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Orange Cassidy reportedly out of action due to injury

Image: AEW

Former AEW International Champion Orange Cassidy is on the sidelines with an injury, according to a new report out by Fightful Select Thursday.

The outlet stated that the early indication is Cassidy has possibly torn his pectoral muscle but it wasn’t confirmed. His return date and whether he requires surgery is still unknown.

Cassidy last wrestled in a four-way qualifying match for an International title shot against Kenny Omega at this Sunday’s Dynasty. The match, which included Ricochet, Mark Davis and Mike Bailey, took place on March 19th. He hasn’t been on TV or wrestled since then.

The 40-year-old hasn’t been extremely active like he usually has been thus far in 2025, missing nearly two months in January and February. He had started to pick up his activity in March until the injury hit.

Cassidy was part of a four-way challenge for the AEW World title at last December’s Worlds End — his second shot at the top title in as many months.

Orange Cassidy advances in AEW International title eliminator tournament

Orange Cassidy was one of two competitors to advance in the first round of the AEW International title eliminator tournament on Wednesday’s Dynamite.

Cassidy defeated CMLL’s Hechicero in the main event of Dynamite to advance to the four-way finals set for next week’s Dynamite episode. Earlier in the show, the debuting “Speedball” Mike Bailey advanced with a victory over The Beast Mortos.

Cassidy and Bailey now await the winners of Saturday’s AEW Collision tournament matches to see who else will join them in the tournament finals. The winner of the four-way match on next week’s Dynamite will advance to the Dynasty pay-per-view on Sunday, April 6 to challenge Kenny Omega for the AEW International Championship.

On the Saturday, March 15 Collision, Ricochet faces Katsuyori Shibata in one tournament contest, while Mark Briscoe faces Mark Davis in the other.

Our full report from Wednesday’s Dynamite which also included a confrontation between Hangman Page and MJF, MJF and MVP engaged in an in-ring promo segment, Megan Bayne attacking AEW Women’s Word Champion Toni Storm, and much more, is available here.

International title match official for next AEW Dynamite

Orange Cassidy has advanced in the International Championship Series and will challenge for the title on next week’s AEW Dynamite.

Cassidy defeated Roderick Strong on Wednesday’s Dynamite in the show’s main event in the first match of the International Championship Series, advancing to next week’s title match against current champ Konosuke Takeshita.

After his victory on Dynamite, Cassidy was confronted and attacked by The Don Callis Family group of Callis, Takeshita, and Mark Davis. Kenny Omega made the save for Cassidy, holding up the title as a staredown ensued between Cassidy, Takeshita, and Omega.

Omega will face the winner of next week’s title match for the International Championship at Revolution on March 9 in the conclusion of the International Championship Series.

Wednesday’s Dynamite featured two new matches finalized for the Revolution card. Our full report from this week’s Dynamite is available here.

The current lineup for the Wednesday, February 26 AEW Dynamite:

  • AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Orange Cassidy

Orange Cassidy vs. Hangman Page set for AEW Dynamite Fight for the Fallen

A new match announcement has been made for AEW Dynamite Fight for the Fallen.

For the first time ever, Orange Cassidy and Hangman Page will clash in a one-on-one match on Dynamite this Wednesday night. Tony Khan confirmed the bout today after it was set up in a promo by Cassidy following Worlds End. Both Cassidy and Page were involved in the main event of the pay-per-view, losing a four-way match where Jon Moxley retained the AEW World Championship. There was a spot near the end of the match where Cassidy was taken out by a low blow from Page. Moxley then pinned Jay White for the victory.

“I don’t know what I’m doing. I don’t know why I’m here. Whatever I’ve been doing has not been working,” Cassidy said after Worlds End. “But I’m going to keep showing up and find whatever it is I’m missing. And this Wednesday on Dynamite, I should probably start with Hangman.”

Fight for the Fallen is taking place from Asheville, North Carolina on New Year’s Day and will benefit victims of Hurricane Helene, which severely impacted the Asheville community in September 2024. The show is the first episode of Dynamite that will be simulcast live on Max in addition to still airing on its regular television home of TBS.

Here is the updated card:

AEW Dynamite Fight for the Fallen (Wednesday, January 1) —

  • Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta vs. Adam Copeland & FTR
  • Jamie Hayter vs. Julia Hart
  • Jeff Jarrett makes an announcement about his career
  • Orange Cassidy vs. Hangman Page
  • Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin vs. The Acclaimed

AEW Worlds End preview & predictions: Highs & lows

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

2024 has been a rollercoaster for AEW full of significant highs like another successful Wembley Stadium show, Sting’s spectacular retirement, and, most importantly for their future, a lucrative TV rights renewal.

But with those highs have come familiar lows: consistent, systemic issues that have plagued the company since its inception. Inconsistent booking decisions, the maddening inability to pull the trigger on new babyface acts, and of course, entirely too much weekly TV time to Chris Jericho. Even smaller, technical missteps, like frequent production hiccups, persist. These aren’t just bumps in the road; they are deeply rooted flaws in AEW’s foundation.

For years, fans and defenders of the company would point to attendance and strong ratings as proof that everything was fine. Critics, they claimed, were overreacting and clutching their pearls for no reason. But those indicators are lagging ones. Now, as Dynamite’s ratings continue to fall and attendance dwindles, AEW has been forced to run smaller venues in a practical decision, but one that underscores declining interest.

Fans will show up with both their eyeballs and wallets if the product is good. But no longer can AEW trade on the currency of tremendous pay-per-view shows. That is largely still true, but as good as the in-ring can be if the rest can’t keep up, the audience has proven they will not stay. 

AEW has become over-reliant on the moment and too often neglects the story, making everything feel hollow. A company that once teemed with life now comes off as flat, its vibrancy dimmed. This hits me on a personal level. As someone who watches entirely too much wrestling (apologies to my wonderful wife) and has written about nearly every major AEW show, staying fully engaged as a consumer has never been harder. There hasn’t been much, if any, learning from mistakes.

Claims to be ‘returning to who they are’ and ‘restoring the feeling’ ring hollow when they have been a constant refrain for years. By any objective measure, AEW is still a massively successful wrestling promotion, but in order to achieve lasting success, the status quo cannot be maintained. 

Will this show be good? Most likely. Will any of us remember it by the time the ball drops on New Year’s Eve? Most likely not. Nevertheless, we persist and we preview the end of the world: Saturday’s AEW Worlds End from Orlando, Florida (8 PM EST main card on PPV).

Adam Cole vs. MJF for MJF’s Dynamite diamond ring

This is the sad conclusion to an odd chapter in AEW. These two wrestled in the main event at Wembley Stadium two years ago in an actively disappointing match. At least the program had some heat to carry it through. This time, though, nothing is propelling this story forward. There is only the whisper of what was, and the crowd is (barely) reacting accordingly. The sooner it ends the better and the outcome is irrelevant. Whoever wins will be in the same position they were coming in, if not worse for it.

No matter the outcome, MJF is going to be just fine. It’s Cole who needs a good showing here. He comes across as leagues beneath MJF and miles away from anything meaningful. Nothing about that changes on Saturday. 

Prediction: MJF

Continental Classic Semifinals and finals: Kazuchika Okada vs. Ricochet & Kyle Fletcher vs. Will Ospreay

For the second year in a row, the Continental Classic is an unquestioned high point in AEW’s year. The matches inject some much-needed life into the cards. All the competitors treat it with reverence and go all out to win it. At its best, the tournament revitalized the company’s ethos, reminding fans why AEW once felt like the alternative to the mainstream of sports entertainment. It succeeds not by overloading itself with gimmicks or drama, but by focusing on what AEW has originally promised: wrestling as sport with stakes that matter and stories that unfold in the ring.

Some of my personal highlights:

  • Brody King featured on TV as there is no good reason he shouldn’t have a solo run in 2025
  • Kyle Fletcher’s continued growth as a performer
  • Shelton Benjamin showing out every single week
  • Ricochet’s much-needed character development
  • Will Ospreay struggling for the first time in AEW

The last takeaway is just Darby Allin, worthy of far more than a single bullet and who had a true no skips tournament run for this absolute madman. He’s the most bankable television wrestler in any major company, wrestling tremendous matches with every opponent. None of it was stale, none of it was repetitive. Each match was its own kind of special. There were a lot of bumps for AEW this year, but the ascension of Allin to the top of the card was not one of them.

Winning the Continental Classic should be a launching pad to individual success and treated like an even bigger deal moving forward. It’s now a proven commodity and something that AEW fans should look forward to every year. As for who wins the thing? There’s a good story to be told with either Fletcher or Ricochet winning. It puts a definitive crown on their heel turns and establishes them as featured players for 2025. 

Prediction and new Continental Champion: Kyle Fletcher

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Kris Statlander

Statlander is the most recent example of a problem that’s plagued AEW for years: the sudden flipping of a character’s alignment with no explanation. Three months ago, she was firmly a heel and aligned with Stokely Hathaway. Immediately after her street fight with Willow Nightingale at September’s All Out, her pairing with Hathaway was dropped without mention and she was suddenly ‘good.’

Months later, there has been no clear explanation for the change. No character development. She’s just different now. How is the audience expected to connect with someone like that, someone whose motivations are not just unclear and they are a mystery? It would have taken mere minutes of TV time to explain her actions. If characters are going to continue to haphazardly switch sides, it becomes nearly impossible to care about any of them and it makes meaningful turns so much less impactful. 

A positive for AEW: Mercedes Mone is fully back. One of her strengths is her feel for the moment. Few are better at navigating a big match and building to its crescendo. When these two locked up at Full Gear, it was excellent and I have high, high hopes for the sequel. What I don’t have high hopes for is a title change.

Prediction: Mone retains

AEW Women’s World Champion Mariah May defends against Thunder Rosa in a street fight

This is another title match with very little juice. The first nine months of 2024 belonged to May. Her ascent was marked by a captivating story, one that allowed her to showcase her presence and charisma. Her coronation at All In suggested the division’s next breakout star had arrived. Her matches had buzz; her presence felt like a promise. And yet, since capturing the title, something has been missing. Her reign is defined less by dominance or memorable defenses and more by an unsettling inertia as if the creative energy that fueled her rise was spent entirely in the chase. The lead-up to her crowning moment was so well done that what followed feels, by comparison, deflated. 

Making this a street fight — a stipulation designed to inject grit and urgency into an otherwise lukewarm rivalry — is another misstep. Rosa, despite her resume, has struggled to regain her footing in AEW after a prolonged absence. Her sporadic appearances and uneven booking have left her without the aura of a credible challenger. Like the men’s World title match, this seems like filler and a match designed to buy time for whatever is next rather than elevate either competitor. Being forward-thinking is important, but the present still needs to matter.

Prediction: May retains

AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Powerhouse Hobbs

At last, something we can sink our teeth into: two big, beautiful boys beating the crap out of each other. Takeshita’s brilliance is in his ability to move between styles, equally comfortable trading heavy blows as he is performing mind-melting feats of athleticism. Hobbs thrives by asserting dominance, becoming the kind of force AEW has so often lacked in a roster heavy on smaller, more fleet of foot athletes. Give me 8-13 minutes of these two emptying the tank and I’ll go home happy.

Takeshita is not just a student of greatness; he is its natural heir. As much as I enjoy Hobbs and as good as he is, his ceiling is not to be the best in the world. His opponent, however, possesses that ceiling and gets the win.

Prediction: Takeshita retains

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Orange Cassidy, Hangman Page and Jay White in a fatal four-way

We arrive at the end and are met with a muddled mess.

Moxley and The Death Riders started with such promise, running roughshod over AEW. But, it has become aimless and meandering. After they sent Bryan Danielson into retirement via attempted murder, the remains of the Blackpool Combat Club felt different, all-encompassing, and unbeatable. They summarily dispatched and nearly killed the greatest wrestler of all time without a care in the world.

But weeks and months went on and nothing evolved. They aren’t imposing their will over the rest of the roster. Instead, they are winning matches via distraction rollups. The group that has tried to suffocate someone and poison someone else is winning by the hairs of their chinny chin chins? Not exactly menacing. 

As good of a promo as Moxley is, the words have to mean something at some point. They can’t just be ominous and foreboding. Villains need to have clear motivations and fans need to know what they’re working toward. Taking back AEW and making it something different is all well and good, but what do they want to shape it into? What is the end game? All the tea leaves still point towards Darby Allin winning the title and saving AEW from Mox and crew, completing the coronation of a conquering hero and the establishment of the new top babyface.

For that babyface to exist, the group he overcomes needs to be powerful, not just similarly dressed troublemakers with vague motives and notions of the greater good.

You’ll notice that was about 200 words and none of them about the actual title match on Saturday. That, dear readers, is because this is another filler program. There is no way Hangman, White or Cassidy is leaving Worlds End as champion. None of them have been built up as reasonable threats and they certainly haven’t been treated like they are. Hopefully, the show ends with a hot closing angle (Kenny Omega returning, Darby Allin getting involved with some outrageous weapon, etc.) because as a main event, this is sorely lacking.

Prediction: Moxley retains

Six-man tag team match added to AEW Dynamite Holiday Bash

A six-man tag team match is set for AEW Dynamite Holiday Bash.

Tony Khan announced on social media that Death Riders (Jon Moxley, Wheeler Yuta, and PAC) will meet Jay White, Orange Cassidy, and Hangman Adam Page this Wednesday. Moxley’s opponents will be squaring off against him in a fatal four-way match that will take place at Worlds End on December 28.

“Before #AEWWorldsEnd, the 3 World Title challengers aim to take down Death Riders THIS WEDNESDAY!,” Khan wrote.

White, Cassidy, and Page have all made their claim to be next in line for the championship. On last week’s show, the Death Riders laid out all three of their future opponents after Page interfered in their match.

The Death Riders have continued to wreak havoc across all of AEW’s television shows. The end of Collision on Saturday saw the group attack FTR, putting bags over their faces and dragging them outside of the building.

AEW Dynamite (Wednesday, December 18) —

  • Continental Classic Gold League match: Will Ospreay vs. Darby Allin
  • Continental Classic Blue League match: The Beast Mortos vs. Shelton Benjamin
  • Jon Moxley, Wheeler Yuta, and PAC vs. Jay White, Orange Cassidy, and Hangman Adam Page
  • TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Anna Jay
  • We’ll hear from MJF

Fatal four-way World title match signed for AEW Worlds End

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley will defend against a former AEW World Champion and two other challengers in a fatal four-way at this month’s Worlds End.

Moxley will face Hangman Page, Jay White and Orange Cassidy in the match that is now set for the Saturday, December 28th pay-per-view.

The bout was made after a tag team match featuring Moxley & PAC vs. Cassidy & White that opened Wednesday’s Dynamite. Page ran in to attack Moxley for the DQ and shoved off Cassidy who tried to pull him off.

The two then came to blows before White came after Page. Cassidy then accidentally delivered an Orange Punch to White before also punching Page which was followed by White delivering a Blade Runner to Cassidy. Moxley’s Death Riders then came back to life and laid out all three men.

In a backstage promo, Moxley said he would give all three men an early Christmas gift: the title shot in a fatal four-way. Afterward, Christian Cage did a live promo where he reminded Moxley that if he survives, he might cash in his anytime, anywhere title shot.

Here’s the current card for Worlds End:

  • AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Hangman Page, Jay White & Orange Cassidy
  • AEW Continental Classic semifinals & finals
  • MJF defends the Dynamite diamond ring against Adam Cole

AEW Full Gear live results: Jon Moxley vs. Orange Cassidy World title match

The sixth annual AEW Full Gear airs live tonight from Newark, New Jersey, headlined by AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defending the title against Orange Cassidy.

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone puts her title on the line against Kris Statlander while Jack Perry defends the TNT Championship against Daniel Garcia.

In a pair of marquee match-ups, Konosuke Takeshita defends the AEW International Championship against Ricochet while Will Ospreay faces Kyle Fletcher.

Private Party will defend their AEW World Tag Team titles in a four-way against The Outrunners, House of Black, and The Acclaimed.

Other featured matches include Bobby Lashley vs. Swerve Strickland, Hangman Page vs. Jay White, and MJF vs. Roderick Strong.

AEW Women’s World Champion Mariah May and Mina Shirakawa will hold a champagne celebration.

On the Zero Hour pre-show, Big Boom AJ of the Costco Guys faces QT Marshall; Anna Jay takes on Deonna Purrazzo, and Dante Martin vs. The Beast Mortos vs. Komander vs. Buddy Matthews is also set.

**********

Zero Hour

The WrestleAunts (Renee Paquette & RJ City), Jeff Jarrett & Paul Walter Hauser welcome us to Zero Hour and run down tonight’s card. They throw it down to Excalibur ringside, who, alongside Tony Schiavone & Daddy Magic, take us to the opening contest.

Anna Jay defeated Deonna Purrazzo (w/Taya Valkyrie)

Valkyrie tried to run distraction early, but Jay was able to fend off Purrazzo with a roundhouse kick and rolling neckbreaker for two. Jay went up top, but Purrazzo took the ref, allowing Valkyrie to again distract Jay long enough for Purrazzo to take control. Jay tried a comeback, but Purrazzo caught a flatliner into a Koji Clutch. Jay escaped, managed another thrust kick into the double down for the reset. Slugfest ensues, as Jay fired up with a series of strikes, snap dropkick and corner charge. Jay wanted the Queen Slayer, but Purrazzo countered almost into the Venus De Milo, but Jay got the ropes. Both ladies up, Jay hit a neckbreaker through the ropes, but Valkyrie pulled Jay outside and hit a Spear right in front of referee Mike Posey. Instead of just disqualifying Purrazzo, he ejected Valkyrie, which commentary told us was a “judgment call.” Purrazzo wrenched in an arm breaker, but Jay quickly rolled her up for a flash pin.

-Lexy Nair is backstage with Billie Starkz, who we’re told is one of the entrants on the ROH side of the 4-way women’s cup qualifiers to see who moves on to Wrestle Dynasty in the Tokyo Dome. ROH Women’s TV Champion Red Velvet walks in, says she’s also in it, then mocks Starkz, saying she’s defeated her already. Leyla Hirsch joined and said she’s in the match, finally ROH Women’s Champion Athena interrupts and said she’s the final entrant in it, but wonders why since she’s beaten all of them before. They all argue to end the segment.

-After we hear from the pre-show crew again about more matches tonight, Lexy Nair is backstage with QT Marshall and asks him about laying out Big Boom AJ on Rampage during their weigh-in. Marshall runs down New Jersey and said AJ represents the trash Jersey has to offer. He’s worse than Bruce Springsteen himself and said everyone can thank him for the house tonight.

-A commercial is shown for AEW being simulcast on MAX New Year’s Day for Fight for the Fallen.

Buddy Matthews defeated Dante Martin, Komander (w/Alex Abrahantes) & The Beast Mortos

(Exactly the sprint you’d expect from these four competitors, as the crowd were into it from the very start. Matthews was very over with this crowd, arguably the most he’s been in his time in AEW. This was a wildly entertaining match.)

Loud ovation for Matthews before the bell, as they teased multiple times he & Mortos going at it, but Komander & Martin kept preventing it. Martin popped up Komander into a snap hurricanrana on Matthews, but Mortos did a test of strength with both Komander & Martin. After losing that battle, Komander & Martin took turns hitting assisted launching cross body blocks until everyone teased superplex spots, only to be cut off. Martin flipped over Matthews, who responded with a dropkick to the outside, allowing Mortos to his a twisting Tornillo. Matthews followed with a somersault dive, as this allowed Komander to do his rope walk dive onto the pile to a huge pop.

Back inside, Komander wanted his rope walk Shooting Star, Matthews avoided it, but not Mortos, who sent him into the steps. Mortos hit a gnarly lungblower on Komander and huge Samoan Drop on Martin. Matthews & Mortos finally went at it without interruption, as he spiked Mortos with a draping DDT. Matthews lawn darted Komander into Martin in the corner before flattening Komander with a Jackhammer for two. Martin countered Murphy’s Law into a roll-up for two, as he did the same to Komander until both popped up and hit stereo big boots. Matthews flew in with a Meteora on Martin, but Komander was there with a spinning DDT. Mortos charged in with a crucifix bomb, but Martin was there for a springboard lariat for the reset and This Is Awesome chants. Slugfest by all four until Mortos started firing off headbutts. Komander flew in with a springboard Poison Rana led to a Martin Frog Splash, but as he made the cover, Matthews connected on a Curb Stomp to steal the win.

Big Boom AJ (w/Big Justice) defeated QT Marshall

(I said on Wednesday that the TikTok act wasn’t for me, but I’d be lying if I said the fans didn’t love everything this was. Marshall played the heel role very well and the crowd had a lot of fun during this. I assume this was a one and done for the Costco Crew, as I credit them for promoting the heck out of this leading up. This did exactly what it was meant to do.)

Paul Wight was introduced as the special guest commentator, while The Rizzler, who got a huge ovation, is the special guest time keeper. Marshall came out with security guards, while AJ had Big Justice by his side, high fived I think literally everyone ringside, as both had pyro aplenty.  Early takedowns from Marshall, who mocked AJ’s dance, but AJ returned the favor and got “You Still Got It” chants. Marshall hit one shoulder tackle, but run into a powerslam by AJ for a near fall. High back body drop and clothesline to the floor by AJ, as Marshall’s security is fanning him off before running distraction. Marshall tried a flip dive, but AJ side stepped and all the security went down.

Marshall hit a kick through the ropes as AJ tried getting back in the ring, as a snap DDT followed. Camera kept cutting to The Rizzler to “We Want The Rizzler” chants as Tony Schiavone said he should start grabbing his chin and Excalibur asked which one, which was hilarious. AJ started hulking up with punches and planted Marshall with a spinebuster. AJ went up top and hit a diving clothesline before following it up with a running powerslam for two. Marshall caught AJ off guard with a hand spring Pele Kick followed by a Diamond Cutter, but only got a near fall.

Marshall went after The Rizzler, but Wight stepped in front of him. Excalibur questioned if Marshall was about to assault a child, something we’ll never have the answer to. Marshall went up top, but was cut off by AJ, who hit a superplex. Aaron Solo hit the ring, ran distraction and ate a punch for his troubles, but it allowed Marshall to hit a pump kick. Solo took the ref, as Big Justice got in and dropped Marshall with a Spear. This led to AJ hitting the Power-Boom for the win. AJ, Big Justice & The Rizzler stood tall and celebrated as they did get a pretty big ovation.

-Mercedes Mone & Kamille were walking backstage where Mone told her heater that it’s been embarrassing lately how Kamille is pandering for attention. Kamille was about to stand up for herself when she held back and Mone said she didn’t ask for Kamille to speak, so she can stay backstage and see how a real woman gets the job done.

-They played the great full November Rain hype video one more time before the start of the PPV, which is smart, get the most out of the song while you can.

The 4-Way for the AEW Tag Team Titles will kick off Full Gear, as Kings of the Black Throne made their entrance with their music being played live by Deadbody. The Outrunners, per usual, got a massive ovation. The Acclaimed, though, did their entrance with Caster doing a rap, but he didn’t say the closing line of everyone loves The Acclaimed, instead called himself the best wrestler alive and chucked the mic at Bowens, which was the end of Zero Hour.

AEW Full Gear

Private Party (Zay & Quen) defeated The Outrunners (Turbo Floyd & Truth Magnum), The Acclaimed (Max Caster & Anthony Bowens w/Daddy Ass) & Kings of the Black Throne (Malakai Black & Brody King) for the AEW Tag Team Titles

(I thought this was a fun party match up until the last few minutes, which was just overkill with the dissention between The Acclaimed. We get it, do the turn already. Add to that the dumb attempt late in the match of trying to pin your own partner, which I know is something the New Age Outlaws did years ago, but commentary was just baffled that pin attempt was even allowed.)

Zay & Quen are back to having their Shots, Shots entrance, this time with shot girls lining the entrance ramp. During the intros, every team but The Acclaimed got pretty big reactions. Black & Quen kicked things off trading a series of takedowns until Black had a seat, but popped up and nearly hit The End, but Quen dodged. Blind tag by Bowens, as Zay joined and they traded arm drags until a Fame-Asser connected. Caster was playing to the crowd and missed a tag, allowing The Outrunners to make quick tags and keep Zay grounded. Floyd & King were left in the ring for a slugfest, with Floyd hulking up to the delight of the crowd. Black joined his partner, as it was Bowens who was planted with a superplex/double foot stomp combo until Black hit a diving moonsault onto a pile on the floor.

Back inside, Quen ate a pop-up knee lift, as Zay tried flying in, but ate a right hand in mid-air as Black & King forced everyone to regroup. That happened successfully, as it was a 6 on 1 attack on King until Bowens hit Scissor Me Timbers. Bowens teased a handshake/scissor with Floyd, but Caster broke things up before it could happen, which got boos. Everyone took turns hitting high impact moves until Zay & Quen were left standing tall hitting stereo 450 Splashes on The Outrunners for two. Floyd & Magnum battled back and did their dueling Predator elbow drop, as they wanted Total Recall, but King & Black cut them both off. King flattened Bowens with a Black Hole Slam and corner cannonball with Black. They tried it again, but Caster swept the leg, allowing The Outrunners to successfully hit Total Recall on King for two.

Caster flew off the top with a dropkick on Black, as “F You Caster” chants were heard and he played into it. Bowens just stared at his partner, as Daddy Ass tried giving his team advice, as Caster laid down and Bowens covered his partner for two, which Excalibur said wasn’t allowed, yet Rick Knox counted it. Blind tag by Caster on Bowens, who was trying for a crucifix pin on Zay, as he wanted a Mic Drop. Bowens hit The Arrival, but Floyd interrupted the elbow, allowing Private Party to hit the Gin n’ Juice to pin Caster.

-Orange Cassidy was backstage and interviewed by Lexy Nair. Cassidy said tonight, AEW sends a message back to the Death Riders. Private Party proved a point when they won the Tag Team Titles and they all need AEW. Tonight, Cassidy shows that AEW doesn’t need Jon Moxley, he takes everything the AEW World Title represents and puts it in his backpack to become the new World Champion.

MJF defeated Roderick Strong

(Good match, probably one that could’ve happened on TV, but MJF got great heat and Strong fought well as the babyface. The finish came pretty abruptly, but the post-match was the bigger story, as Strong is the one presumably out of commission for a while. I’m not sure the end game for this Cole/O’Reilly/Kingdom story, but we need to get Cole vs. MJF soon and all involved need to be able to move on to other things to start 2025.)

The Thank Me Later banner fell in the ring for MJF’s entrance, as he quickly bailed outside at the bell and took the microphone. MJF said the people like Strong because he’s just like them, white trash and asked if it offended the dumpster fire of the world, New Jersey? While he was out shooting movies, Strong’s mother was busy shooting his daddy. Strong went after MJF, tried a chop against the post, but MJF dodged and Strong smacked the steel. MJF trapped Strong’s fingers between the metal of the buckle before hitting a powerbomb on the edge of the apron. MJF trash talked Strong back inside, but ate some hard chops, which turned MJF’s chest beat red almost immediately. Strong answered with a half nelson backbreaker to get some time to recover.

Jumping knee strike in the corner connected, followed by an Angle Slam to give Strong a near fall. MJF tried to answer with a Heatseeker, but was sent flying outside, where Strong met him with a backbreaker on the railing. Back inside, MJF got a boot in the corner, but opted to mock Adam Cole and tried a Panama Sunrise, which Strong countered into another backbreaker. Both men slowly up, this time with MJF striking first, hitting the hammerlock spike DDT. MJF tried trash talking once more, but ate a series of chops and dropkicks for his troubles. Strong shot the double leg and sank in the Texas Cloverleaf. MJF got the rope break, but as they both got up, Strong fired off an End of Heartache, but a foot on the rope broke the count. MJF bailed outside again, until back inside, MJF countered End of Heartache into a roll-up for two. Strong up first and hit a torture rack backbreaker, fireman’s carry gut buster and Sick Kick before going for another End of Heartache, but MJF turned it into a brainbuster for the double down. Strong draped an arm over for a two count, but MJF spun into Salt of the Earth for a very quick submission from Strong.

Post-match, MJF brought a chair in the ring and Pillmanized the arm of Strong until Adam Cole, Mike Bennett & Matt Taven sprinted to the ring, but it was too little, too late. MJF bailed through the crowd as Kyle O’Reilly joined checking on Strong and shoved Cole down, screaming that Cole was too late (he has a point). O’Reilly helped Strong to the back, as Taven & Bennett were left with Cole.

Mercedes Mone defeated Kris Statlander to retain the TBS Title

(You could make an argument that aside from Double or Nothing and All Out this year respectively, each against Willow Nightingale, this was both Mone & Statlander’s best matches in AEW. I thought these two ladies crushed it and I’m thrilled we didn’t get any Kamille shenanigans. The crowd bit at the numerous false finishes and the final one thought they were about to get a new champ. I hope Statlander isn’t actually hurt with her knee, as she had to be helped to the back by a doctor.)

Statlander used her power advantage out the gate, turning a vertical suplex into a press slam. Rolling senton into a standing moonsault gets an early near fall, as Mone took a powder. Statlander wanted a suplex to the floor, but Mone went to the eyes and hit a wild step-up hurricanrana off the apron. A Meteora followed off the apron, as Mone demanded a count-out win. Baseball slide sent Statlander into the announce table, as Mone chucked her into the steps and hit another Meteora into them.

A third Meteora back inside got a near fall, leaving Mone furious and screeching at referee Aubrey. In an oddly effective counter, Mone turned a Statlander powerbomb attempt into a neckbreaker variation for two. Sunset flip into the corner led to a fourth double knee by Mone to get another two count. Statlander threw Mone aside off a Tornado DDT attempt, as Mone went for a fifth Meteora variation, this time, it came back to bite her, as Statlander caught and dropped her in the corner. Commentary talked about how it was bound to happen with Mone trying it so often.

Snap powerslam from Statlander, who hit a series of corner charges until a Chaos Theory folded up Mone for two, with Mone getting a foot on the rope. Statlander tried pulling Mone up, but the momentum saw Mone leap up and turn it into a crucifix bomb. Statement Maker was locked in, as Statlander powered out, but Mone hit a backstabber for a near fall. Mone hit another Meteora, the most devastating one of the match for two. Statlander caught a charging Mone with a discus lariat, as she followed with the twisting fireman’s carry for a close two of her own. Statlander wanted Saturday Night Fever, but Mone swung through into a spike DDT and had a meltdown off getting only two.

Three Amigos from Mone, as she went up top for a Frog Splash, but leapt into the clutches of Statlander, who hit a F5 for the closes two of the match. Statlander wanted a 450, but crashed and burned, as Mone targeted the bad right knee repeatedly and hit a Frog Splash onto it. Multiple backstabbers led to the Mone Maker, which looked really great, but again, only managed two. Both ladies scurried for pin attempts, leaving Statlander to power up, wanting Saturday Night Fever, but Mone literally bit the bad leg, swung Statlander into the ropes and got a roll-up for the win.

Switchblade Jay White defeated Hangman Adam Page

(While I really enjoyed their match at Wrestle Dream, I thought this was even better, as each man had a target for the other and they told a great story of selling as a result. The crowd were almost torn at times, but Page did a good job eventually getting the crowd to boo him. This obviously won’t be the last time these two will wrestle one another, as this is something Page just can’t get passed until he’s at least beat White again, even though White is up 5-1 on him in singles matches in their career.)

Page wasted no time sending White over the top to the outside and targeting the ankle, which, thanks to Page himself, kept White out of action for three months this year. After posting the ankle, it’s what Page zoned in on in the ring. A slow and methodical attack from Page until White turned the tide and went at Page’s previously hurt leg. That momentum was only brief, as Page responded with a fall away slam into the corner as dueling chants from the crowd rang out. After flipping off the crowd, Page hit another fall away slam off the second rope, but got a near fall. Page took too long, which allowed White to post Page’s bad leg multiple times before going up in the corner for a big time superplex. Both slowly up and took turns just heaving their bodies at the others injured body part to cause the double down.

Forearm exchange turned to wildly loud lariats, which just echoed throughout the Prudential Center, until White managed a Flatliner and snap suplex. Page stumbled up and got a desperation pop-up powerbomb for another reset. Page wanted Dead Eye on the apron, but White escaped into a brutal half and half, folding up Page on his neck. White followed with another one on the floor towards the ramp and instead of taking a count-out, he told referee Paul Turner to stop the count and come with him. The delay allowed Page to recover enough to chuck White into the barricade after White’s ankle gave out on a suplex attempt. With his ankle trapped between the barricade, Page booted it and applied an Ankle Lock. The ref put the count on both men, as White crawled to the ringside area still in the submission, as Page broke the hold, made it at 9, but so did White.

Page measured White for a Buckshot, but flipped into a Flatliner attempt, only to counter into another Ankle Lock. White rolled through, sent Page to the apron and got a dragon screw through the ropes. Big time uranage from White got a close two, as he wanted Blade Runner, but Page again went to the Ankle Lock, which White countered this time into an inverted Figure Four. Page got the ropes, crawled to the corner, but White was there for another dragon screw. The brief hesitation to follow-up from White allowed Page to hit two Dead Eyes, but White kicked out. Page skinned the cat, tried Buckshot, White nearly countered into Blade Runner, Page with the Ankle Lock again, but this time White rolled through, got up and caught Page into Blade Runner for the win out of nowhere. White smiled, as he reminded Page that he has 5 wins on him now, with the 1 win Page had being pretty tainted.

Post match, White celebrated up the ramp, but when he turned his back, Page went up after and laid him out. Christopher Daniels and officials came out to stop him and Page dropped Daniels as well. Both White & Daniels were helped to the back as Page stormed out.

Kyle Fletcher (w/Don Callis) defeated Will Ospreay

(At one point in this match, Tony Schiavone called this a show stealer and that’s putting it mildly, this match was incredible. This was the star making performance Fletcher needed as a single, with Ospreay giving him everything he had. A phenomenal battle with the crowd there every step of the way.)

Punisher inspired gear from Ospreay, as we also had flashy new entrance music, tron video and entrance attire for Fletcher, who wore a crown to the ring. Bell rang and these two wasted no time going full speed, with Fletcher getting the first take down. Ospreay sent Fletcher outside, wanted a dive, but Fletcher side stepped and sent Ospreay into the railing. Both trade suplex attempts on the steps, until Ospreay leapt over the steps, then launched off them with a hurricanrana. Back inside, Fletcher fought back, spiked Ospreay with a DDT, ripping away at the kinesio tape. He was trying a brainbuster on the apron, which Ospreay countered, but Fletcher wrenched at the neck before hitting a brainbuster on the floor. Fletcher kept Ospreay grounded, as Don Callis on commentary talked about not carrying at all that Ospreay lost feeling in his arm while holding his child, all Callis cares about is Fletcher.

A flying kick to the neck led to a draping DDT in the ropes for a near fall. Dragon Sleeper applied, but Ospreay escaped, tried a head scissors DDT, but Fletcher countered it into a Michinoku Driver. Fletcher missed a corner charge, Ospreay fired off a Helluva Kick and followed with a Sky Twister Press to the floor, so impressive even Callis had to put him over. Pip, Pip, Cheerio connects back inside, as Ospreay hits Kawada Kicks until Fletcher started a chop battle. Fletcher’s chest is bleeding, so he pump faked a chop and opted for a slap instead. This only pissed Ospreay off, who hit a Cheeky Nandos kick and spinning Torture Rack bomb for two. Hidden Blade dodged, but Ospreay connected on a Hook Kick, only to try an Oscutter, which Fletcher countered into a neckbreaker in mid-air. A massive sit-out powerbomb got a super close near fall, as the crowd are cheering loud for the sequence.

Fletcher with a corner charge boot, but Ospreay fought back with Stundog Millionaire. They tried a spot where Ospreay was cut off from skinning the cat and were going to turn it into a Tombstone outside, but they stumbled briefly until ultimately hitting the move. Fletcher beat the count at 9, but as he rolled in, Ospreay met him with a springboard dropkick and perfect Leap of Faith for two. Shoulder pad removed, as Ospreay wanted Hidden Blade, but Fletcher ducked, they traded a crazy series of counters until a standing Spanish Fly hit for Ospreay. Hidden Blade charge, but Fletcher turned him inside out with a lariat. Ospreay still had some fight left, fired off a desperation Hidden Blade for the reset. Ospreay again wanted another Leap of Faith, but was crotched, ultimately slid out of a brainbuster attempt with a Styles Clash, as he rolled Fletcher over, annihilated him with a Hidden Blade, but Fletcher managed to kick out.

Ospreay violently punched at the back of the head while on the apron before looking down at the steps set-up from earlier. He wanted a Storm Breaker off the apron, but Fletcher floated over and hit a Tombstone off the apron onto the steps in a wild spot that got justified “Holy Sh*t” chants. Fletcher told Ospreay he refuses to win via count-out, he wants to show he’s better than him, as they go back inside where Fletcher hits a charging leg lariat and reverse Tombstone we’re told is the Grimstone for two. That move was just as scary looking as a Tiger Driver if I’m being honest. That’s what Fletcher went for next, but Ospreay rolled into a pin attempt for two. Ospreay threw Hidden Blade, but nothing was behind it and he collapsed, with Fletcher no selling. A lariat folded Ospreay up before a Helluva Kick led to the brainbuster on the top rope to give Fletcher the victory.

Post match, Fletcher stood over the fallen Ospreay as Mark Davis came to the ring to tend to his fallen friend. Fletcher said they deserve each other, as Callis had the crown with him, commentary saying in order to become a king, you have to kill a king and this was Fletcher’s shining moment as a singles star.

Mariah May & Mina Shirakawa’s AEW Women’s Title Champagne Celebration

Shirakawa made her entrance as Nigel McGuinness said earlier in the show, they brought The Boom, while now it’s time for The Boo…but was hilariously cut off by Schiavone. Shirakawa introduced May (who has a big shiner on her eye) to the stage, as photos of them both and the AEW Women’s Title was set-up. May said there’s not a single woman alive who can touch her. May also said she couldn’t have done this without Shirakawa, as the two toasted champagne and Shirakawa said long may she reign. May said it’s time to celebrate as the two started dancing until Shirakawa turned her back and May was about to deck her with the champagne bottle, but was caught. Shirakawa kicked the bottle out of May’s hands and tackled her off the stage with both crashing through a table. Shirakawa ultimately got up, with her mouth bleeding, as she kissed the forehead of May before being escorted away.

Daniel Garcia defeated Jack Perry to win the TNT Title

(They unfortunately had to deal with an exhausted crowd after the Ospreay & Fletcher match, but the last closing minutes, the crowd was behind Garcia, especially the finish. Despite a slow opening few minutes, I thought these two had a good match and I’m happy Garcia got his first singles title in AEW, it was more than overdue. With The Elite storyline being seemingly done for a while, there’s no need for Perry to be holding the TNT Title right now, so hopefully Garcia can have a strong run going forward.)

Daddy Magic Matt Menard joins commentary as a video package for Garcia was shown before his entrance with the focus being on finishing what he started. Garcia’s mother’s voice was in the background saying he’s always been about helping the people he cares about, but needs to realize it’s time to do what’s best for him and she’ll be praying for him. Apparently, Perry got free from being tied to a chair in a shed on Wednesday, so he’s here and played mind games taking powders in the early going. After the cat and mouse was done, Garcia slammed Perry into the railing repeatedly before booting Perry into the front row. The brief delay of Garcia breaking the count allowed Perry to hit a draping DDT off the apron to the floor before doing another off the barricade.

Perry kept grounded Garcia until a Saito Suplex gave Garcia some time to recover and start a slugfest. Perry got a drop toe hold into a Snare Trap, as the crowd is very quiet at this point. Garcia was dragged to the apron where Perry hit a back suplex on the edge of the ring before trying to goad Menard into fighting but shoving him. Perry took Garcia over and powerbombed him brutally through the time keepers table and dumped trash on him for good measure. Menard tended to Garcia, who eventually broke the count.

Garcia started slowly firing up as Perry was toying with him, as lariat took Perry’s head off. A house of fire, Garcia ran wild with charges and butterfly suplex stack in the corner. Both slugged it out while up in the corner until Perry lawn darted Garcia into the corner buckle and hit a sit-out slam for two. Perry grabbed the TNT Title, teased using it, but tossed it down to Garcia and dared him to use it. For some reason Garcia actually debated losing it and would’ve been DQ’d, but gave it back to referee Rick Knox. The distraction let Perry hit a low blow and charging knee, but Garcia kicked out. Perry wanted another knee, but Garcia collapsed. Perry tried a third time, but Garcia got a jackknife pin for two. Garcia blocked a superkick, trapped the foot and hit a nasty piledriver for two of his own.

Both start throwing slaps, until Garcia starts chopping the hell out of Perry repeatedly, but Perry just smiled, so Garcia starched him with another piledriver. Garcia sank in the Dragon Tamer, wrenched back after Perry failed to get the ropes and he ultimately tapped to a huge pop. Post match, Garcia held up an AEW flag while holding marching to the back.

Konosuke Takeshita (w/Don Callis) defeated Ricochet to retain the AEW International Title

(Despite being two of the best in the world, I almost feel this match was unnecessary on this card and could’ve very well been fine on Dynamite. That said, the second half of this match I thought was excellent, even though the crowd was pretty quiet for a majority, similar to the previous match. This was the first singles loss for Ricochet, who I’m assume will bounce back from this just fine, as Takeshita certainly should not be losing the title anytime soon.)

Commentary put over how both Takeshita & Ricochet will be involved in Wrestle Dynasty on January 5th. After the feeling out process, Ricochet popped off an early springboard cross body, but Takeshita blocked a Tiger Feint Kick in the ropes and booted Ricochet’s head off to the outside. Takeshita connected on a brutal back suplex onto the barricade, as back inside, that’s the body part he zoned in on, Ricochet’s back. Takeshita hit a picture-perfect spinning side suplex for two, as he worked over the small of the back until Ricochet wanted to do a springboard, but the back gave out and Takeshita press slammed him clear across the ring. Right as Takeshita was about to rear back for his forearm, Ricochet connected on a rolling dropkick and handspring back elbow for the reset.

Ricochet sent Takeshita from corner to corner until this time successfully hitting the springboard clothesline. Low bridge and enzugiri sent Takeshita to the outside, as Ricochet connected on his Sasuke Special before a 450 Splash hit for two. Callis left commentary and tried to fire up Takeshita, so that resulted in loud “F Don Callis” chants. Ricochet missed the axe kick, hit a thrust kick, but a handspring led to a counter into a Blue Thunder Bomb by Takeshita for two. Ricochet blocked the Power Drive Knee, but not the wind-up forearm, as Takeshita keeps throwing everything behind his shots. Ricochet floated over a German suplex, tried a cazadora, but Takeshita rolled through into the German suplex. Takeshita missed a lariat, as Ricochet hit one of his own for the double down.

Takeshita crotched Ricochet in the corner and hit a release avalanche German suplex before a lariat turned Ricochet inside out for two. Power Drive Knee hit flush, but again Ricochet kicked out. Takeshita again went after the back before going up top, but Ricochet sprung up with a hurricanrana followed by a Poison Rana. Again up top, Ricochet hit the Shooting Star Press for a close two. Ricochet signaled for The Spirit Gun, missed, tried Vertigo, but Takeshita countered into the Bastard Driver for two. Takeshita wanted his knee, but Ricochet dodged into a brainbuster and Benadryller for a close near fall. Ricochet once more went up top, but took too long, allowing Takeshita to crotch him, hit a pump knee and avalanche Falcon Arrow for the win.

Bobby Lashley (w/MVP & Shelton Benjamin) defeated Swerve Strickland (w/Prince Nana)

(This was as dominating of a win you can have, while still having it be competitive, if that makes sense, I hope it does. Strickland got a lot of hope spots off, but ultimately Lashley needed to look strong and did just that. I really thought this match did exactly what it was meant to do, job well done to both. I think this feud is just getting going.)

Jim Ross joins commentary for the final two matches of the evening, as he said he dances like Prince Nana when he wakes up in the morning and it feels good. Lashley showed off his power in the early going, to the point where he was picking Strickland up from a pin attempt off a spinning slam. One arm vertical suplex connects, as Nana got the crowd behind Strickland, who fired back with chops, but one throat chop from Lashley put him back in control. A running powerslam got another two for Lashley, who slowed the match down with a chin lock, which Strickland’s facial expression selling it was perfect. Lashley missed a corner charge, as Strickland seemed to go for a Swerve Stomp, but Benjamin ran distraction enough for Lashley to recover and launch Strickland with a running tackle.

Back in the ring, Strickland started mounting a comeback, but Benjamin tripped him and got caught by the ref, so he was ejected. On the other side of the ring, Strickland tried a slingshot cross body, but Lashley caught and slammed Strickland on the edge of the apron before chucking him into the barricade. Lashley positioned the steps, tried a powerslam onto them, but Strickland sent him crashing into the post and steps repeatedly. Gouging the eyes of Lashley, Strickland wanted a DDT on the apron, but it looked like Lashley missed it completely and just landed awkwardly outside. Lashley stumbled over to the Spanish announce area and Strickland flew in with a Swerve Stromp off the steps through the table. Back inside, House Call hit flush, as Strickland went up top, hitting the Swerve Stomp, but Lashley kicked out.

Lashley went outside, as Strickland got right in MVP’s face, but the delay allowed Lashley to hit a release overhead belly to belly and wild Spear through the barricade. Back to the ring, Lashley measured and turned Strickland inside out with another Spear before putting him away with The Hurt Lock, as Strickland passed out.

Post match, Nana was tossed in the ring by MVP & a returning Benjamin, as Lashley applied The Hurt Lock again until he also went out.

Jon Moxley (w/Marina Shafir) defeated Orange Cassidy to retain the AEW World Title

(This match had a different feel than anything else on the card, this didn’t just feel like a grudge match, this was almost a match of survival for Cassidy and it resulted in some great emotional storytelling. He had his hope, but the numbers were simply too much, even thought The Conglomeration and returning Willow Nightingale was able to even the playing field for a little bit. Moxley stealing the win was somewhat expected, but the post-match, man, so much happened, too much. They have a lot of stories to tell coming out of the final 5 minutes, so it’ll be interesting in see where they opt to go. A very chaotic ending to an otherwise excellent main event.)

The Death Riders pull up to the arena in their truck, as I want to point out that I think it’s funny and great that PAC travels in his ring gear. Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, PAC & Marina Shafir arrive without Wheeler Yuta, but it’s just Moxley & Shafir walking through the crowd to the ring. Shafir unlocked her hand from the briefcase she’s been carrying around with the key around her neck, as referee Bryce never showed us the title, as Cassidy fired off three Orange Punches and a Tope during the ring introductions. They spill onto the commentary table, where Cassidy lit up Moxley with punches in bunches before biting at the head. Moxley desperately went at the eyes and crotched Cassidy on the barricade before things spilled into the crowd. Moxley dragged Cassidy back ringside, daring him to fight back before stomping Cassidy’s head into the steps, busting him open in the process. I did not expect Cassidy to be the first one to bleed in this if I’m being honest.

Moxley connected with a Paradigm Shift on the steps, as he distracted the ref long enough for Shafir to get in her shots. Finally in the ring now, Moxley is relentless on his attack, biting at the bloody forehead before hitting a Gotch Style Piledriver for two, so Moxley went back to punches. Moxley placed Cassidy on the Spanish Announce Table (which was just reassembled from the previous match), but chucked him into the steps. While his hands were covered in Cassidy’s blood, Moxley high fived Shafir and her reaction was priceless. Cassidy started firing up and the crowd got behind him, as he refused to back down until Moxley punted him in the ribs and hit the release suplex. Kimura applied, but Cassidy got the ropes, rolling to the apron. Moxley charged and Cassidy went crashing into the barricade as Moxley flipped off the crowd.

Moxley dared Cassidy to fight back, he tried, but again, Moxley hit him so hard Cassidy fell like a mannequin. While in the corner, Moxley viciously raked the back, which looked even cooler with the bloody hands, but Cassidy returned the favor, but as he leapt for the DDT off the top, Moxley just popped him mid-air with a forearm. Cassidy bit at the fingers, but fell trapped in a guillotine. Back up in the corner, Moxley wanted an Avalanche Piledriver, but Cassidy fought free and hit his diving DDT. Spinning DDT connected as well, as Cassidy wanted another Orange Punch, but Moxley met him with a Cutter. Both start paint brushing the hell out of each other, which turned to forearms, as Cassidy was on spaghetti legs, but kept daring Moxley to hit him until he put his hands in the pockets and fired off the little kicks. Cassidy ducked a lariat and fired off two Orange Punches, but followed with a cazadora pin for two. Cassidy kipped up for a third Orange Punch and Beach Break for a near fall, which was a great callback to Cassidy winning their match from last Full Gear.

Claudio Castagnoli & PAC emerge from the crowd and look like they were going to get in the ring until Tomohiro Ishii, Kyle O’Reilly & Rocky Romero they said evened the odds, but it’s 3 on 2 outside, as Romero hit a top rope dive onto the pile. With referee Bryce’s attention turned, Shafir was in the ring with the briefcase about to strike when a returning Willow Nightingale made the save and tackled Shafir to the floor to a huge reaction. Cassidy got the briefcase, waffled Moxley, as referee Bryce turned around and counted the closest two of the match. Moxley was stumbling around, grabbing the ref, which allowed Wheeler Yuta to fly in with a Busiaku Knee, as it led to a Death Rider by Moxley to get the tainted victory.

Post match, Yuta grabbed a bottle of what we’re told were chemicals used to clean ringside, as Moxley held Cassidy and Yuta dumped the bottle on Cassidy. Hangman Adam Page then stormed to the ring with a chair, decked Yuta in the head with the side of it before staring down Moxley. It was all a way to sucker Moxley in, as Christian Cage hit the ring, connected with a Killswitch on Moxley, as Page picked up Cage’s contract case and slowly gave it to Cage. Just as Cage was about to give it to the referee, Switchblade Jay White ran down and prevented Cage from doing it, hitting him with a Blade Runner. PAC & Castagnoli attacked White, who was left laughing as The Death Riders scurried away.

White grabbed a chair and stormed to the back as The Death Riders were going to their truck when a car slammed into it from off screen. It was Darby Allin, who stumbled out of the car, bleeding from the head, as The Death Riders stole the keys to another car and hightailed it with Allin screaming for them to finish things right now as the show went off the air.

AEW Full Gear preview & predictions: Death Riders on the storm

Image: AEW

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

The Sopranos, long may it reign, had a habit of loading up the penultimate episodes of a season and dealing with the fallout in the finale. Two of the best episodes in the show’s history (“The Knight in White Satin Armor” and “Long Term Parking”) didn’t end their respective seasons, but were powerhouse episodes that stayed with viewers more than two decades later. 

Last year’s Full Gear offered something similar. We saw the bloody, gruesome beginning of the Hangman Page/Swerve Strickland saga which kickstarted Swerve’s run at the top of the card. It also saw the start of “Timeless” Toni Storm’s lengthy run with the Women’s title. Both of those characters and stories began ramping up after Full Gear and there are a few candidates for this year:

  • Daniel Garcia: It’s well past time for him to make a jump into being a consistent main character.
  • Kyle Fletcher: Can he use his match with Will Ospreay as a launching pad to something bigger like Swerve did?
  • Orange Cassidy: Does he have a real chance to be the hero that conquers Jon Moxley’s Death Riders or is he keeping the seat warm for the true protagonist in the story, Darby Allin?

Other than this bit of self-created intrigue, this show feels flat. It was done no favors by a tragically weak go-home show on Wednesday. There’s been too much recycling of tired WWE-style tropes and hodgepodge booking decisions lately. AEW does not feel cohesive. Too many of the performers feel like they are performing in isolation. The connective tissue to so much of this is missing. Hopefully, the Continental Classic portends a return to AEW’s bread-and-butter: really, really good professional wrestling. Last year’s tournament was a doozy, and they need this one to be the same.

First, let’s see how things shake out this Saturday. Here’s my previews and predictions for Saturday (8 PM Eastern main card start on PPV):

MJF vs. Roderick Strong

The sooner AEW moves past this “story,” the better. It is a jumbled, unnecessary mess. MJF’s contributions to this consist of pre-tapes shot on a seven-megapixel Logitech camera from 2006. And, in case you forgot, Strong is supposed to be the bad guy in this! Remember The Devil™ storyline from last year? Of course, you do. We all do. We all wish we didn’t. But here MJF is, running down Roddy’s family while he cuts a generic babyface promo. There is nothing here now, and there won’t be anything even if Adam Cole winds up wrestling MJF at Worlds End. All parties are best served to end this and move on toward anything else. At least this should be good between the bells. 

Prediction: MJF

Jay White vs. “Hangman” Adam Page

Page is incapable of being boring. Whether it’s his anxiety, a promo about worker’s rights, or his descent into simmering lunacy, he is must-see. Few wrestlers in AEW draw consistent eyeballs, but Page is one of them. He is their most successfully versatile performer. Other wrestlers can switch alignments like he does, but none do it as well. He’s succeeded no matter what he’s been given and should be positioned much higher on the card. 

Every show needs a match like this. It plays off of history, has good mic work, and fits both characters. It’s an easy, paint-by-numbers booking.  I am higher on White than most, it seems. Perhaps I am disarmed and misled by his accent, but I generally like him. I do wonder what his ceiling is, though. He exudes confidence, cuts promos full of venom and has precise character work, but I can’t help wondering if his fate is to be the guy who comes close without ever actually getting to the top. There’s always going to be someone just a little bit better. 

White has had Hangman’s number throughout their careers and will give him another check in the loss column this weekend. 

Prediction: White

Will Ospreay vs. Kyle Fletcher

Fletcher and his sudden tattoos aren’t there yet, but AEW wants him to get there. They need him to get there. They’re giving him the space and the time to smooth out the edges on regular TV. He’s not anything special on the microphone, but he’s getting better. He’s growing like an actor graduating from bit parts to meatier roles. Each week, the nervous energy turns more toward ease with his oodles of raw athleticism and talent coalescing into something potentially special. Giving the ball to someone this inexperienced is a gamble. With Fletcher, it’s starting to feel less so.

Positioning Ospreay as The Guy on PPVs is another smart decision. This is not someone who should be deployed for filler episodes. He’s modeled his game after Kenny Omega and Kazuchika Okada: two of the best big-match performers of this generation. What makes Omega’s whole Best Bout Machine gimmick work is that not every match is the “Best Bout.” That’s the model Ospreay needs to follow during his peak years. He doesn’t need to give someone the match of their life on a random Wednesday night in February. Kicking out of the Stormbreaker or Hidden Blade should mean something, not moves that take us to commercial. Keep the bullets in the chamber for the brightest lights and biggest stages. That way the matches, and moments, mean more. 

As bright as Fletcher’s star might be, Ospreay’s is still brighter. He’s the most over wrestler in the company and he adds to his big show resume with a win.

Prediction: Ospreay

Swerve Strickland vs. Bobby Lashley

Time and again, Strickland has plunged himself into the deep end, daring to test his mettle against the best of his generation. His position as top-tier talent is cemented; an unteachable cocktail of charisma, presentation, and edge. On Saturday, his biggest challenge yet casts quite a shadow.

Hopefully freed from corporate storytelling’s straitjacket, Lashley seems poised to soar, or to steamroll AEW. AEW has the market cornered on mid-sized wrestlers who can fly around the ring. He’s a different type of athletic marvel. What they’re missing, and what’s always been missing, is someone this physically imposing. Few are more imposing than big Bob Lashley. His brute strength and explosiveness combined with Swerve’s puzzle box of unpredictability and penchant for the moment make for a match worth watching. This is a rare occasion where it doesn’t quite matter how we got to our destination, but we sure are happy to be here.

Swerve remains teflon. A loss here won’t hurt him at all and losing to Lashley, combined with his recent losses to Danielson and Page, would introduce some fascinating struggle to a character that has otherwise shined on major shows. A win for Lashley would go a long way to establish The Hurt Syndicate as a serious force in AEW.

Prediction: Lashley

AEW Tag Team Champions Private Party (Isiah Kassidy & Marq Quen) defend against The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd), Kings of the Black Throne (Malakai Black & Brody King) and The Acclaimed (Max Caster & Anthony Bowens) in a four-way

How long are we going to continue to do this with The Acclaimed? An act long past its expiration date, constantly bogged down by the anchor of Caster. Bowens deserves so much more than waiting around for a Caster heel turn that no one cares about. Not a soul. 

Edgelord gimmicks are less successful in wrestling than they are in real life. They’re even worse when the “edgy” content isn’t even funny. Unfunny, corny, and bad at wrestling is not a three-ingredient dish that anyone, let alone the wrestling audience at large, has an interest in eating. The idea of him in The Hurt Syndicate is a laughable one. There is no quicker way to kill momentum than by adding a dash of “Platinum.”

Fortunately, the other teams in the match are all different types of good. Refreshingly, they have gimmicks that are more than “good wrestlers.” Private Party, House of Black, and The Outrunners are all different types of teams that wrestle different types of matches. Diversity is paramount in wrestling (and in life!) and leads to quality matches which this should be. I’m mostly excited about this one! 

Prediction: Private Party retains

AEW TNT Champion Jack Perry defends against Daniel Garcia

We have tried and we have learned all we need to about Perry. There is no failure because something doesn’t work; there is only failure in the absence of effort. Perry could have coasted along as a member of Jurassic Express, equal parts doomed and privileged to be a mid-card, crowd-pleasing act. But in the search for the elusive ceiling — the search for something greater — change was needed. If Perry was going to become an actual pillar of the company, he couldn’t remain static.

The change has not worked. Perry is no more believable as a top guy now than when he started. He is neither top class as a worker, a talker, or in any other way. He’s above average in all three and can play an important but lesser role as long as he wants. But we know what the ceiling is now; a ceiling artificially raised by entrance music. 

If I went through my old columns, I’d imagine the phrase ‘now or never’ shows up more than anything else. I’ll continue that overuse here because it is actually now or never with Garcia. The collective heart of AEW cannot take another stop-and-start. It cannot take more stalled momentum. An audience that has been dying to embrace Garcia needs at least some kind of crowning moment to hold on to. I’d argue winning the TNT championship is much less than beating MJF clean on a PPV show, but who am I? I’m just a guy that clickity clacks his days away. Let us love something, one time.

Prediction: Garcia wins the title

AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Ricochet

This is a match, once again, added late in the week and well past bedtime for all East Coast Dads. It is also a match that reflects the evolution in my pro wrestling fandom more than any other. Like a lot of fans, Ring of Honor was my first discovery when I started venturing outside the WWE monolith. I was taken by not only the charming grime, but the different styles of wrestling on the shows.

But nothing opened my eyes more than Pro Wrestling Guerilla. The stacked supershows run out of Reseda immediately captivated me. I looked forward to their show trailers and DVD sales more than anything else, and Ricochet was front and center of that. I had never seen someone be able to show off athleticism like that. I fell for the flips, and off I went.

As I’ve grown, I’m less drawn to the overly choreographed flippy stuff. Now it’s the ones that hit hard that pull my eyes to a screen — that explosive strong style. If you’ve read any of my columns over the past year or so, you know that I think Takeshita is the present and future of pro wrestling. He’s a perfect prospect, and a real litmus test for Ricochet. If he wants to prove he can hang with the best wrestlers in the world, few are better than the current International champion. He can probably hang, but he probably can’t win.

Prediction: Takeshita retains

TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Kris Statlander

The sudden and sad splintering of Statlander from Stokley Hathaway is unfortunate. One day, they were together, aligned against Willow Nightingale in a street fight. The next, they were nothing. They didn’t exist. Vapor. It’s a shame because it was clicking for me. It let Statlander show some of her personality and unique sense of humor. Now she’s back into a generic babyface role which is fine, but like Jack Perry, fine might be the ceiling in that role.

God bless Mone for continuing to do the most at all times. She’s putting in a lot of effort to elevate a program that feels like a TV build rather than one that belongs on a major show. I am confident this will deliver in the ring. Statlander is solid-to-very good whenever she gets a chance, and Mercedes is at her best when going against someone bigger. I have high hopes for the match, and low hopes for a title change.

Prediction: Mone talks

AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Orange Cassidy

Up until a few months ago, it had been a surprisingly forgettable year for Moxley. An empty IWGP championship reign ended with a hollow loss to Tetsuya Naito. Some good enough but forgettable TV matches. But now? He’s as dynamic as he’s ever been. A reinvigorated ronin. The Ace of Everything is in the best shape of his life and fully engaged. Nothing is off-limits for him. No ceiling exists for this version of Moxley. He can be whatever he wants and shape AEW to his will.

This version of Mox is a looming, seemingly unconquerable force of nature — an Anton Chigurh-like presence. This is the creation of the first real “big bad” of AEW. Sure, they’ve had heels (early Jericho, belt collector Omega, MJF) but none felt like this. None of them felt like something that could block out the sun and reshape the company. None felt inevitable. The scariest villains are the ones completely driven by purpose.

As much as I enjoy the Death Riders part of the story — their matches, promos, presence, fashion choices, etc. — the rest is lacking. Outside of Cassidy and Darby Allin, there isn’t much for them to be afraid of. The Dark Order holding the line in the parking lot? Surely not. The rest of The Conglomeration standing up for AEW? Not a needle mover in the bunch.  No disrespect to the Rocky Romeros and Dark Orders of the world, but they are not equipped to be the protagonists that can save the company.

If heavy hitters don’t engage in this story, success could be elusive. A caveat: if the rumored plans of a triumphant Young Bucks/Elite return to save the day, the success won’t be elusive, it will be non-existent. This is the chance to really do something. Even if Allin is the one who saves the company, the inclusion of The Elite would only serve to tarnish that. This is an opportunity to build something different and establish something new at the top. More of the same isn’t what AEW needs to get to the next level.

Whoever winds up overcoming Mox must be prepared for war. Taking him down won’t happen on the first try. The conqueror must fail, get back up, and keep coming. Their will must be tested, and this is only the first question of the test. It’s a test Cassidy will fail.

Prediction: Moxley retains

Jon Moxley vs. Orange Cassidy World title match official for AEW Full Gear

The rivalry between AEW World Champion Jon Moxley and Orange Cassidy will be renewed at next month’s Full Gear pay-per-view.

Cassidy opened up Wednesday’s AEW Fright Night Dynamite by calling out Moxley for a title shot which was later accepted and made official for the Newark, New Jersey, PPV. The two were eventually part of a mid-show brawl that included the new-look BCC, Cassidy, a returning Darby Allin, Dark Order, and others.

The two men battled twice in a three-month span in the fall of 2023, headlining last September’s All Out when Moxley defeated Cassidy for the then-International title. Two months later and after Cassidy regained the title over Rey Fenix in October, he successfully defended the title against Moxley as part of last November’s Full Gear.

It will be Moxley’s first title defense since beginning his fourth title reign at this month’s WrestleDream with a win over Bryan Danielson. Cassidy has yet to hold the promotion’s biggest prize.

Here’s the current card for Saturday, November 23rd in Newark, New Jersey:

  • AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Orange Cassidy
  • Jay White vs. Hangman Page
  • MJF vs. either Adam Page or Roderick Strong
  • Costco Guy AJ vs. QT Marshall

Orange Cassidy, Hangman Page appearances set for AEW Fright Night Dynamite

A couple of new announcements have been made for AEW’s Halloween-themed edition of Dynamite.

Orange Cassidy and Hangman Page are both set to make appearances on Fright Night Dynamite this coming Wednesday. The show is being held at the Wolstein Center in Cleveland on the eve of Halloween.

Earlier this week, Cassidy’s best friend Chuck Taylor was stretchered out in an angle after being attacked by the Blackpool Combat Club. The attack enraged Cassidy and led to him promising to take care of the BCC, who have been tormenting the AEW roster since Jon Moxley’s heel turn.

AEW looks to be building up Cassidy as the next challenger for Moxley’s World Championship, potentially at Full Gear on Saturday, November 23.

One match that has been made official for the Full Gear pay-per-view is Page vs. Jay White. During his appearance on Fright Night Dynamite, Page will respond to White for the first time since White challenged him for Full Gear.

Here’s the updated Fright Night Dynamite lineup:

AEW Dynamite (Wednesday, October 30) —

  • Swerve Strickland vs. Shelton Benjamin
  • AEW Tag Team Champions The Young Bucks defend against Private Party (Private Party must split up if they lose)
  • Adam Cole vs. Buddy Matthews
  • Kris Statlander vs. Kamille
  • Orange Cassidy appears
  • We’ll hear from Hangman Page

AEW Dynamite live results: Chris Jericho vs. Orange Cassidy

For the first time since September 2020, Chris Jericho and Orange Cassidy will go head-to-head on tonight’s AEW Dynamite.

The two rekindled their four-year-old feud in recent weeks with Jericho continually bringing up Cassidy ruining his jacket that served as the impetus for their first set of battles. Tonight’s match will be their first against each other since Mimosa Mayhem at 2020’s All Out.

The undefeated Ricochet will be in action, taking on The Beast Mortos after last week’s post-match attack.

The Elite (Matthew Jackson, Nicholas Jackson & Kazuchika Okada) will team up against Will Ospreay, Kyle Fletcher & Konosuke Takeshita. Ospreay and Fletcher will challenge the Young Bucks for the AEW Tag Team titles at next week’s Dynamite Grand Slam while Takeshita has been positioned as the likely next challenger for Okada’s Continental Championship.

AEW Women’s World Champion Mariah May & Serena Deeb vs. Yuka Sakazaki & Queen Aminata is also set for tonight.

**********

AEW Dynamite comes on the air with Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli & Marina Shafir entering the building, while Darby Allin is shown skateboarding backstage as well.

Orange Cassidy (w/Kyle O’Reilly & Mark Briscoe) defeated Chris Jericho (w/Big Bill & Bryan Keith)

(This was probably the best Jericho match in a while, as they kept the shenanigans to a minimum, while the pin was a good callback to last week. I still don’t think they needed to base this feud on something that happened 4 years ago, but regardless, the crowd was into this and popped big for the finish.)

All six of The Conglomeration & The Learning Tree slug it out to start, as only Cassidy & Jericho remained in the ring, while others brawled outside. Cassidy took out the pile with a springboard twisting senton, Briscoe flew out with a dive, as Jericho teased a dive, but opted to wave to the crowd. Everyone not involved in the match brawled to the back, as this delay led to an Orange Punch for an early near fall. Jericho bailed to the outside to avoid another, but Cassidy met him with a dive. Cassidy hurdled the barricade and met Jericho with a leaping punch before a splash back inside got another two. Jericho countered a Cassidy hurricanrana off the ropes into the Walls of Jericho, but Cassidy cradled out. Jericho seemingly blocked a tilt a whirl DDT into a powerslam. Cassidy floated over in the corner, but Jericho sent him crashing to the floor. Jericho took the camera and filmed himself putting the boots to Cassidy before heading back inside.

Double axe handle from the top, but paint brushes only woke Cassidy up. Cassidy missed a dropkick, allowing Jericho to hit a Lionsault for two. Cassidy managed a Stundog Millionaire and Michinoku Driver, as Jericho was backdropped outside. Cassidy went for another dive, but this time, Jericho blocked it into a catapult into the railing. Both fought on top of a loading case, where Jericho hit a back suplex off through the time keepers table as things went to break.

A slugfest ensued as we returned and both men collapsed simultaneously. Thrust kick sent Jericho to the corner, as Cassidy ramped up the kicks, charged, but was met with a Jericho clothesline. Cassidy fought out from the corner and hit a diving cross body followed by a round the world DDT, but Jericho countered again into the Walls. As Cassidy got the ropes, Jericho took the ref and Big Bill flew in with a big boot, giving Jericho a two count. O’Reilly returned to fight him to the back, as Cassidy for an inside cradle for two. Jericho fired off a Death Valley Driver, but Cassidy got a desperation DDT and the round the world DDT before going up top for a third DDT variation for two. Cassidy went for the Orange Punch, but ran into a Code Breaker for a close near fall. Cassidy dodged the Judas Effect into Beach Break, but this time, Jericho kicked out. Bryan Keith ran down, but Mark Briscoe was there to fight him off. Jericho all of a sudden had a roll of change in his hand, but Cassidy knocked it free, grabbed it and hit an Orange Punch to knock out Jericho for the win.

-Footage of the BCC backstage last week was shown with PAC asking where Wheeler Yuta has been since All Out? Next week, they have a title defense, so it’s time to come to work. Claudio Castagnoli said he’s not mad, he’s just disappointed, he thought he taught Yuta better. Castagnoli told Yuta to do him this favor and show up next week to defend their titles. Moxley said he knows it’s difficult, but Yuta has his own choice, either stay or leave. Yuta has a responsibility for the greater good to look at himself in the mirror every morning. What kind of man does he want to be?

-Alex Marvez caught up with Yuta, who was about to leave the arena and thanked him for stopping, asking him his thoughts on Castagnoli & PAC demanding he show up next week. Yuta said he’s conflicted on recent events, but he’s worked his whole career to be a champion. Stage hand ran up and handed Yuta his Trios Title that he forgot in the back. Yuta said his head has been all over the place, but if those other guys want a favor, then next week he’ll kick whoever’s ass necessary. I have no idea why Yuta was leaving the arena less than 30 minutes into the show. Maybe this was supposed to be after Collision last week, but they didn’t say that.

FTW Champion HOOK defeated JD Ink

Roderick Strong joined commentary with The Kingdom, as HOOK completely ignored Strong on his way to the ring. HOOK mowed down Ink with a clothesline, an overhead suplex, Taz-plex, crossface strikes and REDRUM for the quick submission. Strong asks Taz what HOOK will do when he breaks his back next week?

-Alex Marvez is backstage and we find out Private Party will be the ones to get the Trios Title match next week following getting attacked by the BCC. Isiah Kassidy said they’ll find a partner, but said if Moxley wants to fight, look no further.

**********

-Renee Paquette is backstage with The Patriarchy as Christian Cage brings up his son, Nick Wayne, will have a 4-way match on Rampage against Rocky Romero, Lio Rush & Kip Sabian. It’s a big match, as Cage decided he wants to hold double gold with Wayne after he cashes in his Casino Gauntlet contract. Cage mentions Paquette’s husband Jon Moxley might have something to say about Cage becoming the next AEW World Champion. Cage made Paquette refer to him as the next AEW World Champion, Christian Cage, before he stormed off set to Kip Sabian trying to approach and asks what he wanted with his son, Nick? He said he doesn’t care if his father’s dead, if he keeps bothering Nick, he’ll put him in the ground next to his father.

Queen Aminata & Yuka Sakazaki defeated AEW Women’s Champion Mariah May & Serena Deeb via disqualification

(This was the match that suffered due to the commercial, as they kept the interaction between Sakazaki & May to a minimum. The finish would lead one to believe we’re getting that title match, perhaps as soon as next week at Grand Slam.)

This is Sakazaki’s first Dynamite match since July of 2021, as she started things off with Deeb, trading early takedowns. Dragon screw was countered by Sakazaki, as a series of near falls led to a stalemate. Rolling snapemare into a kick led to a double team with Aminata, who fired of a snap dropkick. May was preoccupied posing for the camera with her title, as Deeb trapped Aminata’s leg and hit a dragon screw through the ropes. May made a blind tag and hit a snap dropkick of her own before knocking Sakazaki to the floor, mocking her as they went to break.

Sakazaki made a hot tag when things returned and was a house of fire, dishing out a Northern Lights Bomb on Deeb, while stacking May on top with another suplex. Stalling thrust kick to Deeb got a near fall, as everyone traded release German suplexes before Sakazaki hit a Merry-Go-Round hammerlock slam on Deeb. Sakazaki dove onto the pile outside, as she hit the Magical Girl Splash back inside, made the cover, but May blindsided her with the Women’s Title for the DQ.

Post match, May continuously whipped Sakazaki with the title, kissed her on the cheek and held her title high as she posed for the crowd.

Video package of Mina Shirakawa is shown, saying she hasn’t heard from May in months. Shirakawa said May has changed, but she still misses her. They’ve had so many good times together, they can have more, as May has a place in her heart. Shirakawa tells AEW fans to get ready, as Mina is Coming.

**********

-We’re reminded Bryan Danielson vs. Nigel McGuinness will only happen next week if Danielson is medically cleared, which commentary really stressed to fans. After some brief technical difficulties, they showed a highlight video package of McGuinness & Danielson’s wars in Ring of Honor with former ROH World Champions Mark Briscoe, Roderick Strong, Jay Lethal & Jerry Lynn all giving their thoughts. Strong said Nigel McGuinness has always been Nigel McGuinness’ worst enemy. McGuinness himself says he’s the best wrestler in the world, not Bryan Danielson.

Jon Moxley Sends Another Message

Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli & Marina Shafir make their way to the ring from the crowd, but Private Party try to attack before they get there. This didn’t go well, as Shafir choked out Kassidy, while Castagnoli hit a brutal chokebreakers on Quen. Moxley sent Kassidy into the steps before Shafir put the boots to him. Moxley held Kassidy as Shafir fired off kicks. Komander appeared in the ring, tried a dive, but was hit with a Castagnoli uppercut in mid-air. Shafir slammed Alex Abrahantes, took the microphone from his hand, as Komander was launched into the second row by Castagnoli. Moxley had a toolbox and brought a hammer over to Kassidy, saying he could end Private Party’s careers after pulling what they just did. They’ve been here since the beginning, but are in the same spot they were five years ago. Moxley is going to give them what they’ve been missing, some friction, an obstacle to overcome, consider this a gift. Moxley smashed Kassidy’s hand with a hammer and got the proper “You Sick F” chants. Needless to say, I don’t think Private Party & Komander will be getting that Trios Title match they wanted next week.

Darby Allin sprinted out and wiped-out Castagnoli with a skateboard before Moxley threw him in the ring, they had a stare down, but Moxley didn’t strike. Shafir held Castagnoli back, as Allin swung the skateboard, but Moxley bailed. Allin asks when Moxley will realize he’s not the same guy he was five years ago? He’s going to run through Moxley and go on to become AEW World Champion in his home state come WrestleDream. Moxley laughs and retreats with his crew.

-A video package of Jack Perry driving the Scapegoat bus is shown, along with his recent TNT Title defenses over the past week.

Ricochet defeated The Beast Mortos

(Another strong win for Ricochet, who is building his resume to presumably get to Will Ospreay. Aside from the one moment with the dive outside, which they recovered quickly, I thought this was a really fun match, as Mortos again looked good, even in defeat.)

Fast start from Ricochet, who backed Mortos to the corner, only for Mortos to charge with an attack of his own. Ricochet dodged a few more, as Mortos was sent outside, where Ricochet took flight with a dive. Springboard lariat back inside, followed by a running Shooting Star Press, as Ricochet fired off kicks, but both men traded flashy arm drags and hurricanranas. Both dodged sweep attempts and had a stalemate with the crowd cheering loudly. Thrust kick sent Mortos to the floor, as Ricochet tried a somersault dive, but Mortos caught and planted Ricochet with an apron bomb heading to commercial.

It was all Mortos during break, as Ricochet started mounting his comeback with a Tiger Feint Kick in the corner. Handspring was caught by Mortos, who hit a massive pop-up Samoan Drop for two. Ricochet battled back with a rewind kick, but Mortos was there with a brutal headbutt. Mortos tried a monkey flip, but Ricochet sent him to the floor. They tried the somersault dive spot again, but Mortos missed catching Ricochet, so he just hoisted him up for a powerbomb, only for Ricochet to turn it into a float over Code Red. Springboard 450 hit back inside for a near fall, as Ricochet went up top, was cut off, with Mortos joining him, hitting an Avalanche Gorilla Press for two. Tilt-a-whirl into the spinning backbreaker attempt was countered by a Ricochet snap crucifix slam, as that was followed by an axe kick and Vertigo for the win.

-A video package of Hangman Adam Page was shown, about how he had to do what he did because of Swerve Strickland. Justice delayed is justice denied, he will have what he wants. We’ll hear from Page coming up next.

**********

-Footage from Collision last week was shown between FTR & Grizzled Young Veterans with The Outrunners making the save after GYV made the post-match attack. We’re told FTR, The Outrunners & HOOK will face Roderick Strong, Grizzled Young Veterans, Rush & Beast Mortos this Saturday.

Hangman Adam Page Explains His Actions

Tony Schiavone welcomes Hangman Adam Page to the ring, as Page is officially walking out of the heel tunnel now. Schiavone brings up Page mentioning last week that he would take out anyone who ever defended Swerve Strickland or had his back. Page said he’s watched and listened for a long while that this moment would come that Strickland would be gone. Page knew it wouldn’t just be Strickland who would have to pay, but those who protected him from Page, who is surrounded by them now, as the crowd chanted Swerve’s House. These people who cheered for Strickland after every AEW World Title defense and while he was inside a cage before facing his fate. While Page was home for 4 months suspended, he remembers a loud voice, from the commentary desk. Schiavone tried to mention Jeff Jarrett and Page said Jarrett’s not who he means and backs Schiavone into the corner.

Jarrett’s music hits and he runs out from the back, as Page pounces immediately. He sends Jarrett back and forth over the barricade before going back in the ring, looking for a Buckshot, but referees and security have to separate both men. Jay Lethal & Satnam Singh are out to hold Jarrett back, as Page stares him down from the stage. Jarrett grabs a microphone and said he’d be dammed if he allows Page to put a finger on Tony Schiavone. An entire dressing room wants to beat the hell out of Page and Jarrett is at the front of the line. He promises Page he’ll kick his ass if it’s the last thing he does in his career.

-Renee Paquette is backstage with Ricochet, as they’re immediately interrupted by Will Ospreay who walks in, saying there’s always heat between them, but apologizes for last week. Ricochet accepts, but says he’s doing what Ospreay said, he’s getting his wins up. Everyone is coming after Ricochet more than he’s worried about them. They’re more worried about Ricochet than Ospreay, which isn’t the case for Ricochet, who said he got his match via Tony Khan, October 2nd, the 5-year anniversary of Dynamite, he gets his International Title match against Ospreay, who might be on another level, but Ricochet is out of this world. Ricochet said he’ll see him real soon, little bro.

**********

Will Ospreay, Kyle Fletcher & Konosuke Takeshita (w/Don Callis) defeated The Elite (Kazuchika Okada, Matthew & Nicholas Jackson)

(An action-packed main event that showcased everyone involved and teased some potential matches down the line. This was Fletcher’s biggest win in AEW to date and it makes sense to have he & Ospreay look strong prior to their title match next week. I’m glad they aren’t rushing to Takeshita & Okada, as they should build that longer, perhaps WrestleDream. The tension between Ospreay & Takeshita will certainly lead to something as well. The finish being a shout-out to Aussie Open leads me to believe Mark Davis should be expected back possibly soon.)

Excalibur last week said Takeshita had the best G1 Climax debut ever this year, but corrected himself this week, as Okada won the G1 in his first year. Fletcher & Nicholas start off fast, with Ospreay quickly in for a double team wishbone and PK before Nicholas bails and tags Okada. Crowd starts getting amped for the Ospreay & Okada face-off, as Takeshita wanted the tag, but Ospreay turned him down. Pump fake attack in the ropes from Okada, who hit a shoulder tackle, but Ospreay kipped up and dusted it off. Snap hurricanrana from Ospraey, who backed Okada to his corner, where Takeshita slapped him hard in the back for a tag. The Elite attack during the argument and we get a triple slingshot senton into a pose on the floor. That delay led to a triple baseball slide and slingshot cross body. Takeshita snarled at Ospreay as things went to commercial.

Back from break, Ospreay fought free of The Elite corner, as Fletcher made the hot tag and ran wild. Snap Dragons on The Bucks, as Fletcher hit running corner kicks and brainbuster on Matthew for two. After a double down, Okada tagged in and cut off Takeshita from making a tag, as Fletcher ate uppercuts before answering with a Michinoku Driver. Takeshita shoved Ospreay’s hand away so he could tag in and get his hands on Okada, who he took out with a Takeshita-line and deadlift brainbuster. Diving senton off the middle gets two, as Okada flipped out of a Blue Thunder Bomb into a DDT, as The Bucks took out Fletcher & Ospreay. Takeshita fought off all three, as some miscommunication from The Elite, led to Takeshita hit a sitout fireman’s carry-on Okada, followed by running sliding double dropkick for two. Superkick Party from The Bucks, but Takeshita no sold and turned them inside out with a double clothesline, only to turn into a dropkick from Okada into the reset. Okada baited Takeshita into the corner and hit an Air Raid Crash neckbreaker for two, as they go to commercial again.

Takeshita remained isolated, as The Bucks hit Risky Business followed by an Okada top rope elbow. Triple flip off for the crowd by The Elite, as Okada politely folded the middle finger back. EVP Trigger avoided by Takeshita, as The Bucks were hit with a double German suplex before reluctantly tagging Ospreay. Pip, Pip, Cheerio took out Matthew, as a handspring Pele Kick wiped out both Bucks. Standing Sky Twister Press gets a near fall, but Okada avoided Oscutter into a Superkick Party. Hung up over the top, Nicholas hit a double stomp, which flung Ospreay up into a Matthew sit-out powerbomb. The Bucks pump up their shoes, as Ospreay tried a wall walk, but was met with another Superkick Party for two. EVP Trigger was cut off by Fletcher, who sent Matthew in for an assisted sit-out spinebuster from Ospreay for two. Fletcher made the official tag, wanted a Tombstone, but Nicholas hit a rising knee strike. Sliced Bread was countered into a sit-out double team Cutter, but Okada was in with a flapjack and dropkick on Takeshita. Rainmaker countered into a Blue Thunder Bomb, as Takeshita hit a somersault dive outside.

Back inside, slingshot facebuster from Nicholas, who hit a moonsault on Takeshita before The Bucks wanted a TK Driver. Fletcher wiggled out and hit a twisting Tombstone on Matthew for two, as Nicholas made the save. Fletcher caught a superkick, as Ospreay flew in with Hidden Blade before Ospreay & Fletcher hit the Coriolis with Fletcher getting the pin. The United Empire tron played, as Callis applauded his men, while Ospreay offered a handshake to Takeshita, who paintbrushed Ospreay with Callis stepping between them.

AEW Rampage 9/20/24

  • Nick Wayne vs. Kip Sabian vs. Rocky Romero vs. Lio Rush

AEW Collision 9/21/24

  • Dustin Rhodes & Sammy Guevara vs. Mike Bennett & Matt Taven in a Bunkhouse Brawl for the ROH Tag Team Titles
  • FTR, HOOK & The Outrunners vs. Roderick Strong, Beast Mortos, Rush & Grizzled Young Veterans

AEW Dynamite: Grand Slam 9/25/24

  • Bryan Danielson vs. Nigel McGuinness (if Danielson is medically cleared)
  • Darby Allin vs. Jon Moxley for Allin’s AEW World Title Shot
  • The Young Bucks vs. Will Ospreay & Kyle Fletcher for the AEW Tag Team Titles
  • HOOK vs. Roderick Strong for the FTW Title
  • PAC, Claudio Castagnoli & Wheeler Yuta defend the AEW Trios Titles

Orange Cassidy says AEW ‘has the best women’s division ever assembled’

Orange Cassidy has high praise for AEW’s women’s division.

Cassidy was a guest on Barstool Sports’ Rasslin podcast recently and said he believes AEW has the best women’s division ever assembled, specifically mentioning Jamie Hayter, Mercedes Mone, Kris Statlander, Willow Nightingale, and Anna Jay as top performers.

“I also think AEW right now probably has the best women’s division ever assembled,” Cassidy said.

He would later add:

“I feel very strongly about that. I mean, we’re talking Jamie Hayter just came back and we all know how great Jamie Hayter is. We have Mercedes (Mone) here, CEO, doing that dance that we all try to do, but we can’t do it as good as her.”

“And then you also have my former friend, who punched me in the face and stabbed me in the back, Kris Statlander. I think she’s a phenomenal professional wrestler. Willow actually—well, this is going to come out after, but I’m looking forward to the street fight between Willow and Kris at All Out.”

“And then Anna Jay just went to Stardom and she’s going to come back, already from the stuff I’ve seen, she’s coming back stronger than ever.”

Tony Khan, who was off-screen during the interview, then chimed in to say, “And we have more great stars coming back.”

AEW’s women’s division will be featured on tonight’s episode of Dynamite. Serena Deeb will team with AEW Women’s World Champion Mariah May in a tag team match against Queen Aminata & Yuka Sakazaki. As for Cassidy, he’s scheduled to wrestle Chris Jericho in singles competition on the show.

Orange Cassidy’s full appearance on the Barstool Rasslin podcast is available below: