Big Audio Nightmare: A look at Forbidden Door from the NJPW & Stardom perspective

The Big Audio Nightmare is back as Mike Sempervive and I talk about everything happening in the very busy world of Japanese wrestling.

This week’s topics include:

  • A look at this past weekend’s AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door from both an NJPW and Stardom perspective
  • Naito’s performance vs. Jon Moxley
  • Is anyone ready to step up and fill the void in NJPW’s main event scene?
  • Can ZSJ become a true main event star in NJPW?
  • Thoughts on recent Stardom and Marigold shows in addition to Mayu Iwatani’s future
  • Wrestle Dynasty and Wrestle Kingdom discussion

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AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door review: Swerve & Ospreay’s incredible night

Image: AEW

Heading into the main event, AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door had been a pretty darn good show filled with plenty of good to great matches. 

By the end of the night, most people will only remember one match.

Will Ospreay and AEW World Champion Swerve Strickland ended up having a match of the year contender with some of the best work out of either man. Their timing was top notch, there were some absolutely crazy moves (that Swerve dive to the outside on Ospreay looked like it HURT) and the crowd, which had been hot and cold all night, came unglued for the final few moments. Those moments saw Ospreay kick out of everything but he eventually could not kick out any longer, giving Strickland a huge win.

Whenever you see an online troll yell into the ether that AEW matches are nothing but glorified spot fests, I feel matches like this make them look like idiots. Anyone can go out there and do the moves these two did. What makes matches like these special are the participants involved, how they do the moves, when to do the moves, what to do in between, and reading the crowd to know what to do next. It’s so hard to pull off something special like this, and these two not only succeeded, but left the match even bigger stars than they were when they walked in.

I do have to mention part of the finish involved Don Callis giving Ospreay the Kenny Omega screwdriver to use on Swerve. He rejected it, probably starting the course for their eventual separation. I guess that could keep him busy in July, leading to August or September where it seems like he and MJF are inevitable.

Here is the rest of Forbidden Door, which was another great pay-per-view from AEW:

  • Tetsuya Naito winning the IWGP title from Jon Moxley was surprisingly boring. For whatever reason, Naito didn’t feel like doing much and it felt like he was moving at a slow speed for the entire match. Most Moxley matches have a sense of intensity to them — something this one lacked. Their match at NJPW Windy City Riot earlier this year was way better. It didn’t help that the crowd fell asleep for this one.
  • Mercedes Mone is now a double champion, defeating Stephanie Vaquer for the NJPW Strong Women’s Championship. This was good, even though the crowd weirdly hated Mone by the end of the match. I guess they just decided she was to blame for the Celtics winning the NBA title or something. Vaquer has really made a name for herself in the last year when she faced Mone, so this was a cool full circle moment.
  • I did a poll during this match asking if the ladder match is used too much in pro wrestling. The answer is yes as after this ladder match, there will be two more next weekend and probably lots of other ones will take place before the year is over. With that said, I have to say the match to crown a new TNT Champion was absolutely wild. Mark Briscoe did some insane things that have to be seen to be believed. Jack Perry ended up winning the title, and probably will hold it for a while as all members of The Elite are now wearing gold.
  • Samoa Joe, Hook and Katsuyori Shibata defeated Chris Jericho, his redwood Big Bill, and Jeff Cobb. This was perfectly fine action, but it was hard to follow the other matches on the card. It mostly made me want to see Cobb and Joe have a match somewhere, hopefully sooner than later. Hook pinning Jericho clean with his own finish makes sense as the singles rematch is likely for Wembley.
  • I loved seeing Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Orange Cassidy. Sabre’s style of technical wrestling is always fun to watch and Cassidy kept up with him every step of the way. They had a Sabre-style technical bout and Cassidy kept up with him every step of the way. This was probably my favorite match of the show up to that point in the show.
  • Toni Storm retained the AEW Women’s title once more, defeating Stardom’s Mina Shirakawa. This was another great PPV performance by Storm who is finding the groove in having good matches while also keeping in line with her current gimmick. It helps that Shirakawa is very good and the crowd were invested in seeing these two wrestle. In the end, Mariah May didn’t have to choose either lady as everyone kissed and made up after the match, literally. Good for them.
  • Unsurprisingly, Bryan Danielson and Shingo Takagi had an excellent, heated match with Danielson scoring the win in an Owen Hart tournament match with a brutal-looking armbar. Danielson is telling the story that he is banged up and doesn’t have much time left, but can still pull off wins when they matter. I feel like it has to be him and Strickland for the title at Wembley.
  • The Elite taking on “Scissor Ace” Hiroshi Tanahashi was good, especially when Okada and Tanahashi were involved. It was like watching their greatest hits and that’s never a bad thing. I actually was expecting The Acclaimed to get a win here ahead of their title match against The Young Bucks, but it didn’t happen.
  • MJF defeating Hechicero in the opener was good while it lasted. It was mainly a match to put MJF over in his hometown area, and not much else.

Next up for AEW is what I believe is now their own version of WrestleMania: August’s All In from Wembley Stadium in London. The pieces are starting to come together, so hopefully they play out over the next couple of months. One of the things AEW needs to solve is making the TV just as engaging as the pay-per-views. They’ve struggled with that in recent months, but with their biggest show of the year coming up this might be the best time to really flesh out the stories they’ve been telling.

AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door media scrum notes: Tony Khan on holding All In outside of UK

The stars of AEW and NJPW talked to the media following Forbidden Door.

Mercedes Mone, Zack Sabre Jr,. Toni Storm, Swerve Strickland, and Tony Khan appeared during Sunday’s media scrum. Highlights are below.

Mercedes Mone

  • Before taking questions, Mone revealed that George Clooney had sent her a bottle of tequila.
  • When asked about Britt Baker’s return, she said that “a certain b****” wanted to steal her spotlight and there would be a price to pay for interrupting her.
  • A person asked how she feels physically since returning to action in May. She said that her match with Stephanie Vaquer was her fourth since her comeback and she feels better than ever.

Zack Sabre Jr.

  • Called anyone who doesn’t see how talented Orange Cassidy is “a f***** idiot”. He said his goal right now was to be the top wrestler in New Japan Pro Wrestling.
  • Sabre said regarding AEW: “To have a large-scale American company that completely respects pro wrestling, did not exist before.”
  • Regarding one more match with Bryan Danielson, Sabre said they need to have at least one more match in England. He said he has yet to submit Danielson, so he wants one more shot to try it.

Toni Storm recited “America the Beautiful” before inviting Mina Shirakawa on the stage. She, Storm, and Mariah May all danced before leaving without taking any questions.

Swerve Strickland

  • He said following tonight, he felt like he silenced a lot of critics, but will still probably have to silence more in the future.
  • Someone asked what he told Ospreay after the match. It basically boiled down to Swerve saying he loved him and was one of the best talents in the world, and hoped he could do it again with him someday.
  • Strickland credited Albert Gentilly for bringing in people like Rick Ross, Kevin Gates, Fabulous, and Jim Jones, the latter of whom appeared at Forbidden Door. Swerve said that his team makes him who he is, including Prince Nana.
  • Swerve finished by saying that it is gratifying to have a Black World Champion main eventing shows like Forbidden Door, he doesn’t take it for granted.

Tony Khan

  • Earlier it was mentioned that there were 11,000 people at Forbidden Door with a million dollar gate.
  • When asked about how the idea of Wrestle Dynasty came about, Khan instead pushed that it would be a big week for the company.
  • Regarding the ROH tapings during their stay in the Dallas area, Khan said he was excited about them and pushed Atlantis Jr. winning the ROH Television title.
  • Someone asked if All In could be held outside of Wembley. He said that he is focused on this year’s show, as they’ve got something really special with Wembley. He added, however, that All In is a huge event anywhere in the world.
  • Khan said that ticket sales for All In would likely increase as matches are added to the card.
  • Brodie King will be “okay” following a brainbuster spot from Tomohiro Ishii during the Zero Hour pre show.
  • While he wouldn’t know cable buys for a while, digital buys were “excellent” for the show.

Swerve Strickland hands Will Ospreay first promotional loss at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door

Image: JJ Williams

AEW is still Swerve Strickland’s house after the reigning World Champion successfully defended his title against Will Ospreay at Sunday’s AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door.

The win is the first promotional loss for Ospreay since officially starting with the company earlier this year. His AEW International title was not on the line.

The end came when a severely weakened Ospreay was staggering around the ring and attempted a weak Hidden Blade but Strickland caught him. He paced the ring and then hit a House Call kick followed by his Big Pressure (JML Driver) for the pin and win.

What preceded that was a wild few minutes with a bevy of big moves and near falls galore.

Following a vicious looking Swerve stop from the top rope onto a prone Ospreay on the announcers’ table followed by a piledriver on top of the ringside barricade and a falcon arrow back inside the ring for a near fall, Ospreay rallied with a series of Os Cutters and back heel kicks. He attempted a Hidden Blade but Strickland got his forearms up to slightly block the attack. Strickland countered an Os Cutter and went for his arm snapper, but Ospreay rallied and teased a Tiger Driver ’91 only to hit a Storm Breaker for a near fall.

Strickland later countered another Tiger Driver ’91 attempt to continue the storyline of Ospreay not wanting to use it and hit his own Hidden Blade. But he missed a Swerve Stomp and Ospreay then nailed referee Paul Turner with his Hidden Blade accidentally. Strickland immediately hit a reverse rana which Ospreay then followed with a Hidden Blade to get a visual pinfall.

Don Callis then appeared and handed Ospreay a screwdriver to use on Strickland. Ospreay was reluctant and then Prince Nana confronted Callis, shoving him down. Ospreay then threatened to strike Nana with the screwdriver but thought better of it. He went back in the ring and Strickland hit a Drive-By and hit a Swerve Stomp for another close nearfall after new referee Aubrey Edwards appeared to make the count.

Strickland wasted no time and immediately pulled off his arm snapper and hit another Drive-By, but Ospreay kicked out at the last second to the surprise of the Long Island, New York, fans. Ospreay was sporting a big red mark under his right eye by this point.

That led into the aforementioned finish, giving Strickland his fourth successful title defense in his two-plus month run as World Champion.

Ospreay now moves on to defend the International title this Wednesday against Daniel Garcia on Dynamite while Strickland awaits his next challenger and program which is assumed to be against the winner of the Owen Hart Foundation tournament which wraps up in a few weeks. Both Garcia and MJF were shown watching the match at different spots.

Ospreay honored Hayabusa with his ring entrance, donning a mask on the way to the ring in addition to wearing a sash and hand wrap during the bout. Strickland also had different gear on that resembled boxing trunks as opposed to wrestling trunks.

Tetsuya Naito defeats Jon Moxley for IWGP World title at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door

Image: JJ Williams

After a few months without the gold, Tetsuya Naito is once again IWGP World Heavyweight Champion after defeating Jon Moxley at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door on Sunday.

Naito picked up the victory after hitting the Destino, ending a wild match that spilled all over the ringside area. At one point, Moxley looked to have the match won after a lariat and Death Rider, questioning the count by referee Red Shoes as did Taz on commentary.

After the referee prevented Moxley from bringing a chair into the ring for another Death Rider, Naito countered an attempt with a Destino followed by a brainbuster and then another Destino for the victory, avenging a loss to Moxley at April’s Windy City Riot.

The defeat ends the brief title run for Moxley which saw him successfully defend it four times on both U.S. and Japanese soil.

It’s Naito’s second run with the championship. His first run lasted roughly four months after he won the gold at January’s Wrestle Kingdom 18 before ending in April.

Britt Baker returns at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door to confront Mercedes Mone

Image: JJ Williams

After more than ten months out of action, the doctor is back in as Britt Baker made her return to AEW during Sunday’s Forbidden Door pay-per-view to confront Mercedes Mone.

Following Mone’s win over Stephanie Vaquer that brought her the NJPW Strong Women’s title in addition to her own TBS title, Baker’s music hit to a thunderous reaction from the Long Island, New York, fans.

Baker stayed on the ramp, but stared down Mone as the champ champ stared right back at her, holding both title belts in the air. She didn’t cut any promo.

The two have never squared off before with August’s All In at London’s Wembley Stadium looking like a strong possibility for that first-time-ever clash.

Baker has been out of action since a September 2023 loss to Kris Statlander in a challenge for Statlander’s then-TBS title in Baker’s home state of Pennsylvania. It is believed to be due to a back injury, but that has yet to be fully disclosed. She made waves on social media over the weekend by being photographed with the former Bella Twins of WWE fame.

In interviews this week including with this website, AEW head Tony Khan made a point to mention Baker’s name and intimate she was close to returning.

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone becomes double champion at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door

Image: JJ Williams

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone is now a “champ champ” as she defeated NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Stephanie Vaquer in a competitive title vs. title match at Sunday’s AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door.

The end came when Mone hit the Mone Maker which immediately led into the crossface that got a quick tap from Vaquer.

Both women emptied out their respective tanks with high-flying offense, submission attempts and hard-hitting moves like Vaquer ensnaring Mone’s head with her legs and repeatedly driving her head into the mat in rapid fire fashion.

The Long Island, New York, fans turned on Mone during the match, getting behind Vaquer and booing Mone’s offense as announcers tried to explain it was due to her being from Boston.

The win gives Mone her second title in two months after she defeated Willow Nightingale for the TBS title at May’s Double or Nothing.

This was a rematch from their May 2023 semifinal bout in a one-night tourney for the inaugural Strong Women’s title that Mone won, going on to then seriously injure her ankle in that night’s final against Nightingale which played into the story of how Sunday’s match was made.

The win ends the 112-day reign of Vaquer which saw her defend the title four times.

AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door live results: Swerve Strickland vs. Will Ospreay World title match

Swerve Strickland defends the AEW World Championship against Will Ospreay tonight at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door on Long Island, New York.

Toni Storm defends the AEW Women’s World title against Mina Shirakawa while a six-way ladder match will decide the new TNT Champion. TBS Champion Mercedes Mone faces NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Stephanie Vaquer in a title vs. title match while Jon Moxley defends the IWGP World Heavyweight title against Tetsuya Naito.

The show will feature Bryan Danielson vs. Shingo Takagi in an Owen Hart Foundation tournament quarterfinal, MJF vs. Hechicero, and Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Orange Cassidy.

Trios matches round the main card with The Elite vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi & The Acclaimed, and The Learning Tree’s Chris Jericho, Big Bill & Jeff Cobb vs. Samoa Joe, Hook & Katsuyori Shibata.

The extended Zero Hour pre-show features Mariah May vs. Saraya in an Owen Hart Foundation tournament quarterfinal, Kris Statlander & Momo Watanabe vs. Willow Nightingale & Tam Nakano, the NJPW-CMLL trio of Yota Tsuji, Hiromu Takahashi & Titan vs. the Lucha Bros & Mistico, and a four-way tag team match.

**********

Zero Hour

The WrestleAunts, Renee Paquette & RJ City, along with Jeff Jarrett & Rocky Romero welcome us to Zero Hour as they run down the tonight’s card. Amanda Huber & -1 joined them to talk about the Brodie Lee shoe being released by Reebok tomorrow as well.

Kyle Fletcher defeated Serpentico

Excalibur, Matt Menard & Nigel McGuinness on the call, as Fletcher wasted no time mowing down Serpentico out the gate, turning him inside out with a lariat. Serpentico fought off Fletcher ripping at the mask, but ate a leg lariat to the back of the head, followed by a violent reverse Tombstone. Fletcher opted for a stalling brainbuster in the corner and got the dominating win. Bounce back victory for Fletcher, who just lost his ROH TV Title to Atlantis Jr. in CMLL last night.

Kings of the Black Throne (Malakai Black & Brody King) defeated Tomohiro Ishii & Kyle O’Reilly, Private Party (Isiah Kassidy & Marq Quen), Roderick Strong & Gabe Kidd (w/The Kingdom & Gedo)

Excalibur talked about Buddy Matthews being taken out by Christian Cage a few weeks ago, thus explaining his absence. Technical start by Black & O’Reilly before Ishii & King have an intense face off, as Ishii couldn’t hit the brainbuster. The crowd got behind the hometown Private Party, as Zay & Quen ran wild with double teams before O’Reilly & Kidd broke things up to go at it with each other. O’Reilly went for a home run kick, but Strong yelled his name, enough to run distraction and Kidd to take over with violent chops. Kidd & King started barking at each other, as Strong tagged in and argued who would chop O’Reilly, who dove for the Ishii hot tag. Ishii no sold both men’s chops and ran through everyone before Taven & Bennett tried to get involved, only to suffer the same fate.

King made the tag and was almost hit with Dante’s Inferno, but O’Reilly made the save and hit a high low with O’Reilly on King before a brainbuster/head kick combo planted King. Fast sequence from O’Reilly & Zay, but Strong broke it up, only to lead to a double down off a Nigel lariat from O’Reilly. Quen was decked with a Black high kick, but Ishii ran in and flattened Black with a headbutt. Kidd connected on a brainbuster on Ishii, but King came in and wiped-out Kidd with a violent slap. With a pile of bodies on the floor, Private Party connected on a double dive. Back inside, King avoided Silly String and lawn darted Zay into an awaiting Black for The End kick. Black kept a lookout as King planted Zay with a Gonzo Bomb for the victory.

Willow Nightingale & Tam Nakano defeated Kris Statlander (w/Stokely Hathaway) & Momo Wantanabe

Statlander & Nakano started off with the power vs. speed matchup, as it was Nakano’s speed winning in the early going. Nightingale made the tag and Statlander immediately bailed, as Wantanabe was flattened with a low cross body. Hard lariat from Nightingale, as Nakano came in and had a hard-hitting exchange with Wantanabe, who went to the eyes, only to eat a thrust kick. Hathaway ran distraction, allowing Statlander to blindside Nakano and keep her isolated. Finally able to fight free, Nightingale made the hot tag and was face to face with Statlander, a preview of this Wednesday at Beach Break. That was brief, as Statlander bailed once more, as Wantanabe was left to eat the offense from Nightingale, including a spinebuster for two.

Nightingale became to preoccupied with Statlander, as Wantanabe hit a high kick and Statlander was there to pick up the pieces. Slugfest ensued, as Statlander missed a diving corner elbow and Nightingale hit a shotgun dropkick. Nakano went for a cross body, but missed, as Statlander wanted Chaos Theory, but Nakano countered into a German suplex for two. Statlander sent Nightingale & Nakano crashing into each other, as Wantanabe planted Nightingale for a near fall. Doomsday Device attempt was blocked by Nakano, who hit a Tiger Suplex on Statlander, as Nightingale hit an Avalanche Death Valley Driver for a close two. Wantanabe countered a Doctor Bomb into a great Storm Zero, but Nightingale fought back with a Pounce. Statlander was sent outside with a dropkick off the apron by Nightingale, as Nakano made the tag and hit the straightjacket German on Wantanabe for the win.

Mariah May (w/Timeless Toni Storm & Luther) defeated Saraya (w/Harley Cameron) in a Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Cup Quarterfinal

Fast start from May, who hit her spinning side suplex and shotgun dropkick for early near falls. May connected on the handstand head scissors and top rope missile dropkick, as she wanted Sweet Cheek Music, but Saraya slid to safety on the apron. Both ladies duked it out in the corner before Saraya pulled May into the post. Saraya called Storm a cow and McGuinness reminds us on commentary that there’s nothing bovine about the AEW Women’s Champion. Saraya poured on the offense back inside, as Hikaru Shida is shown watching from the back, as the winner of this will face her in the semi-finals. May fired off a headbutt that dropped both ladies into the reset.

Crowd supporting May during the slugfest, as Saraya crumbled to the corner and May hit Sweet Cheek Music. Saraya wiggled out of May Day, as Cameron jumped on the apron, but Storm pulled her to the floor. May became distracted long enough for Saraya to hit the Knight Cap, but May got a rope break. Saraya took too long to follow up and trash talked Storm, as May countered the Knight Light into a roll-up for the flash win. Post match, Storm celebrated with May on the ramp, but Mina Shirakawa came out to celebrate as well. May had to separate both ladies, as we cut to a hype video for the AEW Women’s Title match tonight.

Lucha Bros (Penta el Zero Miedo & Rey Fenix w/Alex Abrahantes) & Mistico defeated Hiromu Takahashi, Titan & Yota Tsuji

NJPW, CMLL & AEW all represented here, as Titan & Fenix wasted no time chopping the hell out of each other at the bell, as a lighting fast opening sequence led to a twisting cross body from Fenix. Matrix from Titan, who spun into a Tornado DDT, but Fenix popped out onto his feet and we get a stalemate. Penta & Tsuji’s turn, as Tsuji wanted a monkey flip, but Penta punted him in the ribs. Handstand corner double stomp from Penta, who posed one time too many, allowing Tsuji to hit a back breaker into a curb stomp. Chop battle ensued, as Tsuji bailed to the floor to avoid Fear Factor, as Hiromu & Mistico tagged in and the crowd went wild. Hiromu went right for the mask, but a quick head scissors and springboard arm drag sent Hiromu to the floor. Tsuji & Titan cut off Mistico, who hit a dive onto Hiromu, as the Lucha Bros hit a double team on Tsuji & Titan in the ring. Senton from Mistico back inside on Hiromu was broke up, as Tsuji & Titan responded with double head scissors and dives onto Penta & Fenix.

Hiromu hit his sunset flip bomb to the floor on Mistico, who was isolated back inside. Mistico fought off everyone in his comeback and made the hot tag to Fenix, but it was Penta who ran wild with Sling Blades. Fenix hit the rope walk kick on Titan, but Hiromu was there to hit a DVD. Penta flew in with a Destroyer, as Tsuji met him with a Falcon Arrow. Mistico flew off the top with a cross body, as Titan ran in and took out Fenix with a crazy DDT, flapjack, thrust kick combo. Mistico was launched by Fenix over the top to the floor onto Tsuji & Titan, as Hiromu suffered a Fear Factor, only to roll to the floor. Titan was taken out by La Mistica and immediately tapped out in an action packed six man.

AEW Forbidden Door

Excalibur, Taz & Nigel McGuinness welcome us, as it’s time for the opening contest of the evening. The crowd went crazy for the hometown hero, MJF, who tried to get the fans to crowd surf him, but it didn’t go very far.

MJF defeated Hechicero

(For being such a styles clash, these two worked very well with one another. I thought Hechicero played the heel role great, as this was a lot shorter of a match than I thought it’d be. MJF could’ve done anything, he was going to be cheered by Long Island, as they were behind him from the moment his music hit.)

Hechicero quickly went for a rolling arm bar, but MJF escaped and offered a handshake to the chants of sportsmanship. Hechicero foolishly fell for it, as MJF booted him in the gut and Fargo Strutted away. Hechicero blocked another boot, but MJF backflipped out into an eye poke. Hechicero pulled referee Bryce in front of him and sent MJF out to the floor, but MJF was there to send Hechicero into multiple guard rails. MJF hit a charging boot, but back inside, wasted too much time and Hechicero wrenched at the arm. MJF wanted Heatseeker, but Hechicero swept the legs out into a spinning slingshot splash for two. The arm is what Hechicero zoned in on, as the spinning hammerlock slam got a near fall. A violent knee strike in the corner allowed a Fargo Strut from Hechicero, who flipped the crowd off after, allowing MJF to hit a back drop into the double down.

One armed comeback from MJF, who managed a snap piledriver, but sold the arm, allowing Hechicero to hit a springboard dropkick and rolling arm bar. MJF countered into Salt of the Earth, but Hechicero scrambled into a double arm trap submission, but MJF got the ropes. Both men with the same idea, as they collided on a double clothesline. Ten corner punches from MJF, who bit at the head, hit a Long Island Sunrise and brainbuster for the victory.

The Elite (Kazuchika Okada, Matthew & Nicholas Jackson) defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi & The Acclaimed (Max Caster & Anthony Bowens)

(Fun tag, as it was mostly focused on The Bucks & The Acclaimed until the closing sequence where Tanahashi & Okada got to reignite their rivalry. This was a good build to Caster & Bowens getting their tag title shot down the line. It doesn’t matter what Okada does, heel or not, he’s going to be cheered by the AEW crowd.)

Caster did an extended rap before they all scissored with Daddy Ace. Okada & Tanahashi had a stare down to start and the crowd went crazy, so of course, Okada tagged out to Nicholas. Cross body into some air guitar from Tanahashi, tagged in Bowens, who hit a quick roll-up into a snap arm drag. Tanahashi backed off Okada to the floor, allowing Scissor Me Timbers to connect onto both Bucks before The Acclaimed did some air guitar with their partner. Blind tag by Okada, who attacked Caster, as The Elite hit a triple attack in the corner before an Air Raid Crash on the knee from Okada, who danced with Nicholas, who put on Caster’s headphones. Nicholas locked on a Camel Clutch, as Matthew got a huge head of steam before kissing his brother on the cheek and doing some air guitar himself.

Some fans tried to start a CM Punk chant at The Bucks, but it was drowned out by He Got Fired chants. After being isolated, Caster finally broke free and tagged in Bowens, who ran wild. Fame-Asser to Nicholas, as Bowens popped Okada with a hard right hand. Matthew tried to mock a Stinger Splash, but failed miserably and ate a thrust kick by Bowens, who hit a spinning fireman’s carry slam for two. Series of reversals by both The Acclaimed & Bucks, resulting in a quadruple down, leaving Tanahashi & Okada to finally go at it in an AEW ring.

Tanahashi hit his somersault senton out of the corner, followed up by a Dragon Screw into the Texas Cloverleaf. Nichlolas broke it up with a high kick, but Caster flew in with a Sling Blade. Bowens countered a Rainmaker into the Arrival, as Caster hit a Mic Drop, but as Tanahashi went for High Fly Flow, The Bucks cut him off. The Acclaimed made the save, as Tanahashi still went for High Fly Flow, but Okada got the knees up. The Bucks pumped up their shoes, took out Bowens & Caster before delivering a Superkick Party onto Tanahashi. Dives onto The Acclaimed outside left Okada to hit a bodyslam, top rope elbow and Rainmaker pose fake out into flipping the crowd off. Tanahashi countered a Rainmaker into a small package for two, as he followed with Dragon Screws to both Bucks, but ran into an Okada dropkick. Rainmaker connected immediately after, as Okada got the pin. Post match, Okada wanted another Rainmaker, but Billy Gunn sprinted to the ring to make the save.

Bryan Danielson defeated Shingo Takagi in a Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Cup Quarterfinal

(Such a hard hitting, back and forth battle, as Danielson really sold the neck for the majority of this. The story of Danielson’s quest to the AEW Title will be whether his body can hold up, as commentary really put over how the next match for Danielson is this Wednesday and will he be able to recover enough in time. This was a fantastic match; one the crowd was into from the moment the bell rang. Takagi continues to be one of the best in the world, but it would’ve been upset of the year had he somehow beaten Danielson here.)

After a very evenly matched opening sequence, Danielson applied the Romero Special, but Takagi escaped. Both men traded shoulder blocks, as it was Takagi who stood tall and followed with a standing senton. McGuinness on commentary really laid into Danielson for not ever holding a title in AEW in three years. Danielson backflipped out of the corner and popped Takagi with a lariat before sending him to the floor. Danielson tried a dive, but Takagi caught him in the ropes and hit a swinging neckbreaker, spiking Danielson on his head. The doctor had to check on Danielson, as ref Aubrey seemingly didn’t care and just put a ten count on him. Danielson beat the count, but rolled into a suplex for two. Takagi kept Danielson grounded and taunted the crowd, but that brief hesitation allowed a Danielson high kick into the double down.

Hard chop and uppercut exchange, as Danielson landed on his feet out of a suplex and hit a low snap German, sending Takagi in the corner. Danielson was cut off going up top, as Takagi mocked Yes chants, but Danielson slid out and hit a back superplex. Danielson locked in a triangle sleeper with elbows, but Takagi powered out into a powerslam. Pumping Bomber in the corner led to a massive superplex from Takagi, who followed with a sliding lariat for two. Danielson avoided Made in Japan, but was turned inside out with a violent Pumping Bomber. Takagi followed up with Made in Japan, but Danielson just managed to kick out. Takagi signaled for the end, looking for Last of the Dragon, but Danielson collapsed, so Takagi fired off a charging forearm. Anvil elbows connected, but Danielson countered another sliding lariat into an attempted LeBell Lock, but Takagi rolled out.

Both men collided with headbutts, as Takagi was up first, wanted Last of the Dragon, but Danielson escaped into a Regal-plex. The crowd loudly behind Danielson, who hit the Busiaku Knee, only for Takagi to kick out. Danielson stomped down at the head before applying the triangle again, with more elbows. Takagi wanted to rise again, but more elbows had him collapse. Danielson violently wrenched back at the arm and Takagi verbally submitted.

Timeless Toni Storm (w/Luther & Mariah May) defeated Mina Shirakawa (w/Mariah May) to retain the AEW Women’s Title

(I thought Shirakawa put up a great fight in this, as I also believe this was one of Storm’s better title defenses in her reign. While the build was to who May would choose, the result saw her convince everyone to kiss and make up.)

Mariah May was in the ring before the entrances and presented both champion and challenger with flowers prior to the match. Storm’s entrance featured her dressed as the Statue of Liberty, holding a torch, as America the Beautiful played. The lights went out and she had her standard intro, as Nigel McGuinness said if anyone epitomizes chin up and tits out, it’s Lady Liberty. Taz questioned if McGuinness could even say that. May couldn’t decide on who to corner, so she stayed neutral.

Storm hit an early hip attack, but Shirakawa battled back, working the crowd and slamming Storm’s repeatedly to the mat by her knees. Shirakawa posted the leg and applied a Figure Four on the post. Shirakawa took too long to capitalize in the ring, as Storm hit a backstabber in the corner with her one good leg before sending Shirakawa to the floor with a hip attack. Storm tried another outside against the steps, but missed, crashing and burning. Luther tended to Storm, but Shirakawa flew off the top, wiping both out. Back inside, Shirakawa went back at the leg and hit a spinning electric chair before applying a Figure Four. Both women started slapping one another, as Storm made the ropes.

Forearm battle ensued, with Shirakawa connecting on a discus forearm before heading up top, only to be cut off. Shirakawa managed an Avalanche DDT off the top and lifting DDT to follow, but only got a two. Storm fought off the Glamorous Driver MINA into a slam, as Storm connected on Sweet Cheek Music, but Shirakawa kicked out. Shirakawa spun out of Storm Zero into the Glamours Collection MINA and elbow strike combo. Shirakawa hit the Glamorous Driver MINA, but Storm managed to kick out. Roundhouse kick collapsed Storm, as Shirakawa went for another Glamours Driver, but Storm escaped with multiple headbutts. Snap German connected, as Storm Zero spiked Shirakawa to give Storm the victory.

Post match, May checked on Storm, looking back at the downed Shirakawa. May walked over with Storm, who brought Shirakawa to her feet. Shirakawa wanted a handshake and Storm accepted. May suggested they hug and both ladies reluctantly did before May got them all to triple kiss, as Nigel McGuinness stood up at commentary, applauding, tears in his eyes.

Zack Sabre Jr. defeated Orange Cassidy

(The story of this excellent match was Cassidy certainly could keep up with the technical wrestling ability of Sabre. The crowd were really into the counters and submissions both men were throwing out there, as this was different from any other match we’ve seen tonight. I would’ve loved for this match to go longer and I hope we get a rematch down the line. I don’t know where Cassidy goes from here, but I wouldn’t mind having Sabre pop up again in AEW.)

After the feeling out process, Cassidy took an extended walk around ringside, as Sabre held the ropes open, but Cassidy opted to roll under the ropes. Both men traded Japanese strangle holds before trading hip toss attempts before Cassidy flew in, picked the ankle and got a cazadora roll up for two. Sabre rolled out, trapped the head with his feet and twisted, as Cassidy went outside again. Back inside, Sabre wrapped up Cassidy like a pretzel, but a rope break put a stop to that. Uppercuts and little kicks mocked Cassidy before Sabre punted him in the chest. Sabre tried a charge, but Cassidy dropkicked out the leg and followed with a violent dragon screw. Sabre went to recover outside, but Cassidy hit a dive and repeated dragon screws before heading back inside. Sabre tried to shake out his knee, as Cassidy flew off the top with a cross body, but Sabre caught him mid air with a cravat. Cassidy quickly escaped into another dragon screw for the double down.

Cassidy tried his spinning DDT and Stundog Millionaire, but Sabre blocked both, only for Cassidy to fire off a Michinoku Driver for two. Again, Cassidy went up top and hit the diving DDT for a close near fall. Sabre dodged Orange Punch, as he stomped down and snapped at the wrist. Sabre again immobilized the upper body of Cassidy with submissions, but the foot of Cassidy got the rope break. Sabre slapped at Cassidy, daring him to fight back and he did just that, punching at the bad leg of Sabre, sinking in a Texas Cloverleaf. Sabre rolled out, wrenched at the bad wrist, but Cassidy spun into a Beach Break for two.

Crazy series of counters, as Cassidy tried an O’Connor Roll, Sabre with the Euro Clutch, but Cassidy did a Euro Clutch of his own, but with his hands in the pockets for a close two. Both trade uppercuts, as Cassidy tried a Mouse Trap, but Sabre countered into a submission that saw him tie up both legs and wrench both arms at the same time, causing Cassidy to verbally submit. Post match, Sabre presented a dejected Cassidy his sunglasses as what commentary assumed was a sign of respect.

Samoa Joe, HOOK & Katsuyori Shibata defeated Chris Jericho, Big Bill & Jeff Cobb (w/Bryan Keith)

(If there was any match on this card that probably could’ve been on Dynamite, it was this one. This was a perfectly fine Trios, but it just felt like a TV match. I was hoping for more Cobb & Joe interaction, but the main story here was HOOK getting the pin on Jericho. Whether or not this feud will continue, I’m not sure, but it’s been going on since I believe February, so it might be time for everyone to move on for a bit, especially if Jericho is going to continue to hold the FTW Title.)

Please Retire chants for Jericho, who said the crowd didn’t actually want that, as he’s from Long Island and a hometown hero. Shibata started things off by slugging it out with Bill, who leveled Shibata with a big boot and high vertical suplex. Jericho tagged in and Shibata immediately started no selling chops, so he could fire off some of his own. HOOK tagged in, as Jericho tried a cross body, but HOOK & Shibata did the Joe side step, as Jericho crashed and burned. Joe & Cobb tagged in and we get a hoss fight with Joe lighting up Cobb with corner shots, but Cobb answered with a spinebuster. Taz mentioned how in the early days of Team Taz, he wanted Cobb to be part of it, but plans fell through. Joe fought out of The Learning Tree corner and tagged in HOOK, who was ultimately the one who found himself isolated, including Keith getting in cheap shots.

Bill connected on a big-time elbow drop and Cobb followed with a standing moonsault. HOOK fought back with a desperation lariat into the double down, as Shibata made the tag and he ran wild with his corner boots. Corner offense by Joe, as Shibata hit his stalling corner dropkick, as Joe flew in with a senton. Bill wiped out Joe on the outside, but HOOK flew off the top with a double axe handle. Keith took ref Aubrey, allowing Jericho to hit a low blow and sink in the Walls of Jericho. Joe tried to make the save, but ran into a Bill choke slam. Shibata delivered a STO, but Cobb was there for Tour of the Islands. HOOK hit a T-Bone on Cobb, leaving Jericho there to hit a Code Breaker for a close two.

Jericho waved to the crowd, allowing HOOK to sink in REDRUM. Shibata choked out Bill, while Joe trapped Cobb in the Coquina Clutch. Jericho got out of the submission, but ran right into a Judas Effect by HOOK to get the pin. Taz applauded his son for getting the victory.

Jack Perry defeated Konosuke Takeshita, Mark Briscoe, Dante Martin, Lio Rush & El Phantasmo in a Ladder Match to win the TNT Title

(This was carnage, as it was big move after big move through ladders and tables throughout. There’s nothing more that can be said other than this was one wild match.)

It was a scramble out the gate between ELP, Briscoe, Martin & Rush to get ladders, but Perry & Takeshita quickly put a stop to that. Rush showed off his speed by wiping everyone out one at a time, leaving him alone in the ready to climb. ELP cut him off and hit a spinning reverse fireman’s carry through a ladder. Takeshita brought Martin in the middle of the ring and planted him with a brainbuster on the edge of the ladder. Briscoe came in and spun around full speed with a ladder on his head before chucking it at Rush. Briscoe set Takeshita up on a table against the barricade and ladder on top of that before delivering a crazy somersault senton through it from the inside out. Perry just looked at the carnage before heading inside to climb. Rush tried cutting him off, but was decked with a ladder by Perry for his troubles.

Perry set up a ladder bridge in the ring and started to climb, but ELP walked the bridge to cut off Perry. ELP gave a twisted at the nipples of Perry before shoving him to the mat, but as Martin came up to fight off ELP, Perry knocked them both to the mat and Martin grabbed the ankle in pain, the same ankle he shattered last year in the ladder match at ROH. Perry set up a table ringside, tried to powerbomb Rush through it, but Martin flew in with a dropkick through the ropes. Briscoe & Takeshita fought on the apron, as Briscoe set a ladder up on the apron, with Rush diving through it onto Takeshita.

Briscoe climbed the apron ladder and just made it to Perry, but the table didn’t break. Martin & Rush were left in the ring to climb and both men faced off at the top of the ladder before Takeshita powerbombed Martin off of it and gave a Last Ride on Rush through a ladder. Takeshita went to climb, but ELP flew in with a springboard onto the ladder, but Takeshita pulled him off into a knee lift. ELP fired off a thrust kick, but instead of climbing, wanted a CR2, but Takeshita countered into a Blue Thunder Driver through tables. Takeshita went to climb, but Briscoe cut him off with a Jay Driller onto a set up corner ladder. Briscoe started to climb, but Perry was there with a ladder shot to the ribs and face. Repeated chair shots to the back led to Perry climbing and getting the TNT Title.

Mercedes Mone defeated Stephanie Vaquer for the TBS & NJPW Strong Women’s Titles

(The crowd was a big story in this, as they seemed to be behind Mone when the match began, but turned on her and got behind Vaquer, who was fantastic in this one, mid match. Commentary told us it’s because Mone is from Boston and we did get F the Celtics and F the Red Sox chants, but it was really something to see them almost all collectively turn on Mone. Post-match was the highly anticipate return of the Doctor, Britt Baker, who seemingly is next in line for the TBS Champion. I hope they build that up to All In: London.)

Vaquer fired off a headbutt before the bell, as the match officially began and Mone answered with a springboard monkey flip. Both ladies trade pin attempts before colliding in the center of the ring. Mone with a double springboard arm drag, but took too long to follow up and Vaquer answered with one of her own. Mone tried one into a cross face, but Vaquer bailed and Mone met her with a baseball slide head scissors. Meteora back inside for Mone, but Vaquer again went outside, this time blocking a DDT, driving Mone back first into the edge of the ring. Sole Food and diving knee from Vaquer sent Mone outside, where Vaquer hit a top rope cross body.

Vaquer stayed in control back inside, until Mone tried the Three Amigos, only for Vaquer to respond by grounding Mone, driving her head first repeatedly into the mat, which popped the crowd. Mone battled back in the corner, but ultimately dropkicked Vaquer in mid-air. Double knees in the corner by Mone, who hit a multi revolution DDT for a near fall. Vaquer countered Mone Maker into a roll-up for two, as Taz pointed out how there were chants for Stephanie. Vaquer missed a legdrop, as Mone did a rolling backslide, but Vaquer tried a package piledriver, Mone spun out and both ladies collided with a double clothesline.

Both ladies kipped up at the same time, Mone was unsteady, though, as they slugged it out before a head scissors into a crossface by Vaquer. Mone escaped and locked in a crossface of her own, as the crowd is booing this. The crowd is loudly behind Vaquer, who dropped Mone into another double down. Mone delivered multiple backstabbers to the boos of the crowd, as Taz said it’s because she’s from Boston. Mone missed a Frog Splash, as Vaquer hit a violent dragon screw and corner knees. Mone again applied the crossface, but Vaquer escaped, only for Mone to finally hit the Mone Maker and again went to the crossface and got the tap out.

Post match, Mone was celebrating with both titles when the music for the returning for Dr. Britt Baker hit to a massive ovation, as she looks in tremendous shape as pyro rained down on the stage before Baker just walked to the back.

-A promo for January 2025 in the Tokyo Dome, as the January 4th will be Wrestle Kingdom, but January 5th will be Wrestle Dynasty where NJPW, AEW, CMLL & STARDOM talent will all face off.

Tetsuya Naito defeated Jon Moxley to win the IWGP World Title

(I can safely say I did not see that finish coming, as I thought this was all Moxley retaining, but alas, Naito got the clean pin. Taz mentioned immediately post-match, he thought Moxley had an actual pin, but Red Shoes only counted two. The finish seemed a little clunky, but for the most part, this was a fun title bout, a Naito paced slower match. I was hoping Moxley was going to have a longer title reign, but maybe he gets a rematch down the line.)

Jim Ross has joined commentary for the final two matches of the evening. Moxley came out to his Death Rider NJPW music, as Naito tried mind games early, spitting at Moxley before bailing outside. Moxley chucked two chairs in the ring, as Naito took a seat before Red Shoes quickly took both chairs out. Moxley ate a corner boot, but held on and hit a knee breaker before mocking the Naito taunt. Moxley repeatedly went at the leg ringside before back in the ring, Naito again spat in the face, which only pissed Moxley off even more. Stalling piledriver by Moxley for two, as he kept daring Naito to slap him, which Naito obliged, but again, just pissed Moxley off, as he raked at the back of Naito. Both trade headbutts while climbing in the corner, as Naito slid out and sent Moxley crashing outside. Naito speared into the ring attendant barricade, as back inside, Naito hit his stalling neckbreaker and stayed in control.

Naito wanted his signature corner hurricanrana, but Moxley countered into a powerbomb for a near fall. Naito fought back with stiff elbows and almost a Diamond Dust variation, as Moxley tried applying a rear naked choke, but Naito countered into Destino. Naito tried another, but this time Moxley turned it into a Paradigm Shift for the double down. Slugfest ensued before Naito hit an enzugiri to the face, but Moxley was there to turn him inside out with a lariat and Death Rider for the closest near fall of the match. Moxley stalked down Red Shoes, as Taz questioned if that was actually three. Moxley grabbed another chair, but Red Shoes again took it away before Moxley could hit a Death Rider through it. Naito seemingly countered Death Rider into a Destino, followed up with a brainbuster and proper Destino for the victory and title.

Swerve Strickland (w/Prince Nana) defeated AEW International Champion Will Ospreay to retain the AEW World Title

(An absolute classic of a main event with Strickland having to use everything in his arsenal to put Ospreay away. You could say the killer instinct that Strickland questioned Ospreay not having is what ultimately did Ospreay in, as Ospreay refused to use the weapon given by Don Callis, so that story has a lot left to be told there. These two need to have a rematch again down the line, as this was one of the best main events in AEW in quite some time.)

A Hayabusa tribute entrance video and gear from Ospreay, who dedicated this match to his grandmother, who recently passed away.  Rapper Jim Jones introduced Strickland to the ring and did the Nana dance along with Prince Nana down the ramp. The crowd went wild for both men during their entrance, as both traded quick snap head scissors, with the other flipping out to their feet, leading to a stalemate, showing just how fast paced this thing can get. Strickland went for his corner diving uppercut, but Ospreay kipped right up and stared him down. Strickland sent outside with a big boot and Ospreay was right there exploding with a slingshot cross body. Ospreay with the Drive By boot on the apron before going back inside, up the ropes, but Strickland swept the feet out and hit his diving uppercut.

Strickland wore down Ospreay, bringing him ringside and onto the guard rail, where both men stood and Ospreay exploded up with a hurricanrana. Back inside, Pip, Pip, Cheerio hit, as just like that, Ospreay is back in control. Ospreay hit a stun-gun, but Strickland blocked a big boot into a backbreaker. A beautiful hip toss into a short arm scissor from Strickland, but Ospreay made the ropes. Cocky kicks from Strickland only woke up Ospreay, who no sold and both men traded forearms. Both went for home run shots, missing Hidden Blade and House Call, but it was Ospreay who connected with a Styles Clash for two. As Ospreay went for Oscutter, Strickland sprung from the ropes to hit a Swerve Stomp in mid-air, as cameras cut to Daniel Garcia watching from box seats.

Both fought up the ropes and Strickland hit an Avalanche Angle Slam for a close two, as Ospreay rolled to the apron. Ospreay floated over a brainbuster, hit the hook kick, tried an Oscutter, but Strickland bailed and Ospreay crashed and burned. Ospreay was left set up perfectly for a Swerve Stomp, but Ospreay rolled to the floor. Strickland didn’t care, as he leapt from the top rope onto Ospreay against the commentary table, which didn’t break, in a wild moment.

Strickland pondered ending it, but opted to go back to ringside and hit a piledriver on top of the guard rail. Back inside, Strickland hit a sit out reverse DDT, but Ospreay kicked out. Strickland took too long for a Swerve Stomp attempt, as Ospreay crotched him and hit a springboard Avalanche Oscutter, followed by a proper Oscutter for two. Ospreay signaled for Hidden Blade, but Strickland got the forearms up. Multiple hook kicks from Ospreay, who missed another Oscutter, this time with Strickland wanting to snap the arm, but Ospreay pulled him into a pin attempt for two. Another proper Oscutter connected, as Ospreay hit Storm Breaker, but Strickland managed a shoulder up as the crowd went wild before the camera showed MJF watching backstage.

Ospreay wanted either another Storm Breaker or Tiger Driver, but Strickland powered out, only for Ospreay to hit a straight headbutt. Ospreay signaled for the Tiger Driver, but Strickland spun out into a violent Hidden Blade of his own. Swerve Stomp missed, but Ospreay charged, Strckland ducked and Paul Turner ate the Hidden Blade. Both men traded Poison Ranas with Ospreay trying a pin, but there was no official. Don Callis appeared and gave Ospreay a screwdriver, as Callis begged him to take it before Nana shoved Callis down. Ospreay teased using the weapon on Nana, but opted to throw it away. Ospreay slid back in the ring and ate a brutal House Call before Strickland hit the Swerve Stomp right as ref Aubrey slid in for two. Strickland snapped the arm, hit another House Call, but again Ospreay somehow kicked out.

Ospreay stumbled to his feet, tried to throw a Hidden Blade, but nothing was behind it, as Strickland just hugged and pat Ospreay on the back before letting him crumble. One last House Call connected before Big Pressure folded Ospreay up and Strickland finally got the pin. This was one of the best matches of the year, no doubt about it. Post match, Strickland showed respect to a dejected Ospreay, who was consoled by Kyle Fletcher as Strickland celebrated to end the show.

Wrestling Observer Live: AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door preview & a wild WWE SmackDown

I am back with the latest Wrestling Observer Live with a preview of all of tonight’s AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door action and a wrap of another wild weekend in wrestling.

I look ahead to tonight’s PPV from the UBS Arena in Long Island, New York, which I will be attending. I break down the card & giving predictions on all the biggest matches.

Also, I have some thoughts on AEW Collision and the show-closing weigh-in that saw Will Ospreay lay out Swerve Strickland ahead of their World title match tonight.

Then, I delve into WWE SmackDown from Friday and the incredible Bloodline segment that saw Paul Heyman take a brutal table bump to end the show. I discuss Paul’s contributions to this angle and whether he is the greatest character actor in wrestling.

Plus, let’s talk about Bryan Danielson’s future, Tony Khan’s interview with Bryan & Dave, an AEW Grand Slam update, and more.

Click here to listen or watch below on YouTube:

Wrestling Observer Radio: AEW’s Tony Khan on media rights, ratings, Forbidden Door & more

Image: AEW

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about in our exclusive interview with AEW’s Tony Khan.

We talk all things AEW, including media rights updates, ratings, and looking ahead to AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door on Sunday.

A fun show as always so check it out~!

Click Here to Listen (sub needed) and watch a free clip here

AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door preview & predictions: Open door policy

The following is an opinion-based preview and does not reflect the views of the website.

Image: AEW

The Forbidden Door doesn’t seem as forbidden this year.

With the cross-pollination of talent built through AEW’s working relationships with CMLL and NJPW, the newness of the event isn’t what it was. These relationships are undeniably good. The influx of CMLL talent in AEW on a more regular basis had led to some of the better matches on AEW TV this year, but it does make this event lose some of its rarity.

MJF can (and should) wrestle Hechicero on any episode of Dynamite, same with Toni Storm vs. Mina Shirakawa and Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Orange Cassidy. We’ve reached a point where there isn’t as much of a need for a standalone event like this. The headliner this year is Will Ospreay vs. Swerve Strickland: a main event-worthy match under any circumstance, but one that is predictable and even expected. The previous Forbidden Doors were headlined by Bryan Danielson vs. Kazuchika Okada and Jon Moxley vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi while this year’s are just two regular AEW wrestlers. 

The overall match quality is excellent though. There are matches up and down the card worth tuning in for — all of which offer something different. MJF’s return to the PPV stage against a beautiful opponent, Bryan Danielson and Shingo Takagi beating the brakes off each other, the IWGP title being is on the line, the progression of a long-simmering women’s program with Storm and Mariah May…I could go on forever, baby. There’s really only one stinker on the whole card (read on to find out more, it should be no surprise), so let’s give AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door (Sunday at 8 PM Eastern on PPV) a rundown.

The Elite (The Young Bucks & Kazuchika Okada) vs. The Acclaimed (Anthony Bowens & Max Caster) and Hiroshi Tanahashi

Maybe Tanahashi’s perfect aura can make up for The Acclaimed being colder than a Yeti cooler at a Luke Bryan concert in northern New Hampshire. While they are next in line for a shot at the tag titles, they feel galaxies away from that. I don’t buy Caster as someone you can ever take seriously and The Acclaimed being part of Blood & Guts, AEW’s flagship match, is a profoundly confusing decision.

The outcome shouldn’t be in doubt. The Acclaimed already got their fluke win a few weeks ago with no Okada involved. The Continental Champion is not taking an L this early in his AEW career. At least we get to see President Tanahashi and Okada in the ring together for maybe the last time. The crowd should justifiably go nuts for that.

Prediction: The Elite

The Learning Tree (Chris Jericho, Big Bill & Jeff Cobb) vs. Samoa Joe, Hook & Katsuyori Shibata

I will not indulge in this madness for long. Samoa Joe is the real king of kings™ for even agreeing to be involved in this program. Unsurprisingly, this current situation illustrates an incredible lack of self-awareness for Jericho. His faction, as always, is purely self-serving, designed only to keep him on TV and elevate no one other than himself. Miss me with the “Oh, Big Bill gets to show some personality.” This dude was already a Tag Team champion, so this is neither an upgrade nor growth for him. Meanwhile, the other side is at least working toward elevating Hook and attempting to give him actual character growth.

One of these things is not like the other and putting the spotlight on it only drives the point home even more.
Prediction: Joe, Hook & Shibata

MJF vs. Hechicero

MJF is so back. New hair, new body, new Max, right? We’ll see. So far, it’s been more of the same. To be clear, MJF in his current form is an incredible performer. But to get to the level of the all-time greats, adjustments are needed. It’s more fine-tuning as opposed to wholesale changes that will push him into that top tier: the one where the air is thin and the true greats reside.

He certainly has the talent to get there. Everything he needs already exists within him, but every great book has an editor, someone to reign in the misguided notions and focus on the strengths and less extended fourth-wall fracturing promos replete with ‘zingers’ that may pop the crowd for a few seconds only to be forgotten an instant later. We need more of the CM Punk version of Max and less of the four pillars one; more pro wrestler than sports entertainer. That’s when the talk of generational talent will come to bear.

His opponent on Sunday is a good one. More specifically, the goods. Hechicero is it, cats and kittens. A unique and rare mat technician, he’s exactly the type of wrestler who can bring the best out of MJF. Someone who knows exactly who they are in the ring and works in a way that doesn’t allow Max to indulge in some of his worst habits. Hechicero can ground the match and give it structure which is where MJF truly shines. More MJF matches should just get announced and then happen without a six-week-long promo battle. A recent example: his recent very good television match against Rush on Dynamite. I’m excited to see what he can do against a very different type of luchador.

Prediction: MJF 

Shingo Takagi vs. Bryan Danielson in an Owen Hart Foundation tournament first round match

This should be a wonderful symphony of violence — not necessarily in a bloody way, but a vicious one. Takagi is an intense, unrelenting striker and a master of controlled brutality. And what needs to be said of the greatest of all time in Danielson? A violent chess master who adjusts his style to attack his opponent’s weaknesses. Chameleon-like in his ability to work any kind of match with any type of opponent, Danielson gets to step in the ring with someone close to a true peer, someone who can match his pace, and push him to the edge of his abilities. But no one is better when pushed to the edge than the American Dragon.

Likely, Danielson will never get to wrestle in the G1, so why not give him a G1-style match on Sunday? Both wrestlers are known for their ability to test the limits of their endurance and deliver matches that are as grueling as they are exhilarating. This is a match that meets the true spirit of the Forbidden Door and is the one I’m most excited about. It’s time for Bryan to win a big match on a big show and this is it.

Prediction: Danielson advances to face PAC

Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Orange Cassidy

The story they’re telling is of a new Cassidy — one without his best friends for the first time in AEW. He never explicitly relied on them to win his matches, but Best Friends were a unit. They supported each other. They celebrated their successes and picked each other up after losses. But the most wholesome and supportive unit in AEW doesn’t exist anymore. Recently, Cassidy has paired up with Kyle O’Reilly and Mark Briscoe, but that isn’t the same. Those are work friends, not real ones. I am very interested in seeing how he would do standing completely alone for the first time.

Few are better at taking a beating – and selling the believability of said beating – than Cassidy. Luckily for us and unfortunately for him, few are better at providing a believable stretching than the bendy man himself. ZSJ was born to play the unwanted interloper. He’s never better than when he gets to go full dickhead mode between the bells and cut odd, fascinating promos outside of them. He has his own vocabulary and in-ring style, entirely unique to him. He should be positioned as the top gaijin for NJPW moving forward. A win here makes too much sense.

Prediction: ZSJ

Jack Perry vs. Konosuke Takeshita vs. Mark Briscoe vs. Dante Martin vs. Lio Rush vs El Phantasmo in a ladder match for the vacant TNT title

All the tea leaves point to Perry walking out of this match with gold around his waist. The evil faction running the company trope works better with everyone strapped up. I wish that wasn’t the case because otherwise, this could be Takeshita’s seventh official coming-out party. The participants in this match are perfect foils for how he best works in smaller, athletic wrestlers that he can throw around and knock out. His match with Darby Allin was my favorite AEW TV match this year, and he has two Darby-sized replacements in Rush and Perry.

Multi-person ladder matches always deliver in AEW and this should be no different. A ripper of a good time with outrageous spots all over the place. I just hope I’m wrong with my prediction.

Prediction: Perry wins the TNT title

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone vs. NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Stephanie Vaquer in a title vs. title match

This could easily steal the whole show. These two wrestled back in May 2023, but a lot has changed since then. Mone overcame a career-threatening injury while Vaquer added championships in two companies while increasing her global reputation. In-ring, these two are about as good as it gets. Mone can make in-ring magic with almost anyone, but when she gets the chance to lock up with someone close to her level, the ceiling does not exist. Vaquer is certainly at that level. Her movements are crisp and sudden, and she’s so fluid in the ring. Mone has to be licking her chops thinking about the wild stuff they can pull off together.

Vaquer’s star may be on the rise, but the Strong belt was made for Mone. It was always designed with her in mind. Giving her an additional championship to parade around with fits. I’ve even talked myself into thinking that her awful theme song adds to how easy it is to dislike her. Song aside, she adds more gold this weekend

Prediction: Mone becomes the champ-champ

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against Mina Shirakawa

Shirakawa has it. That special charisma is instantly clear when she’s on screen. Before Big Business in March, she wrestled Anna Jay in a match for Ring of Honor and it was immediately obvious that she was someone. The music, the presentation, the presence, everything. The live crowd reacted because they knew they were seeing someone worth paying attention to and those reactions carried over to live TV. She moves on screen with the confidence that comes from the comfort of being yourself and owning your character.

Mariah May looms large over this match and for good reason. She is destined to be a top star for as long as she chooses. In many ways, this match is more about her than the title, one she will most likely be challenging for at All In. AEW is frequently criticized for their booking and rightfully so. Too often it is short-sighted and changes without warning.

But credit must be given where it’s due. From the moment May stepped on screen in AEW last November, she began a steady climb up to the top of the card and toward her inevitable crowning moment. It was a dedicated and deliberate attempt to build someone into a main event-level star. Guess what? It’s working. Toni and Mira may be wrestling, but all eyes should be on Mariah. She brings the intrigue to this program, and she is next in line.

Prediction: Storm retains

IWGP World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Tetsuya Naito

In a world that increasingly lacks certainty, it’s nice to be reminded that it can still exist. Few things are as certain as Moxley performing on a big stage. He is one of the most consistently bankable big-match performers of this decade. He has become an incredible all-around performer while staying true to who he is. With so much of modern wrestling being consumed with creating fleeting GIFs or ephemeral moments at the expense of all else, Moxley is anything but that. The man is, simply, a wrestler. We are all better off as fans because of him.

Surely, Naito is popping the t-shirt off for this one? Curiously minimized from the first two Forbidden Door events (he only wrestled in a six-man tag last year and you know he kept the top on for that), he gets a big-time spot on this year’s show. He can’t move like he used to, but he’s smart with his matches, saving the big bumps and big spots for the most important moments and an IWGP title match is certainly that. If Moxley wasn’t based in the States, I’d think a longer title run is in his future. That changes Sunday.

Prediction: Naito gets his belt back 

AEW World Champion Swerve Strickland defends against Will Ospreay

For something that should feel like a big deal, something is missing here. There have been good individual moments in the lead up, but it hasn’t all come together. Strickland says one thing but his actions show the opposite. He bragged that even if he loses the title, he’s still an entertainer, a mogul, a podcaster (lol), so he’d be fine. That’s all a strange thing for the World champion to admit.

But when Ospreay touched the title for the first time, he warned him not do it again. When Ospreay touched it for the second time, he paid for it. So which is it? We could generously interpret this as a man in conflict, but this is pro wrestling and it’s rarely that deep. 

What did work was Strickland bringing up Ospreay’s family. It would be great if Strickland becomes the guy who terrorizes happy families like Christian Cage does to people without fathers. He already broke into Hangman Page’s house and threatened a newborn. Why wouldn’t he come after another healthy family unit? Lean into this! Prove to us that the pursuit of greatness has changed him. Make everything personal because the title is all that matters. Forget all the extra stuff. Become obsessed with the title above all else. Make the championship everything and the only thing. 

It’s only a matter of time before Ospreay wins the big title. He is so clearly the guy in AEW now and going forward. This is their new Kenny Omega: the person who has the biggest matches on the biggest shows and receives tremendous critical acclaim. Some might not like it and his particular brand of wrestling, but AEW and most of the audience sure do. Health permitting, this is a top-of-the-card performer taking AEW through the latter half of the decade.

But it’s not time for Billy Two Belts quite yet. A babyface coming into a company and winning the title instantly is a story not worth telling. There must be some struggle, some challenges to overcome before winning it all. I’m not talking about a Cody Rhodes-level finishing of the story, but he needs to fail at least once before his ultimate triumph.  

Prediction: Swerve retains

El Phantasmo earns final spot in AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door ladder match

El Phantasmo will be the final participant in the TNT title ladder match at AEW x NJPW Forbidden Door.

ELP defeated AR Fox in a qualifying bout on Friday’s taped AEW Rampage episode to earn the sixth and final spot in the match to crown a new TNT Champion at Sunday’s Forbidden Door pay-per-view.

Phantasmo joins Konosuke Takeshita, Mark Briscoe, Jack Perry, Lio Rush, and Dante Martin in the bout to fill the TNT title vacated due to Adam Copeland’s injury.

Forbidden Door airs Sunday, June 30 beginning at 6:30 p.m. Eastern time on AEW’s digital media channels with the Zero Hour pre-show. The main card kicks off at 8 p.m. Eastern time on pay-per-view. The lineup:

  • AEW World Champion Swerve Strickland defends against Will Ospreay
  • Ladder match for the vacant TNT Championship: Konosuke Takeshita vs. Mark Briscoe vs. Jack Perry vs. Lio Rush vs. Dante Martin vs. El Phantasmo
  • Title for title: TBS Champion Mercedes Mone vs. NJPW Strong Women’s Champion Stephanie Vaquer
  • AEW Women’s Champion Toni Storm defends against Mina Shirakawa
  • IWGP World Heavyweight Champion Jon Moxley defends against Tetsuya Naito
  • Owen Hart Foundation men’s tournament quarterfinal match: Bryan Danielson vs. Shingo Takagi
  • MJF vs. Hechicero
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Orange Cassidy
  • The Elite (Kazuchika Okada & The Young Bucks) vs. Hiroshi Tanahashi & The Acclaimed
  • The Learning Tree (Chris Jericho, Big Bill, and TBA) vs. Samoa Joe, Hook, and Katsuyori Shibata
  • Zero Hour: Kris Statlander & Momo Watanabe vs. Willow Nightingale & Tam Nakano
  • Zero Hour: Owen Hart Foundation women’s tournament quarterfinal match: Saraya vs. Mariah May
  • Zero Hour: Mistico & The Lucha Bros (Penta El Zero Miedo & Rey Fenix) vs. Titan, Yota Tsuji & Hiromu Takahashi

Fight Game: Jacob Fatu’s WWE debut

John LaRocca and I are back to talk about the major topics in the world of professional wrestling on this week’s Fight Game Podcast.

We kicked off the show with our Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down winners and losers of the week. Then, we went through our Top Five topics of the week which included discussions on the following:

  • AEW Forbidden Door preview
  • Jacob Fatu’s WWE debut
  • A very good promo by Bo Dallas
  • Shane McMahon
  • Episode 4 of Who Killed WCW review

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Tony Khan AEW media call: Forbidden Door gate, Britt Baker update, Dijak & Becky Lynch comments

AEW head Tony Khan spoke to the media for an hour Thursday to help hype Forbidden Door, addressing questions about potential free agents, the status of Britt Baker, and a positive note about Sunday’s live gate number.

Asked about his interest in free agent-to-be Dijak and current free agent Becky Lynch, Khan joked that he wouldn’t be doing any negotiation on a media call. He never addressed either directly, but remembered that he told TBS people in 2018 that free agency in wrestling has never got back to the level as it did in the 90s. He thinks the movement between groups has been great for both fans and the business before putting over his recent acquisitions of Mercedes Mone, Will Ospreay and Kazuchika Okada.

While talking about injuries and getting back to full strength injury-wise, Khan said Britt Baker “could be returning soon” after being out with an injury. He also mentioned Kenny Omega, Adam Cole and Jamie Hayter as those he is excited to get back and bring the company to full strength.

He also said Sunday’s live gate is approaching $1 million and 10,000 tickets sold which would be the third time in the event’s young history it has hit that financial mark.

To close the call, Khan made some football analogies in saying they are close (in the “red zone”) to making their new media rights deal.

Click here to listen (no sub needed)