On AEW Collision this Saturday night, Konosuke Takeshita will make the first defense of his International Championship reign.
Takeshita became a two-time International Champion when he defeated Kazuchika Okada for the belt at Double or Nothing. Less than a week into his reign, Takeshita is set to defend against Daniel Garcia on Collision. The match was announced by Tony Khan on social media today.
“After The Alpha regained the International belt at #AEWDoN, Takeshita will collide vs former TNT Champion Daniel Garcia in a big title fight TOMORROW!,” Khan wrote.
Though Garcia is his first challenger, Takeshita is locked into a feud with Kyle Fletcher after the returning Fletcher targeted him at Double or Nothing. Takeshita, now a babyface, has linked up with The Conglomeration against his former faction mates in the Don Callis Family.
A Trios Championship match with The Conglomeration (Orange Cassidy, Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly) defending against Don Callis Family’s Rocky Romero, Trent Beretta & Lance Archer is among the other matches set for Saturday’s Collision. The show is being held at the Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
AEW Collision (Saturday, May 30) —
AEW Trios Champions The Conglomeration (Orange Cassidy, Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly) defend against Don Callis Family (Rocky Romero, Trent Beretta & Lance Archer)
AEW Women’s Tag Team Champions Divine Dominion (Megan Bayne & Lena Kross) vs. TayJay (Tay Melo & Anna Jay) in an AEW Women’s Tag Team title five-minute eliminator match
Hazuki vs. Maya World (with Persephone on commentary)
Future of the vacant TBS Championship will be addressed
Saturday #AEWCollision LIVE Nationwide TOMORROW 8e/5p TNT & HBO Max
AEW International Title Konosuke Takeshita vs Daniel Garcia
After The Alpha regained the International belt at #AEWDoN, Takeshita will collide vs former TNT Champion Daniel Garcia in a big title fight TOMORROW! pic.twitter.com/nAS83YxtUQ
In a rematch that’s been a more than a year in the making, Konosuke Takeshita bested faction mate and rival Kazuchika Okada for the International title at Sunday’s AEW Double or Nothing and then was turned on by the returning Kyle Fletcher.
Takeshita picked up the win after hitting a Rainmaker on Okada, followed by an Okada dropkick and then a Takeshita running knee strike that got just a one count. Okada then fell victim to a raging fire to give the new champion the win.
Afterward, Don Callis was joined by Okada, Rocky Romero and Mark Davis in the ring. The three were bickering with Takeshita about giving Okada a brainbuster on the outside of the ring earlier in the way when Fletcher’s music hit — his first appearance since late-March when he suffered a meniscus injury.
Fletcher embraced Takeshita and then raised his arm until his expression changed and he clotheslined his old friend. He then gave him a brainbuster of his own and eventually, the rest of the group got back in the ring. He and Okada picked up the International title at the same time which got a big crowd reaction, but Okada let Fletcher take it who then blasted Takeshita in the head and made it clear he is coming for the title.
The win ends the 317-day reign for Okada who won the title in a unification bout against Kenny Omega last July’s All In and successfully defended it nine times. It’s Takeshita’s second run with the title and his first since March 2025.
The match was a rematch from last December’s Continental Classic semifinals at Worlds End where Okada used a screwdriver to defeat Takeshita.
New York in early summer is the best version of itself, an irrefutable fact for anyone who has spent even a little time here. The city begins to emerge, slowly at first, shaking off whatever the winter and the world did to it. Then, alarmingly quickly, the whole world opens up.
Easing into the summer is ideal, but there is an unhinged beauty in that first real heat that a gentle May afternoon cannot provide. The first 90 degree day, the one that wallops you with its density the moment you step outside, the one that feels like walking through a stick of butter, that’s the day that reminds you that you’re alive. The city doesn’t ease into that day. It arrives all at once, and you hope the air conditioning is ready.
AEW arrives in New York City on the heels of exactly that: the first real heat of the season and, coincidentally, leading into the first real weekend of summer.
Double or Nothing is a card that, in pieces, reminds you how to feel alive – a stirring World championship match tends to have that effect. It is also a card that is the beginning of something significant. The road to All In is peeking over the horizon. The Owen Hart Cup is taking shape. Careers are arriving at their conclusions, willing or otherwise. The second half of the year starts here, in the heat, in New York, in the world’s borough that insists on the real thing.
Let’s run through it.
AEW Double or Nothing main card preview & predictions
Will Ospreay vs. Samoa Joe in an Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal
Ospreay’s relationship with The Death Riders is the most interesting thing happening in AEW right now, and the most interesting character development they’ve done since Hangman Page’s downward spiral. Ospreay is a lot of things to a lot of people. Divisive, transformative, it’s all subjective. But at his heart, Will is a simple man. He wants to make the fans happy. He would also like to win matches, and sometimes these two things are in direct opposition.
Others are driven by ego (MJF), by competition (Jon Moxley), and by testing the limits of the human spirit (Darby Allin). Ospreay is driven by love: of wrestling, and of the fans. He specifically craves their adoration. His turn to The Death Riders is an unexpected and welcome bit of introspection by a performer who had previously shown very little. I’m bullish on his journey with them and, through The Owen, I’m curious to see what lasting change might come from it.
As always, Joe will be a test. He doesn’t give you space to be spectacular. He doesn’t create distance for convoluted counter sequences or opportunities for a flashy highlight reel. He takes up all the space in the ring and limits the oxygen. His arrival is an avalanche, slowly, then all at once.
Ospreay has been everything we could have hoped for since his return. Joe is a test, but one he should pass.
Prediction: Ospreay
Swerve Strickland vs. Bandido in an Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal
AEW is better when both of these cats are on TV. Too often, whether by injury or unfortunate ROH responsibilities, Bandido floats in and out of our lives. His presence and matches are full of light. Seeing his name on the marquee promises, at minimum, something worth watching with the ceiling for something truly special.
Bandido’s joy and exuberance meet its seething match this weekend. Many people snarl and claim to be the best, the most dangerous, but none do it like Swerve. There is no one as cool or as confident. There is grit and realism to his words and actions, a testament to his capabilities as a performer that he’s smooth enough to hit the interview circuit and do media up-fronts while playing the role of an objectively terrible person.
When MJF plays the bad guy, we’re all in on the performance; we can see and acknowledge the winking to the camera. When Swerve does it, the menace feels all too real.
Prediction: Swerve
Athena vs. Mina Shirakawa in an Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal
Before we dive in, a moment for our fallen TBS Champion and being of pure light, Willow Nightingale. She’s one of the performers whose presence fills an entire room. Louis Armstrong Stadium is going to feel a little emptier without her.
Athena seems primed for her semi-annual AEW proper tour of duty, and it’s always a treat. She is everything she’s ever claimed to be and backs that up in the ring and on the microphone. Said simply, she’s great. ROH’s gain remains AEW’s loss, and AEW feels it every time she walks back through the door to remind everyone what they’ve been missing. With two staples of the division out for the foreseeable future and Mercedes Mone still off television, I do wonder if we get more Athena on AEW TV going forward. The division would be better for it.
Prediction: Athena
Chris Jericho, The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin) and The Elite (Kenny Omega, Jack Perry, Matt & Nick Jackson) vs. The Demand (Ricochet, Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona), Don Callis Family (Mark Davis & Andrade El Idolo), and The Dogs (Clark Conners & David Finlay) in a Stadium Stampede match
Whatever goodwill Jericho’s return generated, and admittedly I provided some, has been squandered with frightening efficiency. His insistence on killing anything natural and good, the relentless, painfully unfunny slogans, create an unwanted cocktail I’m glad to send back. The master of reinvention has watched his creative well run dry in real time, in public, repeatedly. The Learning Tree was an outright disaster. Whatever this current iteration is shows little promise.
Fortunately, the Stadium Stampede format and the significant talent of others will dilute his presence across fourteen people, and however many minutes this thing runs.
These matches are thrilling at best and silly curios at worst. The individuals will all get their spotlight moments. Ricochet, freed from any obligation to carry a serious program, should thrive in the chaos. Andrade can pop off his pants and pop the crowd. The Dogs get a chance to shine in an AEW trademark match. Additional critical analysis of this is not required. We know what this is, and you know if it’s something that tickles your fancy.
Prediction: Jericho, Hurt Syndicate & The Elite
AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Kyle O’Reilly
These two have wonderful chemistry, capped by a bloody, visceral n holds barred match at Full Gear that reminded everyone in the building, and everyone watching, what O’Reilly is capable of. More importantly, it reminded Kyle. Moxley has that effect on people. Something about his brand of violence awakens things in his opponents, pulls the best and most dangerous version of them to the surface, whether they planned to show up that way or not.
It has been a genuinely tough run for O’Reilly, the wrestling intelligentsia’s favorite weirdo, since joining AEW. Injury and personal tragedy have a way of hollowing things out and creating a distance between a performer and the thing that made them want to do this in the first place. Finding meaning in the thing you love after it’s been taken from you, even briefly, even partially, is its own kind of victory. It’s great to see Kyle back.
O’Reilly’s story is a good one. Moxley, though the ace, grappling with whether he can beat Kyle is a nice character beat. But a character beat might be all it is.
Prediction: Moxley retains
AEW International Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Konosuke Takeshita
Takeshita’s moment, sadly, has long passed. This is not permanent, this is not irreversible, but for now, the version of Takeshita that felt genuinely inevitable has receded, and what’s replaced it is a performer going through familiar motions with diminishing returns. The exaggerated big move spots, the bomb-throwing without narrative connective tissue, are indicators of a performer doing what he thinks ‘good’ looks like rather than just being it.
When he first started moving up the card, there was a buzz in the arena and online. Now he’s receded into the chaff of the Don Callis Family. Big DC can tell us he’s the alpha and that he’s the best thing going today (there were glimpses of that in his title match with Darby Allin) but he’s lying to himself as much as he is the audience. What Takeshita needs isn’t a new direction so much as a return to his own. He had a natural, easy connection to the crowd — one that still wants to love him.
It would be genuinely funny if, after all this time, after all the deferred moments and missed windows, he finally gets his big win here. Maybe I’ll be awarding myself the ‘fell for it again’ award Monday morning, but I think the big man gets it done.
Prediction: Takeshita wins the title
AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Adam Copeland & Christian Cage in an I Quit match where if Cage and Copeland lose, they must retire as a tag team
I have tried, genuinely and repeatedly, to locate the feeling this program is supposed to produce in me. Alas, I cannot find it. Even with a heavy, heavy stipulation, there is nothing. My fondness for FTR mixed with my lack of appreciation for the Cope of it all makes a 40 degree day. No one has anything to say about a 40 degree day
The I Quit stipulation at least has the virtue of theater, and theater is what Copeland and Cage have always done best. Someone has to say the words out loud, has to submit not just physically but verbally, has to admit it in front of everyone. That’s a fine idea. I just can’t make myself care who says it.
FTR will make sure the match is worth watching. The history books will be kinder to Wheeler and Harwood than to their opponents. Let the work speak.
Prediction: Copeland and Christian win the titles
AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Hikaru Shida, Jamie Hayter and Kris Statlander in a four-way
I don’t buy the Statlander and Shida pairing, and it doesn’t seem like they do either. This is a doomed and empty pairing that is not working on any level. Is anyone really invested in the inevitable breakup? Why can’t Statlander achieve a stretch of character consistency? No matter the season, no matter the year, she always seems to be going through something. Must be exhausting!
Thekla remains insistent on being a star unique to herself: doing her thing, performing her act. It’s not revolutionary, but when something feels this well-worn and natural, it sure is impressive. This doesn’t feel like a flash in the pan but a character with real staying power. This type of performance is extremely for me, and I have enjoyed her more than I ever thought — a complete home run signing and a boon to the entire division.
Hayter continues her slow rebuild. Shida is not what she once was, but she has done good enough work since returning. Statlander is Statlander. The only person in World title form is the one who already holds it. That’s not changing.
Prediction: Thekla retains
AEW World Champion Darby Allin defends against MJF in a title vs. hair match
Allin is a comet ripping through the night and challenging the notion that a title reign has to be long to be historic. Producing this level of output in his preferred style is equal parts remarkable, breathtaking, and psychotic. Just about every match has required a cigarette afterward. Other wrestlers could hold a World title for years and if they produced 20% of matches as good as everything Allin has done, it would be considered a legendary run. I am hard-pressed to recall a title reign that I have enjoyed more than his.
Allin is on the short list for mainstream wrestler of the year on this run alone, and the year isn’t half over. What he has done with this championship, with this character, with this body that somehow still functions at this level, is something that should be appreciated loudly and in real time before it becomes something we remember.
If he isn’t the (again, mainstream) wrestler of the year, it’s because MJF is. His edges have been smoothed, the work tight, and the hair lusciously full. Firmly in his prime and also on the run of his life, the self-proclaimed prophecy of being a generational talent is being fulfilled. MJF risking his hair is as old school as professional wrestling gets. It also makes complete and total sense for who he is.
This is a man driven entirely by ego and vanity. The stipulation isn’t an escalation imposed on the character from outside; it emerges directly from it. MJF, without his carefully cultivated perception of perfection, is a man with nothing left to hide behind. Strip part of the gimmick away and the rest crumbles. Max has done an incredible job of not being above the stipulation but cowering in the face of it. This is a man’s existential crisis with a title match attached.
Restraint can be a weapon. It’s one MJF should wield this week, and one that Darby does not have any interest in having. It will be a battle to see whose style of match prevails. Is it the devil-may-care shape-shifting style that Darby has perfected? Or is it a methodical, slow build like MJF favors? Styles typically make fights, but desperation throws structure out the window. Comets pass our eyes for fleeting and unforgettable moments. Darby’s burns out in Queens.
AEW has announced several new segments for next week’s episode of Dynamite.
With the Owen Hart Foundation set to return, AEW announced that the brackets for the tournament are set to be revealed next week. Both the men’s and women’s brackets are scheduled to be shared on the May 13 episode of Dynamite in Asheville, NC.
In addition to this, Will Ospreay is set to return to in-ring action in a match against Ace Austin. Kazuchika Okada has now also been replaced by Konosuke Takeshita in the AEW World title match against Darby Allin. Also, a ten-man tag match is set to take place alongside an appearance by former champion MJF.
AEW Dynamite | Next Wednesday | Asheville, North Carolina
Darby Allin (c) vs. Konosuke Takeshita for the AEW World Championship
FTR (Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler), Tommaso Ciampa, War Dogs (David Finlay & Clark Connors) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson), Christian Cage, Adam Copeland & Orange Cassidy
MJF to make an appearance
Will Ospreay vs. Ace Austin
Men’s and Women’s AEW Owen Hart Foundation brackets to be announced
Things are set to get more tense for Kazuchika Okada and Konosuke Takeshita in AEW.
Despite belonging to the same faction, Don Callis Family, Okada and Takeshita have never seen eye-to-eye. Throughout their time on the roster, a sense of tension has existed between the two.
Before their singles match against each other at AEW Double or Nothing, Okada was set to face Darby Allin for the AEW World title on the upcoming May 13 episode of Dynamite. However, with Okada visiting Japan for a personal reason, the match has been changed. It was announced on AEW Fairway to Hell that Takeshita, representing the Don Callis Family, will take on Allin for the World title next week.
Update: In a report noted by our Bryan Alvarez, it was shared that, “Okada going to Japan on family business is legitimate.” It was reported as the reason behind the change in Allin’s previously scheduled World title defense.
Darby Allin defeats PAC on AEW Fairway to Hell, Retains World title
In the main event of the AEW Fairway to Hell show, fans saw Darby Allin survive all odds to retain his AEW World title against PAC.
From surviving a massive 25ft drop and crashing through four tables to other brutal moments throughout the match, Allin stood tall and defeated PAC after a Coffin drop. The AEW Fairway to Hell episode closed with Allin standing tall before his World title match next week against Takeshita.
Moments before the #AEW World Title match, @TheDonCallis delivers a reminder – and with @rainmakerXokada in Japan for family business, his hand-picked opponent is waiting in the wings: Konosuke Takeshita!
Promised prior to Dynasty, the first official match is confirmed for next month’s AEW Double or Nothing pay-per-view.
Made official during Thursday’s AEW Collision, Kazuchika Okada will put his International title on the line against Konosuke Takeshita at the Sunday, May 24 event from Louis Armstrong Stadium in Queens, New York.
In a backstage segment, Okada told Don Callis he would put the title on the line in the match as the rivalry between the two stablemates intensified this week. This past Sunday at Dynasty, the two teamed against the Young Bucks and lost due to a seemingly intentional miscue by Takeshita that caused Okada to be pinned.
In a segment shown on Dynamite from Dynasty, Okada and Callis questioned Takeshita to which he mockingly replied, “Oops.” Callis promised Takeshita he could have the match against Okada if they took on the Bucks at Dynasty.
By the time the match comes around, Okada will be at 300+ days as champion and has seven successful title defenses to date. Takeshita held the title for 148 days from late-2024 through early 2025 with eight successful defenses before losing it to Kenny Omega at 2025’s Revolution.
It will be a rematch from this past December’s Continental Classic semifinals that Okada won. While they have been on opposite sides of the ring several times over the past two years, this is only their second-ever singles match.
Current AEW Double or Nothing card | Sunday, May 24 | Queens, New York
AEW International Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Konosuke Takeshita
A star-laden tag team match is official for this Sunday’s AEW Dynasty with big implications for next month’s Double or Nothing.
Former AEW World Tag Team Champions The Young Bucks will take on the Don Callis-led team of Konosuke Takeshita & Kazuchika Okada, made by Callis himself on Wednesday’s Dynamite.
Takeshita, who has been griping with Okada for months, wasn’t thrilled with the revelation but Callis threw in a big gift: Takeshita will get the one-on-one match against Okada he’s been craving at May’s Double or Nothing and it will be for Okada’s International title.
Callis noted that he was originally going to have Kyle Fletcher team with Okada instead, but due to Fletcher’s injury, that plan had to be changed.
Matt and Nick Jackson will take on Hechicero and El Clon of the Callis clan on this Saturday’s Collision.
Current AEW Dynasty lineup | Vancouver, Canada | Sunday, April 12
AEW World Champion MJF defend against Kenny Omega
AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Will Ospreay
AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Christian Cage & Adam Copeland
Darby Allin vs. Andrade El Idolo with a World title shot for Allin with a win
AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Jamie Hayter
Young Bucks vs. Kazuchika Okada & Konosuke Takeshita
The tournament will conclude in Niigata on Saturday with Callum Newman and Yuya Uemura facing off in the finals. In addition to being crowned the New Japan Cup winner, the victor earns an IWGP Heavyweight Championship shot against Yota Tsuji at Sakura Genesis on April 4.
It was already known that Konosuke Takeshita would be in action on Saturday. NJPW has now confirmed that he’ll be defending his NJPW World Television Championship against a mystery opponent. It’s the first title defense for Takeshita since he defeated El Phantasmo last month to become champion.
“The NJPW World TV title will be on the line when Konosuke Takeshita makes his first defense,” NJPW wrote. “After winning the title in overtime at New Beginning USA in Trenton New Jersey, who will step up to the plate and face the Alpha?”
Saturday’s event is being held in Niigata and will air live on New Japan World starting at 2 a.m. Eastern time. Here is the complete lineup:
New Japan Cup 2026 finals (Saturday, March 21) —
Tournament final: Callum Newman vs. Yuya Uemura
Yota Tsuji, OSKAR, Yuto-Ice & Daiki Nagai vs. Zack Sabre Jr., Ryohei Oiwa, Kosei Fujita & Hartley Jackson
Oleg Boltin, Toru Yano & Aaron Wolf vs. Ren Narita, Don Fale & Dick Togo
Shingo Takagi, Drilla Moloney & Taiji Ishimori vs. Jake Lee, Francesco Akira & Jakob Austin Young
Shota Umino & Tomoaki Honma vs. HENARE & Great-O-Khan
The following is an opinion-based preview and reflects that of the author and not the website.
AEW Revolution is AEW’s first real statement of the year, a new calendar with new intentions. This one feels different. Not louder, not more stacked necessarily, but more consequential. Almost every match on Sunday’s card carries the weight of a real-time decision. This isn’t just about who wins, but about who these people will be going forward.
Konosuke Takeshita getting what’s his or being deferred again. Marina Shafir walking through the door or watching it close. Kevin Knight being on the precipice of something bigger than the team he’s in. Hangman Page facing permanent exile from the one thing that defines him. Sunday’s Revolution 2026 isn’t just a show. Rather, it’s a card full of people standing at a fork in the road, whether they asked to be there or not.
These are the questions that get answered this Sunday in Los Angeles. Let’s run through the action.
AEW Revolution preview
Toni Storm vs. Marina Shafir with everyone banned from ringside
There is a specific and under-appreciated generosity in what Toni Storm is doing right now. For years, she was the division’s anchor and a main event metronome. Now, without gold attached, she’s doing something arguably more valuable: she’s making others matter. That’s a skill set not everyone has and fewer are willing to deploy it.
Storm is doing both because that is what the great ones always do. The Timeless character should not have worked at all, but Storm turned both it and herself into one of the most valuable commodities in all of pro wrestling at the ripe age of 30.
Marina Shafir has been many things in AEW. Background. Muscle. Faction decoration. Occasionally terrifying in small doses. But this is different. This is the door opening to something substantially more. Her credibility has slowly accumulated in the margins of larger stories and has led us to this moment.
There is no more patient waiting, no more promising glimpses. The lights are on and Storm, of all people, is the one at home. What Shafir does with this opportunity will define her ceiling in AEW. Either she leaves LA as someone the audience believes in, or she doesn’t. Sometimes it’s that simple. Sometimes, it’s that unforgiving. No pressure!
Prediction: Marina gets the big one
Darby Allin, Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong vs. The Dogs (David Finlay, Clark Connors & Gabe Kidd)
David Finlay has something, something real, something that separates him from his partners in ways that will eventually become impossible to ignore. The Dogs are loud and committed, and while Connors has his moments, this is clearly Finlay’s faction in the same way the Death Riders are (were??) always Jon Moxley’s.
The others exist in service of their leader, whether they know it or not. Gabe Kidd remains, to me, a performer whose reputation slightly exceeds his output, though I am watching him closely. The tag match on Wednesday delivered in a big way with a killer closing stretch that was a perfect preview of what kind of match this should be.
Roderick Strong’s addition is a welcome one. The man is a perpetual motion machine of offense. He fits comfortably into the chaos this match is building toward. Expect more of what we saw on Wednesday, only just a bit louder. This is a fun match on a heavy card and exactly what’s needed.
Prediction: Darby, Cassidy & Strong
Brody King vs. Swerve Strickland
No titles. No trophies. Just violence.
Swerve is never better than when he has an edge. There’s real menace and an earned anger in everything he does. He’s never needed a reason to make someone bleed, but he feels slighted and pettiness is a powerful motivator.
Brody King has come into his own. A hulking, physical performer who has rounded out his edges to become an across-the-board superstar. The man was quietly turning into one of the most compelling physical presences in the company long before anyone thought to build a match around it. Now they have, and the result is a collision that doesn’t need a single title belt attached to justify its existence.
Leave these two alone in the ring, and they will figure it out.
Prediction: Swerve
Andrade El Idolo (with Don Callis) vs. Bandido
Good lord, the juice in this match.
Andrade has never, ever been better — not in NXT, not in WWE, not in his first run in AEW, not anywhere. There is a clarity and a sharpness to him right now that suggests one of two things: this is either a man who finally knows exactly who he is and what he’s capable of, or yet another tantalizing Andrade tease where he dials it in for a stretch before logging out completely.
We know these runs are fleeting and fragile, but right now, in this moment? He is a Tropicana factory worth of juice, and everyone in that arena and everyone at home is going to feel it.
Bandido, meanwhile, remains one of the purest pro wrestling treasures on the planet. His ROH World title is well-earned even if its visibility is…limited. Everything he does is must-see. Everything he does makes the person across the ring look like a million dollars. What happens when the person across the ring already looks that good? There is potential for something really, really special here.
This is lining up to be the match people talk about on the way home. Plan your bathroom breaks accordingly.
Prediction: Bandido
Kazuchika Okada, Kyle Fletcher, and Mark Davis vs. Kevin Knight, Mike Bailey, and Mistico for the AEW World Trios title
AEW Trios Champions Don Callis Family (Kazuchika Okada, Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis) defend against Místico & JetSpeed (Kevin Knight and Mike Bailey)
We are in a moment for the fortitude and otherworldly determination of Mark Davis, a talented, rear-end-endowed man who has battled through more unfortunate injury luck than any one performer should be asked to absorb. It would have been so easy to give up and fade into generic Don Callis Family flotsam.
Instead, he worked his tail off and made the most of his situation. This is no charity act. Davis deserves to stand side-by-side with Okada and Fletcher as a champion. A rugged and beyond-solid worker, he is the kind of performer professional wrestling desperately needs to revitalize a sagging middle-class.
JetSpeed didn’t recruit a consolation prize when they brought in Místico. They recruited a living legend, this site’s Wrestler of the Year, a man so beloved in lucha libre that entire arenas exist in a state of permanent devotion to him. If anything, Knight and Bailey are the junior partners in this arrangement.
JetSpeed has worked better as a team than I ever imagined. I am frequently wrong. I am wrong about something every single day I am alive. Rarely have I been more wrong about something than I was about Bailey in AEW. I thought the act had a short shelf life at best and was an active drag on the product at worst. Nope! Not even close! The dude is not just a television worker, but a television highlight week after week.
The more interesting thread running through this match is Kevin Knight himself. Watch him. He demands it. He got the big match against MJF, he got the prime promo time, something big is coming. He’s already outgrown the trios title, but has he outgrown his tag partner as well? This is a burgeoning superstar with an uncapped ceiling. I can’t wait to see him try to reach it.
Prediction: Okada, Fletcher and Davis
AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Cash Wheeler and Dax Harwood) (with Stokely) defend against The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson)
A few variations on one big question I can’t get out of my head: What can they do to make this special? What can they do to make this meaningfully different than every other time these four men have shared a ring?
It’s an honest question and it deserves an honest answer which is probably not much, at least structurally. The bones of an FTR/Bucks match are well-documented at this point. We know the beats, we know the escalation, we know the breathless finishing stretch. The question is whether, on this particular night in this particular building in this particular ring, they find that thing that separates a great match from a transcendent one.
These are two teams well aware of their legacy and their places in wrestling history. Any implication to the contrary is shortsighted and naive. Both FTR and The Young Bucks are consumed with greatness, and, with their finish lines closer than anyone would like to admit, tearing down the house very much matters to them. How they do it is where the intrigue comes.
If they go 25 minutes and leave everything they have on the floor, this match can still be the thing everyone remembers. These four are too good at their jobs for it not to be.
Prediction: The Young Bucks win the titles
Image Copyright: AEW
AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Konosuke Takeshita with no time limit
Here is the honest Moxley situation as it stands: tweener Jon Moxley is incongruous. The Death Riders are firmly heels while their leader is no longer, at least not consistently. The audience has started cheering him again because the audience never really stopped loving him, which is either a testament to his permanent likability or a creative miscalculation, depending on how charitable you’re feeling.
The full turn feels all but cemented, but that creates a different problem entirely: can the Death Riders function without their True Ace as the fulcrum? Everyone in that group would need to take a significant step up for the faction to work independently of him, and that’s the big blinking question mark at the end of this sentence.
The no time limit stipulation exists because a second draw would be a bit of unconscionable, creative malpractice. One of them must walk out of LA as Continental Champion. The narrative weight of Takeshita finally claiming more gold and Moxley’s potential full face turn needs a clean loss to make it land with proper weight.
This is Takeshita’s moment and has been for a long time. Beating The Ace and bringing another title to the Don Callis Family does wonders for him. He should win, and win clean…and then the Death Riders should bust out the plastic bag one more time.
Prediction: Takeshita wins the title
AEW Revolution (Image credit: AEW)
AEW Women’s Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) defend against Megan Bayne & Lena Kross
Megan Bayne is a top-of-the-card superstar in the making, and pairing her with another woman of size in Lena Kross is exactly the right move — two physically imposing, credible presences who should not ever resort to chicanery to win their matches. Bayne has been ready for titles for a while now and this feels like the first step in a full ascent toward every piece of individual gold.
Willow Nightingale is better than these titles. She is better than this program. She may well be better than everyone in this match. This is less hyperbole and more a statement of fact that AEW has been politely ignoring. Willow is a singles star being asked to be patient inside a tag team. Case in point is her singles title defense being on the pre-show and this on the main.
Harley Cameron is not for me. I’ll own that fully and without reservation. Some people find her endearing and charming which is almost certainly true, and I understand that I am likely the problem here. But as a professional wrestling act, she is an anchor on someone with greatness in her future.
The Babes of Wrath have been fun enough. Fun has a ceiling. Nightingale does not and the longer she remains ancillary attached to other people’s stories — Cameron’s rise, Kris Statlander’s everything — the further she drifts from the moment she’s owed.
Let Bayne and Kross have the titles. Free Willow.
Prediction: Bayne & Kross win the titles
AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Kris Statlander in a two of three falls match
Rarely is someone so comfortable in their character so quickly on national television. Thekla is by no means a rookie, but it still took a terrifyingly short time to become this fully formed, singular performer. No one is really doing it like her. She moves, acts and talks like an 80s action movie villain who is also, entirely and completely, herself. I could listen to her run down her opponents all day. Her delivery of ‘you wear sunglasses now!’ is something I’m still thinking about.
There is a specificity to her contempt that most heels can’t locate without using their opponents’ first names or winking at the camera. Her delivery is spiteful and it always feels like she’s airing a grievance. That’s the mark of someone who has done the work. AEW’s women’s division is flush with talent. Thekla came in like a thunderbolt, forcing everyone else to step up.
This is the rubber match with a fitting stipulation. Two out of three falls neutralizes the chaos that defined their strap match. It forces a longer story, rewarding craft over improvisation, and leans into both women’s ability to go a longer distance. Statlander is proof of concept as the wrestler who waited, grinded, and finally got there. Thekla is the proof of concept for what happens when AEW lets someone be who they are, even when they’re so different from everyone else.
Prediction: Thekla retains
Image Copyright: AEW
AEW World Champion MJF defends against Hangman Adam Page in a Texas Death Match where if Page loses, he can never challenge for the title again
Think about what that actually means, not as a pro wrestling contrivance, but as a story. Hangman spent two years crumbling, crawling back from the edge, reclaiming his moral compass, and eventually pulling the World title back out into the light. Now he walks into a Texas Death Match where losing doesn’t just cost him a championship match. It costs him everything, permanently, forever.
There’s a world where that’s interesting. This is not that world. It’s a booking inconvenience masquerading as drama, and it diminishes something that didn’t need help. The jubilation of Hangman freeing the title from that briefcase last summer is something only he could evoke. Few performers can tell that story. Fewer still can deliver that finale with the proper weight. Adding a “never again” clause is a solution to a problem that didn’t exist.
MJF, for all of his exhausting excesses, has been genuinely great lately. He’s cut the corny name-calling and started delivering his promos with actual meaning. The cowardly, overcompensating heel is still there, but his worst inclinations are being curbed, and the result is a real pro wrestling antagonist.
A Texas Death Match is the complete antithesis of what he is as a wrestler. There is no worse stipulation, no worse opponent. He didn’t burn down a man’s house. He didn’t stick syringes into anyone. MJF is desperate and has done gross things to stay at the top, but Hangman, with everything to lose, is a different beast entirely.
Hangman should win. Any result that doesn’t end with him leaving LA with the belt is misguided. His reign after All In wasn’t the best, but the solution is not to exile him from the title picture forever — it’s to do better this time. MJF losing in his first PPV defense should send him spiraling, and that’s a story worth telling. Give us that story.
On a new Wrestling Weekly, Les Thatcher and Vic Sosa have their eyes on AEW Revolution which should be yet another outstanding pay-per-view.
On this week’s show, we’ll give our predictions on the matches as well as our thoughts on Cody Rhodes’ recent comments and what it might mean for him moving forward.
Konosuke Takeshita’s next NJPW appearance will be taking place later this month.
At New Beginning USA, Takeshita defeated El Phantasmo to become the new NJPW World Television Champion. The match initially went to a 15-minute time limit draw before ELP challenged Takeshita to go into overtime. A new champion was crowned, and now Takeshita is set to appear at the New Japan Cup finals on March 21. His match for the show has not been announced.
“March 21 will see Takeshita bring the title belt to Japan for the first time, as he will be in action at the New Japan Cup final!,” NJPW wrote. “What does Takeshita have planned for his first Japanese appearance in NJPW since New Year Dash?”
The New Japan Cup finals are being held in Niigata and will air live on NJPW World with English commentary available. The show will help set the stage for Sakura Genesis on April 4.
Fourteen wrestlers are still alive in New Japan Cup 2026 as the tournament continues deeper into the second round. The winner faces Yota Tsuji for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship in the main event of Sakura Genesis.
Takeshita is under contract with all three of AEW, NJPW, and DDT Pro Wrestling. This Sunday (March 15), he is challenging Jon Moxley for the Continental Championship at AEW’s Revolution pay-per-view.
AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR will defend against The Rascalz as part of this Saturday’s updated AEW Collision lineup.
Dezmond Xavier and Zachary Wentz earned the opportunity in a title eliminator against FTR last week with the winners of the match moving on to defend against The Young Bucks at this month’s Revolution pay-per-view.
At one point earlier on Dynamite, Dax Harwood challenge Tommaso Ciampa to a match on Collision that never came to be.
In a clash between the CMLL Heavyweight Champion and NJPW TV Champion, Claudio Castagnoli and Konosuke Takeshita will go one-on-one. Takeshita will challenge Castagnoli’s Death Riders teammate Jon Moxley at Revolution. It will be their third-ever singles match with their last being a 20-minute time limit draw at this past year’s Continental Classic.
Former AEW World Champion Swerve Strickland will take on Bandido’s brother Gravity after Strickland choked out Brody King Wednesday followed by Bandido coming out for the late save. It’s Gravity’s first AEW match since the much-discussed tag bout featuring he and Komander against Malakai Black & Buddy Matthews from a November 2023 Collision.
The new additions join a previously announced four-way tag team match that will see the AEW return of Rush & Dralistico.
Current AEW Collision lineup | Tucson, AZ | This Saturday
AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against The Rascalz (Dezmond Xavier & Zachary Wentz)
Claudio Castagnoli vs. Konosuke Takeshita
Swerve Strickland vs. Gravity
place at Tucson Arena in Tucson, Arizona.
LFI (Dralistico & Rush) vs. The Swirl (Blake Christian & Lee Johnson) vs. The Outrunners (Turbo Floyd & Truth Magnum) vs. Private Party (Isiah Kassidy & Marq Quen)
A pair of new champions have been crowned tonight at New Japan Pro Wrestling’s The New Beginning USA show in Trenton, New Jersey.
The first was Oleg Boltin, who pinned Tomohiro Ishii with a Verdict (F5) and Kamikaze (rolling fireman’s carry slam) to win the STRONG Openweight championship.
It’s the first STRONG Openweight championship for Boltin, and the second singles title in New Japan—he held the NEVER Openweight championship for 120 days last year. He is also a three-time winner of the Never Openweight Six-Man Championships, including his current reign along with Hirooki Goto and Yoshi-Hashi.
The match ended Ishii’s first reign as STRONG Openweight champion. He had won the belt from Gabe Kidd at Windy City Riot in Chicago, Illinois, last April.
The second new champion on the show was Konosuke Takeshita, who defeated El Phantasmo to win the NJPW World Television championship. The match originally ended in a time limit draw, but ELP challenged Takeshita to an overtime period. Takeshita accepted and went on to win with a powerdrive kneestrike and raging fire.
This is Takeshita’s first reign as NJPW World Television champion. He is also a former IWGP Heavyweight Champion, IWGP Intercontinental Champion, and NEVER Openweight Champion.
ELP is now a two-time former NJPW World Television champion. He originally won the belt from Ren Narita at Wrestle Kingdom 19 in January of 2025, in a four-way that also included Jeff Cobb (now known as JC Mateo on SmackDown) and Ryohei Oiwa. He lost the belt to Great-O-Khan the following April, but regained it later that same month.
It’s Elimination Chamber weekend, so Les Thatcher and Victor Sosa run down the card and give our predictions for who will have championship opportunities at WrestleMania.
We’ll also take a look at Hangman Adam Page and the idea that he may never be able to challenge for the AEW title again. Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!
AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley will defend his title against Konosuke Takeshita at next month’s Revolution pay-per-view, but with no time limit.
During Wednesday’s Dynamite, Moxley called for a rematch with the twist which was later agreed to off-screen.
Moxley and Takeshita went to a time limit draw at this past Saturday’s Grand Slam Australia in their fifth-ever meeting and a rematch from last December’s Continental Classic tournament where Takeshita pinned Moxley for the first time.
It was Moxley’s first title defense since winning last year’s Classic. Takeshita is looking for his first AEW singles title since his 148-day International title run ended in March 2025.
Current AEW Revolution card | Sunday, March 15 | Los Angeles
AEW World Champion MJF defends against Hangman Page with stipulations to come
AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Cash Wheeler & Dax Harwood) defend against The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson)
AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Konosuke Takeshita with no time limit