WOL: Kyle Fletcher neck discussion, Worlds End, Ilja vs. Carmelo

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm is back with tons to talk about including Kyle Fletcher’s neck bump on Saturday, what William Regal had to say about it, reactions from WWE stars who also had neck surgery, personal anecdotes from Bryan and Lance, the AEW World’s End PPV, and another match you MUST SEE from this weekend. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Jon Moxley legit splits tooth in two during AEW Worlds End

At the December 27th edition of AEW Worlds End, Jon Moxley faced off against Kyle Fletcher in the second match of the night, before winning and qualifying for the Continental Classic finals. However, mid-way through his match with Fletcher, fans saw Moxley suffer a painful moment.

During a ringside spot involving the steel steps, Moxley slipped and stumbled, landing tooth-first on the top edge of the steps and suffering a bloodied, chipped tooth. The moment appeared to be a fluke and occurred while the two were setting up a different spot. Shortly after the PPV ended, Bryan Alvarez reported that Moxley had “legit” split his tooth in two during the incident.

Despite the speed bumps, Moxley fought back and defeated both Fletcher and Okada on the same night to crown himself the new Continental Champion.

AEW Worlds End results – December 27th, 2025

  • Sisters of Sin (Julia Hart and Skye Blue) defeated Hyan and Maya World
  • Eddie Kingston defeated Zack Gibson
  • Máscara Dorada and Bandido (with Alex Abrahantes) defeated Don Callis Family
  • JetSpeed (Kevin Knight and “Speedball” Mike Bailey) and Jurassic Express (“Jungle” Jack Perry and Luchasaurus) defeated Josh Alexander and The Demand (Ricochet, Bishop Kaun, and Toa Liona)
  • Kazuchika Okada (c) defeated Konosuke Takeshita in the Continental Classic semi final
  • Jon Moxley defeated Kyle Fletcher in the Continental Classic semi final
  • FTR (Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler) (c) (with Stokely) defeated Bang Bang Gang (Juice Robinson and Austin Gunn) for the AEW World Tag Team Championship
  • The Babes of Wrath (Harley Cameron and Willow Nightingale) (c) defeated Mercedes Moné and Athena for the AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship
  • Darby Allin defeated Gabe Kidd
  • “Timeless” Toni Storm, Roderick Strong, and The Conglomeration (Mark Briscoe and Orange Cassidy) defeated Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, Daniel Garcia, Wheeler Yuta, and Marina Shafir) – Mixed Nuts Mayhem match
  • Kris Statlander (c) defeated Jamie Hayter for the AEW Women’s World Championship
  • Jon Moxley defeated Kazuchika Okada (c) – Continental Classic final
  • MJF defeated Samoa Joe (c), Swerve Strickland, and “Hangman” Adam Page – AEW World Championship

AEW Worlds End preview & predictions: The end comes for us all

Image: AEW

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

Another year in the books, friends. All in all, it was a pretty rough one for, well, just about everyone. But we soldier on, marching slowly into the sea. As always, a sincere thank you to anyone who’s read even a single word I’ve written over the past 365 days and an extra thanks to the site editors who keep letting me do this.

Extra, extra thanks to my wonderful wife, my sounding board, who patiently listens as I explain why Diddy is somehow a talking point on “the wrestling show that’s somehow always on.” I love everyone, but love her most of all.

With all that said, let’s run down the final big AEW show of the year: tonight’s Worlds End from Chicago, Illinois (8 PM PPV start time).

Continental Classic semifinals & finals

If you’re like me and toil away in the white collar mines, this is also the season of end-of-year check-ins: a famously delightful and productive exercise (sic). Personally, it’s the highlight of my year, especially if you’re someone I work with and happen to be reading this (I actually like my job very much).

In that spirit, it feels like the right moment to check in on the remaining four wrestlers and where they stand now and going forward.

  • Jon Moxley: The formerly loathed leader of the Death Riders is dangerously close to being loved again. This run was supposed to burn off goodwill and to sandpaper the audience into rejecting him. Instead, it reminded everyone why he’s the company’s emotional constant. He bleeds, he loses, he stays true to himself and keeps going. That still plays. Moxley will be embraced again; it’s just a matter of how loud it’s going to be when it happens.
  • Konosuke Takeshita: He’s already held the International Championship and the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, but he’s still circling something bigger. Takeshita’s problem has never been credibility; it’s been timing and commitment. If 2026 isn’t the year AEW finally lets Takeshita define himself outside of utility, matches of the night, and faction warfare, then the promotion risks turning inevitability into a missed opportunity.
  • Kyle Fletcher: Same question as Takeshita — How long can they reasonably hold off crowning him World champion? That’s no longer a rhetorical question. Fletcher has crossed the line from “promising” to “ready” and every month he isn’t positioned as one of the absolute top stars feels more deliberate rather than patient. The Don Callis association has done its job. The reps are there. The confidence is through the roof. Everything one would need to be a champion exists inside the young Aussie. At some point, AEW has to decide whether Fletcher is the pillar he is, or just another name they were high on for a while. The real challenge will be balancing his ascent with Takeshita’s without sacrificing either.
  • Kazuchika Okada: We know what Okada is in AEW. He’s settled into a reliable upper-mid card act that, on occasion, can reach back and create something great. He isn’t asked to do that often, nor does he seem to have a particular interest in doing so. There might be another classic or two left in him, but they’ll be fewer and far between. 

Predictions: Fletcher over Mox, Okada over Takeshita, Fletcher over Okada to win the CC

Mixed Nuts Mayhem: Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, Daniel Garcia, Wheeler Yuta & Marina Shafir) vs. The Conglomeration (Mark Briscoe, Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong) and Toni Storm

A match called “Mixed Nuts Mayhem” (!?!?!?!?) was added on Christmas Day. I will not be previewing it. There are limits. The sickest thing Tony Khan has ever done.

Prediction: I abstain.

Darby Allin vs. Gabe Kidd

The older I get, the saltier I become. That’s not exactly a profound or unique statement, but a true one. I have less and less patience for the Gabe Kidd type. The repeated insistence that he is, in fact, a madman? None of it works for me, brother.

As the year went on, it became clear that Kenny Omega made their Wrestle Kingdom match work through the sheer force of his own greatness. The man held together by tape and love dragged an incredible match out of a slightly above-average wrestler. There’s a non-zero chance that was the last ‘Kenny Omega Match’ we’re going to get. Gabe Kidd! January optimism turned December disappointment — same as it ever was. 

Allin occupies a rare space in wrestling. He exists almost entirely outside of the World title scene yet constantly elevates whatever he’s involved with. He’s now the “big name” others are brought in to have big matches with. He has become a true attraction. This little freak somehow achieved a 99th-percentile outcome before his body gave out which is a remarkable talent.

Prediction: Allin

AEW World Tag Team Champions FTR defend against Bang Bang Gang in a Chicago street fight

Austin Gunn has, no pun intended, a bit of the juice. He can be corny, funny, serious, and he can come out to “Many Men.” Once he figured out who he was as a performer, the in-ring work followed. Watching someone put it together in real time is always a treat, and it’s clear who the breakout star of his family is.

The Bang Bang Gang are fun, loud, and still figuring out how seriously they want to be taken. FTR has long since solved that problem. A street fight narrows the talent gap temporarily. It lets Juice Robinson’s manic charisma shine through and gives Gunn more room to lean into his natural swagger.

Eventually, this becomes what most FTR matches are: a lesson in timing, positioning, and why fundamentals still matter, even when the rules might not.

Prediction: FTR

AEW Women’s World Tag Team Champions Babes of Wrath defend against Mercedes Mone & Athena

The Babes of Wrath have become something surprisingly compelling. They’re a team built on vibes, volume, and Willow Nightingale’s undeniability. Harley Cameron certainly brings an energy, though a brand that I grow less fond of as time passes, but this act only works because Willow is a genuine star hiding inside a fun enough gimmick. At some point, that tension between her joy for life and drive for success must be resolved, or she’ll never reach the heights she deserves.

Across the ring are two wrestlers who seem like they wandered in from a more serious division. Mercedes Mone and Athena have nothing to prove. They have collectively done it all while their opponents have barely done anything. What they do need is purpose. Athena continues grinding away in largely unseen ROH. Mone floats in and out of programs, parading her collection of belts while seething about the one she can’t win. This is a transitional program, nothing more, nothing less. Even though Mercedes and Athena should never, ever lose to The Babes, somehow they will.

Prediction: Babes of Wrath retain

AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander defends against Jamie Hayter

Jamie Hayter is trapped where Kris Statlander used to live: talented, credible, clearly capable of more, but unable to shift the energy around her. Blood and Guts was a proper spectacle, but that was a group effort. Her injury layoff didn’t just stall her momentum; it erased it. The in-ring work still hits. The strikes are still crispy. Between the bells remains vibrant, but everything surrounding it feels inert. Timing is everything in pro wrestling and Hayter’s timing has been cruel. 

Statlander is no longer a what-if. She’s established. She’s bona fide. She wrestles like someone who belongs at the very top. Her reign has been about legitimacy more than spectacle. It’s solid more than spectacular. For a wrestler who spent years lost in the creative wilderness, that consistency is everything.

If you’re frustrated with Hayter’s position, Statlander is the proof of concept. This is what making it out the other side looks like. Hayter doesn’t need to win to benefit here (though it wouldn’t hurt); she needs to remind people who she is. Statlander needs to keep doing what she’s been doing: beating excellent wrestlers clean and stacking wins.

Prediction: Statlander

AEW World Champion Samoa Joe defends against Swerve Strickland, Hangman Page and MJF in a four-way

Strip away the noise, the borrowed outrage, the winking-at-the-camera seriousness, and what you’re left with is a ridiculous amount of star power sharing one ring. That’s the frustrating part. This didn’t need help.

Samoa Joe is gravity. He warps the match simply by standing there, turning every exchange into something consequential. Swerve is violence with intent, a main eventer who has long since crossed the moral event horizon and never looked back. Hangman remains AEW’s emotional barometer, even when his righteousness becomes something more interesting and dangerous. MJF is still the company’s great disruptor, incapable of existing in a scene without bending it toward himself, sometimes for better, often for worse.

If we could wipe away the last few weeks of Diddy-related promo work, this match would be much better served. All they needed to do was ring the bell for this to feel special. I can’t shake the feeling that we’re in for another MJF title reign, especially with Dynamite Diamond ring wearing Bandido waiting for the winner on January 14.

Prediction: MJF

Mixed Nuts Mayhem bout part of new AEW Worlds End additions

AEW has officially announced the addition of several new matches for Worlds End, including a Mixed Nuts Mayhem bout.

Tonight, during the Christmas Collision episode, All Elite Wrestling confirmed Darby Allin versus Gabe Kidd for Worlds End, following their clash during the Dynamite on 34th Street episode. Later, toward the show’s final moments, two more matches were confirmed for the upcoming PPV.

Sisters of Sin (Skye Blue & Julia Hart) will now take on Hyan & Maya World at the Worlds End Zero Hour show. In addition to this, All Elite Wrestling also announced a first-ever Mixed Nuts Mayhem bout for the upcoming show.

The Mixed Nuts Mayhem will have The Death Riders (Claudio Castagnoli, Wheeler Yuta, PAC, and Marina Shafir) going against The Conglomeration (Orange Cassidy, Mark Briscoe, Roderick Strong) and Toni Storm. AEW has not yet revealed the complete details of what the stipulation means for the scheduled 8-person tag team match. The Mixed Nuts Mayhem is a follow-up to the clash that occurred tonight between The Conglomeration and The Death Riders.

AEW Worlds End 2025 match card – Hoffman Estates, Illinois

AEW Worlds End 2025 is scheduled to take place on December 27th, 2025, from the Now Arena in Hoffman Estates, Illinois.

  • Sisters of Sin (Skye Blue & Julia Hart) vs. Hyan & Maya World – AEW Worlds End Zero Hour match
  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Konosuke Takeshita – Continental Classic semifinal
  • Jon Moxley vs. Kyle Fletcher – Continental Classic semifinal
  • Continental Classic tournament final
  • Darby Allin vs. Gabe Kidd
  • The Death Riders vs. The Conglomeration & Toni Storm – Mixed Nuts Mayhem match
  • FTR vs. Bang Bang Gang – Street Fight for the AEW World Tag Team Championships
  • Babes of Wrath vs. Mercedes Mone & Athena – AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championships
  • Samoa Joe vs. MJF vs. Adam Page vs. Swerve Strickland – AEW World Championship
  • Kris Statlander vs. Jamie Hayter – AEW Women’s World Championship

New title match confirmed for AEW Worlds End

On the December 25th, 2025 edition of AEW Collision Christmas, the promotion announced the addition of an AEW World Tag-Team Championship match to the Worlds End card.

FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) and Bang Bang Gang (Austin Gunn & Juice Robinson) are now set to clash against each other on December 27th, 2025, at the upcoming PPV. Earlier today, AEW announced that the two teams will clash in a street fight match.

Earlier this week at Dynamite on 34th Street, Bang Bang Gang challenged the champions for a title match, which was confirmed tonight on Collision.

Previously, FTR successfully defended their titles against Bang Bang Gang at AEW Collision Holiday Bash. While Gunn and Robinson believed they had won the match, it was a rope break from Harwood that saved their titles.

AEW Worlds End 2025 match card – Hoffman Estates, Illinois

  • Kazuchika Okada versus Konosuke Takeshita – Continental Classic semi-final
  • Jon Moxley versus Kyle Fletcher – Continental Classic semi-final
  • Continental Classic tournament final
  • Darby Allin versus Gabe Kidd
  • FTR versus Bang Bang Gang – Street Fight for the AEW World Tag-Team Championships
  • Babes of Wrath versus Mercedes Mone & Athena – AEW Women’s World Tag-Team Championships
  • Kris Statlander versus Jamie Hayter – AEW Women’s World Championship
  • Samoa Joe versus MJF versus Adam Page versus Swerve Strickland – AEW World Championship

AEW uses ‘Welcome to the Jungle’ for Worlds End hype video

After a well-received Full Gear hype video, AEW is collaborating with Guns N’ Roses again to promote its next pay-per-view.

AEW Worlds End — the promotion’s last event of 2024 — is taking place from Orlando, Florida this Saturday. Ahead of the PPV, AEW has released a four-minute hype video set to the 1987 hit song “Welcome to the Jungle” by Guns N’ Roses.

“Your official #AEWWorldsEnd music video, thanks to our friends @gunsnroses: WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE!,” Tony Khan tweeted last night. Don’t miss AEW Worlds End on ppv, THIS SATURDAY, December 28! Merry Christmas!”

Khan teased last week that there had been talks about AEW licensing more music from Guns N’ Roses after having used “November Rain” to promote Full Gear.

Addition Financial Arena in Orlando will be the venue for Worlds End this Saturday. Here is everything that has been announced for the PPV so far:

  • Four-way match AEW World Champion Jon Moxley defends against Orange Cassidy, Hangman Page, and Jay White
  • MJF defends the Dynamite Diamond Ring against Adam Cole
  • AEW Continental Classic semifinal: Kyle Fletcher vs. Will Ospreay
  • AEW Continental Classic semifinal: Ricochet vs. Kazuchika Okada
  • AEW Continental Classic final: TBD vs. TBD
  • TBS Champion Mercedes Mone defends against Kris Statlander
  • Tijuana Street Fight: AEW Women’s World Champion Mariah May defends against Thunder Rosa
  • AEW International Champion Konosuke Takeshita defends against Powerhouse Hobbs

Keith Lee dealing with injury, off AEW Worlds End

Update —

AEW has announced that Keith Lee isn’t cleared to compete at tonight’s Worlds End PPV. Swerve Strickland will instead face Dustin Rhodes tonight.

**********

Keith Lee is dealing with an injury but still trying to compete at AEW’s Worlds End pay-per-view.

Ahead of tonight’s PPV, Lee posted a message on social media revealing that he’s been dealing with an injury for more than a year. Lee said the injury has mostly been well taken care of, but things have been worse since ROH Final Battle. Lee is trying to push through his match against Swerve Strickland at Worlds End.

“Today… I keep it very real with you guys. I have been working through an injury since Arthur Ashe Stadium 2022,” Lee wrote. “It has been mostly well taken care of. Things have been worse since Final Battle. I am trying to get through today for you guys, but I cannot promise anything.”

Lee did not disclose what the injury is.

Lee defeated Shane Taylor at Final Battle on December 15. Lee has wrestled once since then, defeating Brian Cage on the December 23 episode of Collision.

In 2022, Lee & Strickland held the AEW Tag Team titles together. They’re finally scheduled to have their first singles match against each other tonight.

Worlds End is taking place from the Nassau Coliseum in Long Island, New York. The main card starts at 8 p.m. Eastern time.

MJF suffered torn labrum, will still defend AEW World title at Worlds End

Update —

MJF has since deleted the tweet where he announced that he has a torn labrum.

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AEW World Champion MJF has suffered a torn labrum — but he isn’t vacating his title.

On Monday, MJF announced that he underwent an MRI on his left shoulder. The MRI revealed that he has a torn labrum, but MJF vowed that he’ll still be making his scheduled AEW World Championship defense against Samoa Joe at December’s Worlds End pay-per-view.

“I just got an MRI. I tore my labrum in my left shoulder,” MJF wrote. “I’ll be defending my title at worlds end. I believe in AEW.”

MJF retained his AEW World Championship against Jay White in the main event of Full Gear earlier this month. It was reported after the PPV that MJF was dealing with hip and shoulder injuries.

Dave Meltzer wrote in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter:

MJF legit suffered a dislocated hip during the match as well as aggravated a prior shoulder injury. The hip injury took place when he was planning to do the spot where you come off the top rope and fly far, ending with an elbow drop putting your opponent through a table. However, when he put White on the table, it collapsed. Instead of just ditching the spot, he felt that the crowd was going to flatten if he didn’t do the spot, climbed up to the top rope and did an elbow drop from the top rope to the floor, which is an absolute killer on your hip. It was popped back in but he was in terrible pain. The shoulder injury worsened from a top rope uranage.

MJF has now been AEW World Champion for more than a year. His reign began at Full Gear 2022.

Worlds End is taking place from MJF’s hometown of Long Island, New York. The show will emanate from Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Uniondale on Saturday, December 30.