
AEW Dynamite is owned by All Elite Wrestling, Shahid Khan, and TNT
We’re back with more explosive wrestling action, but this week isn’t just ANY episode of Dynamite! For a month now they’ve been advertising this show as the CHRIS JERICHO THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION to commemorate his three decades of butt kicking and smack talking in this business! Does this mean the bubbly will flow thru sprinklers? Will there be a song and dance number or an impromptu Fozzy concert!? We’ll we’re not going to find out by speculating about it, so let’s get started!!
The episode begins with a sincere out of kayfabe segment where the wrestlers of AEW explain just how important Chris Jericho was to them and to making this company what it is today. Of course they can’t show ninety percent of his career because despite wrestling outside of WWE quite a bit that footage STILL ended up in WWE’s hands, but it was still a nice little moment for the promotion! Jericho doesn’t come out to start the show however. Instead we get an unrelated but still pretty darn awesome match!
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Brian Cage Vs. Will Hobbs – FTR Title Match
Taz and Ricky Starks are on commentary
Will Hobbs has been the talk of AEW for weeks now and our appetite for some WILL POWER has only grown more desperate as his big match was canceled due to Lance Archer getting sick. Fortunately Brian Cage is on hand to have a hell of a Big Man fight with this rising talent, and unsurprisingly the end result is a fantastic opening fight! Will definitely comes out of this looking strong as Cage doesn’t squash him right away (pour one out for Pineapple Pete), and both are VERY athletic while projecting so much power in everything they do. It’s almost like watching a Kaiju film on fast forward as all of their moves feel big and heavy, but they can still pull off an impressive amount of speed and dexterity when the need arises. It’s not too complicated of a match as far as the moves. Chops, body checks, suplexes, it’s all very standard and very well executed, but moments like when Cage does a Standing Moonsault or when Hobbs does a Jumping Shoulder Tackle punctuate the action and keeps it exciting all the way through. The only part where things felt a bit off was a moment where Hobbs and Cage seem to forget what they were supposed to do as they just stare at each other before Brian Cage jumps up and takes a Powerbomb from Hobbs. Other than that I found this match to be close to perfect in terms of what it’s trying to accomplish with the wrestlers they have to work with. Cage does something that I THINK was an F5 and only gets a two count, they start trading German Suplexes before giving each other simultaneous clotheslines that knock them flat on their backs, and as soon as they get up from all that they just start trading blows to try and annihilate the other; piece by piece. Hobbs’s fatal mistake in this match however comes after he lands his finisher, The Last Will and Testament, but only gets a two count. Instead of pressing the advantage that he has, he goes for something risky to try to put the match away quickly, namely a Frog Splash from the top rope, but Cage rolls out of the way with easy and with Hobbs on the ground he picks him up to land a Drill Claw for the win. Hobbs may be an exciting talent for the company, but his inexperience showed in that moment and Cage made him pay dearly for it! It was a very simple story with very straightforward action, but the two men did a PHENOMENAL job here and I loved every minute of it! It’s not just a revelation for Will Hobbs who looked amazing; Cage as well managed to look like more than just a big scary guy which is where he’s kind of been stuck at ever since his debut; a little bit above Wardlow, but not quite as compelling as Lance Archer. A great match that did a lot for both men; and really what more could you ask for?
Continue reading “Super Wrestling: AEW Dynamite (10-07-2020)”


