25 Best Wrestling Shows EVER
25. AEW Dynasty 2024
You might balk at certain omissions from this list. There's a sense of unshakeable collective sentiment attached to the vaunted events of yore.
At its best, AEW is better than even fiercely-protected nostalgia. Dynasty 2024 was AEW at its best.
While it wasn’t a “proper” opener, Kazuchika Okada Vs. PAC was one of the better examples of a modern trend that isn’t going away. Often - too often - a match that could headline a show opens it. This can impact the overall flow. Still, it’s virtually impossible to criticise a match as elegant and powerful as the Continental title bout. PAC displayed his range by playing sympathetic babyface with his outstanding selling, where Okada was at his best as the unsolveable puzzle. His panicked 2.99999999 kick-outs were outrageous even by his standards. The slow-burn pacing was masterful.
Roderick Strong Vs. Kyle O’Reilly was a vicious technical ripper. Thunder Rosa and Toni Storm brought an all-too-rare, hate-fuelled energy to their huge over-delivery of a Women’s title match. Adam Copeland, Eddie Kingston and Mark Briscoe Vs. the House of Black was inessential and a bit too long, but very fun. The show itself was a touch too long, as every single AEW pay-per-view is. Did Chris Jericho really need to go 17 minutes with HOOK?
Well, he did, but nobody else needed him to.
Bryan Danielson Vs. Will Ospreay was considered by many to be the greatest match ever promoted on U.S. soil. It was phenomenal - perhaps the greatest ever match sold and wrestled on the high-pressure premise of it being great. The work was out of this world. The crowd shared a collective religious experience as Danielson casually mastered the movez stalemate at the first time of asking. They had barely touched by that point. When they did touch, the action was transcendent. The physical timing was almost unprecedented. Watch Danielson counter the Oscutter with the Busaiku knee: the precision and impact, on such an ambitious and difficult exchange, was the most safe concussive-looking strike that has ever connected in wrestling history.
FTR Vs. the Young Bucks initially struggled to follow such an instant landmark of pro wrestling in the United States. However, the two teams went so incredibly hard - Cash Wheeler in particular wrestled like a man possessed, flying into barricades for fun - that the fans eventually chanted “Please be careful”. This wasn’t so much a wrestling match as cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
The Samoa Joe Vs. Swerve Strickland main event wasn’t great - doing limb work to a monster is never a great thread - but it was good, and it was very impressive. The crowd wanted Swerve to win the World title, he won, and the dead crowd woke up and stayed with him for the duration.