Mercedes Mone and The Beast Mortos get cozy on first date anniversary

Mercedes Mone and The Beast Mortos have celebrated the anniversary of their first date, sharing the milestone with fans.

Often seen publicly together and very vocal about their relationship, Mortos posted an Instagram Story marking the occasion, featuring a photo of the couple kissing at a restaurant with a glass of wine on the table. Keeping with lucha tradition, Mortos hid his face in the picture with an emoji.

“Anniversary of our first date,” wrote the Mexican wrestler.

The couple has been openly affectionate on social media. Mone publicly confirmed their relationship earlier this year during an interview with TMZ after Mortos previously shared a photo of them.

Mone was previously married to Sarath Ton, a costume designer for WWE and former pro wrestler; however, they divorced back in 2024. Mortos previously wrestled under the name Black Taurus. He is currently pursuing a legal career alongside his role as a wrestler on All Elite Wrestling.

John Cena Sr. once encouraged Mercedes Mone in the indies

Recollecting a very old incident recently, John Cena Sr. opened up on the Best For Business podcast about how he had once encouraged a disheartened Mercedes Mone.

“I’ll give you another one that was one that I picked: Sasha Banks,” Cena Sr. said. “Where she is now? We can have a different story about that. Where she is now and where she was — I remember doing a show with her for Chris Setaro and Powerhouse Wrestling. And her mom was there and she said, ‘You know, I don’t know, maybe, I don’t know, I think I might give it up.’

“I said, ‘No! Don’t. You don’t realize what you have.’ She had so much ability, but, you know, it’s awful hard on the indies. It’s not an easy fight out there.”

Mone stood strong and transitioned herself into one of the most popular names in the business.

John Cena Sr. recalls encouraging Mercedes Mone on indies

Before she made it to national television, John Cena Sr. saw big potential in Mercedes Mone.

The father of John Cena appeared on the Best For Business podcast and discussed his own experiences as a manager, authority figure, and promoter on the New England indies. Cena Sr. named Kofi Kingston, Ivar of the War Raiders, Tommaso Ciampa, and Fred Rosser as some of the people he worked with who were destined to succeed. Mone — then known as Mercedes KV — was also someone that he believed in. He recalled encouraging Mone not to give up on wrestling.

“I’ll give you another one that was one that I picked: Sasha Banks,” Cena Sr. said. “Where she is now? We can have a different story about that. Where she is now and where she was — I remember doing a show with her for Chris Setaro and Powerhouse Wrestling. And her mom was there and she said, ‘You know, I don’t know, maybe, I don’t know, I think I might give it up.’

“I said, ‘No! Don’t. You don’t realize what you have.’ She had so much ability, but, you know, it’s awful hard on the indies. It’s not an easy fight out there. And it’s very easy to get depressed. It’s very easy to be defeated. I used to tell everybody, and I still do, ‘Don’t do that. Only one person’s going to defeat you in this business — it’s you. Stay with it. You know what? You may never ever make the WWF or WWE or AEW or TNA, but you’re part of a profession on the other side that’s just as good and just as great.’ And that’s what they need to hear.”

Only a few years into her career, Mone was signed to NXT. She became a star in WWE as Sasha Banks and is now a champion for AEW.

Cena Sr. has been making some media appearances recently ahead of his son’s final match. John Cena will wrestle for the final time this weekend when he battles Gunther at Saturday Night’s Main Event.

AEW Collision live results: Jon Moxley vs. Konosuke Takeshita

For the first time in some time, tonight’s AEW Collision from Columbus, Ohio, has a true air of importance with several key figures on the show.

In an important Continental Classic Blue league bout, former AEW World Champion Jon Moxley goes one-on-one with IWGP World Champion Konosuke Takeshita with each looking to add to their three point totals.

Blue league leader Claudio Castagnoli (six points) will also be in action against Mascara Dorada who is looking for his first points while Orange Cassidy and Roderick Strong (zero points each) will compete in another Blue league match.

A night after losing the ROH Women’s TV title, Mercedes Mone will defend the TBS title against Leila Grey.

In his first live promo since returning from injury, former AEW World Champion Swerve Strickland will make an appearance.

The first televised AEW National title defense will take place as Ricochet defends in an open challenge.

Our live coverage begins at 8 PM Eastern.

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Orange Cassidy (0) vs. Roderick Strong (0)

Collision started with a match I was really looking forward to with Orange Cassidy and Roderick Strong. Strong and Cassidy started with some basic wrestling until Strong hit a backbreaker and then several chops that sent Cassidy to ringside. Cassidy was then back suplexed on the guardrail, and got hit with more hard chops. Strong hit another hard backbreaker that left Cassidy in pain on mat, rolling to the apron. Strong chopped Cassidy again and then hit a slingshot into the bottom turnbuckle from the apron.

Strong hit another backbreaker, followed by a few more. As Strong did these backbreakers he held on for a submission attempt and then would pick Cassidy up and hit another backbreaker. At the last one of these, Cassidy countered into a DDT on Strong. Cassidy stood up, but his hands in his pockets, and hit a monkey flip on Strong before hitting a tope suicida.

Cassidy drove Strong into the turnbuckle and went for a flying crossbody, but Strong caught him and hit a powerslam for a 2-count. Strong attempted to hit a backbreaker on the top rope, but Cassidy shoved Strong from the ropes, causing him to get his knee wrapped in the ropes and allowing Cassidy to hit a tornado DDT for a 2-count. Cassidy missed an Orange Punch and ate another backbreaker and then End of Heartache for a 2-count that Strong immediately went into a Stronghold, but Cassidy countered into a pinfall attempt and then hit Stundog Millionaire. Cassidy blocked another End of Heartache before grabbing the legs of Strong and pinning him.

Result: Orange Cassidy (3) defeated Roderick Strong (0) via pinfall

–Tony Schiavone announced that Darby Allin was removed from the C2 tournament after an injury in his match with Kevin Knight. Jack Perry would be stepping in to take his place in the tournament.

–Darby Allin did an interview saying he wasn’t sure what was next for him, but if Jack Perry was going to be in the tournament, he hoped Perry was going to win the whole thing.

–FTR & Stokely Hathaway came down to the ring to address what happened with Bullet Club Gold on Dynamite. The fans chanted something very rude at Hathaway, wishing him to cease talking. Hathaway called out Juice Robinson and Austin Gunn and they did not disappoint coming down to the ring. Cash Wheeler acknowledged that Robinson and Gunn were the last people to beat them, they would never do so again. Harwood dared Robinson and Gunn touch their belt again,

Gunn said that FTR was right – he was a son of a Gunn. Robinson was the son of a carpenter. Wheeler was the son of his cousin, and Harwood was a son of a… well, you get the idea. Gunn demanded they give them a tag title shot, reminding them yet again that they were the last team to beat FTR, and Robinson said that the next time they touch the tag titles, it will be when The Bang Bang Gang won the tag titles in the United Kingdom.

Juice Robinson and Austin Gunn were awesome here again, stealing the segment with an excellent promo.

–Marina Shafir, Wheeler Yuta, and Daniel Garcia were backstage cutting a promo on Mark Briscoe, saying that Garcia was going to bring the TNT Championship back to the Death Riders when he faces Briscoe.

Claudio Castagnoli (3) vs. Mascara Dorada (0)

At this point in the show technical issues started with the Triller feed of AEW Collision – The recap will be updated as soon as the show resumes.

I only had audio at this point of Claudio & Mascara Dorada. I finally got picture back at the end of the match. The match came back just as Dorada was hitting a shooting star press on Castagnoli for the win.

Result: Mascara Dorada (3) defeated Claudio Castagnoli (3)

–Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa, and Harley Cameron & Willow Nightingale were interviewed by Tony Schiavone about their upcoming world tag team title match AEW Dynamite: Winter is Coming. Storm pointed out that Nightingale and Cameron have been unable to beat Storm, but Cameron followed up by pointing out that her and Nightingale were better than they have been in the past, and Shirakawa interjected, saying that they were all there for the tag titles, and they needed to keep that in focus. Tony Schiavone then drank champagne with them.

–Swerve Strickland came down to the ring, talking about his return at AEW Full Gear. Swerve said that he worked hard at recovering from his knee injury the last 3 months so he could come back more dangerous than ever, and he came back because he wants the AEW World Championship again. Swerve makes his intentions very clear, saying that the last time he and Joe faced off, Swerve was the one that took the title off him last time.

Swerve mentioned cutting through all of Joe’s fodder he put in front of him like enemies in Dynasty Warriors. I appreciate a good gaming reference. Swerve assured Joe that he was going to fall to him again. Swerve talked about Hangman Page next, and said that while they may never see eye to eye, there was no better rivalry than those two, and if he needed another person to ride with him into battle, Swerve would back him up, but after that, they will have a very long conversation.

Josh Alexander came down to the ring. Alexander said that it was not Swerve’s House, but Alexander’s and the Don Callis Family. Alexnader said that he was the one that deserved a title shot ahead of Swerve, and that maybe they should do something about it and fight. Swerve challenged him to a match and it was made for Cardiff, but as he making that challenge, Katsuyori Shibata attacked Swerve from behind, kicking him in the knee that was injured and slowly walking away.

–Lexy Nair was with Mercedes Mone, and Nair wanted to address Mone losing the ROH Television title on the ROH PPV, and Nair was wondering if the two big losses she felt lately would cause her issues when she faced Leyla Grey tonight. Mone said that she was going to make Grey pay, and Mone would get back on track soon.

TBS Championship: Mercedes Mone vs. Leyla Grey (w/ Christopher Daniels)

Mone attacked Grey right at the start of the match and hit Daniels with meteora on the floor. Mone countered a bulldog and hit a meteora on Grey for a 2-count. Ian Riccaboni made a “6-7” reference here, and I wanted to turn off my TV. Sorry, Ian. Mone grabbed Grey by the hair and pulled her to the mat before slamming Grey’s face into the turnbuckle. Nigel Guinness was talking about understanding Mone’s frustration in losing a title. He said it was something Tony wouldn’t understand since he never held a title. He then asked what the greatest victory in his life was, and Schiavone responded “Overcoming you.” Nigel legitimately laughed. Grey hit a running knee on Mone and a bulldog, but Mone countered the pinfall attempt into a statement maker for the submission.

Result: Mercedes Mone defeated Leyla Grey

–Eddie Kingston had an absolutely incredible pretape promo. Kingston put over Joe as the best wrestler in the world because he has the world title, but Kingston is disgusted with him, because he is doing the very thing that Joe hated for years – cheating, lying, and backstabbing people. Kingston said that he was going to take the title from Joe to show the young people in the back how to do it the right way. This was awesome.

–The Triangle of Madness beat up some women backstage and said they were coming to Cardiff for Jamie Hayter & Statlander.

AEW National Championship: Ricochet (w/ the Gates of Agony) vs. Ace Austin

Austin is one of the few people out there that can keep up with Ricochet in the ring, so the opening part of this match was very fast paced as Austin repeatedly sent Ricochet to the floor, and he yelled with rage at the announce desk. Ricochet grabbed the bell hammer and as the referee was taking it from him, Bishop Kaun tripped Austin, allowing Ricochet to get the advantage.

Ricochet ripped a sign away from a fan and then tried to give Austin a papercut with it. Ricochet hit a dropkick in the middle of the ring after reversing an Irish whip. Ricochet missed a running kick in the corner and ended up landing on the back of his head, which looked brutal. Austin hit a Russian Leg Sweep and a series of lariats in the corner. Austin fought off an attempt by Toa Liona to trip him up, hit a springboard clothesline, and a doctor bomb for a 2-count.

Austin hit a forearm in the corner, but Ricochet rolled him up, hit a dropkick, and a standing shooting star press for a 2-count. Ricohcet missed a spirit gun and fought with Austin over a suplex, but Austin cradled Ricochet for a 2-count. Austin hit a superplex on Ricochet. Austin hit a bellringer on Ricochet, stomping his head into the mat. Austin went for the Fold, but Ricochet pulled the referee in the way, went for a low blow that Austin blocked, but Ricochet flipped backwards, hit the spirit gun, and vertigo for the win.

Result: Ricochet defeated Ace Austin

–FTR ran down to attack Ace Austin, beating on him to send a message to Bullet Club Gold. Juice Robinson & Austin Gunn ran down to make the save and drove FTR from the ring. The Bang Bang Gang threw the tag titles back at FTR, sending them packing.

Jon Moxley (3) vs. Konosuke Takeshita (3)

The fans were very positive towards Moxley when he came out in this match, so it seems to me that this slow burn babyface turn for him is working. The fans, of course, also loved Takeshita. The fans saw this as two huge stars meeting for the first time, which is a testament to how Takeshita has gotten himself over, especially since winning the G1 and the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship. Both guys exchanged a lot of technical wrestling at the start, and it started to turn back for Moxley once Takeshita started hitting dragon screws to the knee of Moxley.

Moxley sold the knee very well, looking like Takeshita was making it difficult for him to walk. Great stuff here. Takeshita tried to hit 10-punchces in the corner, but Moxley gouged the mouth and nose of Takeshita and hit 10 punches of his own, but Takeshita sent Moxley into the opposite corner and he crashed to the mat again selling his knee. Takeshita hit a DDT on the leg of Moxley, who looked at Takeshita in pain but nodded and stood up, limping and started exchanging chops with Takeshita until he dropped Moxley with a forearm.

Takeshita faked Moxley out with a forearm and instead kicked Moxley right in the shin. Takeshita charged Moxley, but Moxley hit a forearm and tried to suplex Takeshita off the apron. Takeshita blocked it, but Moxley dropkicked him in the ankle and hit a curb stomp on Takeshita on the apron while selling the knee. Moxley hit a back suplex on Takeshita, and Takeshita popped up, hit a German suplex, and then both men went down after double lariats.

Moxley and Takeshita kept exchanging forearms until neither of them could continue, and both men hit the ropes and Moxley took Takeshita’s head off with a King Kong Lariat. Takeshita went for a Blue Thunder Bomb, but Moxley shifted his weight and took Takeshita over into an armbar before transitioning to an ankle lock on Takeshita. Takeshita continued to sell the ankle that Moxley dropkicked earlier. Moxley tried to piledrive Moxley on the apron, but Takeshita hit a back body drop. Takeshita went for a dive, but couldn’t run due to his ankle. Moxley got back in the ring, and Takeshita hit a hard forearm and managed to hit the ropes and hit a tope con giro.

Takeshita went to take apart the announce table, and it partly collapsed due to it, but Takeshita hit a blue thunder bomb onto one of the walls of the table, which still looked brutal. It was probably worse than the usual table bump. Moxley barely made it back into the ring, and as he rolled in Takeshita flew through the air and hit a frog splash for a 2-count. This match rules. Takeshita went for the power drive knee, but Moxley collapsed. As Takeshita tried to pick him up Moxley baited him in and cradled him for a 2-count. Moxley hit a cutter and went for a piledriver, but Takeshtia picked the leg and stepped over and dropped a knee on Moxley’s knee.

Takeshita charged Moxley and Moxley hit a hard forearm and a Paradigm Shift, but Takeshita got his feet on the ropes. Moxley hit two hard lariats which Takeshita no sold, and then a big boot, but Takeshita got up immediately. Moxley hit some hard strikes and went to the ropes again, but collapsed due to his knee, and Takeshita hit the power drive knee for a 2-count. Takeshita hit a second power drive knee and a Raging Fire for the pinfall. This match was absolutely incredible.

Result: Konosuke Takeshita (6) defeated Jon Moxley (3)

This match was fantastic. One of the best matches of the year for Collision, and maybe one of the best matches of the year for all of AEW. It won’t top Will Ospreay vs. Adam Page, and a few others, but it was easily one of the best Collision main events all year. Jon Moxley and Konosuke Takeshita are fantastic pro wrestlers, and it is a pleasure to watch them work.

–After the match the Death Riders started to make their way down to the ring, looking very disappointed in Moxley. The Horsemen beatdown is coming for Moxley. It is only a matter of when, and not if.

Final Thoughts

The C2 always produces excellent television for AEW, and this was no exception. Simple storytelling, great matches. It’s my favourite time of the year as a fan of the wrestling in AEW. The C2 and the G1 both are my favourite ways to watch wrestling, as the tournament format makes it so easy to build stories with every win, loss, or draw, and Moxley losing twice is a very big deal. Add in that he has lost now to Hangman Page, Kyle O’Reilly twice, Claudio Castagnoli, and now Konosuke Takeshita? Bad, bad things are about to happen to him with the Death Riders, and his babyface run afterwards is going to be so great. Jon Moxley is awesome.

C2 Standings Update

Only the Blue League was active tonight, so nothing to update on the Gold League.

AEW Dynamite: Winter is Coming (December 10, 2025)

  • AEW World Championship: Samoa Joe (c) vs. Eddie Kingston
  • AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship: Timeless Love Bombs vs. Babes of Wrath
  • Hangman Adam Page & Swerve Strickland vs. Powerhouse Hobbs & Katsuyori Shibata

Two title matches added to AEW Collision

Two new title matches has been added to Saturday’s AEW Collision.

At Friday’s ROH Final Battle, Red Velvet pulled off a huge win, defeating Mercedes Mone to regain the ROH Women’s Television Championship. As Mone was reeling from her loss backstage, Leila Grey walked up to her and said even with just twelve titles, she’s still the “baddest b****”.

An enraged Mone tore Grey up and down, but Grey responded by saying she’d be the next TBS Champion and asked Mone what she was doing tomorrow. Mone walked off upset as Tony Khan quickly made the match official.

After spending most of the year accumulating titles, Mone has seen a string of back luck since Full Gear, where she was unable to win the AEW Women’s Championship from Kris Statlander, the only championship Mone has failed to win. 

During the post-show press conference, Khan told Ricochet that he would be defending the National title on tomorrow’s Collision, though he didn’t specify who he’d be facing.

It was announced earlier on Friday that Swerve Strickland would also be appearing on Collision.

AEW Collision lineup | Saturday, December 6

  • Swerve Strickland will appear
  • TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Leila Grey
  • AEW National title: Ricochet defends against TBA
  • Continental Classic Blue League: Claudio Castagnoli (6 points) vs. Mascara Dorada (0 points)
  • Continental Classic Blue League: Jon Moxley (3 points) vs. Konosuke Takeshita (3 points)
  • Continental Classic Blue League: Orange Cassidy (0 points) vs. Roderick Strong (0 points)

Ring of Honor TV live results: Mercedes Mone in action, Final Battle go-home show

The CEO of AEW will make her official Ring of Honor debut on tonight’s ROH TV on HonorClub.

Ahead of her ROH Women’s TV title defense against Red Velvet at Friday’s Final Battle, Mercedes Mone will be in action against an opponent to be named.

The finals of the inaugural ROH Women’s Pure title tournament will be official as Billie Starkz takes on Yuka Sakazaki in the lone semifinal. Deonna Purrazzo has already advanced to Friday’s finals due to a forfeit by Queen Aminata.

The Beast Mortos will battle Komander while the Premier Athletes of Ariya Daivari, Tony Nese and Stori Denali will be in mixed trios action.

Wheeler Yuta & Daniel Garcia will enter the ROH tag team ranks while Dalton Castle & The Outrunners continue their run in the trios division.

Several matches for the Final Battle Zero Hour pre-show are also expected for tonight.

Our live coverage kicks off at 7 PM Eastern.

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Here we are, friends. Another Final Battle’s Eve is upon us. I hope that you and yours are gathered around the Final Battle tree, singing Final Battle carols and enjoying some Final Battle Nog. Don’t forget to leave cookies out for Athena and a carrot for Billie Starkz! (Seriously, they’ll break your stuff if you don’t feed them).

Tonight will round out the card for tomorrow’s magical Final Battle event (until Santa Tony gifts us with half a dozen day-of matches as he’s apt to do), so let’s get right into it.

The Beast Mortos (w/Sammy Guevara) vs. Komander

And there isn’t a bigger way to get into it than with The Beast Mortos! Mortos will compete in the ROH World Championship Survival of The Fittest match at ROH, along with his tag team partner Guevara and his opponent tonight, Komander.

Mortos waved off the Code of Honor, which brought out the matador in Komander as Mortos charged him and he dodged it. Mortos grabbed Komander and threw him into the corners with heavy spashes and lariats to follow.

Komander landed an awesome headscissor takedown to switch the momentum and set Mortos up for a charge in the corner. Mortos back body dropped him, but Komander scrambled to the top anyways for a missile dropkick.

Komander walked the ropes and tried a fancy move, but Mortos grabbed him off the rope and hit a knee to the back that split Komander in half. Mortos hung Komander up on the ropes and started undoing his mask. The ref called him off and Mortos puched Komander in the face instead.

Mortos dragged Komander to the middle of the ring and started messing with his mask again. Komander tried a quick rollup, but only got a two count. He rained down kicks on Mortos and took him down with a hurricanrana.

Mortos tried to intimidate Komander, but some chops and a top rope spingboard hurricanrana kept Komander on offense. Mortos exited the ring and Komander dove after him, flattening him on the entrance ramp.

Komander tossed Mortos back in and went up top. He went for a running splash, but Mortos moved and transitioned into a samoan drop. Mortos went for a powerbomb, but Komander turned it into some kicks and a DDT for a two count.

Komander charged, but Mortos caught him in another Samoan Drop. Mortos landed on his head though and seemed to daze himself. Komander went up top, but Mortos was playing possum and knocked him off the turnbuckle.

Mortos went for a superplex, but Komander came back with a hurricanarana. Mortos caught him though and delivered an inside-out lariat (I call it that because it turned Komander inside out). Mortos went for the cover, but Komander kicked out and hit a poisonrana.

Komander went up top again, bvut Sammy Guevara appeared and knocked him down, causing the DQ.

Match Result: Komander defeated The Beast Mortos via DQ

Guevara then pulled the mask off of a prone Komander. That summoned the RHO Champion, Bandido, who ran down to clear the ring and save Komander.

Suddenly, Don Callis appeared on the ramp and spoke worse Spanish than even I’m capable of. He introduced Hechicero who will also be in the Survival of The Fittest Match at final battle.

While he was doing this, Mortos and Hechicero jumped Bandido and Komander, taking them both out. Hechicero and Mortos then played tug-of-war with the Belt, which was broken up by Guevara. The three pulled it back and forth until Guevara put it down and the segment ended.

The Premier Athletes (Tony Nese, Ariya Daivari & Stori Denali) w/Mark Sterling vs Philly Collins, Marino Tanaglia and Zoey Lynn

The Athletes started off with their usual schtick and the match began with Daivari takingon the much larger Tanaglia. Nese tagged in and the two beat him up. Denali then tagged in and beat up Tanaglia for a bit. That did bring in Lynn though, who was about half the size of Denali and lasted about half a second.

Tags were flying fast as Nese tagged in and took out Colins with some stiff forearms. Collins managed to hold his own with an insiguri and tagged in Lynn who went for a crossbody on Nese and Davari, who caught her and threw her to Denali who finished her off with a chokeslam for the pin.

Match Result: The Premier Athletes defeated Philly Collins, Marino Tanaglia and Zoey Lynn

Sidney Akeem vs Rosario Grillo

Akeem danced his way to the ring. Grillo walked, but we don’t hold that against him.

Grillo immediately ducked through the ropes after the bell, playing some mind games with Akeem. When they locked up, Grillo got a wristlock on, but Akeem flipped it easily and after a kipup, sent grillo to the mat. Akeem dodged a lariat with an awesome matrix-style reverse duck.

Grillo sent him to the corner, but Akeem fought back and hit a dropkick, sending Grillo to the ropes. Grillio went for another lariat, but Akeem flipped over amnd ducked it. Grillo punched him in the face and the fight moved outside the ring until Akeem tossed Grillo back in.

Grillo bounced Akeem’s head off the turnbuckles repeatedly before Akeem hit a spinning crossbody and regained control. He threw a flurry of kicks and punches before, and follow me here, he ran up Grillo’s back, kicked him in the face and then landed on his feet. Yeah, I know.

Akeem hit a handspring cutter on Grillo and boom, that was it. Akeem got the win in impressive style.

Match result: Sidney Akeem defeated Rosario Grillo

Wow! Akeem looked amazing in this match. He was dodging and flipping everywhere and it all made sense and looked really impressive. He’s on his way for sure.

Dalton Castle & The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd) vs. Jake Omen, Austin Adonis and Josh Crane

The Outrunners are missing Fianl Battle tomorrow, but Dalton Castle will be in action taking on Ricochet in the latter’s first defense of the AEW National title.

Magnum kicked things off against Omen, who made them mistake of posing. Magnum immediately showed him the business and posed himself. That brought in Adonis and Floyd. Castle decided to join the fray and all three triple teamed Adonis.

Adonis dragged Magnum to the opposite corner for a little triple team of their own and then he and Crane tried for a double team. Magnum fought them off and Floyd came in so that they could do stereo splashes in the corner before Floyd hit a double bulldog.

Adonis slapped Floyd which hulked him up big time and he sent him flying. Castle tagged in and took out oall three of the opponents with a series of hip throws. The Outrunners cleared the ring and Castle grabbed Omen for a slam and an Outrunner double elbow.

Castle hoisted him up in a bangarang and that was it. Castle and the Outrunners go to 4-0 as a team.

Match Result: Dalton Castle & The Outrunners defeated Josh Crane, Austin Adonis and Jake Omen

After the match, Ricochet sauntered out to the entrance ramp and the Gates of Agony took out the Outrunners in the ring, leaving Castle to stand toe to toe with his opponent for tomorrow. All three went after Castle, and Ricochet belted him with, well, the belt. Castle lay prone in the ring while Ricochet and the Gates stood tall in the ring.

Death Riders (Wheeler Yuta & Daniel Garcia) vs. Damian & Damon Reel

Reely?

Anyway, Yuta and his hair arrived with Garcia through the crowd with their usual emo faces. Yuta and (I think) Damon started things off with Yuta and immediately fell victim to Yuta’s arm-based offense. Yuta dropkicked him into next week and Garcia took out the other Reel. The two then stomped Damon in the center of the ring.

Garcia tagged in and laid ten punches into Damon in the corner. Damon fought back a bit, but Garcia just tagged in Yuta who started working the leg of Damon. Yuta put him in a figure four and Garcia tagged in to punch him in the back of the head.

Damon got a tag to Damian who came in and ducked a few clotheslines. Garcia caught him with a big lariat though and Yuta kicked Damon off the ring apron. The two then traded speedy splashes on Damian in the corner. I mean about 2 dozen of them.

Garcia put Reel in a Sharpshooter and he tapped out quickly, giving the Death Riders the victory.

Match Result: Death Riders defeated Damian & Damon Reel

-Backstage, a very sad Queen Aminata (in full neck brace) officially forfeited her Women’s Pure Tournament Semi Final match with Deonna Purrazzo. Purrazzo moves into the finals against the winner of the other semifinal match, Yuka Sakazaki vs Billie Starkz.

“Undisputed” ROH Women’s TV Champion Mercedes Mone vs Lovely Miss Larkin

So they had been touting this as Mone’s ROH debut, but the chyron said she was 2-0, so along with her 13 or so belts, she also has that going for her.

Larkin seemed to be working a tourettes gimmick (?) and Mone immediately got her into a backstabber and lungblower into a rear naked a choke. That was it for Larkin as she tapped.

Match Result: Mercedes Mone defeated Lovely Miss Larkin

That was really disappointing. They played it up as a big deal debut, but Mone spent more time dancing to her theme music than in the match. I’m sure tomorrow nights match will be great, but what was the point of this?

ROH Women’s Pure Title Tournament Semi Final Match: Yuka Sakazaki vs. Billie Starkz

The clock started and Starkz kicked off the match making fun of Sakazaki’s height. From there, Starkz sent Sakazaki into the ropes to cost her a break at 58:39. Stakz tried to set her up for a submission, but Sakazaki sent her out of the ring.

Sakazaki followed Starkz outside and sent her into the ring apron (the Sakazakiest part of the ring!) and then back into the ring. Starkz grabbed Sakazaki by the hair and sent her to the mat. She clubbed her in the corner and whipped her across the ring.

Starkz hit a DDT and went for a cover, but only got a two count. Sakazaki got up and started throwing elbows. Sakazaki tied Starkz up in the ropes, forcing a break at 55:33. Starkz cam right back, putting Sakazaki into a combination arm and neck hold.

Sakazaki fired back up and hit a bit strike on Starkz, who responded with her one closed fist shot. Starkz hit a suplex and went back to the raised arm lock, forcing Sakazaki to use her scond break at 54:14.

Sakazaki dropped a knee from there and picked up Starkz for a snow plow. She went for the cover but Starkz kicked out at two. Sakazaki grabbed an ankle lock in the middle of the ring and Starkz pulled them both to the ropes, using her second break at 52:26.

Sakazaki went up top, but Starkz threw her off and went up top hersself. She tried a Swanton, but Sakazaki moved and went up for a crossbody. She tried the pin, but Starkz kicked out at two.

Starkz then slammed Sakazaki with a resolve slam. She tried a leg lock, but Sakazaki kicked her way out of it. Starkz put it back on and wrenched the knee. Sakazaki grabbed Starkz ankle and the to twisted each other’s legs, neither one wanting to use their last break.

Starkz wrenched down and Sakazaki pulled back and both women used their final breaks simultaneously at 50:25, a first in a Pure Match!

They started trading forearms, wth Sakazaki coming out on top. Starkz went for a big boot and the slugging continued. Starkz stacked Sakazaki up and used the ropes for leverage (apparently totally legal!) to pin Sakazaki and punch her ticket to the finals at Final Battle tomorrow night!

Match Result: Billie Starkz defeated Yuka Sakazaki

Mercedes Mone set for RevPro title defense

Mercedes Mone’s upcoming trip to the United Kingdom will include an Undisputed British Women’s Championship defense.

Revolution Pro Wrestling announced today that Mone will defend the promotion’s Women’s title against UK indie star Rhio in Cardiff, Wales on Sunday, December 14. The match is part of the card for RevPro’s Uprising 2025 event that’s being held at Vale Arena in Cardiff.

This title defense for Mone is happening one day after Utilita Arena in Cardiff hosts the Winter is Coming episode of AEW Collision. Along with that date, AEW will hold a Dynamite episode and Collision taping in Manchester, England on December 17.

The Undisputed British Women’s Championship was one of the first titles that Mone added to her now-expansive belt collection. She defeated Mina Shirakawa for the title in January 2025 and has made defenses against Kanji, Safire Reed, and Emersyn Jayne.

Mone’s AEW TBS Championship is the crown jewel of her collection, which currently stands at 13 belts:

  • AEW TBS Championship
  • AEW Owen Hart Cup Championship (ceremonial)
  • ROH Women’s TV Championship
  • CMLL Women’s World Championship (Mexico)
  • RevPro Undisputed British Women’s Championship (United Kingdom)
  • Queen of Southside Championship (inactive, unified with RevPro title)
  • EWA Women’s Championship (Austria)
  • Bestya Wrestling Women’s Championship (Italy)
  • Prime Time Wrestling Women’s Championship (Poland)
  • Discovery Wrestling Women’s Championship (Scotland)
  • Bodyslam Women’s Championship (Denmark)
  • Winnipeg Pro Women’s Championship (Canada)
  • APAC Women’s Championship (Malaysia)

So far, the AEW Women’s World Championship is the one title that has eluded Mone. She came up short when she challenged Kris Statlander for the belt at Full Gear on November 22.

Mone has another title defense coming up this Friday when she puts her ROH Women’s TV Championship on the line against Red Velvet at Final Battle.

Mercedes Mone to compete on Thursday’s Ring of Honor TV

Image: AEW

The CEO is coming to ROH a day earlier than expected.

Reigning Ring of Honor Women’s TV Champion Mercedes Mone revealed on Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite that she will be wrestling on Thursday’s HonorClub show ahead of her title defense against former champion Red Velvet at Friday’s ROH Final Battle.

Thursday’s match was taped prior to Wednesday’s Dynamite in Fishers, Indiana, and was Mone’s official debut in the promotion.

Mone defeated Velvet last month in Boston to unify the titles in Velvet’s first match back after multiple months away due to injury. Mone had defeated Mina Shirakawa for the interim title earlier this year.

Thursday’s show will also feature the semifinals of the inaugural ROH Women’s Pure title tournament.

ROH Final Battle lineup | Friday, December 5 | Columbus, Ohio

  • Survival of the Fittest for the ROH World Championship: Bandido defends against Blake Christian, The Beast Mortos, Sammy Guevara, Komander, and Hechicero
  • ROH Women’s Championship: Athena defends against Persephone
  • Finals for the ROH Women’s Pure Championship: TBA vs. TBA
  • ROH Women’s Television Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Red Velvet
  • Vacant ROH Tag Team Championship: The Beast Mortos & Sammy Guevara vs. Adam Priest & Tommy Billington
  • ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Shane Taylor Promotions (Shane Taylor, Carlie Bravo & Shawn Dean defend against Skyfight (Scorpio Sky, Dante Martin & Darius Martin)
  • AEW National Champion Ricochet defends against Dalton Castle
  • 30-minute Iron Man match: Nigel McGuiness vs. Lee Moriarty

Bandido & Mercedes Mone title defenses added to Ring of Honor Final Battle

Two big title matches have been added to next Friday’s Ring of Honor Final Battle streaming special that will see both Bandido and Mercedes Mone defend their respective titles.

In one, ROH World Champion Bandido will put his title on the line against five other men in a Survival of the Fittest match. Sammy Guevara, Hechicero, Komander, The Beast Mortos and Blake Christian will attempt to unseat the champion in the elimination bout.

Bandido was set to defend against Rush, but ROH head Tony Khan revealed the former ROH World Champion is dealing with a knee injury.

The other new match will see Mone defend the ROH Women’s TV title against former champion Red Velvet in a rematch from their unification bout earlier this month. It will be Mone’s first title defense and only Velvet’s second match since returning from an injury absence that kept her on the shelf since June.

It will also be Mone’s ROH debut.

Current ROH Final Battle card | Friday, December 5 | Columbus, Ohio

  • ROH World Champion Bandido defends against Sammy Guevara, Hechicero, Komander, The Beast Mortos and Blake Christian in a Survival of the Fittest match
  • ROH Women’s TV Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Red Velvet
  • ROH Women’s World Champion Athena defends against Persephone
  • ROH Pure Champion Lee Moriarty defends against Komander
  • ROH Six-Man Tag Team Champions Shane Taylor Promotions (Shane Taylor, Carlie Bravo & Shawn Dean) defend against Skyflight (Scorpio Sky, Dante Martin & Darius Martin)
  • AEW National Champion Ricochet defends against TBA
  • Finals of ROH Women’s Pure Championship tournament

AEW Full Gear live results: Hangman Page vs. Samoa Joe steel cage title match

The fall feud between AEW World Champion Hangman Page and former champion Samoa Joe continues on tonight’s AEW Full Gear from Newark, New Jersey, in a steel cage match.

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone will look to complete her set of titles as she challenges rival and AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander.

AEW World Tag Team Champions Brodido will defend against FTR who are looking for their third run with the gold.

Another rivalry enters its sixth chapter as TNT Champion Kyle Fletcher defends against Mark Briscoe in a no DQ match. If Briscoe loses, he joins the Don Callis Family.

A new champion will be crowned in a Casino Gauntlet bout for the new AEW National Championship while Kenny Omega, Jack Perry, and Luchasaurus take on The Young Bucks and Josh Alexander for $1 million storyline dollars.

Jon Moxley takes on Kyle O’Reilly in a no holds barred match, PAC goes one-on-one with Darby Allin, and the four remaining teams in the AEW Women’s World Tag Team title tournament battle in a four-way with the winners able to make a stipulation for their semifinal match.

Four matches will also be part of the Tailgate Brawl pre-show at 7 PM Eastern.

**********

Tailgate Brawl

Max Caster & Anthony Bowens vs. Bang Bang Gang (Juice Robinson & Austin Gunn) vs. Big Bill & Bryan Keith vs. The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd w/Dalton Castle) in a $200,000 Match

(A pretty basic opener, with everyone getting in a bit of their signature spots. The Outrunners were the most over of the bunch, but the story was mainly about how Caster & Bowens can’t get on the same page, still. That story is bound to last forever apparently, as I will say, the fans loved Caster.)

Caster & Bowens got separate entrances and argued who would start first, as Bowens & Gunn began with fast pin attempts, leap frogs and takedowns. Series of jabs from Gunn, until a very awkward looking arm drag from Bowens led to Caster getting his Best Wrestler Alive chant going before he tagged in, as did Robinson. A distracted Caster was dropped with a Manhattan Drop and senton, as Magnum made the blind tag, but so did Bill. Magnum clobbered Keith on the apron, but Bill launched him to the commentators table, where Keith & Caster put the boots to Magnum heading to commercial.

Back from break, Bill missed a corner splash, allowing Floyd to tag in and run wild with bodyslams aplenty. Bulldog/Clothesline combo led to the Son of a B*tch elbow on Keith. Outrunners were posing and didn’t see Bowens flying in with a Fame-Asser, as the former Acclaimed teased Scissor Me Timbers, but Keith cut things off. Bowens planted Keith with The Arrival and Caster hit a Mic Drop, as instead of making a cover, they teased scissoring. Bill cut them off, but Bowens caught him with Rock, Paper, Scissors. Bowens looked around for Caster, but Robinson ran in and rolled him up for the win. Bowens was screaming at Caster, as Ace Austin joined his crew to celebrate, while Robinson got the bag of $200,000 and humped it, you read that right.

Match Result: Bang Bang Gang defeated Max Caster & Anthony Bowens, Big Bill & Bryan Keith & The Outrunners to win $200,000 when Robinson pinned Bowens

-Paul Wight joins commentary ahead of the upcoming match

-Samoa Joe is backstage with a crew of guys wearing Opps Dojo shirts. Joe said he now stands here alone due to Hangman Page’s recent actions, but tonight, Page will find out how really alone Joe is. What stands behind him is a movement of men who have been pushed aside, men of violence, men who exemplify The Opps. Joe won’t walk to the ring on his own, but with an army behind him, of wayward soldiers. Tonight, Page will learn the extent of what this movement truly incapsulates.

Boom & Doom (Big Boom AJ & QT Marshall w/Big Justice, Aaron Solo & The Rizzler) vs. RPG Vice (Trent Beretta & Rocky Romero w/Don Callis)

(The act just isn’t for me, but I’d be lying if I said The Costco Guys & Rizzler didn’t get a big reaction, especially when Justice hit the Diamond Cutter. Callis did have some great one liners in this one.)

Callis said The Rizzler looks like he’s on a day pass from the Home of Incorrigible Boys. Romero & Beretta were sent to the floor early, as AJ backdropped Marshall onto the pile outside and they immediately go to commercial about 60 seconds into the match. During picture-in-picture, Beretta & Romero gained control, isolating Marshall, as Callis got in some cheap shots as well.

Back from break, Romero missed a corner charge, as The Rizzler tended to Marshall outside. Romero got in his face, but Justice intervened. Beretta pie-faced Justice like he did back at All In and this brought Wight from the commentary table. Callis said he’d give Wight $100 if he chokeslammed one of the kids. Marshall hit a wild kick for the double down and this led to an AJ hot tag, planting Beretta with a powerslam and press slamming Romero before launching him over the top with a belly to belly. Beretta connected on a superkick flush, which AJ barely sold, before hitting a spinebuster.

Callis left commentary to trash talk AJ and the distraction was enough for Beretta to clock AJ with his cast and the Sexy Chuckie Knee, but AJ kicked out. RPG Vice hit a Strong Zero on AJ, but Marshall flew in with a top rope elbow to break it up. Romero connected on a standing Sliced Bread and ramped up the locomotion corner clotheslines. Beretta took the ref, as Romero was about to use the cast, when Justice came in the ring and hit a Diamond Cutter to a huge pop. Beretta grabbed Justice, but Wight clocked him with a huge right hand, which caused Beretta to stumble back and take a Blockbuster/Powerbomb combo for the win.

Match Result: Boom & Doom defeated RPG Vice when AJ pinned Beretta

-Alex Marvez is backstage with The Young Bucks & Josh Alexander, as Marvez asked about his Family already 0-1 tonight and how that affects momentum? Callis said not to worry, he’ll have 3 new Family members tonight, when Mark Briscoe & The Young Bucks officially join the ranks. Matt said tonight everything changes, as a million dollars will take them back to the glory days. Callis reminds them about his cut for his initial investment and all the bells and whistles he’s given The Bucks in recent weeks. Alexander promises to end Kenny Omega, just for Callis, who said they’ll also win the CMLL Trios Titles as well. Marvez informs Callis that Okada isn’t here yet. The Bucks said Callis should be concerned, as Callis said this could be The Bucks trying to stir stuff up since Okada was their best friend. Callis yelled “GIFT ME!” and a package flew into the shot, as Callis said it’s not money, but let’s go try it on.

Eddie Kingston & HOOK vs. The Workhorsemen (JD Drake & Anthony Henry)

(At some point they’re going to have to start actually doing something notable with HOOK & Kingston as a duo, they just seem wasted on quick pre-show matches.)

Drake & Henry attacked on the aisle and worked over HOOK immediately after the opening bell. HOOK battled back with a series of suplexes before tagging Kingston to a loud pop, as they dropped Drake with a double back suplex. Kingston spiked Henry with a DDT and made the cover, as HOOK applied REDRUM to Drake for the quick pin/submission.

Match Result: Eddie Kingston & HOOK defeated The Workhorsemen

El Sky Team (Mistico, Mascara Dorada & Neon w/Alex Abrahantes) vs. The Don Callis Family (Continental Champion Kazuchika Okada, IWGP Champion Konosuke Takeshita & Hechicero w/Don Callis) for the CMLL Trios Titles

(This was a fun mix of action, while continuing the on-going rivalry between Takeshita & Okada. These two are bound to clash, it’s just a matter of when and I think they’ve been doing a great job at teasing it for a long time. After having an off night last week on Dynamite, I should point out that Dorada looked great here and also Neon was wildly impressive in his AEW debut.)

Okada was nowhere to be found & Callis told us it’s travel issues. Despite being a 3 on 2 disadvantage, Hechicero & Takeshita stood tall before the opening bell, as Hechicero posted Mistico’s shoulder and drove a chair into it, violently wrenching and snapping it back. Doctors and Abrahantes helped Mistico to the back, as the bell officially started to begin the match. Neon & Dorada battled back with double dives, until Kazuchika Okada was seen pulling up to the arena in a sports car, as he got out in his gear, taking his sweet time, as this officially ends Tailgate Brawl, once again, it bleeds over into the actual PPV.

AEW Full Gear

The PPV officially begins, with pyro setting off and a brawl happening in the ring until Okada’s music hits and he makes his full entrance with pyro of his own. Takeshita is just patiently waiting and watching, nearly getting rolled up by Dorada, who Takeshita quickly sent outside. Hechicero played peacemaker, as Okada offered a handshake, but flipped Takeshita off instead. Dorada & Neon collided both into each other, hitting thrust kicks and were about to hit dueling dives, when they were cut off by Okada & Takeshita. All 4 men fought in the corner for a pretty long time, as Mistico made his way back to the ring like he was brand new. Tiger Feint Kick, Enzugiri and double springboard cross body connected, as Mistico took out Takeshita with a hurricanrana and wild spinning armdrag on Okada. Hechicero tried an airplane spin, but Mistico countered into a head scissors and dive. Back inside, La Mistica spiked Takeshita, but Okada broke up the pin, clobbering Takeshita with punches in the back, throwing him outside before Takeshita could realize who it was. Neon was caught with a dropkick, but answered with an arm drag of his own. Takeshita returned and spiked Neon with a Bastard Driver into a release German Suplex. Takshita signaled for a Power Drive Knee, but Okada scurried in, tried a Rainmaker, almost intentionally missing and trying to take Takeshita’s head off, but Takeshita ducked.

The spot gets repeated on Dorada, but this time, Okada connected with a Rainmaker onto Takeshita, putting a huge smile on his face. Neon & Dorada cleared the ring and ping ponged Hechicero before both hit wildly impressive hurricanrana variations, following up with stereo moonsaults outside. Mistico & Hechicero left in the ring for a fast sequence, as another Tiger Feint Kick connected into La Magistral for two. Hechicero responded with a stiff pump corner knee, tried a powerbomb, but Mistico countered into a Poison Rana and quick La Mistica for the fast submission as Okada & Takeshita were held off ringside. Callis calmed both down on the aisle and left with Okada, as Takeshita was left visibly pissed off.

Match Result: El Sky Team defeated The Don Callis Family to retain the CMLL Trios Titles when Mistico submitted Hechicero

Darby Allin vs. PAC

(Hell of a match between these two and the finish made sense, if you remember the villain of this match literally is called The Bastard. By any means necessary, PAC got the result he wanted and that killer instinct is something he could certainly say someone like Jon Moxley has been missing in recent months, if they choose to go that route. This was PAC’s biggest win since his return.)

Allin’s entrance was a video of his face covered in bandages in a hospital room, watching footage of him getting his ass kicked by PAC over the past few months. He smashed the TV with a baseball bat and walked out. Allin came to the ring with the bat, his right arm and midsection heavily taped. Despite all the violence between these two in the past, we started with arm drags, arm bars and pin attempts, giving PAC what he wanted, a wrestling match. John Woo dropkick sent PAC flying to the corner and he took a powder. Back inside, Allin again fired off quick takedowns and pin attempts before getting a Scorpion Death Lock. PAC got the ropes, as both fought to the apron, where PAC pressed Allin over his head and splat on the floor.

PAC brought Allin back in the ring, ripped away the bandages and wrenched his hands at the burnt skin. That was followed by a nasty looking guillotine on the bottom rope and even rougher looking hammer throw to the corner that saw Allin go flying between the ropes to the floor. Huge shotgun dropkick sent Allin flying, as the crowd chanted to PAC “You Can’t Kill Him”. Allin trapped PAC in the ring skirt and that gave him time to hit a torpedo Tope. With PAC placed on a chair ringside, Allin went up top and hit a missile dropkick, landing even harder than PAC on the impact. Back inside, Allin tried a float over stunner, but PAC countered into a bounce back German and overhead belly to belly in the corner. PAC went to charge, but Allin turned him inside out for a double down.

Coffin Splash was countered into a German, before PAC got a huge running start and waffled Allin with a lariat for two. The Brutalizer is applied, as Allin fought his way to the ropes, but PAC held on to the very last second. PAC repeatedly hit corner pump kicks, went up top, wanted Black Arrow, but crashed and burned. Allin quickly applied a Scorpion Death Lock, PAC was going to tap, but signaled for help. Wheeler Yuta sprinted out and ran distraction, as Allin let go of the hold, as he & referee Bryce went at Yuta. This allowed PAC to grab the baseball bat and crack Allin in the face with it, got rid of the evidence and stole the pin.

Match Result: PAC defeated Darby Allin

Marina Shafir & Megan Bayne (w/Penelope Ford) vs. The Timeless Love Bombs (Timeless Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa) vs. The Babes of Wrath (Harley Cameron & Willow Nightingale) vs. Sisters of Sin (Julia Hart & Skye Blue w/Thekla) with Winners Picking Their Semi-Final Tournament Match Stipulation

(Lots and lots of moving parts in this match, but for the most part, I think it all came off pretty well. They worked in both semi-final pairings interactions, while also doing a nice call back false finish to that of Blood and Guts. In the end, the team that could really have the most fun picking a stipulation for their semi-final, won it. I don’t know how that fairs for them actually winning that match though.)

I could’ve sworn I read this was a Tornado Tag, but apparently, it’s not. Storm charged right at Shafir at the bell, but Shafir quickly hit a Judo throw and tag to Bayne. Storm managed to battle back, tagged Shirakawa, who she used to slam onto Bayne. Rolling forearm connected, as Shirakawa followed with a springing enzugiri, which Bayne shook off into a huge Samoan Drop for two. Shafir back in and continued rag dolling Shirakawa, getting a Tiger Feint head scissors in the ropes, not realizing Blue made a blind tag. Storm was pulled from the apron before being able to make a tag, but Nightingale tagged in from Shirakawa, dishing out corner clotheslines before a cazadora splash with Cameron on Blue got a near fall.

Slugfest ensued with Blue & Cameron, who followed up with Sole Food and backstabber, only to miss the Shining Wizard. Hart tagged in and spiked Cameron with a DDT before she & Blue charged at Bayne & Shafir off the apron. It was so Hart could have room to do her rope walk clubbing blow, as Blue made the tag and hit a PK. Bayne had enough, pie facing Blue outside and launching Cameron with a fall away slam. Love Bombs & Sisters of Sin brawled on the floor, as Shafir kept Cameron isolated until Bayne was back in and planted with a desperation spinning DDT for the double down.

Nightingale tagged in, house of fire on Shafir, hitting an Oklahoma Stampede for two. Shafir floated over a Samoan Drop into a Rear Naked Choke, but Hart stole the tag. Bayne ran through Blue to break a count and the two heel teams started trash talking each other, missing the Shirakawa tag. DDT/Leg Lock combo to Hart & Blue, as Bayne made the blind tag and just ran over Hart. Fate’s Descent into Mothers Milk, as Bayne held off Storm, similar finish to Blood and Guts, this time, Storm got free and saved her partner. Storm & Shafir went at it, missing a Cameron blind tag, as Storm hit Shafir with a Thesz Press, turned into a Cameron cross body for two. Cameron ran into a choke bomb, but Hart & Blue broke the count. Bayne sent Hart & Blue flying a double German Suplex, but Nightingale launched Bayne with a Pounce and cannonball off the apron onto Shafir. With a pile outside, Shirakawa flew off the top onto everyone, leaving Cameron & Storm to trade a crazy amount of pin attempts until Storm hit her Big Package for the flash pin.

Match Result: The Timeless Love Bombs defeated Marina Shafir & Megan Bayne, The Babes of Wrath & Sisters of Sin when Storm pinned Cameron

Brodido (Brody King & ROH Champion Bandido) vs. FTR (Cash Wheeler & Dax Harwood w/Stokely) for the AEW World Tag Team Titles

(One of the best tag matches of the year in AEW, as these two absolutely held nothing back and the crowd were on fire, especially down the stretch. I sure hope Brodido remain a duo, even without the titles, as they are arguably one of the most successful thrown together duos and the fans love them. They both benefitted tremendously from this pairing, as did the tag division itself.)

Pre-match Big Stoke Productions straight out of the movie Belly, as Stokely was walking a club seeing highlights of FTR’s accomplishments before FTR made their entrance. Bandido started things off very quickly with a series of takedowns on both Harwood & Wheeler, forcing them to regroup. King slammed Wheeler onto Harwood before switching things up and it was Bandido slamming his partner onto Wheeler, popping the crowd. Bandido wanted to do The Macarena, but King told him no. Stokely ran distraction on the apron, but Bandido cleared him with a somersault dive, only FTR caught and slammed him face first on the commentary table. Crowd with a “Stokely Gets No Hoes” chant, as Nigel McGuinness said to his knowledge, there are plenty in New Jersey, a line that broke Excalibur.

Very rough looking double spinebuster by Bandido on FTR back inside, as Wheeler went to distract King on the apron, only to have his head knocked off by a forearm. Harwood took the ref and missed the tag Bandido made, waving it off, pissing King off and allowing FTR to double team Bandido. That lasted only momentarily, as Bandido was able to boot his way free and make the King hot tag. Wheeler was planted with a Black Hole Slam with so much torque that Wheeler almost flew out of his arms. Locomotion corner splashes, but Wheeler got a boot up and tried his hardest to hang on with a rear naked choke, only King used him as a weapon to hit a rolling DVD on Harwood. Double corner cannonball got a near fall, as Bandido joined, but was low bridged by Harwood.

FTR wanted a Power-Plex on King, who caught Wheeler coming in for a splash and hit a chokeslam, while Bandido flew in with a Frog Splash on Harwood. Kicks & chops to Harwood until King mowed through him with a lariat. King tried a dive, but Stokely shoved Harwood out of the way and took the bullet. Wheeler quickly spiked King with a Tornado DDT, as back inside, Bandido countered a rebound powerbomb by Harwood into a hurricanrana pin for two. FTR nearly got a Shatter Machine, Bandido countered that, but fell victim to the rebound powerbomb and big splash for a close two. Bandido spun out of a Spike Piledriver, posted Harwood and one arm pressed Wheeler over the top onto his partner. Quickly up to the top, Bandido followed with the highest of cross bodies onto FTR, leaving everyone down.

Back inside, Shatter Machine countered into a DDT, but Wheeler saved his partner from a 21-Plex, only to take the move himself. Bandido got to his feet, but spun around into Shatter Machine, but King broke the count at the last second. Wheeler was placed against the barricade, but King missed his cross body.  Wheeler took one of the title belts and had a tug of war with King, as Bandido rolled up Harwood, with Wheeler smacking Bandido with the belt unaware of referee Paul Turner. Harwood got a roll-up, but Bandido kicked out, while Wheeler was smushed with a barricade cross body. Back inside, Harwood took a Shatter Machine by Brodido, but kicked out. Wheeler put a stop to the monkey flip 450 by crotching Bandido and wiping out King with a wild dive. Doomsday Device attempt was countered, with Bandido using the momentum into a backflip cross body for two. FTR fought with King on the apron, where they hit a Spike Piledriver on the edge of the ring, as back inside, Bandido tried a handspring, but was flattened for two. FTR quickly followed with a Spike Piledriver, but again, Bandido didn’t quit. Crowd are on their feet and losing their minds, as Bandido has a little fight left in him, but not enough to avoid Shatter Machine, which hits and FTR are 3-time AEW Tag Team Champions.

Match Result: FTR defeated Brodido to win the AEW World Tag Team Titles when Harwood pinned Bandido

-Bryan Danielson tags in on commentary and replaces Nigel McGuinness

Casino Gauntlet Match for the inaugural AEW National Title

(These matches are always so chaotic and fun, with this being no different. Lots of storylines continuing throughout and I really enjoyed this one. With the results of last Wednesday night, the winner of this could possibly be seen a surprise, but I think that is why Lashley & Ricochet went so short. We now have an inaugural National Champion and I’m looking forward to seeing how this title is handled going forward.)

After winning their respective qualifying matches on Dynamite, Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin entered at #1 & #2. Both tried taking each other down a few times, to no success, but they did have smiles on their faces. It went barely a minute before Ricochet was #3 with a mic saying the fans wanted them to fight, not wrestle. Gates of Agony attacked from behind, as Ricochet cracked MVP with the microphone repeatedly, saying he hopes Big Boom AJ is watching, that’s 5 Big Booms. Toa Liona & Bishop Kaun demolish Benjamin & Lashley ringside, leaving Ricochet alone in the ring. Tony Schiavone said entrant times are random, so no telling how long this will last (ok, then.) MVP was helped to the back, while Ricochet break danced. Kaun & Liona left, as Claudio Castagnoli is #4 and took Ricochet’s head off with an uppercut through the ropes. Gorilla press into the ring before a quick Giant Swing and uppercut for two. Ricochet turned the tables with a multi-revolution head scissors to the outside, as he was again met by a Death Rider, as Daniel Garcia is #5 and he popped Ricochet with a shot before shooting a double leg. Ricochet side-stepped and posted Castagnoli, as Orange Cassidy is #6. Garcia & Ricochet were up on the top, where Cassidy bipped Ricochet, allowing Garcia to hit a superplex. Garcia was chucked outside, Cassidy tried to steal the pin, but was picked up like a child by Castagnoli (Excalibur called is “sky jail” which was great).

Cassidy fought back with a dive onto Garcia outside, tried a sunset flip on Castagnoli, who powered out, only to eat a Stundog Millionaire and spinning DDT on Ricochet. Wheeler Yuta is #7, who Danielson calls an idiot for not having any urgency to get to the ring. 3 on 1 attack by the Death Riders on Cassidy, including locomotion corner strikes, which Ricochet tries to join in, but gets beaten down for his troubles. Kevin Knight is #8 and hits the highest leaping clothesline on the aisle on Yuta before launching off the apron with one on Garcia. Knight went for a top rope hurricanrana on Castagnoli, who caught him and both spilled to the apron. Roderick Strong is out at #9 and immediately plants Garcia with a backbreaker on the apron, running wild, catching a flying Knight with a backbreaker and an Angle Slam to Castagnoli and End of Heartache on Ricochet followed by a Sick Kick for two. Mark Davis is #10 and runs through everyone in his path, spiking Knight with a piledriver, crazy Awful Waffle to Ricochet and another piledriver to Cassidy for two. Speedball Mike Bailey is #11, who joins Knight in double teaming Davis, before both went for the cover. JetSpeed were about to go at it, until Davis started chopping both. Bailey took out Death Riders & Strong out with a springboard moonsault, while Davis took a springboard clothesline from Knight.

JetSpeed finally went at it, trading quick pin attempts, dodging everything the other threw before a stalemate got the crowd going. Garcia low blowed Bailey and sank in a Dragon Slayer, but Daddy Magic Matt Menard is #12 and Garcia lets the submission go. Intense stare down, as Menard runs wild on his former protégé, forcing Garcia to bail through the crowd with Menard in hot pursuit. Back in the ring, Meat chants from the crowd, as Davis & Castagnoli are facing off when Benjamin & Lashley join, they’ve recovered and a 4-way slugfest ensues until The Hurt Syndicate start laying everyone out with suplexes and slams. Ricochet tried a sneak attack, but got caught and his ass kicked as a result. Castagnoli & Davis cleaned things up, until Cassidy hit Davis with an Orange Punch. Ricochet was about to take one, but Yuta flew in with a Busiaku Knee, nearly stole the pin, but Knight hit a UFO Splash. Ricochet came out of nowhere with a Spirit Gun and got the victory. Kaun & Liona come back to the ring and present Ricochet with the National Title, raising him on their shoulders.

Match Result: Ricochet defeats Kevin Knight to become the Inaugural AEW National Champion

Jon Moxley (w/Marina Shafir) vs. Kyle O’Reilly in a No Holds Barred Match

(Absolute brutal match and another in this amazing recent run for O’Reilly. Considering how violent Blood and Guts was, these two still managed a wildly entertaining bloodbatch with some pretty sick moments. The big story here is, Moxley submitted, again and you have to imagine his days are numbered as a Death Rider. Of course, that could be just fantasy booking, but I wouldn’t be surprised if something major happens soon. In regards to O’Reilly, with this win, you have to hope that he at least enters the Continental Classic and possibly wins it, I certainly would, he’s never been a hotter babyface, go all in with him and this momentum.)

O’Reilly shot a double leg at the opening bell and it led to both trading a series of standing switches. Moxley scrambled when O’Reilly tried a cross-arm-breaker, then hands behind his back, gave O’Reilly some free shots to play mind games. It led to a cheap shot, as both traded strikes in the corner. No Holds Barred, so Moxley fish hooked O’Reilly, who wrenched at Moxley’s finger. O’Reilly tried an Ankle Lock, causing Moxley to scramble outside to regroup, where Shafir gave him a fork. O’Reilly fought off being stabbed as long as he could, until Moxley got a full mount and went to town, stabbing the forehead and raking the body. O’Reilly is bleeding a good amount (I wouldn’t say to the level of Blood and Guts), while Moxley gives cross face shots and bites the forehead, a sick visual.

Moxley remains in full control, stabbing O’Reilly in the nipple with the fork, a line Excalibur was even reluctant to say, while Shafir had a smirk on her face ringside. Moxley tried a rear naked choke on the apron, which O’Reilly countered into a D’Arce Choke, transitioning into a cross-arm-breaker, forcing Moxley to roll outside, since there’s no rope breaks. O’Reilly hit a slingshot into the post and now we have a bleeding Moxley, who is sat on a chair and O’Reilly hits a diving knee from the apron. Back inside, Moxley tried a desperation Cutter, but O’Reilly countered into an Ankle Lock. Moxley spun out into a Triangle Choke, but O’Reilly got free. Moxley went back to the fork, but O’Reilly got it away, sank in a Triangle of his own and stabbed Moxley repeatedly. The blood pouring from Moxley’s head and the camera shot had everyone gross out. O’Reilly scrambled for a chain under the ring, as he gets in the ring and wraps it around Moxley’s neck, but at the same time, Moxley wraps it around O’Reilly’s neck as well. Both fight for suplexes and O’Reilly hits into the double down.

Each battle it out on their feet until Moxley gets a Bulldog Choke using the chain, but O’Reilly scrambles into a full mount, only Moxley presses on the throat to get free and apply a STF. O’Reilly has the fork and stabs the hand of Moxley to get free, but Moxley hit a Curb Stomp onto the chain. Moxley gets a chair and traps O’Reilly’s arm, Pillmanizing it. Death Rider spikes O’Reilly, as Moxley sank in a Kimura, only to be countered into an Ankle Lock. O’Reilly slammed Moxley’s leg onto the chain, wrapped it up and got the Ankle Lock once more, Moxley fought valiantly, but tapped out, again.

Post-match, a frustrated Moxley gave a nod to O’Reilly, who collapsed and was checked on by doctors. Moxley was going to leave, when he came back to the ring and attacked. Death Riders came to ringside, as Moxley left with them, as Roderick Strong & Orange Cassidy helped O’Reilly to the back. You can visibly see the Death Rider members not looking thrilled, especially PAC. Something is going to happen soon, it’s just a matter of when and how.

Match Result: Kyle O’Reilly submitted Jon Moxley

Kyle Fletcher (w/Don Callis) vs. Mark Briscoe in a No DQ Match for the TNT Title (If Briscoe Loses, He Must Join The Don Callis Family)

(If ever there was a time for a “You Deserve It” chant, it was tonight. The only thing I question is placing this and the No Holds Barred match back-to-back, as I completely understand how people would think this is simply too much and should be spaced out more on the card. With that aside, this was an absolute war and the happy ending many of us had hoped for. Briscoe had to go through hell to get it, but the image of him standing tall with the TNT Title is a much-deserved site to see.)

A wonderful tribute video package on Briscoe coming up through AEW and how he calls The Conglomeration his family, while also showing his real family as well. Both traded submission attempts early, as Fletcher caught Briscoe with a running boot off the apron. Briscoe blocked a PK on the apron, swept out the leg and chucked a chair at Fletcher’s face. Briscoe kept up the attack around ringside, placing Fletcher on the chair, biting him in the forehead, but missing a dive off the apron, as Fletcher caught and planted Briscoe through the chair with a brainbuster. Fletcher took too long to follow-up, as his legs were swept from the steps, causing him to land hard. Briscoe started bringing out weapons and placed Fletcher against a ladder, tried a somersault dive, but crashed and burned through the ladder. Fletcher violently launched the ladder into the face of Briscoe, busting him opened, who Callis said he only wants him to be hurt for a few months, not his career to be over, as Callis will own Briscoe’s life. Fletcher threw another ladder into the ring and continued to slam Briscoe on it, while Callis said Briscoe doesn’t have to walk to be his stooge.

Fletcher placed the broken ladder between the ropes and used it as a platform, only Briscoe hit an uppercut, threw the ladder to Fletcher and dropkicked him in the face with it. Briscoe popped Fletcher in the face with the ladder, causing him to bleed as a result, as Briscoe placed him on a table ringside, but Fletcher rolled to safety. Half and half suplex from Fletcher on the floor, as he placed six chairs up, but took too long, as Briscoe threw one in his face. Briscoe went to climb the ropes, but was distracted by Callis, as Fletcher launched Briscoe off and through the table. Another table placed in the ring corner, as Fletcher went for a Lawn Dart, Briscoe escaped, they trade Half and Halfs, while Briscoe wants Jay Driller, but Fletcher countered into a running Waterwheel Drop through the table. Last Ride Liger Bomb connects for two, as Fletcher goes to thumbtacks, spreading them all over the ring, placing them in Briscoe’s mouth and hitting a superkick. Briscoe escaped a Last Ride and spiked Fletcher into the tacks with a Fisherman’s Buster for two. Briscoe throws in two tables, one covered in Barbed Wire and a high ladder, which he sets a table up in front of. This takes forever, as Fletcher is on the apron and tries a brainbuster off through the tables, but Briscoe counters into a Blockbuster off the apron onto the chairs.

Back inside, Briscoe puts Fletcher on the table, climbs the ladder, but is cut-off. Briscoe fights Fletcher off and manages to hit an insane Froggy Bow crashing through the table. Crowd chanting This Is Awesome, as Briscoe pulls in the barbed wire table, but didn’t see Callis give a screwdriver to Fletcher. Briscoe blocks a shot initially, but Fletcher hits a low blow and starts stabbing Briscoe, licking the screwdriver, which Callis called sexy. Fletcher missed another shot, Briscoe hits a low blow of his own, Brainbuster into the thumbtacks, but Fletcher kicked out. Briscoe up top, but Fletcher shoved the referee into the ropes, crotching Briscoe. Fletcher places the screwdriver spike first up, wants the Avalanche Brainbuster, but Briscoe slid out, wanted a Cutthroat Driver, only to be stabbed in the head with the screwdriver. Fletcher hits his Brainbuster flush, but Briscoe kicked out. Fletcher wanted his Avalanche Brainbuster, but again, Briscoe escaped and hit an Avalanche Razor’s Edge through the barbed wire table. Jay Driller hits flush and Briscoe finally wins a title in AEW and the crowd are going nuts.

Match Result: Mark Briscoe defeats Kyle Fletcher to win the TNT Title

Kenny Omega & Jurassic Express (Jungle Jack Perry & Luchasaurus) vs. Josh Alexander (w/Don Callis) & The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson) in a $1,000,000 Match

(If ever there was a PWG style party match, it was this one. Omega is such a masterful seller that I can never tell which is real and which is a work, so I can only hope the knee is a work and he’s ok. I’m really looking forward in where this story goes from here, as The Elite are back it seems and they have a furious Don Callis Army to have to deal with. How they follow-up on this should be lots of fun.)

The Young Bucks had a Wheel of Fortune video play for their entrance, as their gear that Don Callis paid for was covered in money and frills. Despite being 0-3 tonight, when asked about his chances in this match by Excalibur, Callis said he’s not concerned, as everything’s coming up Callis Family. Fast start by Nick & Perry, as they trade a series of springboard counters and arm drags leading to a tense stalemate. Fast tags by Omega & Jurassic Express until a cheap shot by Alexander dropped Omega, as Alexander stole a tag and went to work. Omega fought back with a slingshot cross body, but came up short and is holding his left leg, which is what Alexander targets immediately. Alexander was having success, when The Bucks tagged in and were immediately planted with a double Kotaro Crusher. Omega sent everyone outside and really had to work for a Terminator Dive, ultimately getting all of it.

Perry tried a cross body on Alexander on the apron, but was caught and slammed on the apron. The Bucks tried a dive, but Luchasaurus wasn’t in the right position and Nick landed pretty badly. Matt teased a moonsault on Perry, switching in mid-air to take out Omega on the floor, while he was distracted by Callis. Risky Business by The Bucks on Perry, who remained isolated until a desperation DDT planted Alexander for the double down and Luchasaurus came in with the hot tag. Choke Slams aplenty, as Luchasaurus hit a standing moonsault for two. The Bucks escape a double choke slam with a superkick, but Luchasaurus bounced back and all three are down via clotheslines. Omega tags in and Alexander runs for a tag, but The Bucks wouldn’t give it to him. You Can’t Escape half-way connected, missing the moonsault, as Matt hit a cazadora slam. Perry flew in with head scissors, as Nick launched in with a Destroyer on Luchasaurus, but proceeded to be blasted with a V-Trigger for the match reset.

Forearm battle by Omega & Alexader, as Omega hit a Snap Dragon, but Alexander (who is bleeding from the forehead) is able to sink in the Ankle Lock. While still in the submission, The Bucks hit a BTE Trigger on Omega, as The Bucks held off Jurassic Express. Omega just made the ropes, as Matt tagged in, The Bucks wanted a Meltzer Driver, but Luchasaurus made the save. The Bucks & Alexander connect on the assisted Tombstone for a near fall, as Countdown to Extinction was countered, but friendly fire by The Bucks and Alexander saw Omega make the save and sent Nick outside. Countdown to Extinction connects, but Alexander just broke the count. Double Doomsday was countered with The Bucks landing on their feet and ramping up a Superkick Party, accidentally hitting Alexander off the apron into a One Winged Angel by Omega on the floor. Perry tried a backslide on Matt, who slid through and The Bucks hit a BTE Trigger on Perry to win it.

Post-match, Callis came in the ring with Mark Davis, Hechicero, El Clon & Rocky Romero, telling him they’re rich once again and it’s time to celebrate. Callis went to walk The Bucks up the ramp with the bags of money, as The Family attack Omega in the ring. Matt & Nick ask Callis what this is about, as Callis wants them to go spend the money. The crowd chants You Sold Out, but The Bucks throw down the money and hit the ring, dishing out Superkicks to everyone. Jurassic Express check on Omega before offering a handshake to The Bucks, who accept. Omega slowly gets up and starts putting it together with the crowd chanting Hug It Out. The Bucks offer a handshake, Omega slaps it away and they hug and stand tall. The Callis Family is furious on the ramp, as they are holding all the money. Omega, Jurassic Express & The Bucks all leave on the babyface side of the stage.

Match Result: Josh Alexander & The Young Bucks defeated Kenny Omega & Jurassic Express to win $1,000,000 when Nick pinned Perry

Kris Statlander vs. TBS Champion Mercedes Mone for the AEW Women’s World Title

(This started like a complete sprint, but once Mone started slowly working the arm, it’s when the crowd got quiet for a while. There were wildly impressive moments, the 14 Amigos being one for sure, but the crowd really got back into it down the stretch. I should point out that avalanche rib breaker from Statlander is going to be in highlight package for ages to come, as that was an incredible moment. Mone’s officially 0-2 in trying to win the AEW Women’s Title, as this was arguably Statlander’s biggest win in her AEW career to date. It’ll be very interesting in seeing where both go from here.)

Mone had her shirtless fellas holding all her titles down the aisle, while Statlander rolled out of a crashed spaceship off the side of the stage, which was pretty cool. Mone tried to pick the ankle early, but Statlander was there with counters and pin attempts. Statement Maker escaped, as Statlander hit a standing moonsault for two. Mone sent Statlander landing awkwardly to the floor, but she still caught a Mone dive and got a fireman’s carry up the steps to the apron. Mone missed a charge and Statlander connects with a huge superplex, floats over and misses a 450 Splash. Statlander rolls outside and clutches her left forearm and referee Aubrey quickly checks, but Mone flies in from off-screen with a Meteora and slamming Statlander shoulder first into the steps followed by another Meteroa. Tornado DDT into am arm-breaker back inside, as Mone wrenches at the wrist and arm. Statlander finally started to make a one-armed comeback, until Mone hit a double knees to the arm and snaps it back. Mone then rattled off 14 Amigos, one suplex for each belt she holds, which, despite being a heel, got the crowd applauding.

After all of that, Mone didn’t make a cover, instead went up top and missed a Frog Splash, with Statlander up-kicking her in the face. Statlander starts making her comeback with a spinning Fisherman’s Buster for a near fall. Mone responds by snapping the arm through the ropes on the apron, trying another Meteora, only Statlander countered into a Blue Thunder Bomb on the floor. Both ladies just make the count, as Mone hit her sunset flip into the corner. Mone signaled for the end, only to run into a lariat from Statlander. Mone desperately goes for an arm-bar, but Statlander countered into a ripcord belly-to-belly for two, then applying a Statement Maker of her own. Mone bent the wrist back and got the submission herself, only Statlander powered up and up the corner. Mone switched to a rear naked choke, Statlander switched to a fireman’s carry for an Avalanche Rib Breaker ala Dean Malenko for two.

Statlander wants Saturday Night Fever, but Mone counters and each trade Seatbelt pin attempts for two. Statlander manages a Package Piledriver, but Mone barely gets an arm on the rope. Mone fought out of the corner, looked for a Meteora, but was caught, only to switch and hit a Poison Rana and Meteora for two. Mone took a crazy amount to time to follow-up, allowing both to trade finisher attempts repeatedly, until Statlander avoids the head scissors to the corner and countered into Saturday Night Fever for the victory.

Match Result: Kris Statlander defeated Mercedes Mone to retain the AEW Women’s World Title

-Lexy Nair is backstage with Don Callis, Kazuchika Okada, Konosuke Takeshita & Hechicero (who is in charge of the money tonight). Callis said once Okada & Takeshita get on the same page, they’ll be the best team in AEW history. Okada & Takeshita blamed one another for losing the match tonight and Callis said Okada will defend his Continental Title in the Continental Classic and prove why he’s the best tournament wrestler of all time. Takeshita said that’s fine, as he’ll also be in the Continental Classic. Kyle Fletcher storms in and said Prot-Okada & Proto-Shita, both say they’re best friends, but weren’t there for him when he needed them, so he’s also entering the Continental Classic. Fletcher storms out and Okada told Takeshita look what he did to Kyle.

Hangman Adam Page vs. Samoa Joe in a Steel Cage for the AEW Men’s World Title

(On a night with some wild violence and serious bloody brawls, Samoa Joe decided to have the gusher of all gushers tonight and bled buckets. I’d love to see the amount of people who saw this finish coming at the start of the night. This was one of those shocking results that when it was all said and done, leaves me incredibly intrigued at what is next. An excellent main event and we’re off to the races.)

American Venom from Red Dead Redemption is the theme for Page, which was pretty awesome. Similar to Wednesday, Page has his ribs and neck taped, as Joe is the first to get slammed into the cage and is the first to bleed less then 2 minutes into the match. Page hit a moonsault out of the corner for two, as he took his boot to use as a weapon, but Joe got in a shot, teased the Ole Kick, only Page got up and repeatedly cracked Joe with the boot. Joe fought back, swinging for the fences with chops, as Page hit a series of clotheslines, went for a home run shot, only to be rammed head first into the cage and you guessed it, Page is bleeding now as well. Joe mowed Page down with a back elbow so hard that Page’s neck snapped on the bottom rope. Joe hit his picture-perfect snap powerslam for two, as both fight to their feet in a slugfest. Page backflips out of a German suplex and sends Joe into multiple sides of the cage.

Page slid out of a Coquina Clutch into one of his own, but both are covered in so much blood, they can easily escape. Joe spiked Page with a Uranage in the corner, as Joe is bleeding buckets now, but exposes a corner buckle, which Page fights off. Joe wants a Muscle Buster, but Page bit free and hit a sunset flip powerbomb. Katsuyori Shibata rushes to ringside and grabs the AEW World Title and starts climbing the cage. Page is just watching this happen until Eddie Kingston hits the ring and brawls with Shibata. In the ring, Joe collided with referee Paul Turner as Page hit a Dead Eye for the visible pin, but there was no ref. Powerhouse Hobbs comes to the ring and rips the lock off the cage door and enters with the World Title, but misses a belt shot on Page, who sent Hobbs face first into the cage. Joe used the distraction to apply the Coquina Clutch, but Page sent Joe crashing into the exposed buckle. Page used the opening of the door to hit a Buckshot, but there still was no referee. HOOK rushed to the ring and pleads with Paul Turner to wake up, only to grab the World Title, smile and crack Page with it, revealing an Opps shirt. Joe quickly hits a Muscle Buster on the belt, gets the pin and wins the title.

Post-match, the cage raises and HOOK hugs Joe (commentary question if HOOK has been part of The Opps all along), as Shibata and all of The Opps Dojo that was with Joe on the pre-show join Joe in the celebration until the lights went out. A video on the Tron shows a house on fire and we see Prince Nana saying “we’re in the money, my friend” before “Whose House?” hits and a completely new theme and entrance as the Most Dangerous Swerve Strickland returns. Nana is doing the Swerve Dance as the visual of Joe in the spotlight while he’s absolutely pouring blood is truly a sight to see. Joe tells everyone to step aside and welcomes Strickland to the ring, pointing at the still motionless Page. Strickland slowly takes off his jacket and eliminates the entire Opps Dojo while Joe, Hobbs, Shibata & HOOK bail. Page took care of the last Dojo dork before standing tall with Strickland to stare down the new AEW World Champion.

Match Result: Samoa Joe defeated Hangman Adam Page to win the AEW Men’s World Title

AEW Full Gear preview & predictions: One Title After Another

Image: AEW

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

I can feel AEW’s autumn fog lifting.

They ripped off a killer Blood and Guts last week and followed it up with a mostly solid week of TV, highlighted by the announcement of this year’s Continental Classic: AEW’s reliable creative defibrillator. Every year, the tournament gives Tony Khan a stable, crowd-pleasing tentpole to book around, and I’m hoping this installment brings the same spark.

Historically, the CC has triggered a significant shift in how hot the product feels. Suddenly, the matches are crisper, the promos tighten up, and the entire show carries a renewed sense of urgency. It’s the closest thing AEW has to flipping the ‘ON’ switch.

Hopefully the switch gets hit this Saturday from scenic Newark, New Jersey. Let’s run through the matches and predictions for this Saturday’s AEW Full Gear (8 PM Eastern main card start on PPV) and see how things shake out

Jon Moxley vs. Kyle O’Reilly in a no holds barred match

Hopefully, the end of Blood and Guts reawakened something inside Kyle O’Reilly and reminded him of what and who he is — the violent artist. He felt unleashed and at home in that match, capped off by the full-on moment of tapping out Jon Moxley in a bed of broken glass.

As Moxley does with everyone, he dragged the violence out of O’Reilly, and I pray he dragged it out for good. I’m sure the Conglomeration version of O’Reilly has its fans, but I am not one. That’s not an act to be taken seriously. The post-show promo after that match was a great start, and this week’s Dynamite was an incredible follow-up.

I’m excited to see what the NHB stipulation brings. If this lands, KOR is suddenly, and unexpectedly, a key player in AEW’s upper mid-card. What a wonderful development that would be. Mox has done a remarkable (and honestly shocking) amount of losing for a company ace. If he loses again, O’Reilly might be making a climb up the AEW pecking order.

And I’ll end with a question: Is this a Roderick Strong heel turn?

Prediction: Moxley wins

Darby Allin vs. PAC

This is a match with two men who have no regard for the integrity of their spinal columns. Allin’s bump freak proclivities require no explanation or exposition, but PAC is right there with him when it comes to the willingness to being spiked on his head. An enthusiastic and frequent vertebrae compressor, his absence from TV allows us to forget that no one is willing to eat a DDT quite like our newly short-haired king.

This pairing is long overdue. PAC is at his best when he gets to be cruel; Darby is at his best when someone tries to kill him. Even if there was no story between these two, the pairing is one worth watching. Instead, we have something compelling: Darby’s continual antagonism of the Death Riders and PAC’s desire to bend him (and everyone really) into a pretzel.

Pencil in a few groan-inducing bumps, Darby nearly paralyzing himself, and the slow realization that AEW will absolutely let these two try to fold each other like beach chairs.

Prediction: Darby Allin

Babes of Wrath (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) vs. Sisters of Sin (Julia Hart & Skye Blue) vs. Timeless Love Bombs (Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa) vs. Megan Bayne & Marina Shafir

The winning team gets to pick a stipulation for their semifinal match in the Women’s World Tag Team title tournament.

A four-way like this should feel like a showcase of a thriving division and, in most cases, it does. The Babes of Wrath bring energy and personality every time they show up, even if they skew too close to a comedy act for my liking (Willow should be champion).

The Sisters of Sin know who they are and what the act should be while the Timeless Love Bombs (lol) are pure camp and charisma. Full credit to Toni Storm for effortlessly slotting down from the main event scene to lend serious weight to the tournament. Bayne and Shafir work well as two unique forces of nature thrown together by circumstance. With more time to gel and unite in storyline, the accidental pairing of monsters could realistically anchor the division through its infancy.

And that gets to the heart of it: this still feels like a collection of potential rather than a field of established contenders. There’s talent everywhere, but not enough definition. If even one or two of these teams had been given a month more build or a reason to exist beyond the bracket, this could feel like a true showcase instead of a promising sketch. This division certainly isn’t struggling; it sometimes lacks the connective tissue needed to feel cohesive.

Prediction: Bayne & Shafir

Kenny Omega & Jurassic Express (Jack Perry and Luchasaurus) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson) & Josh Alexander

This feels like it only exists to keep The Elite on the treadmill while AEW tries to figure out where the hell to point Kenny Omega next.

On Josh Nason’s podcast, we ended up talking about the diminishing supply of “true Kenny Omega matches” left, and he said something that stuck with me: every Omega match should feel like an event. Given the miles on his body, there’s no room for throwaways.

That’s why this match worries me. It doesn’t feel like it’s building to a spectacle; it just feels like a placeholder. Kenny doesn’t need elaborate stories or six weeks of promos. You can have him point at Josh Alexander, Kevin Knight, or Takeshita and say, “Let’s go” and boom, you’ve got something meaningful. Instead, we’re back in Elite-adjacent territory and the last time AEW went down that road, the returns were…uneven, to be kind.

Jurassic Express is here because AEW still thinks that brand has juice (they don’t) and think Alexander is excellent at professional wrestling (he is!). The Bucks seem like they won’t be joining the Don Callis family, and that’s what will cost them the match.

Prediction: Kenny Omega and Jurassic Express

Casino Gauntlet match for the inaugural AEW National Championship

My favorite part of writing these columns is the moment I hit “Submit Draft.” My second favorite part is coming up with the titles. And ironically, this column’s title was the only time I enjoyed referencing AEW’s ballooning championship collection (For my PTA heads, my other working title was ‘A Few Small Championships’).

Between AEW and the specter of ROH, there are simply too many belts for any of them to carry weight. Scarcity gives championships meaning and hierarchy gives a roster shape. AEW keeps adding gold like it has a hidden quota to hit, and every new belt chips away at the value of the others. The pecking order gets muddied as we inch toward a future where anyone even moderately competent has hardware. That’s not prestige, that’s clutter.

Prediction: I don’t know, probably Bobby Lashley? Don’t make me do this one.

TNT Champion Kyle Fletcher (w/ Don Callis) defends against Mark Briscoe in a no DQ match

If Briscoe loses, he will be forced to join the Don Callis Family.

Even though this feud still has a little juice left, it’s past its expiration date. This is their third PPV meeting of the year and while the first two matches ranged from good to genuinely great depending on your taste, the rivalry has been stretched thin. The heat just isn’t there anymore. If AEW wanted this to truly matter, the moment to put the TNT title on Briscoe was WrestleDream. That was the peak. Everything since has been diminishing returns.

The TNT Championship isn’t a title that benefits from a year-long saga and in this case, it’s been secondary to the feud the entire time. We’d celebrate a Briscoe triumph even without a belt attached. What people want is simple: Briscoe finally giving the smug prince of the Callis family his long-overdue comeuppance.

But stretching this any further won’t add meaning and continues to dilute what once could have landed with weight. Imagine if Briscoe had won the title months ago? That would have been ideal. Nevertheless, his time is now.

Prediction: Mark Briscoe

AEW World Tag Team Champions Brodido (Bandido and Brody King) defend against FTR (Cash Wheeler and Dax Harwood) (w/ Stokely)

This match rules on paper: compatible styles, clearly evident chemistry, and, most importantly, the existence of Bandido. The man is a pro wrestling treasure with so much physical charisma, it’s sickening. Everything he does is must-see (he pinned Okada for god’s sake!). If that doesn’t tell you what AEW thinks of his future, nothing will.

FTR has been in an almost endless holding pattern, and, at long last, it seems like they have real forward momentum. Brodido, meanwhile, is still fresh and fun. The problem with fresh and fun is that it has a finite shelf life. History tells us that thrown-together tag teams rarely sustain momentum forever, no matter how good they are. AEW also loves the quick-hit shock run to give the unexpected team a little pop, then slide the belts back to the long-term pillars when it’s time to resume the Serious Stories™.

Here’s the twist, though: Brodido is too fun and too popular to cut off this early…which is exactly why FTR needs to win. A heel FTR paired with Stokely Hathaway has infinitely more long-term juice as champions than as chasers and beating such a popular team cements them as heels. Brodido can stay hot without the belts; FTR needs them.

Prediction: FTR

AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander defends against Mercedes Mone

This is the biggest test of Kris Statlander’s career. Can she go 15+ minutes with the women’s division’s version of the Best Bout Machine? Statlander has always been at her best when she’s pushed. When the moment demands something more, she finds it.

Winning the title was a genuine shock; the Toni Storm match at WrestleDream validated that surprise. But this? This is the one that seals the deal. A win over Mone establishes Statlander not just as champion, but as a made woman on top of the card for as long as she wants it.

As for the endless and agonising online whining about Mone collecting belts, please. Breathe some fresh air. Many of the titles she’s holding come from companies so small they barely have websites, let alone Wikipedia pages. The idea that putting their belts on a legitimate global star is “bad for their business” is galaxy-brained nonsense. If anything, she’s giving these titles oxygen and relevance they couldn’t dream of on their own.

More importantly, those complaints miss the entire point of the character. She’s collecting belts precisely because she can’t win the one that matters: the AEW Women’s World Championship. The overcompensating, the theatricality, the bravado are all armor covering the fact that she feels incomplete without that title. She’s chasing validation she can’t quite grasp, and she knows it. If you can’t see that this is interesting character work, try activating your frontal lobe.

Prediction: Kris Statlander

AEW World Champion Hangman Page defends against Samoa Joe in a steel cage

Samoa Joe brings a gravity that few on the roster can. The second he steps into a segment, the air gets heavy and the stakes rise. A steel cage is the perfect setting for him. When you wrestle Joe, there is no escape.

There’s a slight problem in this case: Page has his own propensities towards violence and a bloodlust all his own. He’s not afraid to be trapped in a cage with Joe, just like he wasn’t afraid to have a Texas Death Match with Jon Moxley. Sure, he’s the babyface champion now, but the other side of his coin is stained in blood.

Hangman’s reign has been good. Characterising it as boring might be a little short-sighted. No reign could ever match the catharsis of his ascent, capped by pulling the World title out from the briefcase and into the light. We’ll always remember that, but we need something to remember what happened after. 

It would be a remarkable surprise for Hangman to lose on Saturday, but there’s too much meat on the bone. He’s never better than when he leans into his brutal side, and the cage allows for that. Page’s run at the top continues.

Prediction: Hangman Adam Page

Ring of Honor Women’s TV title unified on AEW Collision

There is a new Ring of Honor Women’s TV Champion following Wednesday’s AEW Collision episode.

In her hometown of Boston, Interim Women’s TV Champion Mercedes Mone defeated the returning ROH Women’s TV Champion Red Velvet in the Collision main event on Wednesday to unify the titles.

The Interim TV title was created in July of this year when Velvet was injured and unable to defend the championship at Supercard of Honor in Texas. Mina Shirakawa won a four-way at Supercard to crown the Interim Champion.

Mone became the Interim TV Champion after defeating Shirakawa at October’s AEW WrestleDream pay-per-view in St. Louis.

After the win over Red Velvet on Collision, Mone brawled with AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander, forcing Statlander to tap to her Statement Maker submission hold. Mone challenges Statlander for the AEW Women’s title at Full Gear on Saturday.

Our full Dynamite and Collision report is available here.

Mercedes Mone wins 13th title belt at House of Glory event

The championship gold keeps flowing for Mercedes Mone.

During House of Glory’d Superclash on Wednesday in Brentwood, New York, Mone defeated Nor ‘Phoenix’ Diana to capture the APAC Women’s title for the first time, defeating Diana with the Mone Maker to win her 13th title.

The title win comes as Mone looks to make history with a potential 14th title victory next weekend at AEW’s Full Gear event when she challenges Kris Statlander for the AEW Women’s Championship, a title she failed to win earlier this year at All In. On this coming Wednesday’s Dynamite, she will also defend one of her titles as she is set to unify her interim ROH Women’s Television title against champion Red Velvet.

The full list of titles Mone currently holds includes AEW’s TBS title, interim ROH Women’s TV title, CMLL Women’s title, BODYSLAM Women’s title, Discovery Wrestling Women’s title, EWA Women’s title, RevPro Undisputed British/Queen of Southside Women’s title, Prime Time Wrestling Women’s title, BestYa Women’s title, WPW Women’s title, AEW Owen Hart women’s tournament winner title, and now the APAC Women’s title.

Title unification match set for three-hour AEW Dynamite

A title unification match is now set for the final AEW Dynamite before Full Gear.

It was announced in the closing moments of Collision that Red Velvet will finally get her chance to unify the ROH Women’s Television Championship, squaring off against interim champion Mercedes Mone. This happens just days before Mone faces Kris Statlander for the AEW Women’s Championship at Full Gear.

Velvet has been out since June, suffering an injury that required AEW to crown an interim Women’s Television Champion. Mina Shirakawa originally won the title at Supercard of Honor, but lost it in a winner-takes-all match against Mone at AEW WrestleDream.

Two AEW Women’s Tag Team tournament quarterfinal matches will also take place. Toni Storm and Shirkawa will team to take on Riho and Alex Windsor, the latter of whom picked up a victory on Saturday. Megan Bayne and Marina Shafir will team together to face TayJay. Shafir attacked Tay Melo on Saturday, causing Melo cut a promo afterwards calling Shafir out.

Current AEW Dynamite lineup | Wednesday, November 19 | Boston, MA

  • Hangman Page vs. Katsuyori Shibata
  • ROH Women’s Television title unification match: Mercedes Mone vs. Red Velvet
  • AEW Women’s Tag Team title tournament quarterfinal: Toni Storm & Mina Shirakawa vs. Riho and Alex Windsor
  • AEW Women’s Tag Team title tournament quarterfinal: TayJay vs. Megan Bayne & Marina Shafir
  • Kenny Omega appearance

Winners crowned in chaotic first-ever women’s AEW Blood and Guts match

The women of AEW made history Wednesday by competing in their first-ever Blood and Guts match as part of a special edition of Dynamite.

The team led by the Triangle of Madness got their hands raised at the end of the match after Toni Storm surrendered for her team.

The beginning of the end saw Marina Shafir throw a mirror at Storm’s head as she was running in for a hip attack. Shafir then stepped on the glass and used it in stomping Mina Shirakawa’s chest, who had Megan Bayne in a bat-assisted figure four. Shafir then judo tossed Shirakawa onto the glass and held her in place as Bayne whipped Shirakawa’s back with a title belt.

Storm was helpless to assist as she was held back by Thekla, Skye Blue and Julia Hart. Storm eventually surrendered and was then beat up by the heels afterward.

The 12-woman bout featured nearly all of AEW’s top female talent including AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander, Storm, TBS Champion Mercedes Mone, Bayne, Willow Nightingale and others. Statlander and Mone were not part of the end as they had made their way to the outside of the cage where Statlander took out the TBS Champion with a Samoan drop off one of the trusses through a table.

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Mone and Statlander, who will meet next Saturday at the Full Gear pay-per-view, had several interactions. Mone made it a point of being grossed out by the blood and later brought in several of her many title belts to hand to her teammates to use on their opponents.

As expected, the match opened up the show from Greensboro, North Carolina, with the men’s Blood and Guts match set for the main event slot. Also as expected, the match featured weapons like a chair, a trash can lid, a belt, a kendo stick with barbed wire, a pool cue, a bag of tacks, and more.

Shafir, a standout in the match, attempted to up the ante after she entered, dragging Statlander outside the cage and counter-clotheslining her on a bed of nails. Storm was the last entrant after Shafir and started hitting women with clutched pearls before Shafir no-sold them and went on the offensive. Storm later got her revenge, wrapping her hands in tape and then sticking broken glass to them for punches.

Blue was busted open early during her opening salvo with Nightingale with her face and upper torso nearly completely covered in red after a few minutes. Statlander was also bleeding at one point as were Bayne, Shafir and Shirakawa.

In another notable spot, Jamie Hayter and Blue were fighting on the top rope when Hayter power bombed Blue through a table that didn’t break, followed up by an elbow drop that also didn’t fully break the table.

The infamous Mone puppet also appeared, hiding a pair of brass knuckles held by Harley Cameron. Cameron, Hayter and Nightingale were not involved in the finish.

Penelope Ford and Queen Aminata, both injured in recent weeks and pulled from the match, made brief appearances.

Order of Entry:

  • Willow Nightingale and Skye Blue
  • Julia Hart
  • Harley Cameron
  • Thekla
  • Jamie Hayter
  • Megan Bayne
  • Kris Statlander
  • Mercedes Mone
  • Mina Shirakawa
  • Marina Shafir
  • Toni Storm

Mercedes Mone reacts to topping the PWI Women’s 250 rankings

Mercedes Mone seemingly responded to her Pro Wrestling Illustrated ranking on Tuesday.

PWI’s annual edition listing the top 250 female wrestlers in the world was released today, and Mone was ranked in the number one position.

The evaluation period for the rankings runs from October 1, 2024, through September 30, 2025. The criteria prioritize win-loss records and championships, followed by influence, technical ability, and activity.

PWI top-10 Women’s Wrestlers 2025

  1. Mercedes Mone
  2. Toni Storm
  3. Saya Kamitani
  4. Tiffany Stratton
  5. Stephanie Vaquer
  6. IYO Sky
  7. Athena
  8. Sareee
  9. Naomi
  10. Rhea Ripley

This is Mone’s first time topping the PWI rankings. She previously finished third in 2015 and second in 2016.

Mone joins Storm, Ripley, Syuri, Bianca Belair, Bayley, Becky Lynch, Ronda Rousey, Asuka, Charlotte Flair, Nikki Bella, Paige, Cheerleader Melissa, Gail Kim, Madison Eagles, Michelle McCool, Mickie James, and Awesome Kong as wrestlers who have topped the list.

Mone’s response is below: