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Showing posts with label Will Ospreay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Will Ospreay. Show all posts

Friday, August 23, 2024

The SPOILER-FREE Let's Watch Some Wrestling AEW ALL IN Preview Blog!


 

Good Morning!


So it’s been tough sitting down to write lately. I don’t think I’ve been down on the products I keep up with -- if anything, I’m more excited for ALL IN than I’ve been for any show in a few months. I think it’s just a matter of the writing itself, you know? When I started things came really easily. I had a lot to say, AEW and WWE were doing interesting stuff, and I quickly found paying work in the field, so I was knocking out listicles for a website while also doing the blog as often as I could.


I don’t think I’m burnt out, per se. I still enjoy writing, and even though the paid work has gone from pro wrestling content to the tech, automotive, and tool articles I now write for SlashGear, I’m still having a good time writing those things since they’re in my wheelhouse. Also, I’m appreciative that ANYONE is willing to pay me to do this -- I’ve got limited experience and even less professional training, much less a degree. 


At the end of the day, though, it’s on me to keep doing this or to find something else. I’m incredibly fortunate in my personal life that I’m able to try to make this something, or to keep it what it is as I figure out what to do next. At nearly 45 years old I’m no spring chicken, but I also don’t want to believe that I can’t do anything new. I worked every position there was at an animal hospital for a decade after high school, until we got bought and I was replaced and forced out. Then I decided I’d learn to work on cars, spent an ungodly amount of money going to Lincoln Tech (because of a 3am commercial I watched while living with my dad) and working at four different shops over about 15 years. It was great, but it did a number on my body and really led me to have a different view of hard work -- going from more of an “I got mine” attitude to wanting to teach and help my younger coworkers and clients alike. And when that philosophy didn’t line up with what my last employer believed, I quit. My wife sent me and my best friend to a Royal Rumble, I started a blog, and here we are. 


The last several months have been a lot, which also makes it hard for me to settle down and write. My little friend Zelda -- we’ve talked a lot about her lately -- just brought me a tennis ball and is staring up at me as I write while enjoying a cigar in my garage, and keeps looking up hoping I’ll take a break and play. So, I’m gonna do that real quick, and then we’re going to get into the pro wrestling section of the Let’s Watch Some Wrestling blog -- a preview of this weekend’s big All Elite Wrestling show, All In, happening on Sunday in London, meaning a nice midday PPV for us here in the States.



It’s The Let’s Watch Some Wrestling ALL IN Preview!


[Ball was thrown, treats were distributed, Zelda is asleep at my feet.]


This year’s version of the show looks great. The crowd is, expectedly, smaller than last year’s, but that’s okay. AEW has had some smaller crowds and weaker storytelling over the last year, but I really feel like they’ve been on a roll these last few months. It’s still a big stadium show in an incredible venue, and this time around it feels like less of a showcase and more of a real card with long standing feuds coming to a head. As of this writing (an hour before Dynamite) we’ve got NINE matches set, with another one scheduled for the two hour (!) pre-show. I’d be willing to bet we’ll end up with at least 15 total when all is said and done, but that doesn’t preclude us from starting the preview now and adding more before I publish this on Friday…and I guess we’ll just hope Collision doesn’t add much more. 




ZERO HOUR: Kris Statlander and Stokely Hathaway versus Willow Nightingale and Tomohiro Ishii


This is the semi-finale of this long feud -- well, long for an AEW women’s rivalry anyways. The woman on the winning team will get to choose the stipulation for what I assume is the big blowoff match at All Out, the next AEW PPV that is coming in a couple weeks. One of the big complaints about last year’s All In / All Out setup is that there were literally six days between the shows, making ALL IN feel way more like an exhibition than a real fight card. This is the first in a number of rivalries that really feels earned, with Statlander relishing her heel character and Hathaway just leaning into his slimy manager persona. 


I think Statlander and Stoke will pick up the win here, because it makes more sense for the baddies to pick the stip and the most lovable face in all of pro wrestling to have to overcome the odds one more time. Ishii will chop the everloving shit out of Hathaway’s chest, and it’s gonna be hilarious/terrifying to watch -- and it’s important to remember that his reaction would be the same one 99% of us watching would have to a single one of those chops from the Stone Pitbull.




A Casino Gauntlet Match for a future AEW World Championship Match


With Orange Cassidy being the only named competitor in this gauntlet, it’s tough to pick a winner. However, AEW CEO Tony Khan made a point to say that there will be a ton of surprises appearing in this match, which always makes for a fun time. Popular opinion seems to be that Ricochet might make his debut for AEW here, and with talent from Mexico and Japan regularly appearing on AEW TV, who’s to say who’ll pop up? Smart money is on “Hangman” Adam Page to get the win and force his way into a match with longtime rival and current AEW champ Swerve Strickland, so I’ll go with him since HE HAS DONE NOTHING WRONG in his quest for vengeance against a man who literally did a home invasion and threatened his (admittedly unsupervised) baby during their last feud. 




“Timeless” Toni Storm © versus “The Glamour” Mariah May for the AEW Women’s World Championship


This might be the biggest storyline in All Elite Wrestling right now, Danielson’s retirement match notwithstanding. Toni Storm took a kinda dumb premise and transformed it into a heel you couldn’t help but love, a movie star from the silent era that somehow decided to become a pro wrestler. When Mariah May was folded into that story as Storm’s protege, we all knew the turn was coming, we just didn’t know who would do it or when. Mariah attacking Storm as May celebrated her victory (and the title shot that went with it) left Storm a bloody mess, and instantly elevated that partnership into a rivalry that these two earned. This match should be incredible, as both women are great wrestlers and storytellers. 


I think Mariah May almost has to win, as she’s a London native and deserving up-and-coming star. She’s also a legit star everywhere else she’s been, and while her promo work has been a little shaky she’s also not been given a lot of time to hone that skill in front of American crowds. I know folks more knowledgeable than me who followed her in Stardom, a Japanese women’s wrestling promotion, have more insight than me on her history, but as an AEW fan I think she’s just getting started, and I’m looking forward to seeing what she does next as her own superstar, rather than just Storm’s understudy. 




Maxwell Jacob Friedman © versus Will Ospreay for the AEW American Championship


MJF won the former AEW International Championship in a surprisingly (to me, anyway) divisive  hour-long match on Dynamite’s 500th show. The problem is that there are a number of fans that don’t like MJF OR Ospreay for a number of reasons, some personal and some professional. For someone who writes about this stuff on the internet, I guess I’m in the minority in that I don’t follow a whole lot of what these folks do outside of the TV shows. Which, while making me slightly uninformed on these behind-the-scenes goings-on, does mean I get to enjoy things without the specter of the performers being bastards in real life affecting my opinion. 


MJF has renamed the International Championship and, in the process, has become a jingoistic, thinly-veiled MAGA stereotype. Will Ospreay, a true generational talent in the ring, has been a baby-kissing, fan-loving good guy ever since he signed on to AEW’s full time roster. And even though Max just won the title a few weeks ago, the whole time-crunched storyline seems to be leading to our UK hero getting his win and his title back. The match will have a lot to live up to, and I can’t imagine they go another hour, so MJF and Ospreay will have to come up with a violent, hard-hitting affair that shows off both men’s strengths while also realizing that they aren’t the main event of this show. Given the pedigrees of both wrestlers, that shouldn’t be a problem.




Jack Perry © versus Darby Allin in a Coffin Match for the TNT Championship


I predicted Jack Perry bringing out a “real glass” coffin for this match, despite my general disdain for the Young Bucks’ insider jokes that seem to have leaked into most of AEW. But I like the Bucks aside from that. I like the Elite. I like Jack Perry, and this heel run has been incredible for him. Darby Allin is gonna get super murdered in this match, I think. After all, Perry just introduced a new title that he forged himself, reminiscent of that one guy we all know who learned how to make knives during the pandemic.

The match itself is probably going to be the most violent of the night, as these two have built up a healthy hatred of one another since Perry’s return. Darby doesn’t need a win here, and Perry is a great baddie who should hang on to gold (or whatever that belt is now) for a while.




Mercedes Moné versus Dr. Britt Baker, D.M.D. for the TBS Championship


You know, it’s okay to admit when you’re wrong. It’s also okay to change your opinions on stuff. I was VERY down on this match from the start, but the last couple weeks reminded me of a couple things. One, Mercedes is great in the ring, and that’s where the match takes place on Sunday. Her unending, insufferable promos will come to an end and we’ll see her in a real match against a real opponent with a real chance of winning, something we haven’t really had since Willow Nightingale lost the TBS Championship to Mercedes. And Britt Baker is doing her part to keep this interesting as well, carrying that contract signing on Dynamite and generally letting Mercedes heel it up and play to her strengths. I love the Diesel/HBK dynamic between Moné and Kamille too, and I’m really hoping Baker gets her muscle back in a returning Jamie Hayter, in Wembley Stadium, to a huge pop. 


All that being said, is it too soon for Moné to lose? I don’t think so. I don’t think it tarnishes her in any way to lose to the best homegrown performer in her division, and I think she’ll have a lot of fun blaming anyone and anything other than herself for her loss. So I’m going with Dr.  Britt Baker for the win here, with a returning Jamie Hayter to boot. One last note -- on her graphic, it says “Hayter Hits Hard,” but “Hayter Hits Harder” just rolls off the tongue better! But I digress…





Chris Jericho © versus HOOK in a Last Chance Match for the FTW Championship


Full disclosure: I jump around a lot when I write these previews. Sometimes I just have an idea of what I want to say, other times I just don’t want to write about a match. This one falls squarely in the latter category, and it’s the last entry for me. I do not like this version of Chris Jericho. And it’s not that I don’t “get” what he’s trying to do with the character, I just think it’s shitty to take a natural fan reaction to a real problem with a performer, and to decide the best way to address it is to just let said performer hang around and eat up TV time while acknowledging the fans’ dislike. 


But whatever. Jericho remains, as always. I love Big Bill and Brian Keith in their roles, and the inevitable breakup of yet another Jericho stable will hopefully lead to some great pushes for both of those guys. 


One-eyed HOOK hasn’t been super great either, but we already knew he wasn’t great on the mic. He’s a silent killer, a man so confident in his abilities that he turns his back on his opponents before his matches. His character has betrayed that lately, and it’s suffered for it. Give the kid an eyepatch, let these two have a short, hard-hitting match with the usual Jericho hijinks, interference, and creative weaponry. Get Taz’s title back in the family with a HOOK victory. Maybe bring Shibata and Samoa Joe back (if possible) to even the odds.




The Young Bucks © versus FTR versus The Acclaimed in a Three Way Tag Team Match for the AEW Tag Team Championship


I want to care about this match, since AEW was built on the importance of the tag team division when it was born. But with the cartoonishly evil corporate Bucks only popping up part-time, the unending FTR push, and the Acclaimed just not doing it for me lately I can’t. I’m sure I’ll enjoy the match, as all three teams can go in the ring. But does it matter if the Bucks keep the gold? They’ll still be EVPs, with all the rules-bending that allows. FTR holding the titles again means more of the same matches they’ve had before. And the Acclaimed seem closer to a breakup than a championship run. So I’ll go with the Young Bucks retaining, and hope I have some fun while watching this one.




The Patriarchy © versus Bang Bang Gang versus House of Black versus TBD in a Four Way London Ladder Match for the AEW World Trios Championship


This one is gonna rip. I know a lot of folks say they’re over ladder matches but this collection of talent is perfect for this format. Christian and sons are gonna have their hands full with teams consisting of *checks notes* a cocaine-addled gremlin and Billy Gunn’s kids, a literal death cult, and whatever other trio is pulled from the aforementioned gauntlet match to toss themselves around for this.


I don’t feel like there’s any straight-up good guys in this fight, although recently the Bang Bang Gang has been the closest to “morally upstanding.” I would rather the Patriarchy retain here, and save the big face pops for big face wins. 




Swerve Strickland © versus Bryan Danielson in a Title Versus Career Match for the AEW World Championship


I love that I have no idea what’s gonna happen here. We’ve been told Bryan Danielson’s family will be at ringside, and this whole year has put the American Dragon’s work in the looming shadow of his impending retirement from full-time work. (Speaking of, I thought it was great of Swerve to mention that little caveat by promising to hunt Danielson down on the indies or internationally if he ever decides to set foot in a wrestling ring again.) I respect the hell out of this obsessed professional wrestler who promised his daughter that he would call it quits when she reached a certain age, and I hope he’s able to do so. 


That being said, maybe now isn’t the time. Maybe Danielson, so well known for wanting to put his opponents over and refusing to win a championship time and time again, deserves to have a run as AEW World Champion before he’s done, both for the fans and for his own legacy. Maybe a few months as champ before dropping the title and calling it a career closer to home at Wrestle Dream is the move. 


I don’t feel like any of this would affect Swerve Strickland in the slightest. He’s got an angry cowboy hellbent on revenge nipping at his heels. He’s never been a truly upstanding champ, more of the “shades of gray” type of character that AEW loves to push. And Hangman Page, who has done nothing wrong, deserves his pound of flesh after this man literally invaded his home and threatened his child! Strickland has had a strong title run, albeit one that had a rocky start as (mostly bad-faith) arguments said he was booked weakly by not opening and closing every show immediately after winning the title from Samoa Joe. He’s looked like a true champ every time he cuts a promo, his matches are entertaining, and he rarely resorts to the cheap wins that many a heel champion relies on to retain their titles.


I keep going back and forth on this one. Danielson’s passionate promo after Swerve once again brought up Danielson’s family didn’t help matters -- I was locked in on Strickland prior to that. Now, I see Danielson winning clean in front of his family. Or the Hangman somehow costing Strickland his championship, keeping his promise to take everything Swerve cares about, no matter the cost. AEW often has a problem with its TV matches in that we can guess the winner pretty easily. Their pay-per-views, this one in particular, have been more nuanced, leaving people who write or fantasy book a ton of wiggle room to argue about plausible outcomes. 


But, in the name of accountability, I’ll say Bryan Danielson wins the AEW World Championship to close out ALL IN with the biggest YES! chant in recent memory.

And that’s it!

Enjoy the weekend, and I hope you’re as successful avoiding spoilers for Rampage and Collision as I’ve been. I’m really looking forward to ALL IN and I hope I see some of you liveskeeting on BlueSky. I tend to be quieter for PPVs because I have my buddy Adam over for them, but I’ll still pop in. And if you’ve got predictions, post them in the comments or mention me on social media with yours!


If you have questions, concerns, or comments, drop 'em in the comments section below! And follow me on Facebook, BlueSky and/or Instagram (although I rarely use that one) using the links on the right.


Thank you so much for reading. If you liked what you saw, consider telling your friends, mentioning Let’s Watch Some Wrestling on social media, or even buying me a hot cup of coffee using the Ko-Fi button. Have a good one, and I’ll see you back here next time, dear reader. Until then, Let’s Watch Some Wrestling!





Tuesday, April 23, 2024

A little bit about AEW Dynasty

 


Good Morning!

We’ve got this dog, Zelda. Well, actually, we’ve got two dogs, Ditka and Zelda. Zelda is our lovable, neurotic “replacement” dog. That is to say, when our beloved semi-foster dog, Frank the Pug, passed away during a routine surgery several years ago, we were heartbroken. We went to Rocky Mountain Puppy Rescue the next day and got her. Needless to say, it was a knee jerk reaction, but one that gave us the weirdest addition to our weird pack. 


Zelda is a terrier mix, but that’s about as far as we can figure on her lineage. She’s wiry, hairy, overly cuddly, and goes absolutely insane when people come into, or anywhere near, the house – not in an aggressive way, just in a “happy to see you” way. We love her, and despite the occasional diva attitude towards food, she loves us back. 


A strange thing has happened over the past few months, though. As we discussed, my little sidekick Mudge the Pug passed away on Christmas, and we have yet to decide if we want to take in another pup, especially since the other two dogs are getting older too. But Zelda has decided to take on more of a “dog” role in the house, as opposed to “weird overly cuddly child.” She’s bringing toys to me for the first 15-20 minutes I’m in the office, she plays fetch, she barks and plays – all things she never really did before. I wonder if she is trying to fill the void that the dumb little sister left. Of course, more often than not she decides to go full cute pupper right when I’m sitting down to work on something for the blog or SlashGear, which means I’m kind of an asshole in her eyes. That’s not fair! Be a pup when we’re hanging out!


It's a terrible thing, this dog owning. You know when you get into it you're going to outlive the things. You know you're going to love them, because they're willing to love you unconditionally. And you know the heartache you'll feel when they pass on. But you're still willing to risk it, because it's one of the best relationships you'll ever know. It's heartbreaking but in a way that reminds you that life is worth living, and that love is worth sharing, even if it's just with some dumb little furball that licks your face and sheds on your furniture.


Zelda is just so empathetic. On some level, she probably knows she's our "replacement," a mutt that was brought in to fill a pug-sized void in our hearts. My wife has been thinking about getting another pug, because we've kind of accepted that we're pug people. But while Ditka is our old guy, and our pugs are beloved memories, Zelda will always be special because of what she represents to me -- a little ball of fur that knows what our family needs, and is more than happy to change for the betterment of us all. That's a rare trait in any friendship, and one I don't think many of us have.

“It’s A Soap Opera With More Suplexes and Less Violence”

…in which I discuss the storylines that keep us watching week to week


I wanted to write about AEW Dynasty because I didn’t write about WrestleMania (I still might) but also because it was a fantastic show! There was maybe one match I didn’t love, and one story beat I could have done without, but otherwise it was a lot of fun! In keeping with the “untitled blog” theme, we’ll do more of a chat than a structured match-by-match recap.


The decision to start the show proper with Pac and Kazuchika Okada was interesting, because AEW has a tendency to want to kick things off with a high-energy banger. I was thinking maybe the ladder match with the Young Bucks and FTR, or maybe the Copeland-and-pals versus House of Black match. But Pac and Okada put on a master class in pacing, keeping things slow to start but unleashing devastating attacks to keep things exciting, but even-keeled until the finish. The outcome was predictable – Okada isn’t about to drop his new championship while the new Elite is still being established – but I still had my doubts a few times. And the audience’s reassurance of Pac after the loss was kinda heartwarming; the “he’s our bastard” chants seemed to really affect the guy.


Actually, a lot of the outcomes on Dynasty were predictable, but that didn’t make them any less interesting. Of the 12 announced matches, we were right on 11 of them. And in hindsight, it makes sense that House of Black FINALLY picked up a win on a pay-per-view, adding fuel to the rivalry between Adam Copeland and Malachai Black and hopefully getting us a singles match between the two at Double or Nothing with Cope’s TNT championship on the line.


I was hoping for Willow Nightingale to win, and when I heard that TBS champ Julia Hart was working through a shoulder injury, I figured it was even more likely to happen at Dynasty. Sure enough, the match was basically an extended squash, and Willow got her moment. Unfortunately, it was literally just a moment, because Mercedes Moné was there to interrupt her celebration to reiterate that she’d be challenging for the TBS Championship at Double or Nothing. 


So either the rankings don’t matter, don’t count towards mid-level championships, or don’t apply towards Mercedes, who hasn’t wrestled a match in over a year. Honestly, I’m already getting tired of her. She hasn’t done anything but wear some stylish outfits and have a theme song that instructs the audience to chant, and she either can’t or won’t do anything physical yet. Also, about that chant – in a promotion where the EVPs are actively involved in storylines, does it make sense to claim another wrestler is CEO, but not as a title, just as a gimmick? Maybe I’m just nitpicking here, but it’s a miss in presentation for me.


She’s going to take that TBS title from Willow in about a month, and hopefully she reminds me why she’s considered one of the best in the world in the ring, because AEW has given her plenty of chances to remind me that she’s not on that level on the microphone. I liked Sasha Banks, and I’m looking forward to liking Mercedes Mone, I’m just not there yet. I’m all in on Willow Nightingale, though. She’s a peach!


Roddy Strong and Kyle O’Reilly (Kylo Reilly to me and my household) had a solid match, but nothing that couldn’t have headlined a Dynamite. And then Chris Jericho did the one thing nobody wanted and defeated HOOK for the FTW Championship. I had this feeling in my gut that Jericho was going to talk his way into forcing the audience’s rejection of him into an angle, but he’s not getting regular boos here, he’s getting “go home heat,” that rare flavor of vitriol where the crowd just does its best to get someone out of the ring and off their TVs. 


Jericho has reinvented himself more times than I can count, and many of those reinventions have been successful. But he’s also done those things while taking breaks from TV, and it really feels like he’s just unwilling to go away for a while. Maybe he’s afraid of losing his spot, or facing the very relatable fear of being replaced by younger, more popular wrestlers. Whatever it is, taking the FTR title while also forcing this program with HOOK feels desperate, like he’s hanging on to a popular young performer just to take credit for that popularity. Hopefully it’s a short program, one that ends with HOOK getting his family’s title back and Jericho going on a cruise or a Fozzy tour.


Toni Storm and Thunder Rosa switched this show into overdrive, and the last four matches were all certified main event level performances. These two women beat the hell out of each other, and even though I was pretty sure Mariah May is the one who will eventually relieve Storm of her AEW Women’s Championship, I talked myself into the makeup-less Thunder Rosa getting back the title she never lost, but had to relinquish due to injuries. 


Seriously, if you somehow have access to the whole show but are wondering what’s really worth the time, watch the opener and the final four and you’ll be impressed. There was a bit of shmozz in the back half of Rosa/Toni when Deonna Purrazzo, frenemy of Rosa, dealt with the distraction of May, but that means we’ve got four women involved in the main title picture, which is never a bad thing. I’ll be interested to see what direction they head in for next month’s Double or Nothing PPV, whether it’s a rematch between Thunder Rosa and Toni Storm, or whether Purrazzo and/or May get involved.


That Will Ospreay match with Bryan Danielson was something else. I’m literally watching it a third time on my second monitor while I’m writing this. Folks are already calling it a contender for best of the year, or even best of all time, and I’m inclined to agree with at least the former statement. Incredible pacing, amazing moves including a few that we rarely see, an incredible anime-looking finishing sequence, and an interesting angle after the match all added up to one of the best bits of storytelling in a wrestling ring. 


And for those folks who are adamant that we aren’t allowed to fully appreciate the match because Ospreay was a jerk in his younger days, maybe remember that the guy seems genuinely contrite, was young, and also deals with some mental health issues every day of his life. And even if that’s not enough for you, personally, sometimes you gotta be able to separate art from the artist. It’s true in music, in cinema, and in professional wrestling. 


The example that many people from my generation of wrestling enthusiasts point to is Chris Benoit. What he did as a person was reprehensible, regardless of what led to it. However, watching his matches in a bubble, the guy was an incredible performer, and his win at WrestleMania 20 was one a lot of us won’t ever forget, especially when he and Eddie Guerrero celebrated with their championships to close out the show. 


It’s a rough business, and always has been, and there will always be people whose personalities or politics aren’t the same as yours. That’s fair, and if you can’t square those things away in a healthy way, maybe it's best to just not watch them. I know a lot of people have been actively avoiding MLW because they signed Matt Riddle, and I understand that. Actually, I’m just incurious and not-online enough to not know why, but one can glean from the occasional visit to BlueSky or Twitter that he’s not the best guy. 


Regardless, you can’t say that a match isn’t good simply because you don’t like one of the participants – I’ll admit that Logan Paul is a good wrestler while also acknowledging that he’s kind of a turd, but that WrestleMania 40 match with Kevin Owens and Randy Orton was still a blast.


But I digress! My point is, even if one doesn’t like Ospreay (or Danielson, for that matter) one has to admit that their match was fantastic.


And then the Young Bucks, who I’ll say right off the bat aren’t my favorite, met FTR for the AEW Tag Team Championships and had to follow the aforementioned match of the year candidate, and somehow managed to keep the crowd interested and put on a hell of a match in their own right! I’ve seen some talk that this match wasn’t anticipated for much more than the expected Jack Perry interference, but I thought the Bucks and FTR understood their place on the card and added the ladder stipulation to keep things as intense as possible. There were some intense spots, a lot of blood from Uncle Dax’s forehead, and a terrific “Please be careful” chant from the St. Louis crowd, which was incredible all night long. When a masked fan ran in to knock Dax off the ladder, we all knew it was Jack Perry, but the reveal was well done and Perry must have practiced what version of “smug prick smile” he would use, because it was perfect.


So Jack Perry is back, meaning my least favorite storyline in AEW must continue – the CM Punk backstage kerfuffle fallout. Part of why I don’t like the Young Bucks’ shtick is because of all the little “too cute” meta storylines they love. A lot of people like it! It’s just not for me. I do like a lot of their in-ring work, and as champs we’ll likely get some good matches down the line, especially since they have rebuilt the Elite with Okada and, I would assume, Perry. It’s fine, though. Bad guys get to do bad guy stuff, I’ll cringe at the “clever” promos, and eventually the Bucks will get their comeuppance.


I will also admit that I had my doubts going into the main event. My worry was that the moment might have been dulled because Swerve Strickland wasn’t facing his rival Hangman Adam Page. Or that Swerve might already be considered a transitional champion, since Will Ospreay fighting for that championship at All In in the UK seems to be a given. But Samoa Joe was also called a transitional champ, and I think he’s done a fantastic job as the tweener tough guy champ, being cheered when the match called for it or respectfully booed when he was the baddie. 


When Swerve hit the stomp and got the pinfall, I felt like his long, long journey had finally paid off. I’ve been following his career since Lucha Underground, where he performed under a mask as Killshot, and during his NXT run where he was honestly terribly booked and never really got the shot he should have. But in AEW he’s been able to work his way into the main event, and in the process has built a rival in Hangman that might be the Rock/Stone Cold of this promotion. 


The fact that Swerve managed to do a home invasion – in which he literally threatened a man’s baby – and worked himself into the good guy role against Joe in a matter of months is something of a miracle, and I think a lot of that has to do with AEW’s audience being able to keep kayfabe separate from real life. Swerve has earned our respect, and he earned that belt. Even if a long title run isn’t to be, he will always be a champion – the first Black AEW World Heavyweight Champion – and nobody can take that away from him. 

Closing Up Shop

…in which I say goodbye for now


Thank you so much for reading. If you have questions, concerns, or comments, drop 'em in the comments section below! And follow me on Twitter (X), Facebook, BlueSky and/or Instagram using the links on the right.


If you liked what you saw, consider telling your friends, mentioning Let’s Watch Some Wrestling on social media, or even buying me a hot cup of coffee using the Ko-Fi button. Have a great week, and I’ll see you back here next time, dear reader. Until then, Let’s Watch Some Wrestling!