How much backstage drama in pro wrestling is too much? AEW feels like it’s about to find out

Backstage drama can be the fuel for memorable pro wrestling storylines, but is the level of it in AEW simply too much?

In one of the calmer moments of the now infamous media scrum after AEW All Out, AEW CEO, GM and head of creative Tony Khan was asked if he thought successes like the show that had just taken place outside Chicago would be able to galvanize the company and help it move forward despite any tensions behind the scenes.

“There’s a lot of conversation about people not getting along, not liking each other,” Khan said. “I definitely think that it’s probably more apparent than ever that there’s a lot of that.”

Khan didn’t have much choice but to admit as much. Not after CM Punk, the company’s newly crowned world champion, unleashed a curse-filled rant during his time at the media scrum that did all but call out the Young Bucks and Kenny Omega by name. Later reports suggested that Punk and trainer/friend Ace Steel started throwing hands with those three, who not only are some of AEW’s top stars, but also its executive vice presidents.

In most professions, berating company executives by name and allegedly getting into fights with them is grounds for immediate termination, typically followed by lawsuits or criminal charges. While it remains to be seen what consequences may await for Punk (and everyone involved, for that matter), he remains, at least for now, AEW’s number one champion and arguably its highest profile star.

It’s no shock that some of the biggest personalities in AEW don’t particularly like each other, and it’s amusing when fans react with surprise that everyone in a young, growing business isn’t just hanging out enjoying each other’s company when they aren’t wrestling. Personality conflicts are inevitable in any workplace, in any industry, and the highly competitive, often cutthroat nature of pro wrestling only exacerbates the tendencies so common in other walks of life.

The difference is that in wrestling, those differences of opinion can be turned into the fuel for memorable feuds, the kind of stuff that fans remember years later. Khan is nothing if not a student of the business, and he has hammered home this point repeatedly. Even as some of his top stars were possibly scrapping elsewhere in the building early Monday morning, he took a glass half-full view of the tensions and talked about how they can be be turned into a positive.

“There are a lot of matches between people who probably don’t get along and don’t like each other, and it’s not always an easy road to get people in the ring,” Khan said. “But when you can get people in the ring to settle their differences … it can be really exciting.”

So far, AEW has done a masterful job taking real world grievances and turning them into storylines, the kind of angles that obliterate the lines between fantasy and reality. Take MJF, who made his return at All Out. Most observers agree now that he had very legitimate gripes about his place in the company, but AEW incorporated them into his character in such a way that his eventual reappearance was guaranteed to be red hot.

But the fact that MJF’s return was overshadowed this weekend by the explosion of other real world drama only underscores how narrow a tightrope it is that Khan and AEW are walking. What happens when talent simply refuses to work with each other? Already, it’s hard to imagine Punk working with Omega in any kind of meaningful program, despite being two top tier talents who would figure to be in the main event mix now that both are healthy.

What if the Young Bucks, two of the people who helped build AEW from a concept to a reality in the first place, decide the soap opera isn’t worth it and leave the company? Khan recently said he felt the AEW roster would be at its strongest point to date now that so many of its wrestlers are healthy, but that means nothing if he’s handcuffed by talent that doesn’t want to compete with each other, or worse still, doesn’t want to be there any more.

(It’s worth mentioning too, that a newly revitalized WWE surely looks like a much more attractive proposition to AEW wrestlers, even some who fled it at one point, than it did just a few months ago.)

On top of all that, what happens may force AEW fans to take sides in an unhealthy way. If Punk is suspended, as many seem to agree is warranted, it risks alienating his supporters and reinforces the perception that because the Bucks and Omega are executives as well as performers that they receive preferential treatment. If nothing happens, fans who are loyal to The Elite have reason to think that Punk is untouchable because he’s the company’s biggest current draw.

Maybe Khan is right, and everyone involved will calm down and realize that there’s more money to be made by sucking it up, accepting that there are people in the company that will never be their friends, and moving forward.

Maybe this is just another entry in the lengthy annals of backstage drama in pro wrestling, and will end up a footnote in the story of AEW’s success.

Right this second, though, those feel like big “maybes,” the kind you wouldn’t want to bank on.

“Sometimes you just have to take it and move on with business, and that’s a part of it,” Khan said.

For AEW’s sake, he’d better be right.

CM Punk goes off on Hangman Adam Page, The Elite in obscenity-laced post-All Out presser

CM Punk didn’t hold back during the post-All Out press conference, airing some serious grievances against Hangman Adam Page and The Elite.

CM Punk left plenty of his sweat and blood in the ring at AEW All Out while reclaiming the AEW World Championship from Jon Moxley on Sunday night in Chicago. And while he appeared at the post-event press conference to answer questions from the media, there were a few topics he obviously wasn’t happy were brought up.

One of them was his former friendship and subsequent falling out with Colt Cabana. Punk gave his side of the story but called it “f–king embarrassing” that he had to answer questions about it.

He not so subtly directed the blame toward AEW’s EVPs, Kenny Omega and the Young Bucks:

It’s 2022. I haven’t been friend with this guy since at least 2014, late 2013. And the fact that I have to sit up here because we have irresponsible people who call themselves EVPs, and couldn’t f–king manage a Target, and they spread lies and bulls–t and put into the media that I got somebody fired, when I have f–k all to do with him — want nothing to do with him, do not care where he works, where he doesn’t work, where he eats, where he sleeps. And the fact that I have to get up here and do this in 2022 is fucking embarrassing.

He wasn’t done. Punk immediately turned his attention to Hangman Adam Page, calling him “an empty-headed, f–king dumb f–k.” Accusing Page of going into business for himself, Punk said his actions jeopardized “the first million-dollar house that this company has ever drawn.”

You can watch his entire comments on Page in this video captured by Steven Muehlhausen of DAZN.

Punk also had some choice words during the press conference for MJF, who made his return to AEW at All Out. While it would be fairly simple to not have Punk work with Page and The Elite, there doesn’t seem to be any way to avoid a program between Punk and MJF.

So far, AEW has been remarkably skilled and/or lucky to be able to turn real life grievances into part of its narratives, but it remains to be seen if that can be done indefinitely. The “two sides to every story” caveat applies to Punk’s comments, but one thing they show is that there is still plenty of tension between various high profile members of the locker room, and that it’s going to continue as a source of fascination and speculation for the larger wrestling industry when it can’t be kept behind closed doors.

AEW Dynamite results: The Elite, United Empire heat up Trios tourney

Get AEW Dynamite results for the August 31, 2022 show from Chicago, with a trios tourney semifinal between The Elite and United Empire.

Welcome to Chicago, or nearby Chicago, anyway, for the kickoff to an entire week of AEW live shows that culminates at All Out. As per usual, there is business to attend to before we can get to the pay-per-view, and some of that will be settled tonight on TBS on AEW Dynamite.

Let’s begin with the World Trios Championship tournament, which is down to just four remaining teams. On the Dynamite side, the reinvigorated Elite, consisting of the Young Bucks and Kenny Omega, will take on the United Empire threesome of Will Ospreay and Aussie Open. Not only can all six men in this matchup really go, but Omega and Ospreay have a rivalry dating back to their time in NJPW that has turned pretty personal pretty quickly since Omega returned.

Want another pick for great in-ring action? A four-way battle between Wheeler Yuta, Rey Fenix, Dante Martin and Rush definitely fits the bill. AEW is hyping this as a preview of Sunday’s Casino Ladder match, which already looks like a barnburner even before all eight contestants have been revealed.

Bryan Danielson, a pretty darn good wrestler himself who you might have heard of, will also be in action on Dynamite. He’ll face Jake Hager, who is kind of a stand-in for the moment for Chris Jericho, Danielson’s All Out opponent.

Last but certainly not least, we’ll hear from AEW World Champion Jon Moxley, who is conspicuously without a title match on one of the biggest cards of the year. Some reports have hinted that he may run it back with CM Punk, which would be … unusual booking, to say the least, but we’ll know soon enough.

That’s a properly loaded card, or so it would appear. Here’s hoping you’re by a big old flatscreen and can watch everything as it goes down, but just in case, we’ll be in this very post updating it with the latest AEW Dynamite results in close to real time throughout the night.

Opening Bell: Stretch run toward Clash at the Castle, All Out

Get set for the week in WWE and AEW with Opening Bell: quick previews of Raw, SmackDown, Dynamite and Rampage.

Welcome to the Opening Bell, where we round up what’s been announced for WWE (Raw and SmackDown) and AEW (Dynamite and Rampage) programming for the week we’ve just begun.

WWE Raw preview – Monday, Aug. 29, PPG Paints Arena

The final live WWE show before Clash at the Castle (because SmackDown was taped last week, since everyone is traveling to Wales) is unsurprisingly loaded. The card starts with the crowning of new Women’s Tag Team Champions, as Raquel Rodriguez and Aliyah collide with Dakota Kai and IYO SKY.

Bobby Lashley and The Miz will also do battle on Monday night, but there’s a story to tell first since Miz was dragged into … um, wherever by Dexter Lumis last week. Is he any the worse for wear? And how exactly did he escape? Hopefully there’s a fun story in there somewhere.

Also on the slate for this week’s Raw:

  • Hall of Famer Kurt Angle makes an appearance in his hometown
  • The Usos and Sami Zayn visit from SmackDown to represent the Bloodline (yes, Sami too)
  • Riddle and Seth Rollins have one final face-to-face before Clash at the Castle and it’s likely to result in fisticuffs

AEW Dynamite preview – Wednesday, Aug. 31, NOW Arena, Chicago

Hey, what do you know, AEW has a big event this weekend as well, so Dynamite is also a pretty stacked show as a result. The World Trios Championship tournament will have its Dynamite final (or as it’s better known more generally, the tourney semifinal) when Kenny Omega and the Young Bucks take on Will Ospreay and Aussie Open of the United Empire. Get your popcorn ready, as the great American philosopher Terrell Owens once said.

Also of interest is a tag team match pitting Toni Storm and Hikaru Shida against Dr. Britt Baker and Jamie Hayter. You may recognize those women as the four who will compete at All Out for the interim AEW Women’s Championship.

Plus there’s more already announced for Dynamite:

WWE SmackDown preview – Friday, Sept. 2, Little Caesars Arena, Detroit (taped on Aug. 26)

As mentioned above, this episode is already in the can, as it was recorded after the live SmackDown last week in Motown. You can get full spoilers online should you be so inclined.

If you’d rather just have teasers of what’s to come and enjoy SmackDown as it happens on Friday, here’s what to expect:

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AEW Rampage preview – Friday, Sept. 2, NOW Arena, Chicago

In a bit of role reversal, Rampage is live this week while SmackDown is recorded. That means it should be a sweet hour of TV even though AEW has so far not said much about what to expect yet.

One match we feel confident will take place is the other semifinal of the World Trios Tournament. The two teams left on the Rampage side of the bracket are Dark Order, after they upset House of Black, and Best Friends. Expect to see them compete this Friday for the right to challenge for the inaugural championship on Sunday.

AEW Fight Forever looks like WWF No Mercy made for modern consoles

See the latest AEW Fight Forever gameplay footage featuring Kenny Omega and Adam Cole.

If you’re a wrestling fan/gamer of a certain age, you probably have warm, fuzzy memories of the titles published by THQ back in the day. Anecdotally, this writer bought a Nintendo 64 specifically for WWF No Mercy, and played the heck out of it simply because it was so much fun.

AEW hasn’t shied away from the idea that its upcoming console game, AEW Fight Forever, is in that same vein — particularly since it’s published by THQ Nordic. And with Gamescom taking place this week in Germany, AEW Games showed off some footage (with some help from the Dark Order’s Evil Uno and Colt Cabana) that definitely reinforced that notion.

As you can see below, the footage features Kenny Omega and Adam Cole doing battle, complete with some signature moves for each wrestler.

There’s something about the way the wrestlers move that immediately calls to mind the classic wrestling games from the early 2000s. The graphical style is in that vein as well; even though it’s definitely several steps forward from the likes of No Mercy, it’s also not going for a certain aesthetic instead of precise photorealism.

AEW has invested heavily in AEW Fight Forever, and Omega has spent a lot of time working with the development team at Yuke’s since the game was first announced in November 2020. Starting a new gaming franchise of any kind can be an uphill battle, but this footage makes it look like the Fight Forever team is on the right track.

There’s still no set release date for AEW Fight Forever, though the expectations are that it will go live in late 2022 or early 2023. It will be available for current gen (PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch) and last gen (PS4, Xbox One) consoles, as well as PC.

Anyone who misses Kenny Omega should tune in to Dynamite tonight

While AEW hasn’t announced anything about a Kenny Omega return, it’s expected to happen on the Aug. 17 episode of Dynamite.

AEW hasn’t come out and announced that Kenny Omega is coming back tonight, on the Aug. 17 episode of AEW Dynamite … but no one and said he isn’t, and all signs point to his return.

A number of well-connected outlets believe he’ll appear as the mystery partner to the Young Bucks, and will compete with them in the AEW World Trios Championship tournament. Fightful Select is one of them, calling Omega’s impending return “the worst kept secret in wrestling.”

It’s certainly on brand for AEW to create a certain level of expectation and then meet it without acknowledging it. The arrival of CM Punk last summer is a good example; though it was still technically a surprise when he made his arrival on Rampage, insiders were pretty sure it was happening ahead of time.

The current narrative around the Young Bucks also makes it perfectly logical for Omega to be revealed as their partner. After they were unceremoniously dumped out of the Undisputed Elite, the Bucks tried to mend their former friendship with Hangman Adam Page. Though those efforts appear to be paying off, Page informed them that he couldn’t go for the trios titles with them because he wanted to support the Dark Order, who has had his back through all of his ups and downs over the past few years.

Ironically, Omega’s last AEW match was against Page, who beat him for the AEW World Championship at Full Gear 2021 in November. While it was widely reported that he needed time off to heal up from injuries, Fightful Select notes that they were worse than originally thought.

We’d later learn these involved a shoulder injury that was rehabbed, a sports hernia, vertigo brought on by an Okada dropkick, and a leg/knee injury that also had to be taken care of. Omega had told us that there was so much to take care of he couldn’t put off surgery any longer.

Having Omega back at full blast will obviously be a huge benefit to AEW, and fans should embrace him as a fan favorite since he was a heel (as were the Bucks, for that matter) for an extended period of time before he was forced to sit out. And it would now be a decent-sized surprise if that doesn’t start tonight on Dynamite.

AEW: Fight Forever gets teaser trailer, will be published by THQ Nordic

The AEW: Fight Forever video game received a teaser trailer and confirmed some additional details about the team behind it.

The AEW video game that has occupied much of the time of Kenny Omega is getting closer to being a reality.

AEW and developer Yuke’s released a teaser trailer today for the game, titled “AEW: Fight Forever,” along with confirmation that it would be published by THQ Nordic. The THQ brand has a long history with wrestling video games, going back to classics like WWF No Mercy for the Nintendo 64.

“One of the first things I did after signing with AEW was to ask Tony Khan to let me help assemble the best gaming team on the planet, to make the best wrestling game ever,” Omega said in a press release. “Well, we just landed the perfect finisher by partnering with global publishing and distribution powerhouse THQ Nordic for AEW: Fight Forever. The THQ brand has long been synonymous with wrestling games – there is simply no more qualified partner to bring AEW: Fight Forever to the millions of wrestling fans the world over.”

Image credit: All Elite Wrestling

“Kenny’s incredible vision for AEW: Fight Forever is informed by his wrestling pedigree both inside the ring and on the controller,” Executive Producer Reinhard Pollice, THQ Nordic, said in the release. “Combine that vision with YUKES’ unparalleled wrestling game development history is resulting in an AEW experience that draws heavily on the arcade feel that first won wrestling gamer hearts more than two decades ago.”

The companies also released a short teaser trailer for the game, which you can see below.

AEW: Fight Forever will release on both current and last-gen consoles, including PS4, PS5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S and Nintendo Switch, as well as PC. What hasn’t been revealed yet is the game’s release date; a Dec. 31, 2022 listing that has popped up over the past few weeks has been debunked as a placeholder for retailers.

In any case, fans of both AEW and video games in general will no doubt be glad about this biggest sign of forward momentum for Fight Forever to date. We’ll be keeping an eye on all news on features, the roster and its eventual release here on Wrestling Junkie.

AEW just pulled off Forbidden Door without 4 of the biggest stars in company history

The continual growth of the AEW roster allowed it to put on an excellent Forbidden Door card with NJPW but without four of its biggest names.

If you asked Tony Khan a year ago (pandemic restrictions notwithstanding), if he wanted to try a dual-branded pay-per-view with New Japan Pro-Wrestling without Kenny Omega and Cody Rhodes, he almost certainly would have said no. The same would have been true six months ago pondering a Forbidden Door without CM Punk and Bryan Danielson.

This past Sunday in Chicago, AEW and NJPW pulled off one of the more entertaining and ambitious pro wrestling cards in recent memory without any of them.

While Rhodes departed of his own accord to return to WWE several months ago (and ironically got injured since then), the other three wrestlers all missed Forbidden Door due to injury. Punk and Danielson were penciled in for specific matches: Punk against Hiroshi Tanahoshi for the AEW World Championship, and Danielson in a battle for technical supremacy against Zack Sabre Jr. Omega has been out longer term, but considering his history with NJPW, he almost certainly would have been in one of the night’s matches, like the four-way match for the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship.

It’s a testament to the amount of talent that AEW has acquired and developed that other members of the roster were able to step up and fill the void almost seamlessly, a fact not lost on Khan during the post-event media scrum.

“You could headline any pay-per-view ever with the list of people who were out on this pay-per-view,” Khan said. “The roster is so deep compared to where it started, and we’re able to sustain it.”

Indeed, having Jon Moxley sub in for Punk worked for a variety of reasons, not least of which because Mox had been seeking a match with Tanahashi for some time, and Khan admitted to delaying it. That paid off handsomely in Sunday night’s main event, with much of the crowd cheering for Tanahashi but also showing Moxley love when he emerged with the victory.

Moxley also missed time in recent months due to checking himself into alcohol rehab, but he and Jericho — as well as Orange Cassidy, who shined at Forbidden Door in a singles match against Will Ospreay — returned to the fold just when AEW needed them most.

Khan’s continued knack for talent acquisitions helped as well, with Claudio Castagnoli making his AEW debut as Danielson’s hand-picked replacement to face Sabre. Amid the ongoing debate over whether AEW has too large a roster in some parts of wrestling fandom, it could have been seen as a luxury signing. But if Forbidden Door proved anything, it’s that you never know when any newcomer or foundational talent will be needed to play a big part on short notice.

“The people who came in helped fill that void,” Khan said, referring to Punk and Danielson. “Now they need the time, now they’re beat up, and now these guys can step back in, the originals, the first few champions. And new faces come in for the company, including, now, Claudio. I just think it’s really cool, to talk about it again, full circle, being back here in Chicago. … So it all came together even though it wasn’t the original plan for tonight.”

It certainly wasn’t, and probably never would have been at any time in AEW’s history. But darned if it didn’t turn out just fine anyway.

All Elite Wrestling FAQ: Your guide to AEW for lapsed and new fans

Reading through our handy AEW FAQ should make lapsed or new fans immediately more conversant in all things All Elite Wrestling.

“What is All Elite Wrestling?”

“Why am I hearing so much about AEW?”

These are questions that are more relevant than ever since the company recently celebrated its third birthday. AEW has changed the landscape of pro wrestling in the U.S. since its founding in 2019, rapidly becoming the No. 2 promotion even though it spent a good chunk of its formative years dealing with restrictions due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

It’s been a long time — decades, in fact — since any promotion not named WWE could claim to have AEW’s national TV footprint, its attendance at live events and its share of wrestling fandom’s attention. While it’s not close in most areas to challenging the reigning incumbent in terms of size and mainstream recognition, it does provide an honest to goodness alternative with the potential to attract both lapsed fans and curious newcomers.

If you fall into either one of those groups, welcome! We’re here to provide an overview of AEW so you can better tell if it sounds like it’s for you. Reading through our handy FAQ should make you immediately more conversant in all things All Elite Wrestling, and catch you up just a bit on what’s gone down in its first three years.