Jeff Jarrett and Jay Lethal added to AEW Revolution Tag title match

Jeff Jarrett and Jay Lethal will have an opportunity to become AEW Tag Team Champions at Revolution. 

Jarrett and Lethal won a tag team battle royale on this week’s AEW Dynamite to earn a spot in the four-way Tag Team title match at the March 5 Revolution pay-per-view. 

Jarrett and Lethal were the final team standing after the 10-team battle royale on Dynamite, last eliminating Trent Beretta of Best Friends to secure their place in the title bout. 

AEW Tag Team Champions The Gunns, and former title holders The Acclaimed are already set for the Revolution bout, with one team still to be decided on next week’s Dynamite. 

The winners of next week’s Casino Tag Team Battle Royale will be added to the Revolution contest. 

Six matches have been announced for Revolution to this point. The lineup so far: 

AEW Revolution, Sunday, March 5 —

  • 60-minute iron man match for the AEW World Championship: MJF (c) vs. Bryan Danielson
  • AEW Women’s World Championship: Jamie Hayter (c) vs. Ruby Soho vs. Saraya
  • TNT Championship: Samoa Joe (c) vs. Wardlow
  • AEW World Tag Team Championship: The Gunns (c) vs. The Acclaimed vs. Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal vs. TBD
  • Chris Jericho vs. Ricky Starks — everyone banned from ringside
  • Texas Death match: Jon Moxley vs. Hangman Page

Mark Briscoe defeats Jay Lethal in Jay Briscoe tribute match on AEW Dynamite

Mark Briscoe made his AEW debut on Wednesday’s Dynamite, defeating Jay Lethal in a match dedicated to his late brother Jay.

In a match that headlined Wednesday’s show, Briscoe won after finally hitting the Jay Driller on Lethal. Briscoe had repeatedly attempted to go for his brother’s finish during the match, but Lethal managed to avoid the move until being taken down by two lariats.

After the match, the AEW locker room came out and applauded both men. Briscoe, into the camera, told Jamin that he loved him as he exited the ring, holding both Ring of Honor Tag Team titles. Briscoe hugged several people, including Tony Khan, before posing with the titles as the show ended.

Earlier on Dynamite, a tribute video aired highlighting Jay Briscoe’s career.

Tony Khan announced last Wednesday that a ROH tribute show in Jay Briscoe’s memory would be taped following the AEW Rampage tapings in Fresno. The show had briefly been listed to premiere on ROH’s YouTube channel on Wednesday night, but the video later went private.

Tony Khan says he ‘worked hard’ to get Briscoe/Lethal match for AEW Dynamite

Tony Khan has spoken regarding the Mark Briscoe/Jay Lethal match made for Wednesday’s Dynamite.

On the Battleground Podcast, Khan said that he ‘fought hard’ in order to get the match approved. He also said that both Briscoe and Lethal requested the match, which will take place on what would be Jay Briscoe’s 39th birthday.

“It’s going to be a great match honoring a great man,” Khan said. “These men requested this match. Wednesday will be the 39th birthday of the late, great Jay Briscoe and his longtime friend and rival Jay Lethal and his brother Mark Briscoe wanted to honor the legacy of Jay Briscoe and I fought hard to make it happen and I’m really excited about the match.”

“I think it’s great that they’re gonna be able to honor the legacy of somebody that everybody in pro wrestling has so much respect for,” Khan added. “This is going to be something really great for everybody in the locker room who is rallying around the Briscoe family.”

It had been reported that although under ROH contract, The Briscoe Brothers were not allowed to appear on AEW television by Warner Bros. Discovery due to past homophobic tweets made by Jay Briscoe that he had long since apologized for. Dave Meltzer reported Tuesday morning that WBD had reversed course, allowing AEW to pay tribute to Jay Briscoe and for Mark to appear on their television moving forward.

Speak Now: Andrade-Sammy drama, AEW Dynamite anniversary show recap

This is a loaded episode of Speak Now Pro Wrestling with Denise Salcedo! 

The episode kicks off with an in-depth recap and analysis of the backstage drama between Andrade and Sammy Guevara, then Denise dives into AEW Dynamite coverage. Topics discussed include Wheeler Yuta vs MJF, Wardlow and Brian Cage, the women’s segment, National Scissoring Day celebration, and lots more! This is a fun and engaging show perfect for all fans of AEW! 

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Ric Flair wins last match against Jay Lethal & Jeff Jarrett

Ric Flair emerged victorious in what was billed as his final wrestling match Sunday evening in Nashville, Tennessee.

Flair, 73, teamed with son-in-law Andrade El Idolo to defeat Jeff Jarrett and Jay Lethal. The finish had Conrad Thompson, Flair’s other son-in-law, throw brass knuckles to Andrade, who gave them to Flair. Flair then used them to strike Jarrett and put Jarrett in the figure four leglock as referee David Miller ran in and counted to three, giving Flair and Andrade the win.

After the match, confetti fell as Flair celebrated with Andrade and his family at ringside. He met with several people sitting in the front row including The Undertaker, Mick Foley, and Bret Hart. He thanked the fans and Nashville for being one of the greatest wrestling cities in the world. He then said that “everything you heard about him is true” and was going to celebrate with Kid Rock tonight. The show ended with Flair holding the NWA World Heavyweight title belt that he held during the mid-to-late 1980s in Jim Crockett Promotions.

Flair’s previous retirement took place in 2008, when he lost to Shawn Micheals at WrestleMania 24. Despite retiring, Flair returned to wrestling the following year and wrestled through 2011, with his most recent match being a loss to Sting on an episode of Impact Wrestling.

Wrestling Observer Live: Flair’s last match, Kenny Omega return, RAW report, NXT 2.0 battle royal, more

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Mike Sempervive is back with tons to talk about including Ric Flair’s final match, odds for blood and such, line-ups for NXT and AEW, the 20 women in the battle royal, Kenny Omega’s return, the RAW REPORT and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Ric Flair to team with Andrade against Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal in ‘Last Match’

Ric Flair’s “last match” has finally been revealed.

Flair will team with his son-in-law Andrade El Idolo for the first time ever as the two take on Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal in a tag team match at Jim Crockett Promotions Presents: Ric Flair’s Last Match. The pay-per-view is being held at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium on Sunday, July 31 and will air live on Fite TV.

The announcement of the match was made on episode two of the Ric Flair’s Last Match docuseries.

The Last Match event will be the first time the 73-year-old Flair has wrestled since 2011. Flair has been training in the ring with Lethal leading into the show.

There was an angle on Flair’s podcast last month where it was claimed that Lethal no-showed appearing on the podcast. Flair said Lethal was upset with him because Flair wouldn’t let him be part of the Last Match event.

That angle continued on the Last Match docuseries when Lethal attacked Flair following the press conference for Jim Crockett Promotions Presents: Ric Flair’s Last Match. After Flair was rude to him when he tried to help, Jarrett joined in on the attack and helped bloody Flair.

Jarrett will also have a role at WWE SummerSlam in Nashville on Saturday, July 30, serving as the special guest referee for The Usos vs. The Street Profits for the Undisputed WWE Tag Team titles.

Jim Crockett Promotions Presents: Ric Flair’s Last Match is taking place as part of Starrcast V. Here’s the updated card for the show:

  • Ric Flair & Andrade El Idolo vs. Jeff Jarrett & Jay Lethal (w/ Karen Jarrett)
  • Impact World Champion Josh Alexander defends against Jacob Fatu
  • Impact Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace defends against Deonna Purrazzo and Rachael Ellering in a three-way match
  • Ricky & Kerry Morton (w/ Robert Gibson) vs. Brian Pillman Jr. & Brock Anderson (w/ Arn Anderson).
  • Rey Fenix vs. Laredo Kid vs. Taurus vs. Bandido
  • The Wolves (Davey Richards & Eddie Edwards) vs. Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelley & Chris Sabin)
  • Killer Kross (w/ Scarlett Bordeaux) vs. Davey Boy Smith Jr.
  • Clark Connors vs. Ren Narita
  • The Von Erichs (Marshall & Ross Von Erich) vs. The Briscoes (Jay & Mark Briscoe)

Jay Lethal challenges Samoa Joe for ROH Death Before Dishonor

Jay Lethal formally challenged Samoa Joe to an ROH Television Championship match at next month’s Death Before Dishonor.

On tonight’s Rampage, Lethal cut a promo saying he demanded that Samoa Joe sign a contract for a title match at Death Before Dishonor, noting that he has not been on AEW television in recent weeks. The promo ended with Satnam Singh telling Joe “Jay’s gonna kill you.”

Lethal and Joe have been feuding ever since the finale of Supercard of Honor in April, where Joe made his return to ROH by aiding Jonathan Gresham from an attack by Lethal and Sonjay Dutt. In the weeks since Supercard of Honor, Lethal and Dutt have introduced former basketball player Satnam Singh to their group.

At the Forbidden Door post-show scrum on Sunday, Tony Khan confirmed that Death Before Dishonor would take place on July 23 in Lowell, Massachusetts. It would be the second ROH show held since Khan bought the promotion in March.

Jake Something debut part of 11-match AEW Dark lineup

Jake Something will make his AEW debut on Tuesday’s edition of Dark. 

The former Impact wrestler will face Jay Lethal on the show. The episode was taped on May 1 from Universal Studios in Orlando, Florida. 

The rivalry between NJPW’s LA Dojo and QT Marshall’s Factory will continue on Dark as well when Nick Comoroto & Aaron Solo take on Kevin Knight & The DKC. Other notable matches include Kiera Hogan facing Skye Blue and The Dark Order taking on Tiger Ruas & Cezar Bononi. 

Tuesday’s edition of AEW Dark will air at 7 p.m Eastern time on YouTube. The full lineup is as follows: 

  • The Gunn Club (Austin & Colten Gunn) vs. Fly Def (Warren Johnson & Zack Mason
  • Jay Lethal vs. Jake Something
  • Jora Johl vs. Trip Jordy
  • Kiera Hogan vs. Skye Blue
  • Lee Johnson & Brock Anderson vs. Brick City Boyz (JCruz & Victor Chase)
  • Rohit Raju vs. Adam Priest
  • Capt. Shawn Dean vs. Serpentico
  • Nick Comoroto & Aaron Solo vs. Kevin Knight & The DKC
  • Abadon vs. Vicky Dreamboat
  • Alex Reynolds vs. Jake Manning
  • Evil Uno & 10 vs. Tiger Ruas & Cezar Bononi

NJPW Strong results: Jay Lethal vs. Ren Narita

Tonight featured the last content from the Strong Style Evolved 2022 tapings from St. Petersburg, Fla.

The DKC defeated Kevin Knight via submission

High quality opener. These Young Lions usually tag together which made the match more interesting; Ian Riccaboni even said they were “like brothers” on commentary. In many ways it was your prototypical NJPW Young Lion style match, but both DKC and Knight added their own distinct wrestling pizazz to make it stand apart from other NJPW rookie openers.

The bout became a much higher impact affair after a few minutes in. The crowd got into it as the match went on, especially towards the finish. Late in the match, the DKC fired up, shouted “DKC FIRE!!” and threw a number of knife-edged chops into Knight’s throat. Knight responded with a basement shoulder-tackle. DKC caught Knight with a flying jump kick off the ropes; it was more like a Bruce Lee type kick as opposed to the modern wrestling fare. It looked cool. He’d later tap Knight out with a crucifix Bomb that he turned into a modified crucifix/Koji clutch submission hold for the win.

Mascara Dorada defeated TJP

In related news, NJPW announced earlier today that TJP would participate in this year’s Best of the Super Juniors 29 tournament in Japan next month.

As for the match between him and Mascara Dorada, it was very good, albeit short. This was Dorada’s first time back in a NJPW ring in six years. The two complemented each other nicely and felt naturally in sync working together.

It was subtle, but on commentary, Riccaboni and Matt Rehwoldt talked about the history between these two. They didn’t mention it, but they are referring to WWE’s 2017 Cruiserweight Classic that TJP won, and Dorada (as Gran Metallik) was a part of.

Early on in the match, Mascara Dorada caught TJP with a perfectly timed Asai moonsault after TJP had slid onto the floor from the outside. His momentum was short-lived, though, as TJP would take back the reins, neutralizing Dorada in the ring with a hammerlock surfboard submission, then released the hold by falling backwards and snapping Dorada’s arm backwards. The crowd booed.

Dorada came back and in the end scored a pinfall on TJP after planting him with a spinning sit-out Death Valley Bomb.

TJP acted like a sore loser afterwards by unmasking Dorada, forcing him to throw a towel over his head to protect his identity. The crowd was heated as TJP left the ring with Dorada’s mask. I imagine we’ll see a rematch between these two down the road based on what we saw tonight.

Jay Lethal defeated Ren Narita

Retired NJPW referee Tiger Hattori joined the English broadcast team for this match.

When the bell sounded, Lethal took his time engaging Narita, instead choosing to please the crowd with his version of the Flair Strut mixed in with a couple of “Woos!” Narita didn’t look pleased. They started off with an extended exchange, going back and forth first on the mat, then running off the ropes. Lethal teased Lethal Injection, but Narita shoved Lethal away.

Ian Riccaboni put over Lethal on commentary as an unsung, underrated wrestler of the scene for years, and rightly so. I mention this because it also reminded me of how young Narita is and how he’s only been wrestling for five years. But he didn’t look out of place at all with a vet like Lethal. It’s almost as though Katsuyori Shibata fully transferred his wrestling spirit into Ren Narita’s body, and what we see now is simply that.

Speaking of Shibata-esque wrestling, Narita later caught Lethal with a few high roundhouse kicks to the chest. Lethal would recover and later attempted a springboard dropkick to Narita as Narita stood on the apron. Narita ducked, but Lethal caught him with a draping cutter which brought Narita back into the ring.

Lethal missed a diving elbow drop, allowing Narita to recover and plant Lethal with a front suplex. He earned himself a nearfall after hitting a nice bridging single-arm suplex. Narita then went for the Narita Special #3, a modified Texas Cloverhold, then transitioned from that into a figure-four leglock. Lethal was able to force the break, and when they separated, we could see Narita’s nose and/or mouth were bloodied up. The announcers weren’t quite sure what happened to cause it, and it wasn’t clear on screen, either.

Lethal used his Lethal Combination on Narita, then followed up with a deadlift brainbuster before connecting with Hail to the King, his Randy Savage-inspired diving elbow drop.

It was around the ten-minute mark when Lethal locked on his own figure four. When Narita got out of the hold, Lethal went for Lethal Injection, but Narita blocked it again, catching Lethal with a sleeper hold before transitioning into a cobra twist submission. The visual here was inadvertently amazing, with Narita’s face now pouring with blood down onto Lethal’s ribcage.

Lethal countered the hold, rolling Narita up for two. They exchanged roll-up pins before Lethal was finally able to catch Narita in rhythm with Lethal Injection and put him away for the victory in just over ten minutes.

Lethal offered Narita his hand after the match. Narita proudly accepted and shook Lethal’s hand while bowing. Both looked terrific in this.

Final thoughts:

This was a short and sweet episode of Strong, clocking in at under an hour with three very good matches that didn’t drag. This episode is the epitome of what we often call an “easy watch.”

The DKC vs. Kevin Knight is a great primer for those unfamiliar with the LA Dojo’s latest prospects. Mascara Dorada vs. TJP had natural chemistry and previewed what could become a longer rivalry down the road between the two. Jay Lethal vs. Ren Narita was one of those Strong matches that if it were in front of a different and/or bigger audience, it’d have torn the house down. Lethal is a pro’s pro, and Narita is something special, proving it all in about ten minutes with Lethal. 

AEW’s Jay Lethal headlining NJPW Strong

AEW’s Jay Lethal will appear in the main event of Saturday’s NJPW Strong episode. 

In the last episode of the Strong Style Evolved 2022 series on Strong, Lethal will face Narita in the main event in a first-time matchup.

Also announced for Saturday’s show, Mascara Dorada will be in action against United Empire’s TJP. Dorada holds a 3-1 edge over TJP in their previous singles matches.

In Saturday’s opening contest, frequent tag partners Kevin Knight and The DKC will face off in a singles match. The two have faced off twice before, splitting the contests 1-1.

Strong Style Evolved 2022 was taped on March 20 in Florida. 

Strong airs at 8 p.m. Eastern time on Saturdays on NJPW World and is available on demand after airing. 

Here is Saturday’s full lineup: 

NJPW Strong: Strong Style Evolved 2022, Saturday, April 30, 8 p.m. Eastern time on NJPW World —

  • Jay Lethal vs. Ren Narita
  • Mascara Dorada vs. TJP
  • Kevin Knight vs. The DKC

Speak Now: Full AEW Dynamite rundown, show recap

Join on-camera personality Denise Salcedo as she rundowns the March 30th edition of AEW Dynamite and also discusses this weeks event! This is a very fun and informative show. Enjoy the podcast!

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CM Punk vs. Max Caster, Jon Moxley vs. Jay Lethal announced for AEW Dynamite

AEW has revealed two new matches for Wednesday’s episode of Dynamite. 

Tony Khan announced on social media that Jon Moxley will face Jay Lethal on the show, also disclosing on a Wednesday Busted Open Radio appearance that CM Punk will go one-on-one with Max Caster.

“I’ve got something I’m very excited about planned for Max Caster tonight on Dynamite. I really like Max Caster and Anthony Bowens, the Acclaimed, very, very much,” Khan said. 

Tommy Dreamer then suggested a rap battle between Caster and P.N. News but the AEW president announced a match with Punk instead. 

“While I can’t do Max Caster vs. P.N. News, I can do Max Caster vs. CM Punk. I’m going to do it tonight. I can’t wait to see the look on CM Punk’s face when Max Caster freestyles to the ring and says whatever Max Caster is going to say to CM Punk tonight on TBS on Dynamite.”

Khan continued to say that Bowens is currently out with a knee injury. He hasn’t wrestled since March 9, but is not expected to be out long-term.

Khan also announced Jon Moxley vs. Jay Lethal on social media earlier Wednesday morning. He noted that the match will pit a former AEW World Champion against a former Ring of Honor World Champion. 

This week’s edition of Dynamite takes place from the Colonial Life Arena in Columbia, South Carolina. 

The updated lineup for the show is as follows:

  • CM Punk vs. Max Caster
  • Jon Moxley vs. Jay Lethal
  • Darby Allin (w/Sting) vs. Andrade El Idolo (w/Jose the Assistant)
  • FTR vs. The Gunn Club (w/Billy Gunn)
  • Women’s Owen Hart Foundation tournament qualifying match: The Bunny vs. a new AEW signee

Adam Cole vs. Jay Lethal set for AEW Dynamite

A new match has been announced for Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite. 

Third-ranked Jay Lethal will take on fourth-ranked Adam Cole in a singles contest. AEW president Tony Khan made the match announcement on Twitter. 

The match will be Lethal’s first on Dynamite since December 2021 when he took part in the Dynamite Diamond battle royal, and his first singles match on Dynamite since his AEW debut TNT title match against Sammy Guevara on November 17, 2021.  Lethal is on a four-match singles winning streak, with two wins on Dark and two on Dark: Elevation.

Here is the lineup for this week’s Dynamite:

  • Eight-man tornado tag match: Sting, Darby Allin & The Hardys vs. Private Party, The Butcher & The Blade
  • Adam Cole vs. Jay Lethal
  • Chris Jericho & Daniel Garcia vs. John Silver & Alex Reynolds
  • Jon Moxley & Bryan Danielson vs. The Varsity Blonds
  • Red Velvet vs. Leyla Hirsch (Kris Statlander banned from ringside)
  • MJF speaks
  • CM Punk appears in person for the first time since Revolution

Jay Lethal vs. Lee Moriarty announced for ROH Supercard of Honor

A new match featuring the return of Jay Lethal has been announced for ROH’s Supercard of Honor event.

Tony Khan announced tonight that Lethal will take on Lee Moriarity, with Matt Sydal in his corner.

“ROH Supercard of Honor. Next Friday April 1, Dallas Metroplex,” Khan wrote. “The Franchise of @ringofhonor returns as @TheLethalJay goes 1-on-1 vs @theleemoriarty, with his mentor + former ROH Tag Team Champion @MattSydal in his corner.”

Lethal left Ring of Honor when the company released all of their talent in October, signing with AEW the following month. He returned for ROH’s Final Battle event in December after the original main event of the show, Bandido vs. Jonathan Gresham, fell through after Bandido pulled out of the show due to testing positive for COVID-19. 

Here is the current lineup for Supercard of Honor, which takes place April 1, 2022 at the Curtis Cullwell Center in Dallas, Texas:

  • Jonathan Gresham vs. Bandido in a winner takes all match to determine the ROH World Heavyweight Champion
  • The Briscoe Brothers vs. FTR for the ROH World Tag Team titles
  • Sw3rve the Realest vs. Alex Zayne
  • Joe Hendry, Ninja Mack also announced for the show