Tony Khan won’t comment on CM Punk status, says ‘I did not know’ about his All Out press conference tirade

It’s hard to believe the All Out press conference would have gone down the way it did if he knew.

Tony Khan has been pretty consistent about not commenting on the status of CM Punk with AEW, and that didn’t change a few days out from Full Gear.

That’s notable because when the show hits Newark’s Prudential Center on Saturday, the return of The Elite (Kenny Omega and the Young Bucks) will mean everyone involved in the fracas that started after Punk’s post-All Out press conference tirade will either be back in action or (in the case of Punk’s longtime friend Ace Steel) gone from the company.

Punk’s fate remains a topic of intense interest and speculation, so it was no surprise that one of the questions during Khan’s pre-Full Gear conference call just flat out asked if fans have seen the last of CM Punk in AEW.

“I can’t comment on that,” Khan said. “I have nothing but positive things to say about the contributions CM Punk has made in AEW on screen, and certainly a lot of positive things to say about thing he did in AEW to date. … I do understand why you’d ask and appreciate you asking.”

The final question on the call also concerned Punk, and specifically about whether Khan might have known that Punk was going to go on the tangents he did — and why he didn’t do anything to stop it. In this case, the person asking the question was someone with a personal interest in the answer: Nick Hausman of Wrestling Inc., the journalist who Punk responded to at All Out that set the entire chain of events in motion.

Khan insisted he had no idea what was going to transpire, and that he had reasons for wanting the press conference to continue.

“You were sitting five feet away from me, and I did not know,” Khan said. “No, I did not know. But I will not comment beyond that except to say that I had Keith [Lee] and Swerve [Strickland] coming up right after that and Toni Storm after that. And I had important stuff to talk to them about.”

Common sense suggests that Khan might field a question or two about Punk after Full Gear too, but his answers are likely to be the same. We’ll find out late Saturday night.

Report: CM Punk met with Tony Khan Tuesday, expected to be suspended or fired

According to Sports Illustrated, everyone involved in the fight after the AEW All Out press conference will be suspended.

The wild storm of speculation around the future of CM Punk with AEW could be cleared up today, and signs point toward either a suspension or departure for the AEW World Champion.

Justin Barrasso of Sports Illustrated filed a story this morning reporting that Punk met with AEW CEO, GM and head of creative Tony Khan Tuesday to discuss what happens next after Punk unloaded on Hangman Adam Page and the company’s EVPs, the Young Bucks and Kenny Omega, during a press conference after All Out in Chicago.

That led to a physical altercation afterward, including Punk, the Bucks, Omega and longtime Punk friend and trainer Ace Steel, among others. SI says that everyone involved will be suspended.

But it could be worse than that for Punk and Steel, who Barrasso says “will either be among those suspended, or will no longer be with the company by the end of Wednesday.” It was already widely believed that none of the parties involved in the fight would be on AEW Dynamite this week, with Wrestling Observer noting that other talent like Chris Jericho and Jon Moxley not expected to be on this week’s show had been called in.

If Punk is let go from AEW, it will mark a stunning end to a brief but eventful tenure that electrified the pro wrestling world when he returned from a seven-year absence in August of last year. Punk won the AEW World Championship twice, but if he’s gone, both reigns will go in the books without a single title defense: He lost his first while trying to unify it with an interim title held by Moxley a few weeks ago, and will give up his current one if he is fired.

In any case, the story that has gripped the entire wrestling industry may finally get some closure today, with the question now being whether a suspension or dismissal awaits one of AEW’s biggest stars.

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.

Jaguars exec Tony Khan: Team ‘feels very different, in a good way’ under Doug Pederson

It sure doesn’t sound like Jaguars executive Tony Khan misses having Urban Meyer at the helm of the franchise.

Jacksonville Jaguars executive vice president Tony Khan is already excited about the work Doug Pederson has done as the team’s head coach, even though the team hasn’t yet played a regular season game.

In an interview with Yahoo Sports, Khan said excitement is “through the roof” in Jacksonville after watching Pederson lead the team through training camp. And it sure didn’t sound like Khan misses having Urban Meyer at the helm of the franchise.

“You can’t force people to respect someone or like someone or want to work with someone,” Khan told Yahoo. “I think at the end of the day, someone needs to do the job on their own merits and the command Doug has of the whole building, respect he has from everybody and the genuine way he conducts himself has gone a really, really long way with a lot of people, including all the staff, everybody around the office and the players.

“It feels very different, in a good way, and very organized and a lot of that is based on the experience of Doug and his staff and the achievements they have in this business, the playoff wins, championship games and Super Bowl rings.”

Meyer was fired by the Jaguars in December after leading the team to a 2-11 record through 13 games. During his short tenure in Jacksonville, Meyer was the subject of several scandals including an accusation that he kicked the team’s kicker Josh Lambo, and another that he called his assistant coaches “losers.”

Report: CM Punk ‘might have almost decided to stay home’ from Dynamite

Is CM Punk unhappy enough to sit out Dynamite or leave AEW altogether?

Is CM Punk unhappy with Hangman Adam Page and with AEW in general? A new report hints that both of those things might be true.

The AEW World Champion has been out of action following a foot injury earlier this year, but returned on the Aug. 10 episode of Dynamite to help prevent the Jericho Appreciation Society from running amok at the end of the show. AEW heavily promoted Punk’s appearance on this week’s episode, and he came out to open the broadcast.

His overall promo, which included some sharp barbs at and an eventual physical confrontation with interim champ Jon Moxley, was well received. But prior to that, he singled out Page and called him a coward for not responding.

One problem: Page wasn’t there. It made for an awkward start to the segment, and Wrestling Observer’s Dave Meltzer reported that it was completely unplanned.

Fightful Select has followed up by talking to locker room sources who speculated that Punk’s callout was payback from comments Page made during a promo leading up to their match at Double or Nothing.

The belief among several on the roster we spoke to was that Punk believed Hangman went into business for himself leading into their Double or Nothing match, and that Punk may have seen the August 17 promo as a “receipt.”

But Punk’s unhappiness may go beyond Page to AEW as a whole. Fightful Select’s report includes sources close to the wrestler saying they felt “he might end up quitting the company” because of his displeasure, and that “he might have almost decided to stay home instead of coming to the August 17 Dynamite.”

If Punk has been at the center of any ongoing discontent, it hasn’t been apparent from the person in charge of AEW. CEO, GM and Head of Creative Tony Khan has consistently spoken highly about what Punk has meant to the company’s success, particularly during a period of time when some of AEW’s original top stars, including Kenny Omega (who made his own return on this week’s Dynamite), were unavailable.

Another twist to this saga got added later in this week’s Dynamite, when AEW announced that the title unification bout between Punk and Moxley will take place next week, on the Aug. 24 edition of Dynamite. It was originally slated for All Out, the company’s next pay-per-view on Sept. 4, which will take place just outside Punk’s hometown of Chicago.

The apparently late pivot to hold that match so quickly could just be AEW using its most high profile program to give Dynamite a boost, but it could just as easily be a warning sign that there is uncertainty around Punk’s future with the company. If nothing else, it’s made the upcoming show a must-watch episode that will either answer some questions or raise new ones.

No one claims to have heard from MJF in months

The most recent update on AEW star MJF is that there is no update.

With all due love to the classic movie “Fight Club,” the first rule of MJF appears to be you do not talk about MJF. Or more precisely, to MJF.

Sean Ross Sapp of Fightful Select, answering a question he must get numerous times per day, every day, posted his latest MJF update, and it can best be summed up by its first sentence: “MJF has effectively vanished from the wrestling scene.”

According to Sapp, even people who are “close to him” haven’t spoken to or heard from the AEW wrestler since he cut his incendiary promo following Double or Nothing. That was on the June 1 episode of Dynamite, meaning MJF has now been persona non grata for more than two months.

Among the people not talking about MJF is one big one: AEW CEO, GM and Head of Creative Tony Khan. Sapp says his sources haven’t “overheard Tony Khan speak about MJF whatsoever since the June 1 promo.” He’s been remarkably consistent in that regard; Wrestling Junkie was on hand for the post-Forbidden Door press conference in late June in Chicago, where Khan politely declined to discuss MJF when asked by a member of the media.

Throughout MJF’s absence, the debate about whether it’s legit or an elaborate work has raged on. The consensus now is that he had very real grievances with his pay and standing within AEW that came to a head, which the promotion then chose to turn into storyline fodder to make the best of a potentially bad, and certainly awkward, situation.

A common belief among wrestling fans now is that if CM Punk hadn’t gotten hurt shortly after winning the AEW World Championship, MJF would have been in the mix right away, feuding with Punk. If that indeed turns out to be the case, MJF’s radio silence (he also hasn’t tweeted to his 325,000+ followers since May 27) could just be part of the show, because his commitment to his gimmick is second to none.

But the big takeaway from all of this is that this situation isn’t normal. Sapp ends his report by saying “I’ve never heard of someone going this unreachable in regards to wrestling for this period of time.”

With each passing week where no one mentions MJF, that becomes more and more true.

Tony Khan thinks prospect of WWE competing for talent with AEW will be ‘exciting’

AEW boss Tony Khan acknowledged some concern about a revitalized WWE but called the possibility of competing for talent “exciting.”

With the notable exception of Cody Rhodes, the flow of pro wrestling talent between WWE and AEW since the latter came into existence a few years ago has been a one-way street. Wrestlers who were unhappy with their place in WWE left and showed up on AEW a few months later, helping bolster the roster as the company grew.

But with Vince McMahon out and a new team in charge at WWE, including Stephanie McMahon and Nick Khan as co-CEOs and Paul “Triple H” Levesque heading up creative duties, WWE could already look like a much more attractive place to work for top talent from other promotions — including those currently under contract with AEW.

That presents a new and potentially significant challenge for AEW, one that’s not lost on CEO, GM and Head of Creative Tony Khan. As he explained in a recent interview with SportsGrid, however, Khan believes it’s an overall benefit to the wrestling industry (h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription).

“I think that’s always been a concern, but now probably more so than ever, I imagine great wrestlers are going to be in demand … I think this is probably going to be good for the wrestling fans because that’s one of the most exciting things about pro wrestling: free agency,” Khan said. “It’s one of those things that was really missing from the sport for almost two decades before AEW came in, because there was not a legitimate competitor in the free agent market, and now there is. I think it’s going to be some exciting times ahead, hopefully for many years to come.”

It’s still very early days for the “new” WWE, but the first show with Levesque in charge featured a bigger push for Ciampa and the weekly TV returns of IYO SKY (formerly Io Shirai) and Dakota Kai, two performers who were reportedly on the outs with the company in the last months that Vince McMahon was in power. That alone suggests WWE will be a place where different kinds of wrestlers may get chances to prove themselves on a top level than before.

Still, Khan seems up for the battle, and believes that with two strong companies pushing each other, it’s the fans who will ultimately benefit.

“It’s going to change the competition, but I think that’s a good thing,” Khan said. “AEW’s got a big fan base. We’re on in 130 countries now around the world, and here in the US, we’ve built a great fanbase … And the competition is going to change. It’s a different person in the chair, opposite me, but I don’t think that’s going to be a bad thing for the wrestling fan necessarily.”

Tony Khan on combined WWE/AEW supershow: ‘It’s not crazy’

Could a combined WWE and AEW card similar to Forbidden Door ever happen? AEW boss Tony Khan is willing to give it a shot.

Talk about taking the Forbidden Door to its logical extreme.

AEW head honcho Tony Khan appeared recently on The Ringer’s The Masked Man Show, to discuss his booking style, the AEW arrival of Claudio Castagnoli, and more. On the topic of working with other promotions, however, Khan went for the gusto and said he’d even consider what to many wrestling fans would be the impossible dream: doing a joint supercard with WWE (h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription).

“I’m not sure that’s going to happen, but I would be open to talking about that kind of thing,” Khan said. “It’s not crazy, but it’s a bold prediction.”

It’s easy to see the appeal from AEW’s side. Though Khan has spoken about the logistical difficulties of putting on the recent Forbidden Door event in conjunction with New Japan Pro-Wrestling, many of those were geographical. That wouldn’t be the case in a hypothetical WWE joint card, and pulling it off would cement AEW as a major player on the same level as the top pro wrestling promotion in the world.

But it’s harder to see the benefit from WWE’s side when the company is already atop its industry. A rising tide may indeed lift all boats, but how much does it lift the one that’s already the biggest? It would take a massive shift in the WWE approach to potential competition, which generally is to simply act like it doesn’t exist.

In the words of undisputed WWE champion Roman Reigns, it’s rare to see the company even acknowledge AEW, much less want to work together. Perhaps a post-Vince McMahon version of the promotion would see things differently, though despite his most recent controversy, it doesn’t appear he’s planning on leaving the business any time soon.

Still, Forbidden Door opened the eyes of many wrestling observers to what’s possible when two companies collaborate, so the idea of WWE and AEW joining forces for a show isn’t quite as zany as it would have seemed even a few months back. And at the very least, it’s great to know that Khan is up for it, because it’s fair to say a lot of fans would be too.

Report: VP of Football Analytics Eugene Shen expected to leave Jags organization

The Jags will be losing a high-ranking member from their football strategies department according to ESPN.

​​The Jacksonville Jaguars will have a high-ranking role to fill in their football strategy department as Eugene Shen will be leaving the team, according to ESPN’s Seth Walder.

With Shen set to leave, it will mark the second year in a row that a key member of the analytics department has left the team. Just over a year ago in late May, it was reported that senior vice president of football operations and strategy, Karim Kassam, was no longer with the team. According to ESPN’s Mike DiRocco, Jags co-owner Tony Khan said that both the organization and Kassam decided that it was best for both sides to move on. At the time of his departure, he had only been with the team for about three months. 

Among other shake ups to the team’s analytics department was the addition of Ryan Paganetti earlier this year. Doug Pederson added Paganetti as the team’s Director of Coaching Analytics after he was named the Jags’ head coach. The two previously worked together in Philadelphia.

As of right now, Shen is still listed on the Jags’ site. No formal announcement has been made by the Jaguars on Shen’s departure.

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.