Last week was fun, so let’s run it back one more time! Tonight is looking to be even bigger than last week’s monster debut, which pulled in about 1.4 million viewers. Not bad for a brand new promotion! With the first match of the tag team tournament to crown the first AEW tag champs, Moxley making his in-ring debut against Shawn Spears, and Jericho’s new stable getting some shine against a vengeful Hangman Page and Dustin Rhodes, it’s looking like they’re on their way to maintaining that momentum.

Tag Team Tournament Quarterfinal Match: Private Party vs Young Bucks

The match starts strong with The Bucks taking control early. As the heavy favorites as both an incredible tag team and EVPs within the company, it would be safe to expect a huge showcase for both them and the young, up-and-coming Private Party.

After a standing flip reversal out of a double suplex, Marq Quen tags in and hits the ring like a house of fire, hitting some superhuman dives over the top rope on Matt and Nick, before bringing the action back into the ring with a picture perfect 450 splash. After a springboard dive attempt, we get our first double Superkick, leading to the Bucks isolating Quen after Matt Jackson powerbombs Isiah Kassidy onto the stage. A powerbomb / sliced bread #2 combination takes Quen down, leading to the pair taking turns working on the young star. Huge “tag team wrestling” chant breaks out as Quen repeatedly tries to mount a comeback before being cut off by the Bucks. A vicious knee to a double foot stomp combination drains the life out of Quen as the crowd begins to get behind Private Party. Isiah finds his way back to the apron, but Nick yanks him off right before Quen creates enough space to leap for the tag.

Isiah finally gets the tag and rallies with a double top rope drop kick and a double hurricanrana, all the while selling his back from the previous stage powerbomb. Matt stops the momentum by throwing Isiah out of the ring, then counters his attempt at re-entering with multiple Northern Lights Suplexes, the fourth of which is hit on both members. The end seems near as Nick takes out Quen with a superkick as Matt applies the Scorpion Death Lock to Isiah. Nick hits a springboard X-Factor just as Isiah is about to reach the ropes. Matt pulls him back to the center of the ring, but Isiah fights through to grab the ropes! I’m not sure if I like him being in that move for so long. Unless Private Party is winning, an isolated submission for that long should signal the end.

Quen gets the tag and gets rid of Nick before hitting Gin and Juice on Matt! (Gin and Juice is a top rop hurricanrana into an RKO and needs to be seen to be believed). Matt reverses Quen’s offense into a Meltzer Driver attempt, but then Isiah pulls Nick off the apron while Quen rolls up Matt for the win! Private Party pulls off the upset!

Overall, that match was phenomenal. My only nitpick was the long Scorpion Death Lock spot where Isiah looked unstoppable after essentially grabbing the ropes twice and fighting through the attacks of two men. Other than that, it was an amazing showcase for a largely unknown team, while the Bucks made sure to put the best of both teams on display.

That brings up a growing concern for me though. I understand that they want to avoid accusations of favoritism as EVP’s, but they all are legitimately some of the best wrestlers in the world. Aside from Cody, the entire crew is suffering from a losing streak. While it’s great to be selfless and give some shine to new talents, doing so for too long will take the shine off of the best wrestlers in the company as they continuously lose. In this case, it happens to be the guys the company is named after. Let’s hope they find a way to balance this in the weeks to come.

Chris Jericho Introduces His Stable, The Inner Circle

Jericho takes credit for last week’s massive rating, which is “The largest premiere in TNT history”. A “thank you Jericho” chant breaks out before Chris tells them to shut up and sit down. He then highlights the rest of his group, with Sammy Guevara, who he calls a “heartthrob” and a “god”. Santana and Ortiz, the former LAX, are next, with Ortiz seemingly having trouble keeping his tongue in his mouth. Jericho closes his intro with “viva la raza”, which is appropriate considring today is Eddie Guerrero’s birthday. When he gets to Jake Hager, Jericho silences the “We The People” chants, calling it “dead and buried” and “an idea from bad creative”. He then calls him the most feared MMA fighter in the world, with an undefeated record that makes him the most dangerous person in wrestling, (which is kind of funny since he’s only fought two people, both of which looked more like punching bags than actual competitors). Jericho declares that the group is his Inner Circle, then turns his attention to Cody. He says he’s been entitled his entire life, while he hates his entire family, including his brother and father, who he thought was a jerk. On November 9, Jericho promises to “beat the everliving SHIT out of him”, filling their one shit per show quota. Promising to celebrate with a little bit of the bubbly, the group poses as the announcers plug that Inner Circle shirts have just gone on sale at shopaew.com.

Spoiler: The website crashed as soon as this promo concluded.

Jimmy Havoc vs. Darby Allin with the winner challenging Chris Jericho for the AEW Championship next week.

Havoc starts with a pre-taped promo, declaring that the last 15 years of pain and violence have led up to this, but he loves the pain and will make Darby feel it on his way to defeating Chris Jericho. Darby won the last time these two men fought, but it was in a three-way where the third man was pinned, so it’ll be interesting to see where it goes.

Darby opens up with a handshake, but Havoc tries to turn it into a punch. A series of reversals lead to a high springboard arm drag from Allin before Havoc regains control by biting his opponent’s fingers. It doesn’t take long for this match to go off the rails as Havoc hits a Falcon Arrow from the apron to the floor. Havoc keeps working on Darby’s arm, continuously biting his fingers when Darby tries to come back as the ref struggles to regain control. Darby rallies briefly with a series of splashes in the corner, but Havoc turns one into a sleeper hold where he lifts Allin off the mat as if he’s hanging him, (shades of Minoru Suzuki vs Hiroki Goto’s Wrestle Kingdom match, one of my personal favorites). Allin rolls outside as we head to commercial.

Havoc hits a spinning punch as soon as the commercial break ends, followed by a death valley driver into the corner. With increasing frustration, Havoc hits a tiger driver 98, but they were too close to the ropes as Allin breaks the count. A frustrated Havoc almost gets caught with a crucifix pin, leading to him to begin stomping Allin’s head out of anger. He goes for the Acid Rainmaker, but Allin takes a move out of Havoc’s playbook by catching his fist with his mouth, biting down on the hand and forcing his opponent to release his grip. As Havoc recovers, Allin hits a flipping stunner over Havoc’s back. Seeing his chance, Allin climbs to the top rope and hits the Coffin Drop for the win!

It was always going to be hard to follow that tag match, but this was still a very good match! It highlighted the pain threshold of both men with an emphasis on the resilience of Allin, following up on the seeds planted when he took Cody to a draw a few months ago. I would’ve liked Allin to get some more offense in through the middle since Havoc dominated a large majority of the match, but it was well done overall with the right guy winning. I’m still confused as to why PAC isn’t getting a shot at the title considering he’s undefeated against two of AEW’s top guys, but then again, it’s too early to be feeding PAC to anyone, and we know Jericho isn’t losing.

BEA PRIESTLEY & EMI SAKURA vs. Britt Baker and Riho

Riho is still incredibly popular after her big championship win last week. The pairing of Bea and Sakura is a weird one, with the ultra-excited Freddy Mercury cosplayer fighting side-by-side with goth incarnate. The growing feud between Bea and Britt is the underlying story going into this, with obvious championship implications with Riho involved.

Starting with a teacher versus student showdown, Emi, the former mentor, overpowers Riho briefly until the champion slides out of a pin and drops Sakura with a drop kick. Sakura regains control and performs the infamous Divas hair pull into her corner as Bea gets some cheap shots in for good measure. Sakura shows off with a Surfboard submission on her much smaller opponent as Bea and Britt begin fighting into the crowd. Sakura eventually helps double-team Britt outside, but taking her eyes off of Riho proved to be a mistake as the AEW Women’s Champion hits a top rope crossbody to the outside on both of her opponents.

We come back from break as Sakura is breaking up a pin attempt to Bea from Britt following a DDT. Sakura drags Bea into the corner and tags herself in, then gets a We Will Rock You chant going to build up momentum for her corner cross body. Britt kicks out of a Vader Bomb pin attempt, then regains control with a cutter out of nowhere, (no pun intended). Sakura tries to charge at Britt, but Riho intercepts with a surprise roll-up into a double stomp. The two fight for dominant positioning until Britt surprises Sakura with a spinning elbow, leading to a Paige Turner and a Double Arm Crossface / Mandible Claw combination for the win. After the bell, Bea attacks Britt, forcing officials and Riho to keep the two apart.

The match overall was pretty good, although I didn’t feel like it was anything special when Riho wasn’t involved. Her quickness and technique are fun to see, but I’m hoping the rest of the women’s division can keep up and truly live up to their potential.

We’re then greeted with a brief video package of the Best Friends hugging in a field. When the interviewer asks the duo what they think of the developments in the tag tournament so far, they say to ask Orange Cassidy’s opinion, who gives a half-hearted thumbs up in the crowd.

Shawn Spears vs. Jon Moxley

As a big fan of Spears during his Tye Dillinger days, I love seeing him treated as a big deal in AEW. His entrance where the lights went out, only to shine a spotlight on him at the top of the ramp sitting in his trademark chair while flanked by Tully Blanchard immediately makes him seem like a star.

Moxley runs straight into the ring and gets in Spears’ face. Blanchard pulls Mox away while Spears uses the distraction to gain control early. This is short lived as Moxley overwhelms Spears with some wild brawling followed by a series of ground based attacks. Meanwhile, PAC takes a seat at commentary and complains about how he’s being overlooked while Moxley should thank him for saving him from a beating by taking his spot against Kenny Omega at All Out. The match spills to the outside, with Moxley abusing Spears with the barricades. Mox runs in and out of the ring to break a count-out despite the referee not counting, but when Moxley returns to the outside, Blanchard grabs him, allowing Spears to cut Mox off. Spears hangs Mox on the top rope, giving Tully the chance to throw Mox into the stairs while the referee is distracted. Spears takes a page from the last match and hits a running DVD into the corner of the barricade, proving he could hang with the former king of the deathmatch.

We come back from the break with Spears still firmly in control, turning a pin attempt into a half Boston Crab. After a brief brawl outside the ring, Moxley regains control with a flurry of offense capped off by a running knee. The two go back and forth with a series of strikes, but Mox gets the better of the exchange after hitting a huge lariat. Spears goes for his own clothesline, but Mox turns it into a Paradigm Shift attempt, which Spears in turn transitions into an Ushigoroshi. Spears makes the fatal mistake of taunting Mox with his old 10 pose, but Mox pulls him in and hits a nasty headbutt. Spears tries another ushigoroshi, but Mox lands on his feet and turns it into a Paradigm Shift to close out a very good match.

After the match, Kenny Omega walks down the ramp with a barb wired bat and broom. He hands Mox the broom, but before they can resume their unfinished business, PAC hits Omega in the back with a chair. He signals to Mox letting him know that Omega is all his, but being the good guy that he is, Jon refuses to attack a downed rival and walks off with his bat in hand.

The match was solid and made Spears look great in defeat, but the post match angle was really interesting. Establishing Omega and Moxley as two guys who hate each other, but still having a sense of honor between them was cool to see. PAC pointing out that he’s being overlooked despite his win record shows that the oversight I mentioned earlier is playing into a story, and seeing how The Bastard is being integrated into the company’s hottest feud is an interesting direction to take. I’m excited to see where this all goes!

Dustin Rhodes and Hangman Adam Page vs. Chris Jericho and Sammy Guevara

Sammy makes his way to the ring in a leather jacket, so RIP panda hood I guess.

Dustin and Sammy start things off as the youngster taunts the veteran before quickly tagging in Jericho. Dustin immediately throws Jericho outside and lands some brutal punches outside, eager to get revenge after the beating he took last week. Jericho is thrown into the crowd, but before Dustin can continue his beatdown, he interupts Sammy’s attempt to break up the beating. Dustin tags Page, with the two hitting consecutive corner clotheslines. Hangman is firmly in control, turning a Crossbody into a Fall-Away Slam, then tossing the smaller Sammy after avoiding a kick. Dustin and Page are working really well together despite never teaming together before! The two exchange a few tags, leading to some impressive double team work that culminates in a running Shooting Star Press by Page. Jericho breaks up the pin, but Page continues to dominate until one last Jericho distraction allows Sammy to lift the much larger Page before being dropped on the corner in an impressive display of strength!

As the final commercial comes to a close, Jericho is choking Page out on the middle rope. Hager has been a non-factor so far aside from standing outside and looking snazzy in his polo shirt. Jericho misses a running knee, giving Page the chance to tag in Dustin, but Sammy tags in first and cuts off his opponent before he can tag. Page fights off Sammy briefly, but the solid teamwork between The Inner Circle shines through as Jericho tags back in as soon as his new protege is in trouble. A Lionsault attempt is counted when Page gets his knees up, but wrestling logic kicks in as Page pretends to not be able to reach Dustin while he waits for Sammy to interrupt one last time. This flub pays off when Page hits a massive lariat that turns Sammy inside out, before Dustin finally gets the hot tag. It’s hard to believe that this guy has been wrestling for over 20 years with some lightning quick offense on both opponents, capped off with a top rope spinning crossbody. Page won’t let the bad guys breathe as he follows Sammy outside with a crossbody of his own, but Hager finally makes his presence known by taking out Page as the ref is distracted. Dustin hits a Canadian Destroyer on Sammy while setting up Jericho for Shattered Dreams. Sammy tries to interrupt, but is hit with a picture perfect snap Power-Slam for his trouble. Despite this, Sammy grabs the referee while on the ground, allowing Hager to hit the ring and take out Dustin, allowing Jericho to hit the Judas Effect for the win.

The post-match segment shows shades of last week, with The Inner Circle beating down Dustin and Page. Hager gets a chair thrown into his face, taking him and Page out of the picture as they brawl into the back. The lights go out, with Cody appearing in the ring when they come back on! He hits Cross-Rhodes on Sammy, then prepares to take on Jericho as he takes off his tie. Santana and Ortiz jump Cody from behind, but MJF hits the ring with a chair in hand. Once again teasing Cody’s “best friend” turning on him as Jericho holds Cody up for the unprotected chair shot, MJF instead takes out the former LAX and Jericho before basking in the cheers of the crowd. His celebration is short lived as Jericho hits him with a Codebreaker, but The Young Bucks even the odds by taking out Santana and Ortiz. As Jericho walks up the ramp with his belt, Darby Allin rides his skateboard down the ramp and ollies into Jericho! Allin takes down his opponent for next week with a series of punches before beating Jericho down with his deck. This is wild in the best way! Darby gets in the ring with The Elite as The Inner Circle is sent packing as the second show goes off the air.

This closing angle made me incredibly excited for Darby Allin versus Jericho next week. In just two weeks, they’ve done a great job of setting up so many angles, from PAC versus Omega and Moxley, Allin’s big opportunity for the title, making Private Party into the hottest tag team in a single night, establishing Jericho’s stable and setting up a women’s title contender with the announcement of Britt Baker versus Riho. The pacing felt much better this week, with neither matches nor promos overshadowing one another, and they gave us something to keep us hooked for next week.

What did you think of the show? Who were your standouts and what could be improved? Let us know in the comments!

The show opens with a hard hitting opening followed by a huge pyro display. Hearing JR’s voice as a full building goes crazy with signs as far as you can see is giving off huge 90’s wrestling vibes. Alongside Excalibur and Tony Schiavone, we head into the AEW debut match!

Cody vs Sammy Guevara

Cody’s rises from the bottom of the stage alongside his wife Brandi. Let’s see if the rising stage is a constant thing of if Cody gets the Triple H entrance every week. Good to see they had the foresight to leave Pharoh in the back this time. Seeing how big Cody is feels rewarding to watch considering this all happened because he dared to bet on himself.

Sammy Guevara looks like a small child, especially with that panda hood on. He impressed in Lucha Underground, so I’m expecting him to hold his own against AEW’s EVP.

Huge “Sammy sucks” chants. This crowd is giving this match a big fight feel already. Hopefully this translates to Sammy being popular in his own right. Both guys are showing off their strengths, as Cody focuses more on traditional wrestling and Sammy relies on his agility. Guevara shows off his lack of sportsmanship with a slap, followed by Cody responding in kind before pulling off a figure four. Sammy gets the ropes as the crowd erupts in a “let’s go Cody” chant. Cody overpowers Sammy in the corner with a series of open hand chops, then follows up with a delayed front suplex. Cody lets his arrogant side show with some Scott Steiner style push-ups. Sammy rallies briefly before Cody hits a springboard cutter for a two-count. Sammy hits a springboard cutter of his own from the apron with similar results. The announcers are heavily emphasizing the importance of wins and losses, emphasizing the importance of every match. Good move on their part!

As Sammy rolls out of the ring, Cody goes for a toupe before his opponent pulls Brandi in the way. Huge “asshole” chants from the crowd. Sammy then takes control, missing two moonsaults before hitting a standing shooting star press. Guevara gets knocked onto the middle rope, allowing Brandi to get some revenge by slapping him. Cody hits a Disaster Kick that turns Sammy inside out, but only results in a two! The two climb to the top rope, leading to Cody hitting a reverse suplex, also for a two! Both Cody and Brandi are selling the urgency of the match as we enter its last 10 minutes, with Sammy being pushed as a resilient dickhead. Cody climbs again, but Sammy leaps up to the top rope and hits a top rope Spanish Fly! Sammy climbs to the top one last time for a top rope Shooting Star Press, but gets the knees up and turns it into a cradle for the win! An unexpected, but earned finish. I probably would have made Cody look a little more dominant by hitting his move for the win, but I liked the creativity of the finish! Hopefully this means that the weekly show will have some unexpected, avoiding formulaic approaches to the matches.

Tony Schiavone enters the ring to interview an emotional Cody, but Sammy pulls him in before reaching for a handshake. This supposed show of sportsmanship ends up being a distraction as Chris Jericho hits the ring and beats Cody down before holding his belt up high.

Interesting note: When the angle ended and the first commercial started, the commercial played in a slightly larger window while the replays and footage during the commercial continued to play off to the side. This is a great way to stand out, since while WWE will do the same during a match, AEW is letting us see what home audiences would typically miss during breaks. Let’s hope this is a constant thing! It gives the home audience a reason to stay on the channel while live audiences won’t be forced to sit in the dark for 3 minutes while the wrestlers stand around pretending not to move.

The break ends as Jericho powerbombs Cody onto two chairs. This is a REALLY long beatdown! Jericho walks away and cuts a promo introducing himself with his Bubbly shirt in full view, (nice touch with the Bubly commercial by the way).

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Brandon Cutler vs. MJF

The Twitter D&D feud comes to a head after Maxwell Jacob Friedman became the biggest heel in the nerd-verse after saying he doesn’t play it. MJF is quickly met with his own “asshole” chants as he introduces himself to the viewers. A brief exchange ends with Cutler backflipping over MJF followed by a disrespectful slap. He then hits what I can only describe as a Canadian Sunset Flip before MJF thumbs him in the eye and takes control. The fight spills to the outside with Cutler hitting a toupe followed by some mounted punches. Apparently, Cutler hurt his knee from the dive and loses his balance at the top rope. He charges into the corner, but MJF holds the referee in the way. He takes Cutler down, slaps on the Salt of the Earth, (an armbar variation), for the tapout. The finish felt like it came out of nowhere and didn’t play into the injured leg at all. Also, Cutler’s knee injury came off as him just losing his balance, making the finish fall flat. Good overall, but nothing special.

Turns out the dual screen commercial breaks is an occasional thing. We’re back to full screen commercials after that match.

Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes being interviewed about the Jay and Silent Bob reboot starring Jericho! I hope he got a thank you out of it!

Jack Evans and Anjelico interrupt them and mock Morris Day and the Time. Mewes points out that they should run their mouths less and focus on winning a match. Private Party comes to the actors’ defense, surely setting up a match down the line.

SoCal Uncensored cuts a pre-taped promo pretending to be Obama and the Secret Service, (who would have known Scorpio Sky can do such a great Obama impersonation?), before declaring, as expected, that DC is “The Worst Town They’ve Ever Been In!” Tony then interviews them, where Scorpio announces that Christoper Daniels and Frankie Kazarian will be representing the group in the upcoming tag team tournament, giving them the experience edge. The Lucha Bros interrupt, declaring that they’re the greatest tag team in the universe. Pentagon Jr declares they have “Cero Miedo” as the two teams begin to brawl.

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Hangman Page vs PAC

We’re finally getting the match we were supposed to get at Double or Nothing! Page gets the pyro treatment, as all cowboys should. By the way, there’s something hilarious about PAC being announced as “The Bastard”, even if it’s his actual nickname.

After the latest commercial break, PAC slides into the ring from the outside and hits a head kick. The two go back and forth with progressively powerful strikes before Page finally takes PAC down with a huge lariat. A huge “Cowboy Shit” chant breaks out as Page beats PAC down outside the ring. Page hits a suicide dive and throws PAC into the ring. PAC eventually regains control after hitting a quebrada to the outside. A springboard splash only gets a two, leading to PAC going for the submission that he beat Kenny Omega with at All Out. PAC goes up top, but Page follows him up before landing a top rope fall away slam. PAC launches Page as hard as possible into the post as we go to our second screen-in-screen commercial break. The actual match is still going as the commercial plays, so my sentiment about not missing the action during commercials is already a wash. Let’s just hope PAC is still in control when the break ends so it wouldn’t have created a situation where you miss the momentum shift.

And good! PAC is still in control as the show comes back from break. Page rallies with a spinebuster and rolls through as he attempts the Deadeye, (in a way where it looked like PAC reversed it into a Sunset Flip and gave up halfway through). Page counters a top rope attack with a discus forearm, which leads to a moonsault to the outside and the Buckshot Lariat. As Page looks like he’s closing in on the win, PAC pulls Earl Hebner in the way and hits him with a low blow. PAC pulls in Page to the corner and hits the Black Arrow on Page on the back before winning with the Brutalizer submission, closing out a very good match!

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Britt Baker comes out for commentary as we head into our first ever AEW championship match between Nyla Rose and Riho. I hope Britt appearing doesn’t give away the ending of this match, with the babyface commentator confronting the victorious heel, (Nyla), in the post-match segment. Match introductions are being handled like a big championship match, which is always cool to see for the women.

Riho takes control early by using her speed to out-maneuver the much larger Rose. Riho slides out from under a pin and goes for a double stomp, but Nyla stands up with Riho on her back, leaving Riho looking scared at the idea that her offense isn’t working. Nyla overwhelms Riho with a series of slams and a delayed suplex. Nyla hits a brutal looking spinning elbow into the ropes, but when she goes for another one, Riho hits a pair of Kenny Omega-esque knees. Riho climbs to the top and dives onto Nyla, but Rose caught her low in an impressive display of strength! Then… Nyla goes for a chair? Why? If she hits Riho with it, she’ll be disqualified and lose the title match! The ref saves Nyla’s chances by stripping the chair from her, but now Nyla is piling chairs ont the floor. Isn’t this still going to be a DQ? Riho better let Nyla hit her with them. But of course… Nyla goes for a Senton and Riho moves, sending Nyla crashing down to her own chairs. Riho nails a double stomp of of the stairs as the competitors climb back into the ring. Riho hits one more stomp to the back for a two count, which the crowd seemed to have bought as a false finish. The crowd is coming alive with a Riho chant as we go to our third picture to picture break of the show.

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During the break, Riho has Nyla in a crossface submission and goes for a crucifix before Nyla reverses it into a Samoan Drop. Riho gets hung up on the top rope, then Rose hits a violent knee drop from the corner for a two. This is the opposite of the last two breaks where important developments are taking place during the break. That’s a page from WWE’s book that you DON’T want to take.

Riho goes for a backdrop on her opponent, (that weighs over double her size), but collapses under the weight. Kind of a scary spot that they really didn’t need to try. Riho keeps trying to rally, but Nyla keeps stopping her. A great looking roll up convinces the crowd that Riho won the match, but Nyla kicks out at 2.99! The crowd is losing their minds as Riho continues to fight back. Nyla climbs to the top rope, but Riho chases after her. Loud “AEW” chants in the crowd! It’s really picking up here. Riho hits a Northern Lights Suplex from the top rope for a 2! Riho misses a knee to the front, but spins around to hit one to the back followed by double knees to the front for the win! Riho becomes the first ever AEW Women’s World Champion in the best match of the night and one of AEW’s best in its brief tenure! I thought this was an incredible underdog match that was rough at points, but the story that it told was fantastic. The last five minutes in particular was an incredible back and forth battle, making Riho’s win feel earned.

Michael Nakazawa runs into the ring to interview Riho on behalf of the Japanese fans, but Nyla hits the ring and hits Nakazawa with a Double-Clutch Liger Bomb, (which was probably them covering for Nyla almost dropping Nakazawa). Rose tries to brutalize Riho, but KENNY OMEGA RUNS OUT FOR THE SAVE! Is this setting up a Kenny versus Nyla feud? That would be incredibly intriguing, if not a bit problematic. We’ll see where this goes, but Nyla’s feud with Riho seems far from over.

We’re heading straight into the main event with a Being The Elite themed entrance!

The Young Bucks and Kenny Omega vs. Chris Jericho and LAX

Kenny’s getting his cardio in after running out, back, then out again! Also, I’ll never not laugh on Jericho using nicknames he made up in New Japan against opponents he finished feuding with months ago. Anyway, the match gets underway, with a tease of Jericho versus Omega before Santana gets tagged in. Jericho sneaks a tag and goes for the Walls of Jericho on Kenny, but the Bucks immediately hit a double superkick before doing a double dive to the outside. Kenny prepares for a dive, but Moxley runs in from behind! Kenny knows something is up, but it’s too late. Moxley starts beating down Kenny and drags him into the crowd. The Bucks are now in a three-on-two situation, but the focus has completely left the match and is following Mox and Kenny. Omega fights back with a mop after wiping down the floor, (as The Cleaner. Get it!?) Moxley soon gets control of the fight, which spills into the VIP area. Moxley then… hits the Paradigm Shift DDT through a glass table!? That explains the staph infections.

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We come back from the last break with LAX in control of the Young Bucks. It’s safe to say we won’t see Omega anymore for the rest of the night. Nick is swept off the apron as Matt goes for a tag, then LAX hits a series of combination attacks for the two. Jericho tags in but is taken down by Matt. Ortiz tags back in and takes down Nick as he climbs back onto the apron. Matt hits a corkscrew stunner out of the corner, but Santana tags in and once again stops the tag. Matt hits the multiple Northern Lights Suplex on Ortiz, then ducks Santana’s attack into a double Northern Lights! Nick gets the hot tag and runs wild on all three opponents, including a soccer kick, a dive and a double stomp in the span of about 10 seconds. Nick tags in Matt, but Jericho gets the blind tag and lands a sudden Codebreaker. LAX hit Matt with one more double-team attack, then throws Matt into Jericho for the Judas Effect for the win.

LAX and Jericho beat down the Bucks after the match, but Cody runs down for the save! He fights off Jericho and LAX, but Sammy Guevara runs down and shrugs before hitting Cody with a low blow! Dustin Rhodes, (complete with face paint, just in case you need to suddenly run in to save your younger brother), runs in for the second save, but then Jake Hager, (the former Jack Swagger, or as JR referred to him, “Jake Hager of Bellator fame)”, keeps the odds in the heels’ favor. Loud “We The People” chants break out as The Elite are decimated. Dustin is hit with a painful looking gut wrench powerbomb through a table that doesn’t quite break! With the heroes destroyed, LAX, Sammy, Jake and Jericho stand tall as the first episode of AEW Dynamite comes to an end.

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Final Thoughts:

At the end of the first match, I said I hoped Sammy didn’t get lost after that debut. I’m so happy that it looks like he’s going to be in a top heel stable alongside Jericho. Everyone knows about MJF’s bright future, but I’m stoked to see where Sammy goes from here.

I joked about Cody’s special entrance, but he ended up being the only one to get one. Not that I mind, but it will surely amplify the naysayers calling this Cody’s vanity project. Not that they’d be likely to be convinced by anything.

The matches tonight were on point. PAC and Page delivered big, as did Cody and Sammy. The final tag match was insane in an old WCW kind of way. Hopefully this won’t be a constant thing or it might wear thin, but as the end of a debut episode, it was fantastic insanity.

The match of the night though, had to be the women’s match. It had its issues, mostly due to the nonsensical attempt to use a blatant chair shot, but when the match picked up, there was not a person in the arena in their seats. Riho winning was a shocker, and the teased angle between Nyla and Kenny will give us something to think about in the weeks to come. My only worry with that is with the influx of transphobic hate thrown at Nyla as it is, moving her into a feud with a man so soon into her run will surely raise eyebrows. We’ll see where this goes.

Who would have thought that Jack Swagger of all people would be the big surprise as a new major promotion went off the air? And that people would be losing their minds over it!? Let’s hope that “Bellator’s own” will shine in ways that he wasn’t allowed to in the past, much like Cody himself.

Overall, this show had a real Nitro / Raw Is War feel in the way that there was constant insanity. The pacing was off a bit, with the first half being promo heavy and the second half being match heavy, but with some fine tuning, AEW could find itself at the top of its game so soon into its TV run. Especially when you compare the improvements of this show compared to some of the shoddy production during the online shows.

That’s a wrap for the debut! Let us know if you enjoyed the recap, as we’ll continue to follow this show on a weekly basis.