Sarah Stock has gone after AEW again—this time blaming the company for keeping her away from her family on Christmas, and she’s naming names.
Stock took to Twitter and revealed that she missed spending the holiday with her 83-year-old mother for the first time in her life. And she pinned the blame squarely on AEW and several key names in the company, like Tony Khan, Bryan Danielson and others.
“First time in 46 years I couldn’t spend Christmas with my family. Thank you, @TonyKhan, @AEW, @koshairby, @the_real_manzo, Karen From-Not-HR, Daniel Bryan, for the rush landlock I’m facing due to your lack of ethics and infinite greed. My Mother is 83. If this was her last Christmas, may you all burn in the 3rd Round of the 7th Circle of Dante’s Inferno. Merry Christmas.”
Stock’s mention of a “rush landlock” seems to refer to an urgent bureaucratic or legal situation—likely related to her immigration or employment status—that prevented her from traveling home. Stock made it clear she holds the company personally responsible.
Not everyone online offered sympathy. One fan questioned whether unemployment would’ve freed her up to visit her family—and whether money was really the issue.
“Shouldn’t being jobless give you more time to be with your family? Did you not save money ahead of time to pay for transportation?”
Stock clapped back hard, clarifying that this had nothing to do with personal finances or a flexible schedule.
“Please educate yourself before speaking. Not an issue of ‘time’ or ‘money’. It’s ok that you’re ignorant, but to broadcast it so publicly is probably not the look you’re going for.”
This all stems from Stock’s series of tweets over the past few weeks, where she publicly called out AEW for alleged mistreatment of foreign talent, lack of HR response, and unfair travel policies—especially for Mexican and non-American female wrestlers.
According to Fightful Select, insiders confirmed that Stock’s comments had become “a significant point of conversation at AEW.” They noted that “there were some elements of her tweets that were claimed to be true,” particularly her claims about the inconsistent travel support between American stars and international talent.
According to one AEW source, only certain contracts include airport pickups or travel accommodations. Others—often foreign wrestlers—are expected to manage their own travel logistics and then get reimbursed. That gap, Stock argues, exposes an unfair double standard: big names like Edge or Orange Cassidy are taken care of, while stars like Stephanie Vaquer and Zeuxis are left to fend for themselves.
While AEW has yet to make any public statement addressing Stock’s allegations, her Christmas tweet shows the wounds are still wide open—and she’s not done speaking out.
Is Sarah Stock right to go public with these emotional grievances? Or is this battle getting too personal for social media? Share your thoughts in the comments below.