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AEW Dynamite Preview (5/28/25) - Double or Nothing Fallout

AEW Dynamite Results (5/28/25) – Double or Nothing Fallout

Welcome to our live recap of tonight’s AEW Dynamite results.

AEW Dynamite emanates live from the El Paso County Coliseum in El Paso, TX, tonight. Double or Nothing is over and done with. Bodies have hit the floor. With the dust settled, what’s next for the wrestlers of All Elite Wrestling? AEW’s momentum continues with Brody King locking horns with the Don Callis Family’s Josh Alexander in an International Championship Qualifier! This follows the post-match events from the Don Callis Family versus Paragon at Double or Nothing’s penultimate match. Owen Hart Cup finalist Mercedes Mone confronts AEW Women’s World Champion “Timeless” Toni Storm ahead of their All In title bout. As he readies for AEW Men’s World Champion Jon Moxley, Hangman Adam Page addresses the Texan crowd and the AEW fanbase in addition to the Death Riders and this upcoming opportunity. All of this and more, tonight!

Follow along with live results from tonight’s card with play-by-play and takes from the matches!

AEW Dynamite Card Tonight:

  • AEW International Championship 4-Way Qualifier: Josh Alexander vs. Brody King
  • TNT Championship: Adam Cole versus Kyle Fletcher
  • “Timeless” Toni Storm and Mercedes Mone meet
  • Hangman Adam Page speaks
  • Harley Cameron and Anna Jay versus Megan Bayne and Penelope Ford
  • Willow Nightingale, Mark Briscoe, and “Speedball” Mike Bailey versus Marina Shafir, Jon Moxley, and Gabe Kidd
  • and more!

Where is AEW Dynamite Tonight?

AEW Dynamite airs live from the El Paso County Coliseum in El Paso, Texas.

What Time is AEW Dynamite Tonight?

Dynamite airs weekly at 8 PM EST on TBS Network and Max.

 

AEW Dynamite Results

Hangman Adam Page’s in-ring promo

Grieving the past few years of anger and aimlessness, Page thanked Ospreay for the match at Double or Nothing. He touted the Aerial Assassin as someone capable of moving the company forward. Furthermore, he expressed that AEW was built on heart and creativity. Ending the promo, he promised to win the AEW Men’s World Championship and become someone the fans can be proud of.

Swerve Strickland approached him, playing back the Young Bucks’ promo post-AEW Dynasty, where they professed they cost Strickland the match for Page. He asked Page if he had any hand in his loss, to which the Anxious Millennial Cowboy answered that he moreso aimed his sights on Jon Moxley that night. Will Ospreay emerged, playing mediator. The Brit expressed his support for Page in a plea to Strickland, whom he saw as his older brother. Ultimately, he stated they weren’t the ones to take out Moxley—Page is. Strickland berated Ospreay, stating that he would never work with Page. The Owen Hart Cup finalist expressed the same sentiment.

Page looks the closest to his former self here. I can’t help but hope this ends Moxley’s reign in what will undoubtedly be a great match.

Marina Shafir, Jon Moxley, & Gabe Kidd defeated Willow Nightingale, Mark Briscoe, & “Speedball” Mike Bailey

Kidd began the match exchanging forearms, fists, and chops with Briscoe. On the outside, Bailey hit Moxley with a gnarly thrust kick. Briscoe paid tribute to Sabu with a point to the sky before toppling the Death Riders with a chair-assisted top rope dive. Bailey overwhelmed Moxley with kicks before landing a Running Shooting Star Press. Nightingale and Shaifr entered with a hot tag, but the former rained an all-out assault on her opponent. Kidd pulled Nightingale’s hair, but Briscoe came to her aid. Bailey sought a dive onto a prone Moxley, but Wheeler Yuta intervened, tossing him to Kidd. Mistakenly diving into Moxley’s world of brawls, Bailey immediately rectified this with a kick. Kidd enraged Nightingale before flattening Bailey with a thunderous lariat.

Briscoe entered the fray, overcoming Moxley and Kidd with an enziguiri and a lunging dropkick, respectively. Briscoe landed a Froggy-Bow on Kidd despite Shafir and Yuta’s interruption. Claudio Castagnoli distracted Briscoe, but Komander treaded on the top rope for a dive. Moxley struck Briscoe with a Paradigm Shift, followed by a bulldog hold, as the Death Riders and Kidd held their opponents to unconsciousness.

Such a thrilling formula. Briscoe gave Kidd a chance to shine, while Moxley did the same for Bailey. Nightingale was the star of the match, with her energy being too much for Shafir. The Yuta interference put a dampener on the match, but otherwise, it’d be hard to dislike this match. Komander keeping Castagnoli away is a grand teaser of their upcoming match on AEW Collision.

MJF and Hurt Syndicate backstage promo

MJF shined as a mouthpiece for what his and the Syndicate’s goals were. MVP grinned as Bobby Lashley wrapped his arm around MJF’s shoulder proudly.

Ricochet backstage promo

Ricochet explained that he needed a crew, as every other big name in AEW has people in their group.

Penelope Ford & Megan Bayne defeated Harley Cameron & Anna Jay in a No Disqualification Match

Ford carried a decorated trash can as a shield while Bayne wielded a golden steel chair. Cameron held a pipe, whereas Jay clutched a plank of wood. Ford dispatched Jay on the outside. Bayne hurled herself at Cameron, propped onto a chair in the corner, only to fall into it herself. Jay and Cameron ping-ponged Bayne with a chair and pipe, only to fall with a double-clothesline. Tripping Bayne onto a steel chair, Cameron dropkicked her onto the bottom rope. The babyface team set up a table on the outside for later use.

Cameron powerbombed Bayne through the wooden table with a chair assist from Jay. Bayne planted Cameron face-first onto the steel steps, bloodying her instantly. Bayne plummeted Jay with a Fate’s Descent into a steel chair. Defiant, Cameron’s crimson face charged straight into Bayne, withstanding a Huge Lariat. Ford and Bayne sent Cameron to a pinfall with a Doomsday Device.

These two teams have built this feud up so well. I don’t know if this match puts a close on things, but this was nothing short of satisfying. Jay and Cameron came out of this like equally as badass as Bayne. I’d long been wanting a reason to back Cameron, and this was it.

 

The Opps (Samoa Joe, Katsuyori Shibata, & Powerhouse Hobbs) (c) defeated The Frat House (Preston Vance, Cole Karter, and Griff Garrison) for the AEW World Trios Championship

Taz mentioned on commentary that HOOK is no longer aligned with The Opps for the time being. The Frat House started the match with a very long promo, looking very 2002. Joe didn’t take kindly to Vance booing loudly in his face and charged him. Shibata annihilated Karter at the barricade, and I don’t think he needed to do that, but I support it. Garrison met Shibata with a chopfest, to absolutely no effect. Shibata hit his trademark dropkick and tagged Hobbs. Karter suffered the onslaught of the Powerhouse, who proceeded to deliver Spinebusters to the Frat House’s pledges, Vance, and Karter. This last Spinebuster on Karter earned The Opps a pinfall victory.

The Frat House has a funny gimmick. The opening promo could’ve been trimmed some, however. This was a perfect reminder of how effortlessly cool The Opps are.

Jamie Hayter’s in-ring interview with Renee Paquette

Paquette began the interview by asking how Hayter would be moving forward after her loss at Double or Nothing. Before she could answer, the arena went dark. When light returned, Thekla returned and laid Hayter out with a forearm.

I’m a big fan of Thekla, and I’m so glad that she made her debut. I was just thinking she should debut by taking out the runner-up of the Owen Hart Cup finals.

Adam Cole (c) versus Kyle Fletcher for the TNT Championship ended in disqualification

Fletcher’s size and agility gave an early advantage, but Cole fired back with his veteran wiles (and some superkicks). Trent Beretta and Rock Romero tried to subdue Cole, but Roderick Strong and Kyle O’Reilly brawled to the back. Fletcher powerbombed Cole onto the ring apron, with a sickening landing on the champion’s neck, or at least the back of his skull. Cole fired back with a superkick, followed by a backbreaker. Cole trounced Fletcher with a Panama Sunrise, but before he could unleash a knee onto his challenger, Josh Alexander took Cole out and bit his forehead, which was gross.

This match had promise but fell apart before it could enter another gear. Probably saving it for a TV special or a pay-per-view. That apron bump nearly gave me a headache, though.

Brody King defeated Josh Alexander in an International Championship Qualifier Match

King unleashed a hellacious series of chops onto Alexander. King suffocated Alexander with his black jacket before chopping his chest and crumpling him to the outside. Setting his sights on chopping Alexander’s chest on a ring post, the Hound of Hell missed, writhing in pain from the impact. Recovering quickly, he dropped Alexander onto the barricade, still selling the hand. Alexander planted King with a DDT onto the ring apron. Alexander proceeded to fling King’s arm into the ring post before whipping him into the steel steps.

Taking advantage of the work done on King’s arm, Alexander hoped to weaken them further, but was reintroduced to the mat courtesy of a suplex. Alexander banged King’s arm on the exposed steel of the top turnbuckle and delivered a German suplex onto the ring apron. King soared with a Flying Crossbody to a chair-prone Alexander into the barricade. Head busted open, Alexander’s red-flowing face survived a German suplex but fell to a Gonzo Bomb, giving King a successful pinfall.

Alexander proved a dynamic foil to the brickhouse force that is King. Brutal and intimate, yet not claiming to be greater, this match sold the International Championship 4-way at Fyter Fest.

Kyle Fletcher backstage segment

Fletcher furiously mourned the disqualification in his match with Adam Cole, stating that he didn’t need any help. Before he could continue, Cole ambushed him and the pair brawled off-camera.

“Timeless” Toni Storm and Mercedes Mone Face-to-Face

Mone paid homage to Owen Hart and Eddie Guerrero, but before she could outline her goals in the upcoming AEW Women’s World Championship Match at All In, Storm interrupted. Laying out her belt in the middle of the ring, she listened to Mone mock her monochrome presentation. Storm detailed Mone’s accomplishments since joining AEW, but never spoke to her despite viewing her highly. Mone stated she doesn’t need to, when she’s the revolution. Her future opponent retorted that she’s “the only Toni Storm” and there’s nobody like her. Mone spoke of how she will “take it home” and that the two of them will have the “greatest women’s match of all time”. Storm agreed with the last point and that the pair became who they were meant to be in AEW.

Storm mentioned that Mone may have wanted all of her titles, but Storm had bled, sweated, and died for the AEW Women’s World Championship. Mone and Storm traded inappropriate innuendos and posited that little girls will look at their match and be inspired by how crazy they are. They shook hands, with Storm making Mone uncomfortable. Mone attempted to attack, but Storm wriggled out of it, scaring the CEO out of the ring.

I expected a lot of awkwardness in this promo segment, but that did not deter me from the excitement of how much star power is going into this match. Two wacky characters with impressive match performances colliding. If this doesn’t main event All In, I will be disappointed.

Closing thoughts

Strong follow-up to Double or Nothing, even with most of the roster reportedly banged up. The follow-ups on Anarchy in the Arena, the International Championship Tournament, and the Owen Hart Cup fallout made tonight a thrill ride. Perhaps one of the best parts was the plunder match between Megan Bayne and Penelope Ford against Harley Cameron and Anna Jay. They won the match of the night in my opinion.

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.