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AEW Dynamite Results – Philly Street Fight
AEW

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

AEW Dynamite airs live again from the famous 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, PA, tonight. Kenny Omega is on the shelf thanks to the Don Callis Family, and AEW Men’s World Champion Hangman Adam Page is out for blood. He takes on the Family’s Josh Alexander, undoubtedly savoring the idea of taking out the man who eliminated him from 2025’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament. The 2300 Arena will bear witness to the AEW Women’s World Champion “Timeless” Toni Storm and Skye Blue‘s Philly Street Fight. Irate after losing their AEW World Tag Team Championship at AEWxNJPW Forbidden Door, Shelton Benjamin clashes with  GOA’s leader, Ricochet, still bitter over Hurt Syndicate’s rejection months prior. Mercedes Mone and Alex Windsor’s war continues, with them teaming with AEW originals, Emi Sakura and Riho, respectively.

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

AEW Dynamite Card Tonight:

  • Grudge match: Hangman Adam Page vs. Josh Alexander
  • Philly Street Fight: “Timeless” Toni Storm vs. Skye Blue
  • Shelton Benjamin vs. Ricochet
  • Mercedes Mone and Emi Sakura vs. Alex Windsor and Riho
  • The Opps & BroDido versus Death Riders and Young Bucks
  • and more!

Where was AEW Dynamite?

AEW Dynamite aired live Wednesday night, again from the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

AEW Dynamite Results

  • Hangman Page defeated Josh Alexander
  • Riho & Alex Windsor defeated Mercedes Mone & Emi Sakura
  • Ricochet defeated Shelton Benjamin
  • “Timeless” Toni Storm defeated Skye Blue
  • Young Bucks & Death Riders defeated BroDido & The Opps

Hangman Adam Page defeated Josh Alexander

(Bryan Danielson on commentary added so much to this, and what makes Alexander and Page so dangerous.)

Page instantly barreled shots into Alexander after the bell. Alexander weathered it but couldn’t grasp control. Overconfidently, Page soared with an elbow but ate Alexander’s swift right hand and a Brainbuster to the apron. Page’s forearm blasted Alexander into the first row crowd. At last, Alexander tied Page to the top rope and delivered slow chops to his chest. Perched on the top rope, Page planned a Moonsault, but Alexander scrambled to ringside.

After a commercial break, Page was seen angrily absorbing chops in the corner. He reloaded, firing clotheslines in succession. Alexander countered a Buckshot Lariat with a series of German suplexes, carrying off to the outside. Page rolled out of the last one, suplexing him into the barricade. They brawled on the outside, narrowly beating a ten-count. Alexander escaped a Death Valley Driver, transitioning it into a slam. He followed this up with an Ankle Lock. Finally, Page hit Alexander with an Orihara Moonsault. He laid out Lance Archer and Rocky Romero amid a Don Callis interference. Despite his best efforts, Alexander fell to a Buckshot Lariat, giving Page the win.

Post-match, Page bemoaned the tactics of the Page and demanded that Kyle Fletcher approach him in the ring to talk. As the Philadelphia crowd quieted, he mentioned Fletcher’s potential and how he saw his past self in him. He informed Fletcher he wasn’t ready (Philly agreed). Fletcher retorted that he was ready and in his prime. Page said he needed something from him, to which the crowd, for some reason, chanted about socks. Page resumed his speech that he needed Fletcher to show up at All Out without the Don Callis Family, plus to wear some socks. Fletcher obliged.

MJF addressed Mark Briscoe

Describing his wedding night, MJF recalled leaving his wife (congratulations, MJF and Alicia Atout!) just to ruin Mark Briscoe’s match against Konosuke Takeshita.

Young Bucks at MJF’s Wedding Dinner

Nick and Matt Jackson struggled to find a table to sit at. Dark Order rejected them, and Brandon Cutler left the table they sat at. The rest of the table fled when Jon Moxley forcefully sat by them. He told them that he needed them to bring their reputation as the best tag team in the world to their match tonight. Furthermore, he offered his share of the money if they won.

Riho & Alex Windsor defeated Mercedes Mone & Emi Sakura

(Riho and Sakura returned to American television like they hadn’t missed a single date. They worked well in chemistry with their partners, too, making for a fun tag you should watch.

Mone strutted to the ring, with her belts adorning Sakura and herself.

Sakura quickly gained momentum over Riho. A Tiger Feint Kick broke Sakura’s control. Windsor and Riho coordinated their efforts to daze Mone. Windsor held Mone and Sakura at bay so Riho could land a Flying Crossbody from the top rope.

Returning from the commercial break, cameras followed as Mone drove her knees into Riho in the corner. Windsor mounted a spirited comeback, leading to her assisting Riho in a diving foot stomping to Mone’s midsection. Riho struck Mone with a dropkick. Thanks to Mone, Sakura hit Rioho with a Senton with some nice air. As Windsor held Mone’s legs in a Sharpshooter by the ropes, Riho tapped out Sakura with a Single-Leg Boston Crab for the victory.

FTR and Adam Copeland & Christian Cage vignette

Renee Paquette narrated a video package naming each team’s historic accolades throughout their respective histories ahead of All Out.

Stokely Hathaway & FTR promo

Hathaway downplayed Paquette’s vignette, that FTR’s match with Copeland and Cage wouldn’t be a dream match. He mocked the insults people lobbed at him, and mentioned that the Philly crowd looked like Roseanne extras. Dax Harwood took the microphone, emphasizing Hathaway’s point before goading several people in the crowd to fight. For some reason, FTR knocked down a cameraman and argued with the other staff, the referees, and security.

Renee Paquette interviewed the Hurt Syndicate

MVP attempted to speak on Benjamin’s upcoming match with Ricochet. Benjamin spoke for himself, stating his intention to honor the deal of Hurt Syndicate and GOA not interfering.

Ricochet defeated Shelton Benjamin

(Benjamin’s a legend. Seeing him bring his trademark against the acrobatic prime Ricochet made for a neat match.)

Wasting no time whatsoever, Ricochet overwhelmed Benjamin with strikes and a dive outside. Benjiamin had had enough, hurling Ricochet left and right and over the ropes. Ricochet pirouetted through the air with a High Cross Lift as though he was absolutely done with him. The barricade wavered as Benjamin’s body was dropkicked into it.

Ricochet ducked Benjamin’s advances, managing a resounding knee strike. Benjamin launched Ricochet with a Belly-to-Belly and German suplex. Each man landed kicks, Ricochet’s being speedier to manage, contrasting with Benjamin’s slower, more devastating ones. Spanish Fly, courtesy of Ricochet, bore no fruit. A desperate Ricochet resorted to his classic golden scissors, which Benjamin caught and broke apart. GOA swarmed the ring, with Toa Liona headbutting Benjamin as the referee was distracted. Ricochet took advantage with a pin.

Post-match, MVP and Bobby Lashley joined the fray to break Ricochet’s jubilation.

Hook addressed The Opps

Hook came to terms with Samoa Joe’s honesty from last week, understanding that he needed to be benched while sick as Powerhouse Hobbs took his place. He mused that maybe he needed to go things alone, or maybe not.

Don Callis and Kyle Fletcher discussed All Out with Tony Schiavone

Callis respected Fletcher’s wishes not to be accompanied against Hangman Adam Page at All Out. They embraced with this understanding, obscuring Schiavone.

“Timeless” Toni Storm defeated Skye Blue in a Philly Street Fight

(This delivered on the expected carnage, but that stapler spot was hilarious, albeit painful to watch. Also, the mousetrap spot and the numerous street signs.)

Storm came to the ring in a homage to ECW’s Sandman, kendo stick and all. Blue emerged, also carrying a kendo stick.

Surprising her from behind, Storm whacked Blue with the stick. Blue responded with a choke attempt with her stick. Storm hammered a cooking sheet on Blue’s spine and played air guitar with a road sign. Blue countered a hip attack with a swing of the cooking sheet. Posterior hanging in the air, Blue stapled Storm’s right cheek. She followed with further staples to Storm’s nipples and nether region.

Storm finally managed a hip attack. On the barricade, Storm and Blue battled, trading forearms. Blue bamboozled Storm with a swing of a fan sign, which was another road sign in disguise. Storm undressed a table, unveiling a field of mousetraps beneath. Blue screamed in agony as Storm drove her hand into a mousetrap. Unfortunately for Storm, Blue powerbombed her through the unbreakable table on several mousetraps. Philadelphia chanted that they wanted cheese.

Storm regained her composure, madly delivering chairshots to Blue’s back. Storm powerbombed Blue on a trash can. Wedging another street sign on Blue in the corner, she dropkicked it. A Storm Zero on a black steel chair provided the Timeless one the victory.

Post-match, Julia Hart and Thekla assaulted Storm. Kris Statlander charged to her aid, but quickly faced opposition. Jamie Hayter raved to the ring, equalizing Hart and Thekla. She rained bitter fists on Thekla’s prone body. Accidentally striking Statlander, a distracted Hayter fell prey to Thekla and Hart. Thekla speared Storm. She held Storm’s AEW Women’s World Championship and did her spider pose to close the angle.

Harley Cameron requested Willow Nightingale to make up with Kris Statlander

Nightingale vowed to war with Marina Shafir. She was delighted to see Cameron with her guitar. Cameron implored her to join with Statlander and herself. She did so with a song. Nightingale retorted that though she adored Cameron, she couldn’t see herself working with Statlander. Cameron and Renee Paquette somberly concluded the former’s song.

The Opps (Samoa Joe, Katsuyori Shibata, & Powerhouse Hobbs) & BroDido (Brody King & Bandido) versus Death Riders (Jon Moxley, Wheeler Yuta, & Claudio Castagnoli) and Young Bucks (Nick and Matt Jackson

(Fun ten-man tag. It was simply for the thrill of it all, but I do find it funny that only one man from this match was involved in the post-match angle.)

The Bucks’ tron featured mugshots with their last names being Massie. The original AEW Dynamite theme played both of them to the ring.

Nick and Bandido started the match off, but that didn’t deter Philly from chanting obscenities at Yuta. Bandido survived a Casadora from Nick. Matt aimed to help Nick survive a pin from Bandido, but Referee Rick Knox caught it. King laid out both Bucks with his size and strength. Bandido stopped mid-Macarena Dance as King urged him for their slam combo. Joe met Yuta, unfazed by the Death Rider’s strikes.

Castagnoli pounded Shibata with uppercuts. The Wrestler drove him down with punches prior to using his Dropkick. Moxley interrupted Shibata’s sleeper on Castagnoli. An all-out brawl transpired, with the Bucks opting out of tussling with King and Hobbs (who barreled through them anyway). BroDido coordinated their offense to lay out all opposition. A splash nearly ended Castagnoli, to Bandido’s disappointment.

Matt dazed Bandido with a Tornado-DDT for a pin to set up a distraction brawl on the Opps and King. Hobbs charged through Castagnoli and Moxley, and tackled them some more. King sent fists a-flying to both of the Bucks. BroDido hoped to connect their teamwork, resulting in a weak Swing to King by Castagnoli. Everyone traded finishers. Nick held Matt’s tights as he anchored Bandido to the mat for the pinfall.

Post-match, the Bucks looked to depart with the money, but the Opps and King laid them out. The Death Riders kicked at Hobbs’s caracass in the ring. The Opps took on the rest of the Death Riders as Darby Allin surprised Moxley with an ambush. A hooded figure toppled Allin from behind. He revealed himself to be a now-heel Daniel Garcia. The crowd despised him for this as he worked Allin’s legs and planted his skull into a steel chair. Moxley was very excited at this. Shafir and Moxley had to hold him back.

Final thoughts

This was an excellent episode of Dynamite. The stay at the 2300 Arena has provided much excitement. The Death Riders story in particular benefited from this, as did any plunder or hard-hitting match. The Philly Street Fight was gnarly, and the carnage of the 10-man tag was ridiculously fun. Hangman Adam Page and Josh Alexander delivered with an opener that played to their strengths. Garcia ending the show in a heel turn shocker bolstered this. Plus, we got Emi Sakura and Riho back on TV. If only we could say the same for Nyla Rose.

This article first appeared on Last Word On Sports and was syndicated with permission.

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