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- Darby Allin Reflects On Joining AEW, Says WWE 205 Live Was ‘The Writing On The Wall’
- Mercedes Mone wins 12th consecutive championship in Canada
- Mets prospects Nick Morabito, Chris Suero carrying strong minor league seasons into Arizona Fall League
- Mercedes Moné Snatches 12th Championship Title
- How Much is Browns’ Quinshon Judkins Worth in Fantasy Trade After 3 TDs vs. Dolphins?
- Christian McCaffrey Makes History, Hailed By NFL Fans as 49ers Hold Off Falcons in Win
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- Nuttycombe XC Men — Lobos Led By Samuel Win By 99
Browsing: title
Mercedes Moné has done it again—and this time, she didnâ€t waste any time breaking her own record.
Just after becoming a champion at AEW WrestleDream 2025, Moné stepped into a Winnipeg Pro Wrestling ring on October 19 and walked out with her 12th career title. The CEO beat Jody Threat to become the new Winnipeg Pro Wrestling Womenâ€s Champion, marking yet another major milestone.
Moné has been on a tear lately. She walked into AEW WrestleDream with the TBS Championship and walked out as a double champion after putting away ROH Womenâ€s Television Champion Mina Shirakawa. That bout was stiff, fast, and dirty—ending with Moné pulling out a thumb to the eye and using the ropes for leverage to snag the win and make history.
But Moné didnâ€t stop there. Just a day later, she showed up in Winnipeg and made quick work of her next goal. With her 12th title win now in the books, sheâ€s pulled even further ahead of Ultimo Dragonâ€s historic multi-title run.
Full list of titles Mercedes Moné has captured on her record-breaking path:
- AEW TBS Championship
- Interim ROH Womenâ€s Television Championship
- CMLL Womenâ€s Championship
- BODYSLAM Womenâ€s Championship
- Discovery Wrestling Womenâ€s Championship
- EWA Womenâ€s Championship
- RevPro Undisputed British/Queen of Southside Womenâ€s Championship
- Prime Time Wrestling Womenâ€s Championship
- BestYa Womenâ€s Championship
- Winnipeg Pro Wrestling Womenâ€s Championship
- AEW Owen Hart Womenâ€s Tournament Winner
- AEW Owen Hart Championship
Do you think Mercedes Mone is the greatest women’s wrestler of her era? Please share your thoughts and feedback in the comment section below.
October 19, 2025 11:30 pm
Ilja Dragunov is officially back—and heâ€s got gold around his waist to prove it.
WWE released new backstage footage on October 19, 2025, showing Dragunov after what appears to be his United States Championship win. The former NXT Champion returned to television on the October 17 episode of SmackDown from the SAP Center in San Jose, where he stepped up to accept Sami Zaynâ€s open challenge. The crowd gave him a huge welcome after nearly a year off WWE TV.
In the new video, Dragunov opened up about the emotional weight of the past year and the message heâ€s sending to the entire roster now that heâ€s champion.
“Itâ€s been such a long year, and nobody understands how I feel sitting on the sidelines for a year, waiting and hoping and training to come back better. Better than anybody else. More ruthless, more ambitious. Fearless. More courage. All these things and everything that I accomplished over this year, this, itâ€s a symbol of it, me as the United States Champion,†Dragunov said while clutching the title.
He didnâ€t hold back when addressing future challengers either.
“So one thing is so clear to me right now. I get a very, very clear message to everyone who is coming for this. My dear friends and my dear enemies, if you step with me into the ring, pain shall entertain it.â€
Dragunovâ€s return wasnâ€t always meant to go down this way. According to previous reports, his WWE comeback was originally targeted for September and slated for the RAW brand. But plans changed, and insiders said SmackDown needed a “shakeup,†prompting WWE to move Dragunov to Friday nights instead.
Before his time away, Dragunov had close calls in major matchups, including a four-way number one contenderâ€s bout against Jey Uso and a World Heavyweight Title live event clash with Gunther. Now on SmackDown with the U.S. Title, heâ€s been handed a clean slate—and he clearly has no plans to waste it.
Ilja Dragunov made it clear he returned with more than just a comeback in mind—he came back to dominate.
Do you think Dragunovâ€s run as United States Champion will elevate SmackDownâ€s mid-card scene? Drop your thoughts in the comments below and let us know what you think.
Please credit Ringside News if you use the above transcript in your publication.
October 19, 2025 12:08 pm
Mercedes Moné made history at AEW WrestleDream 2025 by winning her 11th championship, breaking the long-standing record held by Ultimo Dragon. But not everyone was celebrating. As soon as the match ended, the backlash online erupted—and Mercedes responded exactly the way youâ€d expect.
After defeating Mina Shirakawa in a TBS Title Open Challenge, Mercedes walked out of the pay-per-view with both the AEW TBS Title and the interim ROH Womenâ€s Television Championship. The match was billed as title-for-title, and the result didnâ€t surprise many, but it didnâ€t stop the Internet Wrestling Community from piling on with criticism.
Instead of staying silent, Mercedes logged onto Twitter and threw shade right back. She posted a zoomed-in image of a fan in the crowd who looked furious at her win and used it to mock her critics.
“The IWC every time I win a title! 🤣🤑â€
Mercedes didnâ€t stop there. After securing her 11th title, she went a step further and claimed to be superior to Ultimo Dragon—a comment that lit a fire under wrestling purists who view the Japanese legend as untouchable.
The backlash didnâ€t seem to faze her one bit. If anything, itâ€s fueling her momentum. Moné has fully embraced her role as a lightning rod in the wrestling world—traveling from company to company, collecting titles, and riling up fans at every stop.
Whether fans cheer or boo, Mercedes Moné continues to rack up belts and remind everyone sheâ€s not backing down from the spotlight—or the hate.
Do you think Mercedes Moné is taking it too far with her title run and social media jabs, or is she just playing the game better than everyone else? Let us know what you think in the comments.
Do you think Mercedes Moné deserves her record-breaking success? Please share your thoughts and feedback in the comment section below.
October 19, 2025 11:02 am
Tommy Fleetwood held off Japan’s Keita Nakajima to secure a two-shot victory in the DP World India Championship – and celebrated an eighth DP Tour win with son Frankie on the 18th green.
Fleetwood, who had ended his long wait for a first PGA Tour title at the Tour Championship to claim the FedEx Cup in August, produced a superb seven-under final round of 65 to finish at 22-under in Delhi.
Nakajima had been two strokes ahead going into Sunday, but could only manage three birdies as he signed for a 69. He ended two ahead of a three-man group of Ireland’s Shane Lowry, England’s Alex Fitzpatrick and the South African Thriston Lawrence, who also made 65 – which included an eagle on the 14th.
New Zealand’s Daniel Hillier had looked to also be in contention after going into the turn six-under for the day – only for a double-bogey seven on the par-five 14th to scupper his chances, with more dropped shots at the next and then again on 18. The Masters champion, Rory McIlroy, placed in a tie for 26th at 11 under, finishing with a final round of 71, which had two bogeys on the front nine and another at the 14th.
Fleetwood, who rattled off four successive birdies from the seventh, was happy to get another long overdue individual tournament victory under his belt – and make the most of a special family moment.
“I had said for all the good that has happened this year, a couple of things have disappointed me, that my DP World Tour sort of has, so another win feels great,†the Southport golfer said in an interview on the DP Tour website.
England’s Tommy Fleetwood savours his first DP World Tour win since January 2024. Photograph: Sajjad Hussain/AFP/Getty Images
“We were at home last week and we were driving the buggy. I think we were playing golf together, and he (Frankie) just said randomly: ‘Do you know what you’ve never done?’ He said: ‘You’ve never won a tournament and I’ve been able to run on to the 18th green’. I was like: ‘I’m writing that down’, so I had that written down all week.
“It was just another opportunity really, there is going to be many more times where I hopefully get the chance to do that. But all day today, I had in my mind could I put myself in a position where I can actually make that moment happen?
“It is just one of those little things, it means a lot to me. It means so much to me. That was really cool, that is what I wanted to do all day.â€
HAENAM, South Korea — Decade-long LPGA Tour veteran Sei Young Kim carded a final round 67 to hold off any final round challengers as she claimed a four-stoke victory at the BMW Ladies Championship on Sunday.
It was Kim’s 13th career title since joining the tour in 2015, and ended a five-year long drought since her last tournament victory at the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship in 2020.
Kim, 32, finished with a four-round total of 24-under-264 at Pine Beach Golf Links on the Korean peninsula, with the South Korean only dropping a shot at the par-3 third before finding six birdies through the remainder of the round to comfortably hold her closest rival, Nasa Hataoka, at bay.
Hataoka of Japan also had a final round 67 to finish at 20-under 268, with Celine Boutier (67) and Kim A-lim (66) a further two shots back in a share for third place.
Defending champion Hannah Green shot 66 and finished at 17-under 271 in a share for fifth with Yealimi Noh (70) of the United States. Fellow American Lindy Duncan (65) was a shot further back in a three-way tie for seventh with South Korean pair Hye-jin Choi (63) and Narin An (63) who shared the lowest round of the day.
Jeeno Thitikul last week became the first multiple winner on the LPGA this season with a five-hole playoff win in Shanghai over Minami Katsu. Thitikul did not play this week but will be part of Thailand’s team in the International Crown next week.
After the International Crown, two more LPGA events are scheduled on the five-event Asian swing — at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and in Japan.
HAENAM, South Korea — Decade-long LPGA Tour veteran Sei Young Kim carded a final round 67 to hold off any final round challengers as she claimed a four-stoke victory at the BMW Ladies Championship on Sunday.
It was Kim’s 13th career title since joining the tour in 2015, and ended a five-year long drought since her last tournament victory in 2020 at what is now known as The Annika. Kim also won the KPMG Women’s PGA that season.
Kim, 32, finished with a four-round total of 24-under-264 at Pine Beach Golf Links on the Korean peninsula, with the South Korean only dropping a shot at the par-3 third before finding six birdies through the remainder of the round to comfortably hold her closest rival, Nasa Hataoka, at bay.
Hataoka of Japan also had a final round 67 to finish at 20-under 268, with Celine Boutier (67) and Kim A-lim (66) a further two shots back in a share for third place.
Defending champion Hannah Green shot 66 and finished at 17-under 271 in a share for fifth with Yealimi Noh (70) of the United States. Fellow American Lindy Duncan (65) was a shot further back in a three-way tie for seventh with South Korean pair Hye-jin Choi (63) and Narin An (63) who shared the lowest round of the day.
Jeeno Thitikul last week became the first multiple winner on the LPGA this season with a five-hole playoff win in Shanghai over Minami Katsu. Thitikul did not play this week but will be part of Thailand’s team in the International Crown next week.
After the International Crown, two more LPGA events are scheduled on the five-event Asian swing — at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and in Japan.
World No 1 Matt Hauser has won the triathlonâ€s world championship series in Wollongong, ending a 15-year drought for Australia.
Two-time Olympian Hauser never relented across Sundayâ€s 1.5km swim, 40km cycle, and 10km run event and won gold by a monster 34 seconds on home soil.
The 27-year-old was cheered home by a raucous crowd and finished the gruelling Wollongong course in one hour 42.42 minutes.
Spainâ€s David Cantero Del Campo claimed silver, while Italian Alessio Crociani was a further seven seconds behind in third.
Hauser, in tears at the finish line, joins Emma Moffatt as the only Australians to win an Olympic-distance world title since the championship became a series in 2009.
The 27-year-old is the first Australian man to win the world series, after Pete Robertson won in 2005 when the world title was decided by a one-off race.
Luke Willian was Australiaâ€s next best male on Sunday, finishing 16th out of the 52 athletes.
Hauserâ€s biggest threat Miguel Hidalgo, ranked second in the series, was fourth.
Germanyâ€s Lisa Tertsch triumphed in the womenâ€s final as reigning Olympic champion Cassandre Beaugrand failed to finish.
Tertsch finished the race in one hour 56.50 minutes to win her maiden crown.
Germanyâ€s Lisa Tertsch wins the elite women’s final at the world triathlon championships in Wollongong, Australia. Photograph: Dean Lewins/AP
Italyâ€s Lisa Seregni finished 14 seconds behind, while Franceâ€s Emma Lombardi was a further 12 seconds adrift to claim bronze.
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The womenâ€s series had shaped as a two-horse race between defending champion Beaugrand and Beth Potter, who had entered as equal series leaders on 2925 points.
But a struggling Beaugrand began to tumble down the order early in the run, before Great Britainâ€s Potter dropped out of contention on lap three of four.
While Beaugrand did not finish the Olympic distance course and dropped to seventh in the standings, Potter finished 16th and is third overall.
Sophie Linn was Australiaâ€s best female and finished 18th out of 39 starters, ahead of teammate Emma Jeffcoat in 29th.
Earlier on Sunday, Lauren Parker clinched another medal after Australia finished second in the Para Mixed Relay, with the USA taking gold.
After claiming her fifth paratriathlon world title the day before, Parker combined with Jack Howell, Jeremy Peacock and Maggie Sandles – with guide Lauren Sprague – to win silver ahead of Brazil.
AEW stars spoke to the media following AEW WrestleDream.
Brodido, Kris Statlander, Kyle Fletcher, and Tony Khan all took questions following the events of Saturday’s AEW WrestleDream pay-per-view in St. Louis, Missouri. Here are the highlights:
Bandido and Brody King
- When asked about his upcoming match against Kazuchika Okada on Wednesday, Bandido said they were going to see who is the best.
- Talking about his struggles to get where he is now, Bandido said he had a concussion at the start of the year but everyone still believed in him. He is blessed for his life and for himself as a person, heâ€s really happy with everything and hopes to do the best for all the fans.
Kris Statlander
- Statlander was asked if she wanted to headline Full Gear next month against Mercedes Mone and have it be a title for title match. She said that while sheâ€d love that, itâ€s okay if it isnâ€t. This is her moment to beat her, sheâ€ll do it any time of the week.
- When asked how she reinvents herself, Statlander says she’s still in the process of things and commented how it isn’t nice to shame someone for not knowing who they are immediately upon their debut on a national stage.
- Statlander mentioned that Marina Shafir might be someone to challenge her for the title, but she is open to any and all challengers, even Wheeler Yuta.
Kyle Fletcher
- Fletcher was asked if this was it between himself and Mark Briscoe. He replied that the score seems to suggest that, but things change in pro wrestling constantly.
- When asked about his World Championship aspirations, Fletcher said that he wanted to focus on the TNT title. He does want to be the greatest of all time, so itâ€s absolutely in his mind, itâ€s just a matter of when.
- He says he has not checked in on Will Ospreay and immediately asked for the next question.
- Regarding next challengers for the TNT title, Fletcher said heâ€ll be at Dynamite on Wednesday and anyone that faces him will meet the same result.
Tony Khan
- Khan called this event one of the greatest shows the company has held.
- Renee Paquette mentioned that Jon Moxley’s arm was bleeding following the show as the fish tank got him really bad.
- Khan said Lou Theszâ€s wife Charlie enjoyed the show and was blown away, saying he was glad she was there live.
- When asked about the Amazon Prime issues, Khan said that was something on Amazon’s end but thankfully other feeds were fine. He was dissapointed that both Death Before Dishonor and this show, two of his favorite shows, had feed problems.
- Khan said Bryan Danielson had a family obligation and thatâ€s why he wasnâ€t at the show tonight, saying it was probably best to take that commitment considering the main event.
- Regarding another cross-promotional event during Wrestle Kingdom weekend, Khan seemed to insinuate that the weekend should be focused on Hiroshi Tanahashiâ€s retirement. He said that Konosuke Takeshitaâ€s win was a big deal, putting over his history with the company and said that Takeshita was an AEW guy.
- Regarding a future Okada vs. Takeshita title for title match, Khan said it would be a very interesting thing to happen, but has no control over the IWGP World Championship in NJPW. It would be something to keep an eye on. Heâ€s excited about Bandido vs, Okada this Wednesday on Dynamite.
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After being embarrassed by AEW Women’s World Champion Kris Statlander at WrestleDream, TBS Champion Mercedes Mone has issued a title challenge to Statlander for November’s Full Gear pay-per-view.
After Statlander was celebrating her title defense over Toni Storm Saturday, Mone interrupted her moment and told her to get out of her ring. Statlander acquiesced, but returned after Mone won her record 11th simultaneous title to gain a measure of revenge, laying Mone out and sending her packing.
Later in the night, Mone issues the challenge in a backstage promo. Statlander has yet to answer as of this writing.
Once official, it would be their third singles meeting. They have twice squared off for the TBS title during Mone’s record run, once at last year’s Full Gear and again at Worlds End. In both cases, Mone picked up the win.
Mone unsuccessfully challenged then-Women’s World Champion Storm at this past July’s All In Texas.
Mone will look to add to her record with a 12th title on Sunday at a Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, indie show against Jody Threat.
Full Gear is set for Newark, New Jersey, on Saturday, November 22.
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“Hangman” Adam Page defeated Samoa Joe at WrestleDream on Saturday to retain the AEW World Championship.
Page won after hitting Samoa Joe with three Buckshot Lariats.
After the match, Samoa Joe raised Page’s arm in victory as a sign of respect, but it was a ruse. Samoa Joe and The Opps then ferociously attacked Page post-match.
In recent months, Page and Joe had common enemies in Jon Moxley and The Death Riders, which resulted in them lending each other a helping hand and even teaming up on occasion.
One such instance occurred on the Oct. 1 episode of Dynamite when Page, Joe and Powerhouse Hobbs joined forces to beat the Death Riders trio of Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli and Daniel Garcia.
While it was a great victory for the babyface team, Page and Joe ended up having an altercation after Joe seemingly felt Hangman wasn’t being respectful.
Security had to separate Page and Joe, and with emotions still running high, Hangman called out Joe and challenged him to a match during a backstage interview.
Page said he took issue with Joe telling him that he had never beaten the Samoan Submission Machine before during their argument, although what Joe said wasn’t incorrect.
Joe, Swerve Strickland and Brian Cage beat Page, Hook and Rob Van Dam in a six-man tag team match in early 2024, and Joe later went on to win a three-way match against Page and Strickland at Revolution in March 2024.
In the latter victory, Joe retained the AEW World Championship by making Page tap out to the Coquina Clutch.
That perhaps gave Joe the mental edge entering WrestleDream, although it marked the first-ever meeting between him and Page in a one-on-one match.
Page conquered his demons on Saturday, getting past one of his biggest threats yet in Joe to continue his reign as AEW world champ.