On May 21st, 2026 ROH aired the 167th episode of ROH live in Salisbury Maryland inside Wicomico Youth & Civic Center & can watch it on HonorClub.
Action Andretti defeated QT Marshall (8:51)
Tag Team Match
Maya World & Hyan defeated Kaia McKenna & Allie Katch (4:35)
Rush defeated Ryan O’Neill (1:00)
Tag Team Match
Bustah & The Brain (Jordan Oliver & Alec Price) defeated The Premier Athletes (Ariya Daivari & Tony Nese) (9:51)
Non Title Match
6 Man Tag Team Champions The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd) & Dalton Castle defeated 4Play (Chulo Montana, Danny Grandview & Ykies) (2:40)
Lio Rush defeated Aaron Solo (5:39)
Proving Ground Match
Women’s Pure Champion Deonna Purrazzo defeated Janai Kai (7:00)
Tag Team Match
Mina Shirakawa & Queen Aminata defeated MIT (Billie Starkz & Diamante) via DQ (8:44)
Television Title Match
AR Fox (c) defeated Shane Taylor (9:05) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
On May 15th, 2026 ROH aired the 19th annual Supercard Of Honor live in Salisbury, Maryland inside Wicomico Youth & Civic Center & can watch it on HonorClub & MyAEW.
ROH World Tag Team Champion Sammy Guevara defeated Action Andretti via GTH (11:29) (Pre Show)
Rush defeated LSG via Bull’s Horns (0:41) (Pre Show)
Tag Team Match
Mina Shirakawa & Queen Aminata defeated Janai Kai & Lacey Lane via Figure 4 on Kai (7:41) (Pre Show)
Tag Team Match
The Rascalz (Dezmond Xavier & Myron Reed) defeated The Premier Athletes (Ariya Daivari & Tony Nese) via Soup Kitchin on Daivari (11:22) (Pre Show)
Pure Rules Match
Nigel McGuinness defeated Josh Woods via Lariat (14:53)
Women’s Television Title Match Red Velvet (c) defeated Viva Van via Stir It Up (11:18) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
Television Title Match AR Fox (c) defeated Lio Rush via 450 Splash (15:42) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
Women’s Pure Title Match Deonna Purrazzo (c) defeated Diamante via Venus De Milo (13:01) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
Pure Title Match Lee Moriarty (c) defeated Ace Austin via Trap Pin (16:06) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
6 Man Tag Team Titles Match The Outrunners (Truth Mangum & Turbo Floyd) & Dalton Castle defeated Shane Taylor Promotions (Shane Taylor, Carlie Bravo & Shawn Dean) (c) via Run & Hide on Taylor (17:52) (NEW CHAMPIONS!!!!)
AEW National Title Match Mark Davis (c) defeated Xelhua via Lariat (14:14) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
ROH World Title Match Bandido (c) defeated Blake Christian via 21 Deadlift Plex (26:05) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!) (Recommend)
Women’s Title Survival Of The Fittest Match Athena (c) defeated Zayda Steel, Trish Adora, Yuka Sakazaki, Billie Starkz & Maya World via O Face on World (26:12) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!)
Ring of Honor recorded their upcoming ROH on HonorClub tapings on Saturday May 9th, 2026 at the SoFi Center in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.
If you do not wish to know any SPOILERS for the upcoming episode of ROH on HonorClub then DO NOT READ BELOW HERE.
Below are the quick spoiler results from the recent ROH on HonorClub tapings:
Two On One Handicap Match: Satnam Singh defeated CD Bennett & James Tapia
Pure Rules Match: Josh Woods defeated Angelico (w/Serpentico)
Survival Of The Fittest Qualifying Match: Zayda Steel (w/Christopher Daniels) defeated Hyan
Blake Christian (w/Lee Johnson) defeated Evil Uno (w/Alex Reynolds)
Deonna Purrazzo defeated Kaci Lennox
Shane Taylor Promotions (Carlie Bravo, Shane Taylor & Shawn Dean w/Anthony Ogogo & Christyan XO) defeated Eddie Kingston, Mance Warner & Ortiz
ROH World Television Championship Match: AR Fox defeated Nick Wayne (w/Kip Sabian & Mother Wayne) (c) to become the new ROH World TV Champion
Dalton Castle & The Outrunners (Truth Magnum & Turbo Floyd) defeated Baby Keef, Puma Johnson & Xander Maddox
Bandido defeated Action Andretti
Mixed Six Man Tag Team Match: The Premier Athletes (Ariya Daivari, Stori Denali & Tony Nese w/Mark Sterling) defeated Jacey Love, Maxx Stardom & Ricky Martinez
Death Riders (Daniel Garcia & Wheeler Yuta w/Jon Moxley & PAC) defeated Adam Priest & Tommy Billington
Marina Shafir & MIT (Athena & Billie Starkz) defeated Lacey Lane, Maya World & Yuka Sakazaki
A finishing move can end a match. A great promo can end a career — or launch one into the stratosphere. These 10 wrestlers understood something most never fully grasp: in professional wrestling, the microphone is the most dangerous weapon in the building.
10. MJF
AEW • 2019–PRESENT
Maxwell Jacob Friedman is the best heel talker of his generation and the strongest argument that elite mic work is not a relic of a previous era. MJF is clearly a student of the game. His promos are technically constructed with the precision of a trained writer — knowing exactly when to go personal, when to break kayfabe and when to let the crowd’s hatred fuel the next sentence. Just recent turning 30, MJF has already produced promo work that belongs in the same conversation as the legends above him on this list. You can see bits and pieces from the rest of the field in his work
9. Steve Austin
WCW / WWE • 1989–2003
Stone Cold Steve Austin’s mic work was deceptively simple — short sentences, blue collar attitude and a consistent philosophical code about beer, stubbornness and not taking orders. That simplicity was pure genius, because every word Austin said felt like something a real person in the audience would actually think or want to say themselves. His promos didn’t just over deliver on crowd reaction; they created a cultural identity that resonated far beyond wrestling fans. Add in the raspy Texas accent and 99% of the time you could feel his words.
8. John Cena
WWE • 2000–2025
John Cena’s mic work is one of the most underrated in wrestling history, largely because his babyface run drew so much heat that fans overlooked how technically accomplished he was at promos. His rap-influenced early character gave him a comedic edge and quick wittedness that few main event stars of his era could match. When Cena went serious — particularly in feuds with CM Punk and The Rock — he consistently delivered the kind of composed, layered promo work that belongs in any legitimate conversation about the best talkers of his generation.
7. Paul Heyman
ECW / WCW / WWE • 1987–PRESENT
Paul Heyman is the closest thing to a pure orator professional wrestling has ever produced — a man who could take the most absurd premise and present it with the conviction of a closing argument before a jury. As both a performer and an advocate for Brock Lesnar, he demonstrated that great mic work is fundamentally about persuasion, not volume. His promos don’t just sell matches; they reframe the entire narrative around his client as inevitable and undeniable.
6. Roddy Piper
NWA / WCW / WWE • 1975–2011
Roddy Piper was the original unpredictable — a man who could shift from hilarious to genuinely unnerving in a single sentence, and frequently did. His Piper’s Pit segments set the template for the wrestling talk show format precisely because he could not be scripted into a corner; he found the live wire in every exchange and grabbed it with both hands. Piper’s gift was making everyone around him seem like they were improvising just to keep up.
5. Jake “The Snake” Roberts
WWE / WCW / INDIES • 1974–2018
Where most wrestlers screamed to get their point across, Jake Roberts whispered — and arenas went dead silent. His mic work was psychological rather than theatrical, built on menace, metaphor and the unsettling calm of a man who had already decided what he was going to do to you. Roberts proved that restraint could be more terrifying than anything a louder wrestler could offer.
4. The Rock
WWE • 1996–PRESENT
The Rock turned catchphrases into cultural currency and crowd work into an art form, operating on a comedic timing and rhythm that most stand-up comedians would envy. His genius was making the audience feel like participants rather than spectators — his call-and-response style gave arenas of 20,000 people the illusion they were having a private conversation with him. No wrestler before or since has crossed over into mainstream entertainment on the strength of mic work alone quite like Dwayne Johnson did.
3. CM Punk
ROH / WWE / AEW • 2002–PRESENT
CM Punk’s 2011 “pipe bomb” promo remains the most electrifying unscripted moment in modern wrestling, but it was no accident — it was the product of a career built on sharp, specific and brutally honest mic work. Punk spoke with the controlled rage of someone who actually meant every single word, which made him uniquely credible in an era of polished corporate promos. Even his detractors concede that when the microphone was in his hand, you could not change the channel.
2. Dusty Rhodes
NWA / WCW / WWE • 1974–2010
The American Dream spoke directly to working-class audiences in a way no other wrestler in history has managed to replicate. His promos were loose, rambling and deeply emotional — yet somehow always landed exactly where they needed to. Dusty turned vulnerability into a superpower, and crowds didn’t just cheer for him; they believed him.
1. Ric Flair
NWA / WCW / WWE • 1972–2011
No one in wrestling history combined volume, charisma and pure spectacle the way Ric Flair did every time he grabbed a microphone. His promos were operatic performances — part carnival barker, part Shakespearean villain — delivered with a conviction that made every word feel like gospel. Whether he was bragging about limousine rides and jet plane flights or begging for mercy on his knees, Flair was incapable of giving a dull moment. I’m sure if you asked all men ranked behind him, they would agree he would be #1.
On April 30th, 2026 ROH aired the 164th episode of ROH TV live in Jacksonville Florida inside WJCT Studios & can watch it on HonorClub & MyAEW.
Konosuke Takeshita defeated Matt Menard via Power Drive Knee (6:43).
6 Man Tag Team Champion Shane Taylor defeated Mance Warner via Marcus Garvey Driver (8:07).
Stori Denali defeated Jacey Love via Chokeslam (2:27).
Lio Rush defeated Alan Angels via Blue Thunder Bomb (9:33).
Proving Ground Match
Women’s Pure Champion Deonna Purrazzo defeated Remi Reade via Fujiwara Armbar (3:07).
Tag Team Match
Top Flight (Dante Martin & Darius Martin) defeated Gringo Loco & Soleil via Double Facebuster on Gringo Loco (6:55).
Tag Team Match
The IInspiration (Jessie McKay & Cassie Lee) defeated Madi Maxx & Becca via Finalizer (3:41).
Viva Van defeated Sara Leon via Straight Jacket Electric Chair (4:28).
Tag Team Match
Paid In Full (Bryan Keith & Big Bill) defeated Nick Halen & Vin Parker via Double Team Big Boot on Halen (2:21).
Christyan XO defeated Frankie B via Scissor Kick (2:19).
6 Man Tag Team Match
The Don Callis Family (Rocky Romero, Trent Beretta & Mark Davis) defeated TMDK (Bad Dude Tito, Mikey Nicholls & Shane Haste) via Piledriver on Bad Dude Tito (11:12).
If you followed wrestling in the 2010s and after, you likely came across the Young Bucks at some point. Matt and Nick Jackson are more than another successful brother tag team. They became a focal point for what modern wrestling looks like, both in the ring and beyond. Their story goes beyond titles and standout matches. It reflects a shift in how the business itself operates.
Reinventing Modern Tag Team Wrestling
Photo Credit: Ring of Honor
Before the Bucks broke out on the independent scene, tag team wrestling in the United States had drifted into the background. It was reliable and sometimes very good, but it rarely drove ticket sales. Most matches followed a familiar structure, and fans could often predict the timing of the hot tag before the match even started.
The Bucks took that structure and reshaped it. Their matches leaned on constant movement, inventive double-team offense, and extended closing stretches that felt fast and chaotic but still controlled. Signature moments like the Meltzer Driver, More Bang For Your Buck, and the Superkick Party did more than get reactions. They introduced a new rhythm and visual style for tag wrestling. You could see other teams begin to adjust. What they were doing in PWG, ROH, and NJPW started to show up across the industry.
They also helped bring tag wrestling back into the main event conversation. For years, that idea had quietly faded. The notion that a tag match could close a major show without feeling like an exception started to feel normal again, and the Bucks played a major role in that shift.
Branding, Merch, and the Business Side of Wrestling
Young Bucks X account
One of the most important parts of the Young Bucks story has little to do with what happens in the ring. It comes down to branding. For a long time, the path for wrestlers felt straightforward. Sign with WWE, get television exposure, sell merchandise, and hope it leads somewhere. The Bucks showed there was another option.
Through Pro Wrestling Tees, they built a brand around themselves with logos, catchphrases, and designs fans actually wanted to wear. When their merchandise appeared in Hot Topic stores nationwide, it signaled something bigger. Wrestling outside the WWE system could connect with a wider audience.
That moment did not go unnoticed. Independent wrestlers saw it. Talent in Japan saw it. Even people within WWE paid attention. It opened the door for wrestlers to build careers on their own terms instead of waiting for a contract to define their value. In many ways, the Bucks helped push the idea of wrestlers as entrepreneurs before that mindset became common.
A Career Filled With Championships
Via NJPW X account
Alongside their influence, the Young Bucks built a resume that stands out across multiple promotions and countries.
Ring of Honor (ROH):
3-time ROH World Tag Team Champions
3-time ROH World Six-Man Tag Team Champions
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW):
7-time IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champions
1-time IWGP Heavyweight Tag Team Champions
3-time NEVER Openweight Six-Man Tag Team Champions
Their run in NJPW coincided with the rise of Bullet Club, which became one of the most recognizable factions in wrestling and a major force in merchandise sales.
All Elite Wrestling (AEW):
3-time AEW World Tag Team Champions
2-time AEW World Trios Champions with Kenny Omega
Few teams can point to repeated success across multiple major promotions while also contributing to each company’s growth.
Being The Elite and a New Kind of Storytelling
Being The Elie – YouTube
When the Bucks launched Being The Elite on YouTube, it felt like it was aimed at a niche audience. The show was loose, unpredictable, and often strange in a way that traditional wrestling rarely allows. It mixed travel clips, humor, cameos, and eventually full storyline development.
Wrestlers who later became central figures in AEW, including “Hangman” Adam Page and Kenny Omega, developed character arcs on the show before they reached national television. Some details were subtle, others were not, but it made the series feel essential to follow each week.
What set Being The Elite apart was how it felt. It did not come across as a polished marketing tool. It felt like a window into a group of wrestlers shaping their own presentation. Today, using YouTube or social media to advance storylines is common. At the time, it felt different. It even included moments that blurred the line between story and absurdity, like Adam Cole’s over-the-top on-screen death and return.
All In, AEW, and a Shift in the Industry
All In 2018 post show
turning point came with All In in 2018. Without backing from a major corporation, the Bucks and Cody Rhodes sold more than 10,000 tickets in minutes. For an independently driven event in the United States, that number stood out.
That success led directly to the launch of All Elite Wrestling in 2019. The impact was immediate. For the first time in nearly 20 years, two major televised wrestling promotions operated at the same time in the U.S. Wrestlers had more leverage. Contracts became more competitive. Fans had real options again.
Reactions to AEW vary, but its influence is clear. When you trace that shift back to its origins, the Young Bucks are a central part of the story.
Conclusion
(Image credit: JJ Williams)
The Young Bucks tend to divide opinion. Some view them as one of the greatest tag teams of their era. Others are not sold on their style. Either way, their impact is difficult to dispute. They changed the presentation of tag wrestling, reshaped how wrestlers approach business, and played a role in altering the structure of the industry itself.
Many wrestlers talk about changing the business. The Young Bucks followed through on it, and the effects are still being felt today.
This week’s episode of ROH on HonorClub was originally recorded on April 6th, 2026 from WJCT Studios in Jacksonville, Florida. The show aired on April 17th, 2026 on Ring of Honor’s HonorClub.
The show featured First Round Matches in the Survival of the Fittest Tournament, as well as a ROH Women’s World Championship Proving Ground match, a ROH World Television Championship match, and a ROH Pure Championship match. You can see the full results below.
ROH on HonorClub Results:
Survival Of The Fittest Qualifying Match: Billie Starkz defeated Lacey Lane – (7:27)
Survival Of The Fittest Qualifying Match: Yuka Sakazaki defeated Viva Van – (7:10)
ROH Pure Championship Match: Lee Moriarty (c) defeated Marshall von Erich to retain the ROH Pure Title – (6:51)
Survival Of The Fittest Qualifying Match: Trish Adora (w/Christyan XO) defeated Hyan – (7:28)
Survival Of The Fittest Qualifying Match: Persephone defeated Isla Dawn – (8:16)
ROH World Television Championship Match: Nick Wayne (w/Kip Sabian & Mother Wayne) (c) defeated Evil Uno to retain the ROH TV Title – (10:13)
AR Fox defeated Daisuke Sasaki – (9:37)
The Lethal Twist (Blake Christian, Jay Lethal & Lee Johnson) defeated Aaron Solo, Nick Comoroto & QT Marshall – (8:52)
Survival Of The Fittest Qualifying Match: Maya World defeated Robyn Renegade – (8:54)