Daily Update: AEW Worlds End numbers, WWE SmackDown and Arena Mexico previews

Daily Update

Latest News

Latest Audio

Latest YouTube Video

This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

The new issue of the Observer is up on the site today:
*Road to WrestleMania including the booking changes and injury changes that have caused several changes of plans since they were first in place. We discuss the evolution of this year’s two main events.
*We look at how the Royal Rumble show changed on the last day
*Full Royal Rumble coverage
*Status of different matches
*AJ Styles and is this his final match
*Business notes on the show
*Plans for Elimination Chamber
*How Royal Rumble did on Netflix
*What changes in Nielsen have meant to the TV ratings and why this has happened, and how it will happen multiple more times in 2026 to a lesser degree
*Has the increased in reported viewership helped pro wrestling in the TV world
*Full UFC 325 coverage
*Death of Frankie Cain/Great Mephisto, one of the most intriguing pro wrestling characters of the 60s and 70s with ties to many different worlds
*Death of Bob Lueck, a former Stampede Wrestling headliner who was a CFL All-Star and how he was responsible for getting one of the most important and most influential wrestlers of all-time into the industry
*The most detailed look at the ratings of the pro wrestling shows this past week including placings, demos and silliness
*Box office record set
*CMLL star arrested
*AEW stars spend the week in CMLL
*Major Arena Mexico shows coming
*Reyes del Aire report
*Hiromu Takahashi leaving
*New Japan major show this week
*Fantastica Mania cards announced
*Best matches of 2025
*AEW booking direction
*New AEW signings
*Advance ticket sales for all the major WWE & AEW shows
*Dana White’s testimony regarding his job
*Pride star passes away
*Ava departure from WWE

This Week’s Back Issue

FIRST TIME SUBSCRIBERS GET 50% OFF YOUR FIRST MONTH

Friday Update

— Our weekend schedule is that I will be doing the week in review show and talking the news in today’s Observer with Garrett Gonzales today and will be back with the weekend report on Sunday.

— AEW Worlds End wound up as the most purchased PPV since they went on HBO MAX, beating Full Gear, which had been the biggest since All In.

— Dynamite did 654,000 viewers with an 0.15 in 18-49 and 0.22 in 18-34. The latter two numbers, which are the most important, are the biggest of the big data era. The new system does help in total viewers a significant amount, but not much in 18-49 so these gains are a product that is on the ascent. We don’t have standings yet.

— Ari Emanuel was on Pat McAfee’s show today and said there will only be six or seven fights at the 6/14 UFC show at the White House.

— SmackDown tonight is in Charlotte, NC with Iyo Sky & Rhea Ripley vs. Giulia & Kiana James for the tag team titles, plus Chamber qualifying matches with Lash Legend vs. Chelsea Green vs. Tiffany Stratton and Aleister Black vs. Randy Orton vs. Solo Sikoa. Liv Morgan is als on the show. About 8,700 tickets were out as of earlier today.

— Balloting is closed for the 2025 Wrestling Observer awards which will come out this coming Thursday night. We had the most response I believe in our history to the awards. Thanks to everyone that participated.

— Tonight at Arena Mexico is headlined by Flip Gordon & Neon & Templario vs. Averno & Cavernario & Hechicero, Johnny Consejo (John Hennigan of AEW) vs. Soberno Jr. and Angel de Oro & Niebla Roja vs.. Mason Madden & Mansoor for the CMLL tag team titles. For Sunday at Arena Coliseo, the top three bouts are Atlantis Jr. & Esfinge & Titan vs. Cavernario & Euforia & Volador Jr., Difunto vs. Consejo and El Hijo del Villano III & Villano III Jr. vs. MxM Collection. Sunday at Arena Mexico has Atlantis Jr. & Templario & Titan vs. Ultimo Guerrero & Gran Guerrero & Stuka Jr., Gordon vs. Consejo and Magnus & Vegas Depredador vs. MxM Collection. Monday in Puebla has a rematch from last Monday’s sold out show with Mistico & Mascara Dorada & Templario vs. Cavernario & Soberano Jr & Volador Jr.

— Lots of WWE talent and AEW talent are in San Jose/San Francisco for Super Bowl media. This led to the Seth Rollins/MJF meeting yesterday. Those from AEW there are Tony Khan, Toni Storm, Orange Cassidy, MJF and Swerve Strickland.

— There will be an all-women’s show on 3/6 at Arena Mexico. They announced there would be AEW talent on the show, but no names were mentioned yet. Mei Seira & Starlight Kid from Stardom will also be challenging Jarochita & Lluvia for the CMLL women’s tag team titles.

— AAA will be live on Saturday night at 9 p.m. with two matches announced, Grande Americano vs Rey Fenix vs. Dragon Lee vs. Octagon Jr., will be in a Rey de Reyes first round match plus Ethan Page & Chelsea Green vs. Mr. Iguana & Lola Vice for the mixed tag team titles. Dominik Mysterio will be there live to build to a later match with El HIjo del Vikingo over the AAA Mega title. They will als be taping for the 2/14 and 2/21 shows tomorrow night.

— Mercedes Mone returns to Winnipeg on 3/31 for Winnipeg Pro Wrestling to defend her women’s title against the winner of an upcoming tournament.

— UFC runs 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. on Paramount+ tomorrow from the Apex Arena in Las Vegas:

Priscila Cachoeira (135.5) vs. Klaudia Sygula (135.5)
Jakub Wiklacz (135.5) vs. Muin Gafurov (141) – Gafurov missed weight by five pounds and was fined 25 percent of his purse. The fight is going to happen
Eduarda Moura (127) vs. Wang Cong (127.5) – Both missed weight. Since they both missed weight, neither is being fined. So if you’re going to miss weight, call your opponent and tell them to stop cutting and come to an agreement on weight
Javid Basharat (135.5) vs. Gianni Vazquez (141) – Vazquez missed weight by five pounds and is being fined 25 percent of his purse
Bruna Brasil (116) vs. Ketlen Souza (115.5)
Nikolay Veretenhnikov (170.5) vs. Niko Price (171)
Alex Morono (170) vs. Danil Donchenko (170.5)
Dustin Jacoby (204.5) vs. Julius Walker (206)
Faruid Basharat (136) vs. Jean Matsumoto (135.5)
Michal Oleksiejczuk (186) vs. Marc-Andre Barriault (184.5)
Jailton Almeida (241) vs. Rizvan Kuniev (254)
Kyoji Horiguchi (126) vs. Amir Albazi (125.5)
Mario Bautista (135.5) vs. Vinicius Oliveira (136)

— Selina Slay, an OnlyFans content creator who was at ringside at the Las Vegas AEW tapings doing the Andrade stuff, wrote on her Instagram about the experience, “lmao, this is so fake.” She was harassed after that to the point she deactivated her account.

— PFL runs tomorrow at the Coca Cola Arena in Dubai with the main card starting at Noon Eastern time. It will air on ESPN+ and ESPN Unlimited, but not on television:
Pouya Rahmani (250.2) vs. Karl Williams (256.5)
Abdoul Abdouraguimov (170.2) vs. Kendly St. Louis (171)
Ramazan Kuramagomedov (170) vs. Shmai Musaev (169.6) for the PFL welterweight title
Usman Nurmagomedov (155) vs. Alfie Davis (154.6)n for the PFL lightweight title

— The PFL announced a deal with RMC Sport for a multi-year partnership to broadcast in France, Monaco, Andorra, Luxembourg and Switzerland. The deal kicks off with tomorrow’s show.

— Konnan turns 62 today. Salina de la Renta turns 29. Tojo Yamamoto was born on this day in 1927. Tony Halme/Ludvig Borg was born on this day in 1963. Mario Galento passed away 37 years ago today at the age of 74. Hall of Famer Bobby Davis passed away five years ago today at 83. Konnan (1987) and Dos Caras (1970) made their debuts on this day.

— Today is the 50th anniversary of the Antonio Inoki vs. Willem Ruska first match at Budokan Hall. This was gigantic mainstream with the idea that Inoki, the top star of New Japan Pro Wrestling, would face the 1972 Olympic judo heavyweight gold medalist in a mixed match. The bout was billed to decide the world’s top mixed fighter and was meant for Inoki to win to build up the match later in the year with Muhammad Ali. Ruska was not just a judo gold medalist but a legit badass having beaten the toughest man in Brazil, Ivan Gomes (who later became a pro wrestler) in a challenge fight that was legit. (thanks to Tony Richards)

— Mike Mondo appears on tomorrow’s Memphis Wrestling TV show.

— Mike Santana, Prisccilla Kelly and Breeze (the former Tyler Breeze) wrestle tomorrow for AIW at Penguin City Brewing in Youngstown, OH.

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

Image: WWE

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

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

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

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

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

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

Estimated AEW Worlds End PPV buys & totals for 2025

The early estimates are in for last weekend’s AEW Worlds End pay-per-view when it comes to how many people purchased it, giving an additional estimate on AEW’s total PPV buys for 2025.

In this week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter, Dave Meltzer estimated the Saturday show in the range of 140,000 buys worldwide which would make it their best success on PPV since July’s All In: Texas which was their benchmark for the year and in line with November’s Full Gear.

That number would include both linear/traditional and digital (HBO Max, Triller, etc).

At the post-event press conference, AEW head Tony Khan said numbers were “very good” according to the numbers he had. Meltzer wrote, “Two people with knowledge of the overall numbers both said it would do as good or slightly better than Full Gear.”

Estimated AEW PPV buys in 2025:

  • Revolution (March): 135,000-140,000
  • Dynasty (April): 110,000-120,000
  • Double or Nothing (May): 122,000-130,000
  • All In (July): 180,000-185,000
  • Forbidden Door (August): 122,000-130,000
  • All Out (September): 135,000-140,000
  • WrestleDream (October): 115,000-125,000
  • Full Gear (November): 140,000
  • Worlds End (December): 140,000
  • High end total buys estimate for 2025: 1.25 million
  • Low-end total buys estimated for 2025: 1.19 million

Fight Game: Whose stock are we buying or selling in 2026?

John LaRocca and Garrett Gonzales return with a brand-new Fight Game to discuss some of the most interesting topics in pro wrestling this week.

We first gave our thoughts on AEW Worlds End from Jon Moxley winning the Continental Classic to MJF ending the night as the AEW World Champion.

Then, we talked about where were see some AEW and WWE wrestlers in 2026 compared to how they ended 2025. Are they on the rise? Will they fall? Or, are they going to stay exactly where they are?

Some of the folks we discussed included:

  • Trick Williams
  • Bianca Belair
  • Kevin Knight
  • Chris Jericho
  • Jey Uso

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

WOL: The fallout from AEW Worlds End

It’s the Sunday edition of Wrestling Observer Live with Andrew Zarian.

The big story from the weekend was Saturday’s AEW Worlds End. Andrew discusses the show in detail and breaks down the biggest stories coming out of the pay-per-view which icludes MJF as the new AEW World Heavyweight Champion and Jon Moxley turning babyface.

Also, we got the start of the Mercedes Mone meltdown after losing her match in she and Athena’s AEW Women’s Tag Team title challenge, and everything else from the show.

Plus, notes from the media scrum, a look at Wrestle Kingdom 20, and a new WWE United States Champion was crowned on SmackDown.

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

Kyle Fletcher on AEW Worlds End loss: ‘Where was the screwdriver?’

AEW posted a video featuring post-match comments from Kyle Fletcher following AEW Worlds End on Saturday.

For the second year in a row, Fletcher was eliminated from the Continental Classic in the semifinals, this year losing to eventual tournament winner Jon Moxley.

During the match, Fletcher went looking for a screwdriver that had been placed in the turnbuckle. However, Kazuchika Okada had used the foreign object in the previous match to defeat Konosuke Takeshita. In his post-match comments, Fletcher said the screwdriver not being where it was supposed to be will lead to some “hard conversations.”

Fletcher said:

“I really didn’t think that I would end up here again. One year later, Worlds End, same place, same tournament, same result. Last year, I won the Blue League, this year I won the Gold League and lost in the semis. And losing to a former four-time AEW World Champion, former International Champion, former IWGP World Heavyweight Champion, he’s one of the literal best of all time. But I don’t care.”

I keep saying that I’m going to go down as the greatest wrestler of all time but if I can’t get the job done when it matters, who cares?”

“That’s not even mentioning the screwdriver. Where was the screwdriver? That’s a lot of hard conversations I’m going to have to have.”

“And now 2025 ends exactly where 2024 did. I am aimless. No championship, what’s next? What’s next for the Protostar Kyle Fletcher? I sincerely, truly do not know.”

In 2024, Fletcher won the Blue League with a 4-1 record before being eliminated in the semifinals by Will Ospreay. This year, he finished atop the Gold League with a 3-2 record, earning the top spot via tiebreaker over Kazuchika Okada.

Fletcher’s post-match comments are available below:

Dave Meltzer and Bryan Alvarez praised the Fletcher vs. Moxley match at AEW Worlds End during the latest episode of Wrestling Observer Radio. A clip of the show is available below:

WOR: AEW Worlds End recap & news, the week ahead

Image: AEW

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the Worlds End PPV, all the matches and angles and where they’re going with storylines, lineups for the upcoming week, ratings notes, more on Roland Bock, and tons more!

A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:

Start: Rick Link enters hospice care
3:24: AEW Worlds End recap
49:27: Lineups for the coming week
51:01: Ratings
55:24: WWE SmackDown notes
58:26: More on Roland Bock

Right Click Save As

New World Champion crowned at AEW Worlds End

For the first time in two years and for the second time in his career, MJF can call himself AEW World Champion.

He won the title in the four-way main event at Saturday’s Worlds End pay-per-view from Chicago nearly two years to the day when he lost the title to Samoa Joe at the first-ever Worlds End. Fittingly, Joe was the champion going into tonight’s show.

The end came when Joe was hit with two Buckshot lariats by Hangman Page, but on the third, MJF jumped in the ring and kicked him low. He then hit the Heat Seeker on Joe to get the pin and win to complete the circle.

The match also featured interference with Joe’s Opps teammates Hook, Katsuyori Shibata and Powerhouse Hobbs getting involved. Shibata and Hobbs were taken out by Swerve Strickland while Hook avoided getting punched by Page. Strickland didn’t factor into the finish after he was pushed off the top rope by MJF as he was about to hit a Swerve Stomp on Joe.

MJF’s first run lasted a record 406 days from November 2022’s Full Gear through the aforementioned Worlds End show in December 2023.

MJF made his surprise return earlier this month to interject himself into what was a three-way between Joe, Strickland and Page, using his contract from the Casino Gauntlet match at All In: Texas to do so.

He also has his first title challenge set up as the perennial Dynamite Diamond ring winner will defend against the new ring winner Bandido on the Maximum Carnage episode of Dynamite on Wednesday, January 14. MJF will also appear on this Wednesday’s New Year’s Smash Dynamite.

The win ends the second title run for Joe which started at November’s Full Gear with his win over Page who was in his second run with the gold.

WOL: How will 2025 trends affect wrestling in 2026?

It’s the last WOL Saturday of the year with Jim Valley.

Today’s show looks ahead at what could happen in 2026, back at 2025, and some trends that aren’t going to go away simply because the ball dropped in Times Square.

We’ll preview AEW’s Worlds End with a tease of at least one prediction: people will complain that it’s too long – AGAIN.

Carmelo Hayes had a great match as he pinned Ilja Dragunov for the U.S. Title on an otherwise very standard episode of WWE SmackDown.

For better or worse, a lot of this year’s trends could also affect 2026.

We’ll take a look into our crystal ball and see what could lie ahead for wrestling companies all over the world in 2026.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Em

Tony Khan announces AEW Worlds End will be a ‘clean sellout’

Tony Khan says AEW Worlds End is a “clean sellout.”

Tonight’s pay-per-view is set for the NOW Arena just outside of Chicago. On the afternoon of the show, Khan posted to social media that the event is now sold out.

Khan wrote:

“TONIGHT’s #AEWWorldsEnd PPV will be a clean sellout, with the @NOW_Arena packed with awesome wrestling fans!
AEW is having a fantastic year, and the final @AEW PPV of 2025 is TONIGHT!
Join the wrestling world that will be watching AEW Worlds End TONIGHT!”

As of press time for the most recent edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, just over 8,200 tickets had been distributed to the show. WrestleTix reported on Saturday afternoon that the number had risen to 8,836. The last pay-per-view AEW held in the building was All Out 2024, which drew 8,660.

Dave Meltzer wrote of the event in this week’s newsletter:

“A true sellout would be 9,412 but staging could lower that to a little less. It will be very close to a sellout and look full for television, but it’s not a sure thing it will actually sell out.”

“The last AEW PPV show in Chicago at the building was All Out 2024, the traditional show, which did 8,660, so this should beat that number. But to me Chicago should sell out the NOW Arena for a PPV show and this will come very close to doing so”

He noted that the get-in price on the secondary market was $54.

AEW Worlds End preview & predictions: The end comes for us all

Image: AEW

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

Another year in the books, friends. All in all, it was a pretty rough one for, well, just about everyone. But we soldier on, marching slowly into the sea. As always, a sincere thank you to anyone who’s read even a single word I’ve written over the past 365 days and an extra thanks to the site editors who keep letting me do this.

Extra, extra thanks to my wonderful wife, my sounding board, who patiently listens as I explain why Diddy is somehow a talking point on “the wrestling show that’s somehow always on.” I love everyone, but love her most of all.

With all that said, let’s run down the final big AEW show of the year: tonight’s Worlds End from Chicago, Illinois (8 PM PPV start time).

Continental Classic semifinals & finals

If you’re like me and toil away in the white collar mines, this is also the season of end-of-year check-ins: a famously delightful and productive exercise (sic). Personally, it’s the highlight of my year, especially if you’re someone I work with and happen to be reading this (I actually like my job very much).

In that spirit, it feels like the right moment to check in on the remaining four wrestlers and where they stand now and going forward.

  • Jon Moxley: The formerly loathed leader of the Death Riders is dangerously close to being loved again. This run was supposed to burn off goodwill and to sandpaper the audience into rejecting him. Instead, it reminded everyone why he’s the company’s emotional constant. He bleeds, he loses, he stays true to himself and keeps going. That still plays. Moxley will be embraced again; it’s just a matter of how loud it’s going to be when it happens.
  • Konosuke Takeshita: He’s already held the International Championship and the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, but he’s still circling something bigger. Takeshita’s problem has never been credibility; it’s been timing and commitment. If 2026 isn’t the year AEW finally lets Takeshita define himself outside of utility, matches of the night, and faction warfare, then the promotion risks turning inevitability into a missed opportunity.
  • Kyle Fletcher: Same question as Takeshita — How long can they reasonably hold off crowning him World champion? That’s no longer a rhetorical question. Fletcher has crossed the line from “promising” to “ready” and every month he isn’t positioned as one of the absolute top stars feels more deliberate rather than patient. The Don Callis association has done its job. The reps are there. The confidence is through the roof. Everything one would need to be a champion exists inside the young Aussie. At some point, AEW has to decide whether Fletcher is the pillar he is, or just another name they were high on for a while. The real challenge will be balancing his ascent with Takeshita’s without sacrificing either.
  • Kazuchika Okada: We know what Okada is in AEW. He’s settled into a reliable upper-mid card act that, on occasion, can reach back and create something great. He isn’t asked to do that often, nor does he seem to have a particular interest in doing so. There might be another classic or two left in him, but they’ll be fewer and far between. 

Predictions: Fletcher over Mox, Okada over Takeshita, Fletcher over Okada to win the CC

Mixed Nuts Mayhem: Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, Daniel Garcia, Wheeler Yuta & Marina Shafir) vs. The Conglomeration (Mark Briscoe, Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong) and Toni Storm

A match called “Mixed Nuts Mayhem” (!?!?!?!?) was added on Christmas Day. I will not be previewing it. There are limits. The sickest thing Tony Khan has ever done.

Prediction: I abstain.

Darby Allin vs. Gabe Kidd

The older I get, the saltier I become. That’s not exactly a profound or unique statement, but a true one. I have less and less patience for the Gabe Kidd type. The repeated insistence that he is, in fact, a madman? None of it works for me, brother.

As the year went on, it became clear that Kenny Omega made their Wrestle Kingdom match work through the sheer force of his own greatness. The man held together by tape and love dragged an incredible match out of a slightly above-average wrestler. There’s a non-zero chance that was the last ‘Kenny Omega Match’ we’re going to get. Gabe Kidd! January optimism turned December disappointment — same as it ever was. 

Allin occupies a rare space in wrestling. He exists almost entirely outside of the World title scene yet constantly elevates whatever he’s involved with. He’s now the “big name” others are brought in to have big matches with. He has become a true attraction. This little freak somehow achieved a 99th-percentile outcome before his body gave out which is a remarkable talent.

Prediction: Allin

AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR defend against Bang Bang Gang in a Chicago street fight

Austin Gunn has, no pun intended, a bit of the juice. He can be corny, funny, serious, and he can come out to “Many Men.” Once he figured out who he was as a performer, the in-ring work followed. Watching someone put it together in real time is always a treat, and it’s clear who the breakout star of his family is.

The Bang Bang Gang are fun, loud, and still figuring out how seriously they want to be taken. FTR has long since solved that problem. A street fight narrows the talent gap temporarily. It lets Juice Robinson’s manic charisma shine through and gives Gunn more room to lean into his natural swagger.

Eventually, this becomes what most FTR matches are: a lesson in timing, positioning, and why fundamentals still matter, even when the rules might not.

Prediction: FTR

AEW Women’s World Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath defend against Mercedes Mone & Athena

The Babes of Wrath have become something surprisingly compelling. They’re a team built on vibes, volume, and Willow Nightingale’s undeniability. Harley Cameron certainly brings an energy, though a brand that I grow less fond of as time passes, but this act only works because Willow is a genuine star hiding inside a fun enough gimmick. At some point, that tension between her joy for life and drive for success must be resolved, or she’ll never reach the heights she deserves.

Across the ring are two wrestlers who seem like they wandered in from a more serious division. Mercedes Mone and Athena have nothing to prove. They have collectively done it all while their opponents have barely done anything. What they do need is purpose. Athena continues grinding away in largely unseen ROH. Mone floats in and out of programs, parading her collection of belts while seething about the one she can’t win. This is a transitional program, nothing more, nothing less. Even though Mercedes and Athena should never, ever lose to The Babes, somehow they will.

Prediction: Babes of Wrath retain

AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander defends against Jamie Hayter

Jamie Hayter is trapped where Kris Statlander used to live: talented, credible, clearly capable of more, but unable to shift the energy around her. Blood and Guts was a proper spectacle, but that was a group effort. Her injury layoff didn’t just stall her momentum; it erased it. The in-ring work still hits. The strikes are still crispy. Between the bells remains vibrant, but everything surrounding it feels inert. Timing is everything in pro wrestling and Hayter’s timing has been cruel. 

Statlander is no longer a what-if. She’s established. She’s bona fide. She wrestles like someone who belongs at the very top. Her reign has been about legitimacy more than spectacle. It’s solid more than spectacular. For a wrestler who spent years lost in the creative wilderness, that consistency is everything.

If you’re frustrated with Hayter’s position, Statlander is the proof of concept. This is what making it out the other side looks like. Hayter doesn’t need to win to benefit here (though it wouldn’t hurt); she needs to remind people who she is. Statlander needs to keep doing what she’s been doing: beating excellent wrestlers clean and stacking wins.

Prediction: Statlander

AEW World Champion Samoa Joe defends against Swerve Strickland, Hangman Page and MJF in a four-way

Strip away the noise, the borrowed outrage, the winking-at-the-camera seriousness, and what you’re left with is a ridiculous amount of star power sharing one ring. That’s the frustrating part. This didn’t need help.

Samoa Joe is gravity. He warps the match simply by standing there, turning every exchange into something consequential. Swerve is violence with intent, a main eventer who has long since crossed the moral event horizon and never looked back. Hangman remains AEW’s emotional barometer, even when his righteousness becomes something more interesting and dangerous. MJF is still the company’s great disruptor, incapable of existing in a scene without bending it toward himself, sometimes for better, often for worse.

If we could wipe away the last few weeks of Diddy-related promo work, this match would be much better served. All they needed to do was ring the bell for this to feel special. I can’t shake the feeling that we’re in for another MJF title reign, especially with Dynamite Diamond ring wearing Bandido waiting for the winner on January 14.

Prediction: MJF

Continental Classic semifinals set for AEW Worlds End

Following Thursday’s Christmas Collision, the two Continental Classic semifinal matches are now confirmed for this Saturday’s AEW Worlds End pay-per-view and as expected, the Don Callis Family will be well represented.

In a match building for months, IWGP World Champion and Blue league winner Konosuke Takeshita will take on Gold league co-winner Kazuchika Okada. Takeshita defeated Mascara Dorada earlier in the night, but had already qualified while Okada’s main event win over Mike Bailey locked his spot and avoided a four-way semifinal.

The other match will see Blue league runner-up Jon Moxley against Gold League co-winner Kyle Fletcher. Moxley defeated Orange Cassidy to lock up his spot while Fletcher edged out Jack Perry to open the show.

In both cases, they will be first time ever matches.

Okada will try to win his second straight CC while Moxley is trying to get back to the finals for the first time since 2023.

AEW Worlds End 2025 lineup | This Saturday | Hoffman Estates, Illinois

  • Zero Hour Pre-Show: Hyan & Maya World vs. Sisters of Sin (Julia Hart & Skye Blue)
  • Mixed Nuts Mayhem: Toni Storm, Roderick Strong, Mark Briscoe & Orange Cassidy vs. Claudio Castagnoli, Marina Shafir, Wheeler Yuta & PAC
  • Continental Classic semifinal: Kazuchika Okada vs. Konosuke Takeshita
  • Continental Classic semifinal: Jon Moxley vs. Kyle Fletcher
  • Continental Classic tournament final: TBD
  • Darby Allin vs. Gabe Kidd
  • AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Bang Bang Gang (Austin Gunn & Juice Robinson) in a street fight
  • AEW Women’s World Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath (Harley Cameron & Willow Nightingale) defend against Mercedes Mone & Athena
  • AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander defends against Jamie Hayter
  • AEW World Champion Samoa Joe defends against MJF, Hangman Adam Page and Swerve Strickland in a four-way

Two challenges issued for AEW Worlds End

This Saturday’s AEW Worlds End pay-per-view may grow by two matches imminently.

During Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite on 34th Street, Gabe Kidd issued a challenge to Darby Allin for the Chicago PPV with Allin later shrugging it off after revealing he’s been medically cleared, saying he had other things to focus on.

Kidd then snuck up from behind Allin and took issue with his comments, attacking him and then tossing him down the same stairwell behind the Manhattan Center that Moxley and the Death Riders threw him down last year.

Later in a vignette, the Bang Bang Gang issued a challenge to AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR for a Chicago street fight. FTR has been feuding with Juice Robinson and Austin Gunn for several weeks and recently picked up a tainted win in a title defense, leading to the challenge.

Neither match has been made official as of this writing.

Current AEW Worlds End lineup | Saturday, December 27 | Chicago:

  • AEW World Champion Samoa Joe defends against Swerve Strickland, Hangman Adam Page and MJF in a four-way
  • AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander defends against Jamie Hayter
  • AEW Women’s Tag Team Champions Willow Nightingale and Harley Cameron defend against Mercedes Mone and Athena
  • Continental Classic Semifinal: Blue league winner vs. Gold league runner-up
  • Continental Classic Semifinal: Gold league winner vs. Blue league runner-up
  • Continental Classic Finals: Semifinal winner vs. semifinal winner
  • *AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Bang Bang Gang (Juice Robinson & Austin Gunn) in a street fight
  • *Darby Allin vs. Gabe Kidd

*Unofficial, but likely