-first on the barricade. Castagnoli hit a Gorilla Press to Cole over the barricade as the crowd chanted AEW.

Castagnoli took Cole down with a lariat as he re-entered the ring. After a commercial, Castagnoli pinballed Cole around with uppercuts before running into a superkick. Cole hit a backstabber for a nearfall. Castagnoli backdropped out of the Panama Sunrise but caught a superkick after a back and forth. Cole hit a neckbreaker over the knee for a nearfall.

Castagnoli countered a second Sunrise attempt into a Giant Swing for a nearfall, before transitioning into a Crossface. Cole rolled back into a pin for a nearfall, then caught a launching Castagnoli with a superkick for a nearfall. Cole went to drop The Boom, but Castagnoli hit the Swiss Death uppercut for a nearfall. Castagnoli hammered Cole with uppercuts in the corner before hitting a superplex, but Cole pulled Castagnoli back with a crucifix pin to get the win.

The rest of “The Paragon” came out to celebrate with Cole before leaving. Castagnoli lost his mind at ringside, tipping the announce table over before the rest of the Death Riders came out to calm him down. The crowd chanted LOSERS as the Death Riders left.

(A much better showing for Cole in his first TNT Title defense. Castagnoli losing his mind after the match may be the signs of a crack in the Death Riders after their first big loss. As an aside, did I miss when they started calling the Undisputed Kingdom “The Paragon”? When did that happen?)

Match Result: Adam Cole def. Claudio Castagnoli to retain the TNT Title

We got a recap of Chris Jericho’s TV Time from last week where he took a leave of absence. Lexy Nair’s guests at this time were Big Bill & Bryan Keith. Bill said that he was angry, but Keith calmed him down and said that if they were a family, they needed to handle things in-house. Keith said that maybe if Bill hadn’t put Jericho on blast last week, then Jericho wouldn’t have left. Bill said that maybe they shouldn’t be living and dying by Jericho’s whims, but said that they needed to crack some skulls and get some wins either way.

La Faccion Ingobernable vs. KM, Rosario Grillo, & LSG

Rush is back, and he’s here with Dralistico and The Beast Mortos. This was a beating, and Rush pinned KM with The Bull’s Horns.

Match Result: La Faccion Ingobernable def. KM, Rosario Grillo, & LSG

Renee Paquette’s guest at this time was Kevin Knight, who was hanging out with Speedball Mike Bailey. Ricochet cut them off, complaining about his team’s loss in the $400,000 tag match from Dynamite last week. Ricochet told them not to annoy the vets around AEW, claiming that they’re far below his level. Knight said that he could do everything Ricochet could do, but Ricochet couldn’t swing his hair around like Knight could. They got in each other’s faces and Knight feigned a slap and made Ricochet flinch. Knight and Bailey left, and Renee flipped her hair before leaving Ricochet by himself.

ROH World Television Title Match – Komander (w/Alex Abrahantes) (c) vs. Nick Wayne

ROH announcer Bobby Cruise handed the ring announcements for this one. Wayne refused the Code of Honor, spitting at Komander instead. Komander laid in some strikes and took Wayne down with a headscissors. Wayne rolled out of the way of the ropewalk Shooting Star, then after some back and forth, sent Komander to the floor on a springboard attempt. The rest of The Patriarchy were watching the match backstage at a normal TV-watching angle.

After a commercial, Komander caught Wayne with a fancy flash pin for a nearfall. Komander caught Wayne with a big backbreaker as the crowd chanted his name. Komander hit a double jump kick to Wayne on the top rope, then hit a senton over the ropes onto Wayne as he laid on the ramp. Komander hit a step-up moonsault for a nearfall. The crowd chanted Who’s Mom, Nick’s Mom as Wayne caught Komander with a flash pin before sending Komander into the turnbuckles.

Komander came back with a poisonrana for a nearfall. Wayne caught a launching Komander with a Dragon Suplex with a bridge for a nearfall. Komander cut off Wayne’s World and hit a springboard destroyer before landing a step-up moonsault to big cheers from the crowd. Wayne cut off the ropewalk Shooting Star with boots to the face, then hit the Prodigyplex for the win and the ROH TV Title. The Patriarchy looked pleased in the back.

(A great title match, and a great showcase for both of these young talents. The crowd was rabid for this one after the commercial break. Glad to see AEW giving Nick Wayne some momentum on-screen ahead of Best of the Super Juniors.)

Match Result: Nick Wayne def. Komander to win the ROH World Television Title

It was announced during this match that next week’s Playoff Palooza Collision will air after the NBA playoff games next Saturday night.

We got a video package for Hologram, as he returns to action next week.

Top Flight were backstage. They announced that next week they would get another match with The Cru, and this time, it would be a Tornado Tag Match. The Cru came for a fight, but security broke them up.

Julia Hart & Kris Statlander vs. Harley Cameron & Mercedes Mone

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm joined commentary.

Cameron tried to use Mini Mone to get a quick rollup, but Statlander was too strong. Cameron eventually got a rollup after a sequence for a nearfall. Julia Hart tagged in and hit Old School on Cameron, which was funny to me for some reason. What was funnier was Storm on commentary saying that she wouldn’t be walking the streets calling herself a CEO right now. Statlander and Mone fought on the floor in front of Storm as we went to a commercial break.

After the break, Mone took Statlander up for the Three Amigos, but Statlander responded by doing the Three Amigos with both Mone & Cameron. Jamie Hayter was impressed while watching in the back. Statlander went for the 450 Splash, but Mone and Cameron rolled out of the way. Hart tagged in and moonsaulted onto both of them. Mone sent Hart into the corner, but Mone caught her with a Spider Suplex.

A Pier Six brawl broke as all four women got their moves in, ending with Mone stuffing a moonsault attempt with the knees. Statlander lost her footing with Mone and almost dropped her on her head, but eventually they got to where they were going, with Cameron tagging in. As Hart held Mone in the Tarantula, Statlander hit a discus lariat and the Hayterade on Cameron for the win, sending a message to her opponent on Dynamite.

(Jamie Hayter not being in this match was interesting, as instead we had Statlander in the ring with Mone as a possible preview of the Owen Finals. The match was fine, aside from the one scary spot. This wasn’t quite up to the last two AEW shows, but this was a quality episode of TV.)

Match Result: Kris Statlander & Julia Hart def. Harley Cameron & Mercedes Mone

During this match, Speedball Mike Bailey & Kevin Knight vs. The Young Bucks was announced for Dynamite.

AEW Dynasty live results: Jon Moxley vs. Swerve Strickland, Toni Storm vs. Megan Bayne

AEW returns for their second pay-per-view of 2025 with tonight’s Dynasty from Philadelphia.

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley looks to extend his six-month reign as he defends against former champion Swerve Strickland, and AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against upstart Megan Bayne.

Kenny Omega defends his International title against both “Speedball” Mike Bailey and Ricochet in a three-way.

Both the men’s and women’s Owen Hart Foundation tournaments kick off as Will Ospreay faces Kevin Knight, Kyle Fletcher takes on Mark Briscoe, and TBS Champion Mercedes Mone faces Julia Hart.

The Hurt Syndicate defend the AEW World Tag Team titles against Big Bill & Bryan Keith while AEW World Trios Champions PAC, Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta defend against Rated FTR.

Chris Jericho defends his Ring of Honor World title against Bandido in a mask vs. title match while in a no time limit match with everyone banned from ringside, TNT Champion Daniel Garcia defends against Adam Cole.

**********

Zero Hour

The Wrestle Aunts (Renee Paquette & RJ City) welcome us alongside Jeff Jarrett, talk about how to order the show and go over tonight’s card. Madison Rayne joined the crew saying Megan Bayne is incredibly intimidating, but Toni Storm has walked through hell to carry the women’s division on her back. RJ said this is the equivalent of Attack of the 50 Foot Woman

We go backstage to Lexy Nair with Ricochet, who said since his debut in AEW, he’s been on a quest for gold, but has been screwed every step of the way. Tonight, in the city of champions, nothing will stop him from becoming International Champion.

Harley Cameron briefly joins the panel to help break down the Owen Hart Foundation brackets, as she mentioned Hangman Page having the most wins out of anyone in the men’s tournament with 90, how he defeated Jarrett (as the wild card) last year and will face another wild card again this year. Jarrett said he looks at the men’s field and sees Ospreay and all the rest, he is his pick. RJ said Kevin Knight is also a wild card in itself, as he just debuted last week. They throw it to a video package for Knight, who talked about training in the Hart Dungeon and sees a lot of Owen Hart’s qualities in himself. The Jet feels all the pressure in the world, but he won’t hesitate to knock Ospreay’s block off.

Tomohiro Ishii hilarious joined the panel completely silent until Mark Briscoe came in to talk about his match tonight with Kyle Fletcher. Briscoe calls him a stepping stone, as the Word of the Day is “advancement” as in, he’s advancing in the Owen Hart Foundation tournament. After Briscoe & Ishii left, RJ & Jarrett both picked Fletcher.

Video of Swerve Strickland ringing the bell at the Philadelphia 76ers game last night and taking photos with Alex Rodriguez was shown before we see Strickland & Nana entering the building earlier in the day.

CRU (Lio Rush & Action Andretti) & Nick Wayne (w/Kip Sabian & Mother Wayne) defeated Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin w/Leila Grey) & AR Fox

(Fun party match to get the crowd going, as they were loudly behind Fox from the jump. This was a slower start than you’d expect, but once Fox made his hot tag and ran wild, it picked up in a big way. The numbers game was too much for Top Flight & Fox, as it’ll be interesting to see if Wayne continues to pal around with CRU going forward.)

Excalibur, Tony Schiavone & Daddy Magic Matt Menard are on the call as Andretti took a powder right at the bell, so Fox cleared the top and took out CRU with a dive. Inside the ring, Rush & Andretti gained control with a leg trip/neckbreaker combo for two, but Darius made the tag and fired off lighting quick offense until he was sent crashing into the steps by Wayne. Darius was isolated until Dante made the hot tag and was a house of fire with some wild agility to get the crowd going. Sabian ran distraction, but Dante cut off Rush from using a chain. After a Tug of War, Andretti was in to help his partner and hit a double suplex, but Darius broke the pin.

Massive AR Fox chants from the crowd, as Dante hit a bounce back off the ropes into a double clothesline with Andretti. Fox made the hot tag and hit a corner cannonball on Andretti and corkscrew brainbuster on Wayne. Fox skinned the cat into a double stomp, rolling into a double cutter to send everyone to the outside. Three top rope clearing dives by Fox, who went up top for a senton, but Wayne got the knees up. Standing Spanish Fly from Darius saved his partner, but Andretti flew in with a handspring back elbow. Dante in with his bounce back dropkick, but Rush hit the Rush Hour cutter. Wayne tried to go up in the corner, but Fox flew in with Lo-Mein Pain. Again, Sabian took the ref, but Grey pulled him to the floor. With the ref distracted, Mother Wayne tripped up Fox in the ropes, as Nick hit Wayne’s World to steal it.

Athena joins the panel with her spinner title was asked her prediction for the Mone vs. Hart match tonight and said she doesn’t have time for Mone’s crap, she’s the longest reigning champion, man or woman, in AEW & ROH. RJ mentioned Athena’s last singles loss came in the Owen Hart Tournament, but she reminded him she’s 63-0 in ROH. Athena puts over Harley Cameron for being a hard worker, but says she can’t wait to defeat Mone in the second round. She won’t discredit Julia Hart, her tag team partner last night on Collision, but she wants to face Mone. In regards to the Men’s Owen Hart Tournament, Athena reluctantly picks Will Ospreay.

Max Caster Open Challenge

Caster said there’s been a lot of names being brought up for this Challenge, but the Maxamaniacs know there’s only one chant the fans want to say. “Let’s Go Max, You’re the Best Wrestler Alive” chant actually got going, so Caster had to constantly stop them and say they weren’t doing it right. Caster told the fans to show up for him just like they have for other great Philadelphia athletes, revealing a Ben Simmons jersey. This finally got the crowd to boo, as Caster said the Philly fans aren’t as great as the New York ones.

The lights went out until new theme music (Underground by Jane’s Addiction), video that read 5 Tool Player, pyro and ring gear for the returning “Pride of Pro Wrestling” Anthony Bowens, who was joined by Billy Gunn to a massive ovation.

Anthony Bowens (w/Billy Gunn) defeated Max Caster

Caster pointed out his trademark, but Bowens ripped it away and chucked it aside. The match officially began as Bowens hit his reverse leg lariat and a roaring elbow to win it quick. Bowens hugged Gunn, as commentary talked about how that was years of frustration behind that elbow.

Back to the panel, where RJ was disappointed that his boy Caster, who had the crowd in the palm of his hand, got beat so quickly. Jarrett then informs us Will Ospreay vs. Kevin Knight will open the show.

AEW Dynasty

Will Ospreay defeated Kevin Knight in an Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

(Kevin Knight didn’t know he would be in this tournament a week ago and he came in here and knocked it out of the park. I know Ospreay can make anyone look like a million bucks, but Knight deserves all the credit in the world here, he more than held his own and this was a star making performance. For fans unaware of Knight prior to last week, they sure know who he is now and I’m looking forward to his future in All Elite Wrestling. As for Ospreay, I’m like many in thinking the Owen is his to lose.)

Jim Ross & Taz join Excalibur on the call, as the crowd exploded for Ospreay’s entrance to kick off the show. Knight also got a strong reaction as commentary put over how Knight & Nick Wayne will be representing AEW in New Japan’s Best of Super Juniors this summer. Knight got the first take down, followed with a corner splash and sliding lariat for an early two. Ospreay draped Knight on the top rope, booted him to the floor and followed with a slingshot crossbody as Ospreay bowed to the Owen Hart Foundation trophy. Back inside, Pip, Pip, Cheerio connected, as Ospreay fired off loud chops, Knight answered with one of his own, so Ospreay sank in an abdominal stretch. Knight escaped, ramped up with a series of clotheslines and UFO splash for two. Stundog and corkscrew kick in response from Ospreay, who has Knight’s hand print on his chest from the chop. Knight leap frogged Hidden Blade, tried a German, but Ospreay landed on his feet, hit a chop to the throat and snap German of his own. Knight cut off Ospreay with a dropkick right in the mush, but ultimately ran into a standing Spanish Fly for the double down.

Dueling chants, as both exchange chops and forearms, as each maintained wrist control throughout until Ospreay buckled. Ospreay tried a wall walk, but Knight met him with a dropkick, hurricanrana out of the corner, sending Ospreay to the outside. After bailing, Ospreay thought he was cleared, but Knight flew over the ring post for a dive. Back inside, Ospreay hung up Knight in the ropes, tried a sunset bomb to the floor, but Knight held on, so Ospreay looked for a Styles Clash, only for Knight to counter into a DDT spike on the ramp. Instead of taking the countout, Knight flew off the top with a springboard dive at 9, quickly threw Ospreay into the ring and hit another DDT for two. Knight wanted his springboard lariat, missed, Ospreay floated over, wanted a Styles Clash, but Knight snapped through into a hurricanrana pin attempt for two, leaving the crowd on their feet.

Hook kick lands flush from Ospreay, but Knight hit an anti-air dropkick off an Oscutter attempt. Knight up top and hit a massive UFO Splash for a close near fall. Knight went for his springboard lariat, but Ospreay caught him with a Cutter in mid-air. Knight again though, avoided an Oscutter, but Ospreay managed to hit a Styles Clash for two. Ospreay hit the Oscutter flush, but again, Knight kicked out. Hidden Blade demolished Knight to finally give Ospreay the win in a hell of an opener.

The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin w/MVP) defeated Big Bill & Bryan Keith to retain the AEW World Tag Team Titles

(The match itself was ok, Bill put up as much of a fight as he could, but the MJF interference, though not needed, continues the story with he & The Hurt Syndicate, so I get it. It’s going to take a heck of a lot to get the titles off Benjamin & Lashley, who continue to be super over.)

Keith wasted no time tagging Bill when he saw Lashley was starting, as Bill was backed up to the wrong corner, but fought his way out. Bill hit two clotheslines sending Lashley & Benjamin to the floor to regroup early causing MVP to leave commentary to tend to his team. Benjamin was able to cut off Bill coming back in the ring, allowing Lashley to drive repeated shoulders in the corner. Bill avoided a German, backing Benjamin back to his corner, allowing Keith to make the tag, but foolishly started a slugfest. Benjamin immediately mowed him down with a clothesline, as fast tags kept Keith isolated, as Benjamin sent Keith crashing from barricade to the ring apron. Stalling one armed suplex from Lashley got a near fall, but a follow-up missed corner charge allowed Keith to recover enough to dive for a Bill hot tag.

Locomotion corner splashes and big boot to Lashley had Bill posing too long, allowing Benjamin to hit a big German suplex. Bill started no selling Benjamin’s strikes and hit a Black Hole Slam for two. Bill wanted a Chokeslam, but Benjamin rolled through with a thrust kick. Benjamin charged right into a Bill big boot, as Keith tagged in, but was blindsided by Lashley, who followed with a Flatliner on Bill. A counter from a suplex into Snake Eyes from Bill sent Lashley to the outside, as the big men brawled on the floor. All of a sudden MJF pops up from the front row and decked Bill with a Dynamite Diamond Ring shot, which didn’t make Lashley or Benjamin too happy. With Keith alone, he was dropped with a German suplex and huge Spear to give Benjamin the pin.

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defeated Julia Hart in an Owen Hart Foundation Quarterfinal

(While this wasn’t on the level of Mone’s past 3 or 4 PPV matches and took a while to really kick into gear, I was surprised how the fans were completely behind Hart down the stretch, as they were biting at every submission and pin attempt. That was a really great moment, as I don’t think anyone thought Hart was winning, but it was cool to see the crowd support her. All roads lead to Mone & Athena, which I think will be the match come All In, it’s just how they decide to get there. If they do face each other in the semis, will Mone take her first loss in that round? Will Athena take a loss this quickly in her time back in AEW? Or will they have a No Contest/Time Limit that eliminates both women? Time will tell.)

Mone got pyro for this match and it hilariously startled Taz, who had no idea it was coming. Hart used her athleticism in the early going to avoid Mone’s offense, as a head scissors sent Mone to the corner. Harley Cameron is watching on backstage talking with Mini-Mone, as back to the ring, Hart rolled through a Lungblower and countered Mone Maker into a backslide for two. Mone fired off a chop, tried to scale the ropes, but tripped, causing the fans to boo. Taz scolded the fans telling them to try it, as Mone did her dance, allowing Hart to attack from behind and did the Undertaker rope walk clubbing blow from the top. Hart slammed Mone down repeatedly to the mat, as Mone tried to sweep the leg on the apron, but Hart did a cartwheel, only to be Speared against the barricade. Mone hit a Meteora off the apron and back inside got a near fall.

Dueling chants from the crowd, as Mone kept Hart grounded. A jawbreaker into an inside cradle got Hart a two, but the momentum was quickly cut off by Mone with a dropkick. Mone wanted Three Amigos, Hart escaped after the second, tried a standing moonsault, but Mone got the knees up. Mone hung up Hart in the Tree of Woe and mocked the House of Black pose, but as Mone went up top, Hart powered up into an overhead throw. Mone missed a corner charge, as Hart hit a dive to the floor, quickly back inside for a round the World DDT. Hart tried to repeat the move, but Mone countered into the Lungblower for the double down.

Hart rolled through Mone Maker, jackknife cover for two, as both fought for position, ending up in the corner. Mone charged, but Hart got the Tarantula, as Taz gave a shoutout to Tajiri. Octopus Hold applied by Hart, but Mone collapsed into the corner, sending Hart head first into the buckle. Hart stomped Mone to the mat, went up top, but Mone hit the double stomp to the face off the moonsault attempt. Two backstabbers from Mone, but Hart fought off the third into a crucifix bomb for two. Both ladies traded Statement Maker and Hartless attempts, as Mone rolled through into a quick pin attempt for two, allowing her to reapply the Statement Maker. Crowd completely turned on Mone and are entirely behind Hart at this point, as she escaped into a roll-up for two. Mone recovered, got a cradle and the flash pin.

Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, PAC & Wheeler Yuta) defeated Rated FTR (Cope, Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) to retain the AEW Trios Titles

(The match itself was an action-packed trios tag, one you’d absolutely expect from the talent involved. The big story here is the post-match in something that everyone not named Cope saw coming a mile away, but was done perfectly. FTR are now killer heels and we’re left to wonder if Cope will ever be seen in AEW again after such a heinous attack.)

Nigel McGuinness joins commentary as we’re told referee Paul Turner “drew this assignment” despite having issues with Dax Harwood in recent weeks. PAC & Harwood have a fast exchange to start before Harwood scrambled out from a Brutalizer attempt. Cope tagged in and was quickly taken to the Death Rider corner, as Yuta, who hails from Philly, was booed mercilessly. Cope pulled on the beard, tagged in Wheeler, who hit a slingshot shoulder block and chops to follow. Fast tags from Wheeler & Cope, who keep up their double team until Harwood joins up for an assisted Avalanche Powerslam by Wheeler on Castagnoli for two. Wheeler followed with a Tope Suicida, as back inside, PAC ran distraction, allowing Yuta to shove Wheeler off the top into a Castagnoli uppercut. Wheeler remained isolated until he went to make the hot tag to Cope, Harwood stole it and ran wild to zero reaction from the crowd. Tony Schiavone drove home how that tag was meant for Cope.

Castagnoli no sold three Harwood lariats, tried a pop-up uppercut, but Harwood countered into a back slide. Yuta tried to make the save, but Cope caught him in the Grind House, while Harwood trapped PAC in the Sharpshooter and Castagnoli had Wheeler in one as well. Harwood & Castagnoli started swinging while still having the submissions applied until they broke it up, Castagnoli cleaned house, tagged Yuta and they did the Giant Swing into the dropkick on Harwood for two. Locomotion uppercuts in the corner from Death Riders, as PAC hit a Tombstone, while Castagnoli took turns with Fastball Specials using Yuta & PAC for two, as Wheeler broke the count. Harwood dodged a charging Castagnoli and dove for the Cope hot tag, as he was a house of fire, hitting PAC with an Impaler for two.

Quick tags made, as Cope hit a Power-Plex on PAC with Wheeler hitting the splash and Harwood hitting a headbutt off the top. Yuta recovered and hit a missile dropkick on Cope, but was planted with a bounceback powerbomb by Harwood. PAC reappeared and locked in the Brutalizer as Castagnoli & Yuta held off Cope & Wheeler, but they broke through to stop the submission. Yuta wanted a Busaiku Knee, but ran into a Shatter Machine, as PAC was planted with a Spear, but Castagnoli broke the count. Yuta leapfrogged a Spear, as Cope nearly hit Harwood, but pumped the brakes. Yuta sent both men colliding into each other before hitting Harwood with a Busaiku Knee and got the pin.

Post-match, as Death Riders celebrated back through the crowd, Wheeler was left standing as Cope offered his hand to help Harwood up. Rated FTR stood tall as Wheeler was about to leave when Harwood laid out Cope with a piledriver. Harwood quickly grabbed two chairs and wanted Wheeler to deliver a Con-Chair-To, but Wheeler shoved his partner down. Wheeler went to help out Cope, but pulled him into a Shatter Machine. FTR hit a Spike Piledriver onto the chair as Harwood went to finish the job, but Wheeler stopped him and said “allow me” and hit the Con-Chair-To. The doctor ran to the ring, but Wheeler delivered another one for good measure. Wheeler mockingly put a neck brace on himself and laid on the stretcher as Harwood gave him chest compressions. Wheeler told the doctors Cope needs the brace more than he does as FTR walked to the back as Cope was loaded on the stretcher. McGuinness said FTR stands for F The Rest.

Timeless Toni Storm (w/Luther) defeated Megan Bayne (w/Penelope Ford) to retain the AEW Women’s Title

(Rocky survived Drago or Clubber Lang, whichever you choose. This match was great, as Bayne was built as the perfect monster and delivered her best match in AEW to date. There’s just no holding a candle to Storm, who is by far the best character in all of pro wrestling at this point. The fans were into this from the jump and especially the ending. The build for this was simple, but tremendously effective and resulted in a really fun PPV Women’s Title match. While I wonder where Bayne goes from here, there’s just no reason Storm should be losing the title any time soon.)

After Bayne’s entrance, Justin Roberts introduced us to our Feature Presentation, as Storm was training like she was Rocky on the streets of Philadelphia before screaming into a pillow. Storm is dressed as Balboa, while Luther is Mickey. McGuinness said Storm has been drinking eggs and beating meat and to take that how you will.

Storm tried a quick start, but Bayne showed her power with a shoulder tackle before backing Storm to the corner. Storm ducked a lariat and hit a cross body out of the corner, as she fired off body kicks, only to be caught with an overhead throw. After a bodyslam, Bayne wiped her feet with Storm, as the crowd is loudly behind Storm, who was flattened with a fall away slam and big boot sent her to the outside. Luther tended to Storm, as Bayne hit a big Tope Suicida, wiping out Luther. Storm had dodged, used Luther as a launch pad to hit a Tornado DDT. Back inside, a diving cross body off the top got Storm a near fall. Ford tripped up Storm, allowing Bayne to hit a pump kick and regain control. Bayne remained in the driver’s seat, Ford got in more shots as well, licking Storm in the process. Storm tried battling back with a Thesz Press, but Bayne caught and hit repeated overhead throws. About the fourth time Ford tried interfering, Luther recovered and carried her to the back, leaving Bayne to go at it alone.

This allowed Storm to ramp up, finally hitting the Thesz Press and Tornado DDT out of the corner. Indian Death Lock/STF variation applied, but Bayne powered her way to the ropes. Bayne avoided Storm Zero, sent Storm to the apron where she hit a back suplex from the outside in. Bayne took way too long going up the ropes, allowing Storm to recover and hit a release German suplex that nearly dropped Bayne on her head. Both ladies slowly up and a slugfest ensued with Storm relentless, sidestepping a Bayne lariat into a release German. Bayne caught a charge and hit a stalling German of her own. Bayne connected on a brutal Falcon Arrow for a near fall. Storm rolled through Fate’s Decent, they trade standing switches until Storm hit a snap German. Sweet Cheek Music hit, Bayne no sold, so Storm fired off a headbutt flush and three more Sweet Cheek Musics, whiplashing Bayne’s head. Storm Zero hit, but Bayne was out at one, shocking everyone. Bayne hit herself repeatedly as she stood up and clobbered Storm with two lariats, Liger Bomb, looked for Fate’s Decent, but Storm countered into a Small Package for the flash pin. Bayne couldn’t believe it and neither could Storm on the ramp.

Kyle Fletcher (w/Don Callis) defeated Mark Briscoe in an Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

(Just a fantastic match, as this was one of the best matches of the night so far. No matter who Briscoe is in there with, you want him to win and that will never change. I hope one day they give Briscoe some big wins in AEW, but until then, he’s the perfect guy to put over everyone he’s in there with strong. Fletcher looked excellent in this and I can’t wait to see who he faces in the next round.)

Fletcher hit a dive before the bell during Briscoes entrance, hit a Helluva Kick, but Briscoe nearly countered a Brainbuster into a cradle for two. Fletcher went to the apron where he hit a thrust kick, but back dropped by Briscoe on the edge of the ring. Somersault neckbreaker off the apron, as he tried to set up a chair to launch off of, but referee Rick Knox took it away, so Briscoe told the crowd to boo that man. Baseball slide connected, as Briscoe leapt off the barricade with an elbow. Briscoe threw in multiple chairs, causing Knox to play fetch, giving Briscoe enough time to try a springboard, but Fletcher cut him off and hit an Exploder onto the chair, undetected by Knox as we see Konosuke Takeshita watching on backstage.

Charging boot sent Briscoe flying to the floor, as Fletcher hit multiple powerbombs onto the apron and one onto the barricade. Excalibur brought up the possibility of Fletcher & Takeshita facing each other in the finals when Callis said he was stirring stuff up for matches that will never happen, which Schiavone was about to call him out on, but Briscoe broke the count. Fletcher charged with a boot in the corner, wanted his Avalanche Brainbuster, but Briscoe bit free and hit a shotgun dropkick into the double down as we also see Brody King watching on in the back. Both trade hard corner chops, as Fletcher turned to kitchen sink knees, leading to both ducking running clothesline attempts, getting a head of steam and colliding like two trucks for a reset.

Both slowly up and slugging it out, as Briscoe ramps it up with a flying forearm and Fisherman’s Buster for two. Thrust kick response from Fletcher, Briscoe floated through a Liger Bomb attempt, but Fletcher powered up into brutal Snake Eyes. Enzugiri and thrust kick on the apron, as Fletcher followed with a nasty brainbuster on the apron and proper sheer drop brainbuster back in the ring for two, as Callis is furious. Briscoe floated over the Avalanche Brainbuster, wanted a Cutthroat Driver, but Fletcher held on in the ropes. BT Bomb from Briscoe, who followed with a Froggy Bow for a close near fall. Briscoe wanted a Jay Driller, Fletcher spun out, but Briscoe hit a Cutthroat Driver flush, but Fletcher wisely rolled outside. Briscoe leapt off the top with a Froggy Bow, as back inside, tried again, but Fletcher got the double boots up. Running corner kicks land right on the button, as Fletcher hits the Avalanche Brainbuster to get the win.

Bandido defeated Chris Jericho in a Title vs. Mask match for the ROH World Title

(While this was a good match, I enjoyed their Collision match a few months ago more. The finish was pretty ridiculous if I’m being honest, but it resulted in a feel-good moment and the crowd were more than happy to cheer against Jericho and ultimately sing “Hey Hey Hey, Goodbye” to him as he left without the ROH Title.)

Bandido hugged his mother and sister, who are seated ringside before the match, as Jericho hit a Code Breaker right at the bell and got a close near fall. Lionsault connected for another two, as Bandido recovered, avoided a Jericho charge into a handstand, sent Jericho to the floor, hit one dive and another, clearing the top with a somersault plancha. Bandido brought Jericho over to his family, kissed his mother and calmed her before throwing Jericho back into the ring, going up top with a Tornillo for two. One handed (to start) stalling vertical suplex for a full minute, as McGuinness scolded the crowd for counting in English and not Spanish. Running boot on the apron from Bandido, who tried it again, but Jericho caught him and powerbombed him to the floor, causing Bandido to splat. Jericho grabbed the camera and filmed Bandido’s family as they were crying, chanting for Bandido. Jericho kicked up his feet in the corner and took a breather as Bandido broke the count at 15, as commentary reminded us about the 20 count under ROH Rules.

Chants of “Please Retire” directed at Jericho, who paint brushed and flattened Bandido with a big boot for two. Both started slugging it out until Bandido hit a spinning DDT, firing up with a series of kicks. Jericho answered with an enzugiri and again trash talked the family, allowing Bandido to hit a sunset bomb for two. Bandido was crotched in the corner, as Jericho hit ten punches, tried a hurricanrana, Bandido caught him, looked for a powerbomb, but Jericho countered with a snap hurricanrana in mid-air. Jericho again opted to pose, allowing Bandido to hit a Gorilla Press Slam and Frog Splash for two. Bandido tried another Tornillo, but Jericho got the double knees up for the double down.

Both found themselves back-to-back, as they slowly rose to their feet, nodded and we were going to get a stand-off, but Jericho attacked Bandido from behind. Jericho tried a head scissors, waving to the crowd in the air, but Bandido countered into reverse GTS. Bandido wanted the 21-Plex, but Jericho rolled through into the Walls of Jericho. Bandido got the ropes, as Jericho argued with referee Bryce. Bryan Keith ran to the ring, but Gravity soon followed and brawled with him ringside. With the ref’s attention turned, Jericho grabbed the baseball bat and decked Bandido, hiding the evidence soon after. Jericho made the cover and got the win.

Post-match, referee Aubrey Edwards, who wasn’t the official in the actual match, was talking to Bandido’s mother and sister, who told her about the baseball bat. They left ringside and showed Edwards the bat. Referee Bryce, Aubrey & Justin Roberts talked and we’re told the match has restarted. Jericho grabbed Bandido’s sister by the hair, but she slapped him, allowing Bandido to hit the reverse GTS and 21-Plex to win the match and the title. Tony Schiavone said not often are matches restarted in AEW, but justice was served in this case. Bandido celebrated with his mother, sister & Gravity as Jericho was left seething.

Adam Cole defeated Daniel Garcia in a No Interference/No Time-Limit match to win the TNT Title

(I thought this was a solid end to this chapter they’ve been building up on Collision. Part of me wonders if the seeds were planted for Garcia possibly joining up with FTR eventually? There were times in this match where Garcia was getting overconfident, especially after Cole seemed to injure his leg early on. I don’t see this being the last time these two face one another and I look forward to seeing it again whenever that might be. I’m anxious to see where both men go after this.)

Pie faces and a slugfest kicks things off, as Cole missed a pump kick and ran into a Garcia charging knee. Garcia, who has failed to hit 10 corner punches on Cole during their string of matches, finally hits them, but pushed his luck, wanting 10 more, this time, Cole threw him to the floor. Cole wanted Panama Sunrise off the apron, Garcia dodged and Cole came up limping. Referee never had time to check on Cole, as Garcia flew in with a shotgun dropkick and stomped the knee. Back inside, Garcia zoned in, as Cole is really selling the left leg. The moment Garcia let his foot off the gas briefly, Cole hit a fireman’s carry neckbreaker on his good knee. Cole tried the Panama Sunrise again, but Garcia rolled through, nearly got the Dragon Tamer, only settled for a lariat that turned Cole inside out, as Garcia mean mugged the camera.

Garcia connected on a visually awesome twisting Gotch Style Piledriver, as commentary puts over Jerry Lynn. Garcia lowered the knee pad, but Cole ramped up into a slug fest. Both collide with stereo big boots, Garcia hit a snap back suplex, throws overhand chops, ran into a superkick, as Garcia literally almost fell into a pin for two, as Cole countered into a crucifix for two of his own. Garcia blocked a superkick into an Ankle Lock, but Cole rolled to the floor. Garcia followed and sent Cole crashing into the steps, but as Garcia stood tall and posed, the delay allowed Cole to hit a neckbreaker on the knee while both were standing on the steps. Panama Sunrise hit off the apron, as Cole went to lower The Boom back in the ring, but Garcia collapsed. Garcia nearly tricked Cole with an inside cradle, but as both got up, Cole’s leg buckled and Garcia hit a Panama Sunrise of his own. Garcia lowered The Boom, but Cole kicked out.

A visibly frustrated Garcia slammed Cole’s leg repeatedly against the mat, but had second thoughts when trying for another piledriver. Callback to his match with MJF last year, Garcia went for the Avalanche Piledriver, but Cole fought out and hit the Panama Sunrise flush. Cole went to the other side of the ring and hit a second before lowering The Boom to win the title.

Post-match, Cole offered his hand to Garcia, who accepted the handshake and gave Cole the ring, despite being heartbroken.

Kenny Omega defeated Ricochet & Speedball Mike Bailey to retain the AEW International Title

(This was one of the best 3-way’s I’ve seen in recent memory, as the creativity from all involved throughout, for 30 minutes plus, is unbelievably impressive. You could argue this could’ve been a little shorter, but that’s a nitpick. The crowd seemed tired during the Garcia & Cole match at times, but they seriously picked back up during this. The post-match was simple, but yet another tease to the eventual Omega & Okada showdown that everyone is looking forward to, for what certainly could be a unification match, whenever that may be.)

Ricochet immediately bailed so Omega & Bailey could start. Omega got a roll-up, but was sent to the floor and into the commentary table. Ricochet was sent outside, leaving Omega to hit a hurricanrana on Bailey, but as Ricochet went for one on Omega, he was trapped in an arm bar. Bailey ramped up the Speedball kicks on Omega, as Ricochet flew in, missed a dive, so Bailey hit a dive outside on Omega. Ricochet sprung to the floor, but got paint brushed back and forth by Bailey & Omega to pop the crowd big to the chants of “Bald”. Omega wanted You Can’t Escape on Bailey, who in fact, escaped, allowing Bailey to drape Omega over the barricade. Bailey wanted a moonsault double knees, but Ricochet cut him off and hit a rolling DVD on Bailey onto Omega on the barricade.

With Omega left to try and recover, Ricochet trash talked the crowd as he put the boots to Bailey. While trying to keep Omega at bay, Ricochet wanted his Northern Lights into a Brainbuster, but Omega returned and we get a neckbreaker/DDT combo spot with Ricochet standing tall. Tope Suicida took out both men on opposite sides of the ring before taking Schiavone’s headset and boasting about himself. The camera shot was great, as Bailey flew in off screen and cracked Ricochet right in the face. Bailey politely apologized to Schiavone (who I think dropped a F bomb, popping Taz & Excalibur) before hitting a missile dropkick back inside on Ricochet. Omega quickly back in for You Can’t Escape, but Bailey dodged the moonsault. Ricochet flew in, missed a Lionsault, as he nearly got a double pin off a Bailey backslide attempt on Omega. Bailey meanwhile, nearly pinned both with a double crucifix pin, while Omega did a double backslide for two. Everyone popped up, only to deck one another with high kicks for a triple down and “This Is Awesome” chants.

Everyone slugged it out to their feet, as Ricochet kept being discarded by Bailey & Omega, who fired off jabs, as Ricochet tried again to intervene, but Bailey hit a triangle moonsault to the floor. With Bailey & Ricochet down on the floor, Omega got the crowd amped up with the Terminator Dive on both. Ricochet’s turn to fly as he hit a picture perfect Fosbury Flop, as he went for baseball slide, but Bailey dodged, sprung up and hit an Asai Moonsault. Omega & Bailey back inside, as Bailey missed a PK and moonsault, as Ricochet & Omega were stacked on each other, allowing Bailey to hit his standing moonsault double knees. Time Adventure destroyed Omega, but Ricochet pulled referee Rick Knox’s leg during the count. A pissed off Bailey went after Ricochet on the floor and beat him up relentlessly on the apron. Bailey tried his moonsault double knees, but missed and crashed badly. Knox checked on him outside, as Ricochet chop blocked Bailey (and also Knox, who had to no sell this unfortunately) as back inside, Ricochet fought with Omega up in the ropes. Bailey came back in with a wild Avalanche Poison Rana on Ricochet, but instead of making a pin attempt, he went to Omega, who dropped the bottom out on Bailey and hit a Snap Dragon, while Ricochet suffered the same fate. Omega stacked Bailey onto Ricochet and hit a wild double Snap Dragon that had the crowd going wild.

With both men set in position, V-Triggers delivered to both, as Bailey was launched from the ring during his. Ricochet countered One Winged Angel, Omega countered Vertigo, but Omega was able to hit Croyt’s Wrath for a close two. Bailey dodged One Winged Angel and hit a back heel kick as they teased a callback to how Ricochet & Bailey won their match to advance to tonight with a high stack pin for two. Ricochet dragon screwed Bailey, wanted a powerbomb on Omega, who sent Ricochet tumbling outside. Roundhouse Kick cracked Omega, as Bailey hit Adventure Time in the corner, missed Ultimate Weapon, as he screamed in pain, allowing Omega to sink in a knee bar. Ricochet flew in with a springboard 450 on Omega for two. Ricochet hit Vertigo, but Bailey kicked out and Ricochet couldn’t believe it. Omega cut off the Spirit Gun, as Bailey got a high stack for two. Roundhouse Kick landed again on Omega, as Bailey went up in the corner, only to get shoved off by Ricochet, who followed with a Shooting Star Press for two. Ricochet wanted another on Bailey, who got his knees up into a cradle for a near fall.

Ricochet begged off, as Bailey paint brushed the hell out of Ricochet, who caught a kick and wrenched the bad knee. Bailey fought to his feet and struck the Crane pose and booted Ricochet’s head off with the kick to make Daniel LaRusso proud. Bailey hit the Ultimate Weapon, but Omega flew in with the V-Trigger, wanted One Winged Angel, but Ricochet broke it up with a Poison Rana on Omega. Ricochet wanted an Avalanche Vertigo, but Omega joined with an Avalanche One Winged Angel on Ricochet, while Bailey was trapped in the Tree of Woe, allowing Omega to get the pin.

Post-match, Omega was trying to recover before the coin drop sounded and Kazuchika Okada made his way to the ring with his Continental Title. The stare down was only brief, as Omega flinched first and just walked to the back, as the tease of this showdown finally happening in AEW, continues.

Jon Moxley (w/Marina Shafir) defeated Swerve Strickland (w/Prince Nana) to retain the AEW World Title

(Well, it wouldn’t be a Jon Moxley main event without a crap ton of interference one way or another. The House of Moxley thankfully wasn’t the reason he retained yet again, instead, two familiar faces who haven’t been seen in 6 months in AEW, made the save and cost Strickland the title. It’ll be interesting to see where they go from here, as I assume Death Riders & The Young Bucks vs. Strickland, Page & The Opps could be Anarchy in the Arena next month. I for one am happy The Bucks are back and look forward to seeing how they explain themselves after tonight, especially with Page also involved on the opposing end of things it seems.)

Strickland had a Static Shock theme to his entrance and attire, as we get big fight intros from Justin Roberts to start. Referee Paul Turner holds up the briefcase like it’s the actual AEW World Title and that just visually looks ridiculous to me. Moxley still has marks on his back from taking that board of nails a few weeks ago. Commentary even brought up how they thought these two would slug it out to start, but instead, Strickland picked the ankle and started with wrestling. Moxley scrambled and escaped, but Strickland took him back down, ultimately connecting on his corner uppercut before hitting the Griddy. Test of Strength broke by Moxley, as Strickland flipped out in the corner, sending Moxley to the floor to eat a pump kick. Back to the ring, Strickland went up top, but Moxley swung for the fences and sent Strickland crashing outside. Shafir literally stepped on top of Strickland walking away before Moxley stomped his head into the steps.

Moxley was hell bent on busting Strickland open with forearms to the forehead before going back out to the floor. Moxley chucked Strickland over the table, wiping Excalibur out in the process, as Strickland is now bleeding, while Moxley bit him. Moxley hit a Paradigm Shift on the ring steps before taking a victory lap back to the ring, as Strickland just broke the count at 9. Stalling piledriver for a Moxley near fall, who bit and wrenched at the cut before flipping off the fans, booting Strickland in the face. Inside out suplex hit, as Strickland called off Knox from checking on him. Moxley again bit at the forehead, as he dared Strickland to hit him harder, so Strickland obliged and buckled the champion. Forearms turned to slaps until Moxley sank in a Kimura into a Triangle. Strickland powered up into a powerbomb to break free into the reset.

Strickland ramped up with strikes into his delayed vertical suplex for a near fall. Moxley tried a choke, Strickland rolled into a pin attempt for two. Strickland wanted his rolling Flatliner, but Moxley hit a Cutter in mid-air. Strickland countered Death Rider into a Vertebreaker attempt, but Moxley spun out into a Bulldog Choke, transitioned into a Rear Naked Choke. Strickland got the ropes and finally able to hit the rolling Flatliner before hitting a House Call on the mark for two. Another House Call hit, but as he went for a third, Moxley turned him inside out with a lariat, only he no sold and hit House Call for another double down.

Shafir came into the ring with the briefcase and teased using it until Nana got in her face. Shafir decked him with the briefcase and booted him to the floor until Strickland grabbed Shafir, Moxley leapt for Cutter, but mistakenly laid out Shafir instead. Strickland dropped Moxley with a Paradigm Shift, but took too long to go up top and was launched to the floor. Moxley brought out a ladder set it up ringside, as he wanted a suplex off it, but Strickland fought out, raked the back, bit the head and hit a Swerve Stomp off the ladder through the Spanish Announce Table. Strickland appeared to have tweaked his left leg as both staggered back to the ring to a slugfest that really ramped up. Moxley went at the leg, as Shafir recovered and threw in a chair, as Moxley chucked it at Strickland, who ducked and ref Paul Turner got clobbered to a huge pop.

Strickland connected with a Vertebreaker as Hangman Adam Page then power walked to the ring, but couldn’t decide on who to hit with a Buckshot, Moxley or Strickland. Death Riders appear and attack Page, who side-stepped a Busiaku Knee from Yuta, who hit Castagnoli, as PAC was sent outside. Page dropped Moxley with a Dead Eye, as The Opps ran out and brawled with Death Riders to the back. Strickland chucked a chair into the face of Moxley before going up top, hitting the Swerve Stomp, but his knee was badly damaged and there was no ref.

Just then, the lights went out and when they came back on, The Young Bucks were holding Strickland by the arms and hit a BTE Trigger. Moxley crawled over, made the cover and got the pin. The Bucks left through the crowd, Moxley recovered with Shafir, as Strickland was staring down The Bucks, while Page was staring down Strickland to end the show.

AEW Collision live results: Dynasty go-home show

Tonight’s taped AEW Collision from Peoria, Illinois, is the final stop before Sunday’s Dynasty pay-per-view from Philadelphia.

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone teams with rival Harley Cameron against ROH Women’s World Champion Athena & Julia Hart as all four women are part of the Owen Hart Foundation tournament.

Ahead of his challenge of International Champion Kenny Omega Sunday, “Speedball” Mike Bailey takes on Dralistico with Ricochet, who will also be in the Omega match, on commentary.

Powerhouse Hobbs teams with the returning Tomohiro Ishii against Kyle Fletcher & Konosuke Takeshita while in a tag team grudge match, Top Flight battles The Cru (Action Andretti & Lio Rush).

FTR’s Cash Wheeler takes on PAC of the Death Riders, Max Caster hosts another open challenge, and Daniel Garcia and Adam Cole have a sit-down interview ahead of their TNT title match Sunday.

The show is rounded out by promos and appearances by Jay White, Kris Statlander & Thunder Rosa, and Jamie Hayter & Billie Starkz.

**********

With the Dynasty PPV coming tomorrow night, Collision comes live (to tape) from Peoria, Illinois. Sir Elton John welcomed us to the show, as Tony Schiavone was on the call. Nigel McGuinness was out this week, replaced at the desk by Don Callis as his charges entered for the opening contest.

Konosuke Takeshita & Kyle Fletcher defeated Powerhouse Hobbs & Tomohiro Ishii (w/Rocky Romero)

I’m enjoying the shows that feature the Callis Family talent a lot, as Takeshita and Fletcher are currently two of the best wrestlers in a company full of great wrestlers. I’m also glad they’re keeping Hobbs in sight, even in a losing effort here.

Ishii asked to start with Takeshita, rekindling their war from the Tokyo Dome this past January. The two traded shoulder blocks until they both went down. Fletcher and Hobbs tagged in, with Hobbs simply refusing to fall down on a DDT attempt. Fletcher feigned that Romero tripped him from the outside, distracting the ref so the Callis Family could get an advantage going into the commercial break.

Ishii took Takeshita up and over on a suplex as we came back from the break. Hobbs got the hot tag and ran wild before taking the straps down. Takeshita dropped Hobbs with a German suplex, but Hobbs came back with a main event spinebuster. Ishii and Fletcher tagged in and traded suplexes.

Fletcher and Takeshita dropped Hobbs before double booting Ishii in the corner. They went for a super powerbomb, but Ishii hit a Frankensteiner on Fletcher to escape. Hobbs and Ishii double-teamed Fletcher, with Ishii hitting a vicious headbutt/lariat combo. Takeshita helped Fletcher hit a brainbuster on Ishii, and after Takeshita took Hobbs down with a Blue Thunder Bomb, Fletcher hit a bloody-nosed Ishii with a Tombstone and a brainbuster for the win.

We got a video package on the happenings on Dynamite between Swerve Strickland, Hangman Page, & Jon Moxley. In an interesting editing note, an All In Texas commercial aired, with Page and Strickland as the last two featured faces.

Max Caster was here for another Best Wrestler Alive Open Challenge. He said he had to drive by himself through some terrible weather to get to this show, unlike a former partner of his. He kicked off his chant to boos before announcing he would have another Open Challenge tomorrow night at Dynasty. Mark Briscoe answered the Open Challenge, and we had ourselves a match.

Best Wrestler Alive Open Challenge – Mark Briscoe defeated Max Caster

With Caster announcing another open challenge for the PPV, you have to wonder if that will be the place where Anthony Bowens makes his return.

You know how these open challenges go by now. Briscoe pinballed Caster around and won with the Jay Driller.

We got a video package hyping the Will Ospreay vs. Kevin Knight Hart Foundation Tournament match at Dynasty.

Lexy Nair’s guest at this time was Jay White, who was ruled out of the Owen Hart Foundation Tournament with a broken wrist caused by an off-screen attack by the Death Riders. White mockingly wished Kevin Knight luck and said that Will Ospreay was lucky that he got to duck White again. White turned his attention to the Death Riders, saying that they will regret ever crossing him.

Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin) (w/ Leila Grey) defeated Cru (Action Andretti & Lio Rush)

This match was alright, but there was a big lack of crowd heat as this was on the back end of a Dynamite taping. I’m glad they’ll get to run it with a hotter crowd at the Dynasty Zero Hour. Interesting to see Nick Wayne get shine on his own, as it was announced that he’ll be in this year’s Best of the Super Juniors for New Japan next month.

Top Flight jumped Cru as the lovely Leila Grey distracted them from the ramp. Top Flight pinballed Cru around, and all four guys hit dives as we went to a commercial.

Darius and Andretti took each other down with clotheslines as we came back from commercial. Dante and Rush tagged in, with Dante hitting a springboard dropkick off the bottom rope for a nearfall. Rush snuck a tag, and Cru got some quick offense in to isolate Dante. Andretti hit a springboard clothesline for a nearfall.

Darius saved his brother on a suplex, and the teams traded punches. Andretti dropped Darius, but Dante snuck behind Andretti to catch him with a crucifix for the win. After the match, Cru jumped Top Flight again before AR Fox made the save. Nick Wayne came in and dropped Fox with Wayne’s World (Wayne’s World) before the announcement was made for a six-man tag match at the Dynasty Zero Hour: Nick Wayne & Cru vs. AR Fox & Top Flight.

Lexy Nair’s guests at this time were Hart Foundation Tournament opponents Jamie Hayter & Billie Starkz. Hayter said she was impressed by Starkz and shook her hand and told her to keep her eye out for Athena as she took Starkz’s moment last week. Starkz said she wasn’t a failure and would prove it in The Owen.

Matt Menard told us about the latest sale on the AEW merch store. I won’t be telling you about it because they don’t pay me.

Adam Cole & Daniel Garcia Sit-Down Interview

This feud feels like it’s been building to Garcia getting the biggest defense of his reign so far, beating an All In main eventer and major name in Cole. I think these two have a high quality PPV match in them.

Renee Paquette sat down with both TNT Champion Daniel Garcia & Adam Cole ahead of their title match at Dynasty. Paquette asked the first question to Garcia, but Cole cut her off to talk about the first time they had faced off. Garcia was talented but confused, and he was still the same. Cole said that he had beaten Garcia, but Garcia had never beaten him. This Sunday was Cole’s 17-year anniversary in pro wrestling, in the city where he had his first match, and he felt it was destiny to win the TNT Title at Dynasty.

Garcia said that he didn’t have to give Cole this title match but wanted to out of respect for Cole. Cole has had chances to be the man, just as he’s had chances to be the TNT Champion, but he hasn’t gotten it done. Garcia wouldn’t be giving Cole any other shots after he beat him on Sunday.

Cole asked to clear the room to speak to Garcia alone. He told Garcia that while he had been the man in multiple promotions and carried promotions on his back, Garcia wasn’t ready to do that. He said he would prove it on Sunday. The two stared each other down before Garcia took his title and left.

PAC defeated Cash Wheeler

PAC controlled the opening stage of the match until Wheeler caught him with a flash pin. Wheeler picked the pace up and whipped PAC out of the ring. Wheeler fought out of a superplex after PAC got back in the ring, but PAC swept Wheeler’s feet out from under him and sent him to the floor off the apron. PAC hit a springboard moonsault to the floor to retain control as we went to a commercial break.

PAC got a nearfall with a running uppercut for a nearfall as we came back. Wheeler sent PAC to the floor and followed him with a big suicide dive. Wheeler hit a high cross for a nearfall, then caught PAC with a powerslam for another nearfall. PAC moved out of the way of a big splash but got caught on the ropes with a big superplex for a nearfall. PAC booted Wheeler into the ropes for a German suplex but got caught with a lariat from Wheeler.

Wheeler ran into a thrust kick, but as PAC came off the ropes with a Shooting Star Press, Wheeler moved and pulled PAC up for a piledriver. Wheeler Yuta & Claudio Castagnoli arrived, but Cope came out to cut off Castagnoli. Dax Harwood cut off a charging Yuta, but PAC caught Wheeler in a crucifix to steal away with the win.

After the match, Cope and Wheeler offered Harwood their hands, and he took them as Rated FTR embraced to applause from the crowd.

During this match, Max Caster’s open challenge was made official for the Zero Hour.

We got words from Kenny Omega during a video package for the International Championship match at Dynasty. He said that he had to prove he was the best as he was a champion and said that we would all find out who the true best was at Dynasty.

Shane Taylor Promotions were backstage, as they were tired of hearing people talk tough when they aren’t like that. They called out The Opps, saying that they weren’t opps, they were just an opportunity.

Speedball Mike Bailey defeated Dralistico (w/The Beast Mortos)

Ricochet came out for commentary. Bailey and Dralistico traded headscissors and strikes before bowing to each other. Dralistico gave Bailey the finger and took a mid-kick as a result. Bailey scored with the Lightning Kicks on Dralistico before Beast Mortos got in Bailey’s way, allowing Dralistico to pinball Bailey around the outside to Ricochet’s delight as we went to a commercial.

Bailey caught Dralistico with a missile dropkick as we came back, scoring with a standing shooting star press for a nearfall. Dralistico rolled to the floor, but Bailey followed with a triangle moonsault to Mortos. Dralistico hit a dive, then hit a springboard lungblower for a nearfall. The two traded roll-ups before Bailey scored with a pair of spinning heel kicks to win.

After the match, Ricochet kicked Bailey in the groin before hitting the Spirit Gun to stand tall.

Lexy Nair’s guests at this time were Owen Hart Foundation Tournament opponents Thunder Rosa & Kris Statlander, who would be facing off for the first time ever. They got in each other’s faces, with Rosa landing a slap to Statlander.

Mercedes Mone & Harley Cameron were backstage warming up, with Mone being generally annoyed with Cameron.

We got a video package for Megan Bayne vs. Toni Storm at Dynasty.

Athena & Julia Hart defeated Harley Cameron & Mercedes Mone (w/Mini Mone)

This was a damn good main event, with the interactions between Athena and Mone getting over well as that match gets built. The interactions between the two were very good as well, as that match could end up being the major match AEW wants it to be down the line.

Athena and Mone got in each other’s faces immediately and started the match piefacing each other before Mone tagged in Cameron. Cameron got dragged into the wrong corner, with Hart tagging in and taking her down by the arm. Cameron hit an enzuigiri and tagged Mone, who got caught with a couple of flash pins before Mone took her down.

Mone hung Hart in the Tree of Woe, but Hart sat up out of the way of a pair of corner charges before catching Mone in an Octopus Hold. Cameron threw Mini Mone in the ring to motivate(?) Mone, and I guess it did, as she hit a lungblower on Hart as we went to a commercial.

Hart was your Witch-In-Peril as we came back. She tagged in Athena, and she fired up on Mone before Cameron tagged in. Athena hit a Brian Cage-esque Samoan Drop/Fallaway Slam combo on both her opponents to a big pop. Athena hit a big forearm on Cameron for a nearfall before diving onto Mone on the outside. Cameron took Athena down with a tornado DDT on the floor, and Hart dove from the top rope onto the pile.

Cameron and Athena rolled into the ring, with Athena scoring with a double powerbomb. Hart tagged in and went for her moonsault, but Cameron moved, and Hart ended up taking a backstabber from Mone. Hart and Cameron were left after Athena and Mone took each other out. Cameron hit a back suplex and went for Her Finishing Move, but Hart maneuvered around into an Octopus Hold. Mone could have made the save, but chose not to fight Athena, allowing Cameron to tap out.

AEW Collision live results: Mercedes Mone in action, Jay White vs. Kevin Knight

Tonight’s live AEW Collision from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, will see the return of reigning TBS Champion Mercedes Mone.

It will be Mone’s first in-ring action since defending the title against Billie Starkz earlier this month and subtly taking a jab at ROH Women’s World Champion Athena afterward, leading to speculation of a future match.

Ahead of meeting in a match for the AEW Trios titles at Dynasty, FTR’s Dax Harwood will go one-on-one with Wheeler Yuta of the Death Riders.

Visa issues seemingly behind her, former AEW Women’s World Champion Jamie Hayter will return for the first time since late-January to battle Queen Aminata.

In what is effectively a Tag Team title eliminator match, Big Bill & Bryan Keith will take on Top Flight. Bill and Keith challenged the Hurt Syndicate for the titles Wednesday with MVP suggesting they need a win first.

After declaring for this year’s men’s Owen Hart Foundation tournament on Wednesday, Jay White will compete against Kevin Knight.

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Collision is coming tonight from Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Sir Elton John opened up the show, as Tony Schiavone & Nigel McGuinness are on the call as AEW Women’s Champion Toni Storm made her way to the ring.

Toni Storm Town Hall

An effective opening segment setting up the women’s title match at the PPV. I would like a little explanation as to why Ford is sticking around with Bayne, as their partnership seemed to come together by happenstance more than anything. But they’ve made Bayne a credible threat to Toni. The question now is whether Bayne is a monster of the month or the new face of the division.

Storm said she loved Milwaukee but told Megan Bayne to get out there immediately. Bayne didn’t come out, so Storm took a spotlight and spoke. She was embarrassed, hurt, and ashamed that she got pinned by Bayne on Dynamite so easily. She replayed the scene in her head all night in her hotel room, wondering if that would be the scene at Dynasty. In the morning, she hit her head on the sink and remembered who she was. That would’ve been nice a few months ago.

She promised to beat Bayne at Dynasty before Penelope Ford jumped her. There was a very interesting camera shot here, as the camera was right next to the ropes, so we never saw Ford coming. Storm took out Ford, but Bayne laid Storm out with a lariat and a Fate’s Descent. Bayne stood tall with the Women’s Title and told Storm to bow down.

The Death Riders were in the back. Claudio Castagnoli challenged Cope to a singles match on Dynamite to get revenge for Cope taking him out. He said that Adam had lost his Edge and was just trying to Cope with it. I see what he did there. He promised to leave enough of Cope to destroy at Dynasty. Jon Moxley said that there were only three people in the world he feared – his mother, his sister, and his wife. That was until he met Marina Shafir. He felt like he and Swerve Strickland should sit back and watch Shafir and Willow Nightingale take each other on Wednesday. Shafir told Nightingale to try and smile after getting her liver ripped out. That’s a very specific organ. Will random intestines or a spleen work as well?

Jay White defeated Kevin Knight

White with a clean and tidy win in this opener. Knight got some shine here, and Tony Khan announced that Knight was All Elite, so we’ll be seeing more of him in the future. I think Knight has a ton of potential from his athleticism alone, and could develop into a player on the AEW roster in due course.

We got highlights of Knight in New Japan, as the announcers ran down his credentials as a New Japan Dojo graduate and a former IWGP Jr. Tag Team Champion alongside KUSHIDA. The announcers talked about both men’s similar backgrounds having been foreigners that trained in New Japan during the opening exchanges.

Knight scored with a headscissors, but White came right back with chops. White sent Knight to the apron and DDT’d his leg to hobble him. After a commercial, White chopped Knight off the top rope to the floor. White laid in more chops before Knight drilled him with a dropkick. Knight fired up, hitting a standing frog splash for a nearfall. Knight hit a headscissors that took White off the top rope, but White came back with a slick flatliner. White hit a big uranage before putting Knight away with the Blade Runner.

After the match, White took the mic and put Knight over, saying he believed we would see a lot more of Knight in AEW. The crowd gave Knight an ovation before he left. White said that he would show the world that he was the most elite because he needed his shot at the AEW World Title. He would show everyone it was still the Switchblade Era at All In.

The announcers reset things before throwing to video of MJF throwing the first pitch at the Texas Rangers Opening Day game, in the building where All In will take place. MJF noted that Bobby Lashley lived in Texas, but the Rangers asked for him instead.

We saw a picture of ROH Women’s World Champion Athena standing outside of Mercedes Mone’s locker room, with an accompanying tweet where she said that she might say hello to Mone tonight.

Non-Title Match – TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defeated Robyn Renegade

We got the long-awaited face-off between Mone and Athena here, and it went as well as they could have hoped. With Mone entering herself into the Owen, this is a perfect way to transition her from the TBS Title to the World Title without taking much steam off of her. With Dynasty being in a week, I think this match may be better served for Supercard of Honor in May with a Title For Title stipulation.

Renegade got a lot more offense in than I thought she would, but Mone moved out of the way of a moonsault and landed a Meteora for a nearfall. Mone put Renegade away with the Mone Maker and the crossface.

After the match, Tony Schiavone made his way into the ring as Mone had something to say. Mone called herself the greatest TBS Champion of all time and came to AEW to win more gold. She added herself to the Owen Hart Tournament and vowed to become the AEW Women’s World Champion. Schiavone said that Billie Starkz would be in the tournament as well, which annoyed Mone. She said that Starkz didn’t have more heart than Robyn Renegade and said that whoever trained Starkz sucked at pro wrestling.

This brought out Starkz’ mentor and Ring of Honor Women’s World Champion Athena for a face-off to a big reaction as Nigel McGuinness listed her bonafides. Mone swung at Athena, but Athena laid her out with a forearm. Renegade went to help Mone up, but Mone shoved her in the way of an O-Face and bailed. Athena stood tall with her title to end the segment.

We got a recap of last week’s match between Julia Hart & Queen Aminata. Aminata was with Lexy Nair, who informed the audience that due to a wrist injury she picked up in that match, she wouldn’t be cleared for action tonight. Nair said that Billie Starkz would be taking Aminata’s place against Jamie Hayter. Nair was interrupted by Serena Deeb, who told Aminata that all of this could have been prevented if she had listened. Deeb said that Aminata made the wrong call, but Aminata said that she still refused to listen to Deeb’s trash. Deeb said that since Aminata had a few weeks off anyway, she could do some reading. She handed her the BINDER OF 1,000 HOLDS and left.

(The BINDER OF 1,000 HOLDS is so over with me.)

The Learning Tree (Big Bill & Bryan Keith) defeated Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin) (w/Leila Grey)

A strong win for The Learning Tree as they head to challenge The Hurt Syndicate. Top Flight feels like a more dynamic version of Private Party, but they continue to be fodder for the pushed acts on this show. Hopefully, this issue with The Cru will get them some positive momentum. That is, if they ever book the match.

After some posturing, Keith started with Dante Martin. Dante got Keith in their corner and scored some tandem offense with his brother, but Keith caught Darius with a kick to the face and tagged in Bill. Darius tried to fight out of the corner, but Keith booted him off the apron as we went to a commercial.

After the break, Darius was fighting for a tag. Dante booted Keith and got the tag but immediately got cut off by Bill. Bill ran wild, but Dante ducked a jump into the post and vaulted over Bill for a tag. They double teamed Bill and sent him to the floor before Darius hit the standing Muscle Buster for a nearfall. Bill took Darius out on the floor before taking a top rope dive from Dante.

Keith got his knees up on a Dante splash, and Bill hit a corner splash before throwing Dante into Keith’s rising knee. Bill put Dante away with a big chokeslam for the win. After the match, The Cru came from the crowd to try and jump Top Flight, but AR Fox slid in the ring to cut them off. The Cru backed away as this issue continued.

Lexy Nair’s guest at this time was Jamie Hayter, who she welcomed back. Hayter was excited to be in the ring with a young whippersnapper like Billie Starkz and respected how hard she fought. She promised to give Starkz a ton of fight in the main event tonight, then entered her name in the Owen Hart Tournament. She said that she came back at last year’s All In and will leave this year’s All In as champion.

Adam Cole & Daniel Garcia Town Hall

They announced the match with the graphic before the wrestlers made the match in the segment. It’s not like we didn’t know where this was going, but it made the promo here quite redundant to the TV audience. Maybe Khan made the match without telling them. Anyway, this was a good segment, with Garcia getting the last word in and getting a strong response to his promo.

During Cole’s entrance, it was announced that the rematch between Cole & Garcia would happen at Dynasty with no time limit and no interference. Both men came out with their partners, Cole with The Kingdom and Garcia with Matt Menard. Cole said that he respected Garcia for being a fighting champion, and it had to sit wrong with a fighting champion that he couldn’t beat Cole. Cole didn’t want their issues to end with a draw and said that Garcia knew Cole was the better man.

Garcia said that it did eat him up that he couldn’t beat Cole. Menard took the mic and asked how many shots Cole would get, and that Garcia didn’t need to give him another shot. Garcia agreed that he didn’t have to do it, but he wanted to do it. Strong took the mic and said that as good as Garcia was, he wasn’t ready to beat Cole. This started an argument that Garcia finished by saying that nobody would be at ringside, and there would be no time limit. It would be Cole vs. Garcia one last time, the better man would win, and it would be him.

Athena & Billie Starkz were backstage, with Athena mocking Mercedes Mone’s cadence. Athena said that if Mone was going to be a passive-aggressive b***h, she would get hit. She told Mone to keep her and her minion’s name out of her mouth. Athena got down to business and entered the Owen Hart Tournament before turning her attention to Starkz’ main event. She was sure Starkz would let her down but promised to watch closely anyway.

(Athena entering The Owen caught me off guard, as I expected her to simply take the TBS Title off of Mone. They’re stacking these Owen tournaments with marquee names and really stacking the build to All In.)

Wheeler Yuta defeated Dax Harwood

A solid match here, as Yuta continues to get heat and continues to weave Bryan Danielson’s offense into his arsenal. Yuta getting the clean win surprised me a bit, but it does advance Harwood’s frustrations heading into Dynasty.

They were very evenly matched in the opening exchanges, with Yuta retreating to ringside after a suplex. Yuta baited Harwood to the floor and sent him to the barricade and the stairs. Yuta locked Harwood’s arm in the turnbuckle before reminding the referee that he had till five to break, then took Harwood down with a superplex as we went to a commercial.

We came back to Harwood and Yuta brawling across the barricade. Yuta backdropped Harwood on the floor, but Harwood caught Yuta with a Dragon Screw as they got back into the ring. Harwood locked on the ringpost Figure Four, but when he tried to put a Sharpshooter on in the ring, Yuta shoved him into the post. Harwood fought back and took Yuta down with a back superplex for a nearfall.

Yuta locked on a Cattle Mutilation, but after Harwood made the ropes, he slipped away from Yuta and socked him in the face. Yuta rebounded into the ring and dropped Harwood with a German suplex. Harwood escaped another Cattle Mutilation and got the Sharpshooter on. Yuta got to the ropes, and when Harwood pulled him in the ring, Yuta caught him with the Seatbelt pin combination to score the win. Harwood looked upset as Claudio Castagnoli gave Yuta a solemn pat on the back.

After the match, Harwood argued with referee Paul Turner and grabbed him by his shirt. The black shirt security came in and restrained Harwood to the corner, a bit forcefully in my opinion. Cash Wheeler came out to clear the security off of his partner, but Harwood shoved him down, presuming he was another security guy. Harwood offered a hand to help Wheeler up, but Wheeler shoved him away and left. The crowd gave Harwood You F****d Up chants as he stewed in the ring.

Alicia Atout’s guests at this time were Nick Wayne, Kip Sabian, & Mother Wayne. They were immediately interrupted by The Cru, who asked him what was up with Wayne’s boy AR Fox. Wayne sussed out that The Cru wanted him to deal with their dirty work for them, but his issues with Fox were well in the past. Sabian told Wayne to hear them out, and The Cru said that no one knew Fox like Wayne did.

Hologram defeated Blake Christian (w/ Lee Johnson)

Schiavone put over Hologram’s winning streak, as it was the longest in AEW today. We got some quick action as you would expect from Hologram, ending with Christian sending Hologram into the steps as we went to a commercial.

After the commercial, Hologram made his comeback and hit a dive into Lee Johnson, who shoved Christian out of the way. Christian put Hologram on the barricade, but Hologram took Christian down with a hurricanrana to the floor. A slight distraction from Johnson allowed Christian to hit a Spanish Fly off the stairs and a springboard 450 for a nearfall. Both men traded kicks before Hologram hit the crossbody Spanish Fly. Christian fought off the Portal Bomb, but handsprung onto Hologram’s shoulders, allowing Hologram to hit the Portal Bomb anyway for the win.

Lexy Nair’s guests at this time were Thunder Rosa & Kris Statlander, who Nair announced were both in the Owen Hart Tournament. Statlander said that nobody could stop her, but Rosa disagreed. She never lost the women’s title and would scratch and crawl to get it back. Things got testy, but they shook hands and parted ways.

The full Owen Hart Memorial Tournament brackets will be announced on Wednesday’s Dynamite. Toni Storm vs. Penelope Ford was also added to the card for Wednesday.

Jamie Hayter defeated Billie Starkz

An interesting choice for a main event here, and a very interesting Athena/Hayter staredown at the end of the show.

Hayter knocked Starkz down with a pair of shoulder blocks, but Starkz popped back up with a straight punch to the face. Starkz caught Hayter with a rebound kick, but Hayter ripped Starkz off the ropes and hit a missile dropkick as we went to commercial.

Starkz fought to the ropes on a single-leg crab as we came back from the break. Starkz sent Hayter to the apron and booted her to the floor before hitting a dive. Back in the ring, Starkz hit a senton for a nearfall. Hayter won a strike exchange with a shotgun dropkick. Starkz caught Hayter and hit a backbreaker for a nearfall. Hayter fought out of the Electric Chair and hit the Ushigoroshi and a sliding lariat for a nearfall.

Starkz ducked the Hayterade and traded running strikes, but Hayter scored with a German suplex for a nearfall. Starkz ducked another Hayterade, but Hayter hooked her arm and hit a step-up Hayterade off the ropes for the win. After the match, Athena stared down Hayter from the ramp as the show came to a close.

AEW Collision Slam Dunk Saturday live results: Daniel Garcia vs. Adam Cole

A rematch for the TNT title headlines tonight’s one-hour Slam Dunk Saturday edition of AEW Collision from Omaha, Nebraska, airing after NCAA men’s basketball tournament action.

Daniel Garcia will once again put the title on the line against Adam Cole. The two squared off this month with the match going to a no contest after members of Shane Taylor Promotions ran in to beat both men up. Garcia has held the title since November’s Full Gear and is looking for his sixth successful title defense.

In the third match in their trilogy, former TBS Champion Julia Hart will go one-on-one with Queen Aminata.

In a trios about, Powerhouse Hobbs will team with Mark Briscoe and Rocky Romero against Konosuke Takeshita, Lance Archer and Brian Cage of the Don Callis Family.

Max Caster is still in search of his first open challenge series victory and will continue that quest tonight.

Tonight’s show is expected to begin around 11 PM Eastern.

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It’s Slam Dunk Saturday, and your t-shirts are too tight too Billy! (Shout out to soon-to-be Hall of Famer Lex Luger!) We’re in Omaha, Nebraska for this special one-hour edition of Collision. Tony Schiavone, Nigel McGuinness, & Matt Menard were on the call as the show began with the TNT Title match in the ring, ready to go.

It’s Slam Dunk Saturday, and your t-shirts are too tight too Billy! (Shout out to soon-to-be Hall of Famer Lex Luger!) We’re in Omaha, Nebraska for this special one-hour edition of Collision. Tony Schiavone, Nigel McGuinness, & Matt Menard were on the call as the show began with the TNT Title match in the ring, ready to go.

AEW TNT Title Match – Daniel Garcia (c) vs. Adam Cole went to a time-limit draw

I loved this show starting with a match in the ring ready to start. That’s something I would love AEW to do more of. WWE will always start a show with five-ten minutes of video packages and entrances, so make yourselves standout by starting with immediate action. These two work very well together as their last two matches have shown. The finish tells me that there will be a third match coming soon, probably for Dynasty and possibly with a stipulation regarding the time-limit. A quality start to this special episode. The only thing I would have done differently is announce when the rematch was happening on this show. In theory, you have a bigger audience, so try to hook them in for the next show or the upcoming pay-per-view.

The first exchange went to a stalemate, unless you consider Garcia doing his dance getting the upper hand. Cole won the second exchange and did his Pokemon taunt. Another exchange saw Garcia left stood up, and after some rough breaks in the ropes, Garcia hit a dropkick to send Cole into the corner. Cole interrupted Garcia’s ten punches and sent him over the top rope to the floor.

Cole sent Garcia into the ring steps, with Garcia favoring his knee in the process. Cole went to work on the knee, then hit a Shining Wizard for a nearfall. Garcia rolled Cole up on a Figure Four attempt, but Cole came right back with a backstabber for a nearfall as we went to a commercial.

We came back to Cole driving Garcia’s leg into the post to light boos. Garcia swung on Cole from his knees, but Cole caught him with an enzuigiri. Garcia countered a brainbuster with a Twist N’ Shout, then hit another before a rope-assisted third one got a nearfall. The crowd was split as Garcia went for a piledriver, but the knee gave Cole an opening to hit an Ushigoroshi for a nearfall.

Garcia shoved Cole off of a Figure Four attempt and booted him off the apron so hard that he went to the floor as well. Garcia had a fan help him to his feet before dropkicking Cole in a chair, but Cole caught Garcia with the Last Shot for a nearfall. Cole signaled for the Panama Sunrise, but Garcia cut him off as the ring announcer gave the 15-minute call. Garcia went to give Cole a superplex, but his leg crumbled underneath him. Cole hit the Panama Sunrise, but Garcia got his arm on the rope at two.

Cole set up for another Panama Sunrise, but Garcia ducked out of the ring to the floor. Garcia avoided a Sunrise on the floor and hit a side suplex. With the weak knee, Garcia pulled and pulled Cole up to hit a piledriver for a nearfall. Cole went to superkick a charging Garcia, but Garcia collapsed on the leg. Another Panama Sunrise only got a 2-count, so Cole locked on a Figure Four.

Garcia scraped his way to the ropes, then pulled Cole into the Dragon Tamer and forced Cole into the ropes. The men fought to the apron as the announcers said there was one minute left. Cole hit a Canadian Destroyer on the apron. Garcia held onto Cole’s ankle to keep him from running for The Boom, and it worked as the bell rang right before Cole hit the Boom. The time limit expired, and Garcia retained the title. The two men yelled at each other as we went to a commercial.

During this match, ROH Supercard of Honor was announced for the Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City, New Jersey on May 2nd.

Max Caster was in the ring for his open challenge. He said that he had a busy schedule, unlike his former partner. The crowd chanted for Anthony Bowens, who Caster said was gone and was never coming back. He did his chant to little success and asked for an opponent for his open challenge. Hook came out, and the match was on.

Best Wrestler Alive Open Challenge – Hook defeated Max Caster

They’re setting up Anthony Bowens to get a big pop answering a Caster challenge, which should set him up nicely on his new path as a singles wrestler.

Caster threw the mic at Hook to start, but Hook simply tripped him and locked on the Redrum for the quick win.

Lexy Nair’s guest at this time was Queen Aminata ahead of her match against Julia Hart. She was immediately interrupted by Serena Deeb, who bore a gift: All ONE THOUSAND of her holds in a binder. She wanted Aminata to study those moves, not realizing Aminata’s match was literally about to start. Aminata declined and said she could win this match on her own, with Deeb wondering about that after Aminata left.

Julia Hart defeated Queen Aminata

An odd finish here, with Hart just rolling Aminata up for the win. But Aminata could not beat Hart again without Deeb’s help, so she may need THE BINDER OF HOLDS to advance in her career.

Aminata got the first advantage with a suplex into the corner before dropping her on the apron with a uranage. We came back from a commercial with Hart hitting a standing moonsault for a nearfall. Aminata came back with an Air Raid Crash for a nearfall.

Both women got to the top rope, with Hart hitting a Spider Suplex. Hart went for a moonsault, but Aminata moved and hit the Brain Drain for a nearfall. Aminata hit Hart with a forearm and went for Off With Her Head, but Hart moved and stacked Aminata up for the win.

Lexy Nair’s guest at this time was Harley Cameron. Nair asked Cameron about the lucha showcase match tomorrow night, and Cameron said that she would hop on commentary for that match after her match. When Nair asked about the scurrilous rumors that Cameron was the mysterious luchadora Harleygram, Cameron screamed Feel The Wrath and ducked away.

Konosuke Takeshita & The Murder Machines (Brian Cage & Lance Archer) (w/Don Callis) defeated Mark Briscoe, Powerhouse Hobbs & Rocky Romero

A fun, energetic main event to cap off the show.

Callis hopped on commentary as Briscoe and Takeshita started off. Takeshita cut Briscoe off on a top rope attack, but Briscoe knocked the other Callis Family members off the apron and dove onto Cage. Hobbs tagged in and took Takeshita down with running Vader attacks – the one where you just throw your body into the other guy – before Romero scored with a double stomp. Romero went for a dive, but Cage caught him and passed him to Takeshita for a powerbomb on the apron.

Romero was fighting back on Takeshita as we came back from commercial, hitting a tornado DDT and getting the tag out to Briscoe. Briscoe ran wild, hitting a Fisherman’s Buster for a nearfall. The Murder Machines pinballed Briscoe around before Takeshita hit a home run forearm for a nearfall. Briscoe fought out of the Murder Bomb and tagged in Hobbs, who ran wild on the Murder Machines.

Hobbs laid out Takeshita with a spinebuster before Cage dumped him with a German suplex. Romero tagged in and kicked Cage into a spinebuster. The match broke down into a Pier Six brawl, with Romero hitting a rewind kick for a nearfall. Archer cut Romero off with a forearm, and Cage helped him hit the Murder Bomb. Takeshita came in and hit the Raging Fire for the win.

AEW Dynamite live results: International title eliminator tournament begins

AEW Dynamite airs live tonight with the fallout from Sunday’s Revolution pay-per-view, and a new tournament beginning.

The AEW International title eliminator tournament kicks off tonight with two first round matches.

Orange Cassidy will face CMLL’s Hechicero in one title eliminator bout, with a mystery wildcard opponent facing The Beast Mortos in tonight’s other tournament matchup. Rampant internet speculation suggests that “Speedball” Mike Bailey could be the wildcard.

The winners of tonight’s tournament matches and the winners of Saturday’s tournament bouts on Collision will compete in a four-way on next week’s Dynamite to earn a shot at Kenny Omega and the International title at the Dynasty pay-per-view set for April 6.

New AEW International Champion Kenny Omega will speak on tonight’s show after dethroning Konosuke Takeshita at Revolution in an instant classic on Sunday.

An MJF promo is also scheduled for tonight’s episode. MJF lost to Hangman Adam Page in the opening contest of Sunday’s Revolution pay-per-view.

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AEW Dynamite comes on the air with Excalibur welcoming us alongside Taz before immediately throwing it to the introduction of the new AEW International Champion, Kenny Omega who makes his entrance to his Battle Cry theme, lots of pyro and a huge ovation.

Omega said this is all still so wild to him, as before 2025, he was more than happy just to stand in the ring to say he was cleared to try and do this again. What makes it feel like a dream is that we’re barely into the year, but thanks to the fans, doctors, someone he never thought he’d call a friend, Will Ospreay, not only is he back, but he’s back with a singles title. One final person he needs to thank, controversial as it may be, Konosuke Takeshita, who pushed him harder than he ever imagined. If it wasn’t for Takeshita dragging him to the place he needed to be, he wouldn’t be here in front of these people, so he thanks Takeshita for making this a true International Title.

Omega brought up Tony Khan coming up with the International Title Eliminator Tournament and thinks it’s a great idea, as it will determine who is the best on the planet and Omega will be watching, as he wants to see who will look to being the best. Omega hits the Goodbye & Goodnight line as he signs some autographs and high fives fans before The Opps make their entrance and have a little face-off with Omega before heading to the ring.

The Opps (Samoa Joe, HOOK & Katsuyori Shibata) defeated Eli Theseus, Vinny Pacifico & Gabriel Aeros

Joe gets a huge chant as he lit up Theseus up with corner strikes to kick things off. HOOK tags in and he launches Aeros around with a series of throws before Pacifico tried a running start, but HOOK tripped him, allowing Shibata to tag in and hit his signature corner stalling dropkick. Rear Naked Choke led to a PK and Shibata got the easy win. Quick warmup for Shibata ahead of his match with Ricochet on Collision in the International Title Eliminator Tournament.

-Ricochet is backstage and said despite being screwed at Revolution doesn’t mean his quest for gold is over. He didn’t want the ugly ass Embassy robe anyways, but the gold Kenny Omega is holding looks much better. Ricochet knows what Shibata is capable of, so he’s giving him an option to quit before their match, if not, he won’t be responsible for what happens to him on Saturday.

-Highlight package of Revolution was shown showcasing the entire card

We’re told Jon Moxley vs. Cope next week in a Street Fight for the AEW World Title, with the winner facing Swerve Strickland at Dynasty. Cameras caught up to Strickland last Sunday, as he was asked by the cameraman when he wants to challenge for the AEW Title? Last year at Dynasty, Strickland became the first black AEW World Champion and this year, he looks to do it, twice.

Cope walks in and said he didn’t lose tonight; there’s still a chance he could be AEW World Champion before Dynasty gets here and there’s a chance Strickland will be looking across the ring at him at the PPV. Strickland said that’s exactly what he’d do, too and they bumped fist before Cope walked away and Strickland gave a little nod of respect.

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-Jon Moxley is backstage and said The Rated R Superstar thinks he’s lucky to have walked away from Revolution with the AEW World Title. Moxley said he should’ve never been in that position, he should’ve put Cope out of his misery before Christian Cage got into the match. Moxley hurt Cope, who was sucking wind, couldn’t turn his neck, but he still came forward again and again. Whatever Cope is made of is rare and he can admire that, but you can take the rules, count outs, disqualifications, whatever you want, Cope can take the rules, Moxley will take his excuses. Moxley underestimated Cope’s grit no matter what avalanches befall him, but there’s a reason why Moxley is the World Champion. There’s a difference between amateurs and professionals, the difference is Moxley never makes the same mistake twice. Just the appearance of Moxley on the big screen got massive boos from the crowd.

Powerhouse Hobbs & Hologram (w/Harleygram) defeated Brian Cage & Dralistico (w/The Beast Mortos)

(This was a fun clash of styles tag match, with a highlight being how Mortos was seemingly distracted by Harleygram, which could be a hilarious story if they go that route. The end felt a little off with Hobbs & Dralistico, but they managed to get it on track enough for the finish. Hobbs will continue to feud with the Don Callis Family, while Hologram battles LIJ I’m sure going forward.)

This match came about earlier today with Hobbs issuing a challenge to one member of the Don Callis Family & LIJ, as Harleygram came in and accepted the match on Hologram’s behalf before shutting down. Hobbs wasted no time going after Cage outside, as Hologram & Dralisitco pick things up where they left off last week on Collision. Taz talks about the history of Hobbs & Cage in Team Taz, but those days are gone. Hard chops fired off by Dralistico, as Hologram picks up the pace, trading arm drags and leg sweeps. Dralistico again went to rip off the mask similar to last Saturday before tagging in Cage. Hologram sent Dralistico packing, but was picked up for a gorilla press by Cage, only for Hologram to counter into a hurricanrana. Hologram wanted a tope dive, but ran right into a vertical suplex from Cage in mid-air. Bicep curls into a fall away slam onto the apron as things went to commercial.

Back from break, Mortos is putting the boots outside to Hologram before Harleygram tries to make the save before swiveling her hips to run distraction. This worked, as Dralistico had to pull his LIJ faction mate away. Back in the ring, Hologram fired off a thrust kick, Dralistico responded with a Crucifix Bomb, only for Hologram to answer with a moonsault fall away slam. Tag to Hobbs, who rag dolled Dralistico before Meat chants lead to a Hobbs & Cage clash. Hobbs ducked a lariat, it a standing splash and snap powerslam for a near fall. Hobbs no sold some Dralistico strikes, allowing Cage to hit a German suplex/thrust kick combo. Hologram flew in with a pop-up dropkick on Cage, snap rana on Dralistico, tried it on Cage, only to get powerbombed into Hobbs in the corner. Cage incredibly hit the suplex from the apron back inside, as Dralistico flew in with a dropkick, but barely clipped Hobbs.

A pissed off Hobbs gets up and just slams Dralistico down with a powerslam before Cage makes the save, they go to the apron where Hobbs hit a spinebuster on the edge of the ring. Hologram walked the ropes, launched himself off Hobbs’ chest and hit a dive on Cage. Back inside, Dralistico & Hobbs have a somewhat awkward exchange before Dralistico tried a springboard, but Hobbs countered into a spinebuster in mid-air for the win.

Post-match, Lance Archer & Mark Davis came out to help Cage as they all had a stare down with Hobbs, who stood his ground.

-Last Sunday, Alicia Atout interviewed The Hurt Syndicate, who asks whose asses they need to beat next? MVP said that’s what he loves about Shelton Benjamin & Bobby Lashley, no one works harder than The Hurt Syndicate, which means no one should play harder than they do. Lashley wants to go to the gym, but MVP wants them to take a week off, don’t need to come to TV, enjoy their break. MVP said they want to fight more and do what they do better than anyone else, they want to hurt people.

-A video package on the epic Hollywood Ending is shown, as the entire history of Timeless Toni Storm vs. Mariah May was showcased. Ben Mankiewicz again made a brief cameo highlighting the story as well. This absolutely should’ve main evented Revolution, this was the best women’s feud in AEW and arguably women’s wrestling history. Nigel McGuinness saying this was a cinematic masterpiece was a great and accurate line.

Timeless Toni Storm Addresses the AEW Women’s Roster

With stitches in her lip, staples in her head and glass in her ass, Storm stands before you to say this tramp is still the champ. Revolution was her Hollywood Ending, as a chunk of heart is gone forever, but looking at the AEW Women’s Title, it was well worth it. It’s time for a new beginning; it’s her honor to be the Women’s World champion because this is the most talented locker room in all of professional wrestling. There are so many champions, one is in a bloody briefcase. Other champions are belt collectors, but when you fight with Storm, it’s like visiting the zoo. She bleeds like a pig, licks like a giraffe and she will eat you like a lion. Storm promises you’ll never hear her meow, as she promises she’s no pussy, nobody swings like Toni Storm, so ladies, put your keys in the bowl and let’s get this orgy started. It will be messy, sweaty and it will always be Timeless.

As Storm posed, she was decked from behind by Megan Bayne, who posed over the fallen Women’s World champion.

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“Speedball” Mike Bailey defeated The Beast Mortos in an International Title Eliminator Tournament First Round

(Great showcase of a debut for Bailey, who didn’t show everything he’s capable of, but enough to wow the crowd. Mortos was a perfect first opponent, as he’s able to make everyone he’s in there with look like a million bucks and this was no different.)

Crazy fast series of counters to start before Bailey fired off a stiff kick to drop Mortos. Rapid fire kicks sent Mortos to the outside, but Bailey missed a moonsault off the apron, landed on his feet, as Mortos mowed him down. Bailey was able to battle back with more kicks before heading back inside, rolled through a top rope attack, low bridged Mortos back to the outside, where he hit a somersault dive to take things to break.

During break, Mortos gained control with his twisting Tornillo, but back from commercial, Bailey was back in the driver’s seat with a running Shooting Star for two. Mortos seemingly dodged a high kick, taking a powder, but ate a pump kick on the apron, leading to a springboard moonsault to the floor by Bailey. Back inside, Bailey hit a Liger Bomb for a near fall, as he went up top, missed a Shooting Star, rolled through, but into a pop-up Samoan Drop by Mortos for two. Mortos up top now, but took too long, as Bailey swept out the legs. Both battled until Mortos hit a massive avalanche press slam for a wild near fall.

Bailey avoided a discus strike, traded slaps until Mortos with a Torture Rack backbreaker and discus lariat that turned Bailey inside out. Mortos went for a home run powerbomb, but Bailey rolled through into a hurricanrana and PK. Moonsault knee drop from Bailey, who loaded up for a high-speed roundhouse kick to win it.

-Renee Paquette is backstage with The Patriarchy and asks about Christian Cage’s failed cash-in at Revolution. Cage refuses to speak to anyone related to Jon Moxley, so this will be the most boring interview in history and says Paquette should take a hint, as she’s blonde and not smart, to get out of his sight. Paquette leaves as Cage said he’s still the next undisputed AEW World Champion and demands his contract be returned to him. Cage said he signed for a singles World Title match with Cope, not a 3 way (I’m sorry, what?). Cage said he didn’t tap out; he was relegating his breathing.

Nick Wayne cut him off and said Cage is lying to everyone and if he stuck to the plan, maybe Cage would be World Champion and they all deserve an apology. Cage said he’s sorry it’s come to this and pushes Nick as Mother Wayne intervenes, but Cage said if she does something, she’ll be back to working the midnight shift at Waffle House. Cage asks who Nick is to question his tactics, how many World titles has he ever won? How many World titles did his biological father win? Nick should be thanking Cage that he found him and didn’t end up a coward like his father, who died in front of his mother’s face. Cage said he’ll be AEW World Champion if it’s the last thing he ever does and says for Nick to keep his mouth shut and ride his coattails or it’ll be the last thing he ever does. Cage walks off, as Kip Sabian was left conflicted, but walked off with Cage as Mother Wayne stayed with her son.

-Lexy Nair was outside of MJF’s locker room following his loss to Hangman Adam Page at Revolution, as he was telling himself in the mirror that he’s a fraud before smashing the mirror and screaming for Nair to get out.

MJF Gets an Interesting Offer

MJF said he has a splitting headache, his hand and body hurts, but what hurts the most is he, along with all the schmucks at home and in the arena knows, he had the match won on Sunday. The cowardly Cowboy decided for a cheap shot like he did in 2019. The fans can chant Page’s name all they want, but he’s not upset anymore, as he’s thought long and hard about it, he’s 10 times smarter than Page and his fans ever will be. MJF thinks 10 steps ahead and he will get his, so this thing between he & Page isn’t over, not by a long shot.

MVP’s music hits and he walks out alone, having given Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin the week off. After a brief face-off, they gave each other a hug and acted like old buddies. MVP wanted to tell us about his history with MJF, as an 18-year-old MJF volunteered to drive him to a documentary film for the low price of hearing about the pro wrestling business. The questions MJF asked was what impressed MVP the most. Cut to an indy company in Florida, they met again, as MVP mentioned the drive MJF had, something you could not teach. MJF did everything he said he was going to do back then and that’s what makes MVP proud of him. MVP said what makes him not proud is how MJF has handled the loss on Sunday, out here whining to the people. MVP questions why MJF isn’t smashing things and hurting people? MVP knows the answer to the question, MJF has lost his edge, as the boys in the back don’t respect or fear him anymore. The boys do fear The Hurt Syndicate, which is what MJF is missing.

MVP was able to help MJF a long time ago, but maybe he can help him again. When he passed out his business card when he debuted, it was a way to introduce himself, but now, it’s a way to change your career, to make you a champion. Maybe it’s time for them to talk some business. MVP went to hand out his card, but MJF refused. MJF said he’s not the same kid he was all those years ago, with all do respect, he doesn’t need MVP’s help or advice. He’s MJF and if the moron fans want to hear it or not, he was the longest reigning AEW World Champion. MVP said to focus on the word “was” before handing MJF his business card, leaving and MJF put the card in his jacket.

**********

Max Caster is in the ring to do his Best Wrestler Alive schtick and thanked the Maximaniacs for making his shirt the most popular shirt on ShopAEW. Caster said he was the most popular member of The Acclaimed before trying to get his “Let’s Go Max, You’re the Best Wrestler Alive” chant going to crickets. Caster calls the fans stupid, which got the reaction, as he said whoever answers his open challenge is stupid as well.

Konosuke Takeshita defeated Max Caster

“You F’d Up” chants from the fans to Caster, who still had the mic and said he’s going to friggin kill Takeshita, what are they doing? Takeshita must be here to ask him to join the Don Callis Family. Caster can Main Event the Tokyo Dome, get a recording contract and do something Takeshita wasn’t able to do, beat Kenny Omega. Takeshita waffled Caster with a forearm, but pulled him up at two, just so he could his Raging Fire to win it and march to the back.

-Footage of Chris Jericho & The Learning Tree attacking Gravity & Bandido with a baseball bat before his ROH Title match could take place. Jericho unmasked Gravity, leaving the family of Gravity & Bandido to tend to them.

Jericho is backstage holding Gravity’s mask and said gravity is the perfect word to introduce he & Bandido to their situation. Jericho embarrassed Bandido in front of his family, scaring his sister and making his mother cry. Jericho asks how one could come back from that, realizing the disappointing his mother has in him. Maybe Bandido brought it on himself or maybe he’s an unlucky son of a bitch that Jericho made a point out of not to be comfortable around Chris Jericho. He crumbled up the mask and threw it aside.

Willow Nightingale defeated Penelope Ford

(This picked up in the second half before Nightingale got her first singles win over Ford in AEW. The post-match continued to make Bayne look like a strong contender, especially after her earlier attack on Toni Storm.)

Early shoulder tackle by Nightingale, who blocked a cazadora into a bodyslam and low cross body for two. Nightingale missed with a lariat, but managed a snap suplex. Ford tried her Matrix bridge, sent Nightingale into the corner with a dropkick to the spine and step-up double knee drop to the midsection as things went to break.

It was all Ford during break, but Nightingale fired back with a series of lariats. High boot led to a big spinebuster for a near fall. Ford slid out of a Doctor Bomb, tried a backslide, but Nightingale powered into a Gory Special. Ford escaped by biting the forehead before locking in a triangle in the ropes. Ford hit a top rope cross body for two before licking Nightingale, which Taz called pretty whacky. Nightingale responded with a running powerslam, but Ford got a flash cradle for two. Both trade kicks, as Ford successfully hit her Matrix Stunner, tried again, only to be Pounced clear across the ring for the win.

Post-match, Ford cracked Nightingale in the ribs and back with a chair and kept the attack going until Kris Statlander ran down. Ford tried a chair shot, but Statlander ducked and hit a dropkick sending the chair into Ford’s face. Statlander helped Nightingale up, who didn’t realize who it was, initially shoving Statlander away. The two ladies stared at each other until Megan Bayne hit the ring, hit a double clothesline on both before laying out Statlander with a F5 to stand tall for the second time tonight.

-Renee Paquette is backstage with Mercedes Mone, who is selling her bruised throat, so she can’t do her signature line, so Paquette did it. Paquette said Mone requested Billie Starkz to join them, as she walks in and said her notes she was taking at Revolution was not to get kicked in the throat. Starkz said she’s accomplished a lot here too, she was the first inaugural ROH TV Champion at 19. They aren’t that different, as wrestling is their lives. Starkz said Mone says money changes everything and next week, she’s looking to become a champion. Mone coughed and said Starkz is way out of her league. She shoved Starkz in the face and said next week there’s a price to pay when you mess with Mercedes Mone.

Will Ospreay Calls His Shot for The AEW World Title

Tony Schiavone welcomes Ospreay to the ring, as he’s moving really gingerly and talked about the stitches in his head, might have gotten stabbed in the ribs, but he’s still standing. Ospreay said he was scared for his life at Revolution, but thanks everyone for their support, it carried him through. One day, Kyle Fletcher will be World Champion and if they stand in the ring again, he’ll be the better man once more. Ospreay said he’s in trouble with his wife, he had to lie, as a day before the cage match, she told him she was nervous and said not to do anything stupid off the cage. Ospreay said he’s in his 30s, he’s not doing anything stupid off the cage, but saw fans holding their phones up while he was up at the top of the cage and someone saying please don’t die. He went to the back and saw 15 missed messages from his wife, who couldn’t believe he jumped off the flippin cage. Ospreay promised to cook her dinner and a damn good seeing to.

Schiavone said he understands all of that, but asks what is next for Ospreay? In order to be the guy in AEW, there should be something around his waist, but there’s an issue, Cope has a title match next week, Strickland has a title shot at Dynasty, so when should he call his shot? When it matters the most, as he looked up at the All In Texas sign and said he’s on a mission, to be in the main event for the AEW World Title at All In and how he can do it, is by entering the Owen Hart Tournament. If it’s against Cope, it’ll be a pleasure for a first-time meeting, if it’s Strickland, he can’t wait for the rematch, if it’s Moxley, the king, a word in advance, an Assassin is coming from the throne. Ospreay wants to be the guy because he knows he can do it; he wants to be World Champion because his name is Will Ospreay and he’s On Another Level.

-Renee Paquette is backstage with Switchblade Jay White, who mocks the Ospreay chant saying Willy really is on another level and sometime soon, they’ll see each other in the ring again. White congratulates Ospreay on his win at Revolution, but if he wants a World Title match at All In, they’re going to have to keep protecting him from White. Paquette asks what happened at Revolution and White said everyone wants to know if he hit Cope with the briefcase on purpose and asks Paquette what she thinks and then the crowd. White said he did not hit Cope on purpose, as he’s done everything to win the World Title from Jon Moxley, but the rat (Wheeler Yuta) saved his king. He’ll be dammed if he’ll let anyone stop him from fulfilling his destiny becoming AEW World Champion.

**********

-Renee Paquette approached Hangman Adam Page and was attempting to ask him about Revolution when they walk past MJF and Page asks if he wants to finish breaking his neck? Page said last week, MJF tried to set him on fire, but when he does something like that, he really has to mean it. However, Sunday, MJF let the mask slip, Page realizes MJF cares what the fans think of him. MJF said he’s glad Page thinks he wasn’t going to set him on fire, so he’ll call Page’s bluff, as Page doesn’t realize what is next. Page had a fluke victory, but MJF goes on to become a multiple time World Champion, first ballot Hall of Famer and greatest of all time, while Page fails to reach the pinnacle, only to tumble all the way down, wallowing in his own self-pity. When Page’s mask slips, Page doesn’t think he deserves the fans love and he’s right, as sooner of later, the fans will grow tired of thinking Page will win the big one, when he never will. MJF will win it over and over again, laughing at Page up that mountain. Page said they’ll see, won’t they? MJF walks away and Excalibur said these two will be intertwined for years to come. This was an excellent backstage promo.

Orange Cassidy defeated Hechicero in an International Title Eliminator Tournament First Round

(This was on ok main event, as the clash of styles, flash finish and maybe time crunch prevented this from kicking into another gear. While Hechicero has been on AEW programming in the past, it felt like the fans weren’t used to him at all, so their reaction to his offense wasn’t quite there. Cassidy still managed to get them during the match and I look forward to seeing who joins he & Bailey next week in the 4-way.)

Jim Ross joins commentary and puts over Mike Bailey in his match earlier in the evening. Hechicero blocked Cassidy from going to the pockets in the early going, as Cassidy walked the top rope, put one hand in his pocket before Hechicero stepped away. Cassidy put on the brakes and put both hands in the pockets before hitting a snap dropkick and kip up. Hechicero tried a handspring, but landed right on his head, allowing a Cassidy roll-up with no hands before faking a dive and kip up as Hechicero took a powder into commercial.

During commercial, Hechicero targeted the arm and when things returned from break, Hechicero hung up Cassidy over the top rope before a dragon screw between the ropes. Cassidy managed a cross body off the top, but couldn’t follow with his spinning DDT, allowing a swinging hammerlock backbreaker by Hechicero for two. Cassidy answered with a Stundog Millionaire and spinning DDT, but tried to kip up and his leg gave out. Cassidy signaled for Orange Punch, but his arm was injured, so he went up top slowly, but dove right into an arm bar, eventually getting the rope break. Cassidy tried another Stundog, but was blocked, as was an Orange Punch, as Hechicero tried a swinging Torture Rack, only for Cassidy to get a Mouse Trap for the flash pin.

Post-match, Mike Bailey walked out to the staged and bowed to Cassidy, as they both advance to next weeks 4-way Eliminator to see who faces Kenny Omega for the International Title at Dynasty.

AEW Collision 3/14/25

  • Ricochet vs. Katsuyori Shibata in an International Title Eliminator Tournament First Round
  • Mark Briscoe vs. Mark Davis in an International Title Eliminator Tournament First Round
  • FTR vs. Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly

AEW Dynamite 3/19/25

  • Jon Moxley vs. Cope in a Street Fight for the AEW World Title
  • Mike Bailey vs. Orange Cassidy vs. ? vs. ? in a 4 Way International Title Eliminator Tournament Final
  • Mercedes Mone vs. Billie Starkz

AEW Collision Maximum Carnage live results: Texas Death Match, Continental title defense

Tonight’s Maximum Carnage edition of AEW Collision from Cleveland, Ohio, will feature two ends of the wrestling spectrum: a violent Texas Death Match and a Continental title defense.

Former AEW World Champion Hangman Page will square off with Christopher Daniels in a Texas Death Match. The two have an extensive history outside AEW and Daniels, who hasn’t wrestled since last September, will have contend with Page in his speciality match.

AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada will defend against old NJPW rival Tomohiro Ishii in their first singles bout since 2020’s G1 tournament.

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, Wheeler Yuta, Chris Jericho, Big Bill & Bryan Keith will take on Cope, FTR, Powerhouse Hobbs & The Outrunners.

Adam Cole, Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly go heads-up against The Infantry & Lee Moriarty.

The card is rounded out by Julia Hart vs. Harley Cameron, Dustin Rhodes vs. Adam Priest, and Lance Archer & Brian Cage vs. Top Flight.

**********

Collision started with words from Rated FTR, The Outrunners, Powerhouse Hobbs, Kazuchika Okada, & Hangman Page. Collision was live (to tape) from Cincinnati, Ohio, and our announce team was Tony Schiavone, Nigel McGuinness, & Matt Menard.

Texas Death Match – Hangman Page defeated Christopher Daniels by knockout

An ugly, vicious beating from the Hangman here as he dominated Daniels here. Daniels had some slight hope spots, but Page was unrelenting in his beating here and left him down for the count. A great match, and a great way for Daniels to go if the rumors of his retirement are true.

A vice principal no longer, Daniels came out as the Fallen Angel. Page slapped Daniels in the face and took him to the floor before drilling him with a chair to the head. Daniels was lacerated as Page pulled barbed wire out from under the ring and whipped Daniels with it as we went to the first commercial.

We came back to both men on the apron, stood over Chekov’s Table. Daniels backdropped Page into the ring, but Page threw Daniels into a chair wedged into the corner. We got a replay of Hangman dropping Daniels with a pop-up powerbomb through chairs during the commercial, and after we got back to full screen action, Page double-stomped Daniels through a table.

Daniels got up at the count of seven, with Page responding by pulling out another table with barbed wire taped all over it. Hangman set it up in the ring and looked to go for a Deadeye off the ropes, but Daniels countered with a uranage off the ropes into the barbed wire table. Daniels fired up, but Page quickly shut him down with a clothesline to the ramp. Daniels dodged a Buckshot but had an Angel’s Wings attempt countered with a backdrop into the ring.

Page went for a barbed wire assisted Buckshot, but Daniels countered with a facebuster and a Muta Lock. Page raked at Daniels’ eyes with the barbed wire to escape, but Daniels countered the Deadeye again with the Angel’s Wings. Daniels hit the Best Moonsault Ever, then sat part of the broken barbed wire table over Page and hit another one.

Page popped up at a count of nine with a bloody mouth, dropped Daniels with a lariat, and hit a Tombstone on a chair. Daniels’ arm was limp, and Page followed up with a Deadeye on a chair. Daniels got up, but Hangman dropped him with a Buckshot Lariat to the back of the head. Daniels was unmoving as the referee counted him out, giving Page the win by knockout. Page went to leave but came back to lay Daniels out with the Angel’s Wings. The referee and the ringside doctor checked on an unmoving Daniels as the announcers sold the beating he had taken.

Toni Storm Town Hall

Tony Schiavone welcomed Technicolor Toni Storm to the ring for an interview. Storm said that her dreams were coming true, as she would wrestle in the building where she saw her first wrestling match. Schiavone asked Storm about Mariah May, and Storm called her the best in the business. She said that she had yet to introduce herself to May and wanted to introduce herself to her next week on the Homecoming episode of Collision. Schiavone tried to get through to Storm that they had been in a feud, but Storm cut him off and said that since they were both Toni/Tony, then it was Toni Time.

We got a recap of Wednesday’s trios match before we cut to words from the Hurt Syndicate from after the match. MVP believed that their win made them the #1 contenders to the tag team titles and challenged Private Party to a title match on Dynamite, which was confirmed by an on-screen graphic.

The Undisputed Kingdom (Adam Cole, Kyle O’Reilly & Roderick Strong) defeated Shane Taylor Promotions (Lee Moriarty, Carlie Bravo, & Shawn Dean) (w/Shane Taylor)

Solid trios match here as the Kingdom finally pivots away from MJF. This had a good energy to it, and both teams would be good additions to the Trios division.

We got quick tags to start, with the Kingdom getting the first nearfall with a double suplex on Dean. Dean cut off O’Reilly from the floor, allowing STP to get heat as we went to a commercial.

O’Reilly got the tag out to Cole, who ran wild. Cole got a nearfall with a brainbuster over the knee. Strong tagged in and had a flurry of offense on Dean before getting saved by his partners on a nearfall. The Kingdom hit all of their finishers before finishing Dean off with a Total Elimination.

After the match, Shane Taylor laid out all three of the Kingdom and talked trash to Matt Menard. TNT Champion Daniel Garcia came out to take the fight to Taylor, and all the babyfaces worked together to take Taylor down and out. After the match, the Kingdom stared down Garcia before thanking him for the help.

We got a recap of the issues between the Don Callis Family, Kenny Omega, & Will Ospreay. We cut to an interview Alicia Atout held with Will Ospreay after Dynamite. Ospreay said that his battles with Omega were legendary, and they were linked through Don Callis. Ospreay said that it was time to have a chat with Omega and wanted to do it on Dynamite.

Murder Machines (Brian Cage & Lance Archer) defeated Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin) (w/ Leila Grey)

A bad night at the office for Top Flight.

The Machines jumped Top Flight to start the match and pinballed them around until Darius dodged a corner charge from Archer. Cage tagged in and kept control until Darius landed an enzuigiri. Dante got a tag in and laid in some strikes before dropping Archer with a springboard cannonball. Cage and Archer quickly cut them off and hit a Chokebomb for the dominant win.

After the match, Action Andretti and his poofy coat came out to talk trash to Top Flight. Lio Rush attacked Top Flight from behind, and they laid out Top Flight.

The Learning Tree was backstage with Lexy Nair. They had none of Lexy’s muckraking and stirring the pot between the Learning Tree and the Death Riders. Jericho went over his history with Jon Moxley before saying they would prove why the Death Riders should trust them tonight.

TNT Champion Daniel Garcia & Matt Menard were backstage with Lexy Nair, but the Undisputed Kingdom interrupted them. Cole thanked Garcia again for their help before lamenting that Menard and Garcia didn’t have a third man to challenge for a trios match. Garcia said that he walked into Daily’s Place three years ago with two men he didn’t even know and left with a contract. Menard said that they would call their friend Angelo Parker to accept their challenge for next Saturday.

Max Caster Town Hall

(The end of the Acclaimed, and not a moment too soon. I was in the building at All Out 2022 for the Acclaimed’s breakout match with Swerve In Our Glory – remember them? – and they were a naturally over team of AEW originals. But they were about a year passed their sell-by date, and their Trios Title reign heavily impacted those titles in a negative manner. With that said, I have enjoyed how they’ve gone about breaking the team up, with Bowens getting fed up with Caster’s arrogance and ego. Caster in particular has done a good job of being an annoying weasel heel, and he’s gotten some good heat. I’m interested in seeing how these two do on their own.)

Max Caster was in the ring with a Louis Vuitton bag, getting booed by the crowd. He said that there had been a lot of rumors about the Acclaimed but wanted to clear the air with his partner Anthony Bowens. Bowens came to the ring, and Caster said that there was a misunderstanding between the two. Caster was upset that Bowens wouldn’t call him the Best Wrestler Alive, and Bowens immediately cut him off.

Bowens said that he had protected Caster for five years because he was his partner and he became Bowens’ best friend. Caster made him a liar, because he was an arrogant edgelord piece of s**t. The people thought he sucked, leading to Caster pulling out a framed trademark calling himself the Best Wrestler Alive. Bowens said that he was more than Caster’s partner, and that he had every tool he needed to be a World Champion. He was an ambassador for AEW, the pride of AEW, and wrestling’s five-tool player, and he didn’t need a piece of paper to prove it.

Billy Gunn came out to try and calm things down. Caster said that Gunn didn’t care about them and only attached himself to The Acclaimed to get attention for himself. (The man makes a point.) He said that Gunn made the team about himself when it should be about him, the best wrestler alive…oh, and Bowens too. Caster said that Bowens was his best friend, while Gunn’s own sons didn’t want anything to do with him. Gunn got in Caster’s face, and Caster told Bowens that if he wanted to keep the team together, he would pick him over Gunn.

Bowens threw up the scissors, but when Caster went to scissor him, Bowens gave him the middle finger. Caster threw a tantrum, telling Bowens that The Acclaimed was done because he said they were done. Caster said that he would prove that he was the Best Wrestler Alive, and that Bowens and Gunn would suck without him. Bowens and Gunn scissored one last time to end the segment.

We got footage of Swerve Strickland at a pro-am golf event, rubbing elbows with various celebrities, including recent Monday Night Raw guest Travis Scott. Does that count as a jump? Anyway, Strickland was backstage with Lexy Nair, who asked about his match with Ricochet on the February 5th Dynamite. Strickland said that this wasn’t cat-and-mouse, this was lion-and-rodent. Strickland planned on getting his hands on Ricochet far before February 5th.

AEW Continental Title Match – Kazuchika Okada (c) defeated Tomohiro Ishii

(The word from the tapings is that Ishii hurt his ankle or his leg during this match, which would explain why this was far from what you would expect when you see these two paired up against each other. They basically cut to the closing stretch of a good match before actually having the good match, which is unfortunate as I was looking forward to this.)

Okada was cautious to lock up with Ishii to start before Ishii laid into him with a chop. Okada raked Ishii’s eyes before Ishii dropped him with a shoulder block. Okada bailed out of the ring, but Ishii dropped Okada with another shoulder block on the floor as we went to a commercial.

After the break, the announcers noted that the doctors had to check on Ishii’s ankle during the break. Ishii hit a superplex out of the corner, but Okada caught him with a neckbreaker as he tried to follow up. Okada hit the big elbow drop and did the middle finger pose, but Ishii popped up and grabbed the finger to give Okada one of his own. Okada raked the eyes and hit a landslide, but Ishii countered a Rainmaker with a lariat of his own.

Ishii went for another lariat, but he got cut off with a dropkick. Okada went for another Rainmaker, but Ishii cut him off with a pair of headbutts. Okada caught Ishii with a short-arm lariat, but Ishii powered through and hit another headbutt. Ishii hit a sliding lariat for a nearfall. Ishii went for a brainbuster, but Okada cut him off with a dropkick to the back. Okada grabbed the ring bell from ringside but only used it as a distraction. Okada hit a ripcord low blow, then hit the Rainmaker to win and retain the title.

The Gates of Agony were backstage, putting themselves over and telling AEW to send the best they had to Daily’s Place next week. During the next match, it was made official that the Gates of Agony would take on Brody King & Buddy Matthews.

Dustin Rhodes defeated Adam Priest

Rhodes dumped Priest high on a scoop slam, then went for the Shattered Dreams before the referee cut him off because, y’know, it’s a kick to the nuts. Rhodes was undeterred, hitting the Cross Rhodes and the Final Cut for the win.

We got a highlight video for Brody King & Buddy Matthews, with the encouraging words from Will Ospreay & Adam Copeland played over their highlight reel.

Julia Hart defeated Harley Cameron

As the match began, it was announced that Julia Hart would be taking on Jamie Hayter in a rematch on next week’s Dynamite.

Cameron came out with sunglasses on, or as her people would call them, sunnies. She sold her eyes being damaged after taking the glasses off, but she brought the fight to Hart. Hart clawed at Cameron’s eyes to get control, then dug her fingers into Cameron’s eyes while having her tied up in the ropes.

After a commercial break, Hart countered a fireman’s carry into an Octopus Hold. Cameron fought out of the hold, but Hart peppered Cameron with strikes in the corner before hitting a DDT for a nearfall. Cameron fought to the ropes as Hart tried to lock on Hartless, but Hart dropped her onto the turnbuckle and hit a rabbit lariat before locking on Hartless for the quick submission win.

We got a recap of Samoa Joe’s return to AEW on last week’s Dynamite, followed by the announcement that he would take on Nick Wayne on Dynamite this coming week.

That announcement was cut short, as we cut to the back where The Learning Tree was standing over Powerhouse Hobbs. Jericho had his bat, and Big Bill walked off with Hobbs’ knee brace.

Powerhouse Hobbs, Rated FTR (Cope, Cash Wheeler, & Dax Harwood) & The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd) defeated Death Riders (Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, & Wheeler Yuta) & The Learning Tree (Chris Jericho, Big Bill, & Bryan Keith)

(This main event caused a bit of a furor on social media, but it ended up being a fun fireworks match. The showcase at the end of the day was on Hobbs, who comes out of this important week looking pretty good. If he’s getting programmed with the Learning Tree moving forward, I would have him quickly put them away. The fact that I can’t definitively say whether putting the Ring of Honor World Title on him would be a positive move says everything about the state of ROH these days, but it would be a nice statement of intent to put a World Title on him.)

Hobbs was not out with his team as the match started, with Jericho and Harwood starting off with slaps and chops. Keith tagged in, but Harwood got the better of him and took him to the tecnico corner. Keith escaped to his corner and went to tag Big Bill, but Yuta tagged himself in to get pinballed by FTR. Some back and forth with Yuta and the Outrunners led to a Pier Six brawl breaking out as we went to a commercial.

After the break, Harwood was your mustache-in-peril as the Learning Tree worked him over. Jericho offered Moxley a tag, and Moxley accepted it as the two of them stared each other down. Mox hit Harwood with a piledriver before Yuta tagged in to put more work in on Harwood. Harwood ducked a Busaiku Knee and hit a German suplex, then dodged a Big Bill corner charge to tag in Cope.

Cope ran wild and went for a spear on Jericho, but Cope cut him off with a Codebreaker. Turbo Floyd tagged in and ran wild with bodyslams, eventually hitting the Predator elbow on Jericho and Keith. Another Pier Six brawl broke out, with Cope hitting Moxley with an Impaler DDT on the ramp. Cope went for a spear, but PAC cut him off as the referee was distracted. The Death Riders went to take out Cope’s leg, but Wheeler hit a dive off of the stage.

The Death Riders and Rated FTR brawled through the crowd, but Powerhouse Hobbs hobbled to ringside to tag in and fight off The Learning Tree on one leg. Hobbs and Big Bill faced off, with Hobbs winning the exchange. Jericho got hit with Total Recall, and Hobbs caught Keith trying to hit him with the ROH World Title. Hobbs hit Keith with the spinebuster to get the win.

AEW Collision live results: Ricochet vs. Lio Rush

For the first time ever, Ricochet will battle Lio Rush in the one of the featured bouts on tonight’s live AEW Collision from Cedar Rapids, Iowa — the company’s debut show in the city.

Ricochet is looking to remain undefeated in singles matches while Rush is looking to rebound from a recent defeat to the debuting Shelton Benjamin.

Former AEW Tag Team Champions FTR will take on the new look La Faccion Ingobernable of Rush & Dralistico. In other tag team action, The Outrunners will battle MxM Collection.

Anna Jay will look for her sixth straight win when she faces Viva Van while Penelope Ford will make her in-ring return for the first time since February 2023 when she faces Robyn Renegade.

In search of a rematch with Hangman Page, Jay White will go one-on-one with Shane Taylor.

Wheeler Yuta will be on hand to talk with Nigel McGuinness in a sit-down interview.

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AEW Collision comes to us live from Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The show started with an exclusive video from after Dynamite. The AEW babyface army was surrounding the injured Chuck Taylor as he was stretchered out. Orange Cassidy shoved Daniel Garcia, saying he didn’t want to be involved because something like this would happen. Garcia told Cassidy that he had to do something about it now, and Cassidy said he would do something about it on Wednesday.

Tony Schiavone & Nigel McGuinness were at the commentary desk, noting that Chuck Taylor was recovering from the attack at the hospital.

Jay White (w/ Juice Robinson) defeated Shane Taylor (w/ Lee Moriarty)

I’m enjoying White’s work since his return, with his dedicated leg work giving him the slightest of openings to get the win. A Hangman Page rematch was fairly obvious after the interference in the Christian Cage match, and now we have a set date for it at the PPV.

White went for the leg of Taylor before Moriarty interference allowed Taylor to land a big forearm. Taylor landed a big leg drop on the apron before jaw-jacking at the fans. After a commercial break, White dodged a leg drop in the ring and began a comeback, chopping away at Taylor in the corner. White landed a dragon screw leg whip and a kneebar stunner before scoring a nearfall with a DDT.

Taylor took a clothesline before headbutting White and dropping him with a uranage. White ducked a lariat and caught Taylor with a flatliner, followed by a side suplex. White hit a big uranage of his own for a nearfall. Moriarty tried to interfere again, but Robinson bounced him off the apron. Taylor hit White with a knee lift, but suffered from the knee work White had done earlier. Taylor went for the Marcus Garvey Driver, but the knee gave out, allowing White to hit the Blade Runner for the win.

White took the microphone after the match, noting that both Taylor and Hangman Page hit a lot harder than he does. He said that he got under Page’s skin because, despite Page’s accomplishments, White has always been better than him. White offered Page one last shot at redemption, challenging him to a match at Full Gear.

Ricochet was backstage with Lexy Nair, who asked about MVP’s managerial offer on Dynamite. Ricochet said that he planned on doing his own thing, leading to Lio Rush entering the frame. He noted that he also got an offer from MVP before telling Ricochet to not overlook him tonight.

Kyle Fletcher and his big buzzcut were backstage with Lexy Nair, who said he was here on Don Callis Family business. He would keep an eye on Ricochet on behalf of Konosuke Takeshita. Fletcher said that if Will Ospreay answered his challenge on Dynamite, he would be going on the shelf for a long time. And if he didn’t? Ospreay would prove that he was a coward. Fletcher said that he would be in action next week on Collision either way, wanting a new challenge after disposing of Ospreay.

Penelope Ford defeated Robyn Renegade

This was Ford’s first match in nearly 750 days. Renegade got some offense in, including a rope-hung DDT. But Ford ended up scoring the win with a gutbuster and the Muta Lock. After the match, Jamie Hayter appeared on the JumboTron, taking a page out of Ford’s book. She reiterated her challenge for the November 6th Dynamite.

FTR & The Outrunners were backstage with Lexy Nair. They were hyping each other up for their respective matches before the Outrunners made their way to the ring, with Dax Harwood noting that the Outrunners road to the AEW Tag Team Titles began tonight.

The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd) defeated MxM Collection (Mansoor & Mason Madden)

The Outrunners are a solid comedy team. My limit when it comes to comedy is when my intelligence is insulted, and these guys are far from doing that. They’re just a parody of territory wrestling, and I can live with that.

We got posing from Mansoor and Magnum to start before a shoulder block took Mansoor down. Madden snuck a tag in before blindsiding Floyd with a back elbow. Johnny TV was watching backstage as Madden challenged Floyd to a test of strength. Madden bailed first, but the Outrunners peppered him with dropkicks to send him out of the ring. They shot Mansoor onto Madden on the floor as we went to a commercial break.

Back from the break, MxM kept Magnum away from his corner. They hit a leg lariat variant on the Hart Attack for a nearfall. Magnum fought his way to the corner and made the tag to Floyd, who ran wild. Madden caught both of the Outrunners with a goozle, but they fought him off and hit an assisted bodyslam. They dropped Madden on top of Mansoor before hitting the Predator elbow drop. MxM came back with the old Beer Money finisher, but Floyd kicked out. The Doomsday Device was countered, and the Outrunners hit Total Recall for the win.

Wheeler Yuta Interview with Nigel McGuinness

I really enjoyed this interview. McGuinness having some sympathy for Danielson after the attack was a nice touch, with Yuta framing it perfectly as the Joker being upset that someone else killed Batman. Yuta came across like someone trying to convince himself that he had no choice but to join Moxley’s crew.

Wheeler Yuta sat down with Nigel McGuinness, who asked Yuta why he suffocated Bryan Danielson at WrestleDream. McGuinness said that he wanted to hear what Yuta had to say because he had to answer for it one day. Yuta mocked McGuinness, saying that they killed Batman before the Joker could. He questioned whether that was what McGuinness wanted, with all of the trash talk McGuinness had spoken about Danielson. McGuinness said that he wanted to prove that he was a better wrestler than Danielson, but Yuta went much further than that.

Yuta said that they gave Danielson a warrior’s death. The American Dragon that McGuinness knew was long dead, and they just put him out of his misery and got him out of the way for the greater good. McGuinness asked where it would stop after Yuta helped put his trainer Chuck Taylor on the shelf. Yuta said that if it wasn’t for the BCC, he’d be sitting beside a corpse, hoping it would rise up to save the day. If they were willing to do that to the people they loved, what would they do to everyone else for the greater good?

La Faccion Ingobernable & Jake Roberts were backstage. Roberts said that while FTR had proven a lot in wrestling, they hadn’t proven that they could hang with LFI. Roberts gave away their game plan, noting that they would go after Harwood’s bad shoulder and that there wasn’t anything they could do to stop them.

Ricochet defeated Lio Rush

Despite being the smaller man, Rush was a very good aggressor in this match. A good match here, with Ricochet continuing to settle into his groove in AEW.

Rush was the aggressor to start, sending Ricochet to the floor with a handspring. Ricochet came back with a hurricane boot to take control. Ricochet caught Rush with a 619 in the corner, then stuffed a Spanish Fly attempt before rocking Rush with a knee. Rush feigned being knocked out before sending Ricochet to the floor and landing a pair of dives as we went to commercial.

After the break, Rush took Ricochet off the top into the ropes. Ricochet evaded a frog splash before running wild on offense, hitting a running shooting star for a nearfall. Rush fought Ricochet off with a stunner and cut him off with a clothesline. Ricochet countered the Rush Hour with a Blue Thunder Bomb for a nearfall, calling out Takeshita in the process. Ricochet went for Vertigo, but Rush caught him with a nearfall after almost shoving him into the referee.

Rush followed with a hurricane kick for a nearfall as well. A frustrated Rush grabbed a chair from ringside, but Ricochet booted it into his face before landing a Fosbury Flop. Ricochet sent Rush into the ring and landed his new finisher, a running elbow strike, for the win.

Roderick Strong, Matt Taven, & The Beast Mortos were backstage with Lexy Nair. The Kingdom was still trying to get Mortos to team up with them instead of LFI and offered him a candy bag. They didn’t seem to be getting through to him, so they had Mike Bennett in a Mortos mask to translate. Mortos growled in response to all of this.

Anna Jay defeated Viva Van

The announcers put over Van’s accomplishments on New Japan’s US shows, teasing this as a trap match for Jay ahead of next week’s Women’s Title match. Van caught Jay with a leg lariat after a misdirection. After a commercial break, Jay fired up with a chop exchange before landing a shotgun dropkick. Jay hit a Dangerous Jay kick in the corner before scoring a nearfall with an Iconoclasm.

Van caught Jay with an upkick, then followed up with a backfist for a nearfall. Jay came back with a backstabber for a nearfall. Van hammered her in the corner before hitting a springboard crossbody for a nearfall. Van pulled Jay up into electric chair position, but Jay slid down and pulled Van into a Gory Bomb for the win.

We got comments from Mariah May in a pre-tape. May said that if Anna Jay quit the business tomorrow, no one would care as another blonde would take her place and waste five years of her life. She mocked the idea of Jay as a role model, saying that people who never give up were never good enough to begin with. May learned in Japan what she’s learned in AEW, that there’s not a woman alive who could touch her. May called herself the woman from hell who would step on anyone’s dream and told Jay that if next week was sink-or-swim, May would drown her.

(May continues to improve as she goes on as champion, with her slight character pivot working well. A very good promo to set up next week’s title match.)

We got a hype video for Adam Cole vs. Buddy Matthews on Dynamite. The announcers ran down the card for Fright Night Dynamite and next week’s Collision, with the addition of Kyle Fletcher vs. Komander.

Kyle O’Reilly & Tomohiro Ishii were backstage with Lexy Nair. O’Reilly said it was laughable that The Learning Tree thought they ran Ishii out of AEW, and that the word of the day per Mark Briscoe was honor, which the Learning Tree had none of. O’Reilly turned his attention to Orange Cassidy, saying that he had never seen Cassidy so angry before. He would let Cassidy say his peace on Dynamite. When Nair asked O’Reilly about his focus on the Undisputed Kingdom on Dynamite, O’Reilly said that he kept his eye on everything in AEW and that he was good in the Conglomeration.

FTR (Cash Wheeler & Dax Harwood) defeated La Faccion Ingobernable (Dralistico & Rush) (w/ The Beast Mortos & Jake Roberts)

A hard-hitting main event here that earned the crowd after a while. Dralistico is always at risk for an off night, but he was on point here to contribute to a good Collision main event. This FTRunners deal has the crowd’s attention, and I wonder where they go with it.

As the match began, Jay White vs. Hangman Page was made official for Full Gear, with a note that we will hear from Page on Wednesday’s Dynamite.

Dralistico used his speed to outpace Harwood to start, but FTR got him in their corner for a quick double team to send him scurrying to tag Rush. Rush and Wheeler peppered each other with shots before FTR landed dual German suplexes to send them to the floor. Back in the ring, Dralistico caught Harwood’s attention and allowed Rush to send Harwood into the post.

After the break, Rush took Harwood on a tour of the barricades before LFI clubbered on him. Wheeler got the hot tag after a while and ran wild on both Rush and Dralistico. Dralistico came back with a springboard crucifix bomb, and both men slowly tagged out to their partners. Harwood and Rush charged each other with lariats before Rush landed a senton. Harwood ducked through both of their legs to set up a Wheeler double clothesline off the top rope.

Dralistico caught Harwood with a La Mistica, targeting the shoulder as Roberts said they would. Harwood got to the ropes as Wheeler ducked a Rush charge on the floor. Harwood hit a superplex, but a Shatter Machine attempt was cut off by Rush from the floor. Harwood got sent into Wheeler on the apron, with Dralistico scoring a roll-up nearfall. Wheeler cut off a Bull’s Horns attempt, and Harwood got a nearfall with a rebound powerbomb. Rush caught Harwood with a crucifix for a nearfall.

Rush and Harwood slapped each other as the crowd fired up. Rush fought off a Sharpshooter attempt to send Harwood into Mortos and get a roll-up nearfall. FTR sent Dralistico into Mortos before landing the Shatter Machine for the win. Mortos jumped Harwood after the bell, and LFI went to do more damage before The Outrunners ran them off. The babyfaces did the Predator handshake as we went off the air.

AEW Rampage live results: Tag Team title tournament continues

The tournament to fill the vacant AEW Tag Team Championship continues on tonight’s live Rampage with a wild card bout. 

Orange Cassidy & Trent Beretta will face Powerhouse Hobbs & Kyle Fletcher of The Don Callis Family with the winners advancing to the quarterfinals to face current Ring of Honor Tag Team Champions Mike Bennett & Matt Taven of The Undisputed Kingdom. 

The 10-team field for the tournament will be narrowed to eight following tonight’s Dynamite and Rampage action. The titles were vacated by Sting & Darby Allin following Sting’s retirement match at AEW Revolution earlier this month.

TBS Champion Julia Hart & Skye Blue will team against Kris Statlander & Willow Nightingale in a street fight.

Coming off his victory over Komander last Friday, Konosuke Takeshita will battle Ricky Romero while former Ring of Honor TV Champion Katsuyori Shibata will be back in action after losing to Bryan Danielson last Saturday.

Live from Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 

…Adam Copeland defeated Christian Cage in an “I Quit” Match for the TNT title.

I’m not sure if this is the overrun from Dynamite or the start of Rampaage. But joined in progress, Copeland tried to submit Cage with a hockey-stick assistant crossface, but Cage couldn’t spit out the words I Quit. The rest of the Patriarchy interfered to help Cage, but Matt Menard and Daniel Garcia came in to even the odds. All the members of the Patricarchy ended up handcuffed to opposite corners of the ring. Well, except Shayna Wayne, who ran to the back After several kicks to the groin, Cage still would not quit. Finally, Copeland pulled out “SPIKE,” and even a shot to the “crotch” (really the turnbuckle but play along) with SPIKE wasn’t enough to get him to quit. Finally, Copeland raised SPIKE above his head, and the threat of that was enough to get Cage to quit. That was a complete and total blowoff to this feud. I missed the first part of the match but the finish was suitably epic. 

– Bullet Club Gold was in Florida in a pre-taped bit, enjoying a vacation as a reward for “saving Darby Allinls life.” I guess injuring him kept him from dying on Mount Everest.  They also repainted Sting’s black bat gold. And The Gunns are ready to retire their father.

– Renee Paquette brought out the Acclaimed in front of the live crowd to retort. Billy Gunn was not cleared to travel after getting jumped by the Bullet Club Gold. Caster got the “A$$ Boys!” chant going. This was very much a time-killing promo while the ring cleaned up the ring from the I Quit match. The upshot of the promo was the Acclaimed want Jay White and the Gunn Club. 

Orange Cassidy & Trent Beretta defeated Klye Fletcher & Powerhouse Hobbs (w/ Don Callis)  in a Wild Card match for the World Tag Team Title Tournament (10:31)

The winner advances to face the Undisputed Kingdom in the quarterfinals.

Hobbs hit Cassidy with a spinebuster immediately and almost got the pinfall. Beretta and Hobbs tossed Beretta into the barricade on the floor. Cassidy tried a dive to the floor, but Hobbs caught him and smashed him against the ring apron several times. Beretta came back for his team, taking both his opponents out with a dive onto the floor.

Back in the ring, Beretta chopped Hobbs in the corner and dumped Fletcher with a German suplex. Beretta went for a spinning DDT, but Fletcher blocked it, and Hobbs and Fletcher took out Beretta with a pendulum bomb.

After a split screen break, Beretta caught Fletcher with a spinning DDT, dumped Hobbs to the floor and got the tag to Cassidy. Cassidy took Fletcher out with a crossbody, then followed up with a spinning DDT for a near fall. Cassidy caught Hobbs with a superkick, but Hobbs floored him with a forearm. Hobbs racked Cassidy, and after a pair of forearms from Hobbs, Cassidy was able to break free and sunset flip Hobbs for a near fall. Hobbs floored Cassidy with a bodyblock.

Fletcher dropped Beretta with a half-and-half suplex. Cassdiy caught Fletcher with the Slumdog Millionaire, then Hobbs barreled through both Cassidy and Hobbs. Hobbs threw Cassidy like a sack of flour into the LED boards. Somehow, Cassidy got Hobbs up for a Beach Break on the floor. Back in the ring, Fletcher hit a spinning tombstone on Cassidy for a near fall. Fletcher was bleeding heavily from the mouth.

Fletcher set Cassidy up for a superplex, but Beretta made the save and hit a half-and-half suplex off the top. Cassidy came off the top on Fletcher with a diving DDT, Beretta took out Hobbs with a spear on the floor, and Cassidy hit the Orange Punch for the pinfall.

This was something else. 

Katsuyori Shibata defeated Kevin Matthews (1:20)

Crowd popped huge for Shibata, who mauled Matthews with forearms and hit the dropkick in the corner. Matthews came back with a clothesline. Shibata escaped a fireman’s carry and locked in a sleeper, than hit the PK for the quick victory. 

Konosuke Takeshita (w/ Don Callis) defeated Rocky “Azucar” Romero (8:52)

Romero lured Takeshita into a hard slap, then caught Takeshita with a step-up rana. Takeshita caught Romero with a sit-out death valley driver, then a dropkick.

During the split-screen break, Romeo countered what looked to be an avalanche back suplex with a sliced break off the top rope. Back to full-screen action, Romero hit a pair of dives on the floor, but on the third one Takeshita caught him and tried for a suplex, with Romero escaped. Takeshita tried for a forearm but Romeo ducked and Takeshita hit the post.

Back in the ring, Romero hit the sliced break for a near fall. Romero snapped Takeshita’s arm, and caught him with a cross-arm breaker. Don Callis jumped up on the ring apron to distract Romero, causing Romero to break the hold. Romero went for the sliced bread again, but Takeshita countered and got Romero into the package tombstone. Takeshita hit a spinning blue thunder bomb for a near fall. Romero mounted another comeback and Takeshita floored Romero with a clothesline. Takeshita leveled Romero with a forearm, then hit the spinning falcon arrow for the pinfall. 

This was great. 

Skye Blue & Julia Hart defeated Willow Nightingale & Kris Statlander (w/ Stokely Hathaway) in a Street Fight

The faces came out with chairs and the heels came out with kendo sticks. That didn’t go well for Hart and Blue. Hart got wedged in the chair. Statlander gave her a backbreaker while she was in the chair, and Nightingale hit a sliding boot on Hart.

Nightingale got a table from under the ring that Statlander set up in the corner. Hart found a spike, but when she went to use it on Statlander, she ducked and Hart spiked Blue instead.

During the split-screen break, Statlander and Hart crashed into the table in a spot I couldn’t really see.

Back to full-screen action. As the crowd was chanting “This is Awesome,” Nightingale slammed Blue on the floor. Nightingale tried to set up Blue for a powerbomb on the commentary table, but Blue countered into a Code Blue on the table.

Back in the ring, Blue dumped a bag of thumbtacks in the ring. Statlander pulled out her own bag of tacks and dumped them in the ring as well. Blue powerbombed Statlander out of the corner and into the tacks for a near fall. Blue put the tacks into Statlander’s mouth and hit a superkick for another near fall. The crowd chanted “You Sick [Person]!” at Blue, who ate it up. Blue tried to go to the top, but Nightingale grabbed her and drove her through a pair of tables with a death valley driver.

Back in the ring, Hart tried for a piledriver on Statlander, but Statlander backdropped her into a pile of chairs. Statlander went for a 450, but Hart got out of the way and locked in Hartless.  Hart got the submission when Statlander tapped out. 

AEW Dynamite live results: Kenny Omega vs. El Hijo del Vikingo

In what has been billed as a “dream match,” Kenny Omega faces El Hijo del Vikingo on tonight’s AEW Dynamite. 

Vikingo, considered one of the top high-flyers in the world, will make his AEW debut on Dynamite against Omega. 

Sting will return to the ring on the show for the first time since January, teaming with Darby Allin and Orange Cassidy against The Butcher, The Blade, and Kip Sabian. 

One week ahead of his own return to action, Adam Cole will speak on tonight’s program. 

AEW World Tag Team Champions The Gunns will defend their titles against Top Flight’s Darius Martin & Dante Martin. 

Blackpool Combat Club’s Jon Moxley will take on Dark Order’s Stu Grayson. 

Toni Storm of The Outcasts will face Skye Blue in a women’s division contest. 

Hook will face The Firm’s Stokely Hathaway in a No DQ match. 

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

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AEW Dynamite comes on the air with Hangman Adam Page backstage by an ambulance, as Excalibur told us The Young Bucks had been attacked. Kenny Omega & Don Callis are there on the scene, as Page decided to jump in the ambulance with Nick Jackson and head to the hospital. Callis held Omega back from going with, as Omega has a huge match later tonight. Excalibur said we hope to have more information on this later.

Sting, Darby Allin & AEW International Champion Orange Cassidy defeated The Butcher, The Blade & Kip Sabian (w/Penelope Ford)

(Happy belated Birthday goes out to the Stinger, who celebrated his 64th birthday this week. This was a fun opener with everyone looking good, the highlight being Sting using the mannerisms of Cassidy throughout.)

Cassidy had an O and C on his cheeks that looked like finger paint, which is incredibly fitting. This match stems from the House Rules show this past week in Troy, OH where Cassidy & Allin defeated Butcher & Blade and were attacked backstage post show. Sabian & Cassidy started briefly, allowing Cassidy to do his pocket offense until Butcher tagged in and Sting followed. Sting no sold strikes and lit up Butcher, who went to the eyes, tried a Stinger Splash and missed. Sting was able to connect with one of his own as the match broke down. Sabian tried a dive off the top on Sting, who channeled Cassidy and continued to roll to the opposite side of the ring before tagging Allin. A quick Code Red got Allin a near fall, but Ford ran distraction long enough for the Blade to blindside Allin and gain advantage into commercial.

Allin nearly got a tag, but Blade wiped Sting out on the floor, as Cassidy made the most lukewarm tag of all time, but proceeded to run wild. Cassidy was planted with a powerbomb neckbreaker combination by Butcher & Blade, as Sabian followed with a corner cannonball. Sabian foolishly played to the crowd long enough for Sting to make the tag and clobber Sabian and crew. Sting got the Scorpion Death Lock on Sabian, but was overwhelmed by Butcher & Blade. Allin fought them off with a double Coffin Splash, as Sabian hit a pump knee, but a Stundog Millionaire by Cassidy led to dueling dives on the floor with Allin onto Butcher & Blade. Sting hooked Sabian with a Scorpion Death Drop and got the pin. Post match, Cassidy put his glasses on Sting, while Allin was more focused on staring at the Double or Nothing banner as we saw a video package of all 4 Pillars of AEW brawling last week.

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-A quick video package on El Hijo del Vikingo & Kenny Omega is shown ahead of their match later tonight.

-Before the next match, Excalibur told us he received a text message from Brandon Cutler, who left in the ambulance with the Young Bucks and said it was the Blackpool Combat Club who attacked Matt & Nick Jackson.

The Gunns (Austin & Colten) defeated Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin) to retain the AEW Tag Team Titles

(This match truly suffered from commercial break, as we barely got that much action during this. The Kingdom & Top Flight continue their feud from ROH TV, but the bigger story is what FTR laid out to get their Tag Team title shot.)

A fast start by Top Flight, who used their speed to send The Gunns to the floor and regroup early. Dante tried to spring off the ropes, but got hung up throat first by Colten, as Austin distracted referee Aubrey. That was all that happened before commercial, as Dante remained isolated throughout picture in picture. Darius made the hot tag right as they returned from break with a standing Spanish Fly on Colten for two. A blind tag by Austin led to a spinning slam from Dante for a near fall of his own.

Dante wanted a Nose Dive, but Colten cut him off, as Darius wiped him out with a dive. Dante managed to connect on the Nose Dive, but Colten recovered to break it up the last moment. Matt Taven & Mike Bennett hit the ringside area to attack Dante on the floor with referee’s attention turned. Dante fought back, rolled back into the ring right into 3:10 to Yuma to allow The Gunns to retain.

Post match, Top Flight brawled with The Kingdom to the back while FTR’s music hit and came to the ring. Colten said no one wanted to hear that song or see FTR. The Gunns don’t respect FTR, who are losers and will never get a title shot ever again. FTR said they’d never team in AEW again, but Austin didn’t bite. Harwood then said they’d quit AEW if The Gunns beat them again. Austin & Colten accepted quickly and spat in FTR’s faces before bailing.

-Renee Paquette is backstage with Jade Cargill, Mark Sterling & Leila Grey asking for her comment about the debut of Taya Valkyrie last week. Sterling issued a cease and desist letter saying Taya is not allowed to use Cargill’s finisher, as Cargill said she will give this to Taya herself this Friday on Rampage. Paquette talked about Stokely Hathaway wrestling next and Cargill and crew just laughed about it.

HOOK defeated Stokely Hathaway in a No Disqualification Match

(Poor Stokely was hilarious in getting beat up all over the place, as he tried his best to get out of the match, but to no avail.)

Hathaway is decked out in Nation of Domination colors for his ring gear and gave referee Bryce a hug pre-match. Hathaway said he talked to Doctor Simpson earlier, but he’s not cleared to compete and is retiring today. He handed Justin Roberts his doctor’s note, which is actually a receipt for Wing Stop, as the bell sounded and Hathaway bailed through the crowd. The chase was on as HOOK chucked Hathaway back ringside, as Hathaway was launched with an overhead suplex on the floor.

HOOK tossed in a railing from under the ring, as Hathaway sprayed HOOK in the eyes with a fire extinguisher. Hathaway got a chair, quoted Tupac to the camera, but HOOK blocked a shot and laid out Hathaway with the chair. HOOK launched Hathaway into the set up railing and instead of the pin, opted to get the REDRUM submission. Matt Hardy was backstage hyping up Ethan Page that he is the one who could beat HOOK for the FTW Title.

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Adam Cole Addresses His Return Next Week

(This was an excellent back and forth between Cole & Daniel Garcia, who had one of the best promos of his AEW career so far. I loved the subtlety of accidentally calling himself a pro wrestler, quickly correcting himself. This should be a great match next week.)

Adam Cole made his way to the ring to address the crowd ahead of his in ring return next week. Cole said he’s never been more ready to wrestle and said the big question is who his opponent will be, but before he could continue, Daniel Garcia’s music hit. Garcia said it’s Story Time with Daniel Garcia Bay Bay, as the crowd really let him hear it. Garcia said he’s a locker room leader with all the boys respecting him. Garcia is here to welcome Cole back and put him in his place. While Cole was at home playing video games, Garcia beat Brody King, Ricky Starks & Bryan Danielson. Garcia asked where his respect was as a pro wrestler, which made him stop and correct himself to say sports entertainer. Garcia asks what makes Cole special?

Cole said some day Garcia could lead the charge in AEW, but it’s the company he keeps, as the J.A.S. gives him a false sense of security. Despite not wrestling for nine months, Cole is still a multi time World Champion who has traveled the world. Cole said if Garcia is crazy enough to challenge him next week, he’s on. This isn’t just a return match for Cole; it’s a statement that Adam Cole is back.

-Alex Marvez is backstage trying to get a word with Don Callis & Kenny Omega about what happened to The Young Bucks. Callis asks Omega what the issue is, as he sent Nakazawa with them. This is the best thing that could happen to them, as it allows Omega to focus, as The Bucks can come back in a few months. Callis said Omega vs. Vikingo will tear the house down. Callis had zero regard for The Bucks during this and Omega didn’t seem too delighted about that.

Jon Moxley (w/Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta) defeated Stu Grayson (w/Evil Uno, John Silver & Alex Reynolds)

(These two seemed to be on different pages for the opening minute or so, but they quickly fixed that and turned this into a fun match. Grayson, with the crowd behind him, showed a lot of heart, but Moxley was too much to overcome.)

After an early slugfest, Moxley wrestled Grayson to the mat. Both men awkwardly collided and a visibly frustrated Moxley chucked a chair ringside before heading back in the ring with a Saito suplex on Grayson, who was launched off the apron into the barricade outside. Back inside, Moxley locked on a Texas Cloverleaf, but Grayson escaped, hit one dropkick, only for Moxley to take over again. Grayson fought back and flattened Moxley before connecting with a spinning slam and twisting springboard senton for a near fall.

Grayson went up top, but was briefly distracted by Yuta. Dark Order & BCC exchanged words as Grayson took out the BCC with a moonsault, while Moxley took out Dark Order with a dive. Back inside, Grayson connected on a huge 450 Splash, but Moxley kicked out. Grayson called for Night Fall, but Moxley countered into the Bulldog Choke. Moxley drove knees to the head and got the Rear Naked Choke, as Grayson nearly faded only to cannonball in the corner with Moxley on his back. Grayson hit a back flip kick, but Moxley cut him off in the ropes with an Avalanche Death Rider to get the win.

-Backstage Renee Paquette is with Ricky Starks who had it quick and to the point, he is issuing a challenge to Juice Robinson this Friday on Rampage, as he’s tired of doing this back and forth with him.

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-The next installment of QTV is shown as Harley Cameron shows off footage of Powerhouse Hobbs beating Rey Fenix last week on Rampage. QT Marshall and crew laugh about Fenix losing as Aaron Solo mocks Penta not showing up to save his brother. Solo said he hacked into an “Observer Twitter” account tweeting about hotels. We learn that Hobbs will defend the TNT Title against Penta El Zero Miedo on Rampage.

Toni Storm (w/Saraya & Ruby Soho) defeated Skye Blue

(Fresh off her victory last night on Dark against 18 year old prodigy Billie Starkz, Toni Storm racked up another W here tonight with the only difference being she had help from Ruby Soho & Saraya.)

Storm rushed Blue early, but Blue made a comeback with strikes, face buster and dropkick to the floor. A nice hurricanrana off the apron to the floor followed, as Blue quickly climbed to the top, but was cut off and sent to the floor with a Storm hip attack. Saraya & Soho put the boots to Blue while the ref was distracted. Storm missed a chop against the post, as Blue clocked Soho, only to be planted with a Storm suplex on the floor.

It was all Storm during break until Blue fired up with a corner kick and top rope cross body. A tilt a whirl head scissors led to a spin kick to the head for two. Storm avoided Code Blue and hit a Thesz Press and spinning DDT off the ropes. Storm called for Sweet Cheek Music, but Blue avoided with a pump knee and Code Blue. Soho ran distraction with the ref, as Blue missed her spinning slam on Storm, who connected violently with Sweet Cheek Music, German Suplex and Storm Zero to win it. Post match, The Outcasts were about to attack Blue, but Willow Nightingale and Riho, with a steel pipe; hit the ring to chase them off.

-Doctors are backstage with Stu Grayson, as the Blackpool Combat Club show up and beat him down before walking off.

**********

Kenny Omega (w/Don Callis) defeated AAA Mega Champion El Hijo del Vikingo

(An amazing main event, one of the best in the history of Dynamite in my honest opinion. Vikingo said he was nervous heading into this match, but he certainly delivered and didn’t let the nerves get the best of him here. This was Omega’s first singles match on Dynamite since November 3, 2021 against Alan Angels and my goodness was this a classic.)

I sure have missed Justin Roberts over the top intro for Kenny Omega singles matches. Vikingo hit multiple dives on Omega during his entrance, as a springboard dropkick back inside led to a forearm exchange. Referee Paul Turner officially started the match, as Omega missed a corner splash and Vikingo showed off his athleticism with an Implosion Hurricanrana out of the corner and corkscrew kick to follow. Omega was sent to the floor where Vikingo hit a Shooting Star Press off the apron. An incredible springboard 450 splash off the second rope got Vikingo a near fall back inside, as Omega battled back with a tilt a whirl back breaker and fisherman’s buster. Omega chucked Vikingo into the barricade and set up a table ringside.

Vikingo fought back on the apron with chops, but Omega hit a perfect monkey flip on the edge of the apron to give Vikingo a rough landing. Omega wanted a Snap Dragon off the apron through the table, but Vikingo sprung in the ring, leapt to the top rope and standing on the ring post hit a Dragon Rana on the apron to the floor. Back inside, Vikingo smoked Omega with a nasty corner kick, but as they fought up on the ropes, Omega tried a powerbomb, but Vikingo turned it into a hurricanrana in mid air and planted Omega on his head. Vikingo quickly followed with an incredible spinning Phoenix Splash from the apron second rope back inside for a near fall.

Omega caught a flying Vikingo in mid air with a powerbomb into pump knee, but Vikingo kicked out, as Omega followed up with a Snap Dragon. Omega hit a picture perfect V-Trigger, but Vikingo countered One Winged Angel with a Swan Dive Poison Rana that spiked Omega. As Omega found himself on the table, Vikingo hit his signature breathtaking 630 Senton off the ropes through the table to a huge pop, as the crowd are on their feet. Both men beat the count and start slugging it out on their knees. Omega fired off a V-Trigger, but Vikingo responded with a sunset flip bomb for a close two. Vikingo went to the top, but missed a 630 Senton, as Omega hit a V-Trigger and One Winged Angel for the victory in an incredible main event.

Post match, Tony Schiavone came to the ring to interview Omega as he called that a match for the ages. Before Omega could say much, Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta all hit the ring to attack Omega. As the BCC put the boots to Omega, we hear ambulance sirens and see Hangman Adam Page drive up in the ambulance and 2×4 with nails. Excalibur said Page stole the ambulance, which I don’t believe is very legal. Page stormed the ring, but Moxley told his crew to bail. Don Callis went to spin Page around and ended up flopping like a NBA player, as Omega turned around and thought Page threw down Callis, which he didn’t. Page pleaded his case, but Omega left with Callis to boos from the crowd.

AEW Rampage 3/25/23 (special time Saturday 10/9c)

· Powerhouse Hobbs defends the TNT Title against Penta El Zero Miedo

· We hear from Ricky Starks, who has challenged Juice Robinson

· Taya Valkyrie vs. Leila Grey

· Brody King vs. Jake Hager

· The Acclaimed (Anthony Bowens & Max Caster) take on The Kingdom (Matt Taven & Mike Bennett)

AEW Dynamite 3/29/23

· Adam Cole returns to action against Daniel Garcia