Wrestling Tonight: AEW ALL IN: TEXAS FALLOUT | HANGMAN REIGNS AGAIN | ROLLINS INJURED | NXT GAB & WWE SNME RECAP
Episode 133 of Wrestling Tonight delivers an in-depth look at one of the most emotionally resonant and narratively significant weekends in professional wrestling in recent memory. At the epicenter was AEW All In: Texas, a six-hour showcase of brutality, catharsis, and renewal that drew over 25,000 fans to Globe Life Field and pushed AEW’s creative ambition to new heights. The main event saw Hangman Adam Page reclaim the AEW World Championship in a Texas Death Match against Jon Moxley—a match soaked in blood, symbolism, and emotional weight. With broken glass, barbed wire, and chain-assisted violence, Page not only overcame Moxley but rewrote his own legacy. No longer haunted by doubt, Hangman’s second title reign began surrounded by surprising allies—Swerve Strickland, Bryan Danielson, and Darby Allin—each playing a role in this violent resurrection. Elsewhere, Kazuchika Okada unified two of AEW’s top singles titles, defeating Kenny Omega in their first singles bout in six years. But the match’s integrity was once again compromised by Don Callis, whose interference robbed Omega of a clean opportunity. Toni Storm handed Mercedes Moné her first AEW singles loss in a dramatic, character-driven clash. Dustin Rhodes captured the TNT Title in his home state after Adam Cole emotionally vacated the belt, and MJF earned a future AEW World Title shot by surviving one of the deepest Casino Gauntlet fields in company history. In a match with long-term implications, Will Ospreay and Swerve Strickland defeated The Young Bucks, officially stripping them of EVP status and signaling a broader shift in AEW’s power structure. Meanwhile, WWE’s Saturday Night’s Main Event XL offered its own landmark moment as Goldberg wrestled the final match of his 28-year career, falling to Gunther via technical submission. With echoes of WCW and real-time tears from friends and family, it was a farewell steeped in emotion, legacy, and consequence. Elsewhere on the card, Seth Rollins appeared to suffer a knee injury during a moonsault attempt against LA Knight—causing a hush over the crowd as officials briefly entered the ring before Knight capitalized to secure a win. The extent of Rollins’ injury remains unclear but could alter WWE’s title picture heading into SummerSlam. Randy Orton defeated Drew McIntyre with a signature RKO after Logan Paul and Jelly Roll clashed at ringside, igniting a likely tag match in the weeks ahead. And in the U.S. Title match, Solo Sikoa retained over Jimmy Uso thanks to interference from Tama Tonga—only to be confronted afterward by a returning Jacob Fatu, injecting new blood into the crumbling remains of The Bloodline. In NXT, The Great American Bash: Atlanta served as a creative cornerstone for the brand. Oba Femi retained the NXT Championship in a stiff, international showcase against NOAH’s Yoshiki Inamura, while Ethan Page narrowly survived a star-making performance by Ricky Saints in a wild Falls Count Anywhere match. Sol Ruca and Je’Von Evans scored meaningful victories, and in a significant cross-promotional moment, Trick Williams, Joe Hendry, and Mike Santana signed the contract for their TNA World Title triple threat at Slammiversary, adding gravity to WWE’s growing collaboration with TNA. From Hangman’s bloody redemption to Rollins’ uncertain status, from Goldberg’s goodbye to the rise of AEW’s next chapter, Wrestling Tonight captures a weekend where every promotion moved its pieces forward—and where the past, present, and future collided with force.