History of the AEW Championship

I’ve done a dozen other titles, might as well do this one. It’s a little silly because the title only came to be in 2019 and it’s barely changed hands since then, but I’m running out of titles so screw it. If NJPW Strong gets one, so does this. 

August 31, 2019 – Hoffman Estates, Illinois

Chris Jericho def. Adam Page {AEW World Championship Match}
From the inaugural All Out. The pre-match video was very well-produced, though there wasn’t much of a story going into the match. Page was kind of a tool at this point, and didn’t really get cool until his tag title run. He comes in on a horse here, which is very ‘80s and feels a bit out of place in 2020. I don’t know if there’s a cool and safe way to do that entrance, because coming in on a running horse would definitely look wild. Or even a few guys on horses could look cool? One guy on a horse surrounded by handlers is weak, but I get why you have to do it that way. I’m talking about horses way too much here. Page won a battle royal and Jericho beat Kenny Omega to get us here. I think that’s kind of weak too, but at least they didn’t just have Jericho vs. Omega be the title match straight up just because. Jim Ross gives the match a story before it even begins (more compelling than the well-produced video), which is that Jericho has been a champion many times over and Page has never headlined a PPV before this. This was a rare match in which the heel bleeding was a good move, as it was a receipt from an earlier Jericho attack. It signalled that Page had the momentum. The match was a decent back-and-forth affair, but was slow for a main event and the crowd reacted as such. It probably would have beena hot match with ten fewer minutes. Jericho won with the Judas Effect at 26:18. ***¼ 

February 29, 2020 – Chicago, Illinois

Jon Moxley def. Chris Jericho {AEW World Championship Match}
From the inaugural Revolution. That’s pretty much just a lame WWE PPV name, isn’t it? This time, Jericho had the ornate entrance, with a choir singing his entrance music. This probably would have worked better had just the very good lead singer done it with a band, as the choir is motley and off-key. Both guys had injured the other’s eye in the build to this, which is pretty neat. Neither guy had lost a singles match up to this point, which is also neat. Moxley gets busted open and the visual of blood around his eyematch is cool, which is neat as well. But you know what isn’t neat? The rest of the match. It’s boring and slow and paced like dookie. And then the big reveal, that Moxley’s eye was fine all along, makes absolutely no sense if thought about for more than two seconds. He deliberately handicaps himself in the supposed biggest match of his career for twenty minutes? When Jericho gouged his good eye, it’s not like he was faking being blind, the supposed secret good eye was covered by an eyepatch. Moxley makes the reveal and hits the Paradigm Shift to win the title at 22:29. Nosir, I don’t like it. **½ 

December 2, 2020 – Jacksonville, Florida

Kenny Omega def. Jon Moxley {AEW World Championship Match}
From Dynamite: Winter is Coming. Unlike on USA Network and WWE Network, when you watch this match on the TNT app the next day you actually get to see in full screen what happened during the commercial break. Oh wait, nevermind. It seemed like that would be the case because the commentators spent a full minute teasing a picture-in-picture commercial break before they cut to it. That loose WCW feel continues on Dynamite to this day I see. I guess I can see where people like that the show feels less polished and rehearsed, though it’s a fine line between improvisational and bush league. The Omega-inspired stuff in this was way more fun than the Moxley-inspired stuff in this. I like a good slug exchange, but doing from a seated position in chairs felt very indie. Luckily, everything that stemmed from that was fun. I also always hate a match being stopped by a fake injury because there’s no reason for Moxley to not be immediately declared the winner. At least it didn’t last long here. I didn’t find the Don Callis interference to be too egregious, but I do feel like from Omega’s outside bit to Callis’s bit did drastically slow down what was a really fiery lead up to the finish. Omega hit Moxley with Callis’s microphone, then hit a million V Triggers, then hit the One Winged Angel for the win at 23:50 (shown of 28:28). ***¾

There, I did it, get off my back.