WOL: FUN FRIDAY, All Out buyrate, trademarks, mustaches

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including the buyrate for All Out, a preview of all the shows this coming weekend, WWE trademarks INVASION and AEW trademarks BACON, why mustaches still don’t work, and more FUN FRIDAY shenanigans. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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WOL: Updates on Tiffany and Jey, weekend show news, more!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including multiple injury updates, backstage notes from AEW All Out and WrestlePalooza, full reviews of both shows, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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AEW All Out preview & predictions: Opportunity knocks

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

Seven years in, Saturday’s AEW All Out is both a pay-per-view and a checkpoint: a place where AEW takes stock of what it is, where they are as a company, and what it might become.

The roster is battered and its depth is tested for the first time in a long time. Yet, the company still stands tall as the most viable alternative in modern wrestling history. A second, viable North American wrestling promotion is a boon to the entire industry; iron sharpens iron and all that. A perfect approval rating will never exist, but the alternative AEW provides is needed.

Injuries to Kenny Omega, Will Ospreay, and Swerve Strickland leave this year’s card without some of its most reliable big show anchors. All performers who, if they weren’t closing the show, were a sure bet to steal it. But absences lead to opportunities and AEW has a roster filled with names: Willow Nightingale, Daniel Garcia, Kris Statlander, Jamie Hayter, Queen Aminata and Konosuke Takeshita are among those who are ready for more.

A new generation in wrestling comes faster than anyone expects. For growth to continue, new stars must be developed. 

All Out 2025 (3 PM Eastern main card start on PPV) is a test of depth, of patience, and of AEW’s ability to make new stars when old ones aren’t available. Let’s take a look at the card.

AEW All Out 2025 Cage Cope FTR

Adam Copeland & Christian Cage vs. FTR (Cash Wheeler & Dax Harwood) (with Stokely Hathaway)

FTR has to be kicking their feet in the air and giggling at the thought of this match. Two men who live and breathe tag team wrestling get to square off with Hall of Fame-level Canadians in front of their home crowd. It’s the perfect storm for Dax and Cash who have looked revitalized in recent months. Cope, for me, has always been a mixed bag — overlong matches, overstuffed with drama — but there’s no denying that he’s a living legend.

Christian, a different kind of legend but one all the same, refuses to soften his edges and fully give the crowd what they want. Together, it works.

AEW does this kind of nostalgia showcase better than anyone. FTR will do everything in their power to make the legends shine. Cope and Christian will hit their spots, soak up the deserved love, and go over. Let’s keep this one under 15 minutes, boys. 

Prediction: Cope and Christian

AEW All Out 2025 Eddie Kingston vs Big Bill

Big Bill vs. Eddie Kingston

It’s a stroke of booking genius to announce this match rather than have it be a surprise. It gives the audience something to be excited about while saving the outrageous return pop Kingston will receive. Kingston’s authenticity and fervor in the ring are desperately needed. His absence was glaring. I’m thrilled he’s back. 

Few things in wrestling are as satisfying as Kingston walloping another man. Bill, meanwhile, has quietly become one of AEW’s most effective big men: simple moves presented without irony. This won’t be pretty and it shouldn’t be. Kingston thrives in these meat-and-potatoes brawls, the kind where emotion carries more than execution. Bill will get his moments: a chokeslam here, a big boot there, but make no mistake, this is Eddie’s showcase. He’ll drag Bill into the deep water, spit in his face, yapping the whole time.

Prediction: Eddie Kingston 

The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley, Shelton Benjamin & MVP) vs. Ricochet and GOA (Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona)

Just because this is likely the filler match doesn’t mean it won’t be good with a solid faction on one side, a reinvented daredevil and two bruisers on the other. Lashley and Benjamin are closer to the “greatest hits” stage of their careers rather than their prime, but that can still be wildly effective when paired with Ricochet’s chicanery and the raw power of Kaun and Liona.

The wheel won’t be reinvented, but it doesn’t need to be in order to be successful. Expect Ricochet to bounce around like a pinball, Lashley to hit one or two spears that could be considered like assault, and for the Gates of Agony to show people who they are and what they can do (they’re good!).

Prediction: The Hurt Syndicate

AEW All Out 2025 Jon Moxley vs Darby Allin

Jon Moxley vs. Darby Allin in a coffin match

I should have saved the ‘kicking their feet in the air and giggling’ reference I used earlier for this match. Moxley and Allin have to be over the moon coming up with some really sick things they can do to each other during this match. These are two men who would happily hurl themselves into actual caskets and get buried alive if the occasion called for it. Maybe even light it on fire while we’re at it, but it’s also a perfect match for a perfect pairing.

Moxley is the connective tissue of AEW. There is no situation where he can’t shine. It doesn’t matter who the opponent is, the program, or the match. You can drop him into anything and trust it will land. Darby, meanwhile, remains wrestling’s crash test dummy, a man with no regard for either his body or tomorrow. If this clicks, and it should, this won’t feel like a stipulation match, but more like a natural extension of who these two are.

Expect a car crash watched between slits in your fingers, full of blood, and bodies crumpled in unnatural shapes. No one will be left wondering if they held anything back. Darby is one of the few performers in wrestling who is not hurt by losses. Mox wins and continues his path of destruction on whoever steps up next.

Prediction: Moxley

MJF vs. Mark Briscoe in a Tables ‘n’ Tacks match

AEW is never better than when it leans into chaos and there are few wrestlers more chaotic than Mark Briscoe. He’s a one-man demolition derby. The idea of him and Darby Allin working on a blank canvas fills me with joy. Pairing Briscoe’s brand of unhinged with MJF, a man who is all about control and theatrics, is a recipe for either disaster or delight, depending on how self-indulgent the newly married Max (congrats!) is feeling.

He must show restraint and let the match itself be the theatrics. The match will be over the top without his typical antics. His job is to hold the match together and to provide structure around the madness. If he leans into being more of a conductor instead of a melodramatist, this could be special. 

The stipulation pushes MJF out of his comfort zone while Briscoe will gleefully throw himself through every piece of furniture in the building if it means entertaining the crowd. Blood is promised; just how much is the unknown. As much as I’d like to see Briscoe gain some constant momentum, I don’t think that’s happening. 

Prediction: MJF

AEW All Out 2025 Mercedes Mone vs Riho

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Riho

Mercedes Mone is at her most compelling when she can lean into cruelty. Against Riho, she has a rare size and power advantage which should allow her to work with a different cadence: stretching her out, bullying her, making every bump feel violent.

Riho is an AEW original, someone who can pull on the crowd’s heartstrings and rallying them through her resilience. The success of this match depends on contrast: Mercedes as the precision villain vs. Riho as the stubborn survivor. Play that chord and we have some music. It’s not an epic waiting to happen, but it’s a smart piece of matchmaking.

It’s always nice to see Riho pop back up for her semi-annual six-week run. There were certainly signs of ring rust, but she’s a proven performer on big stages. There’s the potential for some seriously gruesome bumping in this match. Count me in. 

Prediction: Mone retains

AEW Unified Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Konosuke Takeshita and Mascara Dorada in a three-way

For all of Okada’s undeniable greatness, this match feels like Takeshita’s to define. He’s been on the cusp of superstardom for what feels like forever and it’s only a matter of time before he makes his move to that tier. If Kenny Omega couldn’t bring out the full Okada experience, can Takeshita? At some point, perhaps, but not in a triple threat.

The subtle teases for an Okada/Takeshita collision have been there for a while, but this doesn’t feel like two titans settling a final score. This is the amuse-bouche for something more and hopefully something greater. It should lead to the Don Callis family imploding in some capacity with Takeshita emerging as a top of the card babyface that’s been inside of him all along.  

The intrigue comes in the form of Dorada. He prevents the straight-line collision between Okada and Takeshita. He’s certainly not here to win, but to add a sense of bombast and excitement to the match. Besides, if Big Kazu decides to run this one at 60% capacity, Dorada can certainly pump up the heartbeat of the match.

Prediction: Okada retains

AEW World Tag Team Champions Brodido (Brody King & Bandido) defend against The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson), JetSpeed (Kevin Knight & “Speedball” Mike Bailey) and The Don Callis Family (Hechicero & Josh Alexander) in a four-way ladder match

This is AEW at its most AEW: eight wildly different wrestlers thrown into a ladder match with full intentions to tear the house down. JetSpeed brings the juice, Knight and Speedball look better and better every week, and Hechicero’s unorthodox brilliance meshing with Josh Alexander’s no-nonsense power.

Then there’s Brodido, a pairing that shouldn’t work on paper but absolutely does. What do you mean the lead singer of a hardcore band is partnering with a masked bandit?  That brings us, then, to the Young Bucks. Not much needs to be said about these absolute legends. 20 years of wrestling their style, wrestling their way, and transforming an industry. Their style doesn’t lend itself to longevity, but here they are, as good as they’ve ever been after all this time. 

Expect insanity, expect bodies flying off ladders, and expect at least one terrifying spot that will have the older pro wrestling ‘intelligentsia’ clutching their pearls. But don’t expect the belts to change hands. Let Brodido cook for awhile as they’re too much fun to cut short. The Bucks will come close, JetSpeed will shine, and the Callis Family will menace, but Brodido stays on top.

Prediction: Brodido retains

AEW All Out 2025 Womens Four Way

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against Jamie Hayter, Kris Statlander and Thekla in a four-way

An ace elevates everyone around them. Toni Storm is exactly that. More than anyone else in the company, she is a foundation. The entire women’s division works because of her. She is the sun everything revolves around. Not everything is a home run, but nothing ever misses. The three most important people to AEW right now are Toni, Moxley, and Hangman and she’s not third on that list.

Kris Statlander is here to take the pin, I fear. She remains AEW’s perennial “almost,” talented enough for the spot but perpetually stuck in holding patterns. The parallels with Daniel Garcia’s character are certainly noted. Booking replete with half measures and unfulfilled teases leave her in perpetual limbo. The talent is well and truly there, but something has to change for it to completely click. 

Prediction: Storm retains

AEW All Out 2025 Hangman vs Kyle Fletcher

AEW World Champion Hangman Adam Page defends against Kyle Fletcher

When I listed people ready to make the leap, Kyle Fletcher’s name wasn’t listed. That’s because he’s already made it. He’s seized his opportunity and run through a wall with it. He is ruthlessly efficient. His moves hit hard and hit with purpose. His rise has been consistent with no moment too big for the preternaturally talented Aussie. This is the biggest moment of his career. I doubt he shrinks from it.

Page is as reliable a champion as AEW could want. He’s always good for a fight, always capable of tapping into emotion. Will this be as memorable as his clashes with Omega or Swerve? Probably not as there’s not enough heart in the story. When emotion is involved, no one is better than Hangman. If this had a few more weeks, maybe we could get there. As is, we’re looking at an incredibly solid main event with the potential for more.

Expect Hangman to give Fletcher a ton, maybe too much, before closing the door. The goal of this match isn’t for Page to dominate, but to put the final stamp on the main event version of “The Protostar” Kyle Fletcher.

Prediction: Page retains

Kyle Fletcher: As a character and wrestler, they ‘don’t get much better than Hangman’

After starting out as a fan of AEW, Kyle Fletcher now has the opportunity to contribute to one of the promotion’s greatest-ever story arcs.

The 26-year-old Fletcher is challenging Hangman Page for the AEW World Championship at All Out this weekend. In advance of the pay-per-view, he spoke with Bleacher Report and discussed the unique perspective he has on Page as someone who started out as an AEW fan and is now one of the company’s top rising stars.

“I think I have a pretty unique perspective on AEW in general because I’ve watched as a fan ever since its inception in 2019. I was living in Australia. I was watching everything, watching all the pay-per-views,” Fletcher said.

“So I have a bit of a different perspective, and I’ve gotten to see that character arc that Hangman has been on. I really believe that he has one of the greatest characters in professional wrestling.”

Fletcher believes that the continuity of Page’s story is what makes it so special. It has never been stop-start, and all of Page’s failures and successes have contributed to the persona he has today.

“He’s had such an awesome story,” Fletcher said. “A lot of stories feel very stop-start. I feel like everything Hangman has done has threaded so beautifully into one another. The man that we see today, the wrestler that we see today, is the culmination of everything that he’s been through.

“And I think there’s so much depth behind it all because of that. So yeah, I think as a character and a wrestler, you don’t get much better than Hangman.”

Page is now a two-time AEW World Champion, with his most recent reign having begun when he dethroned Jon Moxley this July.

Fletcher is AEW’s current TNT Champion but has never held a World title before.

Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada will be the venue for All Out on Saturday. The main card has a start time of 3 p.m. Eastern.

AEW All Out Tag Team title match challengers decided

The field for the Tag Team title ladder match at AEW All Out on Saturday is set following the events of September to Remember.

Three teams won qualifying matches on Wednesday’s three-hour September to Remember go-home show, finalizing the lineup for the four-way ladder match featuring AEW Tag Team Champions Brody King and Bandido.

In the September to Remember main event, Josh Alexander and Hechicero defeated Top Flight to qualify for the All Out ladder match. Earlier in the card, The Young Bucks defeated The Bang Bang Gang to advance to All Out, plus JetSpeed defeated Killswitch and Kip Sabian to punch their ticket to All Out.

Current AEW All Out card | Saturday, September 20 | Toronto, Canada

  • AEW World Champion Hangman Page defends against Kyle Fletcher
  • Adam Copeland & Christian Cage vs. FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler)
  • TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Riho
  • AEW Unified Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Konosuke Takeshita and Mascara Dorada in a three-way
  • AEW World Tag Team Champions Brodido (Brody King & Bandido) defend against The Young Bucks (Matthew & Nicholas Jackson), JetSpeed (Mike Bailey & Kevin Knight), and Josh Alexander & Hechicero in a ladder match
  • The Hurt Syndicate (Shelton Benjamin, MVP & Bobby Lashley) vs. Ricochet and the Gates of Agony (Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona)
  • Jon Moxley vs. Darby Allin in a coffin match
  • AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against Thekla, Jamie Hayter and Kris Statlander in a four-way
  • Tables ‘n’ Tacks match: MJF vs. Mark Briscoe
  • Tailgate Brawl pre-show: Willow Nightingale, Mina Shirakawa, Harley Cameron & Queen Aminata vs. Julia Hart, Skye Blue, Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford in a tornado tag match
  • Tailgate Brawl pre-show: Daniel Garcia vs. Katsuyori Shibata
  • Tailgate Brawl pre-show: Samoa Joe & Powerhouse Hobbs vs. The Workhorsemen (JD Drake & Anthony Henry)

Kyle Fletcher ready for ‘very surreal’ AEW All Out 2025 opportunity

The biggest moment of Kyle Fletcher’s life so far is just five days away.

This Saturday, Fletcher will challenge Hangman Page for the AEW World Championship at All Out 2025. A victory would bring Fletcher the first World Championship of his career at just 26 years old. Fletcher has always had World Championship potential, but he told Forbes that possibly accomplishing this goal at such a young age feels surreal.

“It’s the biggest thing that I’ve ever done in my career — and in my life,” Fletcher said. “My whole career, people have kind of pegged me as this future World Champion, and it’s a cool thing to hear, right? But now that the opportunity is real, like it’s right in front of me, and it’s about to happen, I have a chance to not only fight for the AEW World Championship, but possibly win it.

“I’m 26 years old. I didn’t know that when people said I was a future World Champion, that I thought the opportunity [would] be coming this quickly. It’s very surreal. Growing up as a kid wanting to be a professional wrestler, this is the kind of moment you dream of, that first World title win. So, it could be soon, which feels surreal, and preparation is in full effect.

“I’m just trying to bring the best me, the best package I can, while trying to stay calm with it all and not letting the nerves get me too early on. But I know I have a job to do, and I just got to stick to it.”

Fletcher has had a rapid ascent as a singles star in AEW, where he’s a member of the Don Callis Family. He told Forbes that he’s grateful so many people have seen him as a future World Champion. And while that adds pressure, it’s also motivated Fletcher to work harder so he can prove other people and himself right. He already holds the TNT title and would become a double champion if he dethrones Page at All Out. Page won the World Championship from Jon Moxley this July and has made two successful defenses so far.

Saturday’s pay-per-view is being held at Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The main card has a start time of 3 p.m. Eastern.

Fight Game: Is changing AEW All Out’s start time the right move?

John LaRocca and Garrett Gonzales return with a brand-new Fight Game to discuss the latest happenings in the world of pro wrestling.

We kicked off the show with our Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down winners and losers of the week before getting to our headline topic about whether or not Tony Khan moving AEW All Out to an earlier start time was the right move.

We also talked about the following:

  • The possible return of AJ Lee
  • AEW PPVs being available on HBO Max
  • A low TV rating for AEW Dynamite
  • Whether Darby Allin has the characteristics of a top babyface
  • Looking at the current All Out & Wrestlepalooza lineups

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WOR: All Out vs. WrestlePalooza, AEW PPVs on MAX, Dynamite, NXT, more!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including AEW moving the start time of All Out and a big debate on whether they should have, AEW PPVs moving to MAX, Arena Mexico, Nick Hogan suing Bubba, Netflix, Jon Jones exonerated, AEW Dynamite and NXT TV reviews, and more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: AEW PPVs heading to Max, AEW All Out moving early to avoid WWE Wrestlepalooza
23:11: Netflix viewership, other ratings
37:32: Nick Hogan suing Bubba the Love Sponge, CMLL notes
42:28: MMA notes on Anderson Silva, Jon Jones, Chael Sonnen, AJ Mana & Rampage Jackson
57:20: AEW Dynamite recap
1:16:22: WWE NXT notes

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Report: WWE holding main roster PLE on same day as AEW All Out

Another head-to-head battle between WWE and AEW could be on the horizon.

Post Wrestling reports that, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the company’s event schedule, WWE is slated to hold a main roster PLE on Saturday, September 20 — the same day as AEW All Out. The yet-to-be-announced WWE show will be held in Indianapolis. The AEW pay-per-view is taking place from Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

The start time of the WWE PLE is not known yet, while All Out has a listed start time of 6 p.m. Eastern for ticket holders — likely meaning 8 p.m. for the PPV main card.

AEW’s two most recent PPVs — All In and Double or Nothing — each faced competition from WWE NXT shows happening at the same time. There was also a WWE Saturday Night’s Main Event episode on the night of All In.

Tony Khan addressed WWE’s “consistent” counter-programming strategy at AEW’s post-Double or Nothing press conference in May, promising that things will go better for AEW than they did for Jim Crockett Promotions when that company was in competition with WWE decades ago.

The addition of another main roster PLE fills a gap on the WWE schedule. There had previously been no September PLE scheduled, with Clash in Paris happening on August 31 and then Crown Jewel Perth set for October 11.

Tony Khan on AEW All Out location: ‘Toronto is one of the greatest wrestling cities’

Tony Khan says he’s happy to be bringing a major show back to one of the top pro wrestling cities in the world.

On Tuesday, it was revealed that All Out 2025 will take place at Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena on September 20. It will be AEW’s first event at the venue since Forbidden Door 2023 and the first show in the city since the Dynamite and Rampage tapings on March 20, 2024, held at the Coca-Cola Coliseum.

During an interview with the Toronto Sun, Khan called the venue a “mecca” of pro wrestling.

“Toronto is one of the greatest wrestling cities on the planet. It’s a very special place. When I was in college, I went on spring break to Toronto to watch wrestling and it’s some place I really love and it’s – to me, what we call in America a Mount Rushmore city – it’s one of the real crown jewel cities. It’s definitely, to me, one of my top four pro wrestling cities on the planet.”

Khan continued:

“I think there’s great wrestling fans all over Ontario. We’ve done great shows in London, Ottawa, Hamilton, and in particular, in Toronto. And in different venues. We’ve had great experience at the Coca-Cola Coliseum but certainly ScotiaBank Arena is a mecca for us and a mecca for pro wrestling and I’m so excited about bringing AEW All Out back to ScotiaBank Arena this year for All Out 2025 on September 20.”

Toronto’s Scotiabank Arena

The venue is home to the NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs and NBA’s Toronto Raptors. WWE presented Money in the Bank 2024 from the arena, and SmackDown aired from the building on February 28, 2025, the night before Elimination Chamber took place nearby at the Rogers Centre.

Other major wrestling events held at Scotiabank Arena include WWE SummerSlam 2004 and 2019, WCW Mayhem 1999, NXT TakeOver: Toronto (2016 and 2019), WWE Survivor Series 2016, NXT Heatwave 2024, and WWE Unforgiven 2006.

Khan’s full interview with the Toronto Sun is available below:

Wrestling Observer Live: Bryan and Tom talk All Out main event, RAW, Smackdown, news!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including everyone’s thoughts on the All Out main event, a ton of notes from the show, the AEW TV deal expected to be announced at any time, RAW tonight, Tom vs. Madman Pondo, and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Wrestling Observer Live: AEW All Out fallout

I am back with another Wrestling Observer Live where the main focus is Saturday’s AEW All Out from Chicago.

I discuss the event in full including all the angles that came out of the show and the amped-up emphasis on violence.

Probably the most noteworthy news was Jon Moxley and Claudio Castagnoli of the Blackpool Combat Club aggressively breaking away from Bryan Danielson in a shocking turn after Danielson defended his AEW World title. Maybe they should bring in another member for this new group? Let’s talk about it.

Of course, I have to talk about that main event in which Hangman Page defeated Swerve Strickland in what might have been one of the most violent matches we have ever seen.

Plus, the latest on the pending AEW/WBD TV rights renewal deal and the pending timeline for an official announcement.

Click here to listen or watch on YouTube below:

AEW announces change to All Out 2024 date

There will be a little bit more time between AEW’s All In and All Out events this year.

Though the pay-per-views were originally scheduled to be held on back-to-back weekends again, that will no longer be the case. AEW announced today that All Out 2024 is moving to Saturday, September 7. That’s six days after its original planned date of September 1.

All Out is still being held at NOW Arena in Hoffman Estates, Illinois. Tickets for the PPV have not gone on sale yet. AEW notes that ticket information will be announced in the coming weeks.

All In 2024 is taking place from Wembley Stadium in London, England on Sunday, August 25. The change to the All Out date means that there will now be two weeks of AEW television between All In and All Out instead of one.

The change also means that All Out won’t take place on Labor Day weekend, which had been an annual tradition for AEW. WWE Bash in Berlin and AEW All Out were scheduled to happen on back-to-back days on August 31 and September 1.

AEW’s updated PPV schedule for the remainder of 2024 is listed below:

  • Sunday, May 26: Double or Nothing (MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada)
  • Sunday, June 30: Forbidden Door (UBS Arena in Elmont, New York)
  • Sunday, August 25: All In London (Wembley Stadium in London, England)
  • Saturday, September 7: All Out (NOW Arena in Hoffman Estates, Illinois)
  • Saturday, October 12: WrestleDream (Tacoma Dome in Tacoma, Washington)
  • Saturday, November 23: Full Gear (Prudential Center in Newark, New Jersey)
  • Saturday, December 28: Worlds End (Addition Financial Arena in Orlando, Florida)

Filthy Four Daily: Tom and Bryan talk Smackdown, Rampage, Collision, All Out, more

Filthy Four Daily with Bryan Alvarez and Tom Lawlor is back with tons to talk about including thoughts on Smackdown, Rampage, Collision, Danielson vs. Starks and Orange vs. Moxley, Gunther vs. Chad Gable, and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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