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AEW All In 2025 live results: Full card, start time, winners and losers, updates and highlights

AEW All In 2025 live results: Full card, start time, winners and losers, updates and highlights

Yahoo12-07-2025
Kenny Omega is set to renew his epic all-time great rivalry with Kazuchika Okada. (Photos: Getty, AEW. Design: Stefan Milic, Yahoo Sports.)
AEW All In 2025 lives true to the old mantra: Everything is bigger in Texas. Tony Khan's company takes its biggest stars to Globe Life Field in Arlington on Saturday night with the stage set for one of the most significant events in AEW history.
In the main event, the AEW World Championship is once again on the line as long-reigning champion Jon Moxley defends in a much-anticipated grudge match against Hangman Adam Page. Appropriately, the match stipulation will be a Texas Deathmatch. Considering the magnitude of this pairing and the history both men share, this could be a brutal affair.
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Despite the anticipation for the world title tilt, the inaugural AEW Unified Championship match between champions Kenny Omega and Kazuchika Okada has the collective pro wrestling world most salivating. The rivalry between the two all-time greats from their years in New Japan Pro-Wrestling delivered arguably the best matches ever seen in a ring. To say there's plenty of hype for this renewal of the blood feud on American soil would be an understatement.
Omega vs. Okada isn't the only champion vs. champion match, though. The big featured women's match sees AEW Women's World Champion Toni Storm defend against the TBS titleholder (among several other championship labels) — and the winner of the women's Owen Hart Cup — Mercedes Moné.
AEW All In 2025 hosts three additional title matches to comprise a loaded 11-match lineup.
AEW All In 2025 starts at 3 p.m. ET on Amazon Prime Video, PPV.com and YouTube. Check out the full lineup and follow along with Uncrowned's live blog below:
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Wyndham Clark wanted Oakmont ban to stay private, happy to have path forward after U.S. Open locker room incident
Wyndham Clark wanted Oakmont ban to stay private, happy to have path forward after U.S. Open locker room incident

Yahoo

time13 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wyndham Clark wanted Oakmont ban to stay private, happy to have path forward after U.S. Open locker room incident

Wyndham Clark opened up again about the U.S. Open locker room incident on Sunday, something that's dragged along throughout the golf world even now as the British Open wrapped up a month later. Clark was suspended from Oakmont Country Club outside of Pittsburgh last week after he smashed a locker during the major championship there last month. He missed the cut at the U.S. Open after climbing to 8-over at the midway point, and that led to an outburst in the locker room. Clark apologized for the incident the next week, and called it a 'mistake in a moment of rage.' But this week, Oakmont suspended Clark from the course until he meets certain requirements, like paying for damage, making a charitable contribution and attending 'counseling and/or anger management sessions.' That was laid out to Clark and course members in a letter from club president John Lynch. 'Obviously I feel terrible with what happened. I'm doing anything I can to try to remedy the situation,' Clark said after his final round at the British Open on Sunday. 'We're trying to keep it private between Oakmont, myself and the USGA. I'm just happy we have a pathway moving forward, and like you said, I'm hoping we can get past this and move on and hope there's no ill-will towards me and Oakmont.' As for why that letter was made public, though, Clark didn't seem too pleased. 'We were hoping it was going to be private,' he said. 'I'll just leave it at that.' The locker room incident was the second such outburst Clark has made this summer. He launched his driver into a sponsor wall behind a tee box at Quail Hollow Club during the PGA Championship after a bad shot. That left a big hole in the sign and actually broke his driver. Thankfully, nobody was behind him at the time. He apologized for that incident, too. Clark said he's had temper issues in the past, but he's trying to learn from the latest two outbursts. He also said it was a 'no-brainer' to pay for the damages he caused at Oakmont. 'I've been pretty open about my mental shift and change to get better, and I did that in '23 and '24, and then having a tough year and all the expectations and just frustration all coming together, and I did two stupid things,' he said. 'But one thing that it did do is wake me up and get me back into the person I know I am and the person I want to be. 'I hope those things don't reflect because I don't think they reflect on who I am, and going forward that stuff is not going to happen again.' Clark finished T4 at the British Open on Sunday with his final-round 65. That was his best finish at a major championship since he won the U.S. Open in Los Angeles in 2023. Clark now has two top-10 finishes on Tour this season. He entered Royal Portrush at No. 28 in the Official World Golf Rankings. Though Clark is currently banned from Oakmont, it won't be much of an issue for him for a while. The course isn't set to host the U.S. Open again until 2033, which is the final year that Clark can play in the tournament under his 10-year exemption he received for his win. 'That's up to them,' he said when asked if he'll get to play there again. 'I really don't know. I would hope so … I did something awful, and I'm really sorry for it. Hopefully they have it in their heart to forgive me, and maybe in the future I'll be able to play there.'

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