AEW All In London Card Is Building: What We Know and What Still Needs to Be Announced

Started by BankHolidayBlues, Today at 06:54 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Topic: AEW All In London Card Is Building: What We Know and What Still Needs to Be Announced   Views(Read 51 times)

BankHolidayBlues

AEW All In London at Wembley Stadium is now seven weeks away and the card is taking shape faster than any previous All In event. Following Forbidden Door, the confirmed matches are Ospreay versus MJF for the AEW World Championship, Maya World versus the Women's World Champion for the women's title, and the presumed continuation of ZSJ versus Omega following their outstanding Forbidden Door main event support match. The card has three weeks of television to add further matches and the Wembley date creates commercial and booking pressure that will fill the remaining slots quickly.

The live gate question for Wembley is interesting. All In London in 2023 drew approximately 81,035 paid attendees to set the record for the highest attendance at a professional wrestling event in Europe. That figure came before the Ospreay signing and before the booking of a title match specifically designed to culminate at this venue. The 2026 Wembley All In has a more emotionally compelling main event than any previous iteration: a British wrestler challenging for the world title of a major American company on home soil for the first time in modern wrestling history.

The television build through AEW Dynamite and Collision over the next seven weeks will determine how much the wider audience understands what this match means. The challenge for AEW's broadcast team is communicating the significance of Ospreay's journey from the UK independent scene through NJPW to this moment to an American audience that may not have followed every chapter. The British wrestling community already understands it. The American audience needs to be brought into it.