AEW Dynamite results and live updates from the Siegel Center in Richmond, VA, 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.
Two titles are on the line, and two matches in the Owen Hart Tournament continue on this AEW Dynamite! Speedball Mike Bailey challenges former friend Kevin Knight for the TNT Championship following his attack the previous week. The venomously-tongued MJF finally locks horns with the bull that is RUSH as he defends his AEW World Championship. Once United Empire teammates, Will Ospreay takes on his monstrous opponent and AEW National Champion Mark Davis in the Owen Hart Tournament. Ospreay’s fiancée, Alex Windsor, meanwhile, faces a Wild Card opponent in the women’s bracket of the Owen Hart Tournament.
Where is AEW Dynamite Tonight?
AEW Dynamite airs live tonight, from the Siegel Center in Richmond, Virginia.
What Time is AEW Dynamite Tonight?
HBO Max and the TBS Network air AEW Dynamite live tonight at 8 PM ET.
AEW Dynamite Card Tonight
- AEW World Championship: MJF (c) defeated RUSH
- Mark Briscoe defeated Lio Rush
- Andrade El Idolo defeated DK Vandu
- AEW TNT Championship: Kevin Knight (c) defeated Speedball Mike Bailey
- Owen Hart Women’s Tournament Semi-Final: Mercedes Mone defeated Alex Windsor
- Owen Hart Women’s Tournament Semi-Final: Will Ospreay defeated Mark Davis
Results From AEW Dynamite Tonight (6/3/26)
RUSH vowed to win the AEW World Championship
When asked by Renee Paquette how he felt ahead of his match against AEW World Champion MJF, RUSH illustrated his motivations: his family and his pride. MJF interrupted him, insulting his upcoming challenger. The pair brawled, to which security flocked. Later, Paquette asked RUSH again about his feelings on the match becoming “No Count Out”. This time, Andrade El Ídolo entered the scene and urged him to victory.
MJF (c) defeated RUSH for the AEW World Championship
Trading elbows with RUSH, MJF spurred his ire by hocking a loogie into his face. Understandably irate about this, RUSH took the action outside, where he spat on the champion and dashed him into the barricades. Referee Bryce Remsburg had to soothe the bull, who had MJF choked with a green wire. RUSH recovered in enough time to fling MJF into the timekeeper’s area via a Back Bodydrop. MJF took advantage of Remsburg, imploring RUSH not to shove him headfirst into an exposed turnbuckle. This sliced RUSH’s forehead into a waterfall of blood, which MJF rubbed his wrist into. He then landed a decent Spinebuster.
Undeterred by the trickling of blood down his face, RUSH raged on, slingshotting MJF from corner to corner. MJF converted RUSH’s hurricanrana into a Backbreaker. A Heatseeker from the champ wound up countered by a cacophonous headbutt. RUSH followed this with a Straitjacket Piledriver to the apron. Medical staff urged Remsburg to call the match off, finding neither man was fit to compete. RUSH took umbrage with this, plunging his Bull’s Horns into MJF. The champ rolled out of the way of another Bull’s Horns ahead of the barricade. Out in the crowd, MJF plummeted RUSH with a Tombstone Piledriver. Wild defiance rang through RUSH’s face before MJF tamed him to sleep with a crossface.
Post-match: Mark Briscoe prevented a post-match beatdown on RUSH. The Conglomeration joined him, including a returning Tomohiro Ishii.
Match Review: The selling was a tad, a smidge inconsistent. That said, the intensity was so hot here that I don’t even care. This was so gnarly and physical. I see this as a potential launchpad for RUSH to have a babyface run.
Mark Briscoe defeated Lio Rush
The Conglomeration watched in terror as Rush crept to the ring. Well, not Ishii, but he’s Ishii to be fair. Briscoe, meanwhile, regarded him curiously. He whispered into Briscoe’s ear, clearly confusing the Sussex County Chicken.
The spry Rush kept pace with Briscoe with kicks and chases. The pair gave a “Bang bang!” tribute to Cactus Jack on the apron. Rush galloped in pursuit of Briscoe, only to run into a scissorkick. Once they finished screaming at each other for some reason, both men bartered palm strikes. Briscoe leapt at another Cutter attempt to drop him with a Cutthroat Driver to win the match.
Post-match: Eschewing the comic relief of the match, Briscoe reminisced about the good times he had with his brother Jay. They had a birthday tradition of eating birthday cake together, but on their birthday, the year of Jay’s passing, Mark debuted in AEW. Being a man of love, Briscoe grieved that MJF brought hate out of him. He pointed the camera’s attention to his Hebrew tattoo, which translates to “Child of God.” Citing the end of The Bible, he said that the devil (MJF) would lose. Spoiler alert.
Match review: I appreciate the goofiness, but Rush’s character work has extended neatly into his in-ring capabilities.
Thekla set a Ladder Match
Detailing her past in World Wonder Ring Stardom, Thekla boasted her ruthless attitude. Flanked by Skye Blue and Julia Hart, she pointed out that they have to win the Owen Hart Tournament and the TBS Championship, respectively. As her Sisters of Sin brought out a ladder, Thekla promised to shut the Forbidden Door on Stardom. To drive the point home further as to her feelings on the promotion, she spat on its logo.
Jon Moxley motivated Will Ospreay
Daniel Garcia started bragging about the Death Riders. Moxley told him to stop talking. He focused on Ospreay, presenting that he will need no fear in his match with Mark Davis. Uncomfortable with all the faction warfare going on in the company, he assured Ospreay he needed not worry about it. He concluded the talk pointing out Ospreay’s changes have become more and more evident.
Andrade El Idolo defeated DK Vandu, Don Callis Family entered with a new member
Idolo swiftly dominated Vandu, soundly squashing him with a DM. He gave a short promo declaring he’d come for MJF’s AEW World Championship.
Don Callis and Jake Doyle greeted Idolo and congratulated him on his victory. He then welcomed AEW TNT Champion Kevin Knight into his Family.
Kevin Knight (c) defeated Speedball Mike Bailey for the AEW TNT Championship
Knight eluded Bailey, bashing them against the steel steps and unleashing uppercuts. Bailey similarly evaded Knight’s springboards. Having studied each other’s moveset, the former JetSpeed partners met at several standstills. However, Bailey gained leverage by way of a Corkscrew Crossbody. Knight caught them in mid-air, toppling with a vertical suplex and baseball lariat. Having planned a Triangle Moonsault, Bailey’s aspirations of striking down his ex-friend flew just as he did out of the ring when he missed. Knight decapitated him with a soaring clothesline from the top rope.
Bailey gritted their teeth, crashing Knight down with a kick to the midsection. Knight replied with a backbreaker. Jake Doyle distracted Referee Mike Knox, allowing Don Callis to disrupt Bailey’s hurricanrana. Knight bodyslammed Bailey to the mat, securing a victorious title defense.
Post-match: Knight labeled Bailey as the dead weight that weighed him down. After linking up with Don Callis, he felt ready to clash soon with MJF for the AEW World Championship.
Match review: This lacked the emotion and intensity of the two despite what would have otherwise been expected. Not the amount of urgency, hesitancy, or emotions as would have been expected. Furthermore, I’m not a fan of Knight joining the Don Callis Family.
The Dogs rejected the Young Bucks’ offer to settle the score
Believing themselves entitled to a match against The Dogs, The Young Bucks proposed that the two teams lock up in the ring. David Finlay shrugged off this request, stating that the Dogs would face them when they felt like it.
MJF still refused to allow Mark Briscoe to challenge for his title
Soaking in a tub, MJF answered Renee Paquette’s questions on Briscoe’s earlier challenge. The answer was still no.
Mercedes Mone defeated Alex Windsor
Mone dropped Windsor at any point she had an opening, bullying her along the way. Windsor charged, falling into a roll-up. Mone tossed Windsor around in armdrags and a Statement Maker. The returning CEO clashed Windsor to the floor with a top-turnbuckle Meteora. Windsor hurled Mone with an Iconoclasm to gain some breathing room. Mone connected with the Three Amigos. Once again, Mone resorted to a Meteora. Windsor shook off a rolling powerbomb to the corner, trapping her in a pin. Cracking Windsor with a knee, Mone swung Windsor in for a backstabber and Statement Maker. Windsor tapped, but Mone didn’t let go for almost a minute after winning.
Match review: Welcome back, CEO. We’ve missed you. My only complaint is that this should have been the main event.
Don Callis touted his Family’s influence
Proud of acquiring Kevin Knight, Callis shifted attention to Mark Davis’s upcoming match with Will Ospreay. Moving on to Kazuchika Okada, Callis stated he got screwed by Konosuke Takeshita’s AEW International Championship victory. Okada agreed, declaring that his title was unfit to sit idly in someone’s backpack.
Tommaso Ciampa baldly declared his intentions for Jericho
Ciampa recounted Jericho’s return to AEW. The Psycho Killer also included his ascent on the roster since his debut. He threatened to cut Jericho’s return run short.
Will Ospreay defeated Mark Davis
Immediately, Ospreay focused on Davis’s left knee. The gartantuan Aussie stretched the Aerial Assassin with an abdominal stretch. He displayed more killer instinct, clobbering Davis’s head on the commentary desk. Perhaps he got too confident, as Davis redirected a Tornado-DDT to a spinning toss onto the commentary desk. He demolished Ospreay even more with a superplex. Viewing victory on the horizon, Davis chopped his former United Empire teammate down. Ospreay fought back, chipping away with Kawada Kicks and an enzuigeri. Davis blocked a Hidden Blade with his right forearm. Ospreay continued dismantling Davis, extending an armbar. Davis used this to powerbomb him and then piledrive him. On the apron, Ospreay tried for a Piledriver, yet flopped to the ring with a clothesline. Davis collapsed, prime for Ospreay’s successful Robinson Special. Ospreay countered a powerbomb from the apron to the floor with a hurricanrana. Not even a Styles Clash could destroy the giant
. Davis accidentally kicked the referee out of the ring. Ospreay stabbed Davis with his Hidden Blade finisher. Trent Beretta and El Clon attacked Ospreay, but Wheeler Yuta and Daniel Garcia came to his aid. Lance Archer sent them down with a Flying Crossbody. Claudio Castagnoli unleashed a corkscrew uppercut to send him out. Brian Cage sent Castagnoli packing, but PAC dropkicked him to the floor. Ospreay planted Davis with an Oscutter. Jake Doyle splashed Ospreay across the ring. Marina Shafir clung to Doyle’s back to choke him out, finding herself slammed down instead. Jon Moxley brawled with Doyle and equalized him with a Paradigm Shift. As the madness subsided, Ospreay clutched Davis with a Double Underhook, but Kyle Fletcher thwarted him with a Half & Half from behind. Pulling out a screwdriver, Fletcher nearly stabbed him with it. Konosuke Takeshita pulled him away, and the pair teed off toward backstage. Davis grabbed the screwdriver, but a Hidden Blade denied its use. Ospreay grounded Davis with an armbar that ultimately submitted the Australian beast.
Match review: Virginia was in a riot throughout this. The carnage and chaos of Death Riders, Takeshita, and the Don Callis Family injected quite the fire into this match. I can see why it main evented over Mercedes Mone’s return, but unless this leads to Blood & Guts or Anarchy in the Arena, I’m not sure how to feel about this, other than pumped by the overall performance and execution.
Final Thoughts
Not a bad show, I’d say. However, there were some things I didn’t agree with. Namely, the aligning of Kevin Knight to the Don Callis Family was a step back. Especially after the Swerve Strickland teases. Additionally, the women should have had more depth on the show; a few matches couldn’t have hurt. Considering the Owen Hart Cup Tournament is ongoing, this would’ve been feasible. Given that Mercedes Mone had been anticipated by fans for a while, her main eventing with Windsor would’ve been a slam dunk.
All of that aside, the in-ring was spectacular. Every match, aside from the Idolo squash, hit. I’m only slightly disappointed that JetSpeed’s breakup match didn’t have the intensity or urgency required of such a strong tag team run. RUSH came out of this show looking the best, I’d say, but I hope he’s not cooled off too much after his loss.