Sting reacts to Darby Allin’s AEW World title win: ‘Proud of him like he’s my son’

Darby Allin ended MJF’s second reign as AEW World Champion on last week’s edition of Dynamite, earning praise from Tony Khan and Sting for the milestone moment. 

AEW shared footage of Allin’s win, celebrating the special moment with Tony Khan, Sting and other wrestlers. Khan told him ‘you earned it’ and they embraced backstage. Meanwhile, Sting gave props to Allin and recalled how he told him he was World Title worthy years ago, and that he was proud of him like his own son. 

“I told him years ago that he is World Championship calibre and he proved it tonight. The rest is history. It’s not showtime, it’s Darby time.”

“I’m proud of him like he’s my son, yeah.”

Allin was one of the first few stars signed with AEW when it was established in 2019. Around a year later, Sting mentored him and accompanied him for matches. His rise has been closely tied to the wrestling veteran who has played a vital role in the development of his AEW career. 

This Wednesday, Allin will defend the title for the first time against Tommaso Ciampa.

Tony Khan, Ric Flair share thoughts after WWE WrestleMania 42 main event

Many in the pro wrestling world were talking about WWE WrestleMania 42’s first night on social media Saturday including Ric Flair and AEW head Tony Khan, the latter of which indirectly, anyway.

Shortly after Cody Rhodes defeated Randy Orton in the main event of the night, Khan posted that “AEW is where the best wrestle!” followed by a promo for this Wednesday’s AEW Dynamite.

Flair also had thoughts about the main event, writing that the Orton vs. Rhodes match was “One Of The Greatest Matches I’ve Seen In The Last Few Years. Congrats To Cody Rhodes, But There Is No Winner Or Loser! Randy Orton, You Were Spectacular! You Both Represent So Well At The Highest Level. I Have So Much Respect For You Both! #wrestlemania

Flair was in Las Vegas for several appearances throughout the weekend including a Saturday party with musician Diplo. He is currently under AEW contract although he is not used on TV. He is a former WWE stablemate with Orton in Evolution and obviously has an extensive history with the Rhodes family.

Becky Lynch offers MJF help after AEW World title loss

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

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

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

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

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

Tony Khan says he did a ‘much better job’ of trusting his instincts in 2025

By Shawn Garrett (aka Bryan’s friend Shawn from the Bryan & Vinny Show)

A condensed version of this appears on Seattle’s KING 5.

**********

Tony Khan, speaking ahead of Wednesday’s AEW’s Dynamite Spring BreakThru show at Angel of the Wind Arena in Everett, WA, framed the event not just as another television taping but as part of what he sees as the momentum carryover from what he repeatedly described as a banner 2025 for the promotion.

He pushed the show as the one year anniversary of Dynamite becoming, in his words, “the longest running prime time pro wrestling show in the history of TBS and TNT,” and said the Everett card would feature multiple championship matches topped by MJF defending the World title against Darby Allin in a rematch of one of the company’s foundational rivalries.

Khan was especially strong in putting over the idea of Allin vs. MJF as an “original AEW” matchup with added local significance because Allin is the hometown favorite.

He described Darby as being on a “phenomenal winning streak” and said the match was “gonna be a lot of fun,” very much presenting it as a big match title defense rather than a routine TV main event.

On the undercard, he also heavily emphasized Kevin Knight vs. Claudio Castagnoli for the TNT title, noting that Knight had just won the championship at Dynasty, that Claudio had been “loaded up, ready to fight,” and that there has never been a one-on-one match between the two.

Khan also leaned into Castagnoli’s resume, calling him one of AEW’s top stars and a former CMLL World champion and AEW Trios champion, while stressing the kind of unpredictability AEW has tried to establish around title reigns.

He also plugged Willow Nightingale’s return, tying it into Kamille’s comeback angle and noting that Kamille had been away filming American Gladiators, where he said she plays Hurricane.

Khan referred to Willow as “the face of TBS” and essentially pitched that match segment as another one of the major hooks for the Everett show, saying “The face of TBS is fighting on TBS this Wednesday night at Spring BreakThru.”

The more interesting part of the interview, though, was Khan talking philosophy.

He went back to the fact that he was fantasy booking long before AEW existed, saying he started writing a show called Saturday Night Dynamite in 1995 when he was 12, posting it on message boards and sending it to friends.

He clearly still sees a straight line from that kid booking imaginary shows to the actual AEW schedule that includes Dynamite and Collision.

But he also made the familiar distinction that writing wrestling as a fan and running a company are completely different things, comparing it to the difference between running a fantasy football team and running an actual football team.

His point was that ideas and instincts matter, but working with real people, managing personalities and evaluating how somebody fits into the locker room is where the real job begins.

That flowed into his comments on talent evaluation where he said “AEW is where the best wrestle,” but also made clear that ring work alone is not the only criterion.

He said the company wants the most skilled athletes and people who love wrestling, but also the kind of person who can be “good for the locker room” and potentially become a star on television.

He added that there is no single template for what makes an AEW wrestler because top talent can come from completely different backgrounds, sizes, personalities and career paths, tying it directly to how he evaluates people coming from wrestling, football, and soccer executive experience.

Khan then got into saying 2025 was a year where he deliberately re-centered AEW around his own instincts.

He said that after learning a great deal in AEW’s first year in 2019 and applying those lessons successfully in 2020, he felt he had drifted away from that approach in later years.

He said he went “soul searching” at the end of 2019 and made the rule for himself on January 1, 2020: “I will only trust my instincts. I will only execute the ideas that I believe in. If I don’t believe in something, then I’ll pull the plug on it.”

He said that same philosophy was consciously reapplied at the end of 2024 heading into 2025, and he plainly believes that shift is a major reason AEW had the year it had.

He also acknowledged the management side of that process, saying the easiest thing in the world is to go with ideas from people you trust because it makes them feel good, while the harder part is saying no when you disagree.

Khan said he thought he did “a much better job” of that in 2025 than in the previous few years, and he linked that directly to stronger decision-making.

He specifically said there were so many things happening outside the ring in 2022 that his usual rule of thumb was not always front of mind, and that by the end of 2024, he felt he needed to take what he learned in year one of wrestling and reapply it to year six, essentially saying the 2025 creative rebound came from him tightening his grip and trusting himself more.

When asked about the highs of 2025, Khan gave a detailed answer that, more than anything else, showed what he thought AEW got right last year.

He raved about Toni Storm, calling her “incredible” and that her run was one of the major highlights of the year, particularly her going home to Brisbane, regaining the title at Grand Slam Australia in front of her family, and building to what he called one of his favorite AEW matches ever against Mercedes Mone at All In Texas.

He also said AEW misses her and can’t wait until she is back.

He also put heavy emphasis on Hangman Page and MJF, framing their 2025 rivalry as a payoff to the original AEW vision.

Khan went back to the first unveiling of the AEW World title when Bret Hart revealed the belt and Page and MJF were presented as the two future contenders AEW wanted fans to identify with from the beginning.

Khan said both men more than lived up to that billing by becoming multiple-time world champions and said their rivalry throughout 2025 was “fantastic.”

He sees them not just as top stars now, but as proof that the long-term AEW vision on homegrown headliners actually paid off.

The longest and most passionate section of Khan’s answer dealt with Jon Moxley, and specifically what he called “Moxley’s metamorphosis.”

Khan described Mox as the darkest villain in AEW at the start of 2025, the man who had effectively made himself the mountain everyone else in the company was trying to climb.

He talked at length about the alliance that formed between Page and Will Ospreay while chasing Moxley, saying the bond between them as rivals who agreed one of them had to beat Moxley was “one of the most incredible things I’ve ever witnessed” and one of his all-time favorite stories to work on.

He also referenced Ospreay being taken out by Moxley and then returning to get revenge, which he tied into the more recent Dynasty match.

Khan’s view was that the Continental Classic changed Moxley. He said the tournament “unlocked something in Jon” because it forced him to wrestle without the Death Riders, without interference, without the briefcase, and without outside help.

Khan said that stripped everything back to Moxley’s love of wrestling and reconnected him with the audience exactly the way he predicted it would.

He specifically pointed to Moxley vs. Kyle Fletcher in the semifinals as the moment when the crowd’s perception changed in real time and they realized they were cheering for Moxley as the underdog.

From there, Khan described Moxley beating Fletcher and then Kazuchika Okada in the final as an emotional climax, especially because he framed Okada as the greatest tournament wrestler of all time in a format he had dominated.

He then went even further, saying Moxley’s post-tournament speech embodied the exact opposite of everything the character had been saying about AEW throughout the previous year.

Khan clearly sees that promo, and the fan response to it, as one of the defining emotional beats of the company’s recent creative direction.

He called it a perfect ending to his favorite year of AEW from start to finish and even went into how much it hit him personally, noting that he red-eyed from Worlds End to Indianapolis for Jacksonville Jaguars business, then later went back and watched the Moxley-Fletcher match, the Okada final, and the speech again because of how strongly he felt about them.

Khan was similarly enthusiastic talking about Kenny Omega’s resurgence.

He said he felt strongly that Omega was going to “find himself” in the WrestleDynasty 2025 match with Gabe Kidd, which he described as part of the AEW/New Japan relationship in the spirit of Forbidden Door.

He then ran down a long list of Omega-related highlights from 2025: Maximum Carnage, Revolution vs. Takeshita, the Dynasty three-way with Ricochet and “Speedball” Mike Bailey that Khan called one of the greatest three-way matches he had ever seen, Anarchy in the Arena, and finally promoting Omega vs. Okada for All In Texas, which he said was part of the biggest show AEW has ever done in North America.

He also referenced the lights out cage match and said he had “so many incredible memories” of Omega last year.

Beyond the top line stars, Khan also mentioned the Young Bucks having one of their best years in wrestling and a return to form after time away, plus Fight for the Fallen in Asheville with Adam Copeland and FTR for what he described as a meaningful hometown cause.

He also touched on the later Copeland & Christian Cage/FTR developments and said reuniting Copeland and Cage was another of his favorite memories from the year.

AEW officially rolling out NFL-themed lucha masks

AEW is officially rolling out its first-ever merchandise collaboration with the NFL.

After first being announced by Tony Khan back in February, NFL-themed lucha masks will go on sale via ShopAEW.com during Dynamite tonight (April 15). Masks for every team will be available to purchase ahead of the 2026 NFL Draft.

Khan showcased a Jaguars-themed mask at Super Bowl Radio Row while announcing this partnership between AEW and the NFL, calling it a dream come true and something that he’s been working to make happen for years. Khan’s father Shahid Khan is the owner of the Jacksonville Jaguars, with Tony Khan serving as the team’s Chief Football Strategy Officer.

There’s been no word on whether this will lead to more collaborations between AEW and the NFL in the future. The NFL and WWE also partner together to sell custom title belts through Fanatics.

AEW is at Angel of the Winds Arena in Everett, Washington tonight for its special Spring BreakThru episode of Dynamite. The show includes an AEW World Championship match with MJF defending against Darby Allin.

Tony Khan on his current creative approach to AEW: ‘I will only trust my instincts’

AEW President Tony Khan currently has a new creative approach.

Just days ahead of the upcoming April 15 episode of AEW Dynamite in Everett, Washington, Khan appeared for an interview with KING 5, where he opened up about the episode, his role in developing Dynamite, and his current creative approach.

With three championship matches scheduled for Spring Break Dynamite, Khan claimed AEW’s current creative momentum came from him learning from his mistakes and lessons.

“From now on… I will only trust my instincts. I will only execute the ideas that I believe in.”

Khan also reflected on his history with Dynamite, and the idea had originated several years ago, when he was just 12-years-old.

I started writing a show called Dynamite in message boards, and on dial-up Internet and sending it to my friends,” he said. “I started doing that in 1995 when I was 12 years old, and it was called Saturday Night Dynamite.”

Over three decades later, Khan now runs AEW, which has become one of the world’s largest mainstream wrestling promotions since its launch in 2019.

Tony Khan says there were ‘several’ changes to AEW Dynasty card

The AEW Dynasty match card was altered after Kyle Fletcher’s injury and Toni Storm’s abrupt absence.

During AEW Dynasty Post Show Media Scrum, Tony Khan discussed the last-minute changes to the card. He compared it to adjustments made for Forbidden Door 2022 which subsequently occurred after Double or nothing that year. For Dynasty, Khan confirmed Fletcher and Storm were definite names to be involved before their injuries. 

“Now, many of the matches were the same, but there were several changes to the card. There are people out that 100% would have been involved. One great example would be the former TNT champion Kyle Fletcher, who was out injured that happened a few weeks ago, who 100% I would have had involved in AEW Dynasty. Also, ‘Timeless’ Toni Storm and I made many changes to this pay-per-view over the last few weeks. They would have both been a big part of it. They’re both a huge part of AEW, and anytime I can have Kyle Fletcher, The Protostar, or ‘Timeless’ Toni Storm involved in an AEW event, it’s very important. So coming out of Revolution, I expected them to each be in matches on the show. So there’s more, and there’s other changes. Then, when you make changes like that, it leads to other changes. But I’m very proud. I think that we became uniquely conditioned during the pandemic period to make changes to a pro wrestling show.”

On the March 18 edition of Dynamite, Storm was scheduled to face Marina Shafir in a No Holds Barred Match. However, before the show, Storm was found laid out in a pool of blood backstage forcing Mina Shirakawa to take her place. There is no reported reason for her sudden absence and she is expected to be out of in-ring action for an undisclosed time period. 

Nearly ten days later, Fletcher suffered a meniscus injury in his tag team match with Mark Davis against The Rascalz. He had to vacate his AEW TNT Championship for which a 10-man Casino Gauntlet Match transpired at Dynasty. Kevin Knight won the bout marking his first singles title win in the promotion. 

AEW Dynasty scrum notes: Tony Khan gives Gabe Kidd update, talks card changes

Wrestlers and Tony Khan spoke to the media following AEW Dynasty.

Khan, Thekla, The Conglomeration, and Kevin Knight all spoke to the media following Sunday’s show in Vancouver. Here are the highlights:

Tony Khan:

  • Khan started the scrum by saying he wanted MJF on here to take questions, but he refused.
  • Regarding Gabe Kidd, Tony Khan said he was “out indefinitely,” saying it was his shoulder that was injured and was being evaluated.
  • He spoke further on the Mark Hitchcock Memorial show, saying that he wanted to step up and help, and that is why he helped make their new main event happen.
  • Buys for HBO Max were “very high” and this might be the most bought Dynasty event ever.
  • Khan was asked if there was a social media policy in the company and if Ricochet violated that with his controversial post recently. He said he had a frank discussion with Ricochet. There continues to be a policy in place for these things and Ricochet violated that, but they are moving past it.
  • He compared his recent collaboration with Maple Leaf Pro to the concept of Forbidden Door. He likes what Scott D’Amore is doing and enjoys having many promotional partners, including CMLL.
  • Khan noted that this pay-per-view cycle had the most changes to a show since the original Forbidden Door event. He explained that he had plans for AEW Dynasty and many of the matches were the same, but there was a lot of changes, naming the sudden absences of Toni Storm and Kyle Fletcher as examples.
  • One person mentioned the Tokyo Joshi Pro event held in Vancouver earlier on Sunday. Khan said he would have probably collaborated with TJPW if they asked as he likes them, specifically mentioning Miyu Yamashita as someone he likes, as well as Nicole Matthews.
  • Khan said one of AEW’s strengths is working with other promotions all around the world and has built trust with other promoters, and he feels that his word goes a long way. It’s helped him build relationships with promotions that weren’t there at the start, like NJPW. 
  • The scrum ended with he and Renee Paquette talking about some of their favorite Canadian AEW memories. Khan mentioned the debut of Renee Paquette back in October 2022, as well as Sunday’s show. Renee also mentioned Bryan Danielson vs. Kazuchika Okada and Kenny Omega vs. Will Ospreay in Toronto for Forbidden Door, and the hockey fight between Adam Copeland and Christian Cage.

Other notes:

  • Thekla was asked about re-signing with the company. She said that AEW needed her, but also said that it was the perfect platform for her.
  • She also said that she is very hands on with her entrance and other aspects of her look. She is an artist as she paints, writes, and makes her own ring gear.
  • Kyle O’Reilly, with the rest of The Conglomeration, said that tonight meant the world to him. He said that while his father (who recently passed away) wasn’t here to see him win, his daughter was.
  • Kevin Knight was asked about headlining the Mark Hitchcock Memorial Show. Knight said he learned about it when he saw the announcement online. Khan apologized for that but did note that Knight has stepped up before in the past. This was where Khan announced that Claudio Castagnoli would be challenging Knight for the TNT title on Dynamite.
  • Knight was asked if there was any tension between him and Speedball after his singles title win. Knight said he would love to defend the title against Bailey.

Tony Khan says he spoke to Ricochet following controversial social media post

Moments after AEW Dynasty, company president Tony Khan revealed having a conversation with Ricochet over his controversial social media post.

At the AEW Dynasty post-show media scrum, Joel Pearl of Fightful’s In The Weeds asked Khan about Ricochet’s controversial social media comment and if he had a chance to engage in a conversation with him.

Khan claimed that he had a conversation and emphasized how Ricochet’s comments were not “acceptable.” He also confirmed having social media policies and how they were violated by Ricochet.

I did, and I had a conversation with him. I have a good conversation and a frank talk. That was not acceptable, and I think that was communicated. We have a policy and continues to be a policy in place for such things, and that violated it. There is no place for that in wrestling or anywhere. I do appreciate you asking, and we’ve tried to move past that, but thank you for asking,” he said.

In March earlier this year, Ricochet engaged in a controversial, heated moment on social media after he responded to a fan with a harsh tweet after the fan criticized him. Shortly after, he apologized for his comment and behavior.

Several weeks have gone by since the incident, and Khan made it clear that they want to move past it now.

At AEW Dynasty, Ricochet faced and defeated a returning Chris Jericho.

Tony Khan names Thekla the ‘MVP’ of AEW’s new signings

It has been less than 12 months since Thekla’s debut in AEW, but she has already made a great impression on her boss. 

Tony Khan discussed Thekla and some of the other talent he signed in 2025 during an appearance on The Masked Man Show.

“I think when you look at the champions on the women’s side, I would say absolutely Thekla would be … the MVP of the new arrivals as world champion,” Khan said. “And she’s been fantastic.” 

Khan pointed out how Jamie Hayter was Thekla’s first rival in the promotion. 

“When [Thekla] arrived, she had a goal of winning the world title, but the very first thing she did was go after Jamie Hayter,” he said. “And Jamie Hayter been a huge part of AEW, one of our most popular stars, a former world champion. And Jamie Hayter versus Thekla I think is a really compelling, exciting rivalry, and I’m excited for their match this weekend at AEW Dynasty. I think Thekla’s been a huge part of the company on the women’s side.”

Khan also called his current trios champions “fantastic signings.”

“All three of them,” he said. “They represent very different places in their careers, different experiences, different backgrounds, but three great wrestlers that we’ve signed in the past year in Mistico and Speedball Bailey and of course the Jet Kevin Knight. I can’t believe those two have only been around for a year. I’m the biggest Speedball fan in the world. They’ve had an incredible run.”

Mistico & Speedball Bailey & Kevin Knight will defend their AEW World Trios Championships against the Dogs on Collision this Saturday, April 11. The next night, Thekla will defend her AEW Women’s World Championship against Hayter this Sunday, April 12, at AEW Dynasty. 

Tony Khan praises ‘brilliant’ AEW star Jon Moxley

Jon Moxley is a hugely valuable presence in AEW both in the ring and behind the scenes.

During an appearance on The Masked Man Show ahead of AEW Dynasty, Tony Khan named Moxley as the promotion’s “ultimate snap count guy” — someone who comes to every show and is eager to wrestle. Khan said Moxley is always willing to help out other talent backstage and give them advice.”

“Mox is definitely the ultimate snap count guy. Mox is at every show, he always wants to wrestle. He’s so awesome,” Khan said. “He’s such a great leader. After Mox wrestled Anthony Bowens, the advice he was giving him after the match for his future. And then, we just shot for this weekend, Anthony Bowens vs. Rush, that’s going to be a great match on [Collision] Saturday. This was again right after Anthony Bowens came through the curtain. And that’s not even one of his Death Riders. Like, the advice he gives to his Death Riders and his proteges is so brilliant. This isn’t even one of his students. It’s just him trying to help a guy he wrestled and give him insights. I’m listening to Mox’s insights, and he’s so brilliant.

“I still think he wrote the greatest wrestling book anybody’s ever written. I think it’s just the best book, the ‘Mox’ book, it’s incredible. The things that come from his mind, they’re amazing. And his physical output is amazing.”

Khan also listed Orange Cassidy and Toni Storm as people who always want to be involved, along with praising dual-contrcted CMLL stars like Mistico who work in both Mexico and the United States.

Moxley is a four-time AEW World Champion. He now holds the Continental title, which he will put on the line against Will Ospreay at Dynasty this Sunday. The pay-per-view is being held at Rogers Arena in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Tony Khan says restrictions left him ‘flying blind’ in WWE bid

Tony Khan says he was “flying blind” in his bid to purchase WWE.

The AEW president put in a $6.9 billion bid for the company when it was up for sale in 2023. During Thursday’s pre-AEW Dynasty media call, Khan said his bid was based on WWE’s stock value as that’s the only information he had access to.

Khan said:

“I looked at it and felt that it was certainly, for me, in my capacity as the CEO and owner of AEW, a very interesting opportunity in the market. When we launched seven years ago as a challenger promotion, I never imagined I would have even an opportunity to consider such a position.

And given some of the restrictions, I think compared to other people, I was flying blind. Some of this, I guess, is publicly available information. I will respect the process, and there’s only so much I can say, but based on the information I had to put a bid together, I basically had the same market information everyone else had, which is why the bid I made was very close to the stock market price.”

Khan said he was not given access to a data room, which is typically where sellers provide serious bidders with non-public financial and internal information. He added that he understood why he was not granted that access in this case.

I had no more information than the rest of the public, no data room access or anything, and I’m sure that’s why they all made it further in the process than I did. As to what happened after my involvement in it, I can’t say with the other three parties, but I understood why they wouldn’t want to give me data room access.”

Brandon Thurston asked a follow up question about what Khan’s plans would have been had his bid been successful. Khan noted that there were several major free agency pursuits going on at the time, including Kazuchika Okada, Mercedes Mone, and Will Ospreay. He said he was focused on AEW during the bidding process, but would have kicked himself if he hadn’t gotten involved.

Khan said:

“We never even gotten close to considering that. But knowing what was happening in the world of wrestling, I think it made sense for me to do the things that I did there.”

Tony Khan media call notes: TNA blocks, Kyle Fletcher injury, Chris Jericho, WWE purchase interest

During a media call on Thursday, AEW head Tony Khan openly discussed his 2023 bid to buy WWE in addition to his thoughts on the recent blocks of talent by TNA Wrestling in addition to the re-signing of Chris Jericho and Kyle Fletcher’s injury.

We will have audio available later on today.

TNA

Asked for a comment about TNA pulling talent from matches with MJF and Ricochet, Khan said he approved both the matches they were involved in, and put over his partnerships with NJPW and CMLL as he loves collaboration. He said he “was surprised to see those matches were changed as a result of the other company not wanting them involved” as they were previously agreed upon.

Kyle Fletcher’s injury

Khan said Fletcher’s recent injury affected plans for several shows including Dynasty in addition to other TNT title defenses he had planned. Khan said he has taken a half-full approach to the injury as there is also a lot of positivity. Fletcher is expected out months and not a year or anything like that, according to Khan who hopes he’ll be back for All In London.

“That’s a goal and realistic based on the timeline,” Khan said.

Chris Jericho’s return

Khan was asked about any details with Jericho’s new contract to which he simply said it was a multi-year deal, that he wanted Jericho back in AEW, and that Jericho had a lot of options from around the world of wrestling.

Asked about whether Jericho wanted to return to the ring at Dynasty a year after he left, Khan said 100%. He said they had talked and Jericho wanted to return on TV at Winnipeg and back in the ring at the PPV.

Potentially buying WWE in 2023

Asked for a follow-up to his comments about not being able to live with himself if he didn’t bid for WWE, Khan said he felt it was an interesting opportunity in the market but that he was flying blind compared to others given the restrictions like not getting access to the data room, but understands why they left him out.

But, he said that made it challenging for him to do more than anyone else would and his bid was based on the stock market rather than the same info other bidders were getting.

Later asked about any other insight on what his plan would have been if he had acquired WWE, Khan said there was a lot of intriguing things happening at the time (2023) and there was a lot of free agent pursuits like Okada, Mone and Ospreay. He was focused on AEW, but cognizant of the process. He would have kicked himself if he didn’t get involved, but all he could do was bid with the stock market as that’s all the information he was provided (no data room, etc).

“Given our position and the opportunity and partners we work with, he thought it was an opportunity worth exploring,” he said.

Other Notes:

  • Khan says that Spring BreakThru editions of Dynamite and Collision will be returning next week after all.
  • He stopped short of saying there was interest in a potential collaboration with JCW, only saying that some wrestlers have worked in both companies and that they are a cool company.
  • Asked if more Joshi talent will be used in Toni Storm’s absence, Khan said Yuka Sakazaki will be in an ROH Survival of the Fittest qualifying match and that Hikaru Shida will team with Kris Statlander this Saturday on Collision. He said they will work with Stardom this summer on events including Forbidden Door.
  • Asked if he is considering the Camping World Stadium in Orlando for an event since the Jacksonville Jaguars will be playing there in 2027 due to renovations, Khan said it’s a great thought but one he had never considered it until getting that question.

MJF claims fake pilot once tried to abduct him at AEW show

MJF recalled a bizarre backstage incident when he was almost abducted from an AEW event.  

He detailed the incident during his interaction on The Adam Friedland Show. A man claiming to be a pilot approached him backstage informing him that he’d be flying him out to Long Island after the event. MJF later went to thank Tony Khan for the gesture, believing his boss had arranged it after his father suffered a heart attack. But Khan was confused and insisted he had nothing to do with it. 

“A pilot walks up to me and he goes ‘Mr. Friedman, I’m going to be flying you out back home after the show’s proceedings’ which to be fair I’ve flown on the jet with my boss up to that point anyway. Not to the island, well, to the island, as in Long Island, the only island that matters.”

“So, I find my boss after this pilot says this to me and I knock on his door and he opens the door and he goes ‘Max!’, I go ‘Yeah, it’s me. I want you to know how much this means to me the fact that you’re trying to fly me back to my dad as soon as possible, after he had the heart attack.’ Cause he did know, my boss Tony Khan and he goes ‘What the f*ck are you talking about?’. And I go ‘The pilot just told me’. He goes ‘I didn’t f*cking book you a jet to go back home tonight’”

MJF returned with QT Marshall to confront the man. Marshall asked him to show his pilot’s license as proof and he pretended to have left it at home. 

“So, now I go back over with one of my bosses, one of the EVPs of the company, QT Marshall. And QT goes, ‘So, who did you say hired you, again?’. He goes, ‘Tony Khan’. Tony Khan’s my boss. We go, ‘Okay, are you sure about that?’. And then security comes and they grab this guy, and QT goes, before the guy leaves, he goes ‘wait a minute, wait a minute, we’ll let you stay if you show us your pilot’s license’. And the guy, I sh*t you not does this (pats himself imitating his search). ‘Ah, I left it at home’. Get the f*ck outta here. So, then they f*cking throw, I guess they throw the guy in whatever you call the brig or whatever.”

The interviewer asked MJF how the man managed to get backstage access to which he replied that no one knows to this day. When security questioned the man’s intentions, he replied to abduct MJF. 

“We still don’t know how he got there. We still don’t know how he got backstage. To be fair our security team has changed since then but it probably was the building security, not even AEW security fault but they asked this guy ‘What were you planning on doing?’. And he was honest he said gonna f*cking abduct me”

There was no specification on when the alleged incident transpired. However, MJF has talked about it publicly dating back to 2020. 

Tony Khan explains changing ‘collective rebel spirit’ approach in AEW

AEW began as a mainstream wrestling rival promotion in 2019 and has since grown massively in numbers; however, the promotion’s philosophy has changed over the years as well.

Initially, as fans might remember, both AEW and Khan would often take direct shots at WWE on television or publicly. Speaking to Jonathan Coachman and Vince Russo, Khan believes they have now overcome that phase and the “collective rebel spirit” approach they once had in AEW.

Now Khan looks forward to focusing on and developing AEW rather than talking about his competition.

I changed my approach. At the beginning of AEW, there really was a collective rebel spirit. Now, I think AEW is very established, and people know AEW has a quality product and a lot of fans. I do want to grow that fanbase, but the way I would do something now might be different than how I would have done it six or seven years ago,” Khan said.

I also think it’s possible that Vince Russo, Vince McMahon, and DX could succeed by zigging at one point where I might succeed by zagging at another point. There are different ways to get to success, and I’ve got my ideas and my way, but I can learn from different people. I might not incorporate every aspect of it, but I do want to hear your thoughts and ideas. I think the AEW fans would agree that I’ve refined my own media strategy, and people have seen me trying to take the high road,” he continued.

Some of it is the fact that I believe in taking the high road when possible. I feel like by taking the high road, that’s rubbed people the right way. I’m not saying I’m trying to kill people with kindness, but being nice to people has gotten me a long way, and I’ve been trying to do it more in recent years.

Recently, a report had also emerged about Tony Khan bidding and attempting to buy WWE a few years ago. Speaking to Coachman and Russo, he also opened up about that situation, where he explained his bid for the promotion.