A new match has been added to the Zero Hour pre-show for Saturday’s AEW Worlds End pay-per-view.
As announced during Friday’s Rampage episode, Kris Statlander will face Willow Nightingale at Worlds End Zero Hour.
The match was agreed to during a backstage interview segment involving Statlander, Nightingale, and Stokely Hathaway. Nightingale & Statlander were close to an agreement to team on the show, but Hathaway egged the two on to face each other instead.
The Zero Hour pre-show airs Saturday, December 30 beginning at 6:30 p.m. Eastern time on AEW’s YouTube & social media channels. The main card begins at 8 p.m. Eastern time on pay-per-view.
Here is the updated lineup for Worlds End:
AEW World Championship: MJF defends against Samoa Joe
AEW Women’s Championship: Toni Storm defends against Riho
TNT Championship, no DQ: Christian Cage defends against Adam Copeland
AEW Continental Classic finals: Eddie Kingston vs. Jon Moxley
TBS Championship: Julia Hart defends against Abadon
Swerve Strickland vs. Keith Lee
Andrade El Idolo vs. Miro
Bryan Danielson, Claudio Castagnoli, Mark Briscoe & Daniel Garcia vs. Jay White, Rush, Jay Lethal & Brody King
Sting, Darby Allin, Sammy Guevara & Chris Jericho vs. Big Bill, Ricky Starks, Powerhouse Hobbs & Kyle Fletcher
Zero Hour: FTW rules for FTW Championship: Hook defends against Wheeler Yuta
Zero Hour: 20 man battle royale for a TNT title match anywhere, anytime
The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects the views of the author.
AEW’s gift to us this holiday season was a wonderful wrestling tournament that got us through the winter doldrums and into the always promising new year.
By any objective measure, the Continental Classic was/is a tremendous success — a reminder and throwback to the foundation that AEW was built on which is an incredible in-ring product. Building a series of shows around high-quality matches has breathed much-needed life into AEW as it feels exciting again and reinvigorated.
The best Dynamite of the past few months was the December 13th episode. No skips, no filler, just good in-ring action with some necessary story exposition. Folks, that’s all it takes. The Devil storyline took a deserved backseat — the sooner this is and the rest of MJF’s version of As The World Turns is over the better — and the focus was almost entirely between the ropes. The sun AEW should revolve around is whatever happens between the bells, not who is under a Party City mask.
Everything falls neatly into place when the shows have something to revolve around rather than just someone. Anchoring the show around one main character can be burdensome to the viewer. How many 20-minute MJF solo promos can we take? This is not a reflection of his talent, which remains generational, but it’s not working as well as it should. For over a year, MJF has been the linchpin of the show, for better or for worse. Giving so much focus to the Continental Classic gave him space to breathe and gave him time to rest. And let’s face it, the last few months in the MJF-verse haven’t been good. When he first won the title, he talked about going on a HHH-esque reign of terror. If only we knew how accurate that would turn out to be.
Saturday’s Worlds End looks strong on paper and with AEW never missing at pay-per-views, I have high hopes for the last big show of 2023. Let’s run through the matches and give some predictions.
Andrade El Idolo vs. Miro
Andrade was one of the breakout performers in the Continental Classic. It might seem strange to refer to someone who has been wrestling since the early 2000s as a breakout, but this was by far his best work — not just in AEW, but since he’s been a regular in a major US wrestling promotion. The dude had his working boots on for every match and fully opened up the engines. When engaged and motivated, there is nothing he can’t do in the ring. Being reminded of that these past few weeks was wonderful. Let’s hope he carries the momentum into 2024.
It would have been easy to do something corny about Miro and CJ Perry’s IRL marriage. Instead, AEW decided to tell a story with nuance and layers which are things not typically associated with wrestling storylines. CJ wants to get back to what she was great at; managing and elevating talent. She’s upset that her husband wants to wrestle on his own, but she’s soldiering on doing what she wants. Miro, now no longer feuding with God, just wants to focus on wrestling.
It’s not going to win any awards or breathlessly be described as cinema, but this is a program that means something without any gold attached to it. This should be a good one!
Prediction: Andrade El Idolo
Keith Lee vs. Swerve Strickland
For whatever reason(s), Keith Lee in AEW hasn’t worked out like most (I am most) thought. The AEW Tag Team title run with Strickland was excellent, but other than that, nothing has been memorable. He has, somehow, become an afterthought. Or perhaps he’s been surpassed by others with greater gifts than his own. Maybe even a bit of both. There was a time when he was looked at as a no-doubt future World champion. Does that ceiling still exist? I hope it does. Wrestling is more fun when Keith Lee is regularly hossing people around the ring and making everyone roll their eyes when he’s doing a backstage promo.
This is going to be good, but it’s not hot. I’ll give AEW some grace on this one, though. Too often they are pumping the card full of last-minute matches, but with the C2 running until this week, they had no choice here. This does feel like a step down for Strickland who remains on a months-long heater. He might not have won the C2, but he maintained his momentum coming out of it and is positioned for a massive year in 2024 – one that should include an AEW World Championship reign. Anything less would be uncivilized.
Prediction: Swerve Strickland
Big Bill, Ricky Starks, Powerhouse Hobbs & Kyle Fletcher vs. Chris Jericho, Sammy Guevara, Sting & Darby Allin
I continue to love the Bill/Starks pairing. It’s self-aware and smart enough to work. They aren’t friends and there is no ‘can they co-exist’ storyline. This is just two dudes who recognized each other’s immense talents and thought ‘Yeah, this should work.’ Wrestling is better when it’s not all brothers and best friends tag teams. Homogeneity is boring. There’s a reason Baskin Robbins has 31 flavors.
Guevara continues, unceasing, ebbing and flowing, between character alignments like tides that lick the coast of the Atlantic. He turned on Jericho in October, went on paternity, and came back to his waiting arms. Sure, whatever. Why was he so upset about the painting of his daughter? A young queen with five kings supporting her? Seems good to me! But alas, here we are yet again, closing 2023 with another Guevara/Jericho pairing that no one asked for and even fewer wanted.
Prediction: Jericho, Guevara, Sting & Allin
Jon Moxley vs. Eddie Kingston in the Continental Classic finals
The Continental Classic was destined to come down to this. The King of The Bums vs. the man who has done everything in pro wrestling. It took Kingston into his 40s to achieve what Moxley was doing in his late 20s. Bound together since the early years of AEW, the two men who know each other best go to war on Saturday. It’s going to be messy, it’s going to be brutal, and it’s going to be beautiful. Sometimes wrestling is just two dudes hitting each other really hard and is the most perfect thing in the world.
This year checked a lot of boxes for Kingston. The absolute madman won the Ring of Honor World title from his forever rival, wrestled in the G1, and is now in the finals of the C2. He is primed to win the American Triple Crown and follow in the footsteps of all his heroes. Getting to do it in his home state is the cherry of all cherries to cap off a hell of a 2023.
There are certainly people who don’t love or believe in him, but those are the exceptions that prove the rule. Those who love him do so loud and love him fiercely. They will be out in full force for his coronation on Long Island.
Prediction: Eddie Kingston
TBS Champion Julia Hart defends against Abadon
Hart just won the TBS Championship and is going to stay winning. She continues to grow in the ring and adds to her overall presentation on what seems like a weekly basis. She is AEW’s biggest homegrown success and her future is bright…or dark…or however she prefers it, really.
Abadon’s look and presentation are just incredible. Even the most ardent of haters have to admit that her character just works. In a sea of similar gimmicks and aesthetics, she stands out. She’s just not going to win the TBS title. Too much time was invested in building Hart into what she is now for her to lose the title less than two months after she won it.
Prediction: Julia Hart
TNT Champion Christian Cage defends against Adam Copeland in a no DQ match
It’s likely that you, the intelligent wrestling consumer that you are, have already decided if you’re going to like this match. This is the Copeland special. These are the matches he loves to have with plunder and weapons galore. It will likely be too long. It will likely have a few missed pinfalls and submissions. It will likely be a bit overwrought. It can be all of those things and still be good because as always, this is subjective. If that is your type of match, I have some good news. You’ll probably get an excellent version of it on Saturday night. If this is your preferred brand of vodka, get ready for top shelf. If not? You can probably squeeze in a 40-minute nap during the match.
Recently, AEW has shied away from doing trilogies. The Orange Cassidy vs. Jon Moxley and Swerve Strickland vs. Hangman Page programs wrapped up (for now) after two matches. I can’t help but feel that will be the case at Worlds End, too. Christian has done yeoman’s work making the TNT title important again — important enough that Copeland winning it will feel like a big deal.
Prediction: Adam Copeland
AEW Women’s Champion Toni Storm defends against Riho
Your opinion on Storm is a telling character decoder. Do you think she’s the funniest thing you’ve ever seen? Perhaps broaden your comedic horizons. Do you think it’s terrible and an embarrassment to this business? I would encourage you to allow a little light and levity into your life. The highs are high and the lows are cause for shaking your head, not changing the channel. The truth is this probably skews more towards good than a transcendent character, but Storm is the singular focus of the women’s division.
There is too much juice left in the Storm orange to change the title here. AEW is invested in her current character and future program with Mariah May. Taking the title from her here makes no sense.
Prediction: Toni Storm
AEW World Champion MJF defends against Samoa Joe
There is no good reveal for the Devil. It’s low floor, low ceiling storytelling and the type of storytelling that AEW should do well to avoid. What is a good reveal here? It’s a rhetorical question, but is there anyone on the roster that would make this amount of TV time worth it and make some storyline sense?
Even if it leads to a returning Kyle O’Reilly, would an Adam Cole reveal really move the needle? The best they could do in that situation would be if the entire injury was a work, leading to him costing MJF the title. Even if that’s the case, we’re still in for another long MJF melodrama program — the same type of program Cody Rhodes would get killed for if he was still in AEW, by the way — and something has to change. After Wednesday night’s show-closing angle, something has to change immediately. Put this to bed and never talk of it again.
Regardless of anything else that happens at Worlds End, Samoa Joe should walk out with a World title on his shoulder. Even at 44, he remains a singular force of nature in wrestling. His presence and menacing delivery on the microphone scream monster. He can be that final boss. He can be the person everyone is terrified of. Let him run roughshod over AEW for a few months while the next big babyface (Swerve Strickland) gets primed for a run on top.
It should be a big deal when MJF drops his belt as he is the longest reigning champion in company history, after all. But the reign has been lackluster ever since Cole became his best friend and why am I still writing about a friendship storyline in December?
If Joe doesn’t win here, I don’t know what’s left to do. MJF is hurt and carrying 1.5 lame-duck storylines by himself. Let him heal up and give Joe the one thing he’s never had and the one thing he deserves: a World title in a major company.
A new eight-man tag team match featuring competitors from the Continental Classic has been announced for Saturday’s AEW Worlds End pay-per-view.
Bryan Danielson will team with Blackpool Combat Club member Claudio Castagnoli, Mark Briscoe and Daniel Garcia against Jay White, Rush, Jay Lethal and Brody King on the main card.
Danielson lost to Eddie Kingston and White lost to Jon Moxley as part of a three-way Wednesday, eliminating them both from the tournament. Moxley will face Kingston Saturday to determine the Classic winner and first “modern” AEW Triple Crown Champion.
Here’s the current card for Saturday (8 PM Eastern) from Long Island, New York’s Nassau Coliseum:
AEW World Championship: MJF defends against Samoa Joe
AEW Women’s Championship: Toni Storm defends against Riho
TNT Championship, no DQ: Christian Cage defends against Adam Copeland
AEW Continental Classic finals: Eddie Kingston vs. Jon Moxley
TBS Championship: Julia Hart defends against Abadon
Swerve Strickland vs. Keith Lee
Andrade El Idolo vs. Miro
Bryan Danielson, Claudio Castagnoli, Mark Briscoe & Daniel Garcia vs. Jay White, Rush, Jay Lethal & Brody King
Sting, Darby Allin, Sammy Guevara & Chris Jericho vs. Big Bill, Ricky Starks, Powerhouse Hobbs & Kyle Fletcher
Zero Hour: FTW rules for FTW Championship: Hook defends against Wheeler Yuta
Zero Hour: 20 man battle royale for a TNT title match anywhere, anytime
In a 180 from this month’s pre-Ring of Honor Final Battle call, AEW head Tony Khan was more loquacious in speaking to the media Thursday prior to Saturday’s Worlds End and was more than happy to talk about several topics that included the Continental Classic and their impending TV rights negotiations.
The full audio can be heard below.
He said he’s never felt more on top of things and more invigorated than he is right now with the booking and spoke of the Continental Classic as an “experiment” with both a control group (what they have been doing) and experimental group (increasing what he called the allocation of sports-based old school wrestling).
He is attributing the recent ratings increase for Collision to the more sports-based presentation despite going head-to-head with the NFL on Saturdays recently. He said he will move more toward that style of presentation based on fan feedback which he said was tangible.
He said the Classic has been the most fun thing he’s ever done and put together. However, he was non-committal about a women’s version.
TV rights
Asked about his current relationship with Warner Bros. Discovery, Khan said the relationship is “amazing” and that he’s excited to work with WBD through 2024 and after that, there will be some exciting conversations to be had. He again said he has lots of interest in ROH TV rights and is holding them as a card to be played during the AEW TV rights as he assumes there will be a lot of suitors. He said it would have to be a heck of an offer to get away from WBD.
Like WWE, he expects “a lot more” in revenue when it comes to the next round of AEW media rights based on where Dynamite started.
He defended the year-over-year declines in both Dynamite and Rampage ratings, bringing up how WWE Raw had experienced a similar decline in the fourth quarter as has cable, but no one brings up their downturn when talking about Raw TV rights. He said he thinks WWE would give a similar answer as to their performance vs. cable.
The Devil revealed?
Khan also heavily implied the identity of The Devil will be revealed at Saturday’s PPV, saying “there will be some big revelations and big moments at Worlds End.”
Other notable quotes:
Khan said he is excited for Hiroshi Tanahashi as NJPW president while giving props to outgoing president Takami Ohbari. He values his relationship with Tanahashi quite a bit and puts over his professionalism in every aspect.
Asked if he has replacements for VPs and other front office people who are departing, Khan said he has some big announcements regarding that, hinting those will come in the new year after contracts end.
Khan said Kenny Omega’s diverticulitis affected “a lot of things” when it came to the Worlds End card. He thought the best thing would be to rebuild the card and not just try to replace him which led to bringing in Sammy Guevara, Sting and Darby Allin.
He felt the time was right for Swerve Strickland vs. Keith Lee and has been wanting to build up both guys for this moment.
More matches have been announced for Saturday’s Worlds End pay-per-view.
It was confirmed on Wednesday that Keith Lee will face Swerve Strickland. In a backstage interview on Dynamite, Tony Schivone told Strickland that while Lee was at Dynamite, he had a contract for Strickland to sign in case he didn’t see Lee. Prince Nana was upset at the thought of the match, but Strickland said we’ll see if Lee shows up on Saturday.
A match between Andrade El Idolo and Miro was also made for the pay-per-view. Miro has been waiting to face Idolo ever since he agreed to be managed by CJ Perry. Miro, however, has said he doesn’t want to face Idolo because his wife is managing him, but because Idolo was “an a**hole”.
An eight-man tag team match was confirmed, as Chris Jericho, Sammy Guevara, Sting, and Darby Allin will team together to take on the Don Callis Family of Ricky Starks, Big Bill, Powerhouse Hobbs, and Kyle Fletcher. Guevara turned on Callis and reunited with Jericho on Wednesday after Callis gave him an ultimatum between his new family or the Don Callis family.
A new Zero Hour match has also been made, where a 20-person battle royale will take place. The winner of that match will get a TNT title match anywhere at any time. The FTW rules match for the FTW title between champion Hook and challenger Wheeler Yuta has also been confirmed for Zero Hour.
Here is the updated lineup for Saturday’s Worlds End pay-per-view:
AEW World Championship: MJF defends against Samoa Joe
AEW Women’s Championship: Toni Storm defends against Riho
TNT Championship, no DQ: Christian Cage defends against Adam Copeland
AEW Continental Classic finals: Eddie Kingston vs. Jon Moxley
TBS Championship: Julia Hart defends against Abadon
Swerve Strickland vs. Keith Lee
Andrade El Idolo vs. Miro
Sting, Darby Allin, Sammy Guevara, and Chris Jericho vs. Big Bill, Ricky Starks, Powerhouse Hobbs, and Kyle Fletcher
Zero Hour: FTW rules for FTW Championship: Hook defends against Wheeler Yuta
Zero Hour: 20 man battle royale for a TNT title match anywhere, anytime
Wrestling Observer Live is BACK and we’ve got a ton to talk about as Bryan is joined by Filthy Tom Lawlor to talk all the big upcoming events, line-ups, predictions for AEW leading into World’s End, the world famous Smackdown report and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!
Jim Ross gave a health update on the latest episode of his podcast.
The 71-year-old said he hopes to return by AEW Worlds End on December 30 but still has some health issues to address.
Ross said:
I’m taking it a day at a time. I feel great. My leg hurts, all that stuff, that’s nothing new. It’s an open wound and it’s been open for over a year. That ain’t good.
Ross noted that a suspected reason his leg hasn’t healed properly is due to having high blood sugar levels. However, he has been taking insulin injections recently and his levels have come down considerably.
Ross continued:
The medicines that have been prescribed to me are working. Mentally, I feel like I’m back in the hunt competitively. I have no idea what my future is at AEW, I have no clue. And to be very frank about it, I’m not worried about it yay or nay. My work should stand on its own after 50 years for God’s sake, seriously. So, sometimes I worry too much.
Conrad Thompson asked Ross if he hopes to return to AEW by Worlds End on December 30. Ross responded:
I have the corner of my eye thought about the pay-per-view coming up that you just mentioned on Long Island. But that’s a hope that I would be healthy enough and able to work and work to the level that I need to work.
I don’t have a date. It’s just hard to plan. I don’t want to set myself up for dissapointment. If I’m going to do something and I say I’m going to do it then it’s going to get done but I can’t commit to that right now because I still got some ongoing health issues that need to be addressed and they are being addressed.
Ross continued to speak on how important returning to the wrestling business is to him.
When you’re 71 and you’ve spent your whole life in this business, and I have, early 20s when I got into this stuff. No regrets, it’s just in my blood. As long as my heart’s beating that blood, I want to be involved in some way because I still love the wrestling business.
It’s cruel sometimes. It’s challenging more often that not but for some reason, it’s what I love. And now that Jan’s gone, I need something to love. And I’m not being funny here, I need to make sure I got something in the works to fill that void because I can’t replace her, God bless her, I wish I could.
Kenny Omega & Chris Jericho will challenge for the AEW World Tag Team Championship at Worlds End on December 30.
As announced during this week’s Dynamite, Omega & Jericho of The Golden Jets will challenge Ricky Starks & Big Bill for the AEW Tag Team titles at the Worlds End pay-per-view set for Saturday, December 30.
Video was played of the backstage attack angle from post-Full Gear where Starks and Bill laid out Jericho. Jericho and Omega then called out Starks and Bill and issued the challenge for Worlds End, which Starks was quick to accept.
In the back-and-forth promo segment on Dynamite, Jericho compared Starks to Enzo Amore, and suggested comedy tag team names for Starks & Bill, while Starks brought up defeating Jericho twice earlier this year.
In addition to the Tag Team title match, an AEW World title defense, plus the finals of the Continental Classic are also set for Worlds End.
The current lineup:
AEW Worlds End, Saturday, December 30, on pay-per-view —
AEW World Champion MJF defends against Samoa Joe
AEW World Tag Team Champions Ricky Starks & Big Bill defend against The Golden Jets (Chris Jericho & Kenny Omega)
MJF has since deleted the tweet where he announced that he has a torn labrum.
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AEW World Champion MJF has suffered a torn labrum — but he isn’t vacating his title.
On Monday, MJF announced that he underwent an MRI on his left shoulder. The MRI revealed that he has a torn labrum, but MJF vowed that he’ll still be making his scheduled AEW World Championship defense against Samoa Joe at December’s Worlds End pay-per-view.
“I just got an MRI. I tore my labrum in my left shoulder,” MJF wrote. “I’ll be defending my title at worlds end. I believe in AEW.”
MJF retained his AEW World Championship against Jay White in the main event of Full Gear earlier this month. It was reported after the PPV that MJF was dealing with hip and shoulder injuries.
MJF legit suffered a dislocated hip during the match as well as aggravated a prior shoulder injury. The hip injury took place when he was planning to do the spot where you come off the top rope and fly far, ending with an elbow drop putting your opponent through a table. However, when he put White on the table, it collapsed. Instead of just ditching the spot, he felt that the crowd was going to flatten if he didn’t do the spot, climbed up to the top rope and did an elbow drop from the top rope to the floor, which is an absolute killer on your hip. It was popped back in but he was in terrible pain. The shoulder injury worsened from a top rope uranage.
MJF has now been AEW World Champion for more than a year. His reign began at Full Gear 2022.
Worlds End is taking place from MJF’s hometown of Long Island, New York. The show will emanate from Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale on Saturday, December 30.
A new event has been added to AEW’s pay-per-view calendar.
As announced during Wednesday’s Dynamite, AEW Worlds End will air on pay-per-view on Saturday, December 30 from the Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Long Island, New York.
Tickets for the show will go on sale Friday, November 3 at 10 a.m. Eastern time.
As we reported in today’s Daily Update, AEW had recently filed for a trademark for Worlds End.
The announcement comes as AEW continues to expand its pay-per-view schedule from three events in 2019 to four shows in 2020 & 2021, then five in 2022, and now eight in 2023.
Double or Nothing, All Out, and Full Gear all took place in 2019, but with the company’s launch coming in May, only three PPVs were held. Revolution was added to the schedule in 2020. Forbidden Door was then added to the schedule in 2022, while 2023 has seen the addition of All In, WrestleDream, and now Worlds End.
Worlds End will be the first AEW pay-per-view to be held in New York.
No talent announcements have been made for Worlds End to this point. Nassau County native MJF is scheduled to defend his AEW World title against Jay White in the main event of the next pay-per-view, Full Gear set for Saturday, November 18 in Inglewood, California at the Kia Forum.