
The Young Bucks are officially out of power. At AEW All In: Texas, Matt and Nick Jackson put their executive roles on the line in a match that ended in a devastating lossboth physically and professionally.
Swerve Strickland and Will Ospreay faced the Bucks with massive stakes on both sides. If the Bucks lost, theyd be stripped of their EVP titles in AEW. On the flip side, if Swerve and Ospreay lost, theyd be banned from challenging for the AEW World Title for an entire year. In the end, it was the Bucks who lost it all.
The match was a nonstop war. The Bucks dominated early, isolating Ospreay while Swerve struggled to make his way back to the ring. Nick Jackson even hit a release Northern Lights Suplex on both men, asserting total control in the opening stretch.
Momentum swung when Ospreay managed to tag in Swerve. From there, things got violent. The two teams hit big double-team moves, including a double Styles Clash and a Swerve Stomp and Stormbreaker combo that almost sealed the deal.
At one point, the Young Bucks tried every trick in the book to surviveincluding a sneaky low blow behind the referees back. But no matter how hard they hit, Ospreay refused to stay down. After a brutal sequence of finishers and superkicks, Swerve stepped in to take multiple shots for his partner, refusing to back down.
The finish came when Swerve and Ospreay nailed Matt Jackson with a Hidden Blade and House Callscoring the three count and ending the Bucks reign as EVPs.
The crowd erupted as the reality sank in. The Young Bucks are no longer in charge, and AEW just shifted in a major way.
What do you think AEW will look like without the Young Bucks in power? Drop your thoughts in the comments and let us know how you feel about this major shakeup.