Ric Flair ‘wouldn’t be surprised’ if Tony Khan buys WWE one day

Ric Flair wouldn’t be surprised if we someday end up living in a world where WWE is run by Tony Khan.

During his appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show on Wednesday, Flair — who is under contract with AEW — praised Khan as one of the best people he’s ever known. With all of the money the Khan family has, Flair believes they could end up buying WWE one day.

“Tony Khan is one of the greatest people I’ve ever met in my life. And you know what, I wouldn’t be surprised — because he has the money to do it — if he doesn’t buy WWE one day,” Flair said. “The Khan family’s got more money than God, you know that, right? That $9 billion price on the WWE is nothing to Shad Khan.

“But more than that, Tony’s provided an opportunity for guys who would never get a chance to work anywhere else, because the WWE is a very difficult, very selective organization. And Tony has offered all of these opportunities. And he pays the guys good. All he cares about is making a product and making sure that people are happy. He’s a very personable guy.”

Khan did make a nearly $7 billion bid for WWE when the company was up for sale in 2023, but Endeavor ultimately won out in that process and now runs WWE and UFC under the same umbrella in TKO Group.

Also in the Helwani interview, Flair said he’s a fan of AEW star MJF — who Flair says used to have a little bit of an ego problem but has now calmed down.

“He had a little bit of an ego problem, but he’s calmed that down now,” Flair said about MJF. “When I see him, it’s like, ‘Hey, Mr. Flair’ and sh*t like that, you know what I mean? He used to blow by me like I was just… But it’s a whole different world. And I’m very, very proud of his success, as I am all of the guys there. They have a lot of great talent there.”

Flair only makes very sporadic on-screen appearances for AEW despite being under contract. He was originally brought into the company for Sting’s retirement tour and a brand deal with his Wooooo! Energy drink.

Becky Lynch offers MJF help after AEW World title loss

WWE’s Becky Lynch is ready to help MJF after he recently lost his AEW World title.

On the April 15th episode of AEW Dynamite, MJF lost his World title in an extremely short match to Darby Allin. Going on a rant since then on social media, Maxwell Jacob Friedman recently uploaded a social media post demanding justice. MJF called out Tony Khan, Bryan Danielson, Aubrey Edwards, Renee Paquette, and Darby Allin as guilty.

WWE’s Lynch, who is known for her friendship with MJF, offered her help to the former champion. She replied to the post, writing, “Let me know, I’ll put you in contact with the BEST lawyers!

MJF believes he was cheated out of his World title reign following his title defense against Kenny Omega. MJF appeared in the arena after Dynasty, unaware of his World title match.

While the match was previously scheduled to open the show, it was later moved to the main event, where he lost in under two minutes. No official title rematch for MJF has been announced yet.

Wrestling Weekly: WWE WrestleMania 42 weekend, the new AEW World Champion

It’s WWE WrestleMania 42 weekend and on a new Wrestling Weekly, Les Thatcher and Vic Sosa are back to make their predictions for all the matches on both nights.

They also discuss the new AEW World Champion Darby Allin.

Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!

Click here to listen (sub needed)

Fight Game: WWE WrestleMania 42 preview, thoughts on Darby Allin’s AEW title win

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

We gave out their thumbs up and thumbs down before jumping into two main topics:

  • A discussion on Darby Allin beating MJF for the AEW World title
  • A full preview of WWE WrestleMania 42

In the Observe This! segment, we remember WrestleManias from our childhood and look at some of Dave Meltzer’s WrestleMania star ratings.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Update on MJF after AEW World Championship loss

It doesn’t sound like MJF will be taking time off from AEW after dropping the promotion’s World Championship.

Just days after retaining against Kenny Omega at AEW Dynasty, MJF lost the AEW World Championship to Darby Allin last night at Dynamite Spring BreakThru. The loss led to speculation that MJF could be going on hiatus from AEW for an acting role. However, Self Made Pro Wrestling — an outlet that interviewed MJF in February — reports that he is not expected to miss time and is factored into the plans for Double or Nothing 2026.

“In speaking with a source with knowledge of the situation, it was relayed to @SelfMadePW that MJF is not expected to miss time and is not filming a movie at this point,” Self Made tweeted. “MJF is scheduled for upcoming Dynamites and will be factored into main event plans for Double or Nothing.”

The Allin vs. MJF match on Dynamite was a quick one with Allin, after getting payback for an MJF low blow, hitting a Scorpion Death Drop, four Coffin Drops, and pinning MJF with a headlock takeover.

Double or Nothing is being held in Queens, New York on May 24. MJF also has a homecoming scheduled for May 1 when he competes for Create-A-Pro in Long Island. It was originally supposed to be MJF vs. Nic Nemeth at that indie show, but MJF will now be issuing an open challenge after TNA Wrestling canceled the originally scheduled bout.

Becky Lynch calls MJF ‘just the sweetest boy’ after working on Happy Gilmore 2

Becky Lynch thinks MJF is “just the sweetest boy.”

Lynch and MJF both appear in Netflix’s sequel to Happy Gilmore. Lynch plays an Irish golfer named Flex, while MJF portrays one of Happy Gilmore’s sons.

During an interview with Vulture that was published Thursday, April 16, Lynch was asked for her thoughts on the now-former AEW World Champion and what it was like working on the movie with him. Lynch said she initially expected MJF to be similar to his wrestling persona, but ultimately realized that was not the case.

Lynch said:

“I think he’s so great. I love him. And honestly, I’ll be honest, I thought he’d be an a–h— like his character. He’s so good at his character that I was like, ‘Oh, I’m gonna hate this guy.’ And he’s just the sweetest boy. He’s so nice and he was so great and he was such a great conversation. It was such a great chat and we bonded instantly and I love him.

You know I totally bought the act, and now I’m killing the act, so sorry. But no, I think he’s great and he’s wonderful and he was so great in the movie. He’s fantastic. He’s just a fantastic little speaker and actor and he’s also so young still. So I’m so very excited to see where his career goes.”

Up next, Lynch will challenge AJ Lee for the WWE Women’s Intercontinental Championship on night one of WrestleMania 42 on Saturday. As for MJF, he is coming off losing the AEW World Championship to Darby Allin in the main event of Wednesday’s Dynamite from Everett, Washington.

Lynch’s full interview is available below, with the video queued to her comments about MJF.

Darby Allin ends MJF’s World title reign on AEW Dynamite, Sting makes surprise appearance

For the first time ever, Darby Allin can call himself AEW World Champion.

Allin defeated MJF in front of his home crowd in Everett, Washington, to win the championship in quick fashion on Wednesday’s Spring BreakThru episode of AEW Dynamite, hitting the now-former champion with four coffin drops and a side headlock takeover for the pin and win, a call back to their past AEW match.

The match surprisingly took only a few minutes, started by an MJF low blow with Allin later hitting one of his own, followed by a Scorpion Death Drop and the sequence above.

Sting, Allin’s former AEW Tag Team Championship partner, made a surprise appearance as Allin was preparing to walk to the ring, saying it wasn’t showtime but Allin’s time. He then came out to take part in the post-match celebration along with the locker room.

Allin earned the shot with his Dynasty victory over Andrade El Idolo this past Sunday.

The win ends MJF’s second title run that began at last December’s Worlds End and saw seven successful title defenses.

At the onset of Dynamite, they played off that MJF had no idea the match was happening Wednesday even though it was announced Sunday night after Dynasty, saying AEW officials had been trying to get in touch with him all week and that the match was starting the show.

Allin came out to start the show, soon followed by an irate MJF who ran down the crowd, said he wasn’t doing the match, and would sue everyone involved. An emotional Allin tried to goad him into it, but MJF said his back was hurt from Sunday and wasn’t doing it.

Bryan Danielson got up from commentary and said he got a message from Tony Khan in the back who said the match would be pushed until the main event and if MJF didn’t defend, he would stripped of the title.

AEW needed a fully committed MJF & are getting it once again | Opinion

I’m glad the fully committed MJF finally returned to AEW in a time when the company desperately needed that to happen.

Here’s a refresher on the 18 months between January 2024 and June 2025 that was a stretch I think he might even privately admit was a bit “mid”.

After losing at December 2023’s Worlds End and ending the longest World title reign in company history, he was out nearly six months recovering from injuries and made a surprise return at May 2024’s Double or Nothing to confront Adam Cole who had turned on him before he left.

That return was, well, yeah. MJF simply kicked him low, hit a brain buster, booted him out of the ring, did a “I’m staying” promo to finally end the whole “bidding war of 2024” bit, showed off a new AEW tattoo, and away we went – a strange way to kickstart what once promised to be an all-time AEW feud that suffered from sh*t luck timing due to injuries.

Sure, MJF feuded with Will Ospreay in a somewhat memorable International/American title angle in 2024, but the Cole storyline just laid out there never fully concluded until December 2024’s Worlds End. By that point, fans were just done with it and I’m guessing so were Cole and MJF. It was voted the worst feud of that year by readers of our website (yes, even AEW gets ‘worst’ awards on our website!) and it was hard to dispute that. It was past the expiration point, but they had to drink the sour milk anyway.

He wrestled just 11 times in 2024 and after defeating Daniel Garcia at September 2024’s All Out (remember that whole ordeal about Garcia’s indecision on whether to re-sign affected this?), MJF disappeared for two months only to return for a Full Gear match against Roderick Strong that I completely forgot happened. I bet you did too.

After he beat Cole at Worlds End, he was gone for another two months, came back to beat Dustin Rhodes, took on Hangman Page at 2025’s Revolution, and then, there was the whole Hurt Syndicate thing that just…I don’t know what. Alrighty, then.

It wasn’t until his Mistico feud began in June 2025 that we finally got glimpses of the talent that was white hot for most of 2021, 2022 and 2023. He just didn’t feel as committed as he did before, likely because of outside interests like doing movie projects and such, and it was evident watching him on screen. Wrestling felt like one of the things he was doing rather than the primary thing he was doing.

That’s definitely not the case anymore.

Since last summer, everything old feels new again. There was the aforementioned Mistico feud and his rivalry with Mark Briscoe in which he physically pushed all the chips into the middle, especially in the tables n’ tacks match at last September’s All Out. While there was another three month gap with no in-ring activity, he regained the World title at last December’s Worlds End and it’s been one of the best moves Tony Khan has made creatively in a long time.

He’s defended the title seven times since then, two of those coming outside AEW as he committed to the “traveling champion” moniker. He has wrestled Page, Bandido, Brody King, Mike Bailey, Kevin Knight, Zilla Fatu, Alec Price, and this past weekend, Kenny Omega. The shortest of those was 17 minutes and he’s put everything he has into them. While not as star-laden yet in terms of challengers that his first reign had, I think I have overall enjoyed this run more and we’re only four months in.

He’s on TV regularly again, he’s wrestling more, and his promos feel more inspired and less laden with forced attempts at catchphrases. In short, it feels like he has fully bought into what’s being asked of him and he’s excelling, truly putting the World title as a North Star that everyone is trying to get to. That’s the way it should be and he’s nailing it.

Of course, that leads us to tonight’s Dynamite where he defends again, this time against past rival Darby Allin. There’s a narrative out there that Allin should win tonight because it’s where he trained as a wrestler, that it would be a good story, you need surprise title changes, blah, blah.

I’m here to tell you there’s no way MJF’s run should end tonight, even if it’s to create a moment that would just be erased at next month’s Double or Nothing in a rematch anyway.

AEW needs the MJF train to roll into their biggest show of the year: August’s All In. That’s just over four months away – plenty of time for intriguing feuds with Andrade El Idolo, Swerve Strickland, and maybe even someone like Kazuchika Okada. There’s zero reason to make a stop on the way to Wembley. Zero.

As to who MJF could defend against in London, there’s plenty of time to figure that out even though the odds-on favorite is the aforementioned Ospreay. I’m looking forward to continuing to enjoy the hopefully continued ride until we get there and more of MJF being the conductor.

What’s next for AEW after Dynasty? | Opinion

The results of Dynasty left the future murky for some of the biggest stars and champions of All Elite Wrestling. With much of the slate wiped clean, what should we expect for Double or Nothing and beyond?

Here’s a look at what might be next for wrestlers like MJF, Will Ospreay, and Darby Allin. The following is based purely on speculation and conjecture, and not on any backstage rumors or reports.

Let’s start by looking at the long-term destination: All In London will occur at Wembley Stadium on August 30. This will be AEW’s third show at the giant building, and with the novelty perhaps having worn off, they’ll need a big draw. The biggest draw they could book would be Will Ospreay challenging for the world championship in front of his hometown crowd. 

The problem there is that Ospreay just lost his challenge to Jon Moxley for the Continental Championship. So to get to Wembley, Ospreay would likely need to win the Owen Hart Cup and the title shot that comes with it. If this sounds familiar, that’s because it’s the same blueprint AEW used for Bryan Danielson in 2024: injuries, a losing streak, a last-chance tournament win, and climactic victory in London. (Hopefully Ospreay’s postscript will last longer than Danielson’s did.) 

So who will Ospreay be challenging? AEW has already booked MJF to defend his World Championship against Darby Allin at Spring BreakThru, only three days after his victory against Kenny Omega. And Omega is likely to hang around the championship scene as well, having visually pinned MJF for over a dozen seconds at Dynasty. We can probably expect the three of them to battle for the belt from now through the summer, perhaps with Andrade El Idolo and Swerve Strickland getting involved as well. 

It’s worth pointing out that AEW’s next pay per view is Double or Nothing in Queens, New York, not far from MJF’s backyard. He’s almost certain to main event that show, but will he be going in as champion or challenger?

One name not in the world title mix: Hangman Page. Page has not been seen since losing to MJF at Revolution and thus, allegedly, will never challenge for the world championship again as per the stipulation. So Page needs a new goal. Jon Moxley, meanwhile, needs a new challenger for his Continental Championship after beating Ospreay. Putting the two together would be rematch of the main event of All In: Texas, AEW’s biggest show of 2025. (They have had one singles rematch since then, with Page beating Moxley on Dynamite last July.) 

One more match seems certain for Double or Nothing: it seems like Kazuchika Okada and Konosuke Takeshita have finally, finally split, and the two will likely face off for Okada’s International Championship.

Elsewhere:

  • Surprisingly, FTR defeated Adam Copeland & Christian Cage at Dynasty to retain the World Tag Team Championships. In the days leading up to that match, Cage & Copeland had a staredown wth the Young Bucks, who would then beat Okada & Takeshita at Dynasty. Booking Cope & Cage against the Bucks for a title shot, only for FTR to interfere and set up a three-way instead, sounds like a very WWE thing to do. In this instance, it might also make the most sense.
  • Kevin Knight is your new TNT Champion and has a bevy of Death Riders, Don Callis Family members, and La Faccion Ingobernable luchadors set to challenge him. He will be defending against Claudio Castagnoli on Wednesday at Spring BreakThru. It also seems inevitable that he’ll be defending against Speedball Bailey in a teacher-vs.-student matchup somewhere down the road.
  • In the women’s division, Willow Nightingale will obviously be defending the TBS Championship against Kamille, who laid her out twice on Sunday night. As for Thekla, after defeating Jamie Hayter at Dynasty, her next challenger for the AEW Women’s World Championship might be Hayter’s tag team partner, Alex Windsor, who defeated Marina Shafir at Zero Hour. 
  • I wouldn’t spend too much time thinking about the Conglomeration and the World Trios Championships. Those titles have already changed hands five times in three and half months this year. They seem to be AEW’s answer to New Japan’s Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championships: an excuse to put a lot of bangers on shows without a lot of dominant champions or long-term story developments. 

WOR: AEW Dynasty recap, WWE SmackDown live thoughts

Dave Meltzer and I are back on Wrestling Observer Radio following the AEW Dynasty PPV from Sunday night.

We talked about:

  • The full Dynasty PPV
  • Notes from Tony Khan’s presser
  • Latest news coming out of the show
  • AEW Collision
  • WWE SmackDown live from San Jose

Click here to listen (subscription required) or watch on YouTube

World, TNT & TBS title matches announced for AEW Dynamite Spring BreakThru

Just moments after AEW Dynasty, three new title matches have been announced for AEW Dynamite Spring BreakThru.

Earlier in the night, after Kamille made her long-awaited return to AEW and attacked TBS Champion Willow Nightingale, she was announced for a title match. On the upcoming April 15 edition of AEW Dynamite Spring BreakThru, Kamille will now face Nightingale for the TBS title.

Also during the PPV, Darby Allin defeated Andrade El Idolo to earn a future AEW World title shot. In the main event, after MJF successfully defended his World title against Kenny Omega, he was announced for an upcoming World title match against Allin. The match was announced after he called his shot, saying he wanted the match on Wednesday, April 15, in Everett, Washington.

Also, brand new TNT Champion Kevin Knight will also be in action defending his TNT title against Death Riders member Claudio Castagnoli on AEW Dynamite Spring BreakThru.

On April 16, AEW is also set to host Collision Spring BreakThru; however, no matches have been confirmed for that show.

AEW Dynamite Spring BreakThru updated lineup

  • Kevin Knight vs. Claudio Castagnoli for the TNT Championship
  • Kamille vs. Willow Nightingale for the TBS Championship
  • MJF vs. Darby Allin for the AEW World Championship

MJF defeats Kenny Omega, retains World title at AEW Dynasty

At least for one night, a devil proved they can beat a god.

MJF’s reign as AEW World Champion continued at Sunday’s AEW Dynasty with another big win in a main event, defeating Kenny Omega and denying him his second World title run after a 4.5 year drought.

Near the end of the match, MJF pulled referee Bryce Remsburg into an V-Trigger knee, followed by a low blow on Omega. He then took his Dynamite Diamond ring from Remsburg’s pocket after he had confiscated it earlier. Omega avoided an MJF punch with the ring, hit a V-Trigger followed by a One Winged Angel which MJF kicked out of after a second referee entered the ring — a rare occurrence.

Omega then dragged MJF outside to the apron, teasing a One Winged Angel through a ringside table but MJF hit him in the stomach with the ring instead and delivered a jumping tombstone through the table. He then propped Omega on the apron, hit the Heat Seeker, and pinned him.

MJF now moves on to defend against Darby Allin which appears likely for this Wednesday’s Spring BreakThru episode of Dynamite in Everett, Washington. Allin defeated Andrade El Idolo earlier in the evening to earn the shot. It will be a rematch from November 2021’s Full Gear in their only prior AEW singles match.

The win extends MJF’s second run which has seen seven successful title defenses after he regained the belt at December 2025’s Worlds End. Sunday was a rematch from he and Omega’s October 2023 match on Collision where MJF picked up a successful title defense during his first run. The match was Omega’s first shot at the title since that night.

Omega earned the shot with his win over Swerve Strickland in their rematch last month, taking Strickland’s opportunity while retaining his EVP status.

Dynasty saw two title changes amid all the defenses as The Conglomeration are now Trios Champions while Kevin Knight became the TNT Champion.

AEW Dynasty preview & predictions: What’s a devil to a god?

The following is opinion-based and reflects the views of the author and not our website.

No wrestling company in the world has a higher ceiling than All Elite Wrestling. On any given night with the right combination of intent and a bit of restraint, it’s the most exciting place this wonderfully silly medium has to offer.

The matches hit harder, the risks feel real, and for a few hours, everything clicks into something special. Even their average output is fathoms above what the monolith of the industry embarrassingly tosses out on Mondays and Fridays, and that’s been the case for a while.

But sometimes it’s a self-inflicted struggle to reach such great heights. For every moment of clarity, there’s another that feels strangely undercooked: stories that drift, characters that stall, ideas that arrive half-formed and linger longer than they should. The ingredients are almost always there. The discipline is not. I have exhaustively covered every major AEW show except one – something I am beyond grateful for and never take for granted – and I am still pleading with them not to add multiple matches within hours of bell time. I do have a family.

Dynasty is a reflection of all this: a card full of wrestlers operating near the peak of what they are capable of, just enough uncertainty to warrant a head tilt, and too many matches added the week of the show. Kyle Fletcher’s injury clearly threw a wrench into everything planned, so I magnanimously offer grace during this trying time.

Let’s run through the card as announced through Friday night.

AEW Dynasty 2026 preview & predictions

Chris Jericho vs. Ricochet

Jericho is back and he is once again doing…something. Whether that something is good remains an open question. Absence, in his case, has not necessarily made the heart fonder, but it has made my digital pen more willing. Everyone needed a break from the persistence of Jericho. The man would roll into a show, and his ten minutes would feel like humidity in the middle of July: heavy, pulpy, and begging for relief.

Working down the card with someone fun and willing is the proper use of Jericho at this point. Steering clear of the people whose best moments are still ahead of them is wise. What I worry about is Jericho looking across the locker room and spotting Mike Bailey or Kevin Knight, someone with enough motion to set off a neighborhood’s worth of Ring cameras, and licking his chops. And please, for the love of god, keep him far away from Fletcher. 

Ricochet will not be broken by his time across the ring from Jericho. His progress won’t stall. For now, this is fine.

Prediction: Jericho

Casino Royale battle royal for the vacant TNT title

Best wishes to Fletcher, who hopefully makes it back for All In this summer. He had long outgrown the TNT Championship, but having him reliably carry the midcard made an enormous difference in weekly television. His absence creates a void, but it’s also a significant opportunity to do something exciting.

Someone like Rush or the earlier-mentioned Bailey and Knight would be inspired choices to carry the gold. All three can be counted on to deliver weekly, and in entirely different ways. These matches are always impossible to predict with any real confidence, but Tony Khan, I beseech you: take this as a chance for genuine growth, not a moment to rest on your laurels and reach for the old reliables. The person who steps into this vacuum has a chance to matter.

Prediction: Someone inspired (please)

Kazuchika Okada & Konosuke Takeshita vs. The Young Bucks

The “can they coexist” trope is one of my least favorites in all of pro wrestling. It’s right up there with a random tag team calling themselves “best friends.” At least this question answers itself immediately (they cannot!) and we’re spared the indignity of being asked it seriously.

The more honest conversation this match opens up is about Takeshita, who has been adrift in AEW for long enough now that it’s hard to ignore. He floats in and out of the Okada rivalry, something that should have been definitively resolved months ago, and engages and disengages without direction, without urgency, and increasingly without consequence. The moves are still big, the bombs still land. But it feels hollow.

Elite execution is being asked to compensate for a story and a character that’s lost all urgency. Consistent, clear, and most importantly, expedited direction would do wonders. Booked with the conviction AEW showed with Fletcher, Takeshita could heat back up and step directly into the space his stablemate left behind.

Prediction: Okada & Takeshita

Darby Allin vs. Andrade El Ídolo

Allin occupies a specific and invaluable position in professional wrestling: a perverse, almost irresponsible, bumper who gives everyone their very best match. Good stories and solid creative always help, but nothing helps a career more than working with Darby. He should win the big one once before his body inevitably makes the decision for him (and make no mistake, it will eventually make that decision) but not now, and not like this.

His value isn’t in wearing gold and everything that comes with it; it’s in what he extracts from whoever stands across from him. There are still so many AEW wrestlers who would be significantly buoyed by a program with him. 

Right now, that person is El Idolo, whose ceiling remains stratospheric even without Darby’s help. The clarity and sharpness he’s carrying into every match right now suggest a man screaming toward an astonishingly high peak. Every match and every moment on screen has the texture of someone who finally knows exactly what he is. Don’t slow that down. Don’t complicate it. Point him upward and get out of the way before he decides he’s done enough and, again, starts to coast on his natural gifts.

The neon flashing sign points to a clear destination: Darby vs. MJF at Double or Nothing. Fine on paper, but not where I’d steer the ship. I’m spoiling myself here, but I think Kenny Omega is winning this main event. I don’t have much stomach for the inevitable procession of wheezy MJF promos about Darby’s fragility, his possible imminent death, and whatever other standard-issue material gets excavated from the vault, but somehow, I’ll endure.

Prediction: Darby

AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR defend against Adam Copeland & Christian Cage

If this is the ceremonial last run at the top for two genuine legends of the business, then sure, fine, whatever. AEW has always had a complicated relationship with its legend types, and Copeland is the most complicated of all. His career is a collection of great moments more than great, sustained work. It’s highlights assembled into a reel, admittedly a long one, which gets mistaken for a collective body of work. AEW asked its audience to receive him as a top-tier attraction, but some of us did the math on our own.

It takes about two minutes of honest thought to understand why Cope’s retirement tour feels so fundamentally at odds with Sting’s. Part of it is personal preference; Sting was a resonator. I can point to discrete moments where he made me feel genuinely alive as a wrestling fan. With Copeland, I can point to cool moments: mostly highspots, but calorically empty.

The second part is less subjective: Sting belongs in a rare and specific pantheon of performers by any reasonable objective measure. Copeland does not and not by a small margin. Always better as part of something rather than singular, Cope’s legacy will surely endure, though it won’t be what he sees in his head when he closes his eyes at night.

The funniest part is that when it’s all over, FTR will likely be remembered more fondly and have done more for tag team wrestling than their opponents. But we all know where this is going. Whether Dynasty takes us there is the question.

Prediction: Copeland and Christian win the titles

AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley defends against Will Ospreay

Ospreay came back from a surgery serious enough to make people quietly question his future. The big return has already happened and his direction is clear. This is a simple revenge story with all its emotional infrastructure already in place; it just needs the right villain standing across the ring.

That villain needs to be Moxley, unambiguously and completely, not the tweener the audience has been cheering for the past few months, and certainly not the antihero. We need the version of Mox who tried to kill someone with a plastic bag, a real piece of garbage without qualification. The tweener run served its purpose and reminded everyone why they loved him in the first place, but this program only reaches top gear if Moxley is genuinely dangerous and Ospreay is a serious, aggressive hero with a neck to protect and a score to settle.

When the bell rings, Ospreay needs to initiate the action. He needs to wrestle with purpose and belief. If there is a superhero counter sequence at any point during this match, the groan I’ll let out will get me evicted.

The ballsy booking decision, one that would show genuine conviction, would be to structurally run back Moxley’s match with CM Punk with Ospreay coming out on top. What will likely happen instead is Moxley mercilessly working the neck until Ospreay comes roaring back like nothing happened (derogatory), before a hold-your-breath finishing stretch (mostly derogatory, slightly complimentary).

Ospreay shouldn’t win this. It’s too early, and taking a title isn’t the point. He needs to beat Moxley in something more violent, more permanent, down the line.

Prediction: Moxley retains

AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla defends against Jamie Hayter

Hayter is still finding her way back. Her injury cost her more than time, halting her momentum at the precise moment she seemed ready to cement herself as a permanent fixture at the top of the card. She’s just now beginning to be what she once was, and her partnership with Windsor is a big part of that. It gave her a credible partner to play off, a vehicle for consistency, and, most importantly, a reason to show up every week with something specific to do.

Knowing that you’ll be on the show and performing every week goes a long way toward staying sharp and staying engaged. You can see her finding herself again inside that dynamic. Behold the power of friendship. 

Thekla arrives here with all the momentum Hayter once had. She has been a transformative force the moment she arrived in AEW, and nothing about her current trajectory suggests that will change. Right now, she’s the best thing going in AEW’s women’s division. I understand if her brand of promo and mic work isn’t for everyone, but in a world where so many people do so many things the same, something different – and something remarkable – speaks to me. I remain, unequivocally, a fan of the spider.

This is a match that could significantly overdeliver if these two really lay into each other, but there will be no title change.

Prediction: Thekla

AEW World Champion MJF defends against Kenny Omega

If there is any justice left in professional wrestling, let Omega have one last run before he can’t anymore. He has earned it in ways that are somehow both difficult to fully articulate and impossible to overstate; a modern legend whose fingerprints, for better and for worse, are all over the current state of pro wrestling.  Every match now carries the particular weight of potentially being one of the last true Kenny Omega matches — something I write in every column and will continue until I can’t.

Here is one possibility worth sitting with: MJF drops the title to Omega here, giving Omega the last reign he deserves heading into AEW’s biggest date on the calendar. The road to Wembley becomes a drive toward Ospreay vs. Omega, a rematch the wrestling world has been circling for two years, finally given the venue and stakes it warrants. Two maximalists, in London, in front of eighty thousand people, for the AEW World Championship.

That makes a whole lot of sense and will sell a whole lot of seats. And wouldn’t it be nice to see MJF struggle with having a short title reign and the fallout that comes with it? Joys abound for us all. 

Omega was a catalyst; someone instrumental in building something from nothing. He proved that another kind of wrestling company wasn’t just possible, but that it could achieve tremendous success. It should be Omega until the wheels fall off.

Prediction: Kenny Omega

Wrestling Weekly: Wreck on the road to WrestleMania plus AEW Dynasty predictions

Plenty of people have had strong reactions to Pat McAfee being the mystery man behind Randy Orton, and Les Thatcher & Victor Sosa will share their thoughts on this edition of Wrestling Weekly.

But it’s more than just McAfee; it’s the reporting indicating who made this happen and why. We’ll discuss why we think it’s an overreaction to a problem that was created in house.

We’ll also run down the card for Sunday’s AEW Dynasty and give our predictions for the show.

Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!

Click here to listen (sub needed)

Pat Buck issues statement on TNA blocking MJF vs. Nic Nemeth

Pat Buck has issued a statement on TNA Wrestling blocking Nic Nemeth vs. MJF.

Buck is the owner and founder of Create-A-Pro, which was set to host the match on May 1 in Melville, New York. He also serves as AEW’s vice president of talent development.

Buck issued the following statement to PWInsider.com:

“I don’t usually speak on things like this, but this one’s too ridiculous to ignore.

TNA, specifically Carlos Silva, forced a change to the main event of our Create A Pro show three weeks out after it was already approved and promoted.

Not sure who that helps.

Create A Pro is a training school with a promotion focused on developing talent while running consistent live events. We’re a school, dojo, and a mom and pop business… just with two dads. 

Live events are a necessary training tool, and they’re disappearing, even at the highest levels, because they’re not as cost effective and the money is in television. In a direct way, we are providing a service for your talent to make $ and keep their skills sharp. Do you not see that ? 

We train wrestlers for wrestling companies. And now a wrestling company has stepped in and hurt another wrestling company that helps wrestlers get to wrestling companies. Makes perfect sense. Maybe I’m the one missing something.

I’m annoyed, as it’s hard to ignore how unnecessary, and honestly how cringe, this situation is.  

And to be fair, talent wasn’t pulled, but altering a main event match like that on our limited stage has the same impact. Anyone who has actually promoted shows understands that.

When something changes that affects another promoter’s show, you make it right. Whether that means sending talent, strengthening the card, or finding a way to return value, you don’t just create the problem and walk away from it.  

That didn’t happen here. And if any attempt is made now to make it right, it’s a bit too late. You meet people with grace, not chaos.

Create A Pro isn’t a competing media company. It’s a training ground that built its own platform to develop talent. No TV deal, no streaming, and we’re not attached to any bigger company, yet. 

Between CAP/WrestlePro, we run around 25 events a year and reinvest back into us, our leases, rings, and the equipment needed to put on shows.

Equipment that, at one point, your company needed to rent to operate in this market. And at another point, when your company needed content and additional matches, talent was placed on Create A Pro and WrestlePro shows because there wasn’t enough content to support it. Did anyone let you know about a past positive relationship? 

Years ago your company used our students for extra work in a meaningful way. Now it looks more like carrot dangling, ring crew, and helping with catering but that’s an entirely different conversation. 

Create A Pro has been a pipeline and a support system to just about every major company in wrestling. Most people know that. (Unless you ask the WWE ID program, then we apparently don’t exist. )

I’m willing to believe Carlos may not know who I am, and that’s fine. But if you’re in an executive position, you should probably understand the room you’re operating in and the etiquette that comes with it. Maybe Tony Khan can give a quick crash course on how to protect your brand while still helping the overall scene. It’s times like this I’m glad to work for someone who actually champions the entire sport, not tries to shrink it.

And yeah, I’m on the payroll but these words are from experience not influence.   

At the end of the day, we’ll adjust like we always do. But if the goal is to grow this industry, or even your own company, this isn’t the way to do it.

Keep it up! 

Pat Buck 

CAP Founder/Trainer,  

AEW VP Talent Development

One of the Adults in the Wrestling Room”

Nemeth vs. MJF is one of several previously scheduled matches that have been scrapped following TNA blocking its talent from working with wrestlers contracted to other companies on independent shows. Leon Slater vs. Ricochet for the Mark Hitcock Memorial SuperShow has also been canceled due to TNA’s updated policies. Moose had been slated to appear on Scott D’Amore’s Maple Leaf Pro event in Las Vegas next week, where he would have faced a wrestler under contract elsewhere, but that match has also reportedly been blocked by TNA.

MJF has been vocal about his reaction to the situation. After calling TNA president Carlos Silva an “actively dumb motherf****r” on social media on Thursday he later appeared on Busted Open Radio and said.

What Carlos Silva is doing is disgusting. And if anybody supports him or that company at this point, it is very hard for me to wrap my head around.”