Tuesday, September 24

Upgraded 2024 AEW All Out Card and Predictions for Match Order

Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire through Getty Images

Simply 2 weeks after rocking Wembley Stadium in London for All In, the stars of AEW will be back at it with All Out in Chicago on Saturday.

All In was extensively considered as among AEW’s leading pay televisions of the year and perhaps in business history, so All Out has a difficult act to follow.

However, All Out has a possibility to be terrific in its own right and ought to have the ability to build on what happened at All In thanks to a strong card from leading to bottom that will include numerous matches with significant ramifications, consisting of champions.

Here is whatever you require to learn about All Out, consisting of a rundown of the whole card and forecasts for how the match order will play out.

Where: Now Arena in Hoffman Estate, Illinois

When: Saturday, Sept. 7 at 8 p.m. ET (Pre-Show begins at 7 p.m. ET)

View: B/R Live

AEW All Out 2024 Card and Projected Match Order

  • International Championship: Will Ospreay (c) vs. Pac
  • AEW World Tag Team Championships: The Young Bucks (c) vs. Blackpool Combat Club (Claudio Castagnoli & & Wheeler Yuta)
  • AEW Continental Championship Four-Way Match: Kazuchika Okada vs. TBD
  • Chicago Street Fight for CMLL World Women’s Championship: Willow Nightingale (c) vs. Kris Statlander
  • TBS Championship: Mercedes Moné (c) vs. Hikaru Shida
  • AEW World Championship: Bryan Danielson (c) vs. Jack Perry
  • Unsanctioned Lights Out Steel Cage Match: Swerve Strickland vs. “Hangman” Adam Page

Leading AEW All Out 2024 Matches to Watch

Swerve Strickland vs. “Hangman” Adam Page

Among the most individual competitions in AEW history will reach the next level at All Out when previous AEW world champs Swerve Strickland and “Hangman” Adam Page satisfy inside a steel cage.

Swerve and Page had a series of matches versus each other in late 2023 and early 2024 with Strickland triumphing each time. They likewise dealt with each other in a three-way match for the AEW world title that likewise consisted of Samoa Joe, and Joe’s win installed aggravation to the point that Hangman vanished from AEW shows for a couple of months.

Throughout Page’s lack, Swerve beat Joe for the AEW World Championship, and when Page ultimately went back to contend in the Owen Hart Foundation Tournament, he made taking the title from Swerve his stated objective.

Page lost in the competition last to Bryan Danielson and later on lost on a world title shot by losing the Casino Gauntlet at All In, which apparently triggered him to snap and interfere in the Swerve vs. Danielson centerpiece at All In.

Danielson went on to beat Strickland for the world title,

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