Report: More on MJF’s injury from AEW Dynamite match

A brand new report has emerged on MJF’s injury.

On Thursday, June 4, 2026, MJF was pulled from his scheduled match for Beyond Wrestling. The promotion announced that MJF had suffered a hyper-extended knee and would be unable to compete at the show.

Fightful Select has now published a report sharing more details on MJF’s injury. While many believed that the injury took place during the piledriver on the barricade spot, the report revealed that such was not the case. Instead, it happened during Rush’s knee spot in the corner. The injury was regarded as a “freak accident,” and there is allegedly no heat on Rush.

Despite pulling out of the Beyond Wrestling event, MJF is expected to continue appearing on AEW, as the promotion continues monitoring the gravity of the injury.

After MJF was removed from the indie wrestling show, Justin Barrasso reported that AEW’s Andrade was announced as his replacement. The Don Callis Family member will now face Bobby Orlando at Beyond Wrestling’s event in Cranston, Rhode Island.

AEW star set to replace MJF at weekend indie show

With AEW World Champion MJF having to pull out of a Friday indie match due to a knee injury, another AEW star is stepping up to take his place.

First reported by Justin Barrasso, Andrade El Idolo will now face Bobby Orlando at Beyond Wrestling’s event in Cranston, Rhode Island. It will be the the IWGP Global Heavyweight Champion’s first appearance for the promotion.

MJF hyperextended his knee in Wednesday’s title defense against Rush and is currently not cleared to travel or wrestle.

Andrade joins Wheeler Yuta and Lio Rush as new additions to the show since the news in addition to TNA also making travel changes in order for Bear Bronson to appear as well. The show, which is airing live on IWTV, will also feature AEW’s Megan Bayne against indie standout Gabby Forza.

Beyond Wrestling founder Drew Cordeiro told Barrasso they even had “people in WWE exploring options as well.”

“My heart swells with pride that so many people within the wrestling industry care about Beyond Wrestling and our fans. To me, independent wrestling doesn’t mean avoiding all of the biggest companies — it means pulling out all the stops to navigate the different dynamics to give this Cranston crowd the best possible show,” he said.

Update on MJF after AEW Dynamite injury | Exclusive

An update is available on MJF.

On Thursday, the AEW World Champion was pulled from a scheduled match for Beyond Wrestling, with the promotion revealing that MJF suffered a hyperextended knee during his match against Rush on Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite.

Our own Bryan Alvarez provided an update on the situation, writing to his subscribers on X:

“MJF injury is legit but they’re hoping it’s not serious”

Beyond Wrestling has since announced that Lio Rush and Wheeler Yuta have been added to Friday’s show in Cranston, Rhode Island.

MJF pulled from Beyond Wrestling show due to a hyperextended knee suffered on AEW Dynamite

MJF had been scheduled to wrestle Bobby Orlando on the show in what he said would likely be his last indie booking for “an extraordinarily long time.”

“Unfortunately @The_MJF hyperextended his knee during his match last night & is not medically cleared to travel or compete,” Beyond wrote on Thursday. “He will not be in Cranston tomorrow night but assured me he will wrestle for Beyond Wrestling as soon as his schedule allows. We wish him a speedy recovery.”

Other wrestlers booked for the show include Megan Bayne, Max Caster, Mark Sterling, Jordan Oliver, and Alec Price.

AEW World Champion MJF pulled from indie show due to injury

AEW World Champion MJF will no longer be making his scheduled appearance for Beyond Wrestling this Friday night.

It was supposed to be MJF vs. Bobby Orlando at the indie promotion’s event in Cranston, Rhode Island on June 5. However, Beyond sent out an announcement this morning saying MJF suffered a hyperextended knee on Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite and won’t be able to travel or compete in time for the show.

“Unfortunately @The_MJF hyperextended his knee during his match last night & is not medically cleared to travel or compete,” Beyond wrote. “He will not be in Cranston tomorrow night but assured me he will wrestle for Beyond Wrestling as soon as his schedule allows. We wish him a speedy recovery.”

To prove himself as a traveling champion, MJF started to take more indie bookings during his second reign with the AEW World title. He is now on his third reign after regaining the belt from Darby Allin — and this Beyond show was likely going to be MJF’s last indie booking in the United States for an “extraordinarily long time.” He still plans on making up the date despite that.

MJF retained over Rush on AEW Dynamite —

There is no word on the severity of MJF’s knee hyperextension or if he’ll be missing any shows past this one. On Dynamite last night, he defeated Rush to retain the AEW World Championship. The show also furthered the build to an upcoming title bout between MJF and Mark Briscoe.

MJF could be done working US indies ‘for an extraordinarily long time’

After this Friday, MJF says it could be an “extraordinarily long time” before he wrestles on another independent show.

MJF is set to face Bobby Orlando at Beyond Wrestling’s Break the Walls Down on Friday, June 5, in Cranston, Rhode Island. However, during a recent interview with Justin Barrasso of The Undisputed, the AEW World Champion said he needs to focus on his AEW career and pointed to losing the AEW World Championship to Darby Allin back in April as his storyline reason why.

“I’m going to announce that this is probably the last American independent match I’m going to have for an extraordinarily long time,” said Friedman. “I need to focus on AEW. I took my eyes off the ball for a millisecond, and a dude who is like 145-fucking-pounds soaking wet beat me. That can’t happen. I don’t care that he hit me in the nuts and spammed his finisher on me four times, and Aubrey Edwards, who is a complete liar, made a fast count. But glass half full, I’m now a three-time champion at the age of 30.”

This will be MJF’s first match for Beyond Wrestling since 2019. He debuted for the promotion in late 2016 on a show in Providence, Rhode Island.

“Beyond was one of the first independent circuits that really took a chance on me,” said Friedman. “That’s where I could talk on the microphone before my matches, and it’s where I wrestled big matches with top names at the time on the independent circuit.

“Now I want to come in and see what Bobby Orlando is all about. I’m excited to test this kid, I’m excited to get more eyeballs on him and on Beyond, and that’s naturally what is going to happen because I am the biggest fucking draw in this business. I’m looking forward to it, and hopefully he gets a contract out of it.”

MJF recently defeated Pat Buck at a WrestlePro show at the Rahway Rec Center in Rahway, New Jersey, on May 31. He also wrestled Max Caster at a Create-A-Pro show on May 1 in Melville, New York. In January, he defended the AEW World Championship against Alec Price for Limitless Wrestling in Lewiston, Maine.

Up next, MJF will defend his AEW World Championship against Rush on the June 3, 2026, episode of AEW Dynamite.

Backstage reaction to Darby Allin’s AEW World Championship run

For 39 days, Darby Allin thrilled AEW fans with one exciting World Championship match after another. We know it got over with the fans. But how did it get over with the locker room. 

Sean Ross Sapp at Fightful Select reports that not everyone with the company thought that Allin’s title run was a good idea, but Allin impressed his critics in the end. 

“Several skeptics of Darby Allin’s title reign applaud him for going the extra mile to make the reign a special one,” Sapp writes.

Sapp adds that Allin had one believer from the beginning: MJF, the man he defeated for the title, and to whom he lost it. 

“Sources that Fightful Select spoke to believe that MJF had been supportive of the Darby Allin title reign dating back quite a while,” Sapp writes.

For the record, MJF has denied Sapp’s report. “This is false,” he posted on social media. He tagged X’s Community Notes and Community Notes and Violations accounts to ensure the proper authorities were alerted. 

Allin won the title from MJF on Dynamite on April 15; he lost it back to MJF at Double or Nothing on May 24. In between he defended the title seven times. All seven of those matches, as well as the loss to MJF, were rated **** or higher by Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer newsletter. Defenses against Tommao Ciampa and Konosuke Takeshita were rated *****.

Fight Game: Is MJF a WON HOFer + WWE Clash in Italy preview

John LaRocca and I return with a brand-new Fight Game to discuss some of the most topical things going on in pro wrestling this week.

You can also watch full video of the show below.

We gave out our thumbs up and thumbs down before jumping into the major topics of the week which included:

  • MJF’s body of work as a top guy in AEW
  • Kevin Knight’s heel turn
  • Worries about WWE booking
  • Clash in Italy preview
  • Kenny Omega and Will Ospreay

We finished up with Star Wars Corner and reviewed The Mandalorian and Grogu.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Daily Update: WWE notes, Twisted Metal, MJF

Daily Update

Latest News

Latest Audio

Latest YouTube Video

This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

This Week’s Back Issue

FIRST TIME SUBSCRIBERS GET 50% OFF YOUR FIRST MONTH

Thursday Update

Triple H WWE Raw
Triple H hypes up the WWE crowd. (Image credit: WWE)

WWE

  • WWE posted a video with Paul “Triple H” Levesque sending a message to fans ahead of Clash in Italy:
    • We’re a few days out from Turin, and if I can give one message to the fans: Believe me, this will mean as much to us and the WWE Superstars as it does to each and every one of you. We cannot wait to get there.
    • One of the great things about being a WWE Superstar is that global nature of what we do. The ability to go to countries where maybe they don’t speak the same language, maybe the culture is completely different to ours. It really points out the similarities, as opposed to the differences, between us all.
    • I’ve heard people say before that music is the universal language, but I think maybe WWE is the universal action genre. It connects with everybody. It’s simple to understand. It’s not country vs. country. It’s an escape. It’s larger-than-life superheroes solving their conflict in our ring. There’s a universal language to that.
  • Jade Cargill promoted Clash in Italy during an appearance on The Rich Eisen Show.
  • ESPN has a 30-minute video of Cody Rhodes reflecting on some of his career highlights.
  • WrestleVotes reports that, while WWE is being flexible with AAA’s scheduling ahead of this year’s two-night Triplemania, AAA Verano de Escandalo 2026 is planned for late July.
  • In an interview with Huge Pop, Gunther discussed the quick success Oba Femi has found on the WWE main roster:
    • He came in guns blazing, really good for him. Hasn’t been in the ring with me 20 minutes yet, so let’s see. I feel like down the line, that’s going to be something that’s very interesting. I think he’s a super exciting talent, and very much looking forward to seeing what he’s going to do in the next years. I think he’s got the potential to be a big superstar in this company, be one of the pillars down the line.
  • Gunther was the guest on No-Contest Wrestling this week.
  • The Hollywood Reporter published an article on Danhausen “uncursing” the New York Knicks on their run to the NBA Finals.
  • R-Truth appeared on Undertaker’s Six Feet Under podcast.
  • CM Punk was mic’d up in the crowd while attending Tuesday’s Las Vegas Golden Knights NHL playoff game.
  • WWE Vault uploaded Rey Mysterio’s 1992 mask vs. mask match against Mr. Condor from AAA. The video includes a brief introduction from Mysterio.

Other Wrestling

  • Explaining Samoa Joe’s AEW absence over the next few months, season three of Peacock’s “Twisted Metal” – where Joe plays Sweet Tooth – is scheduled to film in Toronto from June 15 through August 26.
  • On Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Brian Myers (Curt Hawkins) recalled meeting MJF for the first time when MJF started training at his wrestling school
    • Yeah, I’ll never forget it. It was very early on, probably the first four months of Create A Pro. It’s kind of funny, because it’s a very similar mentality, he committed to something in college football, but he really had his heart set on wrestling. I think it kind of hit a wall with what he was doing and what his parents wanted him to do and what he wanted to do. I was in a very similar situation, because when you tell people you want to be a wrestler, it’s not really that believable. His dad came in with him, and it almost felt like, ‘Here, he’s your problem now, this is what he wants to do.’ I was like, let’s go. So pretty early on, we did a promo class where he just murdered this kid, and I was like, okay, and there’s something about this guy.
  • Myers called MJF’s in-ring ability “wildly underrated” and said MJF’s work ethic is something younger wrestlers should emulate:
    • He should be studied for young guys too, like just doing everything that you’re supposed to do to make it. Getting in the car, making the drives, making the connections, you know what I mean? Max is a people person. So he gets your number, ‘What’s your number?’ He stays on top of you for opportunities, things that a go-getter does, he did all those things. He checked all those boxes.
  • Mistico is hoping to return from his knee injury at CMLL’s Arena Mexico show on June 5.
  • The Wrestling Classic has an interview with Cedric Alexander.
  • Candice Michelle, who works behind the scenes as a producer in TNA, appeared on TMZ Inside the Ring.
  • WrestleZone spoke with Shotzi Blackheart.

MJF World title defense, Kevin Knight vs. Speedball part of next week’s AEW Dynamite

AEW World Champion MJF will defend the title for the first time in his third reign on next week’s AEW Dynamite.

He will put the title up against Rush who called his shot after picking up a win in a four-way Wednesday for his sixth straight victory. He did so just after MJF turned down old foe Mark Briscoe who came out to interrupt the champion’s celebration.

It will be their second-ever singles meeting with the last coming in June 2024 that MJF won in his first match back from injury.

The show from Richmond, Virginia, will also feature a women’s quarterfinal match in the Owen Hart Foundation tournament as Alex Windsor takes on a wild card entrant, filling the spot relinquished by the injured Willow Nightingale.

The show will also feature a clash between Will Ospreay and Mark Davis in an Owen Hart Foundation tournament semifinal after Davis defeated Jack Perry on Dynamite. It will be their third meeting and first since Davis scored an update over Ospreay in February.

After turning heel at Double or Nothing and then laying out former partner “Speedball” Mike Bailey on Dynamite, reigning TNT Champion Kevin Knight will defend against Bailey. It will be their fourth-ever singles match with Bailey holding a 3-0 record. They last squared off in the 2025 Continental Classic this past December.

Current AEW Dynamite lineup | Next Wednesday | Richmond, Virginia

  • AEW World Champion MJF defends against Rush
  • Women’s Owen Hart Foundation tournament quarterfinal: Alex Windsor vs. TBA
  • Men’s Owen Hart Foundation tournament semifinal: Will Ospreay vs. Mark Davis
  • TNT Champion Kevin Knight defends against Mike Bailey

Mick Foley ‘genuinely happy’ following AEW debut

Wrestling hardcore legend Mick Foley made his AEW debut at Double or Nothing, and had nothing but words of appreciation for the promotion following the event. 

He took to Instagram to express gratitude for being involved with AEW and contributing to what he described as an ‘amazing’ night of wrestling .

“ALL ELITE I am so genuinely happy to be part of @AEW, and to have contributed in a small way to such an amazing night of wrestling.” 

Foley co-hosted Zero Hour with Renee Paquette, focusing on coverage leading into the pay-per-view. He addressed the AEW World Championship match set to main event the program, offering words of advice before tensions escalated. 

MJF interrupted the hardcore legend during his comments about the AEW World Championship match. He eventually struck Foley with a low blow. Allin then rushed out to make the save.

Later, in the post show media scrum, AEW President Tony Khan discussed the vision he had in mind for Foley and Paquette’s roles on the promotion.

Tony Khan calls Darby Allin ‘one of the greatest fighting champions ever’ in AEW

Tony Khan praised and appreciated Darby Allin’s commitment and in-ring fearlessness during his AEW World Championship reign. 

Speaking on the Post Show Media Scrum,  Khan praised Allin’s work ethic, defying stunts in the ring and still having a meaningful run as AEW World Champion. 

“It’s hard to put into words how much Darby Allin means to this company because nobody would ever ask somebody to put their body on the line. No boss could ever go to somebody and ask somebody to do the kinds of things Darby Allin does.”

“To wrestle that often, to wrestle that hard, to take those kinds of chances, to take the risks that he did. He’s a very, very special person and he was fantastic as the TNT Champion, he was fantastic teaming with Sting, and he’s been fantastic as the World Champion. Everything Darby Allin’s done for us, he’s done his very, very best.”

“Whether it’s been in his singles run and the singles championships, he captured the TNT title, the World Title as a tag team wrestler, or climbing Mount Everest. He’s done just about everything he’s ever set his mind to in pro wrestling, and I believe it’s one of the greatest title reigns of any kind we’ve ever had in AEW. And it’s very fitting because I also think some of the greatest TNT title reigns have been Darby’s reigns where he put his body on the line and wrestled every week, but we’ve really never had a world champion wrestle at this kind of pace, this kind of schedule multiple times a week.” 

He compared Allin’s schedules with Jon Moxley, when he was champion during the pandemic era. Khan defined how Allin defended the title multiple times a week with his high-risk maneuvers. 

“Mox wrestled on the show every week, but there was only one show a week back then in the pandemic. We didn’t have Collision yet, and it was before Rampage even. So, we probably have never really seen anything quite like this with somebody going out twice a week often and wrestling at that kind of pace and taking these kinds of risks. So he’s one of the greatest fighting champions we’ve ever had in AEW of any kind at any time, and we’re very fortunate he’s been here this whole time.”

Despite Allin’s title reign spanning across 39 days, it validated his AEW run given how he is considered one of the four pillars of the promotion.

At Double or Nothing, MJF defeated him in a hair vs. title match to become a three-time AEW World Champion before the age of 30. 

MJF retains hair & regains World title at AEW Double or Nothing, Kevin Knight turns heel

MJF will keep his hair for a while longer and can once again call himself AEW World Champion after Sunday’s AEW Double or Nothing.

In a physical match that had to follow the spectacle of Stadium Stampede, MJF got the win after a second rope tombstone piledriver, followed by a side headlock takeover — a staple of their feud dating back to the indies — for the pin and the beginning of his third World title run.

Allin put up the title against MJF’s hair as the big stipulation.

Afterward, Allin was being stretchered out when MJF stopped it to put his foot on top of him to add insult to injury. Kevin Knight then ran out to run off MJF and decided to then deliver a UFO splash from the top turnbuckle to the stretchered Allin on the outside of the ring, turning heel. There was no explanation for it with Excalibur mentioning both men were trained by the late Buddy Wayne.

As expected, Allin took some considerable punishment during the match even when he was delivering on offense. Late in the match, he hit a coffin drop through a table on the stage that was set up for a possible head shaving. The drop was from above the scaffolding setup and lights on the stage and when Allin landed, he appeared to hit his head on a platform the table was set up on as he came up bleeding from the back of his head.

Our Bryan Alvarez noted it had to be a hardway cut as the New York State Athletic Commission doesn’t allow blood.

Allin nearly got injured early as he went for a tope, but hooked his heels on the ropes and landed right on top of his head for a nasty spill. He later got hit with a package piledriver onto the ringside steps and also hit a cameraman on a dive as MJF pulled him in front of Allin.

The win ends the short title run that began the Wednesday after April’s Dynasty when Allin won the championship for the first time in front of his hometown of Everett, Washington. The 40-day run saw seven successful title defenses.

AEW Double or Nothing odds leave room for MJF to go bald | Opinion

Some of you reading this might believe that MJF is a lock to win his third world title at AEW Double or Nothing tonight and avoid being shaved bald.

According to the latest betting odds, he is a -300 favorite to defeat Darby Allin at +200. While those are good odds for MJF, they are definitely not “full-blown certain he’s going to win” odds.

I think many of us, myself included, assumed based on the stipulation that there was really no chance MJF would lose. After all, if he was willing to have his head shaved bald, it felt like that would have happened during his program with Místico in CMLL.

And MJF’s hair has changed a little since then too.

When MJF and Mistico had their program, I’m not certain that MJF’s potentially trip-to-Turkey-assisted hair situation was quite as lush and, I dare say, buoyant as what we’ve seen since he returned to AEW late last year.

So if MJF wasn’t willing to have his head shaved before, what would make him willing to do it now?

MJF vs. Darby Allin stipulation impacts AEW Double or Nothing ticket market

Dave Meltzer noted on Wrestling Observer Radio on Saturday that the secondary market for tickets to Double or Nothing tripled in price after the title vs. hair stipulation was announced.

The show is sold out, and it’s approaching a $1.5 million gate, if it hasn’t gotten there already. This has been a huge success. People are into it.

And we’ve seen big stipulations do well for AEW on pay-per-view before.

But I wonder if the interest in the stipulation could actually increase the chances that we see MJF lose, see the stipulation carried through, and that tonight’s pay-per-view ends with locks of hair lying on the ring mat as a bald MJF sobs in the corner.

Will MJF actually get shaved bald at AEW Double or Nothing?

MJF and Darby Allin are surprisingly similar.

A few ways to describe them: When it comes to wrestling, both MJF and Darby go all out, full throttle, pedal to the metal, all gas, no brakes, whatever. They turn their speakers to 11.

In MJF’s case, this is at least true when it comes to wrestling. For Darby, it appears to be with life in general.

MJF’s commitment to maintaining his character is the same kind of commitment to wrestling that Darby had when he threw himself through shards of glass during Sting’s last match.

While you can accuse MJF’s character of being lazy and opportunistic, I don’t think anyone can debate that whatever real person is hidden under layers of the MJF character is incredibly passionate about wrestling. He wouldn’t be going to the lengths he does if he wasn’t.

If MJF believes it’s best for wrestling for him to have his Turkey vacation-assisted hair shaved clean bald tonight, I think he’ll do it.

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Betting Odds

As for the other betting odds at AEW Double or Nothing, Jon Moxley is a -1000 favorite to beat Kyle O’Reilly at +550 in the AEW Continental Championship match.

Konosuke Takeshita is a -280 favorite to defeat Kazuchika Okada at +185 in the International title match.

Athena is a -800 favorite over Mina Shirakawa at +425 in the Women’s Owen Hart Cup quarterfinal.

Cage and Cope are massive -3000 favorites against FTR at +900 in the AEW World Tag Team title match.

Will Ospreay is a -3000 favorite against Samoa Joe at +900 in the Owen Hart tournament quarterfinals.

Swerve Strickland is a -800 favorite over Bandido at +425 in the other men’s Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal.

Chris Jericho, the Hurt Syndicate, and the Elite are -700 favorites over the Demand, Don Callis Family, and the Dogs at +400 in Stadium Stampede.

And in the AEW Women’s World title match, champion Thekla is a -1000 favorite to retain against Jamie Hayter at +350, Hikaru Shida at +1000, and Kris Statlander at +1100.

AEW Double or Nothing preview & predictions: Heat of the moment

New York in early summer is the best version of itself, an irrefutable fact for anyone who has spent even a little time here. The city begins to emerge, slowly at first, shaking off whatever the winter and the world did to it. Then, alarmingly quickly, the whole world opens up.

Easing into the summer is ideal, but there is an unhinged beauty in that first real heat that a gentle May afternoon cannot provide. The first 90 degree day, the one that wallops you with its density the moment you step outside, the one that feels like walking through a stick of butter, that’s the day that reminds you that you’re alive. The city doesn’t ease into that day. It arrives all at once, and you hope the air conditioning is ready.

AEW arrives in New York City on the heels of exactly that: the first real heat of the season and, coincidentally, leading into the first real weekend of summer.

Double or Nothing is a card that, in pieces, reminds you how to feel alive – a stirring World championship match tends to have that effect. It is also a card that is the beginning of something significant. The road to All In is peeking over the horizon. The Owen Hart Cup is taking shape. Careers are arriving at their conclusions, willing or otherwise. The second half of the year starts here, in the heat, in New York, in the world’s borough that insists on the real thing.

Let’s run through it.

AEW Double or Nothing main card preview & predictions

Will Ospreay vs. Samoa Joe in an Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal

Ospreay’s relationship with The Death Riders is the most interesting thing happening in AEW right now, and the most interesting character development they’ve done since Hangman Page’s downward spiral. Ospreay is a lot of things to a lot of people. Divisive, transformative, it’s all subjective. But at his heart, Will is a simple man. He wants to make the fans happy. He would also like to win matches, and sometimes these two things are in direct opposition.

Others are driven by ego (MJF), by competition (Jon Moxley), and by testing the limits of the human spirit (Darby Allin). Ospreay is driven by love: of wrestling, and of the fans. He specifically craves their adoration. His turn to The Death Riders is an unexpected and welcome bit of introspection by a performer who had previously shown very little. I’m bullish on his journey with them and, through The Owen, I’m curious to see what lasting change might come from it. 

As always, Joe will be a test. He doesn’t give you space to be spectacular. He doesn’t create distance for convoluted counter sequences or opportunities for a flashy highlight reel. He takes up all the space in the ring and limits the oxygen. His arrival is an avalanche, slowly, then all at once. 

Ospreay has been everything we could have hoped for since his return. Joe is a test, but one he should pass.

Prediction: Ospreay

Swerve Strickland vs. Bandido in an Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal

AEW is better when both of these cats are on TV. Too often, whether by injury or unfortunate ROH responsibilities, Bandido floats in and out of our lives. His presence and matches are full of light. Seeing his name on the marquee promises, at minimum, something worth watching with the ceiling for something truly special.

Bandido’s joy and exuberance meet its seething match this weekend. Many people snarl and claim to be the best, the most dangerous, but none do it like Swerve. There is no one as cool or as confident. There is grit and realism to his words and actions, a testament to his capabilities as a performer that he’s smooth enough to hit the interview circuit and do media up-fronts while playing the role of an objectively terrible person.

When MJF plays the bad guy, we’re all in on the performance; we can see and acknowledge the winking to the camera. When Swerve does it, the menace feels all too real.

Prediction: Swerve

Athena vs. Mina Shirakawa in an Owen Hart tournament quarterfinal

Before we dive in, a moment for our fallen TBS Champion and being of pure light, Willow Nightingale. She’s one of the performers whose presence fills an entire room. Louis Armstrong Stadium is going to feel a little emptier without her.

Athena seems primed for her semi-annual AEW proper tour of duty, and it’s always a treat. She is everything she’s ever claimed to be and backs that up in the ring and on the microphone. Said simply, she’s great. ROH’s gain remains AEW’s loss, and AEW feels it every time she walks back through the door to remind everyone what they’ve been missing. With two staples of the division out for the foreseeable future and Mercedes Mone still off television, I do wonder if we get more Athena on AEW TV going forward. The division would be better for it.

Prediction: Athena

Chris Jericho, The Hurt Syndicate (Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin) and The Elite (Kenny Omega, Jack Perry, Matt & Nick Jackson) vs. The Demand (Ricochet, Bishop Kaun & Toa Liona), Don Callis Family (Mark Davis & Andrade El Idolo), and The Dogs (Clark Conners & David Finlay) in a Stadium Stampede match

Whatever goodwill Jericho’s return generated, and admittedly I provided some, has been squandered with frightening efficiency. His insistence on killing anything natural and good, the relentless, painfully unfunny slogans, create an unwanted cocktail I’m glad to send back. The master of reinvention has watched his creative well run dry in real time, in public, repeatedly. The Learning Tree was an outright disaster. Whatever this current iteration is shows little promise.

Fortunately, the Stadium Stampede format and the significant talent of others will dilute his presence across fourteen people, and however many minutes this thing runs.

These matches are thrilling at best and silly curios at worst. The individuals will all get their spotlight moments. Ricochet, freed from any obligation to carry a serious program, should thrive in the chaos. Andrade can pop off his pants and pop the crowd. The Dogs get a chance to shine in an AEW trademark match. Additional critical analysis of this is not required. We know what this is, and you know if it’s something that tickles your fancy.

Prediction: Jericho, Hurt Syndicate & The Elite

AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Kyle O’Reilly

These two have wonderful chemistry, capped by a bloody, visceral n holds barred match at Full Gear that reminded everyone in the building, and everyone watching, what O’Reilly is capable of. More importantly, it reminded Kyle. Moxley has that effect on people. Something about his brand of violence awakens things in his opponents, pulls the best and most dangerous version of them to the surface, whether they planned to show up that way or not.

It has been a genuinely tough run for O’Reilly, the wrestling intelligentsia’s favorite weirdo, since joining AEW. Injury and personal tragedy have a way of hollowing things out and creating a distance between a performer and the thing that made them want to do this in the first place. Finding meaning in the thing you love after it’s been taken from you, even briefly, even partially, is its own kind of victory. It’s great to see Kyle back.

O’Reilly’s story is a good one. Moxley, though the ace, grappling with whether he can beat Kyle is a nice character beat. But a character beat might be all it is.

Prediction: Moxley retains

AEW International Champion Kazuchika Okada defends against Konosuke Takeshita

Takeshita’s moment, sadly, has long passed. This is not permanent, this is not irreversible, but for now, the version of Takeshita that felt genuinely inevitable has receded, and what’s replaced it is a performer going through familiar motions with diminishing returns. The exaggerated big move spots, the bomb-throwing without narrative connective tissue, are indicators of a performer doing what he thinks ‘good’ looks like rather than just being it.

When he first started moving up the card, there was a buzz in the arena and online. Now he’s receded into the chaff of the Don Callis Family. Big DC can tell us he’s the alpha and that he’s the best thing going today (there were glimpses of that in his title match with Darby Allin) but he’s lying to himself as much as he is the audience. What Takeshita needs isn’t a new direction so much as a return to his own. He had a natural, easy connection to the crowd — one that still wants to love him. 

It would be genuinely funny if, after all this time, after all the deferred moments and missed windows, he finally gets his big win here. Maybe I’ll be awarding myself the ‘fell for it again’ award Monday morning, but I think the big man gets it done.

Prediction: Takeshita wins the title

AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) defend against Adam Copeland & Christian Cage in an I Quit match where if Cage and Copeland lose, they must retire as a tag team

I have tried, genuinely and repeatedly, to locate the feeling this program is supposed to produce in me. Alas, I cannot find it.  Even with a heavy, heavy stipulation, there is nothing. My fondness for FTR mixed with my lack of appreciation for the Cope of it all makes a 40 degree day. No one has anything to say about a 40 degree day

The I Quit stipulation at least has the virtue of theater, and theater is what Copeland and Cage have always done best. Someone has to say the words out loud, has to submit not just physically but verbally, has to admit it in front of everyone. That’s a fine idea. I just can’t make myself care who says it.

FTR will make sure the match is worth watching. The history books will be kinder to Wheeler and Harwood than to their opponents. Let the work speak.

Prediction: Copeland and Christian win the titles

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

I don’t buy the Statlander and Shida pairing, and it doesn’t seem like they do either. This is a doomed and empty pairing that is not working on any level. Is anyone really invested in the inevitable breakup? Why can’t Statlander achieve a stretch of character consistency? No matter the season, no matter the year, she always seems to be going through something. Must be exhausting!

Thekla remains insistent on being a star unique to herself: doing her thing, performing her act. It’s not revolutionary, but when something feels this well-worn and natural, it sure is impressive. This doesn’t feel like a flash in the pan but a character with real staying power. This type of performance is extremely for me, and I have enjoyed her more than I ever thought — a complete home run signing and a boon to the entire division. 

Hayter continues her slow rebuild. Shida is not what she once was, but she has done good enough work since returning. Statlander is Statlander. The only person in World title form is the one who already holds it. That’s not changing.

Prediction: Thekla retains

AEW World Champion Darby Allin defends against MJF in a title vs. hair match

Allin is a comet ripping through the night and challenging the notion that a title reign has to be long to be historic. Producing this level of output in his preferred style is equal parts remarkable, breathtaking, and psychotic. Just about every match has required a cigarette afterward. Other wrestlers could hold a World title for years and if they produced 20% of matches as good as everything Allin has done, it would be considered a legendary run. I am hard-pressed to recall a title reign that I have enjoyed more than his. 

Allin is on the short list for mainstream wrestler of the year on this run alone, and the year isn’t half over. What he has done with this championship, with this character, with this body that somehow still functions at this level, is something that should be appreciated loudly and in real time before it becomes something we remember.

If he isn’t the (again, mainstream) wrestler of the year, it’s because MJF is. His edges have been smoothed, the work tight, and the hair lusciously full. Firmly in his prime and also on the run of his life, the self-proclaimed prophecy of being a generational talent is being fulfilled. MJF risking his hair is as old school as professional wrestling gets. It also makes complete and total sense for who he is.

This is a man driven entirely by ego and vanity. The stipulation isn’t an escalation imposed on the character from outside; it emerges directly from it. MJF, without his carefully cultivated perception of perfection, is a man with nothing left to hide behind. Strip part of the gimmick away and the rest crumbles. Max has done an incredible job of not being above the stipulation but cowering in the face of it. This is a man’s existential crisis with a title match attached.

Restraint can be a weapon. It’s one MJF should wield this week, and one that Darby does not have any interest in having. It will be a battle to see whose style of match prevails. Is it the devil-may-care shape-shifting style that Darby has perfected? Or is it a methodical, slow build like MJF favors? Styles typically make fights, but desperation throws structure out the window. Comets pass our eyes for fleeting and unforgettable moments. Darby’s burns out in Queens.

Prediction: MJF wins the title