AEW Star Addresses TV Absence: “We Are Taking A Break”

Satnam Singh Billy Gunn The Acclaimed Jay Lethal at AEW All Out

Satnam Singh opened up about not being as heavily featured on AEW programming as he was in the past.

Though he was once a regular fixture on AEW television alongside Jeff Jarrett, Jay Lethal, and Sonjay Dutt, Satnam Singh hasn’t wrestled since All Out, where he teamed with Lethal and Jarrett to take on The Acclaimed and Billy Gunn.

Speaking in a new interview with Sportskeeda, Singh admitted that it’s difficult to find the right story to tell with so many wrestlers on the All Elite Wrestling roster, and he says he and his crew are taking a break until the time is right.

“We have to try to figure out the story. There are so many wrestlers over there right now. It’s almost like over 300 wrestlers, so we try to put everything together. We have like four shows in a week. Wednesday, we have Dynamite, Rampage, then we have Saturdays, Collision, [ROH]. So we have a lot of shows going on.

“So I talk to Sonjay and I talk to Jeff Jarrett and also Jay Lethal, so what’s the story? What’s going on? So I think when I come back from India to here, we are going to start back on the road…now we are taking [a] break.” (h/t Fightful)

Satnam Singh On QT Marshall’s AEW Departure: “I Was Really Sad”

Elsewhere in the interview, Singh opened up about his relationship with QT Marshall, who recently announced his exit from AEW.

“I’m really sad. When I talk to Coach always, and he’s a really good friend of [mine]. He’s my coach, he teach me everything. So when I ask him last week, I said, ‘Hey Coach, are you coming this week? Because I’m going to India, I want to see you before I go.’

“He [sent me a] message, he said, ‘I’m sorry, I missed AEW tonight, and I’m not coming anymore over there. So I hope I can come there, but I’m [leaving] AEW.’ I said, ‘Oh, seriously?’ He said, ‘Yeah.’

“I was really sad. I will say he’s [an] amazing coach. He knows everything [about wrestling]. From zero wrestler, like me, I was totally [a] basketball player. I don’t know anything about wrestling, and he teach me everything. How good is that?

“I want to say to him, good luck for the future, and I hope he finds a better opportunity somewhere so he can teach or maybe he can coach, whatever he want to do. But I want to say, good luck for the future, good luck with everything. I go to his school, so I go see him always. So I [would] really like to learn from him more and more.” (h/t Fightful)