Tony Khan hopes to have CM Punk’s status cleared up by Sunday ahead of All Out

It’s not out of the question that CM Punk could still be added to AEW All Out on Sunday, but it’s far from a sure thing.

Is there still hope for the suspended CM Punk to make an appearance or even wrestle at All Out this weekend in front of his hometown Chicago fans? AEW CEO, GM and head of creative Tony Khan left the door open ever so slightly toward the end of his customary pre-PPV media call on Thursday.

Asked by Brandon Thurston of Wrestlenomics whether there would be an update on Punk’s status ahead of the show, Khan said that was his plan.

“That is my goal,” Khan said. “And I promise, that is what I hope, that we have a resolution. I don’t expect a full resolution, but I at least expect more information by then, and I’m going to keep working on it. It’s a challenging situation, to say the least.”

Khan was asked earlier in the call for updates on Punk and Jack Perry, both of whom are reportedly suspended after they had a physical altercation during All In London at Wembley Stadium last weekend. He noted that the “incident” was still under investigation and he couldn’t comment about it at this time. Khan also declined to comment on a query by Fightful’s Sean Ross Sapp concerning reports that he had spoken to Punk prior to the show and any alleged frustrations expressed.

AEW is handling the Punk-Perry incident in a similar manner to the infamous dust-up between Punk and The Elite following All Out. No suspensions were ever publicly announced, but Punk, Kenny Omega, Matt and Nick Jackson were suspended, among others, until the fact-finding process was complete.

The urgency this time around is heightened since All Out is now just two days away. If Punk is cleared of wrongdoing enough in the eyes of AEW by Sunday that he can be reinstated, it sounds like we’ll know before the broadcast goes live from the United Center.

Why Ricky Starks might be the big loser from the CM Punk-Jack Perry All In altercation

The AEW All In backstage drama may have cost Ricky Starks a big match.

The backstage altercation between CM Punk and Jack Perry at AEW All In was obviously suboptimal for a company in the middle of its biggest show ever. It’s also less than ideal for Punk to be suspended for All Out this weekend in Chicago (assuming his suspension lasts that long), where he’s the biggest draw. Yet there’s also collateral damage in situations like this in the form of opportunity costs to other talent.

In this case, that sounds like it applies to Ricky Starks. While he’s been serving a storyline suspension, it conveniently was timed so that he could have a match at All Out on Sunday, though he’s nowhere to be found on the card.

According to Fightful Select (subscription required), there’s a reason for that: He was being considered for a match with Punk.

One of the matches on the table was CM Punk vs. Ricky Starks for the AEW Real Worlds Championship, which would have followed up their series of matches that went down this summer. From what we’ve heard it likely would have been the main event. There’s no word on the status of the match now that CM Punk was suspended after his physical altercation with Jack Perry.

AEW has certainly pushed Starks as a bigger star and given him more of a spotlight since Collision launched this summer, but his most recent plot twist that has kept him out of the ring has robbed him of some momentum (for what it’s worth, Fightful also says he isn’t injured).

A main event spot with Punk in Chicago obviously would have made up for that in a big way, but it’s possible that opportunity has fallen by the wayside if Punk is out of the picture for All Out.

That looks like the case, since Tony Khan has promoted a different potential match for Starks based on this Saturday’s episode of Collision:

 

A match against a legend like Ricky Steamboat isn’t nothing, and it makes sense in the context of Starks beating him down with a belt earlier this month. It’s just not the same as competing against the biggest name in the company in that person’s hometown.

Hopefully AEW finds a way to do right by Starks in the near future, but his predicament is a good example of how the kind of backstage drama that popped up again at All In can affect more than just the people involved.

All In London 2023 Stadium Stampede: Best photos

Check out some of the best photos of the wild and bloody Stadium Stampede match from AEW All In London.

Any time AEW announces a Stadium Stampede match, fans know they’re in for a spectacle. The first two bouts were born from the pandemic era and featured wrestlers brawling all over empty arenas. That was anything but the case at London’s Wembley Stadium, which held more than 80,000 people for All In.

No matter. This Stadium Stampede was just as wild, as you can see thanks to some of the best photos from this brutal encounter. (Images courtesy of All Elite Wrestling)

All In London 2023: Best photos from Wembley Stadium

Check out some of the best photos from the biggest event in pro wrestling history, AEW All In London at Wembley Stadium.

AEW All In managed to live up to the hype with a great card of matches in front of what was a record paid crowd of 81,035 at Wembley Stadium in London. Check out some of the most memorable images from an unforgettable night for pro wrestling. (Images courtesy of All Elite Wrestling)

AEW suspends CM Punk, Jack Perry for All In backstage incident

Sports Illustrated confirmed earlier reports from several outlets that both wrestlers were disciplined after confronting each other in London.

Update: Aug. 29, 10:45 a.m.: Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated reported today that AEW has indeed suspended CM Punk and Jack Perry for their altercation during All In, pending an internal investigation:

CM Punk and Jack Perry have both been suspended for an altercation before the start of the All In pay-per-view, Sports Illustrated has confirmed.

Original post follows.

Fightful Select (subscription required but recommended) reported Sunday that backstage at AEW All In, CM Punk and Jack Perry were involved in an altercation shortly before Punk’s match with Samoa Joe. Perry said on camera during his Zero Hour pre-show match Sunday, “It’s real glass, cry me a river,” in reference to his alleged conflict with Punk earlier this summer, and it ignited another incident between the two.

Now, it seems both men will pay the consequences. According to Wrestling Observer’s Bryan Alvarez, Punk and Perry are believed to be suspended by AEW pending the results of an investigation, which means neither man will be involved at Sunday’s All Out pay-per-view.

According to Fightful Select, Perry allegedly “stepped in” Punk’s face and “bumped” him, before Punk reportedly “choked” him. There was no word on who broke up the fight.

Another side said Punk threw the first punch, while other accounts say that Punk initiated things. After exchanging words, Punk allegedly stepped up to Perry, got in his face and put Perry in a front facelock before the altercation was broken up.

PWInsider reported that Perry was asked to leave while Punk stayed for a little while after his match with before departing. Nick Hausman of Haus of Wrestling added that Punk left Wembley Stadium on his own, understanding the situation wasn’t good and not wanting to escalate things further.

If Punk and Perry are indeed suspended, it’s not likely AEW will make any official announcement to that effect. The company notably never confirmed suspensions for Punk and The Elite after their physical confrontation following All In 2023.

The United Center in Chicago will host All Out, and in Punk’s hometown of Chicago, AEW would have likely given him a significant role in the show. He defeated Samoa Joe at All In and still holds the Real World Championship, so any plans for fallout moving forward will seemingly halt.

This also takes Punk off Collision, which is in Chicago the night before All Out. That means the rabid wrestling fans of the Windy City will miss out on their top star twice.

At All In, Hook defeated Perry to win the FTW Championship. If the story were to continue, that is obviously now on hold due to the investigation.

We will have to wait and see what happens next as this developing story continues to affect All Out, which is just days away, and how it impacts Perry and Punk’s respective standing in AEW moving forward.

AEW All In takeaways: Analyzing the biggest moments from a historic event

AEW All In London was an unforgettable night at Wembley Stadium. Here are the moments that stood out most.

We have heard plenty of times over the years about a major wrestling show being a historic event.

Most of the time, it’s hyperbole, or as the kids say, cap.

But Sunday afternoon (or night for the good folks in the United Kingdom), really was a historic happening not just for All Elite Wrestling but for all of professional wrestling, as 81,305 people packed into Wembley Stadium to witness All In — a world paid attendance record for professional wrestling.

And to think this all started with a challenge to put 10,000 people in an arena.

 

Did AEW deliver on such a monumental event? Here are my takeaways from the show:

What a moment for AEW and professional wrestling

When WWE does well, it usually only benefits WWE and not the industry as a whole. 

Evidence of this was WWE lording over the wrestling industry for nearly 20 years with very little competition before AEW came to be in 2019. WWE became the industry leader, but the industry was helped none. All WWE’s dominance did was make professional wrestling synonymous with the promotion’s three letters.

There is a large group of people in the world who still refer to any form of wrestling as that “WWE stuff.” That doesn’t help any other promotion sell one ticket.

AEW putting more than 80,000 people into a historic venue like Wembley Stadium actually does help the industry, as it shows that there are a lot of people who actually care about the unique sports/entertainment/art hybrid known as professional wrestling — so much so that it packs out football (both the gridiron kind and the pitch kind) stadiums around the world. 

It is a good look for the entire industry, not just AEW.

AEW should be very proud, as it sold a large chunk of those tickets before one match was announced. The novelty of AEW putting on a major show in the United Kingdom obviously helped, but it is a testament to the fan base the promotion has built during its four years of existence.

AEW apparently enjoys the arrangement it has with Wembley Stadium, as it will return to the venue next year for another All In.

More backstage drama

But what would a major AEW show be without some backstage drama? It is like they go hand-in-hand at this point. 

And it involves the promotion’s prominent name, CM Punk, again.

During the opening match on the card Sean Ross Sapp posted on X that Punk had been involved in a “physical confrontation” with Jack Perry prior to walking through the curtain for his match against Samoa Joe.

According to multiple reports (but h/t to Wrestling Inc.), the confrontation stemmed from a comment Perry made during his match against Hook on Zero Hour. Perry took a bump on the windshield of a limo he rode in for his entrance. 

He eventually stood up, looked at the camera and said “It’s real glass, cry me a river.”

This comment was apparently in reference to Perry wanting to use real glass during a match on Collision and Punk (rightly) putting the kibosh on it. This apparently angered Perry, prompting him to speak his mind during his match at All In.

Punk heard Perry’s comment and decided to check him right before he went through the curtain to open up one of the biggest wrestling shows of all time.

(Note: There have been conflicting reports about who approached who in this incident. Either way, it’s all bad.)

Enough already.

Is Perry wrong for saying what he said? I think so. There was no reason to do it and it is unprofessional to keep fanning these flames — especially after Punk, who seemingly has limitless power, had allegedly excommunicated multiple people from Collision, including management. If Perry really had something to say about it weeks after the fact, all he had to do was speak to Punk. Don’t go out on television and sneak diss.

Is Punk wrong for confronting Perry right before his own match? Yup, mainly because of the time and the place. Punk fashions himself as a locker room leader. A locker room leader does not try to physically confront anyone who dares speak ill of him, in my opinion.

I’m not saying Punk shouldn’t address these things. What Perry did was honestly childish and should be addressed. But how about we do this the professional way and talk about it? And that conversation does not have to happen right before the opening match. In fact, it doesn’t have to happen that day at all.

(Note: Again, there have been conflicting reports about who approached who in this incident. Either way, it’s all bad.)

The promotion is literally breaking worldwide attendance records. This squabble couldn’t have waited until tomorrow? Could we just cut the nonsense and push the egos to the side for one day? Not one day?

Bottom line: Both Perry and Punk’s actions were selfish and took away attention from the biggest event AEW has ever produced. The other people on that roster have worked too hard to let rubbish like this mar their day.

Smartly, AEW did not have Punk take part in the post-event media scrum, but something has to be done.

MJF and Adam Cole remain brochachos … for now

Fortunately for AEW, the drama right before the show’s opening match did not dampen the mood for the main event, which was the best match on the show by far.

The action in the ring was great, but the storytelling took this match to an even higher level. It was the best storytelling I have seen this year outside of the Bloodline. It was really well done.

And to make things even better, AEW has the rare opportunity to complete a full double turn. Time will tell if Adam Cole will flip to a full heel while MJF flips to being more of a good guy, but even having the opportunity to actually pull it off is pretty cool. Again, they don’t come around often.

I am very much looking forward to what’s next regarding these two.

Saraya wins with her family by her side

In probably the most touching moment of the event, Saraya won the AEW Women’s World Championship in her home country and with her family by her side.

Whether you agree with the decision to give Saraya the title or not, it made for a great moment for the fans in the United Kingdom.

I could not help but think of how much this could mean to Saraya, who has been through A LOT during her professional wrestling career. She was called up to WWE’s main roster and thrust into a top position at a very young age, had explicit photos and videos of her leaked online, was in an abusive romantic relationship with a coworker, and was told her career was over due to a severe neck injury.

Despite all of that adversity, Saraya was on top of the world in her home country Sunday.

Side note: Mercedes Moné was in the building Sunday. Maybe she can help make AEW put more than one women’s match on its major events …

Stadium Stampede was a bloody yet sort of fun mess

I’m not a big fan of the ultra-violent, ultra bloody style of wrestling, especially matches that include skewers being shoved into the top of someone’s head.

However, I was a fan of the end of Stadium Stampede, which saw a bloody Orange Cassidy pull off yet another miraculous win. I’ve written before about why I enjoy watching Cassidy so much, and Sunday was another example of it.

Yes, Cassidy did win after he punched someone in the head with a punch while his fist was covered in glass, but he only landed the move once, and it ended the match.

If you’re going to venture into ultra-violent territory, make the moves mean something.

Will Ospreay picks up another HUGE victory

It’s been quite a year for Will Ospreay with two big matches against Kenny Omega and another against Chris Jericho at Wembley Stadium.

It is one thing to be in the big matches. It is another to win them, and that is what Ospreay has done, starting at Forbidden Door against Omega and at All In against Jericho.

FTR stake their claim as the best in the world

If All In was supposed to determine the best tag team in the world, I believe FTR proved it during their win over the Young Bucks Sunday.

And since The Usos aren’t currently a tag team, I’m OK with giving FTR that honor. Objective rankings aside, all of the participants in this match held up their end of the bargain as this was the second-best match on show, in my opinion.

The Acclaimed hosts the world’s largest scissor party

Isn’t it wild how over The Acclaimed is? I mean, they had 80,000 people at historic Wembley Stadium screaming about scissoring each other, which is both NSFW and hilarious at the same time.

AEW All In will return to London, Wembley Stadium in 2024

AEW will try to break the attendance record it just set next year.

What do you do if you’re AEW and just set the record for the largest pro wrestling crowd ever with All In at Wembley Stadium in London? Run it back next year and see if you can break your own record, of course.

Right at the end of Saturday’s broadcast, Excalibur revealed that AEW All In will return to Wembley next year. All In 2024 will take place on Sunday, Aug. 25, 2024.

This is the first time AEW has announced any live event this far in advance, but it makes sense to try to capitalize on the excitement of its first trip to the U.K. The company announced Sunday’s attendance as 81,035, breaking the attendance record previously set by WrestleMania 32. Part of that turnout was undoubtedly due to the fact that AEW had never put on a show of any kind outside North America before this weekend, adding to the FOMO factor.

That won’t be quite the same for the sequel, but the atmosphere and visual impact of a crowd that size at Wembley was breathtaking, and it wouldn’t be surprising if AEW can at least make a run at the crowd they drew this year.

In the meantime, AEW has a quick turnaround before it’s next PPV, as All Out is set for the United Center in Chicago om Sunday, Sept. 3.

AEW All In London results: Friendship bends but doesn’t break as MJF defeats Adam Cole

Though both men had their morals tested, the AEW All In main event between MJF and Adam Cole ended in hugs.

Everything about this is screaming big fight. Both men have more pyro and theatrics in their entrances, and there’s cool lighting during their in-ring entrances. MJF has a little trouble getting his robe off, cracking a smile.

The two men step together and have a few words, then head to opposite sides of the ring to put on their Better Than You Bay Bay shirts. The fans, already cheering, get even louder for that.

Lots of hip tosses and headscissors leave no one with an advantage. They shake hands at the urging of the crowd. MJF does a little Ric Flair mixed with Rick Rude, and Cole comes right back with his signature pose.

MJF leads a “sportsmanship” chant but uses it to trick Cole as he rushes in. Adam slaps him for that, then lets go with a series of strikes and an enzuigiri. Cole gets the first near fall and looks like he’s in control.

Cole pulls MJF’s trunks and his hair to maintain his edge. The champ finally gets tired of being made a fool but still can’t do the dive to the floor. His hesitation allows Cole to land a superkick, covering for a two count.

An irritated Cole says “I had you beat,” referring to their Dynamite match that started this whole story, and he takes off MJF’s shirt. The champ finally gets rolling with a series of offensive moves, including plenty of corner punches … and a bite.

Buoyed by the crowd’s support, MJF decides to try the suicide dive and looks shocked when it turns out fine. He rolls Cole back into the ring to cover for two.

MJF and Cole do the rolling pinfall thing until Cole is caught and powerbombed onto the champ’s knee. Is MJF trying a Panama Sunrise? Maybe, but Cole superkicks him and hits the Heatseeker, and the champ needs to get his foot to the rope to disrupt the count.

On the outside, MJF is hurled into the steel steps, then given a brainbuster on top of it. He barely beats the 10 count to keep the match going, then rolls back outside to get out of the crosshairs of a Panama Sunrise.

MJF needs to regroup and clears off the announce table. He wants to Tombstone Cole through the table but decides he can’t do it. Cole has no such issues, hitting the same move on a table that doesn’t break. The crowd starts up an “a–hole” chant, then MJF kicks out at two.

Things still look bad for MJF even after he manages to slow Cole’s attack, leaving them both on the canvas. They yell out “double clothesline” and connect, then pin each other’s shoulders at the same time. The ref, Bryce Remsburg, tells Justin Roberts it’s a draw, which is what he announces.

Cole refuses and grabs the mic to ask for five more minutes, the same thing he asked Max once before. MJF says no … but only because it’s not enough time: “We’re going until we have a winner in f–king Wembley.”

Right after the match restarts, however, Remsburg takes a bump, and MJF gets a chair. Both men toss the chair back and forth to each other, then they try to one-up each other to make it look like they’ve been hit by the other. MJF rushes forward and tries to pin Cole, who kicks out once and then again after a Heatseeker.

They head out to the apron, where Cole hits a straitjacket German suplex that looks painful. So does a Panama Sunrise on the floor. Cole rolls the champ back into the ring but still can’t seal the deal.

Cole tries another Panama Sunrise in the ring, but MJF throws Remsburg in the way and the ref takes the move. MJF gets his Dynamite Diamond Ring from his trunks but can’t bring himself to use it. Roderick Strong runs down and punts MJF in the crotch, and Cole hits the Panama Sunrise. Cole drops the Boom as well, but Remsburg is still out. He eventually comes to, but his count is slow and MJF has time to kick out.

With Strong urging him on, Cole takes his team shirt off and lurks with the title belt. But he, too, has a crisis of conscience and tosses the belt away. That proves costly, as MJF catches Cole with a small package and holds on for the three count.

As Cole looks on the verge of tears, MJF crawls over and tells Cole the fans still love him and he got lucky. MJF goes to get their ROH tag team titles, but Cole chucks his away when offered.

MJF is clearly hurt, and throws his belt to Cole, saying he was always just after his title. Strong returns too, but Cole throws the world title down and they end up in a long hug in the center of Wembley.

Click here for full All In London 2023 results.

AEW All In London results: Will Ospreay digs deep to slay a legend against Chris Jericho

The best of the present met a legend as Will Ospreay and Chris Jericho collided at AEW All In. See how their match went down.

Chris Jericho gets the big fight entrance by singing a live version of “Judas” with Fozzy (after a short Freddie Mercury tribute), but the crowd is solidly behind Will Ospreay. It doesn’t take long for them to cheer as he launches himself to the floor, then hits a springboard elbow back in the ring for a near fall.

The two men hit each other with simultaneous big boots before they trade strikes. A dropkick sends Ospreay to the floor, where Jericho hits a baseball slide kick. A German suplex on the apron drops Ospreay right on his neck, and Jericho flips the crowd the double bird.

Ospreay rallies quickly for a near fall. Jericho fires right back with one of his own thanks to a top rope hurricanrana. He tries a Lionsault too, but Ospreay sees it coming and greets him with knees. A Shooting Star Press with Jericho strung over the ropes gets Will another two count.

A massive Codebreaker after a shakier first one leads to a Jericho near fall. An Oscutter is a good answer but still only worth a two count. Ospreay wants Storm Breaker, but a series of reversals finds Ospreay in the Walls of Jericho. With Don Callis distracting referee Aubrey Edwards, Sammy Guevara smashes Ospreay with Jericho’s baseball bat (Floyd), but Ospreay manages to not submit.

A running Spanish Fly is answered by a Codebreaker and Jericho’s version of the Oscutter. The Ocho crawls to cover and still only gets two.

While both men are tied up, Jericho sneaks in a low blow and hits the Judas Effect. Ospreay pulls himself together to kick out before the three count, and Jericho is incredulous.

After connecting on his own take on the Judas Effect, Ospreay hits Storm Breaker, finally, only to see Jericho kick out at two. Determined, Ospreay uses Hidden Blade to set up a second Storm Breaker, and he finally gets the legend to stay down for three.

Click here for full All In London 2023 results.

AEW All In London results: Saraya gets to celebrate title win with her family

Though it might have spelled the end of the Outcasts, Saraya earned a emotional title victory at AEW All In London.

Saraya has family with her on her ring walk, which is nice to see. She hugs teammate Toni Storm before the match starts as well, and The Outcasts waste no time double-teaming Hikaru Shida.

But they quickly end up squabbling over who gets to pin Britt Baker, and that gives the current champ time to recover and attack them both. Saraya’s family helps keep Baker in place for attacks, but Saraya soon finds herself back battling Storm in the ring … and not faring well.

Storm takes a turnbuckle pad off and looks like she’d going to use the metal to attack Saraya’s neck. Ruby Soho runs down to stop her, but Storm turns and hits her, not realizing it’s a teammate.

Soho leaves as quickly as she arrived, and Shida has things rolling as she hits a Meteora on Saraya for a near fall. Baker hauls the champ out of her pinfall to apply the Lockjaw, but Shida won’t allow the doctor to really sink in the hold.

While she gets closer to having Shida in trouble, Saraya hits Storm with a DDT, covering to get the three count. She’s visibly emotional as her family joins her in the ring to celebrate.

Click here for full All In London 2023 results.