AEW Dynamite preview, card 03/27/24: Ospreay battles Shibata in Quebec City

A big four-way women’s match with Mercedes Moné on commentary will also be a highlight of AEW Dynamite from Quebec City.

Is the phrase “dream match” thrown around too loosely in the current pro wrestling scene? Perhaps. But it’s a lot shorter than saying “pretty freaking cool matches we never thought we’d see,” and one of those is again on tap for AEW Dynamite tonight from Quebec City.

Can Will Ospreay soar again to defeat Katsuyori Shibata?

So far, Will Ospreay has looked like he’s worth every penny of what AEW paid to sign him, not only bringing his undeniable in-ring talent to bear but also turning in some passionate promos. He’s the goods.

In Katsuyori Shibata, he’s got an interesting opponent for tonight. A number of people are watching to see if Ospreay can perhaps throttle back just a tad and still be compelling, or if Shibata will take bumps we perhaps haven’t seen from him given his injury history. It’s going to be fascinating but will almost certainly be great.

Can Swerve Strickland pass a stiff test in Konosuke Takeshita?

The other big singles match advertised for tonight’s card is a meeting between two wrestlers seemingly headed in opposite directions at the moment. Swerve Strickland is still very much a world title threat, laser focused on getting back to a place where he can take on Samoa Joe one on one.

Konosuke Takeshita remains as awesome as ever between the ropes, but he recently took an ‘L’ to Ospreay and seems likely to do so again in Quebec City. Could his devotion to the Don Callis Family start faltering soon? It might be nice to see him as a face again.

Mercedes Moné might be in the middle of something

Even though the self-appointed CEO of AEW doesn’t have a feud to call her own just yet, Mercedes Moné is definitely sniffing around the edges of one thanks to her history with Willow Nightingale. That figures to come into play tonight as Mercedes will be on commentary when Nightingale and Kris Statlander are part of a four-way match that also includes Skye Blue and Anna Jay.

The stakes are real, too, as the winner gets a TBS Championship shot at Dynasty. Keep an eye on Moné to see what part she might play.


AEW Dynamite card for Quebec City:

  • Will Ospreay vs. Katsuyori Shibata
  • Konosuke Takeshita vs. Swerve Strickland
  • Young Bucks vs. Private Party – AEW World Tag Team Championship Tournament Quarterfinal
  • Kris Statlander vs. Skye Blue vs. Anna Jay vs. Willow Nightingale – 4-Way match for a TBS Championship shot at AEW Dynasty, with Mercedes Moné on commentary
  • Best Friends vs. Undisputed Kingdom – AEW World Tag Team Championship Tournament Quarterfinal

The action kicks off as usual at 8 p.m. ET, and we’ll have full AEW Dynamite results and updates live here at Wrestling Junkie all evening long.

AEW officially announces Kosha Irby as COO

Irby held high level marketing positions at Clemson and PBR before joining AEW.

AEW made an addition to its executive team official today.

A press release from the company confirmed that Kosha Irby has joined AEW as its Chief Operating Officer (COO). His duties will include strategic planning of “Live Events, Marketing, Finance, Human Resources, Licensing, Consumer Products and other major lines of business for the company,” according to the release.

Fightful Select (subscription required) first reported in early January that Irby would be on his way into AEW and would possibly be named COO. Kirby’s LinkedIn page suggests he has been in the role since last month, and it’s not unusual for companies to wait a little bit before making C-suite hires official.

Kirby most recently served as Chief Marketing Officer for the Clemson University athletic department. He also held the same position for Professional Bull Riders (PBR) and was president of the Memphis Express in the now defunct Alliance of American Football.

“Kosha brings decades of experience within the sports, entertainment and wrestling industries alongside an incredible work ethic and passion for our brand,” AEW CEO, GM and head of creative Tony Khan said in the release. “As Chief Operating Officer, he will be a phenomenal asset to AEW as we enter the next phase of the company’s ongoing business development and expansion.”

Having another keen marketing mind on board can only help AEW, which is facing a unique challenge as it turns five years old this year. While sentiment around its product is once again high, drawing fans to shows on a consistent basis has proven difficult, and a reinvigorated WWE is eating up most of the mainstream headspace for pro wrestling.

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Why AEW Collision won’t have to go head to head with WrestleMania night 1

Fans of both AEW and WWE should be able to watch WrestleMania night 1 and then switch to TNT later for Collision on April 6.

Ever since AEW Collision launched last year on Saturday nights, there’s been some fascination about how it would handle some specific competition. For wrestling fans, said competition doesn’t get any bigger than the first night of WrestleMania.

While there are of course many options for watching TV broadcasts after the fact these days, the live audience for the Saturday, April 6 episode of Collision figured to be affected greatly if it was shown at the same time as WrestleMania 40 night 1 from Philadelphia.

But it turns out that won’t be the case. As noted by Wrestling Observer, TNT will be showing the semifinals of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball tournament, a.k.a. the Final Four, starting at 6 p.m. Those games will run through Collision’s 8-10 p.m. time slot and beyond.

TNT has Collision listed for an 11:30 p.m. ET start, but if there’s anything we’ve learned from the tourney over the years, it’s that the games could run long and Collision might start later. That will certainly have a negative impact on live ratings, thought it does mean that wrestling superfans (and intrepid media like those of us here at Wrestling Junkie) will be able to catch Collision after WrestleMania.

It’s also not as big a deal since Collision won’t be live. The show will be taped on Wednesday, April 3 after Dynamite in Worcester, Mass.

There was no Collision at all this past Saturday, March 23, also due to college hoops. The good news is that the show is live this coming Saturday, March 30, in its normal time on TNT, and will be good to go on April 13 and beyond. The question about going head to head with WrestleMania will have to wait at least another year, but considering these events all fall at around the same time annually, this may well be the norm as long as Warner Bros. Discovery retains AEW’s broadcast rights.

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Is AEW Rampage new tonight, 03/22/24?

College basketball is messing with the AEW Rampage schedule, but only for this week.

The NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament is in full swing, and the Warner Bros. Discovery family of cable networks is heavily involved in carrying all the college hoops action. That means some changes to the AEW programming schedule, including AEW Rampage.

In previous years, Rampage was sometimes aired late at night after basketball was over on the Friday of the first round. That isn’t the case this year, and there is no new episode of AEW Rampage tonight, March 22.

Instead, Rampage was live this week in Toronto on Wednesday, effectively turning Dynamite into a three-hour show. In fact the finish of Dynamite even bled over into the beginning of Rampage, with Adam Copeland celebrating what appears to be the end of his long-running feud with Christian Cage.

Rampage itself was a lot of fun, undoubtedly helped by the fact that it was live in front of a hot Toronto crowd, and was capped off by an entertaining Street Fight pitting Kris Statlander and Willow Nightingale against Julia Hart and Skye Blue.

If you missed it Wednesday, we have full AEW Rampage results right here.

It’s worth noting that because of basketball, there’s also no new episode of AEW Collision this weekend at all. However, both Rampage and Collision will return to their regular nights and times next week on March 29 and 30.

AEW Rampage results 03/20/24: Julia Hart, Skye Blue prevail in Street Fight

We also saw Best Friends advance in the AEW tag team title tournament in Toronto.

How’s everyone feeling after AEW Dynamite? Ready for another hour of wrestling? Because that’s exactly what we’re getting on a live episode of AEW Rampage on a special night.

In fact the change from one show to another in the T-Dot was basically seamless, since the main event I Quit match ran long. Confetti for Adam Copeland, tears for Christian Cage.

But hey, there’s plenty to look forward to on Rampage as well. We’ll see another team advance in the tag team title tournament, and Katsuyori Shibata is in action. The main event should be a women’s tag team Street Fight, and that works for us.

So yes, bring on the third hour, we say, if only for this week. Let’s get into it.

AEW Rampage results from Toronto:

  • Bullet Club Gold is in Florida, not Toronto, threatening to win the trios titles from The Acclaimed, and Jay White claims he saved Darby Allin’s life by breaking his foot and keeping him from climbing Mount Everest
  • Renee Paquette brings out The Acclaimed, who are definitely upset at Bullet Club Gold and lob plenty of insults at White and The Gunns
  • Best Friends (Orange Cassidy and Trent Beretta) def. Don Callis Family (Kyle Fletcher and Powerhouse Hobbs) by pinfall in an AEW Tag Team Tournament Wild Card Match
  • Katsuyori Shibata def. Kevin Matthews by pinfall
  • New TNT Champion Adam Copeland is shown popping champagne bottles backstage with plenty of the roster’s faces
  • Konosuke Takeshita def. Rocky Romero by pinfall
  • Skye Blue and Julia Hart def. Kris Statlander and Willow Nightingale by submission in a Street Fight as Hart taps out Statlander; the match included tables, moves on top of the announce table, chairs and a whole mess of thumbtacks

AEW Dynamite results 03/20/24: Copeland has grit, friends to make Cage quit

Toronto also saw Kazuchika Okada win gold on AEW Dynamite.

When two former friends from Ontario want to settle their massive, ongoing beef, maybe the only real way to do it is in an I Quit match in Toronto. Wouldn’t you know it, that’s exactly what awaits tonight on AEW Dynamite.

Adam Copeland and Christian Cage have clashed over the TNT Championship before, with Cage emerging victorious thanks to the aid of The Patriarchy. He dismissively sent Copeland to the back of the line, figuring that would be the end of it.

Copeland brushed himself off and jumped into the idea of working his way back to title contention with gusto thanks to his series of “Cope Open” matches. They didn’t really go on as long as he and AEW would have us believe, but it’s a fine narrative regardless.

If you didn’t think we were always headed back here, you must be relatively new to pro wrestling (so welcome!). An I Quit match in front of what is a hometown crowd for both men should be excellent.

It’s not the only title match on Dynamite tonight either. Eddie Kingston actually has several titles that confusingly are sometimes referred to as one. Only one of those three, the still fairly new Continental Championship, is at stake when Kingston faces Kazuchika Okada.

A villainous Rainmaker took some getting used to but seems like a stroke of genius for AEW. Will Okada break through this early in his time in the U.S.? We’ll find out tonight.

AEW Dynamite results from Toronto:

(please scroll down for more details on any match or segment in bold)

  • Mercedes Moné is here, as is Willow Nightingale, but are they united even against Julia Hart and Skye Blue?
  • Matthew and Nicholas Jackson want Alex Marvez to talk Japanese to Kazuchika Okada, or to learn how by next week, but the Rainmaker knows enough English to tell Eddie Kingston he’s coming for the title
  • Kazuchika Okada def. Eddie Kingston by pinfall to become the new AEW Continental Champion, however …
  • … after his victory, Okada sees Pac come out to the stage, insinuating he’ll be going after the Continental title
  • Renee Paquette speaks with Swerve Strickland, who accuses Samoa Joe of running and ducking him but is in the mood to issue an open challenge for a fight tonight
  • Paquette next speaks with Nightingale and Statlander about their Street Fight on Rampage, with Willow noting that she’s completely different in that environment; Moné stops by and exchanges thanks with Statlander but freezes out Nightingale (and Stokely Hathaway for that matter)
  • Hook def. Chris Jericho by pinfall
  • Adam Cole talks about how disappointed he is in Wardlow, so now the big man’s job is to protect the gold Undisputed Kingdom has, framing it as wanting what’s best for Wardlow
  • Paquette grabs a minute with Jericho backstage, and he says Hook lived up to what he expected from the “future world champion”; next week, Jericho says he has a proposition for Hook
  • Tony Schiavone calls Will Ospreay to the ring, and the Aerial Assassin says he’s changed and is now here for the betterment of AEW but needs some maple syrup from Canada in return; he also addresses Bryan Danielson claiming he couldn’t walk in Bryan’s shoes and tells Katsuyori Shibata he wants to face him next week
  • A hype video is shown for the Adam Copeland-Christian Cage I Quit match later tonight
  • Deonna Purrazzo and Thunder Rosa def. “Timeless” Toni Storm and Mariah May by pinfall
  • Swerve Strickland def. The Butcher by submission, then cuts a promo on Samoa Joe which is answered in the flesh by the AEW World Champion, and then by Don Callis, which apparently sets up a match between Swerve and Konosuke Takeshita
  • Adam Copeland def. Christian Cage in an I Quit match to become the new AEW TNT Champion

Mercedes Moné still has business with Willow Nightingale, which only gets more complicated

Please say hello to your new CEO. Mercedes says she’s still on a high from her debut in AEW last week, and goes on to talk about her near-career-ending injury 10 months ago when she was facing Willow Nightingale.

Cognizant that some people might not know exactly who she is, Mercedes shows a video package to fill them in. No, there are no Sasha Banks highlights in it.

She’s not here to lead a women’s evolution, as she’s done that before. Mercedes says she wants to lead a global revolution, facing the best women all over the world.

For now, it seems she wants to focus on Nightingale, but the lights go out when she does her mic drop, then come back up to find Julia Hart standing on the ramp. Skye Blue attempts an attack from behind, but both heels are easily repulsed.

Hart and Blue go under the ring for chairs but are neutralized by the arrival of Nightingale and Kris Statlander, both carrying chairs of their own. The lights go out and back on again, and it appears Willow was considering hitting Mercedes, which of course ticks off the CEO as she leaves.


Kazuchika Okada makes it rain gold against Eddie Kingston

Kingston has been talking about how Okada has never faced anyone like him, but an argument can be made that he’s as rooted in Strong Style as any current non-Japanese wrestler, so perhaps that’s not 100% true.

It’s also fun to see how some of Okada’s trademark mannerisms and bits still work even now that he’s a heel. We also see Matthew and Nicholas Jackson in the back, working as producers for the match as they promised Okada they would.

OK it’s not all business as usual with Okada as he’s a lot cockier than normal, but he’s bumping like the top level pro he is as Kingston hurls him around with suplexes. Eddie is getting plenty of support from the fans but there are some chants for the challenger as well.

Signature Okada dropkick? Check. But Kingston is able to nail the spinning back fist not long after for a near fall.

A running clotheslines has Eddie pulling down his straps, but Okada is able to gouge the champ’s eyes after a quick ref distraction. A spinning powerslam leads to a Rainmaker, and Okada is golden in AEW already.


Deonna Purrazzo, Thunder Rosa get one over on Toni Storm, Mariah May even though they aren’t completely aligned

The framing here is about how Storm and May are a proven team while Purrazzo and Rosa may not be on the exact same page. It’s not a problem in the opening minutes, and Rosa looks good in one of the longest matches we’ve seen from her on TV since she returned from her long injury layoff.

Ah, but things change when the Virtuosa has things rolling against May and Rosa tags herself in. That proves to be a tactical error as she eats a hip attack from the champ, but Thunder reverses a piledriver and gets the victory out of nowhere.

It doesn’t look like Deonna is 100% happy with things after the match, however.


Adam Copeland gets help to overcome The Patriarchy and makes Christian Cage quit

The fans enthusiastically sing along with Copeland’s theme a cappella even after the music stops, but the mood changes quickly when Cage makes his ring walk. There’s also a “holy s–t” chant that rings out in the early going.

It doesn’t take long for the two Canadians to fight into the crowd, where Cage dons a Bruins sweater and Copeland wears a Leafs sweater for an additional hometown pop. During picture-in-picture action, they battle out onto the concourse and then back toward the ring.

The crowd starts a “TLC” chant as a ladder comes into play, and both men are hurt when Copeland pulls Cage backward onto the steel. That gets a “this is awesome” chant going as well.

Now Copeland gets out a table, leaning it against the barricade. Cage leapfrogs a Spear and sends Copeland into the ringpost after a quick poke to the eyes.

Copeland ends up getting driven through the table when Cage jumps off the top rope, and he’s busted open as a result. They head back into the ring, where Cage catapults Copeland into a ladder laid across the ropes. The ref asks Copeland for a response but he’s not ready to quit.

Cage’s frog splash finds no one home, and Copeland grabs him in a crossface. The champ also isn’t quitting and gouges the challenger’s eyes to free himself.

During more picture-in-picture, Cage looks like he’s trying to walk out on the match, but Copeland catches up with him and catapults Cage off the stage. The champ also briefly gets thrown into a hockey net, as one does.

While they fight back toward the ring, Mama Wayne runs up and uses a hockey stick to hit a low blow on Copeland from behind. Cage breaks the stick over Copeland’s back and they head back inside the squared circle.

Cage unloads with the blade half of the stick and flexes to a chorus of boos. He jams the stick into Copeland’s throat, and the ref asks him several times if he’ll quit and still gets a quiet no.

Looking under the ring again, Cage slides several chairs into the ring. He produces one with barbed wire around it too, looking for a devastating Con-chair-to. Copeland rolls away at the last second and now he has the barbed wire chair, but Cage kicks it away.

Copeland runs Cage over with the hockey stick and tries choking him out, then takes the drawstring out of his tights to choke the champ. Nick Wayne and Killswitch pick that moment to jump in again, and they invite Mana Wayne to slap him.

Daddy Magic and Daniel Garcia run down to attack The Patriarchy, and Killswitch takes a DDT on the barbed wire chair. They also send Wayne flying to the floor, and Copeland climbs a ladder and dives to the floor onto both of them.

Garcia produces handcuffs, and the faces end up cuffing both Wayne and Killswitch to opposite corners. Mama Wayne sees more handcuffs and decides to make a run for it.

Cage is now left three on one, which makes things look grim for him. He’s handcuffed to another corner, where Copeland kicks him in the junk repeatedly.

Copeland gets in one shot from Spike, his nail-studded 2×4, and threatens another to finally make Copeland say “I Quit.”

AEW Dynamite preview 03/20/24: Can Adam Copeland make Christian Cage quit?

And can Kazuchika Okada win AEW gold from Eddie Kingston so soon after his arrival?

Even though last Wednesday was Big Business and the site of a huge debut, it’s not like tonight’s AEW Dynamite is just a ho-hum “regular” episode. Nope, there are big things on the card for this week as well, as the scene shifts to Toronto.

Will Adam Copeland finally beat his point into Christian Cage’s head?

When Adam Copeland first arrived in AEW, he tried to approach his old friend with love in his heart. That didn’t work, and as Copeland has since learned, it’s because Christian Cage isn’t the man he once knew.

They’ve been fighting off and on ever since, but even after failing to take the TNT Championship from Cage on his first try, Copeland kept battling to get back to face Cage again. That’s led them back home to Toronto, the proper setting for an I Quit match between the two Ontario natives.

The only thing that might work for Copeland now is to humble Cage. Getting him to verbally quit might do that. But the deck will once again be stacked against him, and it’s going to be fascinating to see if AEW finds a compelling way to overcome the odds.

Can Okada make it rain gold so early in his AEW run?

Having Kazuchika Okada was a stroke of creative genius for AEW. Fans have seen so much of the Rainmaker as the hero of New Japan that it was a breath of fresh air, especially while joining forces with the most intentionally unlikeable version of the Young Bucks the company has seen.

On Dynamite, Okada will challenge Eddie Kingston for the Continental Championship, and the fact that it’s only one of Eddie’s three belts makes it feel much more possible that he’ll drop it. Holding some gold right after arrival might make Okada seem like a bigger deal for anyone who still isn’t that familiar with his body of work in Japan. We’ll see if that’s what’s in store.

AEW Dynamite card for Toronto:

  • Christian Cage (c) vs. Adam Copeland – I Quit match for the AEW TNT Championship
  • Eddie Kingston (c) vs. Kazuchika Okada – AEW Continental Championship match
  • Chris Jericho vs. Hook
  • “Timeless” Toni Storm and Mariah May vs. Deonna Purrazzo and Thunder Rosa
  • We’ll hear from Mercedes Moné

Also don’t forget that Rampage is tonight too, on TBS right after Dynamite to make it an even three hours of AEW action. We’ll be recapping all the action here on Wrestling Junkie, so join us back here at 8 p.m. ET for the latest.

Report: Mercedes Moné chose AEW over WWE for ‘balance’ between wrestling, other interests

Both AEW and WWE were willing to pay Mercedes Moné a ton of money, so there was more to her decision.

When both of the top two wrestling promotions in the world are willing to make you the highest-paid woman in the business, what becomes the deciding factor in which one to join?

Mercedes Moné recently had to figure that out before signing with AEW and making her much anticipated debut at Big Business in Boston. Though Moné has told ESPN that money was of course a factor, it’s clear that both AEW and WWE were willing to pay her handsomely.

According to PWI, the difference between the two offers came down to where she perceived the greater opportunity to do new things both in and out of the ring.

PWInsider.com is told that in the end, the final factor in the decision-making as to where to go on Mone’s part was which destination would allow for stronger potential, not just for herself but for additional and future women in professional wrestling.

In AEW, Moné has not only a host of new wrestlers to work both with and against. She also has a more direct path to being positioned as the promotion’s top women’s star, as opposed to WWE where it could be argued that Becky Lynch, Bianca Belair and Rhea Ripley are all at the same level.

It’s also clear that Moné has interests outside wrestling, including acting and music, that she may not have been as free to pursue in WWE.

From PWInsider:

Beyond Mone’s acting pursuits, PWInsider.com is also told that over the last several years, by being outside the WWE bubble, she has had the chance to develop fashion and music projects that she wants to keep bringing to the forefront.  Those interests grew exponentially while she was recovering from her leg injury over the last year.

At the end of the day, the belief from those close to Mone is that the best way she could keep developing and working on her passions beyond performing in the ring was to be in a place that would allow her to still develop her projects, not just sign up to return to WWE, where all her energy would be targeted on WWE 90% of the time. AEW provided more of a balance.

The thought here is that in WWE, top stars certainly can reach a wider audience but build up fame and fortune for the brand first and themselves second. In AEW, that formula might be flipped on its head in return for having a smaller reach.

For Moné that might not matter, as she has the brand recognition, for lack of a better way to describe it, that she build up first in WWE (albeit under a different name). There might not be too many women’s wrestling stars for whom this calculus would work out in exactly the same way, but it’s a choice she seems satisfied with for the foreseeable future.

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When is AEW Rampage this week? When to tune in

AEW Rampage isn’t on its normal night or time this week. Find out when you’ll need to tune in to catch it.

If you’re looking for AEW Rampage this week, you’ll need to look on a different night than usual.

While Rampage usually airs Friday nights at 10 p.m. on TNT, it’s moved around a number of time due to that network’s sports commitments. That is once again the case this week, as TNT is involved in the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament (otherwise known as something that has to do with March), which rules out any wrestling on the Turner networks for a few weeks.

Unlike some of those past pre-emptions, when Rampage would shift to an earlier time, it’s actually moving days and times this week. AEW Rampage will air this week at 10 p.m. on Wednesday, March 20, immediately following Dynamite. It’s also on TBS this week, not TNT, so don’t change the channel after Dynamite.

Rampage will be live instead of taped, and coming to us from what should be a live crowd in Toronto as the promotion spends the next few weeks in Canada.

This is also a good time to remind everyone that there will be no new episode of Collision this week for the same basketball-related reasons. That show returns live on Saturday, March 30 from London, Ontario.

The important thing to remember is that for this week, there’s only one night of AEW wrestling, and it’s on Wednesday. The hoops won’t have started yet, so there are no conflicts to tuning in and taking in Dynamite and Rampage back to back.

AEW Collision results 03/16/24: Danielson downs Shibata in dream match

Christian Cage also revealed what was in his case on AEW Collision and how he’s going to use it on Christian Cage.

How we feeling, AEW fans? The promotion seems to have received a shot in the arm as of late, and that’s no surprise considering Will Ospreay, Kazuchika Okada and Mercedes Moné all arrived within weeks of each other. It’s a crazy talent infusion, but none of it will be part of tonight’s episode of AEW Collision.

Will that matter? Maybe not, as AEW felt a little more focused even in the build-up to Revolution earlier this month. Maybe not quite to the point where it’s restored the peak enthusiasm from a few years ago, but trending upward for sure.

Plus, if there’s one thing Tony Khan can be counted on to do, it’s to book a dream match out of nowhere just because he can. Bryan Danielson vs. Katsuyori Shibata, come on down!

So while the three newcomers are of course all amazing, AEW doesn’t have to rely on only them, and we should see that tonight from Canada’s capital. Let’s see.

AEW Collision results from Ottawa:

  • Bryan Danielson def. Katsuyori Shibata by pinfall; they shake hands, hug and generally show each other respect afterward
  • A highlight package from AEW Big Business is shown, with a special spotlight on the debut of Mercedes Moné
  • Julia Hart def. Trish Adora by pinfall to retain the AEW TBS Championship; as a results, Hart can be ringside for the match between House of Black and The Infantry later tonight, but Adora cannot
  • Lexy Nair asks Zak Knight about fighting Angelo Parker, which he’s happy to do, just not in Canada

  • Daniel Garcia def. Lee Moriarty by submission; Matt Menard was on guest commentary and celebrates with Garcia in the ring afterward
  • Pac def. Aaron Solo by submission; after the bell, Pac says he’s looking for trouble and Solo isn’t exactly what he had in mind, so he tells Tony Khan to find him some trouble or he’ll find it himself

  • Danielson is meditating backstage but stops to talk about how grateful he is that he got to wrestle Shibata tonight and that he’s got a match coming up with Will Ospreay coming up; Danielson suggests that Ospreay doesn’t understand what he and Shibata have gone through and isn’t ready for what the American Dragon is willing to do

  • Claudio Castagnoli def. Lance Archer by DQ after he’s attacked by The Righteous; Danielson tries to make the save but is outnumbered, so Shibata also flies down with a chair and sends the heels running
  • Nair talks to Parker, who was ready to fight Knight tonight, but he agrees to “leave it alone for tonight” after Ruby Soho suggests that if he tries to start something tonight, he’ll have to do it without her

  • Kyle O’Reilly def. Bryan Keith by submission; after the match, Undisputed Kingdom comes out to celebrate with O’Reilly
  • Nair speaks with Deonna Purrazzo and Thunder Rosa, who may have some differences in opinion on the world championship but certainly seem like they’ll put them aside to get back at Toni Storm and Mariah May

  • The Infantry def. House of Black (Brody King and Buddy Matthews ) by pinfall in an AEW Tag Team Tournament Wild Card Match, in large part due to interference by Mark Briscoe
  • Adam Copeland sits down to recap his take on the whole Christian Cage situation, saying he never came to AEW to take his old friend’s spotlight away and finally revealing what’s in his box: Spike, a nail-studded 2×4; Copeland says he and Spike will make Cage say “I quit” and take away Christian’s pride