As the road towards Forbidden Door, the cross-promotional Pay-Per-View between AEW and New Japan Pro Wrestling, inches closer and closer with each passing day, wrestlers in both promotions are scrambling to find opponents for what should be one of the most loaded cards in recent memory.

Jon Moxley has a bout set with Hiroshi Tanahashi, there's something brewing between Adam Cole, Adam Page, and Jay White, and the United Empire is preparing arms to take on the Best Friends-plus-FTR, with Jeff Cobb and Great-O-Khan calling out Trent, Chuck, and Rocky Romero at NJPW Dominion.

But who will Bryan Danielson, one of the hardest-hitting performers in wrestling history, face off against at the marquee PPV? Will he wrestle CHAOS' Tomohiro Ishii in the hardest-hitting chop fest in the history of Chicago? Or how about Minoru Suzuki, the crazy-haired assassin who isn't afraid to throw down with anyone?

Well, Danielson might not have to explicitly seek out a challenger, as a well-traveled foe, Zack Sabre Jr., informally called out the “American Dragon” while the cameras were rolling at the end of Dominion. If Tony Khan and Gedo are wise, they'll take ZSJ on that offer, as it would quite possibly go down as one of the best technical matches on a card presumably loaded with fantastic matches.

Zack Sabre Jr. and Bryan Danielson could put on an all-time AEW classic.

Zack Sabre Jr. and Bryan Danielson might just be the two best technical wrestlers in the world today. The duo hit like jackhammers, grapple on the mat, and execute all sorts of fantastic holds designed to put their foes in so much pain they have to either tap, pass out, or risk serious injury.

Goodness, when even WWE calls ZSJ one of the best technical wrestlers on the planet, five years ago before he really popped off internationally no less, there has to be some fire generating all of that smoke.

Though the duo have yet to face off in an AEW ring, an NJPW ring, or any other promotion's ring for that matter either, they've wrestled many of the same performers, including Kenny Omega and “Hangman” Adam Page, and have consistently had their matches graded highly on the Wrestling Observer scale, with the duo combining for nine five-star matches according to Dave Meltzer.

Speaking of Meltzer, in his end-of-the-year Wrestling Observer Awards, either Sabre and Danielson have won the “Bryan Danielson Award – Best Technical Wrestler” every year since 2005, with the former securing seven nods and the latter earning ten. Throw that duo together in a winner-take-all bout for the technical wrestling crown without any championship belts to cloud the booking and watch in awe at the masterclass that ensues.

Contrary to popular belief, every important match doesn't have to be for a title. Sure, championship gold can add pedigree, hype, and historical significance to a bout, but in the modern age, where every match is added to Cagematch and most can be watched one way or another on the internet with relative ease, even if a Bryan Danielson- Zack Sabre Jr. match holds no more significance in the AEW history books than a random bout on Dark Elevation between Tony Deppen and John Silver, its technical mastery would surely live on in the hearts, minds, and browsing histories of wrestling fans forever.