Tag: Tony Khan

  • EXCLUSIVE: Top AEW Performers in Option Year

    EXCLUSIVE: Top AEW Performers in Option Year

    A major contract story is quietly developing within All Elite Wrestling involving two of the company’s top performers, sources tell us.

    According to sources familiar with the situation, Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler of FTR signed a four-year agreement with AEW in 2023.

    We’re told the team are now approaching the option year of that agreement, placing renewed focus on FTR’s long-term future within the company.

    Sources close to the situation describe FTR as believing their value and consistency over the last several years should place them among AEW’s top-tier acts financially.

    There has also reportedly been at least preliminary interest from WWE communicated through mutual contacts as the situation continues to draw attention internally.

    At present, there is no indication a departure is imminent, though FTR’s future beyond the current option year remains unclear.

  • Not a Retirement: FTR vs Cope & Cage at Double or Nothing

    Not a Retirement: FTR vs Cope & Cage at Double or Nothing

    I have been a fan of FTR since they were The Revival, and the people who read me know it, so I am not going to pretend to be neutral about Sunday night. I once spent a long time alone in a car park in Texas after a tag team match they wrestled, and I have not been the same kind of fan since. That is the kind of FTR fan I am. What I want to write here is not a love letter, though, because the match at Double or Nothing is more interesting than fandom can adequately describe. It is interesting on the level of the four men in the ring, on the level of the two teams, on the level of the audience watching, and on the level of a division, a company, an industry, and a form. The stipulation underneath it is doing something professional wrestling almost never does, which is ask a question with a real answer.

    Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler have spent a decade making the same argument, and on Sunday night in Queens they will make it again, against the longest-running tag team story in mainstream professional wrestling.

    The argument is this: that the tag team, as a unit of professional wrestling, is a serious thing. That it deserves to be treated with the gravity once afforded to it by Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard, by the Midnight Express, by the Brain Busters and the Rock ‘n’ Roll Express. That two men who tag in and tag out, who cut the ring, who refuse to flip and refuse to break character and refuse to wrestle as anything other than a team, can carry a pay-per-view. FTR have made this argument from every promotion that would have them. They have made it in WWE as The Revival and they have made it in ROH and they have made it in New Japan and they have made it across six years now in AEW, and they have made it well enough and consistently enough that the argument is no longer really an argument. It is the most decorated tag team body of work of the modern era. On Sunday night, they defend it.

    Across the ring stand Adam Copeland and Christian Cage, who have been a tag team for longer than some of the wrestlers on the card have been alive. They formed in the late nineties as a pair of Toronto kids who had grown up together. They became one of the defining acts of the Attitude Era. They held the WWF tag titles seven times. They main-evented pay-per-views. They fell out, reconciled, retired, returned, retired again, returned again, and now, in the year 2026, with both men deep into the back half of their careers, they find themselves standing across the ring from a tag team that wants to end them. The story of Cope and Cage is, in the genuine sense of the word, historic. It is the longest continuous tag team narrative in mainstream professional wrestling. It is also, by stipulation, set to end on Sunday night if FTR can make it end.

    Wrestling almost never lets a story finish. Feuds blur into other feuds, teams drift apart through the quiet attrition of forgotten bookings, careers end with a whimper or no ending at all. The trilogy at 1-1 is a structure professional wrestling reaches for and almost never executes cleanly, because executing it cleanly requires the discipline to actually let one team lose. Sunday is the stipulated third act. The retirement clause is the cost of getting it. AEW has, in effect, paid the price required to give this story a real ending, and the price was Cope and Cage agreeing in advance to disappear as a unit if Dax and Cash could do to them on Sunday what they have already done to them once before.

    The stage is Louis Armstrong Stadium. It is the first Double or Nothing held inside the five boroughs of New York City. It is the biggest stage the company has ever built for this pay-per-view. And the match they have chosen to place at the centre of it, the one carrying the weight of finality and history and craft and stakes, is the one in which FTR have been asked, again, to make their argument.

    The argument, like the partnership across the ring from it, has four people inside it.

    Dax Harwood is the most outspoken wrestler of his generation about what tag team wrestling is for. He writes about it. He talks about it on his podcast at length and with the unembarrassed seriousness of a man who has decided this is his life’s work. He cites Arn Anderson the way a young novelist cites Cheever. He has, more than once, articulated a theory of tag wrestling, that the team is the unit of meaning, that the psychology lives in the cut-off and the hot tag rather than in the dive, that a good tag match is closer to a long con than a highlight reel, and he has spent his entire career trying to prove the theory by wrestling it. I have spent years arguing alongside that theory in print, because I think it is right, and because Dax is one of the very few active wrestlers who has built a body of work that proves it on tape. Sunday is, in some sense, the largest single test of that theory he has ever been handed. He is across the ring from the team that, more than any other in the modern era, can claim to have proven a different theory: that two charismatic singles wrestlers can also be one of the greatest tag teams of all time. Dax has been waiting a long time to argue with that.

    Cash Wheeler does his arguing in the ring. He is the quieter half of FTR by some distance, the one less inclined to give the long interview or write the column, and he is also the half of FTR whose in-ring work has, over the last three years, quietly become some of the best tag wrestling on the planet. He is the engine. He is the man who eats the heat, who sells the leg for eight minutes, who makes the hot tag mean something by spending the time before it being broken. In an I Quit match, with no count-outs and no disqualifications and a stipulation that ends only when one man breaks, Cash is the kind of wrestler the format was designed for. He does not break easily. He is not going to be the one who says it.

    Christian Cage is doing the most interesting character work of his career at the age of fifty-two. The version of Christian who has wrestled in AEW since 2021 is not the affable face of the Attitude Era and is not really the heel version anyone remembered from before. It is something newer and stranger, a sneering, articulate, openly contemptuous heel who treats every promo like a closing argument and has, across five years, become genuinely one of the best talkers in the company. He is the brain of Cope and Cage. He is also the half of the partnership most likely, in the existing storyline logic of the feud, to find a way to win that does not require him to actually quit. Whether he will let his partner quit on his behalf is the more interesting question, and it is a question that goes to the heart of what a partnership is and what one half of a partnership owes the other.

    Adam Copeland is the reason the match has the stipulation it has. He made the challenge himself, on the April 25th Dynamite, and he made it in the form of an offer FTR could not credibly refuse: a rematch on the condition that he and Christian would, if they lost, end as a team. It was a strange and significant thing for a wrestler to do. Copeland has a Hall of Fame ring. He has nothing left to prove individually. What he has chosen to put at risk on Sunday is not his career and not his legacy as a singles wrestler but the thirty-year partnership with the friend he started wrestling with as a teenager. That is the offer he made. Sunday is the night it is paid out.

    What gives the offer its weight is the fact that the two teams it brings into collision are not making the same argument about what a tag team is.

    FTR are the most credible argument professional wrestling has produced this century for the proposition that the tag team is a serious art form. That is a large claim and it can be defended. The body of work is on tape. The Briscoes trilogy in 2022. The match against the Young Bucks at All In 2023, in front of eighty-one thousand people at Wembley, in which they out-wrestled the company’s founding tag team on the company’s biggest night. Their work with the Bang Bang Gang, Lucha Brothers, with the Bucks again at multiple intervals, with the Gunns, with the various permutations of the AEW tag division across six years. They have done it in WWE as The Revival, where they became the first team in company history to hold the NXT, Raw, and SmackDown tag titles. They have done it in ROH, where the Garland match against the Briscoes is widely cited as one of the great tag team matches of the modern era. They have done it in New Japan. They have done it in front of empty arenas during the pandemic and in front of stadium crowds afterwards. The argument is not that they are flashy. The argument is that they are right. The team is the unit. The cut-off is the moment. The hot tag is the payoff. The finish comes in the middle of the ring, after the structure has been built. They wrestle like men who have read the textbook and believe it.

    Cope and Cage are an argument of a different kind. Their case for greatness is not built on the patient craft of tag wrestling as a discipline. It is built on the fact that two of the most accomplished singles wrestlers of their generation grew up together and chose, repeatedly, across thirty years, to come back to one another. The partnership is the through-line of two Hall of Fame careers. They are not great as a tag team because they have spent their careers studying the form. They are great as a tag team because they are great wrestlers who happen, also, to be a tag team, and the chemistry between them is the kind of thing that cannot be drilled into existence in a training school. It is the residue of three decades of shared work and shared life. When they reunited in AEW it was treated, correctly, as a homecoming. The reunion was the story. The wrestling was the proof.

    These are not the same argument. They are not even arguments about the same thing. FTR’s case is for the tag team as a craft to be mastered. Cope and Cage’s case is for the tag team as a bond to be honoured. Both cases are true. Both cases have produced great tag team wrestling. What Sunday night does is force them into the same ring with the title and the partnership on the line, which means it forces them, in effect, to argue with each other. The match will be decided in the ring. But the result will read, after the fact, as a verdict on which argument the wrestling business is currently in a position to reward.

    It is also, for the audience watching, a verdict that comes at a cost.

    FTR have, over the last six years, accumulated a fanbase that behaves less like an audience and more like a movement. I know this because I am part of it. It is a particular kind of wrestling fan, the fan who can tell you what a cut-off is and why it matters, who reads Dax’s column and listens to the podcast and treats Arn Anderson the way film students treat Scorsese, who shows up at independent shows two countries away because FTR are on the card. Frequently it is the fan who has been told for most of their wrestling-watching life that the kind of wrestling they love is dead, or unfashionable, or beneath the moment and who has been, through FTR, given a six-year run of evidence that the kind of wrestling they love is in fact alive and being done at the highest level on the biggest stages. To be an FTR fan is to be a person who has had their taste vindicated, repeatedly, by men in the ring. On Sunday night, that fanbase, my fanbase, is being asked to watch FTR end the partnership of two of the most beloved wrestlers of the last thirty years. It is a strange thing to ask, and I am not entirely sure I am ready for it.

    The fanbase across the ring is older, longer-standing, and bound to its wrestlers by a different kind of investment. The Peeps and the Rated-R loyalists have been with Christian and Adam respectively for the better part of three decades. They watched these two men come up together. They watched them feud with each other and reconcile. They watched the retirements and the returns. They watched the partnership become the thing that survived everything else, the injuries, the company changes, the long stretches apart, the entire arc of late-career wrestling reinvention. For that fanbase, Sunday night is not a tag match. It is the stipulated ending of a relationship they have followed since they were teenagers.

    Both fanbases get the same match. Neither gets what they want without the other losing something they care about. The FTR fan who wants the third match to confirm what the first two suggested has to want, in the same breath, for the partnership to end. The Cope and Cage fan who wants the partnership to survive has to want, in the same breath, for FTR to lose the titles and the argument they have been making for a decade. There is no clean cheer in this match. Whichever way it goes, the building will contain, in roughly equal measure, people who have just been given a story they will remember for the rest of their lives, and people who have just been asked to grieve.

    That this match is being treated as the kind of thing two fanbases can grieve over is itself the result of a longer story.

    For most of the last twenty years, the tag team championship has been a thing that happened on the pre-show. That is not a complaint and it is not nostalgia. It is a description of how the major North American promotions chose to use their tag divisions across the 2000s and into the 2010s, as a place to develop young talent, to give veterans something to do on the way down, to fill the middle of the card on television, but rarely as a place to stage the matches a company built its biggest nights around. The tag titles were carried by good teams who were rarely allowed to feel important. The case for tag team wrestling as a main-event form, the case that the Road Warriors and the Anderson brothers and the Midnights had been allowed to make in the seventies and eighties, had largely been retired by the time most of Sunday’s audience started watching wrestling.

    AEW did not single-handedly reverse that trend, but AEW, more than any other promotion of the modern era, has acted as if the trend was reversible. The Bucks and FTR were main-event acts from the company’s first months. The Lucha Brothers were treated as legitimate threats. The tag division was given television time and storyline weight and, crucially, given matches that were allowed to run as long as the wrestling required. The result has been a slow rebuilding of the case that a tag team championship can carry the weight of a pay-per-view’s biggest match. That case is being tested again on Sunday, and it is being tested at scale, with the additional weight of a partnership on the line, which is to say, with the unit of meaning itself placed at the centre of the wager.

    The willingness to make that wager says something about the company making it.

    A wrestling company is, in the end, the sum of the stories it chooses to finish. Promotions get judged on a lot of things — ratings, gates, talent acquisition, production values, but the thing that determines whether the wrestling itself is good or not is whether the company has the discipline to start stories with a clear ending in mind and then, when the moment comes, actually deliver the ending. This is harder than it sounds. It requires telling a wrestler they are going to lose. It requires telling a popular team they are going to break up. It requires resisting the temptation, when a story is going well, to extend it past its natural shape because the extension will draw money in the short term. AEW has been criticised, often fairly, for not always making those calls cleanly. The booking of the last six years has contained genuine triumphs and genuine drift. The criticism that the company sometimes starts stories it does not know how to end is a criticism that has, at various points, been earned.

    The FTR versus Cope and Cage trilogy is the answer to that criticism, or at least an answer. It is a story the company started with a clear shape. It put the first match on television and let FTR win in a bloody, definitive bout. It put the second match on a major show and let Cope and Cage even the score. It then did the harder thing: it scheduled the third match, with a stipulation that requires one team to be decisively, narratively finished. The retirement clause is not a marketing device. It is a commitment. It is the company telling its audience that on Sunday night, this story ends, and one of these two partnerships will not be a partnership on Monday morning. That is the kind of booking discipline wrestling does not always reward and does not always produce. AEW is producing it here, on the first Double or Nothing held inside the five boroughs of New York City, at the centre of a card it could have built around any number of things and has chosen, in part, to build around this.

    Which raises the question of what the industry beyond AEW is supposed to do with it.

    Professional wrestling, for all that it traffics in endings, almost never produces a real one. The form is built on continuation. Wrestlers retire and come back. Teams break up and reunite. Feuds get revived a decade after they were supposedly settled. Storylines get quietly abandoned and then quietly resumed when the writers remember them. This is not a criticism of the form. It is a feature of it. Wrestling is closer to a long-running serial than to a film, and serials work by extending rather than concluding. The price of that extension, however, is that the moments of actual narrative finality become genuinely rare, and the ones that hold up, Flair’s retirement match against Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XXIV, Edge’s first retirement speech, the Undertaker’s final walk, become, by their rarity, the things the industry’s memory organises itself around.

    A stipulated tag team ending belongs in a different and smaller category. There is no obvious canonical example in the modern era of a major tag team being booked out of existence at the height of their relevance, with both members continuing on as singles wrestlers, by their own pre-agreed terms. Teams have broken up after losing loser-leaves-town matches at lower stakes. Teams have drifted apart through storyline dissolution. Teams have been ended by injury or by departure. What has not really happened is what is happening on Sunday: two of the most decorated wrestlers in the business, in the middle of a creative late-career run, walking into a building having agreed in advance that if they lose, the partnership they have spent thirty years building is over by stipulation. That is a new shape. Or if not new, then so rarely attempted at this scale that it might as well be.

    What that shape suggests, if it works on Sunday, is something the industry has not really been asked to consider before: that a tag team partnership can be treated as a thing with a beginning, a middle, and a chosen end, in the same way a singles career can. That the partnership itself is the unit of meaning, not just the wrestlers who comprise it. That when a team ends, something has actually ended, and the ending deserves to be staged with the same seriousness an industry stages the retirement of a singles wrestler. This is the proposition FTR have been making in different language for ten years, and it is the proposition Cope and Cage have, by agreeing to the stipulation, conceded the seriousness of. Whichever team wins on Sunday, the match itself is the argument’s most thorough demonstration. A partnership is a thing that can end. The ending can be chosen. The choice can be honoured by the staging.

    Two men will wrestle to keep being a tag team on Sunday night in Queens. If they lose, they will not retire. They will simply, by their own prior agreement, stop being the thing they have been to each other and to the audience for three decades. The match will end when one man says the words. And then there will be a moment after the words, before the music plays and the referee raises the winners’ hands, when the losing corner of the ring contains two men who are no longer a tag team. Both still wrestlers. Both still standing. Both, by their own choosing, alone. That is the moment the stipulation is for. That is the thing this match has been built to stage. I will be watching for it, and whichever way it falls, what I expect to see is the rarest thing wrestling produces: a partnership that exists, in real time, and then does not.

  • Rebel Reveals Terminal ALS Diagnosis

    Rebel Reveals Terminal ALS Diagnosis

    1. Rebel is a pro-wrestling veteran who’s battled it all in the wrestling world. Now, she’s fighting through a new battle.

    Rebel, who’s most recently worked under the AEW banner, was alongside Britt Baker for the latter half of her run. But, Rebel was off-screen in recent years due to illness. While she struggled to find out what the issue was, she now knows. Sadly, Rebel revealed that she’s been diagnosed with terminal ALS that is affecting her body and speech.

    “Okay, here’s an update and hold on, because there’s a plot twist. First, I want to say thank you for all of your prayers because for those who know, it’s been a two year medical journey trying to find out what is wrong and finally, our prayers have been answered. The thing is, sometimes, we don’t want to hear that answer to our prayers. So, while I was waiting to have lung surgery for the masses on my lungs, the doctors finally found what’s going on. The doctors have diagnosed me with terminal ALS. There is not a lot of research behind ALS and we don’t know how long I have, but it explains why I have trouble walking and talking, all of my functions will soon decline. Now, we can pray for the future and what is to come. I want to say thank you to Tony Khan. Thank you to Tony Khan and AEW for supporting me on this medical journey. It has been a blessing that is unheard of. From the bottom of my heart, thank you and thank you to all of you for your prayers. Please continue to pray for a peaceful journey and a peaceful passing. I love you.”

    https://x.com/rebeltanea/status/2050243697774571548?s=46

    Rebel has been flooded with prayers and well wishes from the entire wrestling community. Bodyslam would also like to send out our heartfelt prayers and well wishes to Rebel. Stay strong.

    H/T Fightful

  • How Tony Khan’s Renewed Focus Helped Restore the Feeling in AEW

    How Tony Khan’s Renewed Focus Helped Restore the Feeling in AEW

    For the last 17 months, All Elite Wrestling has been on a roll.

    Why 17 months? That lines up with when the company secured its new deal with Warner Bros. Discovery. The agreement was widely reported as a three-year deal, with a fourth-year option, valued at around $555 million, not including that optional year. Talk about securing the bag!

    That moment feels like a turning point.

    After a roller coaster 2024 filled with inconsistent booking and plenty of backstage chatter, AEW feels like it has never looked back. The shows feel finely tuned. The matches are hitting at a high level. But most importantly, the fans are back in it. Yeah, you’ll have your typical IWC trolls and grifters, but even Tony Khan has seemed to changed some of their mindsets—can’t win them all!

    Ratings are up. Attendance is up. Social media buzz is up. It has not been a random spike here or there. It has been a steady climb over the past year. Similar to Darby Allin summitting Mt. Everest.

    Tony Khan Back in Control

    One of the biggest reasons for the shift is simple. Tony Khan is more hands-on again.

    Reports last year indicated Khan was back “in the weeds,” taking a deeper role in booking. Watching the product now, it is hard to argue with that.

    And honestly, it shows.

    Khan never fully stepped away, but his attention was pulled in every direction. He was juggling Ring of Honor, dealing with heavy and aggressive competition from WWE and its partnerships, navigating a crowded creative process, and working to land a major TV deal. Don’t forget about his duties outside of wrestling with the Jacksonville Jaguars and Fulham FC.

    That was a ton on one man’s plate.

    Now, with his focus locked back in on AEW, things feel more consistent. The vision is clearer. The direction makes sense.

    A Better Product Across the Board

    Dynamite and Collision have felt sharper again. Dynamite will always be the flagship show, but it no longer feels like Collision is just thrown together anymore. There is purpose.

    Storylines actually progress week to week. There is a better balance between established stars and younger talent trying to break through. The pacing and production of the shows has improved in a noticeable way.

    Pay-per-views have always been strong, but even the key events feel bigger and stronger. But the matches? The matches have been on point, and fans are already calling this run one of the best stretches in company history.

    A recent PPV, AEW Revolution 2026 stands out as a recent example. Arguably the best card of matches ever assembled, and with storytelling at an all time high. Revolution, to some, is talked about as one of the top events the company has ever produced. It seems like this has been a never ending trend since Tony dove into the weeds.

    That kind of consistency matters.

    Competition Brings Out the Best

    It would be impossible to talk about AEW’s recent run without mentioning the level of competition right now.

    WWE since 2019 has been hot, with the last two years showing a cool down. There is no denying that. With strong storytelling, major business moves, and crossover attention, the pressure has been on. But instead of folding under that pressure, AEW seems to have responded in the best way possible.

    They have leaned into what makes them different. Stay in your lane, and worry about you, and the rest will take care of itself.

    Rather than trying to mirror WWE, AEW has doubled down on in-ring quality, a faster pace, and giving a platform to a wider variety of wrestling styles. That contrast has helped the company stand out again instead of getting lost in the shuffle. In a tight economy, WWE has put their fanbase in a chokehold financially, and it has shown. Ticket sales have seen an increase in AEW, and that’s seems to be a culmination of things, but most importantly, it’s affordable and entertaining. You get a bang for your buck. AEW set out to be the alternative, and it’s truly stepping into that.

    In a lot of ways, this is what wrestling fans always wanted. Two companies pushing each other, raising the bar, and forcing both sides to be better.

    Right now, AEW is holding up its end of that deal.

    A Shift in the Roster Philosophy

    Another quiet but important change has been how AEW handles its roster.

    The company has allowed some contracts to expire, particularly with talent who did not seem fully invested. In some cases, that included recognizable names who came over from WWE but never quite fit. Guys seeking greener pastures, but with large egos strapped to their backs and wallets.

    Instead of chasing big names for the sake of it, AEW appears focused on wrestlers who actually want to be there.

    That shift feels intentional.

    This is no longer a company trying to prove it belongs. It already did that. Now it is about building something sustainable with the right mix of talent.

    Restore the Feeling

    At its core, AEW feels closer to its original identity again.

    Be the alternative. Showcase where the best wrestle, and ultimately give fans something they can enjoy every week.

    With Tony Khan more directly guiding the creative direction, that original energy has returned. It feels less scattered and more confident.

    If this momentum continues, this stretch could end up being remembered as a defining era for AEW.

    For now, one thing is clear.

    The feeling is back.

  • AEW Dynamite: Darby Allin Set To Defend World Championship Next Week

    AEW Dynamite: Darby Allin Set To Defend World Championship Next Week

    Darby Allin main evented tonight’s AEW Dynamite in successful fashion, but the train doesn’t stop now. It just keeps going.

    Tonight on AEW Dynamite, Darby Allin said ahead of his match that after winning the AEW World Championship last week, he would be willing to be a fighting champion every week until his body cannot go anymore. And it all started with tonight’s main event against Tommaso Ciampa.

    Darby and Ciampa had a killer match that was full of craziness, blood and the crowd on their feet the entire time. But, after what was a hard-fought defense, Darby Allin made Tommaso Ciampa tap out to the scorpion death lock.

    Following the match, Brody King made his presence known. He said that he spoke to Tony Khan, and if Darby is up for the challenge, he wants Darby for the World Title next week. Darby simply shook his hand in agreement.

    https://x.com/bodyslamnet/status/2047133764862493141?s=46

    Earlier on in the night, Brody King had defeated Lio Rush and then said he’d be watching the main event to keep a close eye on it. Now, he gets his shot in one week on AEW Dynamite.

  • No Flips, Just Fists: A Tribute to Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler

    No Flips, Just Fists: A Tribute to Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler

    By Mark O’Brien (@WrestleMobs)

    There is a car park outside the Curtis Culwell ntre in Garland, Texas, that I will carry with me for the rest of my life.

    I sat there for an hour after Supercard of Honor XV on Friday, 1 April 2022. I had just watched FTR beat The Briscoes in twenty-seven minutes and twenty-five seconds to win the ROH World Tag Team Championship. And something inside me, something I had been dragging around for five years, had just broken open.

    I want to write about FTR — Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler — because they are, without qualification or hedging, the greatest tag team of their generation, and one of the greatest tag teams ever to lace boots. That is the tribute I owe them as a fan and writer. But I cannot write that piece honestly without telling you what they did for me personally one night in Garland, because it is the reason I am here to write anything at all.

    This is a piece about craft. It is also a piece about being met at the right moment by the right thing.

    Case on Its Merits

    Before anything personal, the case on its own terms.

    FTR’s claim to tag team greatness is not a vibe or a marketing line. It is quantified and qualified in a ledger. In WWE as The Revival, Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler — then Scott Dawson and Dash Wilder — became the first team in company history to hold the NXT, Raw, and SmackDown tag titles. First ever Triple Crown tag team champions. They did that while the company was actively trying to bury the division, while creative kept workshopping gimmicks nobody wanted, while a main roster run that should have been a coronation became an exercise in institutional indifference. They won anyway. They won because they were better than what they were being asked to do.

    They left. They spent two months on Dynamite in the summer of 2020 wrestling without a contract, because Tony Khan asked them to and they believed him. When they eventually signed, they were babyfaces because they had saved The Young Bucks from an attack — a bit of writing that is almost too neat when you consider how long those two teams would go on to define each other. They won the AEW World Tag Team Championships at All Out 2020 from Hangman Page and Kenny Omega. They lost them. They got them back. They got them back again. They are now three-time AEW World Tag Team Champions, tied for the record.

    They won the IWGP Tag Team Championships at Forbidden Door. They won the AAA World Tag Team Championships. They won the ROH World Tag Team Championships — twice — and the first of those reigns is the one I am going to come back to, because it happened in Garland.

    They did all of this while wrestling a style that, on paper, was a commercial suicide pact. “No flips, just fists.” A throwback to an era most of their audience was not alive for. Southern tag wrestling. Brainbusters. Midnight Express. Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard. In an era where tag matches were increasingly sprints — dive festivals, four-way tornado spot-fests, every sequence trying to outdo the last — FTR went the other way. They slowed it down. They sold limbs. They built heat. They made you care about an arm bar in the year 2023.

    That is the craft argument. You can find a dozen versions of it written by better-credentialed people than me. What I want to add, because I am one of those who can, is what happens on the other side of the camera when two men are that good at what they do. What happens to the people who watch.

    Backstory

    Garland does not make sense without this section, so here it is, briefly.

    My mother died in 2017 after a long illness. In 2021 I broke my neck playing rugby, which ended a career I had been building since 2010 at various levels.

    So by the early months of 2022 I was grieving, without a sport, and without the particular outlet that a decade in rugby gives you for managing what is happening inside you. I had a professional career. I had the apparatus of a functional adult life. I had plenty to be getting on with.

    I flew to the United States that March with a friend to complete a bucket list activity, attending WrestleMania. However that weekend in Dallas had a separate card I could not look away from. FTR versus The Briscoes had been teased since Final Battle 2021, when Dax and Cash had shown up after The Briscoes’ twelfth ROH tag title win and sparked a pull-apart brawl. For anyone who had grown up on this stuff, this was the match.

    The show was on 1 April 2022. My mother’s anniversary was 4 days later. I did not plan it that way, purely coincidental.

    Garland

    The Curtis Culwell Center is not a cathedral. It is a multi-purpose arena in a Dallas suburb, the kind of building that hosts high school graduations and regional volleyball tournaments. Nine thousand seats. Low ceiling. It did not need to be a cathedral.

    The match itself is a twenty-seven-minute argument for professional wrestling as a serious art form. Two teams who had spent years being told they were the best of what was left of a dying form, finally in the same ring, with a belt on the line, on the first show of ROH’s new Tony Khan era. If you have not watched it, stop reading this and go watch it. I will wait.

    Back? Good.

    What FTR and The Briscoes did in Garland is the thing that, when it is done this well, cannot be done anywhere else. It is not film. It is not theatre. It is not sport. It is its own thing, and when it works, there is nothing else like it. They built the crowd from the first lockup. They told a story with bodies. The split crowd that became a unanimous one. The near falls that made grown men shriek. The moment in the final third when it stopped feeling like a match and started feeling like a vigil for a form of wrestling everyone in the room had been told was dead. FTR hit the Big Rig, Cash dove onto Jay, and Dax covered Mark for the pin. The referee’s hand came down. New champions.

    Something afterwards came loose in me.

    I do not fully understand, even now, the mechanism. I know there is a whole literature about catharsis, and I know that wrestling has always been a place where people who do not know how to process things go to process them by proxy. I know that watching two people do something with absolute competence and absolute love for the thing they are doing can reach parts of you that the conventional tools cannot. I know the timing mattered. I walked into that building 4 days before an anniversary I had been carrying quietly for years, and the building was ready for me in a way I had not been ready for it.

    I made it to the car park to call for an Uber. I sat there for an hour. And for the first time in a long time, I could breathe.

    I went to WrestleMania the next two nights. I could not tell you much about it, not a huge amount registered or landed in comparison with what I had seen the night prior. I was still in Garland.

    What Followed

    I want to be careful here, because stories about wrestling saving lives are stories wrestling tells itself, and some of them are true and some of them are nice myths, and the honest version of this one has to include the part the myth leaves out.

    Attending SuperCard of Honor, and seeing FTR vs Briscoes did not directly save my life, but it certainly opened a door. What I did after walking through it is what saved my life. That work was mine and most of it is not for a wrestling essay, but it was real and it took years and it is the reason the rest of this paragraph exists.

    I started writing about wrestling. I had never written about wrestling before. By the end of 2022 I had bylines at Bodyslam, then Wrestling Inc, Wrestlezone, Wrestle Inn, PW Musings and Voices of Wrestling. I started the WrestleMobs interview series with friends from the Irish Wrestling scene (Irish Wrestling Entertainment). I trained in a number of schools across Ireland and the UK. I wrestled on a handful of shows. I got invited to events and media junkets by WWE and AEW as credentialed media.

    In early 2023 I met Dax and Cash for the first time at a For the Love of Wrestling event in Manchester. I met them again the night before All In 2023 at Wembley — they invited me to spend time with them and colleagues, the night before the biggest wrestling show of all time. Same again the night before All In 2024. Same again before Forbidden Door 2025. Four separate occasions now where two men who owe me absolutely nothing have given me their time. I have not, in any of those meetings, told them the full version of the story in this essay, but I have certainly expressed parts of it, largely because there is no need. Men like Dax and Cash have met enough of us with similar stories to my night in Garland to understand the impact they have had on people’s lives, directly and indirectly.

    I applied to an MBA programme. I got into the top-ranked course in Europe, on a scholarship, which I still cannot quite believe when I write it out. I completed it. I graduated. I got consulting job I could only dream of, while coaching rugby at a semi professional level. I have a new relationship. There is a new life.

    I have bought, at last count, every piece of merchandise FTR have released since their WWE days. Every one. I have nearly every action figure. I scour eBay, Pro Wrestling Tees and the AEW shop at weekends looking for old drops. This is not a flex. This is how fans like me say thank you when we do not know how else to say it.

    What They Do, and Why It Matters

    I want to circle back to the craft, because I have buried the lead on purpose and now I want to dig it up.

    The thing FTR do, at their best, is the oldest thing in professional wrestling. They make you believe. Not in them — anyone charismatic can do that — but in the match. In the stakes. In the idea that an arm bar applied by a man who genuinely wants to hurt the other man is the most interesting thing in the world for the eight seconds it is happening.

    In a form that increasingly prizes the exceptional — the dive, the flip, the table spot, the shock — FTR prize the connective tissue. The transitions. The reason one thing leads to another. There is a structural intelligence to their work that I think is going to be studied by wrestlers fifty years from now the way good tag teams now study The Midnight Express tapes. They are teaching a style that was, on all reasonable forecasts, going to die with the men who invented it. It is not going to die. They have students now, whether they asked for them or not. The floor of tag team wrestling in AEW, ROH, and on the independent scene is higher because of them.

    And there is something else, which is harder to articulate and I will try anyway. There is a moral quality to what FTR do. Not moral in the puritan sense. Moral in the sense that there is a philosophy of labour underneath it. They show up. They do the work. They sell. They make the other team look good because the other team looking good is how the match looks good. They are pros in a sense that has been getting quietly vandalised in our culture for about thirty years. Watching them is, among other things, a reminder that there is dignity in being very, very good at a thing and caring about it more than you care about being seen caring about it.

    This is what was underneath my night of clarity in that Garland car park, I think. I had spent a decade in rugby, a sport that teaches you a particular relationship with your body and with effort, and I had lost that sport, and I had not replaced what it gave me. FTR, in Garland, for twenty-seven minutes, reminded me what it looks like when people love a craft enough to suffer for it in public. That is not nothing. In the right moment, on the right weekend, it is everything.

    What I Believe

    I have said versions of this to other fans in other rooms, and I believe it: there are people walking around alive today who would not be, if not for Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler.

    I do not say it as hyperbole and I do not say it for effect. I have been in rooms with fans who have told me variations of similar stories. Wrestling as a form has a peculiar power to reach people who cannot be reached by the conventional apparatus of help. It finds men who will not go to therapy and women who have tried everything else, and it sneaks up on them through a form they were told as adults they were too smart to love, and it does its quiet work. FTR, because of the specific style they wrestle and the specific story they tell with their bodies, do this as well as anyone in the business right now.

    What FTR gave me, in the end, was not a distraction, cure or escape – it was a door — a specific door, opened on a specific night, at a specific moment, in a specific car park, far away from home — and a glimpse through it of what the next version of my life might look like. That glimpse was enough. The rest of it I managed with an awful lot of help, But I managed it because, for one night in Garland, Texas, two men who had once been told their style of wrestling was obsolete reminded me that sometimes the old forms are the ones that still work.

    I do not know how to end a piece like this, because the truth is that it has not ended. I will be at more FTR matches this year at AEW All In at Wembley Stadium on August 30th,  and RevPro 14th Anniversary show the night prior in Wembley Arena, and the year after, for however long Dax and Cash choose to keep doing this. I will buy the next t-shirt. I will chase down the next figure. I will write the next thing.

    But if you have read this far, and you have ever wondered what any of this is for — the wrestling, the fandom, the absurd devotion some of us bring to a form that much of the culture does not take seriously — I would offer, as my one piece of evidence, a car park in Garland, Texas, on a Friday night in April 2022. A person who had living in a dense fog for too long, sat on a kerb, finally able to breathe.

    That is what FTR did for me. That is the craft of Professional Wrestling.

    People walking around and thriving in life today is their legacy, and this is my tribute.

    No flips. Just fists. Thank you, Dax. Thank you, Cash.

  • AEW Dynamite Spring Break Thru: Three Championship Matches Set

    AEW Dynamite Spring Break Thru: Three Championship Matches Set

    This Wednesday live on TBS, AEW Dynamite will be a special Spring Break Thru edition. This will also be a two night event that carries on to a special Thursday edition of AEW Collision just one day later. Coming out of the AEW Dynasty pay-per-view, this Wednesday’s Spring Break Thru is loaded with now three championship matches, all piggybacking off of things that took place on Dynasty.

    First, it was revealed that MJF will defend his AEW World Championship once again after successfully retaining the championship against Kenny Omega in the pay-per-view main event. MJF’s opponent will be Darby Allin, who earned his shot by defeating Andrade on Sunday. Now, Darby and MJF will clash for the World Title.

    https://x.com/aew/status/2043556081893532160?s=46

    Also on Wednesday, the AEW TBS Championship will be on the line when Willow Nightingale defends against the newly returned Kamille. During the AEW Dynasty Zero Hour, Kamille attacked Willow backstage, revealing that she’s back. Then, Kamille had a match where she dominated a local opponent. After the match, Nightingale came out to confront Kamille, but was once again laid out. Later into the show, Willow threw out the challenge to Kamille for Spring Break Thru, and was willing to put her title on the line. It’s official.

    https://x.com/aew/status/2043548950419107991?s=46

    Lastly, we have a brand new AEW TNT Champion and it’s ‘The Jet’ Kevin Knight. Kyle Fletcher was forged to vacate the TNT title due to injury and thus, the title was up for grabs in a Casino Gauntlet Match on Sunday night. After many competitors entered, Kevin Knight stood tall as the new champion. In the gauntlet match, Death Riders members Wheeler Yuta, PAC and Daniel Garcia were all in the match. But, there was one interesting omission, which was the Death Riders’ Claudio Castagnoli.

    Because Claudio was not in the match but the other team members were, he will get a chance at the gold. Tony Khan announced during the post-Dynasty scrum that Kevin Knight will defend the TNT Championship against Claudio Castagnoli this Wednesday.

    https://x.com/aew/status/2043549750310711395?s=46

    As of now, no matches have been announced for the Collision portion. Stay tuned to Bodyslam.Net for more updates on AEW Spring Break Thru, and results following the event(s).