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AEW Dynamite Graphic of NJF and Hangman Adam Page to decide their stipulation at AEW Revolution
February 25, 2026 By  AEW, North America, Pro Wrestling

AEW Dynamite Results and LIVE Updates (2/25/26): MJF vs Page Stipulation

AEW Dynamite results and live updates from the Mission Ballroom in Denver, Colorado, tonight will be available throughout the show. Please bookmark this page and check back frequently for live updates during and after every match and segment.

AEW Revolution is inching closer, but what will the layout of MJF and Hangman Adam Page’s match be? They meet tonight to confirm just that, as they decide the stipulation for their upcoming AEW Men’s World Championship Match. El Clon represents the Don Callis Family against Death Rider leader Jon Moxley. Elsewhere, can Orange Cassidy’s aloof antics match up with the slugger, madman mentality of NJPW’s Gabe Kidd? Lastly, while Mark Davis is on a tear, how will he stack up against fan-favorite Brody King?

Where is AEW Dynamite Tonight?

AEW Dynamite airs live tonight, from the Sacramento Memorial Auditorium in Sacramento, CA.

What Time is AEW Dynamite Tonight?

HBO Max and the TBS Network air AEW Dynamite live tonight at 8 PM ET.

AEW Dynamite Quick Results

  • Jon Moxley defeated El Clon
  • Gabe Kidd defeated Orange Cassidy
  • Kevin Knight defeated Mansoor
  • AEW Revolution: MJF (c) versus Hangman Page will be a Texas Death Match for the AEW Men’s World Championship
  • AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship: Babes of Wrath (c) versus Megabad ended in DQ
  • Brody King defeated Mark Davis
  • Mile High Madness: Young Bucks, The Rascalz, & Jack Perry defeated The Demand and FTR

AEW Dynamite Results from AEW Dynamite Tonight (2/25/26)

Dynamite Cold Open

Babes of Wrath and Megabad swore to defeat one another for the AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship. Young Bucks and FTR shared their anticipation of beating each other in the ring. Their Mile High Madness Match was confirmed to be the night’s main event.

Jon Moxley defeated El Clon

Renee Paquette asked Marina Shafir, following the latter’s accompaniment of Moxley to the ring, about the pre-match slap. Sheafir indicated that the slap was for the joy of battle.

Despite his best efforts, Clon quickly found himself grounded by Moxley’s grapplings. Moxley shrugged off a shoulder tackle with a crude hand gesture. Clon finally gained momentum with a couple of armdrags. Outside, Moxley clobbered his masked opponent with a barrage of fists against the barricade. An armbar left Clon desperately legging at the bottom rope for a break. Undeterred, Clon rebounded with lethal chest chops and then used the tag rope to throttle the Death Rider.

Back outside, Clon walked up the barricade to Moonsault a horizontal Moxley. Moxley retaliated, propping Clon’s neck on the bottom rope to emulate Seth Rollins’s curb stomp—onto the apron. Somehow, Moxley absorbed a low blow and a kick to the throat to decapitate Clon with a King Kong Lariat. He capitalized with a Piledriver. Clon eluded a sleeper hold by cranking Moxley’s arm on his shoulder and followed with a pele kick. To the shock of the Denver crowd, he vaulted himself from the mat to the outside, spilling Moxley to the floor. Moxley lay in wait moments later for a Cutter to deny a Flying Crossbody. With less than 5 minutes remaining, Clon sought a flying stomp from the top to no avail. A Paradigm Shift courtesy of Moxley rejected a Fireman’s Carry, but a Death Rider secured him the 3-count.

(Clon’s presence on the roster has differentiated quite nicely from Hologram’s style. It sets him apart from the more acrobatic luchador. To mesh well with Moxley’s in-ring style is the cherry on top.)

Swerve Strickland and Prince Nana addressed the fans

Nana evicted the commentary team from their desk, rudely, if I might add. Strickland emerged from the crowd to stand on said desk, boasting over his victory and the punishment of Kenny Omega from the February 18 episode of Dynamite. Proudly declaring himself soon to be next in line for the AEW Men’s World Championship, he professed Omega’s folly was thinking him not a threat. Even hinting that Brody King was the most dangerous member of the AEW roster put Omega at further odds with Strickland. A member of the Denver crowd insulted Strickland, to which he responded, “Your momma, boy.” Lastly, Strickland announced that the rest of the AEW roster was on notice.

Brody King was ready for Mark Davis

Brody King didn’t take kindly to Strickland’s comments and actions because of Omega’s compliment weeks earlier. King then shifted his attention to Mark Davis, whom he was set to fight later on. Tag team partner Bandido hyped King up.

Gabe Kidd defeated Orange Cassidy

Kidd’s earlier control rested on his brawling style. Cassidy responded with his fluid and evasive tactics. Kidd hurled Cassidy outside, where he battered him against the barricade. Cassidy eventually landed offense with a Stundog Millionaire, to which he added a Diving DDT. Kidd regained dominance with a Powerbomb and a knee strike. Weakly, Cassidy partook in his usual routine of soft chops and hands in pockets before rerouting Kidds’ Powerbomb into a Beach Break. Kidd resorted to a Piledriver to end Cassidy once and for all.

Post-match: Clark Connors joined Kidd, and together they assaulted Cassidy. Darby Allin charged into the ring, driving a skateboard into Kidd’s jaw before sliding it to Connors. There, Allin snuck in a Code Red. Kidd returned to strike Allin, but Cassidy surprised him with an Orange Punch. Allin added to this with a swing from his board.

(I was curious as to what this match would look like, and it reached those expectations. Not really mindblowing, but an intriguing blend of styles.)

Kris Statlander warned Thunder Rosa about Thekla

Rosa laid out a fiery Spanish promo addressing her March 4 match against AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla. Former champ Statlander solemnly urged Rosa to exercise caution, but Rosa ignored her. Instead, La Mera Mera told Stat that they’d be teaming up together soon against the Sisters of Sin.

Kevin Knight defeated Mansoor

Mansoor, to Knight’s delighted shock, kept the JetSpeed member at bay with his own brand of agile maneuvers. A Spinebuster kept Mansoor well in control. Knight resorted to a more grounded approach, using his stiff arm for a Flying Lariat. Thanks to some hurricanranas and a Tornado DDT, Knight quelled Mansoor with a UFO Splash.

Post-match: Knight wished fellow AEW Men’s World Trios Champion, Hangman Adam Page, luck in his stipulation choice on the show. He then reiterated that he wasn’t the future, but the now.

(Mansoor showed out while making Knight look like a main eventer.)

Hangman Adam Page and MJF’s Revolution Title Match Stipulation

MJF began things by reminding everyone of Page’s ultimatum. Alluding to the cost of former talent Cody Rhodes’s loss of his chance to ever challenge for the AEW Men’s World Championship in 2019, he savored possibly doing so to Page in 2026. He left it to a coin flip. MJF proposed that if the coin landed in his favor, Page wouldn’t be allowed to use weapons.

Page responded that the coin flip would be alright with him. However, he asked who MJF thought he’d be if he did introduce the nasty weapons of a Texas Death Match against him. To Page, if he couldn’t beat someone like MJF, he wouldn’t deserve the championship. MJF flipped the coin, which landed in his favor. Page demanded to see the quarter. MJF attempted to flee, but JetSpeed and BroDido cut him off, cornering him in the ring. Page took the quarter to find both faces to be exact replicas of each other.  Tony Khan in the back instructed Tony Schiavone to announce the match as a Texad Death Match as a consequence for MJF’s attempted rigging.

Brawling Birds put the Women’s World Tag Team scene on notice

Alex Windsor and Jamie Hayter stated their intent for tag team gold in AEW’s women’s roster.

Babes of Wrath (c) (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) versus Megabad (Megan Bayne & Penelope Ford w/Lena Kross) for the AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship ended in DQ

Nightingale fell victim to a sneak tag by Ford after repeated dominance by Bayne. However, Nightingale fired back with stiff forearms. Cameron helped with a Senton assist from her partner. Bayne toppled the Babes with a tope and positioned them for a Moonsault from Ford. Nightingale swung a comeback with a Spinebuster to the Megasus. A German suplex and a Cannonball hurled further damage to Bayne. Kross, with one of the tag team championships, swung it at Nightingale. The match ended in disqualification, but Kross and Bayne clobbered the champs anyway.

(Tragic that Ford’s return from injury was cut short. Her body is giving her no breaks except for what happens to her bones. I hope she heals up quickly. She just got back.)

Brody King defeated Mark Davis

These two big boys clashed, but neither gave an inch. King slid away from Davis’s Senton to drop one of his own. Davis thwarted a charging King by driving his full weight upon the tattooed behemoth. King regained momentum with a Death Valley Driver. After exchanging elbows, King caught Davis’s lariat and sent him back-prone to the mat. Diving between the top ropes, King launched Davis nearly into the front row of fans. Sitting Davis on a chair adjacent to the barricade, King squished him with a Flying Crossbody.

Withstanding King’s Cannonball, Davis slithered into a sleeper hold. Unquenched, Davis returned with a lariat. King pulled him up again and again for two lariats before enjoying victory by 3-count.

Post-match: King challenged Swerve Strickland for a match at AEW Revolution. Backstage, Strickland smirked and walked off. Bandido also wanted to fight at Revolution, to which Andrade El Idolo answered with his presence at the entrance.

(One-hundred percent, the hoss fight I knew this would be. Davis’s stock is rising.)

Kyle Fletcher named his TNT title “Pinky”, Kazuchika Okada wanted to reunite

Fletcher heard that Tommaso Ciampa wanted a rematch for the TNT Championship and remained confident that the result would be the same. Okada approached, asking Fletcher if he’d want to reunite as ProtoKada again.

Mile High Madness: Young Bucks (Nick and Matt Jackson), Rascalz (Desmond Xavier & Zachary Wentz), & Jack Perry defeated FTR (Dax Harwood & Cash Wheeler) & The Demand (Ricochet, Toa Liona, & Bishop Kaun)

The Demand and FTR ambushed Jack Perry en route to the ring. “Tarzan Boy” by Baltimora played for half of the match. The Young Bucks focused mostly on FTR while the Rascalz and Perry kept their attention on The Demand. Wheeler used Stokely Hathaway and his wheelchair as a weapon against the Bucks. FTR and the Bucks used trash cans and recycling bins agains the other. Wentz and Xavier resorted to chairs. Perry hit a DDT on Ricochet. Just when the Bucks were ready to superkick Ricohet. FTR came to his aid. The Rascalz united with the Bucks for a combined superkick to FTR.

Nick and Matt set up a table outside, hoping to drop Harwood through it. Liona caught them, set to drop them, until the Rascalz superkicked him. Perry joined all four in a combined superkick to Liona. Xavier laid everyone out at ringside, while Liona launched Perry into the table by the commentary desk. Wentz singlehandedly rocked The Demand and FTR; Liona waited with a headbutt to trounce him. Ricochet and Kaun buffeted Xavier with kicks so Liona and Wheeler could splash him. Ricochet twirled with a 450-Splash. Nick faked Harwood out with a superkick, instead dropping him with a DDT. Rascalz superplexed Ricochet into another wooden table. The Bucks used a superkick to assist Perry’s Canadian Destroyer on Liona to yet another table. He hit another Destroyer, this time on Ricochet, who suffered a BTE Trigger. The Bucks threw Perry into Ricochet, to which he gained the pinfall victory.

(So much happened here. I’m kind of overwhelmed, but in the best way possible. The carnage of this match was probably one of my favorite TV matches this year so far.)

Final thoughts

The main event scene saw the most attention put into it, that’s for sure. Strickland, King, Page, MJF, Idolo, BroDido, they all feel so huge. Of course, the women suffered a bit in this, with a Thunder Rosa + Kris Statlander promo and a tag match that saw Penelope Ford injured. So, highs and lows. Speaking of highs, though, that Mile High Madness was a blast. I’m one-hundred percent okay with this being a sporadic television version of Double or Nothing’s Anarchy in the Arena. “Tarzan Boy” playing repeatedly on loop added a humor and hype factor that made this match special. Overall, a great night for AEW.

About Corey Michaels

Corey is a content creator who covers pro wrestling and comic books. A lover of literature and great storytelling, Corey writes in a way that will capture emotions and detail that resonates with readers. He also loves video games, scented candles, and Reeses Peanut Butter Cups.