Omega vs. Okada AEW All In double title match official

One of professional wrestling’s all-time-great rivalries will be renewed at AEW All In Texas.

As announced during Wednesday’s Fyter Fest, AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada will face AEW International Champion Kenny Omega at All In in a “winner takes all” double title match.

The title for title matchup at All In will mark the first time that Omega and Okada have squared off in a singles match since their two out of three falls match at NJPW Dominion in June 2018, widely considered the best pro wrestling match of all time.

Omega retained the International title in a four-way on Wednesday’s Fyter Fest, then Okada came to the ring in the post-match to confront Omega. The two posed with their title belts holding them aloft, then Tony Schiavone officially announced the All In bout on Tony Khan’s behalf later in the program.

In addition to their Dominion 2018 bout, Omega and Okada had a trilogy of bouts in 2017 at Wrestle Kingdom 11, Dominion, and in the G1 Climax tournament. They split those meetings 1-1-1, with Okada winning at Wrestle Kingdom, a 60-minute time limit draw at Dominion, and Omega scoring a win in the G1.

AEW All In Texas, Saturday, July 12 —

  • AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Hangman Adam Page
  • AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against Mercedes Mone
  • Winner takes all: AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada vs. AEW International Champion Kenny Omega

Kenny Omega to defend International title at AEW Fyter Fest, tournament revealed

After surviving a hellacious Anarchy in the Arena match, AEW International Champion Kenny Omega will defend his title at next month’s Fyter Fest special.

Announced during Sunday’s Double or Nothing, Omega will defend the title in a four-way at the four-hour special on Wednesday, June 4th on TBS. His opponents will be determined in a tournament that kicks off this week on Dynamite and Collision.

On Wednesday’s Dynamite from El Paso, Texas:

  • Josh Alexander vs. Brody King

On Saturday’s Collision from El Paso, Texas (taped after Dynamite):

  • Claudio Castagnoli vs. Komander
  • Mascara Dorada vs. Hechicero

The winners of those three bouts will then face Omega in the four-way in Denver, Colorado, the following Wednesday.

Omega has held the title for nearly 80 days, winning it at March’s Revolution with his win over Konosuke Takeshita. He has one title defense since then, beating “Speedball” Mike Bailey and Ricochet at April’s Dynasty.

The matches are the first announced for this week and for Fyter Fest.

AEW Double or Nothing preview & predictions: You, me and Anarchy

Image: AEW

This is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the author and not the website.

Last month’s AEW Dynasty show kicked off the road to All In Texas with Sunday’s Double or Nothing (8 PM Sunday from Glendale, Arizona, on pay-per-view) putting us on the home stretch. As always, the on-paper matchups for DoN are exciting and worth watching. Are they as exciting as trusting Tom Cruise one last time? No, but what can be?

Double or Nothing is still well worth our time, attention and dollars. Let’s run through the matches.

AEW Double or Nothing preview & predictions

AEW Double or Nothing 2025 Will Ospreay vs Adam Page

Will Ospreay vs. Hangman Page in the men’s Owen Hart Foundation finals

This is as excited as I’ve been about a match that didn’t involve Bryan Danielson in quite some time. I remain more interested in any and everything Hangman does more than Ospreay whose entire AEW persona has been about “restoring the feeling” — a corny tagline that should be retired.

Restoring the feeling, as best I can tell, is just wrestling good-to-great matches regularly and if that is the goal, consider it reached. A performer like Ospreay raises both the floor and the ceiling of the company. He can reach heights that few can and even if he’s going at half-speed, that’s raising the level of the other performers. But it’s hard to root for a babyface that seemingly hasn’t overcome anything. Ospreay came into AEW as a top guy and has remained one throughout. He hasn’t struggled or fallen down; he’s just been himself.

And, maybe that’s enough. Maybe Ospreay’s genuine nature is exactly what we need in a world far too full of sly winks and half-truths. He says what he means and does what he says while being among the best in the world. My criticisms aside, this is what a World champion looks like. 

Changes in behaviors and actions lead to true redemption. Has Hangman done anything to deserve redemption yet? Does winning the World championship absolve someone of their sins? He brutally retired Christopher Daniels and short of expressing a bit of remorse for that and his previous actions, he has yet to show complete contrition or that he’s changed. The same singular focus and drive are omnipresent. This is still a man obsessed with his goal above all else. He might want to be someone his son can look at proudly, but make no mistake, this is still a man who would do anything to get his title back. 

Will he, though? Will he be the one to save AEW from Jon Moxley and his Death Riders? I don’t think so. There’s more struggle and more story to be told with Hangman Page. 

Prediction: Will Ospreay

AEW Double or Nothing 2025 Mercedes Mone vs Jamie Hayter

Mercedes Mone vs. Jamie Hayter in the women’s Owen Hart Foundation finals

Jamie Hayter is so back.

It took a minute for her to re-establish her footing after such a long layoff, but she’s back to doing what made her so popular to begin with: hitting people hard. It helps that she was finally given a program worth investing in, both from her perspective and the crowd’s. Few performers in the AEW’s women’s division bring the edge and looming threat of violence in her matches. It’s wonderful seeing her toward the top of the card again.      

In her 14 months in AEW, Mone has proven to be worth every dollar and every cent. She’s had great matches with a litany of opponents and constantly elevated those around her. She’s proven her versatility through programs with two unique performers in Kris Statlander and Harley Cameron. Best of all, she’s still a complete bump freak willing to put her whole body into any move. Combine this with her ever-growing status out of the ring, and AEW has a true crossover star on their hands. This is not a surprise or some lightning bolt of realization. Mercedes has always been this good; she’s finally allowed to do it all the time.

As much as I’d love Hayter to get a win and move back into the main event scene, the future demands something bigger of Mone.

Prediction: Mercedes Mone

AEW Double or Nothing 2025 Mark Briscoe vs Ricochet

Ricochet vs. Mark Briscoe in a stretcher match

Few embrace turning heel in the way that Ricochet has. Too often, an alignment will shift, but the style doesn’t morph to match it. A heel’s goal should not be to pop the crowd and have the spot of the night. It’s the complete opposite. They should be doing everything they can to get the crowd to loathe them and love the babyface. That means stooging and stalling, denying the crowd of big moves and moments. A heel should never be trying for a “holy sh*t” chant but frequently, they seek it out.

Ricochet does not. He has no interest in the liminal space that entices so many modern heels. This, more than anything, is what makes him special. This makes him stand out. Long ago, there were moments of heel Ricochet in PWG, but never on a big stage like this.

Briscoe recently celebrated 25 years in pro wrestling and I hope he has 25 more. An asset to any company, the Chicken Man should have been a staple of weekly television long ago. He’s here to put on solid matches, be entertaining as hell, and get people over, which is exactly what he will do on Sunday.

Prediction: Ricochet

Paragon (Adam Cole, Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly) vs. The Don Callis Family (Kyle Fletcher, Josh Alexander & Konosuke Takeshita)

Here are some things that are true:

  • The reunion of Cole, Strong and O’Reilly is a happy story.
  • Paragon is an unfortunate name. 
  • Cole winning the TNT title and disappearing from television outside commentary is curious. 
  • The three best wrestlers in this match are part of The Don Callis Family.
  • Within the next 12 months, Kyle Fletcher is winning the World title.

As nice of a story as the Paragon is, they are also the past. This iteration of the Don Callis Family is the future, and they win this easily. Bigger and better things should await as a result.

Prediction: The Don Callis Family  

AEW Double or Nothing 2025 Tag match FTR

FTR vs. Daniel Garcia & Nigel McGuinness

I’m stubbornly leaving the light on for Garcia, but I’m worried how much life the bulb has left.

There was a time when he was getting some of the biggest reactions on the show, regardless of his alignment. He is a gifted wrestler and a good enough talker, but AEW tried to pull the trigger with him too late. Momentum would abruptly stop right after it started.. One can only take so much disappointment before they move on which seems to have happened with the audience.

So much needs to go right to make a new wrestling star. They need skill, connection, opportunity, timing, and countless intangibles. Not everything needs to be there at the same time, but the one thing that always does is the timing. Unfortunately, time is fickle and fleeting. There were moments when the stars aligned for Garcia, but somehow the timing was never right. Now he’s an afterthought in someone else’s story.

That story belongs to FTR. Dax and Cash feel alive in their proper alignment as snarling no-gooders. The version of FTR that is just happy to be here because they love wrestling is fine, but has a definitive ceiling on it. Loving ‘this’ and the business always has a shelf life. Now they’re on a mission to seemingly ruin the lives of anyone middle-aged and above. They started with Cope and now have eyes for McGuinness. I fear the worst for my favourite British colour commentator, but at least we’ll get more Oasis on TV. 

Prediction: FTR

AEW Double or Nothing 2025 Okada vs Speedball Bailey

AEW Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against “Speedball” Mike Bailey

Big Kazu is on an unsurprising run of solid television title matches, yet something greater calls. He’s built for the biggest matches on the biggest stages and a Big Match this is not. This is, at most, a medium match. Full respect to Bailey, who’s been great since debuting in AEW but he is not getting 25+ minutes with Big Match, non-blonde Okada. His hair was brown and not a “b*tch” was uttered this week. If this is the beginning of a more serious and determined Okada, count me extremely in. He rarely gets pinned and certainly won’t be on Sunday. Kenny Omega awaits. 

Prediction: Okada 

AEW Tag Team Champions The Hurt Syndicate defend against Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara

AEW’s tag team division is lacking serious juice. For so many years, it was a reliable foundation for AEW, but its current state is quite sad. There is perilously little beyond The Hurt Syndicate. The space between them and every other team in the division is a chasm, and that’s reflected in their booking. Since becoming champs, they’ve defended the titles against The Gunns, The Outrunners, The Learning Tree, The Gates of Agony, and Top Flight. These are teams that provide solid depth for a division, not ones that are regularly competing for the title.

I’m not sure there’s an easy solution, either. A potential quick fix would be FTR sliding into a top spot after this show, but a returning Cope likely fills their dance card. Maybe The Young Bucks free up after Anarchy In The Arena, but outside of that, it’s going to take some time to build the tag ranks back up.

Prediction: The Hurt Syndicate

AEW Double or Nothing 2025 Toni Storm vs Mina Shirakawa

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

One of the worst things about being a wrestling fan, and existence in general, is the Internet. We cannot escape its blight.

Sometimes, though, it creates moments of delight that make it all worth it. Moments like Tony Khan being extremely online and changing Shirakawa’s new entrance music on the fly because people didn’t it. We’d be a much more honest community if everyone admitted to being terminally online. There is no shame. Our brains have long since smoothed over. That’s why it’s so funny when Triple H claims not to pay attention to what the Internet says. If he had to uninstall Twitter (never X) from his phone, he wouldn’t know what to do with himself. He’d have withdrawals just like the rest of us.

There is proof of concept of this match from last year’s Forbidden Door. The match was fine, largely good even! Both come into this untethered from Mariah May, the star their first match revolved around. Shirakawa has more natural charisma in one hair follicle than most people do in their entire being while Storm remains a true one-of-one performer in pro wrestling.

Yet, like so many other matches on the card, this remains in service of the future. The real juice comes later in the form of the biggest women’s match AEW can make: Toni Storm vs Mercedes Mone at All In Texas.

Prediction: Toni Storm retains

Kenny Omega, Swerve Strickland, The Opps & Willow Nightingale vs. The Death Riders & The Young Bucks in an Anarchy in the Arena match

Blood & Guts is my preferred brand of AEW stipulation. Anarchy In The Arena doesn’t scratch the itch. Maybe there’s too much, you know, anarchy. Maybe it’s the music playing during the match. Likely, it’s the combination of the two. It is also a stipulation for stipulation’s sake. Matches like this and Blood & Guts are always better served when there’s a strong story to support them.

I’m not quite sure this works in that regard. The individual components are delicious. Strickland, Omega, the Bucks, Moxley. All of them are proven top dogs and top draws. Yet the sum is less than its parts. This should feel like the life of AEW is on the line but it doesn’t, and much of that lies at the feet of The Death Riders. They no longer inspire fear, merely resignation. We don’t want them to be conquered; we want them to go away.   

The newly re-signed Nightingale is everything the company should be built around moving forward. She is the now and future ace that can do anything and everything. Again and again, she’s proven herself up for any challenge. Every bar easily cleared. She has the charisma, the skill, and the connection to reach the highest levels of wrestling. AEW cannot let this opportunity slip away like they did with Garcia. She’s here for the long haul, and it’s long been time for them to commit to her the way she committed to them. She should get the pin in this match and, honestly, she should pin Moxley.

Prediction: Willow, Omega, Swerve and The Opps

Kenny Omega says Hikaru Shida’s visa renewal taking ‘quite a while’

Kenny Omega provided an update on Hikaru Shida during a recent Twitch stream.

The former AEW Women’s World Champion announced last month that she was returning to Japan to renew her visa and wrestle a few matches in the country.

Omega, who is taking care of Shida’s two cats while she is away, says the visa process is taking longer than expected.

“You never really know how long the process is going to take. And in this case, it’s taking quite a while,” Omega said. “Her cats get separation anxiety, they don’t like being alone.”

“I would do it anytime. It is not a chore whatsoever. I’m enjoying the baby. But I do worry because this week, as you guys know, is pay-per-view week. So we’ve got Dynamite, Collision, then also the pay-per-view,” he said of watching Shida’s cats.

Hikaru Shida in 2025

Shida hasn’t wrestled a match for AEW since last fall, when she lost to Kris Statlander on the November 20 edition of AEW Dynamite. She appeared at Maya Yukihi’s anniversary show at Korakuen Hall in February, wrestled on the Lucha Fiesta show at Sumo Hall on April 27, wrestled her former Ice Ribbon opponent Hiragi Kurumi at her anniversary show on May 2, and won a battle royal at a WAVE event on May 4, also held at Korakuen Hall.

Kenny Omega being ‘way more cautious’ since health issues

After a life-threatening health issue kept him away from wrestling for more than a year, Kenny Omega is taking a more cautious approach to his job.

Omega suffered a diverticulitis attack in December 2023 that could have potentially been fatal. While it was initially unclear if he would ever be able to return to wrestling on a regular basis, Omega underwent surgery in May 2024 and has been back in the ring since January. He’s wrestled seven matches since his return, including dethroning Konosuke Takeshita for the AEW International Championship.

In a conversation with Adi Shankar (creator of Netflix’s “Devil May Cry” television series), Omega praised his agent Barry Bloom for how he handled Omega being out of action. Bloom wasn’t concerned with earning money from Omega but just wanted him to be healthy. Omega said the health scare made him aware of his own mortality, and he’s being more cautious because of that.

“He’s really like a family member to me, absolutely,” Omega said about Bloom. “It wasn’t like an obligation because he wanted my money, it was not that at all. It wasn’t, ‘Show me the money.’ It was like, ‘Show me your doctor’s report and tell me you’re healthy or if not, no one’s getting their hands on you.’ That kind of thing. I’d be like, ‘No, I think I can do it.’ He’s like, ‘No, no, you have to know you can do it. I don’t care about the money. You need to be healthy.’ And this is coming from someone now who like is understanding of his own mortality now. I’m being way more cautious, and as cautious as I am Barry is still more cautious than I am. Whether it costs me or him money or not, that’s not the primary concern. At all.”

Omega’s most recent match took place on Dynamite two weeks ago, teaming with Mark Briscoe, Kevin Knight & “Speedball” Mike Bailey in a loss to Kazuchika Okada, The Young Bucks & Ricochet. It was the first time iconic NJPW rivals Omega and Okada have faced off in an AEW ring.

All Star eight-man tag match booked for next AEW Dynamite

An All-Star eight-man tag featuring some of AEW’s top stars is set for the next episode of Dynamite.

Kenny Omega will team with Speedball Mike Bailey, Mark Briscoe, and Kevin Knight to take on The Young Bucks, Kazuchika Okada, and Ricochet. The match was made official on this week’s episode of Collision. In his tweet making the announcement, Tony Khan noted this would be the first time Omega and Okada have met in the ring since 2018.

After Swerve Strickland defeated Blake Christian in the opening match of this week’s Collision, The Young Bucks jumped him, laying out Swerve with the EVP trigger. They went for the Meltzer Driver but were interrupted by Omega, who made the save by laying out Nicholas with a snap dragon suplex. He attempted the v-trigger, but Matthew pulled Nicholas from the ring before Omega could lay him out.

It was also announced that both The Hurt Syndicate and MJF will be appearing on next week’s program. MJF in recent weeks has attempted to align himself with the group, but Bobby Lashley is the lone holdout that doesn’t trust whatever MJF has up his sleeve.

The AEW Dynamite lineup for April 30:

AEW Dynamite, Wednesday, April 30 —

  • Owen Hart Foundation men’s tournament semifinals: Hangman Adam Page vs. Kyle Fletcher
  • All-Star 8-man tag: Kenny Omega, Speedball Mike Bailey, Mark Briscoe, and Kevin Knight vs. The Young Bucks, Kazuchika Okada, and Ricochet
  • The Hurt Syndicate will appear live
  • MJF will appear live

Fight Game: Early WWE WrestleMania 41 predictions

John LaRocca and I are back to talk about the major topics in the world of wrestling on this week’s Fight Game Podcast — our last podcast together before WrestleMania 41 as I will be in Las Vegas for the F4W convention.

However, that doesn’t mean we won’t have an episode next week. In fact, we hope to have two episodes from Las Vegas next week and hope to also livestream them on YouTube, so make sure you’re subscribed to the F4WOnline YouTube channel.

We kicked off this show by giving out our Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down winners and losers of the week before going into our Top Five topics which included:

  • Early WWE WrestleMania 41 predictions
  • NXT Stand and Deliver
  • The Young Bucks’ return to AEW
  • Kenny Omega’s unserious promo to start AEW Dynasty
  • Dark Side of the Ring episode on Big Van Vader

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Kenny Omega & Kazuchika Okada have staredown at AEW Dynasty

The slow build to what many expect will be another meeting at July’s AEW All In Texas continued at Sunday’s AEW Dynasty.

Following Kenny Omega’s victory in a three-way with “Speedball” Mike Bailey and Ricochet to retain the AEW International title, reigning Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada’s music hit. He and Omega had a brief staredown in the ring before Omega left.

It was a scene reminiscent of a similar situation at last December’s World End. After Okada won the Continental Classic tournament with a win over Will Ospreay, Omega made his return to AEW following an extensive break due to multiple injuries to go face-to-face with his old rival.

Okada and the Young Bucks took Omega out in May 2024 to write him off in storyline, forming the new-look Elite along with Jack Perry. Both the Bucks and Perry have been off TV for months, leaving Okada as the lone remaining member.

The two had a legendary run of matches in NJPW from 2017 to 2018 that ended when Omega defeated his rival for the IWGP Heavyweight title in a best-of-three falls match at June 2018’s Dominion.

AEW Dynasty live results: Jon Moxley vs. Swerve Strickland, Toni Storm vs. Megan Bayne

AEW returns for their second pay-per-view of 2025 with tonight’s Dynasty from Philadelphia.

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley looks to extend his six-month reign as he defends against former champion Swerve Strickland, and AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against upstart Megan Bayne.

Kenny Omega defends his International title against both “Speedball” Mike Bailey and Ricochet in a three-way.

Both the men’s and women’s Owen Hart Foundation tournaments kick off as Will Ospreay faces Kevin Knight, Kyle Fletcher takes on Mark Briscoe, and TBS Champion Mercedes Mone faces Julia Hart.

The Hurt Syndicate defend the AEW World Tag Team titles against Big Bill & Bryan Keith while AEW World Trios Champions PAC, Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta defend against Rated FTR.

Chris Jericho defends his Ring of Honor World title against Bandido in a mask vs. title match while in a no time limit match with everyone banned from ringside, TNT Champion Daniel Garcia defends against Adam Cole.

**********

Zero Hour

The Wrestle Aunts (Renee Paquette & RJ City) welcome us alongside Jeff Jarrett, talk about how to order the show and go over tonight’s card. Madison Rayne joined the crew saying Megan Bayne is incredibly intimidating, but Toni Storm has walked through hell to carry the women’s division on her back. RJ said this is the equivalent of Attack of the 50 Foot Woman

We go backstage to Lexy Nair with Ricochet, who said since his debut in AEW, he’s been on a quest for gold, but has been screwed every step of the way. Tonight, in the city of champions, nothing will stop him from becoming International Champion.

Harley Cameron briefly joins the panel to help break down the Owen Hart Foundation brackets, as she mentioned Hangman Page having the most wins out of anyone in the men’s tournament with 90, how he defeated Jarrett (as the wild card) last year and will face another wild card again this year. Jarrett said he looks at the men’s field and sees Ospreay and all the rest, he is his pick. RJ said Kevin Knight is also a wild card in itself, as he just debuted last week. They throw it to a video package for Knight, who talked about training in the Hart Dungeon and sees a lot of Owen Hart’s qualities in himself. The Jet feels all the pressure in the world, but he won’t hesitate to knock Ospreay’s block off.

Tomohiro Ishii hilarious joined the panel completely silent until Mark Briscoe came in to talk about his match tonight with Kyle Fletcher. Briscoe calls him a stepping stone, as the Word of the Day is “advancement” as in, he’s advancing in the Owen Hart Foundation tournament. After Briscoe & Ishii left, RJ & Jarrett both picked Fletcher.

Video of Swerve Strickland ringing the bell at the Philadelphia 76ers game last night and taking photos with Alex Rodriguez was shown before we see Strickland & Nana entering the building earlier in the day.

CRU (Lio Rush & Action Andretti) & Nick Wayne (w/Kip Sabian & Mother Wayne) defeated Top Flight (Dante & Darius Martin w/Leila Grey) & AR Fox

(Fun party match to get the crowd going, as they were loudly behind Fox from the jump. This was a slower start than you’d expect, but once Fox made his hot tag and ran wild, it picked up in a big way. The numbers game was too much for Top Flight & Fox, as it’ll be interesting to see if Wayne continues to pal around with CRU going forward.)

Excalibur, Tony Schiavone & Daddy Magic Matt Menard are on the call as Andretti took a powder right at the bell, so Fox cleared the top and took out CRU with a dive. Inside the ring, Rush & Andretti gained control with a leg trip/neckbreaker combo for two, but Darius made the tag and fired off lighting quick offense until he was sent crashing into the steps by Wayne. Darius was isolated until Dante made the hot tag and was a house of fire with some wild agility to get the crowd going. Sabian ran distraction, but Dante cut off Rush from using a chain. After a Tug of War, Andretti was in to help his partner and hit a double suplex, but Darius broke the pin.

Massive AR Fox chants from the crowd, as Dante hit a bounce back off the ropes into a double clothesline with Andretti. Fox made the hot tag and hit a corner cannonball on Andretti and corkscrew brainbuster on Wayne. Fox skinned the cat into a double stomp, rolling into a double cutter to send everyone to the outside. Three top rope clearing dives by Fox, who went up top for a senton, but Wayne got the knees up. Standing Spanish Fly from Darius saved his partner, but Andretti flew in with a handspring back elbow. Dante in with his bounce back dropkick, but Rush hit the Rush Hour cutter. Wayne tried to go up in the corner, but Fox flew in with Lo-Mein Pain. Again, Sabian took the ref, but Grey pulled him to the floor. With the ref distracted, Mother Wayne tripped up Fox in the ropes, as Nick hit Wayne’s World to steal it.

Athena joins the panel with her spinner title was asked her prediction for the Mone vs. Hart match tonight and said she doesn’t have time for Mone’s crap, she’s the longest reigning champion, man or woman, in AEW & ROH. RJ mentioned Athena’s last singles loss came in the Owen Hart Tournament, but she reminded him she’s 63-0 in ROH. Athena puts over Harley Cameron for being a hard worker, but says she can’t wait to defeat Mone in the second round. She won’t discredit Julia Hart, her tag team partner last night on Collision, but she wants to face Mone. In regards to the Men’s Owen Hart Tournament, Athena reluctantly picks Will Ospreay.

Max Caster Open Challenge

Caster said there’s been a lot of names being brought up for this Challenge, but the Maxamaniacs know there’s only one chant the fans want to say. “Let’s Go Max, You’re the Best Wrestler Alive” chant actually got going, so Caster had to constantly stop them and say they weren’t doing it right. Caster told the fans to show up for him just like they have for other great Philadelphia athletes, revealing a Ben Simmons jersey. This finally got the crowd to boo, as Caster said the Philly fans aren’t as great as the New York ones.

The lights went out until new theme music (Underground by Jane’s Addiction), video that read 5 Tool Player, pyro and ring gear for the returning “Pride of Pro Wrestling” Anthony Bowens, who was joined by Billy Gunn to a massive ovation.

Anthony Bowens (w/Billy Gunn) defeated Max Caster

Caster pointed out his trademark, but Bowens ripped it away and chucked it aside. The match officially began as Bowens hit his reverse leg lariat and a roaring elbow to win it quick. Bowens hugged Gunn, as commentary talked about how that was years of frustration behind that elbow.

Back to the panel, where RJ was disappointed that his boy Caster, who had the crowd in the palm of his hand, got beat so quickly. Jarrett then informs us Will Ospreay vs. Kevin Knight will open the show.

AEW Dynasty

Will Ospreay defeated Kevin Knight in an Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

(Kevin Knight didn’t know he would be in this tournament a week ago and he came in here and knocked it out of the park. I know Ospreay can make anyone look like a million bucks, but Knight deserves all the credit in the world here, he more than held his own and this was a star making performance. For fans unaware of Knight prior to last week, they sure know who he is now and I’m looking forward to his future in All Elite Wrestling. As for Ospreay, I’m like many in thinking the Owen is his to lose.)

Jim Ross & Taz join Excalibur on the call, as the crowd exploded for Ospreay’s entrance to kick off the show. Knight also got a strong reaction as commentary put over how Knight & Nick Wayne will be representing AEW in New Japan’s Best of Super Juniors this summer. Knight got the first take down, followed with a corner splash and sliding lariat for an early two. Ospreay draped Knight on the top rope, booted him to the floor and followed with a slingshot crossbody as Ospreay bowed to the Owen Hart Foundation trophy. Back inside, Pip, Pip, Cheerio connected, as Ospreay fired off loud chops, Knight answered with one of his own, so Ospreay sank in an abdominal stretch. Knight escaped, ramped up with a series of clotheslines and UFO splash for two. Stundog and corkscrew kick in response from Ospreay, who has Knight’s hand print on his chest from the chop. Knight leap frogged Hidden Blade, tried a German, but Ospreay landed on his feet, hit a chop to the throat and snap German of his own. Knight cut off Ospreay with a dropkick right in the mush, but ultimately ran into a standing Spanish Fly for the double down.

Dueling chants, as both exchange chops and forearms, as each maintained wrist control throughout until Ospreay buckled. Ospreay tried a wall walk, but Knight met him with a dropkick, hurricanrana out of the corner, sending Ospreay to the outside. After bailing, Ospreay thought he was cleared, but Knight flew over the ring post for a dive. Back inside, Ospreay hung up Knight in the ropes, tried a sunset bomb to the floor, but Knight held on, so Ospreay looked for a Styles Clash, only for Knight to counter into a DDT spike on the ramp. Instead of taking the countout, Knight flew off the top with a springboard dive at 9, quickly threw Ospreay into the ring and hit another DDT for two. Knight wanted his springboard lariat, missed, Ospreay floated over, wanted a Styles Clash, but Knight snapped through into a hurricanrana pin attempt for two, leaving the crowd on their feet.

Hook kick lands flush from Ospreay, but Knight hit an anti-air dropkick off an Oscutter attempt. Knight up top and hit a massive UFO Splash for a close near fall. Knight went for his springboard lariat, but Ospreay caught him with a Cutter in mid-air. Knight again though, avoided an Oscutter, but Ospreay managed to hit a Styles Clash for two. Ospreay hit the Oscutter flush, but again, Knight kicked out. Hidden Blade demolished Knight to finally give Ospreay the win in a hell of an opener.

The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin w/MVP) defeated Big Bill & Bryan Keith to retain the AEW World Tag Team Titles

(The match itself was ok, Bill put up as much of a fight as he could, but the MJF interference, though not needed, continues the story with he & The Hurt Syndicate, so I get it. It’s going to take a heck of a lot to get the titles off Benjamin & Lashley, who continue to be super over.)

Keith wasted no time tagging Bill when he saw Lashley was starting, as Bill was backed up to the wrong corner, but fought his way out. Bill hit two clotheslines sending Lashley & Benjamin to the floor to regroup early causing MVP to leave commentary to tend to his team. Benjamin was able to cut off Bill coming back in the ring, allowing Lashley to drive repeated shoulders in the corner. Bill avoided a German, backing Benjamin back to his corner, allowing Keith to make the tag, but foolishly started a slugfest. Benjamin immediately mowed him down with a clothesline, as fast tags kept Keith isolated, as Benjamin sent Keith crashing from barricade to the ring apron. Stalling one armed suplex from Lashley got a near fall, but a follow-up missed corner charge allowed Keith to recover enough to dive for a Bill hot tag.

Locomotion corner splashes and big boot to Lashley had Bill posing too long, allowing Benjamin to hit a big German suplex. Bill started no selling Benjamin’s strikes and hit a Black Hole Slam for two. Bill wanted a Chokeslam, but Benjamin rolled through with a thrust kick. Benjamin charged right into a Bill big boot, as Keith tagged in, but was blindsided by Lashley, who followed with a Flatliner on Bill. A counter from a suplex into Snake Eyes from Bill sent Lashley to the outside, as the big men brawled on the floor. All of a sudden MJF pops up from the front row and decked Bill with a Dynamite Diamond Ring shot, which didn’t make Lashley or Benjamin too happy. With Keith alone, he was dropped with a German suplex and huge Spear to give Benjamin the pin.

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defeated Julia Hart in an Owen Hart Foundation Quarterfinal

(While this wasn’t on the level of Mone’s past 3 or 4 PPV matches and took a while to really kick into gear, I was surprised how the fans were completely behind Hart down the stretch, as they were biting at every submission and pin attempt. That was a really great moment, as I don’t think anyone thought Hart was winning, but it was cool to see the crowd support her. All roads lead to Mone & Athena, which I think will be the match come All In, it’s just how they decide to get there. If they do face each other in the semis, will Mone take her first loss in that round? Will Athena take a loss this quickly in her time back in AEW? Or will they have a No Contest/Time Limit that eliminates both women? Time will tell.)

Mone got pyro for this match and it hilariously startled Taz, who had no idea it was coming. Hart used her athleticism in the early going to avoid Mone’s offense, as a head scissors sent Mone to the corner. Harley Cameron is watching on backstage talking with Mini-Mone, as back to the ring, Hart rolled through a Lungblower and countered Mone Maker into a backslide for two. Mone fired off a chop, tried to scale the ropes, but tripped, causing the fans to boo. Taz scolded the fans telling them to try it, as Mone did her dance, allowing Hart to attack from behind and did the Undertaker rope walk clubbing blow from the top. Hart slammed Mone down repeatedly to the mat, as Mone tried to sweep the leg on the apron, but Hart did a cartwheel, only to be Speared against the barricade. Mone hit a Meteora off the apron and back inside got a near fall.

Dueling chants from the crowd, as Mone kept Hart grounded. A jawbreaker into an inside cradle got Hart a two, but the momentum was quickly cut off by Mone with a dropkick. Mone wanted Three Amigos, Hart escaped after the second, tried a standing moonsault, but Mone got the knees up. Mone hung up Hart in the Tree of Woe and mocked the House of Black pose, but as Mone went up top, Hart powered up into an overhead throw. Mone missed a corner charge, as Hart hit a dive to the floor, quickly back inside for a round the World DDT. Hart tried to repeat the move, but Mone countered into the Lungblower for the double down.

Hart rolled through Mone Maker, jackknife cover for two, as both fought for position, ending up in the corner. Mone charged, but Hart got the Tarantula, as Taz gave a shoutout to Tajiri. Octopus Hold applied by Hart, but Mone collapsed into the corner, sending Hart head first into the buckle. Hart stomped Mone to the mat, went up top, but Mone hit the double stomp to the face off the moonsault attempt. Two backstabbers from Mone, but Hart fought off the third into a crucifix bomb for two. Both ladies traded Statement Maker and Hartless attempts, as Mone rolled through into a quick pin attempt for two, allowing her to reapply the Statement Maker. Crowd completely turned on Mone and are entirely behind Hart at this point, as she escaped into a roll-up for two. Mone recovered, got a cradle and the flash pin.

Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, PAC & Wheeler Yuta) defeated Rated FTR (Cope, Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) to retain the AEW Trios Titles

(The match itself was an action-packed trios tag, one you’d absolutely expect from the talent involved. The big story here is the post-match in something that everyone not named Cope saw coming a mile away, but was done perfectly. FTR are now killer heels and we’re left to wonder if Cope will ever be seen in AEW again after such a heinous attack.)

Nigel McGuinness joins commentary as we’re told referee Paul Turner “drew this assignment” despite having issues with Dax Harwood in recent weeks. PAC & Harwood have a fast exchange to start before Harwood scrambled out from a Brutalizer attempt. Cope tagged in and was quickly taken to the Death Rider corner, as Yuta, who hails from Philly, was booed mercilessly. Cope pulled on the beard, tagged in Wheeler, who hit a slingshot shoulder block and chops to follow. Fast tags from Wheeler & Cope, who keep up their double team until Harwood joins up for an assisted Avalanche Powerslam by Wheeler on Castagnoli for two. Wheeler followed with a Tope Suicida, as back inside, PAC ran distraction, allowing Yuta to shove Wheeler off the top into a Castagnoli uppercut. Wheeler remained isolated until he went to make the hot tag to Cope, Harwood stole it and ran wild to zero reaction from the crowd. Tony Schiavone drove home how that tag was meant for Cope.

Castagnoli no sold three Harwood lariats, tried a pop-up uppercut, but Harwood countered into a back slide. Yuta tried to make the save, but Cope caught him in the Grind House, while Harwood trapped PAC in the Sharpshooter and Castagnoli had Wheeler in one as well. Harwood & Castagnoli started swinging while still having the submissions applied until they broke it up, Castagnoli cleaned house, tagged Yuta and they did the Giant Swing into the dropkick on Harwood for two. Locomotion uppercuts in the corner from Death Riders, as PAC hit a Tombstone, while Castagnoli took turns with Fastball Specials using Yuta & PAC for two, as Wheeler broke the count. Harwood dodged a charging Castagnoli and dove for the Cope hot tag, as he was a house of fire, hitting PAC with an Impaler for two.

Quick tags made, as Cope hit a Power-Plex on PAC with Wheeler hitting the splash and Harwood hitting a headbutt off the top. Yuta recovered and hit a missile dropkick on Cope, but was planted with a bounceback powerbomb by Harwood. PAC reappeared and locked in the Brutalizer as Castagnoli & Yuta held off Cope & Wheeler, but they broke through to stop the submission. Yuta wanted a Busaiku Knee, but ran into a Shatter Machine, as PAC was planted with a Spear, but Castagnoli broke the count. Yuta leapfrogged a Spear, as Cope nearly hit Harwood, but pumped the brakes. Yuta sent both men colliding into each other before hitting Harwood with a Busaiku Knee and got the pin.

Post-match, as Death Riders celebrated back through the crowd, Wheeler was left standing as Cope offered his hand to help Harwood up. Rated FTR stood tall as Wheeler was about to leave when Harwood laid out Cope with a piledriver. Harwood quickly grabbed two chairs and wanted Wheeler to deliver a Con-Chair-To, but Wheeler shoved his partner down. Wheeler went to help out Cope, but pulled him into a Shatter Machine. FTR hit a Spike Piledriver onto the chair as Harwood went to finish the job, but Wheeler stopped him and said “allow me” and hit the Con-Chair-To. The doctor ran to the ring, but Wheeler delivered another one for good measure. Wheeler mockingly put a neck brace on himself and laid on the stretcher as Harwood gave him chest compressions. Wheeler told the doctors Cope needs the brace more than he does as FTR walked to the back as Cope was loaded on the stretcher. McGuinness said FTR stands for F The Rest.

Timeless Toni Storm (w/Luther) defeated Megan Bayne (w/Penelope Ford) to retain the AEW Women’s Title

(Rocky survived Drago or Clubber Lang, whichever you choose. This match was great, as Bayne was built as the perfect monster and delivered her best match in AEW to date. There’s just no holding a candle to Storm, who is by far the best character in all of pro wrestling at this point. The fans were into this from the jump and especially the ending. The build for this was simple, but tremendously effective and resulted in a really fun PPV Women’s Title match. While I wonder where Bayne goes from here, there’s just no reason Storm should be losing the title any time soon.)

After Bayne’s entrance, Justin Roberts introduced us to our Feature Presentation, as Storm was training like she was Rocky on the streets of Philadelphia before screaming into a pillow. Storm is dressed as Balboa, while Luther is Mickey. McGuinness said Storm has been drinking eggs and beating meat and to take that how you will.

Storm tried a quick start, but Bayne showed her power with a shoulder tackle before backing Storm to the corner. Storm ducked a lariat and hit a cross body out of the corner, as she fired off body kicks, only to be caught with an overhead throw. After a bodyslam, Bayne wiped her feet with Storm, as the crowd is loudly behind Storm, who was flattened with a fall away slam and big boot sent her to the outside. Luther tended to Storm, as Bayne hit a big Tope Suicida, wiping out Luther. Storm had dodged, used Luther as a launch pad to hit a Tornado DDT. Back inside, a diving cross body off the top got Storm a near fall. Ford tripped up Storm, allowing Bayne to hit a pump kick and regain control. Bayne remained in the driver’s seat, Ford got in more shots as well, licking Storm in the process. Storm tried battling back with a Thesz Press, but Bayne caught and hit repeated overhead throws. About the fourth time Ford tried interfering, Luther recovered and carried her to the back, leaving Bayne to go at it alone.

This allowed Storm to ramp up, finally hitting the Thesz Press and Tornado DDT out of the corner. Indian Death Lock/STF variation applied, but Bayne powered her way to the ropes. Bayne avoided Storm Zero, sent Storm to the apron where she hit a back suplex from the outside in. Bayne took way too long going up the ropes, allowing Storm to recover and hit a release German suplex that nearly dropped Bayne on her head. Both ladies slowly up and a slugfest ensued with Storm relentless, sidestepping a Bayne lariat into a release German. Bayne caught a charge and hit a stalling German of her own. Bayne connected on a brutal Falcon Arrow for a near fall. Storm rolled through Fate’s Decent, they trade standing switches until Storm hit a snap German. Sweet Cheek Music hit, Bayne no sold, so Storm fired off a headbutt flush and three more Sweet Cheek Musics, whiplashing Bayne’s head. Storm Zero hit, but Bayne was out at one, shocking everyone. Bayne hit herself repeatedly as she stood up and clobbered Storm with two lariats, Liger Bomb, looked for Fate’s Decent, but Storm countered into a Small Package for the flash pin. Bayne couldn’t believe it and neither could Storm on the ramp.

Kyle Fletcher (w/Don Callis) defeated Mark Briscoe in an Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

(Just a fantastic match, as this was one of the best matches of the night so far. No matter who Briscoe is in there with, you want him to win and that will never change. I hope one day they give Briscoe some big wins in AEW, but until then, he’s the perfect guy to put over everyone he’s in there with strong. Fletcher looked excellent in this and I can’t wait to see who he faces in the next round.)

Fletcher hit a dive before the bell during Briscoes entrance, hit a Helluva Kick, but Briscoe nearly countered a Brainbuster into a cradle for two. Fletcher went to the apron where he hit a thrust kick, but back dropped by Briscoe on the edge of the ring. Somersault neckbreaker off the apron, as he tried to set up a chair to launch off of, but referee Rick Knox took it away, so Briscoe told the crowd to boo that man. Baseball slide connected, as Briscoe leapt off the barricade with an elbow. Briscoe threw in multiple chairs, causing Knox to play fetch, giving Briscoe enough time to try a springboard, but Fletcher cut him off and hit an Exploder onto the chair, undetected by Knox as we see Konosuke Takeshita watching on backstage.

Charging boot sent Briscoe flying to the floor, as Fletcher hit multiple powerbombs onto the apron and one onto the barricade. Excalibur brought up the possibility of Fletcher & Takeshita facing each other in the finals when Callis said he was stirring stuff up for matches that will never happen, which Schiavone was about to call him out on, but Briscoe broke the count. Fletcher charged with a boot in the corner, wanted his Avalanche Brainbuster, but Briscoe bit free and hit a shotgun dropkick into the double down as we also see Brody King watching on in the back. Both trade hard corner chops, as Fletcher turned to kitchen sink knees, leading to both ducking running clothesline attempts, getting a head of steam and colliding like two trucks for a reset.

Both slowly up and slugging it out, as Briscoe ramps it up with a flying forearm and Fisherman’s Buster for two. Thrust kick response from Fletcher, Briscoe floated through a Liger Bomb attempt, but Fletcher powered up into brutal Snake Eyes. Enzugiri and thrust kick on the apron, as Fletcher followed with a nasty brainbuster on the apron and proper sheer drop brainbuster back in the ring for two, as Callis is furious. Briscoe floated over the Avalanche Brainbuster, wanted a Cutthroat Driver, but Fletcher held on in the ropes. BT Bomb from Briscoe, who followed with a Froggy Bow for a close near fall. Briscoe wanted a Jay Driller, Fletcher spun out, but Briscoe hit a Cutthroat Driver flush, but Fletcher wisely rolled outside. Briscoe leapt off the top with a Froggy Bow, as back inside, tried again, but Fletcher got the double boots up. Running corner kicks land right on the button, as Fletcher hits the Avalanche Brainbuster to get the win.

Bandido defeated Chris Jericho in a Title vs. Mask match for the ROH World Title

(While this was a good match, I enjoyed their Collision match a few months ago more. The finish was pretty ridiculous if I’m being honest, but it resulted in a feel-good moment and the crowd were more than happy to cheer against Jericho and ultimately sing “Hey Hey Hey, Goodbye” to him as he left without the ROH Title.)

Bandido hugged his mother and sister, who are seated ringside before the match, as Jericho hit a Code Breaker right at the bell and got a close near fall. Lionsault connected for another two, as Bandido recovered, avoided a Jericho charge into a handstand, sent Jericho to the floor, hit one dive and another, clearing the top with a somersault plancha. Bandido brought Jericho over to his family, kissed his mother and calmed her before throwing Jericho back into the ring, going up top with a Tornillo for two. One handed (to start) stalling vertical suplex for a full minute, as McGuinness scolded the crowd for counting in English and not Spanish. Running boot on the apron from Bandido, who tried it again, but Jericho caught him and powerbombed him to the floor, causing Bandido to splat. Jericho grabbed the camera and filmed Bandido’s family as they were crying, chanting for Bandido. Jericho kicked up his feet in the corner and took a breather as Bandido broke the count at 15, as commentary reminded us about the 20 count under ROH Rules.

Chants of “Please Retire” directed at Jericho, who paint brushed and flattened Bandido with a big boot for two. Both started slugging it out until Bandido hit a spinning DDT, firing up with a series of kicks. Jericho answered with an enzugiri and again trash talked the family, allowing Bandido to hit a sunset bomb for two. Bandido was crotched in the corner, as Jericho hit ten punches, tried a hurricanrana, Bandido caught him, looked for a powerbomb, but Jericho countered with a snap hurricanrana in mid-air. Jericho again opted to pose, allowing Bandido to hit a Gorilla Press Slam and Frog Splash for two. Bandido tried another Tornillo, but Jericho got the double knees up for the double down.

Both found themselves back-to-back, as they slowly rose to their feet, nodded and we were going to get a stand-off, but Jericho attacked Bandido from behind. Jericho tried a head scissors, waving to the crowd in the air, but Bandido countered into reverse GTS. Bandido wanted the 21-Plex, but Jericho rolled through into the Walls of Jericho. Bandido got the ropes, as Jericho argued with referee Bryce. Bryan Keith ran to the ring, but Gravity soon followed and brawled with him ringside. With the ref’s attention turned, Jericho grabbed the baseball bat and decked Bandido, hiding the evidence soon after. Jericho made the cover and got the win.

Post-match, referee Aubrey Edwards, who wasn’t the official in the actual match, was talking to Bandido’s mother and sister, who told her about the baseball bat. They left ringside and showed Edwards the bat. Referee Bryce, Aubrey & Justin Roberts talked and we’re told the match has restarted. Jericho grabbed Bandido’s sister by the hair, but she slapped him, allowing Bandido to hit the reverse GTS and 21-Plex to win the match and the title. Tony Schiavone said not often are matches restarted in AEW, but justice was served in this case. Bandido celebrated with his mother, sister & Gravity as Jericho was left seething.

Adam Cole defeated Daniel Garcia in a No Interference/No Time-Limit match to win the TNT Title

(I thought this was a solid end to this chapter they’ve been building up on Collision. Part of me wonders if the seeds were planted for Garcia possibly joining up with FTR eventually? There were times in this match where Garcia was getting overconfident, especially after Cole seemed to injure his leg early on. I don’t see this being the last time these two face one another and I look forward to seeing it again whenever that might be. I’m anxious to see where both men go after this.)

Pie faces and a slugfest kicks things off, as Cole missed a pump kick and ran into a Garcia charging knee. Garcia, who has failed to hit 10 corner punches on Cole during their string of matches, finally hits them, but pushed his luck, wanting 10 more, this time, Cole threw him to the floor. Cole wanted Panama Sunrise off the apron, Garcia dodged and Cole came up limping. Referee never had time to check on Cole, as Garcia flew in with a shotgun dropkick and stomped the knee. Back inside, Garcia zoned in, as Cole is really selling the left leg. The moment Garcia let his foot off the gas briefly, Cole hit a fireman’s carry neckbreaker on his good knee. Cole tried the Panama Sunrise again, but Garcia rolled through, nearly got the Dragon Tamer, only settled for a lariat that turned Cole inside out, as Garcia mean mugged the camera.

Garcia connected on a visually awesome twisting Gotch Style Piledriver, as commentary puts over Jerry Lynn. Garcia lowered the knee pad, but Cole ramped up into a slug fest. Both collide with stereo big boots, Garcia hit a snap back suplex, throws overhand chops, ran into a superkick, as Garcia literally almost fell into a pin for two, as Cole countered into a crucifix for two of his own. Garcia blocked a superkick into an Ankle Lock, but Cole rolled to the floor. Garcia followed and sent Cole crashing into the steps, but as Garcia stood tall and posed, the delay allowed Cole to hit a neckbreaker on the knee while both were standing on the steps. Panama Sunrise hit off the apron, as Cole went to lower The Boom back in the ring, but Garcia collapsed. Garcia nearly tricked Cole with an inside cradle, but as both got up, Cole’s leg buckled and Garcia hit a Panama Sunrise of his own. Garcia lowered The Boom, but Cole kicked out.

A visibly frustrated Garcia slammed Cole’s leg repeatedly against the mat, but had second thoughts when trying for another piledriver. Callback to his match with MJF last year, Garcia went for the Avalanche Piledriver, but Cole fought out and hit the Panama Sunrise flush. Cole went to the other side of the ring and hit a second before lowering The Boom to win the title.

Post-match, Cole offered his hand to Garcia, who accepted the handshake and gave Cole the ring, despite being heartbroken.

Kenny Omega defeated Ricochet & Speedball Mike Bailey to retain the AEW International Title

(This was one of the best 3-way’s I’ve seen in recent memory, as the creativity from all involved throughout, for 30 minutes plus, is unbelievably impressive. You could argue this could’ve been a little shorter, but that’s a nitpick. The crowd seemed tired during the Garcia & Cole match at times, but they seriously picked back up during this. The post-match was simple, but yet another tease to the eventual Omega & Okada showdown that everyone is looking forward to, for what certainly could be a unification match, whenever that may be.)

Ricochet immediately bailed so Omega & Bailey could start. Omega got a roll-up, but was sent to the floor and into the commentary table. Ricochet was sent outside, leaving Omega to hit a hurricanrana on Bailey, but as Ricochet went for one on Omega, he was trapped in an arm bar. Bailey ramped up the Speedball kicks on Omega, as Ricochet flew in, missed a dive, so Bailey hit a dive outside on Omega. Ricochet sprung to the floor, but got paint brushed back and forth by Bailey & Omega to pop the crowd big to the chants of “Bald”. Omega wanted You Can’t Escape on Bailey, who in fact, escaped, allowing Bailey to drape Omega over the barricade. Bailey wanted a moonsault double knees, but Ricochet cut him off and hit a rolling DVD on Bailey onto Omega on the barricade.

With Omega left to try and recover, Ricochet trash talked the crowd as he put the boots to Bailey. While trying to keep Omega at bay, Ricochet wanted his Northern Lights into a Brainbuster, but Omega returned and we get a neckbreaker/DDT combo spot with Ricochet standing tall. Tope Suicida took out both men on opposite sides of the ring before taking Schiavone’s headset and boasting about himself. The camera shot was great, as Bailey flew in off screen and cracked Ricochet right in the face. Bailey politely apologized to Schiavone (who I think dropped a F bomb, popping Taz & Excalibur) before hitting a missile dropkick back inside on Ricochet. Omega quickly back in for You Can’t Escape, but Bailey dodged the moonsault. Ricochet flew in, missed a Lionsault, as he nearly got a double pin off a Bailey backslide attempt on Omega. Bailey meanwhile, nearly pinned both with a double crucifix pin, while Omega did a double backslide for two. Everyone popped up, only to deck one another with high kicks for a triple down and “This Is Awesome” chants.

Everyone slugged it out to their feet, as Ricochet kept being discarded by Bailey & Omega, who fired off jabs, as Ricochet tried again to intervene, but Bailey hit a triangle moonsault to the floor. With Bailey & Ricochet down on the floor, Omega got the crowd amped up with the Terminator Dive on both. Ricochet’s turn to fly as he hit a picture perfect Fosbury Flop, as he went for baseball slide, but Bailey dodged, sprung up and hit an Asai Moonsault. Omega & Bailey back inside, as Bailey missed a PK and moonsault, as Ricochet & Omega were stacked on each other, allowing Bailey to hit his standing moonsault double knees. Time Adventure destroyed Omega, but Ricochet pulled referee Rick Knox’s leg during the count. A pissed off Bailey went after Ricochet on the floor and beat him up relentlessly on the apron. Bailey tried his moonsault double knees, but missed and crashed badly. Knox checked on him outside, as Ricochet chop blocked Bailey (and also Knox, who had to no sell this unfortunately) as back inside, Ricochet fought with Omega up in the ropes. Bailey came back in with a wild Avalanche Poison Rana on Ricochet, but instead of making a pin attempt, he went to Omega, who dropped the bottom out on Bailey and hit a Snap Dragon, while Ricochet suffered the same fate. Omega stacked Bailey onto Ricochet and hit a wild double Snap Dragon that had the crowd going wild.

With both men set in position, V-Triggers delivered to both, as Bailey was launched from the ring during his. Ricochet countered One Winged Angel, Omega countered Vertigo, but Omega was able to hit Croyt’s Wrath for a close two. Bailey dodged One Winged Angel and hit a back heel kick as they teased a callback to how Ricochet & Bailey won their match to advance to tonight with a high stack pin for two. Ricochet dragon screwed Bailey, wanted a powerbomb on Omega, who sent Ricochet tumbling outside. Roundhouse Kick cracked Omega, as Bailey hit Adventure Time in the corner, missed Ultimate Weapon, as he screamed in pain, allowing Omega to sink in a knee bar. Ricochet flew in with a springboard 450 on Omega for two. Ricochet hit Vertigo, but Bailey kicked out and Ricochet couldn’t believe it. Omega cut off the Spirit Gun, as Bailey got a high stack for two. Roundhouse Kick landed again on Omega, as Bailey went up in the corner, only to get shoved off by Ricochet, who followed with a Shooting Star Press for two. Ricochet wanted another on Bailey, who got his knees up into a cradle for a near fall.

Ricochet begged off, as Bailey paint brushed the hell out of Ricochet, who caught a kick and wrenched the bad knee. Bailey fought to his feet and struck the Crane pose and booted Ricochet’s head off with the kick to make Daniel LaRusso proud. Bailey hit the Ultimate Weapon, but Omega flew in with the V-Trigger, wanted One Winged Angel, but Ricochet broke it up with a Poison Rana on Omega. Ricochet wanted an Avalanche Vertigo, but Omega joined with an Avalanche One Winged Angel on Ricochet, while Bailey was trapped in the Tree of Woe, allowing Omega to get the pin.

Post-match, Omega was trying to recover before the coin drop sounded and Kazuchika Okada made his way to the ring with his Continental Title. The stare down was only brief, as Omega flinched first and just walked to the back, as the tease of this showdown finally happening in AEW, continues.

Jon Moxley (w/Marina Shafir) defeated Swerve Strickland (w/Prince Nana) to retain the AEW World Title

(Well, it wouldn’t be a Jon Moxley main event without a crap ton of interference one way or another. The House of Moxley thankfully wasn’t the reason he retained yet again, instead, two familiar faces who haven’t been seen in 6 months in AEW, made the save and cost Strickland the title. It’ll be interesting to see where they go from here, as I assume Death Riders & The Young Bucks vs. Strickland, Page & The Opps could be Anarchy in the Arena next month. I for one am happy The Bucks are back and look forward to seeing how they explain themselves after tonight, especially with Page also involved on the opposing end of things it seems.)

Strickland had a Static Shock theme to his entrance and attire, as we get big fight intros from Justin Roberts to start. Referee Paul Turner holds up the briefcase like it’s the actual AEW World Title and that just visually looks ridiculous to me. Moxley still has marks on his back from taking that board of nails a few weeks ago. Commentary even brought up how they thought these two would slug it out to start, but instead, Strickland picked the ankle and started with wrestling. Moxley scrambled and escaped, but Strickland took him back down, ultimately connecting on his corner uppercut before hitting the Griddy. Test of Strength broke by Moxley, as Strickland flipped out in the corner, sending Moxley to the floor to eat a pump kick. Back to the ring, Strickland went up top, but Moxley swung for the fences and sent Strickland crashing outside. Shafir literally stepped on top of Strickland walking away before Moxley stomped his head into the steps.

Moxley was hell bent on busting Strickland open with forearms to the forehead before going back out to the floor. Moxley chucked Strickland over the table, wiping Excalibur out in the process, as Strickland is now bleeding, while Moxley bit him. Moxley hit a Paradigm Shift on the ring steps before taking a victory lap back to the ring, as Strickland just broke the count at 9. Stalling piledriver for a Moxley near fall, who bit and wrenched at the cut before flipping off the fans, booting Strickland in the face. Inside out suplex hit, as Strickland called off Knox from checking on him. Moxley again bit at the forehead, as he dared Strickland to hit him harder, so Strickland obliged and buckled the champion. Forearms turned to slaps until Moxley sank in a Kimura into a Triangle. Strickland powered up into a powerbomb to break free into the reset.

Strickland ramped up with strikes into his delayed vertical suplex for a near fall. Moxley tried a choke, Strickland rolled into a pin attempt for two. Strickland wanted his rolling Flatliner, but Moxley hit a Cutter in mid-air. Strickland countered Death Rider into a Vertebreaker attempt, but Moxley spun out into a Bulldog Choke, transitioned into a Rear Naked Choke. Strickland got the ropes and finally able to hit the rolling Flatliner before hitting a House Call on the mark for two. Another House Call hit, but as he went for a third, Moxley turned him inside out with a lariat, only he no sold and hit House Call for another double down.

Shafir came into the ring with the briefcase and teased using it until Nana got in her face. Shafir decked him with the briefcase and booted him to the floor until Strickland grabbed Shafir, Moxley leapt for Cutter, but mistakenly laid out Shafir instead. Strickland dropped Moxley with a Paradigm Shift, but took too long to go up top and was launched to the floor. Moxley brought out a ladder set it up ringside, as he wanted a suplex off it, but Strickland fought out, raked the back, bit the head and hit a Swerve Stomp off the ladder through the Spanish Announce Table. Strickland appeared to have tweaked his left leg as both staggered back to the ring to a slugfest that really ramped up. Moxley went at the leg, as Shafir recovered and threw in a chair, as Moxley chucked it at Strickland, who ducked and ref Paul Turner got clobbered to a huge pop.

Strickland connected with a Vertebreaker as Hangman Adam Page then power walked to the ring, but couldn’t decide on who to hit with a Buckshot, Moxley or Strickland. Death Riders appear and attack Page, who side-stepped a Busiaku Knee from Yuta, who hit Castagnoli, as PAC was sent outside. Page dropped Moxley with a Dead Eye, as The Opps ran out and brawled with Death Riders to the back. Strickland chucked a chair into the face of Moxley before going up top, hitting the Swerve Stomp, but his knee was badly damaged and there was no ref.

Just then, the lights went out and when they came back on, The Young Bucks were holding Strickland by the arms and hit a BTE Trigger. Moxley crawled over, made the cover and got the pin. The Bucks left through the crowd, Moxley recovered with Shafir, as Strickland was staring down The Bucks, while Page was staring down Strickland to end the show.

AEW Dynasty preview & predictions: Keep on rollin’, baby

Image: AEW

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

AEW is once again cooking. Last month’s Revolution was one of the best pay-per-views in company history. It might even be the best if the main event was anything less than a torturous watch worthy of a trip to The Hague.

Dynasty likely won’t reach those same heights as it’s tough to put together a card with only a few weeks of build but it still offers enough to make it worth our time and money. Megan Bayne, “Speedball” Mike Bailey and Kevin Knight are all making their big show debuts. Swerve Strickland might even reclaim his place at the top of the company. 

We’re officially on the road to All In. Let’s see how it all shakes out for Sunday’s AEW Dynasty (8 PM Eastern main card start on pay-per-view):

Will Ospreay vs. Kevin Knight in a men’s Owen Hart Foundation quarterfinal

Every generation sees the bar for athleticism move higher and higher. The splash of the top rope that used to draw oohs and aahs from the crowd now hardly draws applause. A moonsault gets only slightly more. What was once special becomes expected as that bar climbs. Every night, freak athletes wrestle on TV.

Yet, Kevin Knight may be a step above the rest. He might be the one who moves that bar to the thinnest of air. The way he moves is unique. The height he gets on a dropkick kind of melts my brain. We’re conditioned to see things look a certain way. Yet, his movements surprise. They don’t align with what we imagine. The suddenness and explosion remind me of when I first saw PAC highlight reels. We can’t predict outliers, but when we see one, we can recognize it. Knight is one of them. 

Ospreay got another tattoo and you simply have to hand it to him. Lots of sweet birds, dragons, and other cool symbols are finding their way onto his body. He is unapologetically himself and frankly, I respect it. Keep filling that skin canvas, Will, and keep winning. As much promise as Knight holds, he’s not ready to hang with Ospreay. A brisk 10-13 minute exhibition at full throttle to get the crowd fired up is just the way to open the show.

Prediction: Ospreay advances

Mercedes Mone vs. Julia Hart in a women’s Owen Hart Foundation quarterfinal

Mone has two tentpole opponents this year: Toni Storm and Athena. Anything else happening should be in the service of either of those matches. One could happen soon if she and Athena advance in the Owen Hart Tournament (they will). The other is set for the biggest show of the year: All In.

It’s not difficult to sketch a future with Mercedes draped in her belts — including one for winning this tournament — and proclaiming herself the best. Cut to black and white, cue “Timeless” Toni to say something weird and suitably vulgar, and off we go. One match for everything. This is what Mone’s run in AEW has been building toward since she signed: the biggest match possible on the grandest stage possible. Full apologies to Hart, but she’s a slight obstacle on the road towards that.

Prediction: Mone advances

Kyle Fletcher vs. Mark Briscoe in a men’s Owen Hart Foundation quarterfinal

Both times these two touched were magic. They may not be perfect rivals, always pulled together like Hangman Page and Swerve Strickland, but they could be perfect in-ring opponents. Fletcher has completely established himself as a heel and the tearaway pants are the flawless final touch for his presentation.

He’s matched by the wild, pure babyface of Briscoe. If anyone lesser tried the Mark Briscoe formula, it would fall flat. He has a rare mix of unpredictability, charm, and innate timing. The term “one of one” is a bit lazy and overused, but that’s exactly what Briscoe is. I love him and I love these two together. Fletcher’s victory sets up what could be an incredible semifinal match against Page. Give me all that.

Prediction: Fletcher advances

ROH World Champion Chris Jericho defends against Bandido in a title vs. mask match

Bandido’s talent and charm are so powerful that I’m writing about Jericho matches again despite my self-imposed protest. Bandido perpetually feels like the first day of Spring: full of excitement and full of all the promise in the world. He is an energy shifter. When he’s on screen, the crowd sits up straighter and pays more attention even before the bell rings. Once it does, he fulfills that promise. This is a dynamic, kinetic performer that belongs on weekly television. It’s wonderful to have him back and I hope he’s here forever.

As much as it pains me to admit it, Jericho has been…kind of good here and at least a good enough foil for Bandido. It’s the most engaged he’s been in years, and Bandido is benefiting from the program. It must be contract negotiation season.

Prediction: Bandido wins the title

AEW World Tag Team Champions The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin) defend against Big Bill & Bryan Keith

As far as injury replacements and adjustments go, this could be a lot worse. Big Bill’s growth as a character is far more captivating than anything related to the Murder Machines. His career is a fascinating and inspiring one. He has experienced the highs of WWE and fought through addiction. His story shows the power of the human spirit and is deserving of our complete respect. And from a wrestling sense, the dude gets over. He was over in WWE, was over in a thrown-together tag team with Ricky Starks (RIP), and he’s over now. He’s the best part of The Learning Tree and is capable of so much more.

Just like I said before Revolution, the Hurt Syndicate are still the stars we need in the tag division. I am cautiously optimistic over their involvement in an MJF angle. MVP is fantastic on the mic, capable of drawing out MJF’s best. But there’s always a risk that the program devolves into more of the same MJF milieu. For now, the Syndicate remains strong. Nothing about that changes on Sunday.

Prediction: The Hurt Syndicate retain

AEW World Trios Champions The Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, PAC & Wheeler Yuta) defend against Rated FTR (Cope, Cash Wheeler & Dax Harwood)

It doesn’t take a clairvoyant to connect the dots here. An FTR breakup is unlikely, at least not now. Maybe they splinter at some point at the end of their careers, but an all-time tag team breaking up over Cope is certainly not happening. The far more likely outcome sees Dax and Cash turning on Cope and the Death Riders retaining.

Given the issues in Christian Cage’s Patriarchy, could he and Cope end up in each other’s platonic arms again? They should reunite before they retire. It’s not a bold claim, but it’s necessary. The two of them reuniting at All In to wrestle FTR is fitting for a show of that stature. The journey to that could start this weekend.

Prediction: Death Riders retain

TNT Champion Daniel Garcia defend against Adam Cole in a no time limit, everyone banned from ringside match

It is an unfortunate and inconvenient truth that the Cole so many of us fell in love with might be gone forever. This is partly because of his injuries and extended time off. It’s also because what made him unique is now usual. I mentioned it when talking about Knight, but benchmarks change. They change in every sport and wrestling is no different.

Cole was emblematic of the PWG-influenced indie era of the 2010s, but styles and preferences have shifted. For better or worse, almost every AEW wrestler can, and often does, wrestle that kind of match. He’s still a gifted talker and connector, but what he does in the ring is not as remarkable as it once was. Ringing the bell doesn’t make him special anymore. I take no pleasure in writing this, and hope I’m wrong, but it’s far likelier we’ve already seen the best of Adam Cole. 

Danny Garcia, the wrestler, is remarkably refined for someone so young. It’s easy to forget that he’s still only 26 and a burgeoning star in an unconventional way. He has polished in-ring skills that reflect someone with far more experience. Garcia wrestles with an edge, but maintains a bit of babyface playfulness. I’d like to see him lean into his edgier side, but that’s preference more than anything. He doesn’t completely check every box, but there are no empty boxes on his ledger. A future in the main event is squarely in his range of outcomes. It just will take time to get there. 

Prediction: Garcia retains

AEW International Champion Kenny Omega defends against Ricochet and “Speedball” Mike Bailey in a triple threat

The excitement in this match comes not from the result, but from the AEW PPV debut of Bailey. While he is familiar to the sickos, this is his first true opportunity to connect with such a large audience. This is not TNA, DDT or GCW. This is a massive platform and Bailey has a lot that stands out like his unique look, presentation, and martial arts style catch attention. But can he set himself apart from the many great in-ring performers? Ricochet faced a similar problem when he debuted in AEW. He had to change his character to connect with the audience. I think “Speedball” will face a similar challenge.

Like some of the other matches on the card, this feels like a placeholder for something bigger down the road. The only thing that should matter in Omega’s world is a match with Kazuchika Okada. Both should be booked as strongly as possible until we get there, likely on July 12th, deep in the heart of Texas.

Prediction: Omega retains

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm defends against Megan Bayne

To this point, “Timeless” has yet to stand completely alone. She was inextricably linked to Mariah May. Everything she did — story beats, matches, etc. — was in service of their story. With that over, curiosity abounds. What does this character look like untethered from a major foil? Does it lend itself to the more traditional “challenger of the month” type programs? Storm has proven to be up for pretty much anything, and this will be her biggest challenge yet. 

The rollout of Bayne as a monstrous force in AEW is good and her matches with Kris Statlander have been even better. Her presentation and what happens between the bells are more than ready, even if the rest is not quite there yet. For someone with such a commanding presence, she doesn’t exactly command a room with her presence. Too often there’s an odd vacancy behind her eyes, and a lack of connection. Something is a bit off.

But those are the kinds of things that get ironed out with experience. She has the credentials: time in Stardom, a big debut, a featured spot in a Clairo music video. It’s only a matter of time before everything comes together and AEW’s women’s division has another star. That time doesn’t start right now.

Prediction: Storm retains

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Swerve Strickland

Moxley has devolved into something previously unfathomable and uninteresting. Someone proven to be such a magnetic promo and performer throughout his career is now just another generic heel with a propensity for violence. Even the likelihood of that violence isn’t enough to keep things juicy. For months, it has been the same thing on different days. Too many shows end with the Death Riders beating down someone. It’s been an active drag on the main event scene, culminating in a dreadful and disappointing main event at Revolution. What started with so much potential has become nothing but wasted ideas and intentions.

The time has come to return the main event scene to once-realized heights and Strickland is the man to do it. 

Go back in time to when Swerve debuted in AEW. Imagine telling someone that this dude will be the biggest star in the company. Bigger than Jon Moxley, Will Ospreay or any other signings brought in with more fanfare. Swerve, however, likely expected this. True greatness often stems from unwavering self-belief. What a remarkable rise it has been. No shortcuts, no flimsy gimmicks required. He presents himself with a naked audacity — daring someone to question his words and actions. But the truth is that everything he says and does is valid. He is as dangerous as he claims and as good as he says. He took a Bryan Danielson-induced detour from the top, but the top is where he belongs. The top is where he’ll be when the lights go off at Dynasty.

Prediction: Swerve wins the title

Wrestling Weekly: Orton vs. Owens (finally), who will be the fourth Hurt Syndicate member?

Image: AEW

It’s Friday and that means Wrestling Weekly.

New matches have been made on the road to WWE WrestleMania 41 and MJF’s road no longer seems to run towards the Hurt Syndicate in AEW.

On today’s show, we’ll look at all the happenings in WWE and AEW from this past week.

Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!

Click here to listen (sub needed)

AEW Dynamite live results: Kenny Omega vs. Blake Christian

The build to AEW Dynasty continues on tonight’s Dynamite.

Before his three-way International title defense at Dynasty, Kenny Omega will be in action on tonight’s show against Blake Christian in a non-title match. Omega defends against Mike Bailey and Ricochet in a three-way at the Dynasty pay-per-view set for April 6 in Philadelphia.

AEW Women’s World Champion Toni Storm teams with Thunder Rosa on the show against Megan Bayne and Penelope Ford. Storm will defend her title against Bayne at Dynasty.

After being recruited by MVP two weeks ago, MJF will give his answer to The Hurt Syndicate as to whether or not he will join the group on tonight’s episode.

The Rated FTR trio of Cope, Dax Harwood, and Cash Wheeler will have a sit-down interview with Tony Schiavone on the show.

Three more singles matches are also announced, with Kyle Fletcher vs. Brody King, Konosuke Takeshita vs. Mark Brisoce, plus Powerhouse Hobbs vs. Mark Davis.

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AEW Dynamite comes on the air with a Minecraft inspired intro video package and LED boards in partnership with the movie releasing on April 4. Excalibur welcomes us alongside Taz & Tony Schiavone as they throw it to the opening contest of the evening, Kenny Omega vs. Blake Christian. They show highlights of Christian during his time in Ring of Honor, as well as Zero Hour last month at Revolution. Omega is out to his Battle Cry theme this week.

AEW International Champion Kenny Omega defeated Blake Christian (w/Lee Johnson)

(Straight up statement victory for Omega here, as Christian got in a few shots, but once Omega got going, he wasn’t going to be stopped. The post-match was kept simple, as Speedball Bailey will put aside the respect he has to win the title, Omega is about legacy and Ricochet (congratulations on getting married) is about the gold and the girl.)

Omega fired off headlock takedowns in the early going, but Christian responded with his agility, kipping up and flipping Omega off. Series of chops and high stack back suplex from Omega, but Christian used his speed for a dropkick, mocking the Omega gun pose before gouging the eyes and hitting a spear on the apron. Christian connected with an inverted tope before heading back inside, tried a handspring elbow, but Omega got a pump knee. Johnson ate a right hand on the apron, as Omega hit Christian with multiple Snap Dragons and leg trapped neckbreaker on the knee. V-Trigger lands flush followed by a One-Winged Angel to win it.

Post-match, Omega took the mic and said it’s unfortunate that he can’t wrestle every week like he’d like to, but promised them he’d make it quick tonight, so Tony Khan had no choice but to sign on the dotted line to let him wrestle. Omega said it’ll be a lot longer of a battle at Dynasty when he faces Ricochet & newcomer Speedball Bailey. Right on cue, Bailey’s music hits and he comes to the ring to a solid ovation. Bailey congratulated Omega on the win, saying he’s an inspiration, he admires Omega as a person and champion, but come Dynasty, he won’t hold back or hesitate to kick his head clean off and take the International Title. Crowd booed this and Bailey played into it, when Ricochet interrupted on the screen.

As much as he’d like to be there in person, fortunately for everyone, today is his wedding, the best day of his life, until April 6th, when he beats Cornball and the former Best Bout Machine to become International Champion. Ricochet said continue to argue about the inevitable, as he’ll leave Dynasty with the gold and the girl.

Omega said congratulations are in order, but Dynasty isn’t about making friends, he has a cat, he doesn’t need anymore friends. As big of a piece of garbage as Ricochet is, Bailey isn’t Omega’s friend, as there’s only one thing Omega has time for, his legacy, the International Title. Omega said both Bailey & Ricochet are both stepping stones and bids the crowd adieu and Goodbye & Goodnight, bang!

-Footage of Bandido regaining his brother Gravity’s mask on Collision was shown, as was the young kid who flipped Chris Jericho off. We go to The Learning Tree backstage, as Jericho said it’s time for all the masks to be removed. Jericho said Big Bill & Bryan Keith have been under the branches of the Learning Tree so long, without using the wisdom bestowed upon them. Jericho questions if they believe it’s still worth it being associated with him, if so, prove it to him. Bill & Keith walk off as Jericho congratulates Bandido on getting Gravity’s mask back, but he didn’t want Gravity’s, he wants Bandido’s. Jericho challenges Bandido to a Title vs. Mask at Dynasty. Is it worth the sacrifice to possibly make Bandido’s mother cry again? He thinks it is and he’ll see him at Dynasty.

MJF Answers MVP

MJF came to the ring, chucked his gum into the crowd and immediately took a shot at Prince and their Minnesotan accent before telling them to shut the hell up. MJF took out the MVP business card and invited MVP to the ring to talk, as he’s been looking at this card for two weeks. Loud chants for MVP and “We Hurt People” as MJF said we can all agree MVP is a legend in the sport of wrestling and compliments the new cane. After everything that happened between MJF & Adam Cole, he promised that he’d never do the “friends” thing again, but there’s something he noticed about Montel, is that he doesn’t do friends either, he does business. MJF said his decision is he’d like to be in the business of hurting people. MJF offers his hand out, but before MVP can shake it, Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin come to the ring, as Benjamin especially gets a loud ovation from the Minnesota crowd.

Face-off between Lashley & MJF before Lashley offers his hand, asking for the business card. Lashley hands MVP his Tag Team Title and rips up the card before putting a fist up to MJF’s face. MJF told MVP he thought they were cool, as MVP holds back Lashley & Benjamin, as MJF bails to the back.

Bryan Keith & Big Bill interrupt and said don’t worry, they aren’t out to join their group therapy session, they have real business to address. MVP told Bill to get his bitch on a leash, as Bill said he sees the Tag Team Titles, but doesn’t see a challenger, as MVP hilariously said neither did he. Bill said he can’t tell if MVP is American Psycho or Iceberg Slim are you a pimp or business man? MVP said he’s a little bit of both, so he’s about to have his boys look like bitches. Big Bill said MVP is the MVP of being The Hurt Syndicate’s bitch and said he never lost the Tag Team Titles, as when he held the titles, Sting beat his partner and retired, so he never got a rematch. MVP said why don’t they actually win a match and then they might get an opportunity to fight for the titles. Lashley & Bill had a face-off before The Hurt Syndicate walked off.

**********

-Renee Paquette is backstage with Timeless Toni Storm & Thunder Rosa, bringing up the main event tonight and them teaming 3 years ago, as Storm said not much has changed since then, but Rosa reminded her so much has changed. Storm has a butler now and last time, Storm tried to knock her out. Storm said you make mistakes in the heat of passion. Rosa wants what she never lost and Storm said enough of this gay banter, Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford, you’re about to be double teamed like you never dreamed. Rosa said tonight you meet the team of, Storm interrupted Thunder Tits! Rosa had to remind her it’s Thunder Storm, but Storm said not anymore, it’s not. This got a chant from the crowd, as this segment was hilarious. Paquette was barely able to keep it together.

Kyle Fletcher (w/Don Callis) defeated Brody King

(I was happy not just by the amount of time this match got, but how the crowd was really behind King, even in defeat. It’s the result you’d expect with the Callis Family cheating their way to victory, but King put up a great fight and I’d love to see this happen again eventually. Regardless of how he got it, this was a good way to get Fletcher back in the win column following Revolution.)

Fletcher charged with offense immediately, but he ripped off his pants like he’s channeling Taichi, which gave King time to recover. Callis tried to yell at his client to turn around and when he did, King leveled him with chops, a scoop slam and running senton. For some reason, Fletcher tried chopping back and was flattened as a result. Wisely switching it up, a running leg lariat hit, but King caught a boot and sent Fletcher over the top to the floor with a clothesline as things went to commercial.

King controlled most of the break, but was eventually sent into the commentary table, allowing Fletcher to be in the driver’s seat when things returned. Both trade shots, until Fletcher dodged multiple lariats, but was dropped by a Boss Man Slam for the double down. Fletcher was sent outside, as King followed out with a big Tope Suicida. Placed on a chair, King wanted a cross body against the barricade, Fletcher leaped off the steps and ultimately posted King, hit a PK and Tope Suicida of his own. Fletcher wanted the count-out, but King broke the count at 8. Fletcher quickly up top for a Macho Man elbow drop for two. Fletcher wanted a brainbuster, but King reversed into an Exploder into the corner. To the apron both go, as King wanted a piledriver, Fletcher escaped with thrust kicks, but King hit a DVD on the edge of the ring, as we go to our second break.

Slugfest when things return, as they trade thrust kicks and rolling elbows that leave King standing tall. Short lariat led to a Gonzo Bomb attempt, but Fletcher slid out, took out the knee and hit a stalling Tombstone for a close two. Fletcher went for a corner charge, but King turned him inside out with a lariat. Both stumble to their feet, as King gets a splash, but Callis took the official, allowing Mark Davis to show up and save Fletcher from a cannonball. King tried to fight his way out of the corner, but Davis ran distraction, as Fletcher gouged the eyes and hit his top rope Brainbuster for the win.

Post-match, Callis shook Davis’ hand as Aussie Open put the boots to King until Powerhouse Hobbs’ music hit. Excalibur said the Davis/Hobbs match shouldn’t be until later in the show, as Hobbs entered through the crowd and attacked Davis & Fletcher from behind as King hit a clothesline, sending Fletcher & himself to the floor, as we’re told Davis & Hobbs is happening, next.

**********

Powerhouse Hobbs defeated Mark Davis (w/Don Callis)

We’re told it was chaos during the break, as security, referees and Christopher Daniels were separating Hobbs & Davis, as Callis joined commentary and said Hobbs should be arrested. Davis & Hobbs tossed the security from the ring, as the bell sounded to each trading clubbing blows, as Davis hit a suplex, Hobbs no sold and hit one of his own. Callis said he replaced Hobbs in the Family because he’s bigger, stronger and tougher. Davis hit a brutal sliding forearm to the face in the corner, but Hobbs hit a backdrop off a piledriver attempt, followed by a snap powerslam. Hobbs lowered the straps, hit corner clotheslines to the sound of Meat chants, but both were on different pages, as I think Hobbs went for his Spinebuster right as Davis went for an enzugiri, causing both to fall down. They recovered, Davis hit the enzugiri, but ran right into a Spinebuster to give Hobbs the rather quick win.

-Lexy Nair is backstage with The Patriarchy minus Christian Cage, as she asks what is going on with Nick Wayne? Nick said things are finally making sense to why Cage did what he did at Revolution, but he’ll address Cage when he’s there with him face to face. Last week was how you properly execute a plan, glaring at Kip Sabian, as did Mother Wayne, as they walked off, with Sabian eventually following.

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-Renee Paquette is backstage with Hangman Adam Page, as she mentioned Page entering the Owen Hart Tournament last week. Swerve Strickland charged in and asked if he heard Page saying he’d get into his business with the AEW World Title? Page said bitch, did I stutter? Prince Nana came in and had to pull Strickland away.

Rated FTR Sit-Down Interview

Tony Schiavone is sitting down with all parties earlier today saying they are all basically next door neighbors and Cope is responsible for some of the biggest breaks in FTR’s career. Dax Harwood interrupts and apologizes, saying their goal was always AEW Tag Team Titles, but after four months of helping Cope, who failed twice…Cope interrupted and said he’s making it seem like he kept them from the Tag Titles, but that wasn’t his intention, he helped them, as Death Riders tried attacking them and put bags over their heads. Harwood said they were directionless for four months, as Cash Wheeler said everyone knows he & Harwood are best friends, but not many know what Cope has done for him. When Wheeler was struggling, living in his car, Cope gave him a place to live without worries. Harwood again apologized, saying he took things too far last week, but said they helped Cope go for his goals, but their goal is the Tag Titles and went to call out the Hurt Syndicate, but Wheeler cut him off, saying he still wants to go for the Trios Titles. Cope agrees and if there’s juice left in the tank, let’s do it and challenges Death Riders to the Trios Titles at Dynasty. Harwood agrees and says Top Guys, Out. Cope interrupts and says Rated FTR, Out. Harwood agrees once more to end the segment.

I think we all know where this story is going.

Swerve Strickland Calls Out Jon Moxley

Massive ovation and chants for Prince Nana & Strickland, who said he’s here not to call out the Death Riders, but Jon Moxley and said he better have the balls to look at him eye to eye. Moxley’s music hits and he walks out from the crowd, alone. Nana goes to the floor, leaving Moxley & Strickland alone, as Strickland said he’s been allowing this to go on for far too long. People have asked why Strickland hasn’t lent a hand to fight the Death Riders and asks what happened to Moxley, he used to be revered, respect, he went hand in hand with the AEW World Title. Now, Moxley hides behind Claudio, PAC, Yuta & Marina Shafir and has the nerve to say no one wants to be World Champion, but Moxley doesn’t have the nerve to be Champion himself, which is the reason why Moxley hides the AEW World Title, he can’t stand to look at himself in the mirror holding it anymore. Strickland asks Moxley how his back is doing and said everything Moxley used to describe himself as, is looking at him right now.

Claudio Castagnoli appears behind Prince Nana, as Strickland turned and glared, but Moxley called him off. Moxley said it’s not about himself at Dynasty, it’s about Strickland and questions who and what he is, really? Moxley knows exactly who Strickland is and what he could be, as he had high hopes for Strickland, but on April 6th, he’ll let Strickland be everything he thinks he could be. How far is Strickland willing to go, when you’re in pain and tired, the world bearing down on your shoulders and everyone gunning for you, will you endure or will you look for a way out and take others with you? Moxley said Strickland hasn’t suffered enough yet, but he will at Dynasty. Moxley’s sport has taken over by billionaires, Hollywood talent agencies and kids who sees the world through a filter, but guys like Strickland gives Moxley hope for the future, making him believe what he put his body through was for a reason. Moxley said he’s going to make Strickland work for it, he’s not about handouts and he’s will to go right now. Moxley said it shouldn’t be a problem, as Strickland is “The Most Dangerous Man in AEW”.

Marina Shafir charged to the ring and got on the apron with a crowbar, but Willow Nightingale soon joined her with a pipe. Strickland said Moxley is finally facing someone who is smarter than he is. Moxley bled pints, Strickland bled buckets. Moxley fought in Texas Death Matches, while Strickland won them. Strickland will continue to lead the Dynasty era, letting him continue to play Jon Moxley on TV. Moxley called off Castagnoli & Shafir, as they all retreat through the crowd, with Shafir being visibly pissed, so she came back and swept Nightingale off the apron as the ladies slugged it out. Castagnoli carried Shafir away, as Nana tried his hardest to hold back Nightingale. There was a brief face-off between Nightingale & Moxley, which was pretty great, not going to lie.

-Katsuyori Shibata had apparently gotten a camera and was filming Samoa Joe & HOOK, who are walking backstage where Joe asked why HOOK held onto REDRUM a little too long on Max Caster on Collision? HOOK said he’s fun to choke out, as they walked up on Caster talking to Top Flight & AR Fox, trying to get his chant going to them. Caster noticed Shibata and the camera, as Joe choked him out, agreeing it is fun. The Opps shook Top Flight & Fox’s hands as HOOK told the camera “til the death.”

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-Renee Paquette is backstage with Switchblade Jay White, who officially enters the Owen Hart Foundation Tournament. Last year, it didn’t work out so well for White, who lost to Page thanks to Christian Cage and got hurt for months in the process. Before we get to the tournament, how about one of the original Collision Cowboys return this Saturday Night and issues an Open Challenge.

Top Flight (Darius & Dante Martin w/AR Fox) defeated Alex Findley and Devo Knight

Action Andretti & Lio Rush are seated in the front row watching on, as Big Bill & Bryan Keith were shown watching backstage. Darius hit almost a Spear into a Manhattan Drop on Findley really tweaking his knee in the process. Dante tagged in, corner enzugiri and big top rope cross body. Shotgun dropkick into a release German Suplex, as Darius hit almost a Muscle Buster before Darius hit a massive Frog Splash for the win.

We’re told Bill & Keith vs. Top Flight is official for Collision.

-Video package for Will Ospreay is shown saying it’s time for him to lead AEW into a new generation. When you hear this is where the best wrestle, it’s where Billy wrestles and it’s time to restore the feeling. Ospreay will be live on Dynamite next week.

Konosuke Takeshita (w/Don Callis) defeated Mark Briscoe

(This was a damn fine battle, as I could watch these two wrestle each other in some capacity every week. Having three matches on the show tonight, The Callis Family went 2-1 with one clean win and one tainted victory. So a little bit of everything tonight from the Callis crew, who I’m glad are looking strong, despite not currently challenging for titles.)

Callis again joins commentary and said, despite being a degenerate, Briscoe is a fantastic wrestler. Early enzugiri from Briscoe and thrust chop in the corner led to a rolling Death Valley Driver, went up top, but Takeshita cut him off and hit a massive superplex for two. Both trade corner charges with forearms, as Briscoe sent Takeshita over the top with a clothesline, geared up for a dive, but Takeshita quickly recovered, came back to the ring and hit a big boot. They go to the apron, where Takeshita spiked Briscoe with a DDT as things went to break.

When things returned, Briscoe was biting the forehead of Takeshita to fight out of the corner, allowing him to get back into things. Flying forearm led to palm strikes in the corner from Briscoe, as he dragged Takeshita to the floor, this time hitting a baseball slide, somersault senton off the apron and cannonball Suicida. Briscoe ran the barricade and hit a diving elbow before going back inside, looking for a Froggy Bow, but missed. Takeshita hit a wild release German, but Briscoe no sold and turned Takeshita inside out with a lariat for two. Callis left commentary to cheer Takeshita on, as Briscoe wanted a Jay Driller, but Takeshtia spun out into a forearm battle. Both went for home run shots, traded Exploders four times until Takeshita exploded with the charging knee for two of his own. Takeshita missed a home run lariat, as Briscoe hit the Jay Driller, but Takeshita got his foot on the ropes. Briscoe wanted the Cutthroat Driver, but Takeshita wiggled free, hit the rolling elbow and Raging Fire for the victory.

-We go backstage to the AEW Trios Champions, Death Riders, as Yuta said he already hates FTR’s guts, while Cope tried to rip him from his family, but his family is much stronger than Cope’s. Castagnoli said when the going gets tough, you start throwing hissy fits. PAC said it’s their arrogance they find it so hard to stomach. It’s Rated FTR who has the audacity to challenge them? That’s not how things work around here, they challenge Rated FTR to survive the Death Riders at Dynasty.

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-Alicia Atout approaches The Hurt Syndicate backstage and asks if MJF is in or out? MVP politely asks her to step aside, as Lashley questions why MVP would invite MJF into their group? MVP says last week he told Lashley & Benjamin to take some time off, something MVP never has, as they always talked about getting a 4th man. Lashley said MJF is so grimey, but MVP said he likes that quality, but if they don’t want him in the crew, it’s something they can revisit, but now, they need to focus on this Big Bill situation.

Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford defeated AEW Women’s Champion Timeless Toni Storm (w/Luther) & Thunder Rosa

(You couldn’t have made Bayne look stronger than they have the last few weeks and have done a great job building her into a legit threat to win the Women’s Title. The reaction Storm gave in the post-match was great, as everything she attempted didn’t have much effect at all, making her have to regroup big time if she wants to retain her title come Dynasty.)

Excalibur was upset Justin Roberts didn’t use the name Storm suggested they went by earlier in the show. There’s actually a Thunder Tits sign in the front row, as Bayne didn’t budge from an early Rosa shoulder block and hit a spinning body slam. Bayne turned her back and posed, as Storm tagged in, but so did Ford. Shoulder tackle from Ford, who followed with a springboard arm drag, seemed to deck Storm with a shining wizard, but Storm I think was supposed to duck it, as she no sold and tagged back in Rosa to double team Ford. Rosa sprung off Storm’s back for a shotgun dropkick on Ford for two as things went to break.

Ford & Bayne controlled Rosa the entire commercial, as Ford decked Storm off the apron before hitting her handspring back elbow on Rosa, licking her face in the process. Rosa & Ford slug it out until they collide with a double clothesline. Storm & Bayne tag in and finally collide, but Bayne no sold clotheslines. Bayne missed a sledgehammer, allowing Storm to clothesline her to the floor, but landed on her feet and pulled out Storm. After being sent into the steps, Storm hit a Tornado DDT, but rolled back into the ring, where Ford met her with a Matrix Cutter. Rosa returned with a Death Valley Driver on Ford, as Bayne was back, laid out Rosa with Fate’s Decent, but Storm came back in to fight her off.

Leg sweep in the corner led to Sweet Cheek Music, but Bayne no sold and Storm couldn’t believe it. Ford got a waist lock, but Storm moved and Bayne hit her partner with a pump kick. Storm charged at Bayne, but was dropped with Fate’s Decent to give Bayne the clean pin on the Women’s Champ. Ford celebrated with Bayne, as Rosa tended to Storm, who was left looking spooked that everything she threw at Bayne had no effect.

AEW Collision 3/28/25

  • Switchblade Jay White vs. Kevin Knight
  • Mercedes Mone in Action
  • Jamie Hayter vs. Queen Aminata
  • Big Bill & Bryan Keith vs. Top Flight
  • Wheeler Yuta vs. Dax Harwood

AEW Dynamite 4/2/25

  • Jon Moxley & Marina Shafir vs. Swerve Strickland & Willow Nightingale
  • Will Ospreay Returns

Kenny Omega vs. Blake Christian, FTR sit-down interview set for AEW Dynamite

Kenny Omega is set for action this Wednesday on Dynamite.

On Sunday’s Collision, it was announced that Kenny Omega will take on Blake Christian. It will be his first match since Revolution, when he defeated Konosuke Takeshita for the International title. He will next defend the title against Speedball Mike Bailey and Ricochet in a three-way match at AEW Dynasty on April 6.

FTR will sit down with Tony Schiavone. Recent weeks have seen Dax Harwood rebuff The Undisputed Kingdom for a handshake after wrestling them twice on recent episodes of AEW Collision. After Jon Moxley defeated Adam Copeland to retain the AEW World title on last week’s Dynamite, FTR came out to help Copeland but Harwood ended up storming to the back, leaving Cash Wheeler at ringside.

Elsewhere on the show, Kyle Fletcher will make his return to in-ring action, taking on Brody King. On Collision, he promised that he would make clear what was next for himself and the Don Callis Family.

Also announced for the show is Mark Briscoe taking on Konosuke Takeshita and Powerhouse Hobbs facing Mark Davis. Additionally, Toni Storm and Thunder Rosa will face Megan Bayne and Penelope Ford after the company confirmed that Storm will defend the AEW Women’s title against Bayne at Dynasty.

Here is the updated card for AEW Dynamite:

  • Kenny Omega vs. Blake Christian
  • Kyle Fletcher vs. Brody King
  • Mark Briscoe vs. Konosuke Takeshita
  • Powerhouse Hobbs vs. Mark Davis
  • Toni Storm & Thunder Rosa vs. Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford
  • FTR sit-down interview
  • MJF will respond to MVP’s offer to join The Hurt Syndicate

Kenny Omega segment booked for next AEW Dynamite

The International Champion will appear live on the March 26 AEW Dynamite.

Kenny Omega appearing on the show is one of two segments announced for the Wednesday, March 26 Dynamite. Omega will defend his International title against both Ricochet and Mike Bailey in a triple threat match at the Dynasty pay-per-view on April 6 following the conclusion of the International title eliminator tournament on Wednesday’s Dynamite.

In the tournament final four-way, Ricochet and Bailey executed a double pin on Mark Davis to secure their shot at Omega’s International title at Dynasty. Orange Cassidy was also in the final four-way.

In another segment announced for next week’s episode, MJF will answer MVP regarding his apparent invitation to join The Hurt Syndicate. MVP gave MJF his card on last week’s Dynamite, and MJF was shown mulling over the offer in pre-taped backstage segment on this week’s show.

The announced lineup for the Wednesday, March 26 AEW Dynamite:

  • AEW International Champion Kenny Omega appears live
  • MJF responds to MVP’s offer to join The Hurt Syndicate

Kenny Omega to defend International title in three-way at AEW Dynasty

AEW International Champion Kenny Omega won’t just have one contender to defend against at next month’s AEW Dynasty pay-per-view, but two.

That’s because both Ricochet and new roster member “Speedball” Mike Bailey both qualified during Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite by virtue of a double pin on Mark Davis.

Bailey, Davis, Ricochet and Orange Cassidy were competing in a four-way that represented the finals of a eight-man eliminator tournament designed to give Omega his next challenger.

Bailey had Davis pinned with a backslide out of the corner when Ricochet jumped in to try and steal the pin but with his feet on the ropes. As both men argued their case following the referee counting three, the referee declared that it was a double pin and both men would move on to face Omega.

Omega won the title for the first time at this month’s Revolution by defeating rival Konosuke Takeshita.

Here’s the current card for the Sunday, April 6th event from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:

  • AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Swerve Strickland
  • AEW International Champion Kenny Omega defends against Ricochet and Mike Bailey in a three-way