Sunday, March 22, 2026

AEW WrestleDream 2023

AEW WrestleDream 2023
October 2023 - Seattle, Washington

CHAMPIONSHIP RUNDOWN: Coming into this show, the AEW World Champion was MJF, Saraya was the AEW Women's Champion, the TBS Champion was Kris Statlander, the TNT Champion was Christian, the World Trios Championships were held by Billy Gunn and The Acclaimed, and the AEW World Tag Team Champions were FTR. 



The first ever WrestleDream kicked off with MJF taking on The Righteous in a 2-on-1 handicap match for the Ring of Honor Tag Team Championships. This was mostly played for laughs and built around MJF's pre-match promo and crowd-pleasing spots (a hyped-up bodyslam and the Kangaroo Kick). I liked that MJF had to use leverage to get the eventual pin but Dutch and Vincent definitely didn't come out of this looking very strong. Of course, it's the Ring of Honor Tag Team Championships, not the AEW World Tag Team Championships so it's not like they were or even are considered a top prize. As someone who liked The Righteous, it was disappointing that any of their momentum was halted here. As was noted at the time, MJF not defending his AEW World Championship on this show was a real missed opportunity as even a 10-minute pseudo-squash would've probably been better than this. Not my thing, but excessively panned on Cagematch. For what this was, it had the crowd engaged. (2/5)

Eddie Kingston took on Katsuyori Shibata in the next match with both men putting their respective championships on the line (Kingston being the ROH World Champion and Shibata being the NJPW Openweight Champion). This was meant to be an homage to 90s Japanese wrestling with its physicality and deliberate pacing built around snug submission and stiff strikes, but paying homage can only carry a match so far before you start to want something fresh or original to differentiate it from what its source material. I'm not sure this match had anything new to say and ended up feeling a bit longer than its 10-minute runtime. (1.5/5)

Kris Statlander defended her TBS Championship against Julia Hart of the House of Black in the next match. I dug this one. Statlander hit a killer vertical suplex early before they went to the outside. Hart gained control by tripping Stat up and she took a nasty bump on the apron. Hart hit an ugly off-the-back senton a few minutes later but I appreciated how much these two "went for it" despite not getting too many minutes. Stat hit a beautiful running knee and, after some slight interference from Brody King, slapped the mist out of Hart's mouth before she could use it. Stat performed a ridiculous deadlift German suplex. They eventually got onto the top rope where Hart flipped Stat off the top rope. Hart hit a moonsault (with Stat not even attempting to roll out of the way, which was a bit noticeable) but then Statlander countered a submission attempt into a tombstone, maintained her grip and hit her with the Sunday Night Fever for 3. This was too short to be considered great and there was some obvious cooperation/telegraphing at times, but this exceeded my expectations quite a bit and both women hit some really good-looking offense. A very good sub-10 minute match and the best on the show up till that point. (3/5)

The next match was to decide who would be the Number One Contenders for the AEW World Tag Team Championships - The Gunns vs. The Lucha Bros vs. Orange Cassidy and HOOK vs. The Young Bucks. Fenix came into this match as the AEW International Champion, having won the title in very surprising fashion after Jon Moxley called an audible to take the L when he realized he was hurt during their match a few days before this. Fenix sold how much the fight with Mox had taken out of him from the start as he started the contest against Nick Jackson and then Orange Cassidy. The Gunns took out the Bros on the outside and then tried to pin one another, but the ref wouldn't count it. In came the Bucks to drop them with superkicks as the match devolved into a series of tandem spots and it became unclear who was even legal. HOOK and Matt Jackson squared off with both men delivering body shots and trading Northern Lights Suplexes. This led to a multi-man vertical suplex spot as Schiavone noted that Rey Fenix had seemingly been taken out of the match entirely. Pentagon came in but couldn't get much offense in. The match slowed and got a little wonky when The Gunns and HOOK had their stretch, but Pentagon eventually got the hot tag and the match shifted back into the hands of the more experienced workers. HOOK attempted to apply the Redrum on Austin Gunn but Nick Jackson hit the 450 to break it up. We got a cool finishing sequence from there that featured a unique Pentagon/Matt Jackson combo move in which Penta delivered a cradle piledriver on Cassidy while also having HOOK locked up on his back. The Bucks got the victory from there with a BTE Trigger. This felt like they were holding back a bit and purposefully not trying to burn out the crowd with dives or intricate sequences, which isn't exactly what one might expect from a match involving The Bucks, Pentagon, and OC. It was solid but a bit underwhelming. (3/5)

Swerve Strickland vs. "Hangman" Adam Page in a grudge match followed. This was the first match between these two, the start of an epic rivalry that would bring us some of the most violent matches of the past few years. Swerve was the hometown hero at this show and Page played the heel from the very start. Lots of signature moves out of both guys early on which gave things a 50/50 feel until Page caught Swerve with a powerbomb on the apron and then the barricade before hitting him with the moonsault to the floor. Swerve kicked out of a pop-up Ligerbomb and went to the outside. Page came at him with a tope and then whipped him into the barricade to maintain control. Page delivered a flying clothesline from the top for 2 and a deadlift German Suplex, but Swerve rallied with a Flatliner and then a brainbuster. Strickland followed it up with a nifty backbreaker and went to the top, but Page followed him up to try to bring him down with a superplex. Swerve fought back and hit him with a Swerve Stomp and then a House Call for 2.5. Page went to the apron and evaded another Stomp but got pulled hard into the post. Swerve went for a piledriver on the steps but Page countered it into a Deadeye! Page tried to set up Swerve for the Buckshot but Strickland prevented it by narrowing the gap and not giving him enough space to work. Page attempted one after biting Swerve's hand but Strickland countered it with an armbar and then stepped on Page's bent wrist! Nasty stuff! Page rolled to the apron and was getting looked at by the doctor but Page hit him with another Stomp! And then a 450 on the injured arm for 2.5! Great sequence there that could've been a believable finish. Swerve went for another armbar but Page got his foot on the bottom rope. I didn't love the first Stomp spot because it required too much of Page's cooperation, but the apron one was beautiful. The home stretch was really good with more counters and Prince Nana pulling Swerve's foot onto the rope to save him from a pin. This allowed Swerve to hit Page with Nana's crown when he attempted a Buckshot Lariat and nearly ending the match. From there, Swerve hit two more Last Calls and then the Big Pressure (JML Driver) to finish Hangman off. This was an excellent match that showcased Page and Swerve's chemistry and toughness. (3.5/5)

Wheeler Yuta took on Ricky Starks in the next match. I liked that they had Moxley on commentary but am not sure they needed Good Ol' JR too. Yuta is a bit like Adam Cole in that he doesn't have a great "look," though at least he's reasonably tall and his moveset plays to his strengths - submissions, quickness - and isn't built around shit moves like Panama Sunrise which require obvious cooperation from his opponent. Starks doesn't look all that much bigger, but he's more muscular (I doubt that his true height is 6'0'', though). This felt like a TV match more than anything and seemed to hint towards a Ricky Starks/Jon Moxley match that I don't recall ever happening. Not bad, but not particularly memorable. (2.5/5)

Bryan Danielson vs. Zack Sabre Jr. in a match to determine the best technical wrestler in the world was next. I enjoyed the hell out of this, though I think it would've been an even stronger presentation without Moxley and JR on commentary. JR had little input aside from the occasional bit of praise and seemed to be "drowned out" by Mox, who talked over most of the match. Unlike Yuta and Starks, a much "colder" bout that benefitted from Mox's energy, this was the kind of match where silence would've spoke volumes as the action in the ring told the story better than any narrator could. Commentary aside, this was maybe just slightly underwhelming due to its finish, which saw Danielson take Sabre out with two Baisuku Knees rather than the expected submission finish that I (and maybe most fans) were hoping for. I loved Sabre's work on Danielson's arm throughout the match, especially the way his cut-offs targeted the Dragon's previously-injured forearm. I loved the mirror work on display at times. The crowd was hot for this from beginning to end too. Its rare when a match goes 20+ minutes and you still wish it went another 5-6 but this is that kind of match because all the work was so good and, somehow, it didn't even really feel like both guys had reached their limit. I wanted to enjoy this match more, but it didn't quite reach the level of greatness I was hoping for/expecting. A hair short of must-see but, as is often the case for elite-level workers like Danielson, this sort of match from most any other talent would probably be a career-best but for him wouldn't even rank in the top 20. (3.5/5)

A six-man match pitting Kenny Omega, Chris Jericho, and Kota Ibushi against Don Callis' Konosuke Takeshita, Sammy Guevara, and Will Ospreay followed. Good for what it was, but I wish they would've shaved 3-4 minutes from this match and given it to Danielson and Sabre Jr. Everyone "got their shit in," though it was a bit noticeable how much Ibushi was "protected" and I wonder if he wasn't actually 100% for this match. You could tell that everyone in this match was able to take a bit of a night off because they were able to spread the wealth a bit, but that also made this feel a bit perfunctory rather than a super-important, intense match of consequence. Because of the star power and the crowd's enthusiasm, this felt "bigger" than a Dynamite main event - something that couldn't be said of some of the matches on this card - but this was still far from "must see." (2.5/5)

Aussie Open - Kyle Fletcher and Mark Davis - challenged FTR for the AEW World Tag Team Championships in the next match. I liked this a good bit, but the crowd seemed pretty burned out and uninterested at times. Watching these shows in chunks really helps in that. By this point in the evening, the crowd had seen basically every big "name" on the AEW roster so making them care about an FTR/Aussie Open match was an uphil battle. Fortunaely, both teams are top-notch, deliver excellent tandem offense, and have great timing. I'd also give credit to Mark Davis for not just working through his wrist injury, but weaving it into the match to the point that I had to look up whether or not it was legitimate and not part of the plan. (3/5)

Main event time - Darby Allin vs. Christian in a 2-out-of-3 Falls Match for the AEW TNT Championship. Darby came in as the hometown hero seeking revenge for Christian's cruel verbal attacks against his family (and that of his trainer, Buddy Wayne, who had passed away in 2017). Speaking of Darby, as expected, he took some absolutely hellacious bumps throughout this match but the spots built around the steel steps were especially gnarly and dangerous (as Christian looked too gassed to perform them safely). I loved the first fall ending with Darby getting something a bit like a "flash pin" and catching Christian off guard and then Christian being forced to get dirty to even things up. This was very in-tune with his character at the time. The 3rd fall was extra rough and violent with Christian exposing the wooden beams underneath the ring mat. Would exposing the wood lead to a DQ? I don't think so (as its not using a foreign object but just modifying the ring...though, that does make me wonder if anyone's ever been disqualified for uncovering the turnbuckle pad). Anyway...the Nick Wayne heel turn was fairly predictable but at least the live crowd "bought in." I don't understand why it took so long for Sting to show up (and why, when he did come out, he looked pretty banged up). Also, did he forget his signature baseball bat? His arrival and Killswitch's arrival both seemed to be messed up in terms of timing and execution. Before they could deliver a Con-Chair-To to the Stinger, we got the debut of Adam Copeland. I liked Copeland's video, I thought the crowd response came off well, and I thought Copeland's spears looked good here (and it was great heel work by Christian to be the only one to avoid one), but him posing and playing to the crowd before saving Sting and Darby was silly and those "moments" could've been saved for after he had dispatched the heels. All in all, this match (and I'm including the post-match) had some very good elements but also some that I was less pleased with. (3.5/5)


Earning a Kwang Score of 2.5-out-of-5 on the Kwang Meter, WrestleDream 2023 starts out slow with two mediocre matches before course-correcting with a strong TBS Championship match, the 4-way tag match, and the Hangman/Swerve bout. While Yuta/Starks felt like a TV match, Sabre Jr. and Danielson, the six man, and the World Tag Team Titles match were all good-to-great (though I wouldn't consider any of them Match of the Year candidates). The main event was a bit of a mixed bag as Darby put on a tremendous performance, but Nick Wayne's predictable turn and the weirdly timed Sting "save" were frustrating in their illogical execution. Adam Copeland's debut in AEW was a cool moment for what it was and, at the time, I can understand Tony Khan wanting it to be the last thing the fans saw...but, knowing now that leaning into the "sports-entertainment" side of things didn't necessarily yield great results in terms of raising viewership or even engagement from the die-hard AEW fanbase, I almost wonder if they shouldn't have swapped it out with the Bryan/Sabre Jr. match, which must better defined what makes AEW different than the WWE. 

FINAL RATING - Watch It...With More Remote in Hand

Random Matches




Shinya Hashimoto vs. Takoa Omori (12/23/2000, NOAH): An interesting match in the sense that it offers a story that American fans unfamiliar with NOAH can understand, but far from "must see." Omori comes in with some confidence and gets a big entrance, but Hashimoto basically decimates him in under 10 minutes in what I believe was Hash's NOAH debut. Immediately after the match, he starts calling out Misawa, building to a 1-on-1 match that I don't think ever happened. Reading the reviews on Cagematch, I was a bit surprised that this match is known for its lack of cooperation as I just thought it was another day in the office for Hashimoto and his usual stiff chops and kicks (plus, the finish, a huge brainbuster, is not the type of move you want to dead-weight somebody on). I can see why some people really like this match, but I guess I was expecting something a bit "meatier." (2/5)


Ted Dibiase vs. Jumbo Tsuruta (03/14/1978, AJPW): A bit boring unless you're super into "human game of chess"-type matches that are all about leverage and technical proficiency. DiBiase looks to be about 19 years old in this match (he was closer to 24) and Jumbo is also in his mid-20s. I haven't seen a ton of 70s wrestling from Japan or really anywhere, but I've seen more thrilling and entertaining stuff than this. Not my cup of tea. (1.5/5)


Yumiko Hotta vs. Reggie Bennett (09/02/1995, AJW): Reggie Bennett shows how tough and resilient she is in this losing effort to Hotta, who actually reins in some of her unprofessional/overly stiff tendencies in this match. This is not a mat classic, though there are some actual submissions applied and suplexes and what not. As Bennett says in her post-match interview, she's a barroom brawler and a pro-wrestler, differentiating herself from Hotta's martial arts background, and this match does play like a clash of wrestling styles (as well as a squint-and-you'll-see-it David vs. Goliath match with Bennett being the powerhouse). Inessential viewing. (2.5/5)


Dave "Fit" Finlay vs. Batista (12/02/2006, WWE): Not as good as I wish it was considering I'm a fan of Finlay and not a Batista hater. With Finlay, you always get stuff that makes logical sense and is rooted in psychology, but what may hurt the match more than anything Finlay and Batista actually do is the production around it. Michael Cole and JBL are insufferable on commentary, leaning way, way too far into an antagonistic dynamic full of petty slights and jabs that detract from the match. (To be fair, JBL had only become a regular commentary on SmackDown about 6 months before this.) I didn't love the "schmoz" finish, but understand it was done to build up to the Armageddon main event (which saw Batista team with Cena to take on Booker T and Finlay). (2/5)



Eddie Kingston vs. Naomichi Marufuji (08/28/2022, House of Glory): As someone that is very new to seeing Marufuji, I must admit to being a bit underwhelmed at times and was not impressed by what he and Kingston did here. The match goes under 8 minutes and is mostly just chest chops and slaps (and a notable Sliced Bread from Marufuji). With them focusing so much on strikes, you would think both guys would really lay them in, but after the first couple, nothing really lands and the closing stretch is especially weak. Even the commentators seemed to be expecting something a bit more epic than this, though I did read one review that mentioned Marufuji may have come into this match injured. A disappointment. Steer clear even if you're a fan of both guys. (1.5/5)




Roddy Piper vs. Jimmy Snuka (07/15/1984, WWE): This was a fun one with lots of energetic bumping and selling out of Piper and Snuka getting to be the badass face in front of a rabid crowd that wants to see him murder his opponent. Oops, probably shouldn't mention murder and Snuka in the same sentence. Anyways, the finish is inconclusive, but the action leading up to it is plenty exciting (though it does ebb-and-flow a bit between really cool moments and just sorta commonplace brawling and theatrics you've seen a dozen times before). Snuka hits a hell of a dive towards the end that is really fun to see. Not a match I'd consider "must see" personally, but I totally get why fans of this era, of this style, and of Piper especially would consider this to be a hidden gem. (3/5)



Aja Kong and Kyoko Inoue vs. Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda (08/09/1997, AJW): Another incredible match out of Kyoko Inoue (and Aja Kong for that matter). This is a hellacious tag team brawl that, if it isn't officially a "No DQ," is wrestled like one as we get chairs and crowd-brawling from the very start. Lots of lots of really stick strikes and slams and powerbombs and I loved when Inoue and Aja Kong applied stereo submissions (and did Kyoko's signature dance together). Mita and Shimoda came across as super tough and determined challengers but took a hell of a beating throughout. A fire extinguisher came into play at one point and I don't think it was "gigged" as the chemicals it puts into the air really do seem to cause respiratory issues for the fans, announcers, and even the wrestlers themselves. Kong's splashes look painful as all hell. Some of the maneuvers performed on chairs laying in the ring were considerably ahead of their time. The finish is definitive and earned, though maybe a touch underwhelming after all the hell the two teams put eachother through. An absolute joy to watch if you're into joshi brawls or are looking for a place to start. (4/5)



Manami Toyota Gaunlet Match (12/25/1995, AJW): As someone else wrote on Cagematch, I didn't understand this at all - what the rules were, why it was happening, anything about it...but there is some fun in seeing Manami Toyota, an absolute legend in Japan, take on nineteen different opponents for roughly 90-120 seconds each. She pins some, she gets pinned by some, some just float in and out of the "match" when another competitor takes a powder - it's unclear what exactly is happening aside from Toyota just working her way through an incredible test of endurance and toughness. Kyoko Inoue and Aja Kong were the most recognizable challengers, though some of the other wrestlers like Mita and Shimoda were familiar too. It's hard to rate something like this because it is such a different type of match than anything I'd seen before, but there were enough really cool moments to make it work for me as a viewer. (3/5)


Mitsuharu Misawa vs. Naomichi Marufuji (12/10/2006, NOAH): This one started off a bit slow to me with Misawa looking his age a bit, but then got more exciting as Marufuji started to "throw bombs" and the drama behind the story - the New Wave vs. the Old Guard - ramped up. At 44, Misawa takes some nasty bumps to prove he was still capable and willing to deliver what was needed to make for a memorable, hard-hitting match, but it's also clear that he is not the same Misawa of 5 years earlier, let alone 10 (Misawa would pass away in 2009). I wouldn't go as far as to call this a "carry job" because that implies Misawa doesn't take a whole ton of punishment, including some on the arena floor, or even deliver some good offense himself - his suicide dive is still a thing of beauty - but this is Marufuji keeping things at a pace that works for the veteran and building things slowly until we get to the big spots in the latter half of the match. This is good enough and interesting enough and wrestled in front of a hot enough crowd for it to be "above average," but its not the most comfortable watch and it does take a minute to kick into a higher gear. (3/5)


Genichiro Tenryu and Yoshinari Ogawa vs. Takeshi Morishima and Masao Inoue (05/11/2013, NOAH): A fun match for its comedic elements - Masao Inoue and Morishima's interplay, in particular - but this nothing I'd go out of my way to see. Tenryu looks and works his age. Ogawa does most of the heavy lifting for his team, but I expected a "bigger" performance out of him too. (2/5)



Nick Bockwinkel and Ray Stevens vs. Red Bastien and Billy Robinson (11/06/1973, AWA): I'd always heard how great Billy Robinson was and I saw some of it here, though I imagine that this was not even the most representative match of his style as it was a 2-out-of-3 falls "studio" tag match. His agility is spectacular. This is an action-packed match and the crowd is into it, though it didn't hook me the same as some of the posters on Cagematch who called this an all-timer. Going into this match being more familiar with the rivalry and context probably would've helped. (3/5)



Kyoko Inoue and Aja Kong vs. Manami Toyota and Blizzard Yuki (04/02/1995, AJW): I enjoyed the heck out of this one, just as I suspected I would considering that 3-out-of-4 of the competitors are among my current favorite wrestlers, male or female. Blizzard Yuki holds her own, but the other three are why one should check this match out. Kong and Inoue's teamwork is funner in the 1997 match, but both have great chemistry with Toyota, who is excellent in this match. Some great nearfalls in the closing stretch and all the big signature spots one would expect from Kong, Kyoko, and Toyota. Maybe just a hair short of "must see," but very strong. (3.5/5)



Shinya Hashimoto and Toshiaki Kawada vs. Mark Coleman and Kevin Randleman (03/07/2004, HUSTLE): Doing some reading about HUSTLE, I was surprised to learn that the promotion had a reputation for being wacky and very, very different from the more serious puro resu wrestling promotions of the time because this match felt plenty serious and "shoot-based" to me. Coleman and Randleman were renowned MMA fighters (Coleman being the subject of The Smashing Machine) and bring their legitimate wrestling style to this match, while Hashimoto and Kawada are obviously known for their striking (specifically kicks). The clash of techniques and unpredictability of Coleman and Randleman, who were relative newcomers to the world of pro-wrestling, makes for an interesting watch. Loved Kawada's running boot in the corner to Coleman, which had to hurt. I didn't like the finish, an out-of-nowhere TKO victory for Randleman on Hashimoto, as it seemed like it was designed to prevent anybody from taking a pin or submitting (without just going with a more overt DQ). (2.5/5)


                                       
Mayumi Ozaki vs. Dynamite Kansai (03/17/1995, JWP): Kickass, bloody, violent street fight - more like a chain match, to be honest - with Ozaki looking almost gleeful as she uses every weapon she can find to punish Kansai. Kansai had the size disadvantage, but Ozaki brings a level of craziness to her hardcore matches that makes her incredibly dangerous (at one point she even starts biting Kansai's head wound!). Heated, wild brawling at its best and thoroughly entertaining from beginning to end. This is not going to be everyone's cup of tea, but fans of ECW at its most hardcore will recognize and appreciate what these two did. (4/5)



Kensuke Sasaki, Katsuhiko Nakajima, and Takeshi Morishima vs. Genichiro Tenryu, Yoshinari Ogawa, and Kotaro Suzuki (09/27/2009, NOAH): This was a hoot of a match thanks to the great work of Morishima, Sasaki, Ogawa, and an aged-but-still-game Tenryu. There were multiple Misawa tribute spots that I caught, but the crowd probably picked up on even more. This seemed like a match that Misawa himself would've dug because of the layers of story involved with Tenryu and Ogawa having history with Misawa dating back to the 80s and Kotaro Suzuki being one of his proteges in NOAH. I also really liked that they sprinkled some comedy into the match as Ogawa is always good at doing the little chickenshit heel stuff and there was a funny spot when Suzuki attempted a Tiger Drive on the monstrous Morishima. I read one review of this match that criticized the lack of story, but the story seemed pretty clear to me with the babyfaces - a team comprised of two legends (well, Ogawa is a legend to me) and Misawa's protege Suzuki - taking on a powerful team of brash, disrespectful heels in tribute to the ultimate babyface of Japanese wrestling, their fallen friend. There was a bit of a lull in the middle of the match, but this was mostly action-packed and good. (3/5)



Yoshinari Ogawa vs. Jun Akiyama (04/07/2002, NOAH): This has to be up there as one of the biggest upsets in pro-wrestling history, not just in NOAH or Japan or of the decade. Jun Akiyama was built up as something of a "5th Pillar," though obviously of a generation after Misawa, Kawada, Taue, and Kobashi. His reign as the GHC Champion had lasted over 250 days by this point and he had defeated his mentor Misawa to capture the title. Akiyama was very much "The Man" while Ogawa had, to my knowledge, always been booked and presented as a weaker, less serious competitor who had skill, but also could be cowardly and fight dirty. Akiyama comes into the match with a ton of confidence, but ends up getting cradled for a shocking pinfall loss in under 5 minutes. As a booking choice, the finish has considerable criticisms but it is a great, surprising "moment" in a main event match that I'm sure most fans expected to not only go longer but also have a very, very different ending. Its hard to rate a match like this as must-see because it doesn't really have much to it, but they did do a lot in the little bit of time they had and there is no downplaying how surprising the finish was. (3/5)



Manami Toyota and Toshiyo Yamada vs. Yumiko Hotta and Kyoko Inoue (02/18/1994, AJW): This received a very high 4.5 stars from Meltzer in the Observer and while I won't go nearly that high in my rating, I can see why, at the time, this would've been considered great. Toyota is incredible in this, a real master of pacing her matches to spread out the big crowd-pleasing signature spots without it ever feeling like a formula. She takes a ton of punishment throughout, including being hooked up in a camel clutch by Inoue which leaves her vulnerable to a brutal kick to the chest by Hotta. I dug Indian Deathlock-esque submission that Toyota applied early. I liked when Toyota went for one of her trademark dropkicks but got caught by Inoue, who then spun her around for the airplane spin, though it's far from an original spot. Still cool. Another good match featuring the ultra-reliable Toyota and Inoue. (3/5)



Jeff Hardy vs. Jushin Thunder Liger (08/27/2016, NEW): More of a "curio" than a truly great match, this happening in 2016 means that both guys are well, well past their prime and we don't get nearly the amount of big signature high spots that we would've gotten had these done battle a decade or, better even, 15 years prior. Liger hits a frog splash late for a good nearfall, but eventually Hardy gets the W because he was the bigger star in America. This was pretty heatless too because while Hardy was perpetually over, Liger also had his fair share of supporters and didn't "heel it up" enough to add tension or conflict to what was basically a Legend vs. Legend match. The highlight was Hardy taking a nasty back bump onto one of those stiff, thick plastic tables at ringside. Weirdly enough, after watching several of Hardy's matches in TNA from 5-6 years earlier, he looked to be more motivated here than he did when he was considerably younger and was being pushed at the top of the card. (2.5/5)


Hector Guerrero and Chavo Guerrero vs. Ted DiBiase and Steve Williams (07/26/1985, Houston Wrestling): This was a cage match for the Mid-South Tag Team Championships held by DiBiase and Williams. I've now watched more than a few Ted DiBiase matches from pre-WWE and I still don't see an "all-time great worker," though he'll probably still make my Greatest Wrestler Ever list just based on his reliability and heel work as the Million Dollar Man. "Dr. Death" is usually a funner watch too but there was a shortage of big power moves in this one. The Guerreros didn't impress me much either here. We get blood and the crowd is certainly hot for this, but the ref turning heel for the finish made the whole thing seem pointlessly long. You know something isn't great when you check the runtime and feel like it went 4-5 minutes longer (this match was barely 12). (1.5/5)


Akira Taue vs. Big Bubba (Big Bossman) (07/29/1993, AJPW): According to Cagematch (I had to look it up), Ray Traylor had left the WWE in the late winter/early spring of 93', did a few one-offs for the USWA and in Australia (where he faced Nailz of all people), and then did a tour in Japan, which is what led to this match. My first thought was that its crazy how relatively "small" Taue looks in the ring against Bubba, especially as Taue was sort of known for being one of the larger heavyweights of the AJPW scene in the 80s and 90s. Not a bad match, but nothing super special to see. I'm not sure how familiar these two guys were with each other, but they seemed to know each other's signature moves well enough. (2.5/5)


KENTA vs. Kenta Kobashi (10/09/2004, NOAH): You don't need to know much "story" here aside from Kobashi being the veteran/legend and KENTA being the young rising star. KENTA comes out of the gates trying to use his speed and strikes, but Kobashi's chops cannot be matched. I still thought Kobashi did a great job of selling KENTA as a legitimate threat despite the clear size difference. When Kobashi takes over, KENTA pays for his confidence for an extended period but KENTA does get in some excellent offense of his own, including a brilliant tease of the Burning Hammer (he ends up delivering a GTS to the back of Kobashi's skull that doesn't look too great instead). Not every piece of offense looked too good, but most of it - especially Kobashi's powerbombs - were jaw-dropping. I didn't love this match as much as others on Cagematch - where it is hovering above an 8 - but if you're into super stiff chops and kicks, this will be right up your alley. (3.5/5)


Manami Toyota vs. Kyoko Inoue (05/07/1995, AJW): One of the most controversial matches to ever get named Match of the Year int The Observer, this match has so much going for it - a tremendous opening stretch, lots and lots of insane head drops and falling back elbow drops and dropkicks galore and nifty submissions - but also so many things that work against it. The match is best described as a near hour-long sprint (on YouTube the match is only about 50-52 minutes so I'm not sure if I watched a "clipped" version or what, but it didn't seem to be) as Toyota and Inoue go to war with countless nearfalls - many of which have such an overdramatic count by the ref that they actually deter from the match. We get some crowd brawling and a table spot and it is undoubtedly a remarkable show of endurance by both women to fight for so long...but the time limit draw finish is a total letdown. The crowd was into this way more than I was despite having such an excellent start. (2/5)


Kota Ibushi vs. Claudio Castagnoli (04/12/2008, NOAH): Considering the reputation and abilities of both men, I was expecting to like this match considerably more than I did. I'm not sure if Claudio intentionally wanted to slow things down a bit and work a match that wasn't super spot-heavy, but this was not the "fireworks show" I expected. Perfectly fine match, but Claudio has become a much, much more interesting worker since this one (and the same can be said for Ibushi, I guess). I really liked Ibushi's devastating back-flip double knee-drop off the guardrail. (2.5/5)


Kenny Omega vs. Pentagon Jr. (09/01/2018): Billed as the "Biggest Independent Wrestling Show Ever," the first ever All In show was the precursor to the formation of All Elite Wrestling and this was the main event. The crowd was red hot for this and it did have "big match feel"...but, watching this years later without all the "buzz" of the event itself and only being able to take in the atmosphere secondhand, the match isn't much more than a Greatest Hits set. Of course, with some of those hits being brutal V-Triggers and a package piledriver on the apron, this isn't a bad thing at all, but it does mean the match doesn't really offer anything new beyond seeing two icons of independent wrestling/lucha libre going move-for-move. At one point, Omega dropped Pentagon Jr. on what looked like the top of his head, but somehow the match didn't end there. Undeniably good, understandably great to many, but this isn't a match I think has that "must see" quality that separates it from the pack. (3/5)


Yoshinari Ogawa/Zack Sabre Jr./Hitoshi Kumano vs. Taichi/El Desperado/Taka Michinoku (1/??/2015, NOAH): According to Cagematch, these two teams had 3 matches in 2015 and all were fairly similar so I wasn't able to determine which one this was. Even their runtimes - a little under 11 minutes - were near identical. Anyway...I love me some Ogawa and he was the highlight for me here while Sabre Jr. didn't really seem to get much offense in and was just sorta there. Haven't seen any of Taka Michinoku post-WWE, it was also kinda cool to see him as the veteran heel here. Not bad stuff, but not really anything great. (2.5/5)


Jon Moxley and Claudio Castignoli vs. Hechicero and Konosuke Takeshita (03/11/2026, AEW): Caught this on Dynamite and was maybe hoping for something a bit more fun, but this was fine for what it us. Its a booking decision/question but, with Okada being on the show later, I would've had him involved in this match as Takeshita's partner not only to continue the long-simmering Takeshita/Okada rivalry but also because they have a much more interesting dynamic together period. Moxley and Castignoli are a good pairing, but they also aren't each other's best teammates. And so, in the end, this felt more like a tag team match involving 4 singles wrestlers rather than a tag team match between actual partners. The action was good and Takeshita and Moxley got big responses for their interactions - a good sign for their upcoming bout at Revolution - but I didn't find this to be anything above average as a whole. (2.5/5)


Kyle Fletcher vs. "Speedball" Mike Bailey (03/11/2026, AEW): This match got 5 stars in The Observer, but because Meltzer blew up his own rating scale, that doesn't mean the same thing as it once did. I wasn't as huge a fan of this, though it was very good. Kyle Fletcher is a fantastic worker and Bailey is really fun to watch but this was a bit predictable to me. You knew you were going to a fireworks show with lots of fast-paced sequences and high-flying and that's what you got. You knew the match was going to go close to the time limit and would either end in a draw or in some screwy way to protect Bailey and they went with a (relatively weak-looking) belt shot/interference. You knew what Callis would add to the commentary and that's what he added. That doesn't mean any of this was bad or dull or that the match lacked specific highlights - again, with Bailey and Fletcher being such great performers and being so willing to throw themselves into every bump and bust out full-force offense, you're guaranteed to see some awesome stuff - but that it never exceeded or subverted expectations. I wouldn't call it a "Good Match for Good Match's Sake" because there was at least some storyline development here and Bailey got to look like a potential singles champion, but I wouldn't consider this more "must see" than any other great match you'd get on Dynamite. (3/5)



Kyle Fletcher vs. Blake Christian (03/27/2024, ROH): This match was for Fletcher's Ring of Honor Television Championship and ran about 10 minutes. I was surprised that Christian kicked out of the running boot-into-the-brainbuster and kinda wish that would've been the finish because of how well it looked and how often the wrestlers in AEW (and ROH, by extension) do unnecessary finisher kick-outs in matches like this where its not really needed. Before that, the action was very good, but watching this roughly 2 years later, its clear how much Fletcher stepped up in 2025. At this point, you do get some of the cocky, brash character work, but not nearly as much as you get out of him today. Good enough TV match. (2.5/5)


Mitsuharu Misawa and Toshiaki Kawada vs. Yoshinari Ogawa and Jumbo Tsuruta (07/06/1991, AJPW): This was "clipped" at the start, but I'm not sure we missed much as everyone seemed pretty fresh at this point. Highlights included Ogawa's top rope stomp on Misawa and, later on, his use of "Kawada Kicks" on the man that made them famous (great heeling there), Jumbo's signature stuff all looking super crisp and painful, and some really great lariats. I don't think this ever comes close to reaching "must see" level but there's enough good in it to at least consider it average. (2.5/5)


Kenta Kobashi and KENTA vs. Mitsuharu Misawa and Naomichi Marufuji (01/26/2003, NOAH): This was good-not-great, with KENTA and Marufuji working a much faster, much more "junior heavyweight" style while Kobashi and Misawa do their heavyweight stuff, which kinda makes for an awkward start. Things pick up after an initial (rare) botch by Kobashi and Misawa on a dragon suplex attempt and we get to Marufuji taking a ton of offense from the Kentas. Kobashi eventually got the win with a series of nasty clotheslines. Solid. (3/5)


Manami Toyota and Sakie Hasegawa vs. Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoeu (08/30/1995, AJW): Another Toyota/Inoue encounter that went a touch too long for me to really love. One reviewer on PWO noted that these four put on a much better match in January (not sure if he meant 95' or 96'), but I can't compare it to much else aside from the lengthy and unlovable near-hour-long match that Toyota and Inoue had a few months before this. There are some really cool spots at times, the usual high-flying from Toyota and submissions from Kyoko Inoue, but this didn't have me at the edge of my seat from beginning to end the way their better matches have. I also thought that, once again, the referee did an awful job of maintaining a consistent count by pausing before the should-be 3 in order to add drama. (3/5)


Manami Toyota vs. Yumiko Hotta (01/22/1996, AJW): I have no idea why Yumiko Hotta was even allowed anywhere near Manami Toyota after this match as she blatantly kicks her in the head and face, full force, multiple times to the point that it is shocking Toyota is even able to finish the bout. Speaking of the finish, it was fairly sloppy and anti-climactic as it ended with a bit of a "your turn/my turn" exchange with Hotta attempting some powerbombs, not executing them, and then eating one from Toyota to end the match without being really worn down and "set up" for that to be the deathblow. Some how, despite getting kicked in the face throughout the match, its Hotta that is opened up in the early going. Of the things I did like in this match, there was a great moment when Toyota took the trophy they were fighting over and tried to crush Hotta's face with it on the ringside table. Maybe I've seen too many Toyota matches in too short of time to be blown away by her the way I was when I first started watching joshi, but this was almost too stiff and violent with too little selling to make me consider it great. (2.5/5)


Fit Finlay vs. Super Calo (01/28/1999, WCW): 1999 is bit of a strange time for WCW. By this point, the WWE was fully on top of the Monday Night Wars and WCW was desperately trying to stay relevant, but were still mired in the same nWo drama that they'd been in since at the late summer of 96', with much of the commentary during this match revolving around Eric Bischoff and Ric Flair's feud over control of the company. Meanwhile, in the ring, Finlay and Calo put on a good, physical back and forth with some fine offense out of Finlay and some good "fighting from underneath" heart out of Calo. Nothing super special here, but a decent TV match that probably would've been better if it had a real reason for happening or commentary played up that the winner would be "moving up the ranks." Just kinda there. (2/5)


Stan Hansen vs. Akira Taue (04/14/1993, AJPW): The YouTube video of this match is "clipped," but even in slightly abbreviated form, this is a solid hoss battle with Hansen and Taue both delivering all sorts of big lariats and even some dropkicks and a DDT on the floor out of Taue over the course of 10 minutes or so. Having now seen more of Stan Hansen over the past few years, I will say that while he may not mix it up 100% with his offense or anything, he was a more dynamic performer in his prime than I think I gave him credit for growing up. He has no problem taking bumps to the floor and on the floor and selling against Taue here and the match moves a good pace because of that effort. Far from must-see, but pretty solid. (3/5)


Swerve Strickland and Trevor Lee vs. The Young Bucks (01/23/2015, IWF): This was a fun tag bout - nothing super special - but interesting in the sense that it features Swerve before he was Swerve, when he was a bit more of a run-of-the-mill "spot guy," matching agility spots with the Jacksons here. Trevor Lee also showcased noticeably less character work than he would in TNA and NXT (as Cameron Grimes). The match goes about 15 minutes and is a really fun one, but the production is definitely "indie" and the venue is pretty darkly lit (which I don't actually mind). The Bucks are the Bucks - quick tandem offense, lots of energy, superkicks and flips - and it is no surprise why they were so over with the independent wrestling audience throughout the country at the time. Not must-see, but solid for sure. (3/5)


Akira Hokuto vs. Harley Saito (08/05/1983, AJW): Hokuto controls much of the early going of this match, which is not a bad thing at all when your offense is a good as hers is. Reading up on this, the match layout makes a ton of sense as Hokuto was a main event killer and Saito was not near her level on the card. Saito's offense isn't enough across the stretch of the match, but there are moments when she catches Hokuto with a big kick that establish her as a valiant fighter. Over on Cagematch, this has a surprisingly high score because, while it isn't an "epic," it tells its story effectively and Hokuto's charisma is undeniable. That's not enough to make it "must see" for me but it's certainly above your typical match. (3/5)

AEW Revolution 2026

AEW Revolution 2026
Los Angeles, CA - March 2026

CHAMPIONSHIP RUNDOWN: Coming into this show, the AEW World Heavyweight Champion was MJF, the TNT Champion was Kyle Fletcher, the TBS Champion was Willow Nightingale, the AEW World Tag Team Champions were FTR, Kazuchika Okada was the AEW International Champion, the World Trios Championships were held by Okada, Fletcher, and Mark Davis of the Don Callis Family, Jon Moxley was the Continental Champion, the AEW Women's World Champion was Thekla, the Women's World Tag Team Champions were Willow Nightingale and Harley Cameron (The Babes of Wrath), and the AEW National Champion was Ricochet. 

The show kicked off with the finale of the 21-man Blackjack Battle Royal for Ricochet's National Championship. I hate it when a title - held by an entrant - is put up in a battle royal as it really telegraphs that the champion is likely to be one of the last two men standing (which is what happened here). Jungle Boy won the match and the title but I have no idea why. Ricochet has been excellent in AEW when he's been featured prominently while Jack Perry arguably peaked as a tag worker years ago and hasn't been able to put it all together since his backstage run-in with CM Punk and subsequent Scapegoat run.

Next up - FTR vs. Young Bucks for FTR's AEW World Tag Team Championships. It really seemed like Nick Jackson wrestled the majority of this match. 3-out-of-4 competitors ended up bloodied. The Bucks' introduction involved a pre-match video featuring their kids and then the rest of the family was involved in the match too. With all these bells-and-whistles and with the match basically diving head-first into the deep end of violence without any sort of "build," the match felt like FTR and the Bucks opted to try to "wow" the crowd so they'd forget just how many times we've seen these two teams go at it and kick out of and steal eachother's finishers. Unable to tell a truly different story, we got the usual Greatest Hits in slightly different order and with the Bucks playing the sympathetic, hometown babyfaces. A good match, sure, but nothing...uh...revolutionary. Highlights included a really good suplex to the floor spot and I liked the definitive Super Shatter Machine finish, plus Stokely was great. The post-match saw the return of Adam "Cope" Copeland and Christian Cage, setting up what will likely end up being some sort of TLC in the near future. I'm guessing the plan all along was to re-ignite the FTR/Bucks feud to set to the table for Cope and Cage and a 3-way feud. (3/5)

Next up - Toni Storm vs. Marina Shafir. Shafir reminded me of Yumiko Hotta, only not as reckless with her kicks (which were still stiff as all hell, but not to the point that you wondered if she knew wrestling was a work). Storm has done an excellent job of helping make Shafir look like not just a legitimate threat in the ring, but a star worth paying attention to. Storm managed to eke out the W after a series of awesome hip attacks and then a shocking "tit biting" into a roll-up and, after celebrating on the ramp, we got the AEW debut of Ronda Rousey. I'll give some credit to TK here as he went with Rousey showing up out of the crowd and not by blasting "Bad Reputation," which made much more sense in kayfabe and also would've been pretty repetitive after the Cope and Cage return (though I'm a sucker for that song/entrance theme). A solid match and maybe even the best singles match of Shafir's career. (2.5/5)

Jon Moxley vs. Konosuke Takeshita for Moxley's AEW International Championship was next. I was not a fan of their time limit draw on Dynamite so I did not have high hopes for this one. This was a Superhero Fight with Moxley and Takeshita hitting each other with every big move they knew, springing up, hitting another one (or getting hit by another one), over and over for 20+ minutes. It was an incredible feat of stamina, endurance, and toughness, but I'm not a fan of "spamming" and no-selling and multiple finisher kickouts, which was basically all this match had to offer after the limbwork in the beginning (which would be ignored/re-emphasized depending on the sequence). Takeshita getting his black eye busted open was nasty and I almost wish Mox had managed to control more of the match for longer stretches to really allow Takeshita to get the crowd's sympathy a bit more. The post-match was a bit awkward too as Takeshita shook Mox's hand (a clear babyface move), the Death Riders celebrated, and then we got a kinda-bizarre Will Ospreay return video leading to him coming in and taking out all the Death Riders (which positions them as heels despite Moxley being presented as much more of a fan favorite over the past few months against the Callis Family and just in general). (3/5)

Willow Nightingale and Harley Cameron defended their AEW Women's Tag Team Championships against Megan Bayne and Lena Kross in the next match. I thought this delivered what it needed to as a bit of a "break" in the show after a very strong first 90 minutes (I watched this show in chunks, as usual) and also established Bayne and Kross - the Divine Dominion - as worthy champions. Certainly not "PPV worthy," but it was Willow and Kross's second match of the evening and played off of what happened earlier in the show between them with Willow selling an injury before the bell even rang. (2/5)

Swerve Strickland took on Brody King in a grudge match next. I really liked most of this match, though there were some elements I was less of a fan of - specifically Strickland lifting King up in a powerslam position at one point, which hurts his status as one of the few "monsters" in the company and, later on, King kicking out of House Call at one (though they kept the move strong by having him lose by a second one definitively). I was also a touch disappointed with the post-match as we saw the return of Kenny Omega when I think there is still plenty of gas in the Swerve/King tank and that their feud deserves another round (preferably with some sort of chain stipulation). (3/5)

Thekla defended her AEW Women's World Championship against Kris Statlander in a 2-out-of-3 falls match. I really liked the intensity throughout and, once again, how far Statlander was willing to push things to try to get this match over with a crowd that was maybe a bit spent after having already seen most every major star on the roster (including unadvertised appearances from Omega, Ospreay, Copeland, Christian, and Rousey). I liked the layout of this match too with Thekla having to cheat to win the first fall, Statlander resorting to increasingly violent throws and power moves to try to take her out, eventually landing the "Sunday" Night Special to tie things up, and then Thekla having to resort to even more trickery and interference to retain. My biggest gripe might actually be just how much punishment Thekla took as both the first fall and third fall really played up her role as a conniving heel who can't beat Statlander without some sort of advantage (including the use of a strap). Going toe-to-toe with her for so much of the 2nd fall showed Thekla's toughness, but emphasizing it can be a tricky move as it also hurts Statlander's credibility a bit (especially with the obvious size and strength advantage she has). A "good enough" match and I'm curious where both characters go next as this was one of the few matches that didn't feature a big "post-match" moment. (3/5)

Kevin Knight, "Speedball" Mike Bailey, and Mistico challenged The Don Callis Family's Mark Davis, Kazuchika Okada, and Kyle Fletcher for the AEW Trios Championship in the next match. I've been mostly underwhelmed with how the AEW has treated the Trios Championship over the past couple years, so I didn't come into this match with much investment. Thankfully for the competitors involved, the LA crowd was very much into it and very much behind Mistico (and the other luchadores on this card, as we'd see in the next match). Mark Davis was super impressive in this match while Okada felt like he was mostly just doing this match as a "cameo" (which is crazy considering how he could be being used for actual "dream match" scenarios). This also felt like something of a night off for Fletcher as he wasn't the focal point of the match or even attempting to steal the show the way he has the past few PPVs (and even increasingly on TV). At one point, Fletcher rolled into a Speedball top rope move and Schiavone had to basically cover why he would be positioning himself for it (Schiavone explained that he was trying to "roll away" from the move, but it was clear the opposite was true). There was also a sloppy Mistico pin break-up at one point. Aside from that, though, this was a ton of fun and the post-match celebration was clearly a big moment for the crowd and for Mistico as well. I was expecting Knight to turn on Speedball here - not to join the Callis Family necessarily but just to build to the rivalry they sorta hinted at some weeks back - but maybe they're saving that moment for when/if The Hurt Business returns? Another solid match, but not "must see." (3/5)

Bandido vs. Andrade El Idolo was next and, up till this point, would probably be my Match of the Night. While it went a minute or three too long (it went close to 21), with lots of kickouts to moves that could've/should've been the finish, it had an excellent opening, Andrade's striptease moment was mega over with the crowd, and some of the moves Bandido busted out towards the end were absolutely incredible and, in some cases, the first time I'd ever seen them (in the case of Bandido somehow hitting a Pele/heel kick while having Andrade in a fireman's carry, it didn't seem like the commentators had ever seen that before either). I'm still not 100% sure why they paired Andrade with Don Callis when the recipe for his success lies in being treated as a much more singular figure with - preferably - a female manager like Zelina Vega, but I'm a fan of him changing his look a bit (the lighter hair color, the braids, the decision to no longer rock baseball pants) and the much more narcissistic, self-absorbed gimmick he is leaning into. Maybe just a hair short of "must see." (3.5/5)

A Tornado Six-Man Tag followed with Darby Allin teaming with Orange Cassidy and Roderick Strong to take on "The Dogs" (Clark Connors, Dave Finlay, and Gabe Kidd). This was - somewhat surprisingly - my favorite tag team match of the night, though it was admittedly the least-structured and had the lowest stakes. What worked for me most about this match was that, with Darby and OC, you have two very clearly-defined and very engaging characters with enough "shtick" and signature moves to keep things really entertaining and exciting from beginning to end. I really loved Orange Cassidy doing his kick routine on the Dogs and getting brutalized for it, I loved the way the heels neutralized Darby for some of the match by tying him to the post, I loved Roderick Strong's offense (as usual). My only real complaint is that I'm not sure why they'd book a finish that makes your brand-new trio of supposed badasses look like immediate midcard fodder. I can understand any of the three losing in a singles match or even in a tag match, but as a cohesive unit, they should not be losing to a team of three singles wrestlers. (3.5/5)

Main event time (finally) - MJF defending the AEW World Heavyweight Championship against "Hangman" Adam Page in a Texas Death Match (with the added stipulation that if Page loses, he will never challenge for the AEW World Championship again - a not-so-subtle nod to the same stipulation Cody Rhodes once set for himself in the first year of AEW and that MJF ended up costing him). MJF had a fun pre-match video in which he pissed on Page's grave and then came out sporting Terry Funk ring attire. It did not take long for the match to spill into the stands. We got some glass involved fairly early as well, with MJF taking a bodyslam into the stuff and then getting dragged through it. Page then grabbed hold of some barbwire and "busted" MJF open with it (it was a blatant bladejob) before pulling it tight around MJF's mouth in a brutal-looking spot. Page pulled a table out on the outside but before he could use it, MJF hit him with a drop toe hold into a chair near the barricade. Back in the ring, MJF took a shard of glass and sliced Page's forehead open (again, another bladejob) and then bodyslammed Page into the rest of the glass in the center of the ring. MJF grabbed a broom to move the glass off the ring, giving Page a moment to rest. The broom got broken into peices and MJF jabbed Page in the head before leveling him with a chair to the back. MJF then pulled a SYRINGE out from the under the ring and jabbed it through Page's mouth! Ughggh! That is one spot I could certainly live without AEW ever having used in the first place and ever using it again. MJF left the syringe in his mouth and walked about the ring, grabbing the chair. He looked to hit Page in the head with the chair, but Page blocked it and hit him with a right hand (as he spit the syringe out). Page hit MJF with a chairshot to the back and then went to the floor to pull a barbwire-covered chair out from under the ring. When Page looked to use it, MJF hit an Alabama Slam that sent Page into it instead! Damn. MJF set up another table on the outside but this time he was cut-off and Page hit him with a Deadeye into the barbwire chair in the middle of the ring. Page sold some knee damage but was able to grab the chair and bash it into MJF's back repeatedly as the crowd cheered. Page followed it up with a fallaway slam into the chair (which was propped up in the corner) and MJF delivered some loud, vocal obscenity-laced selling. Page went for a moonsault with the chair - which was a dumb, unfitting spot from a logic standpoint - missed it and MJF threw the chair into his face to switch the tide. MJF didn't get much offense in, though, as Page hit him with an absolutely nasty Deadeye through the table near the ring (with the table not breaking immediately, they practically bounced off the thing, which looked extra painful). Both men broke the 10 count and ended up on the opposite apron (where another table had been placed many minutes earlier by Hangman). Page looked to hit another Deadeye but MJF countered with a bite to the skull - something that we'd seen multiple, multiple, multiple times on the show already, preventing it from feeling like a real moment - and hit a Tombstone Piledriver through the table! There was a time when that move would've been cause for a guy to spend the next 9 months at home. Hangman managed to beat the count and MJF rolled him into the ring. From here, things continued to ramp up in violence with dog collars, light tubes, MJF getting his head skewered, a barbwire table (which the fans were hoping Page would set aflame), and even a big spot where both men crashed through the table that controls the pyro off to the side of the entrance stage. The finish to this match - which went over 40 minutes - saw Page attempt a Buckshot Lariat only for MJF to counter it into a literal "hangman" choke with the chain, causing Page to pass out and MJF to be declared the winner. This was about as violent and hardcore as a main event match can get, which feels like something I end up typing every other AEW PPV. (4/5)


With a very respectable Kwang Score of 3.05, Revolution 2026 was a solid show that didn't deliver the same number of great matches as December's World's End show but never dipped too far below average. Some of the highlights of the show were the unadvertised appearances of Rousey, Omega, and Ospreay, none of which are reflected in the show's score but helped break-up the show's layout. AEW PPVs are never thin on good action, but some matches - the Women's Tag Team Championship bout and even the strong Trios contest - felt a bit like marquee television matches rather than PPV matches, but that also reflects the consistent quality of Dynamite and Collision as shows where you'll often see 15+ minute spirited, workrate-heavy matches. 

FINAL RATING - Watch It...With Remote in Hand