Summary

Wardlow said he is getting close to an in-ring return after suffering a torn pec, calling himself "very, very close" to being ready again.

Speaking on BCP+, the former TNT Champion apologized to fans for disappearing from social media and said he never wants to be absent like that again. He described the last two years as a difficult stretch that took him away from wrestling, training and much of the routine he cares about.

The update follows another recent Wardlow injury story, as he also said he filmed *American Gladiators* with a fully torn left bicep in a separate part of the same interview. That earlier account added to the picture of just how much he has been working through while off AEW television, as covered in Wardlow Says He Filmed American Gladiators With A Fully Torn Left Bicep.

Wardlow opened up about the car accident and time away

Wardlow said the torn pec is the first injury in his career that has actually forced him to stop wrestling. He added that previous stretches away from television were not injury-related, but instead came down to creative plans or simply not being used.

He also revisited the April 2024 car accident that disrupted his momentum. Wardlow said he still flew to work after the crash, only for doctors to discover that his hip was out of place when he arrived. He planned to keep going, but after another storyline was scrapped, he finally decided to step away and recover.

What Wardlow being near ready could mean for AEW

If Wardlow is as close to returning as he says, AEW could soon have a chance to revisit the direction set up when he came back at Forbidden Door 2025, targeted Swerve Strickland and joined The Don Callis Family. That matters because his last on-screen move was not a reset, it was the start of a fresh angle that never had much time to develop.

It also puts extra weight on whatever AEW does with him next. After a torn pec, the fallout from a car accident and a long stretch away, Wardlow's first real follow-up appearance would need to feel like a meaningful re-entry point rather than another brief stop-and-start.

Quote from Wardlow

"I miss him too. I miss Wardlow so bad. Like I said, it's been over two years since I've wrestled. So, it has been a rough two years. Basically everything I have loved and cared about was taken away from me almost all at once. From my friend to my dog to wrestling to the ability to work out. I mean, everything I loved was taken from me, and I miss wrestling so much, I can't even put it into words, and I do wanna apologize to the fans for my absence, and for completely going ghost on social media. Because I just kind of hid under a rock for a while... So I apologize to the fans. I will never be absent again, and I am so excited to get back to wrestling in front of a live crowd and at this point, I don't care if they're cheering me, I don't care if they're booing me. I just want to feel that energy. Positive or negative. I just wanna feel that energy and get back to doing what I love, and we're very, very close to being ready... Obviously, I'm healing up from the torn pec, which most people know about. I also wanna state, because there's a lot of discourse online about this, about injuries, right? This torn pec is the first injury in my entire life, indies included, that I've ever taken time off for wrestling. Any time you saw me absent before the car accident, any time you saw me absent was never because of an injury. It was creative or there just wasn't anything going on at the time and I was sitting at home. Did I tweak my knee? Yes, and I continued wrestling. Did I tweak my hamstring? Yes. I continued wrestling. Then I got into that car accident, and I'm so dumb I would have continued to wrestle. Most people after that car accident would have been in a hospital bed. I didn't even go to the hospital. I got in my car, went to the airport, and I flew across the country for work, and I had to stand in the bathroom most of the flight because it hurt so bad to sit down. When I got to work, I had our doctors take a look at me and my hip was actually popped out of place, and I flew there with my hip out of place which is why it hurt so bad to sit down, and they popped my hip right back into place right there, which I don't think I've ever made the noise I made when that happened. I have a pretty high pain tolerance. Boy, did that hurt. So it was the car accident that really messed me up, and I was gonna continue to work, which maybe wouldn't have been smart but I was gonna continue to work, and then the storyline that was planned got thrown in the garbage for like the second or third time, and that's when I ultimately decided, okay, I'm gonna go home. The storyline that I was looking forward to for the second time got canned. I can barely walk at this point after the car accident. So I finally decided to take some time off, which was the first time ever in my career, and then it was while I was healing from that, (American) Gladiators came about. So, thank you to AEW and thank you to Tony Khan for giving me the blessing to go do Gladiators, and then yes, obviously a bummer. I come back immediately, tear my pec. But, we are most definitely going to come back the biggest, baddest version of Wardlow that anybody's ever seen."

Sources

Wardlow while speaking on BCP+