AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Results

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Results

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Results – Welcome to WrestlingAttitude’s live coverage of 2026 Double or Nothing pay-per-view, broadcasting from the Louis Armstrong Stadium in Queens, NY.

Our live coverage begins at 2 p.m. ET with the main card. While you wait, you can watch the “Buy-In” pre-show (1 p.m. ET) in the embedded video below.

Mick Foley Appears in AEW for the First Time

The Buy‑In opened with Renee Paquette in the ring. She introduced Mick Foley, making his first‑ever appearance inside an AEW ring. The crowd exploded, and cameras caught his daughter Noelle cheering at ringside.

Foley said this night was one of the biggest of his life. He talked about getting goosebumps backstage watching the roster prepare. He said AEW made him fall in love with wrestling again. He mentioned having lunch with Tony Khan fifteen years ago, calling him a friend, and said he was proud to be part of the AEW family tonight.

They promised more from Foley as the Buy‑In continued, then sent things over to Excalibur, Tony Schiavone, and Nigel McGuinness.

Divine Dominion vs. Zayda Steel & Viva Van — 5‑Minute AEW Women’s Title Eliminator Challenge

The bell rang and Steel bailed to the floor right away to burn time. She slid back in and tried a school‑girl on Bayne, but Bayne didn’t move an inch. Steel rolled out again. Bayne chased, missed the tag to Van, and Van hit a springboard spin kick as they came back inside. Van used her speed to low‑bridge Bayne to the floor, but she missed a baseball slide and got blasted by a Kross thrust kick.

Back in the ring, Van was isolated as the champs made quick tags and kept her trapped with two minutes gone. Van fought back with an enzuigiri on Kross and reached Steel, who ran wild with elbows and a head‑scissors that sent Kross into the corner. Steel dodged a pump kick and drilled Kross with a tilt‑a‑whirl DDT for a count of two.

Kross answered with a heavy hook kick and tagged Bayne. Divine Dominion hit their corner strikes in sequence, followed by a release German suplex and a double chokeslam. The fall came with fifteen seconds left on the clock.

Winners: Divine Dominion (Megan Bayne & Lena Kross)

After the bell, Bayne wiped out Christopher Daniels with a running boot. Van tried to help but took another double chokeslam for her trouble. TayJay’s music hit, and Anna Jay and Tay Melo stormed out with a pipe and a board. Bayne and Kross backed off and bailed to avoid a fight.

The Opps vs. Death Riders

The Death Riders made their entrance and Garcia asked Marina Shafir to slap him to fire him up. She did, and he sold it like only Garcia can. Yuta and Bowens started the match with fast takedowns and quick pin tries until Bowens lit him up with chops and forearms in the corner.

HOOK and Garcia tagged in next. Garcia attacked nonstop, which the crowd loved. HOOK shifted into a heel trip and an overhead throw, then tagged Shibata, who got a huge reaction. Shibata pointed at Castagnoli and demanded he tag in. They traded forearms and uppercuts until the crowd roared for Shibata’s corner dropkick and his over‑under suplex for a two count.

HOOK returned but got thrown into the wrong corner. Garcia climbed up for ten punches, teased his dance, took too long, and HOOK blasted him with a flying forearm. Shibata tagged back in but ran into a corner boot from Garcia. Yuta entered and immediately ate an atomic drop and more forearms. Shibata set up for another running dropkick, but Castagnoli flew in with a huge uppercut.

The Death Riders hit a triple big boot and huddled up to celebrate. Garcia chopped Shibata, who didn’t react. Garcia chopped harder. Shibata no‑sold again. Garcia switched to elbows. Shibata no‑sold the lariats too and tripped him with a back heel sweep.

HOOK tagged in and got jumped by Yuta and Castagnoli. They hit their corner strikes in sequence. HOOK fought back with overhead throws on both Yuta and Garcia. Bowens tagged in and exploded with neckbreakers and a Fame‑Asser. He spiked Yuta with a draping spinning DDT for two, but Castagnoli broke it up with a double stomp.

Bowens slipped out of the Neutralizer and grabbed a Kimura. The match broke down as Shibata and HOOK locked in double submissions on Yuta and Garcia. Castagnoli mowed them down to break everything up. The Death Riders hit their triple‑team finish, with Yuta and Garcia holding Bowens in place while Castagnoli smashed him with a charging uppercut for the win.

Winners: Death Riders

Paquette & Foley on Stage

We returned to Renee Paquette and Mick Foley on the stage. They talked about how important tonight is with the Owen Hart Tournaments officially beginning. Foley said the tournaments always bring out the best in the roster and the energy backstage feels special.

They shifted to the Tag Team Title match. Foley said he’s known Adam Copeland and Christian Cage for decades, but he also remembered seeing something big in FTR the very first time he watched them wrestle. He said he couldn’t pick a winner, but one thing is certain — one team will have to say “I Quit.”

Boom & Doom & The Conglomeration vs. Shane Taylor Promotions

This one was sponsored by Vita Coco, so the babyface side had a mascot in full costume at ringside. The bell rang and QT Marshall opened with a handspring enzuigiri on Bravo. Every babyface followed with ten corner punches, until Cassidy wound up and delivered…one. The crowd loved it.

The match fell apart fast. Cassidy got trapped in the STP corner and took a beating. Dean hit the BBC in the corner while the whole group posed for the camera and Bravo talked trash. Ogogo drilled Cassidy in the ribs and Taylor smashed him with a heavy right for two. Moriarty tagged in but immediately ate a Stundog. Bravo tried a sunset flip, but Cassidy casually slapped his hands away and walked to AJ for the hot tag.

Taylor missed a corner charge and spilled outside. AJ planted Bravo with a sit‑out slam for two. Marshall climbed the ropes, but Moriarty distracted the ref long enough for XO to crotch him. XO got in The Rizzler’s face, which brought Harley Cameron charging in. She shot a double‑leg and threw punches before high‑fiving The Rizzler.

Briscoe fought off Moriarty and Taylor back in the ring. Redneck Kung‑Fu worked at first, but Taiga Style fired back. Strong used Cassidy as a weapon, then cracked Moriarty with a backbreaker. Briscoe hit an Exploder. (Meanwhile, Marshall was still selling being crotched in the corner.) Briscoe then launched off a chair and dove over the top onto the pile.

Back inside, they hit a Tower of Doom. Justice and The Rizzler sprayed Vita Coco into Bravo’s face, and that opened the door for a triple powerbomb from The Conglomeration and AJ to score the win. As they celebrated, Marshall finally fell off the top rope to the floor.

Winners: Boom & Doom & The Conglomeration

Post‑match, the babyfaces celebrated. AJ was bleeding from the neck. STP surrounded the apron, ready to jump them, until Eddie Kingston’s music hit. Kingston sprinted out with Ortiz and Mance Warner, and STP bailed. The reaction for Kingston and his crew was massive. Commentary reminded us that STP has been feuding with Kingston, Ortiz, and Warner in ROH.

MJF Confronts Mick Foley

Renee Paquette and Mick Foley were back in the ring to talk up Eddie Kingston’s huge reaction and shift focus to tonight’s main event. Foley said the stakes feel massive. He talked about how MJF has been wrestling “not to lose,” while Darby Allin has been wrestling with nothing to fear. Foley joked about his own metal hips and injuries, then pointed out that MJF’s hair came from Turkey. Foley said his pick was Darby Allin leaving with the AEW World Title.

MJF stormed to the ring with no music, yelling “No, no, no!” Paquette bailed, leaving Foley and MJF face‑to‑face. MJF tore into the crowd, saying he’d care about their opinions if they weren’t dumb enough to believe the Knicks would win a championship. He said Darby Allin is just like Foley — an underdog who folds when the pressure hits.

Foley took a moment to soak in the moment. He said he never thought he’d feel this way again and thanked MJF for giving that back to him. Foley admitted he lost a lot of matches, even mentioning The Rock, which drew boos. But he said none of those losses happened in under two minutes. That wasn’t a loss — that was a disgrace. Foley told MJF to put on his big‑boy pants if he wants to deal with Allin. Foley said he used to try to steal the show, but Allin wants to win the AEW Title and take MJF’s hair. Foley said MJF has wavy hair, and tonight he’ll wave it goodbye.

MJF kicked Foley low. Darby Allin sprinted to the ring, and MJF ran for it. Foley grabbed the mic and yelled for MJF not to run. Foley said he didn’t know until a month ago that he inspired Allin’s career. He brought up Allin wrestling Jon Moxley at Six Flags in New Jersey years ago and said he stayed to watch because he knew Allin could do anything.

Foley said Allin was the weird kid who wasn’t picked for stardom, just like him, but proved you can still become a legend. Foley told Allin to win one for the weird ones tonight. Then he closed with a nod to an old friend:

Bang bang, Darby Allin. Bang bang.

Excalibur Runs Down the Card

Excalibur gave the full rundown for tonight’s Double or Nothing lineup, hitting every major match and tournament bout set for the show. He closed by confirming that the AEW Tag Team Championship match — FTR vs. Adam Copeland & Christian Cage in the I Quit Match — will open the main card.

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Results

AEW World Tag‑Team Championships — I Quit New York Street Fight FTR (c) vs. Cope & Cage

The commentary team reminded everyone that this wasn’t just an I Quit Match — it was an I Quit New York Street Fight, meaning anything goes and the only way out is to say the words. The added pressure hung over Adam Copeland and Christian Cage, knowing that if they lost, they would never be allowed to team together again.

Cope & Cage made their entrance to a massive New York reaction. The crowd treated them like returning heroes, roaring as they walked through the smoke and headed to the ring. Moments later, the champions arrived. FTR marched out with the belts, Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler looking locked in and ready for a fight.

The bell rang, and the war began.

Cage and Copeland locked eyes with Harwood and Wheeler as the fight finally took shape. FTR regrouped with Stokely on the floor, but Harwood charged first, throwing right hands at Cage. Cage cut him down with a clothesline and hammered away, even biting Harwood’s head while Copeland brawled with Wheeler on the outside.

Cage launched Harwood with a back body drop. Stokely slipped Harwood a strand of barbed wire, but Cage stopped him cold, jamming the wire into Harwood’s arm. Cage wrapped the barbed wire around the middle rope and whipped Harwood into it chest‑first, then stomped on his spine. Harwood still refused to quit.

Cage whipped Harwood with a belt. Copeland took the belt and lashed both Harwood and Wheeler before choking Harwood with it. Harwood wouldn’t quit, and Wheeler countered by trapping Cage’s arm in a chair and stomping on it.

Copeland set a ladder across the barricade and suplexed Harwood onto it. He pulled a table from under the ring and set it up outside. Copeland dragged Wheeler onto the apron, but Stokely grabbed his ankle. That gave Harwood the opening to blast Copeland with a right hand. Copeland and Harwood tumbled over the top rope, and Wheeler smashed a chair across Copeland’s spine. Wheeler wrapped the chair around Copeland’s neck and drove him into the ring post.

Harwood grabbed a toolbox. Cage fought him off and pulled out a pair of pliers. He clamped them onto Harwood’s nostril, but Harwood still wouldn’t quit. Cage then used the pliers on Wheeler’s groin, but Harwood cracked Cage’s left hand with a chair to break it up.

Copeland dragged Harwood onto a commentary desk. Harwood countered, lifting Copeland, and Wheeler sprinted across the other desk to help deliver an assisted piledriver that sent Copeland crashing through the first table. Wheeler grabbed a cinderblock and smashed Cage’s injured left hand with it. Harwood followed by slamming a chair onto the cinderblock with Cage’s hand trapped inside. Cage still refused to quit.

Cage bit into the side of Harwood’s head, then ripped the top rope loose and wrapped it around Harwood’s throat to choke him out. Wheeler grabbed the barbed wire from earlier and used it to choke Cage in return. FTR followed with a Shatter Machine on Cage. Wheeler smashed Cage with the microphone, but Copeland fired back with a pair of spears on both Harwood and Wheeler.

Copeland unloaded with chair shots across their spines. Harwood grabbed the mic and begged Copeland not to hit him again, trying to distract him long enough for Stokely to sneak up behind. Stokely wrapped a watch around his fist and cracked Copeland with it.

Beth Copeland hit the stage to a huge reaction. She dropped Stokely on the ramp and went after Wheeler, but Harwood cut her off and sent her face‑first into the ring steps. Harwood soaked the table outside in gasoline and lit it on fire. Wheeler tried to send Beth through the flames, but she moved and Wheeler accidentally launched Stokely through the burning table instead.

Harwood stacked Copeland’s head on a pile of chairs and told him to quit if he wanted to see his daughters again. He raised a chair for a Con‑Chair‑To, but Beth grabbed it and low‑blowed him. Cage followed with a low blow of his own, and Copeland drilled Harwood with a piledriver.

Cope & Cage locked in a sharpshooter‑crossface combination, but Harwood still refused to quit. Beth reached under the steps and pulled out Spike the Bat. She slid it to Copeland, who wrapped Spike into the crossface and wrenched back with everything he had.

Harwood finally quit.

Winners (and new): Cope & Cage

Kazuchika Okada vs. Konosuke Takeshita — International Championship

The bell rang and the two stared each other down. Takeshita went straight for Raging Fire, but Okada flipped out of it and dropkicked him off the middle rope to the floor. Okada followed him out and drove him spine‑first into the barricade, then rolled him back inside and slammed him down again on his back.

Takeshita tried a senton off the ropes, but Okada got the knees up. Takeshita answered with a jumping knee that flattened Okada, then launched over the top rope with a Tope Con Hilo that wiped him out on the floor. They returned to the ring and Okada set up for a Tombstone.

Takeshita countered into a belly‑to‑back piledriver. Both men ended up on the apron trading shots until Okada blasted Takeshita with a Rainmaker on the edge of the ring. He followed with a DDT on the floor and pulled Takeshita up again.

Don Callis stepped in and begged Okada not to drop Takeshita on the floor again. Okada hesitated. Takeshita didn’t. He planted Okada with a brainbuster on the outside. He rolled Okada back in, booted him in the face, then dragged him up the ropes and hit a superplex. He tried to follow with another brainbuster, but Okada slipped out and set for a Rainmaker. Takeshita dodged and drilled him with a German suplex.

Okada planted Takeshita with a Tombstone. Takeshita fired right back with a Blue Thunder Bomb. Okada answered by slamming Takeshita spine‑first into the mat and wound up for the Rainmaker, but Takeshita rolled him into a tight pin. Okada kicked out at the last moment.

Takeshita unloaded with right hands, then hit Okada with a Rainmaker of his own. He followed with a jumping knee and covered, but Okada kicked out fast. Takeshita stayed on him, lifted Okada, and drilled him with Raging Fire.

He held the cover.

He got the three.

Winner and NEW International Champion: Konosuke Takeshita

Post‑Match: The Don Callis Family Turns on Takeshita

Mark Davis, Rocky Romero, and Don Callis hit the ring after the match. Takeshita squared up, ready to fight Okada, Romero, and Davis all at once if he had to. Before anything could happen, Kyle Fletcher’s music hit. The crowd erupted as the “injured” Fletcher walked onto the stage for the first time in months.

Callis, Romero, Davis, and Okada all slipped out of the ring, leaving Fletcher and Takeshita alone. Fletcher stepped in, hugged Takeshita… and then blasted him with a clothesline. Callis grinned from the apron.

Fletcher followed with a brainbuster. The rest of the Don Callis Family slid back inside to join the assault. Okada and Fletcher both grabbed the International Championship at the same time, but Okada let go and handed it to Fletcher without a fight.

Davis and Romero hauled Takeshita up. Fletcher smashed him in the face with the title belt as Callis watched proudly.

Athena vs. Mina Shirakawa — Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

Athena tried to take control early, but Shirakawa used her speed to counter with a sharp arm drag and a snap dropkick to the knee. Shirakawa climbed the corner too slowly, and Athena blasted her with a shotgun dropkick that sent her spilling to the apron. Athena followed with a slam on the floor and drove Shirakawa into the steps and the announce table.

Shirakawa stayed in place long enough that Nigel wondered if she was playing possum, but she wasn’t — Athena launched her with a John Woo dropkick into the LED board, knocking it out completely. Back inside, Shirakawa dodged a series of charges and went after Athena’s left leg. Athena still muscled through, catching a cross‑body and drilling Shirakawa with a brutal forward fireman’s carry slam for a count of two.

Shirakawa answered with a springboard enzuigiri and a Sling Blade. She slipped on a Tornado DDT attempt, reset, hit it clean, and Athena spiked so hard she rolled to the floor. Shirakawa followed with a Tornillo from the ring to the outside. Back in the ring, she hit a missile dropkick.

Athena landed awkwardly off an Electric Chair spinning slam but fought out of a Figure Four, swept the leg, and crushed Shirakawa with a violent Curb Stomp in the style of Super Dragon for two. Athena missed the O‑Face. Shirakawa rolled her up, then hit a tilt‑a‑whirl face plant into a Seatbelt Pin for another close call.

They traded strikes until Shirakawa rocked Athena with a backfist and locked in the Figure Four. Athena reached the ropes. Shirakawa hit another backfist and went for the Glamourous Driver, but Athena slipped out, hit a pumphandle tombstone, climbed up, and connected with the O‑Face.

Winner: Athena

Jon Moxley vs. Kyle O’Reilly — No Time Limit Match for the Continental Championship

The bell rang and O’Reilly immediately swept Moxley’s legs. Moxley answered by raining down right hands, but O’Reilly kicked him through the ropes and followed with a jumping knee off the apron that knocked Moxley flat on the floor.

O’Reilly cracked Moxley with a chest kick and went for another, but Moxley moved and O’Reilly’s foot smashed into the ring post. Moxley dragged him back inside and hammered the ribs with rights and lefts before twisting him down with a Dragon Screw. O’Reilly fired back with another chest kick and hit a missile dropkick off the middle rope, then pulled Moxley into an armbar.

O’Reilly slipped out of the armbar and Moxley turned him over into a Half Boston Crab, dragging him to the mat. O’Reilly clawed to the bottom rope to force the break, then rolled through and caught Moxley in an Ankle Lock. Moxley escaped, but O’Reilly stomped him down with a Curb Stomp.

The referee started a ten count. Both men beat it and blasted each other with clotheslines. They traded rights and lefts until Moxley dropped O’Reilly with a lariat and followed with a Death Rider. He locked in a Bulldog Choke, but O’Reilly rolled through into another Ankle Lock. Moxley countered and trapped O’Reilly in an Ankle Lock of his own on the mat.

O’Reilly tapped out.

Winner: Jon Moxley

After the match, The Death Riders and The Conglomeration joined their partners in the ring. Moxley offered his hand. O’Reilly shook it.

Will Ospreay vs. Samoa Joe — Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

Ospreay blasted Joe with an Oscutter the instant the bell rang, then mocked him with corner boot scrapes. Joe popped up and smashed him with an uppercut. The chops echoed, but Ospreay recovered fast and sent Joe outside with a slingshot cross body. Back in, he hit a springboard 450 for a count of two and tried Death Ground, but Joe reached the ropes. Joe rolled out, Ospreay went for a Sasuke Special, and Joe caught him straight into a Coquina Clutch before slamming Ospreay head‑first into the LED board.

Joe hit his own boot scrapes and Mongolian Chops, targeting the neck. Kawada kicks and a chop folded Ospreay, and Joe followed with the chop/boot combo before missing a senton. Ospreay got the knees up, but Joe crushed him with a corner enzugiri. Joe set for a Muscle Buster, Ospreay slipped out and stomped the left arm. A leaping enzugiri staggered Joe and both men dropped for the reset.

Ospreay kipped up into a handspring corkscrew kick for a close call. He teased a Tiger Driver, switched to Kawada kicks, then a Buzzsaw Kick. He tried another Oscutter, but Joe walked away from it and hit a running senton. Joe stacked him with a powerbomb and rolled through into his Boston Crab → STF → Crossface chain. Ospreay made the ropes and started no‑selling kicks, firing forearms. Joe answered with his own combo and a discus forearm. Joe wound up for a lariat, but Ospreay countered into a perfect Styles Clash for two.

Ospreay hit the Hidden Blade, Joe kicked out. Ospreay tossed the elbow pad and charged again, but Joe snapped him with a powerslam. Ospreay hit a La Mistica‑style takedown and went for Death Ground again. Joe stacked him for two and locked in the Coquina Clutch. They hit the Bret/Piper corner spot for a near fall. Ospreay cracked Joe with a hook kick, charged, and ran into a STJoe. Joe locked the Clutch again. Ospreay faded, the arm dropped twice, but he grabbed the ropes on the third.

Joe lifted him for a Muscle Buster, walked out, and Ospreay landed on his feet. Hidden Blade connected — Joe kicked out at one. Ospreay hit another to the back of the head, and this time Joe stayed down.

Winner: Will Ospreay

Joe bowed to Ospreay at ringside before leaving, giving him the moment.

Swerve Strickland vs. Bandido — Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

The bell rang and Bandido blasted Strickland with a thrust kick. He followed with a tijeras and a Gorilla Press that sent Swerve crashing to the floor. Bandido hit a dropkick off the apron, whipped Swerve spine‑first into the barricade, then sat him in a chair and crushed him with a cannonball off the apron.

Back inside, Swerve snapped off a German suplex that launched Bandido into the corner. Bandido answered with a Tornillo off the top, then hammered Swerve with three forearms and kicked him in the midsection while he hung on the ropes. Bandido followed with a German suplex and a Frog Splash for two.

Swerve caught him with a jumping flatliner and hit the Swerve Stomp. Bandido fired back with a reverse hurricanrana off the apron, rolled Swerve back in, and nailed the 21 Plex.

They traded roll‑ups until Swerve set Bandido for a Code Red. Bandido countered into another reverse hurricanrana, but Swerve planted him with a double underhook driver and finished it with the House Call.

Winner: Swerve Strickland

Thekla (c) vs. Kris Statlander vs. Jamie Hayter vs. Hikaru Shida — AEW Women’s World Championship Four‑Way

The bell rang and Hayter, Shida, and Statlander all kicked Thekla at once. They kept the triple‑team going, with Statlander hitting a running senton and Shida cracking Thekla with a running knee on the apron.

Statlander and Shida turned on Hayter in the ring, but Thekla blasted Statlander with a boot as she hung through the ropes. Statlander stacked Thekla and Hayter in the corner and splashed them, then knocked Hayter down with a shoulder tackle.

Hayter and Statlander traded clotheslines without either going down. Thekla tried to fly off the top, but Hayter and Statlander caught her. Shida then wiped out both with a dropkick from the top rope.

Thekla and Hayter rolled up Shida and Statlander at the same time, but both kicked out. All four traded rapid pin attempts until Statlander clotheslined Hayter over the top rope.

Thekla hit a crossbody on all three women outside. She threw Shida into the barricade spine‑first and sent Hayter into the steps shoulder‑first, but Statlander chopped her and bodyslammed her back in the ring.

Thekla hit a superplex on Statlander. Shida answered with a superplex on Hayter. Hayter suplexed Shida, and Statlander floored Hayter with a discus lariat. Thekla speared Statlander, and all four traded punches. Statlander and Hayter hit double kicks on Thekla and Shida, then collided with crossbodies.

Thekla rolled up Shida, Shida kicked out, and Thekla rocked her with a roundhouse. Statlander scooped Thekla, but she slipped free and Hayter suplexed Statlander. Hayter booted Thekla, Shida booted Statlander, and Hayter hit a backbreaker on Thekla. Thekla countered into an Octopus, but Hayter broke free with another backbreaker and hit the Hayter Line. She covered, but Shida broke it with a running knee.

Shida hit a Falcon Arrow and attacked Hayter’s leg. Statlander grabbed Shida, got slapped, then stomped her down and threw her into the steps. Statlander leveled Hayter, returned to the ring, and superkicked Thekla twice before slamming her. She covered, but Shida smashed a kendo stick across Statlander’s spine to break it. Hayter dragged Shida out and clotheslined her.

In the ring, Thekla drilled Statlander with a Curb Stomp.

Winner and STILL AEW Women’s World Champion: Thekla

Team Jericho (Jericho, The Hurt Syndicate, The Elite) vs. Team Ricochet (The Don Callis Family, The Dogs, The Demand) — Stadium Stampede

The bell rang and the chaos hit instantly. Lashley, Benjamin, Matt and Nick Jackson, Jericho, Perry, and Omega all collided with Ricochet, Liona, Kaun, Connors, Finlay, Davis, and Andrade in the center of the ring. Omega stomped Ricochet down in the corner, and the rest of Team Jericho took turns blasting him with clotheslines and knees. Benjamin then chokeslammed Ricochet onto his own teammates on the floor.

Lashley and Davis traded shots outside while Kaun and Benjamin did the same. Andrade hit Perry with the Three Amigos in the ring. Davis hammered Omega’s ribs on the floor until Benjamin dumped Andrade out, only for The Dogs to sweep Benjamin off his feet.

Davis drilled Lashley with a piledriver outside. Liona tossed Jericho over the top rope, then stacked Matt, Nick, and Perry on his shoulders and hit a triple Samoan Drop. He locked an Abdominal Stretch on Omega while Team Ricochet formed a human chain to add leverage. MVP broke it with a cane shot, and Omega, Matt, and Nick dove out of the ring to wipe out bodies everywhere.

Lashley followed with a dive over the top rope. Jericho climbed up and hit a crossbody onto the pile. Benjamin dragged Kaun up the ramp. Back in the ring, Matt, Nick, Omega, and Jericho all hit hurricanranas on The Dogs, Andrade, and Ricochet.

Matt smashed Connors into the barricade and set up a table while Nick set up another. The Bucks climbed the ropes, but The Dogs bailed into the crowd.

Backstage, Benjamin and Lashley brawled with Kaun and Liona. Lashley locked in the Hurt Lock on Liona until Liona elbowed free. Lio Rush suddenly appeared, and Lashley backed off. Rush jumped on Liona’s back with a sleeper as the fight spilled deeper into the arena.

Jericho and Omega hit Andrade with a double back elbow. The Bucks and The Dogs fought near the merch stand. Matt smashed Finlay with a replica belt. Connors got superkicked onto an escalator and rode it up.

Andrade stopped to take a selfie with a fan, only for Luchasaurus — in a blond wig — to appear behind him. Andrade turned, got misted, and Omega held him in place. Jericho dumped a bag of tennis balls into the ring.

Jericho suplexed Ricochet onto the tennis balls and locked in the Walls. Ricochet fought free as Davis and Perry brawled in catering. Tommy Invincible tried to intervene and got dropped. Andrade joined the fight until Satnam Singh appeared and sent someone crashing through a table as a full food fight erupted.

Matt smashed Finlay and Connors with a garbage can, stuffed Connors into a shopping cart, and sent him rolling down the ramp into a Nick Jackson superkick. Benjamin fought Liona until Finlay nailed Benjamin with the shillelagh. Lashley returned and lifted Kaun, but Finlay hit Lashley with the shillelagh and Connors speared him.

Luther handed Jericho a giant tennis racket. Jericho smashed Ricochet with it on a makeshift tennis court, then fired tennis balls at him with a launcher and sent him into a garage door. Ricochet kicked out of the pin.

The Hurt Syndicate suplexed The Dogs onto the tennis balls. The Bucks joined in and hit double superkicks on Connors, Finlay, and Liona. Liona stayed up until The Bucks and Lashley hit a triple superkick, followed by a Lashley spear.

Davis wandered into the parking lot and found a knife Perry had made in a golf cart. The Jungle Express bus suddenly plowed through Davis, the cart, and a car. Perry stepped out of the bus.

At ringside, The Bucks tried Sunset Flips on The Dogs through tables, but The Dogs held on. Omega hit Snap Dragons on both Dogs and Andrade. He followed with a V‑Trigger to Andrade’s neck. Benjamin tried to suplex Liona off the apron through a table. Liona held on, but Benjamin muscled him off and sent him crashing through it.

Omega set up another table. Lashley speared Davis through one. Team Jericho then launched themselves off the top rope, sending Team Ricochet through a series of tables. Omega hit a One Winged Angel on Andrade off the apron through a table.

Inside the ring, Ricochet was alone. Benjamin hit a jumping knee. Lashley speared him. Perry hit a running knee. The Bucks hit a BTE Trigger. Kaun shoved Ricochet aside and took a V‑Trigger from Omega. Team Jericho then hit a seven‑way superkick on Kaun. Jericho finished it with a Lionsault and covered him.

Winners: Team Jericho

Darby Allin (c) vs. MJF — AEW World Championship, Title vs. Hair

The bell rang and Allin hit a scoop powerslam right away, forcing MJF to kick out before rolling to the floor. Allin dove after him, but MJF sidestepped and sent him crashing into the commentary desk. MJF followed with a powerbomb onto the apron, dumping Allin back inside so he could gloat over the damage.

They battled onto the ropes, where MJF muscled Allin into an over‑the‑shoulder powerslam off the middle rope. Allin climbed for a Coffin Drop, but MJF rolled away and dragged the ring steps onto their side. He then spiked Allin with a piledriver onto the steps.

Back in the ring, Allin caught MJF with a low blow and tried a quick pin. MJF kicked out, and Allin locked in the Scorpion Death Lock. MJF clawed free and set for the Heat Seeker, but Allin countered into a Scorpion Death Drop.

They traded roll‑ups until Allin hit a Code Red for a close call. MJF bailed to the floor, and Allin launched himself out of the ring, wiping MJF out — and accidentally taking out a cameraman.

Officials swarmed the cameraman as MJF hoisted Allin onto his shoulders and carried him up the ramp. He dumped Allin into a barber’s chair and grabbed the clippers, ready to take the hair early. Allin kicked the clippers out of his hand and knocked MJF onto the table holding them.

Allin climbed the scaffolding above the entrance and hurled himself off with a Coffin Drop that crushed MJF on the table below. He dragged MJF back toward the ring and locked in another Scorpion Death Lock, but MJF powered free. Allin caught him with a Scorpion Death Drop and went up top again, looking to finish it.

MJF shook the ropes, tripping Allin, then muscled him up and drilled him with a Tombstone off the ropes. He held the cover.

Winner and NEW AEW World Champion: MJF

Medical staff strapped Allin to a stretcher after the match. MJF climbed onto the apron and stood on the stretcher, raising the AEW World Championship over Allin’s body. Kevin Knight sprinted down, chased MJF off, then climbed the ropes. With Allin still strapped down and helpless, Knight launched with a crossbody and crashed onto him as the show went off the air.

–– Here is what’s in store for 2026 AEW Double or Nothing ––

 Buy In:

  • Divine Dominion (Megan Bayne and Lena Kross, c) vs Zayda Steel and Viva Van in a 5-Minute AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship Eliminator
  • The Opps (HOOK, Anthony Bowens, and Katsuyori Shibata) vs Death Riders (Wheeler Yuta, Daniel Garcia, and Claudio Castagnoli)
  • Boom & Doom and The Conglomeration vs Shane Taylor Promotions in a 10-Man Tag Team Match

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Main Card:

  • AEW World Championship Title vs Hair Match: Darby Allin (c) vs MJF
  • AEW Women’s World Championship: Thekla (c) vs Jamie Hayter vs Kris Statlander vs Hikaru Shida
  • AEW World Tag Team Championship I Quit Match: FTR (c) vs Cage and Cope
  • AEW International Championship: Kazuchika Okada (c) vs Konosuke Takeshita
  • AEW Continental Championship: Jon Moxley (c) vs Kyle O’Reilly
  • Stadium Stampede: Jericho, The Elite, and The Hurt Syndicate vs The Demand, The Don Callis Family, and The Dogs
  • Owen Hart Men’s Tournament Quarterfinal: Will Ospreay vs Samoa Joe
  • Owen Hart Men’s Tournament Quarterfinal: Swerve Strickland vs Bandido
  • Owen Hart Women’s Tournament Quarterfinal: Athena vs Mina Shirakawa

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Preview

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 takes place tonight from a sold‑out Louis Armstrong Stadium in Queens, New York. The crowd is ready, and the event already looks like one of AEW’s biggest shows ever. More than 13,800 fans will fill the stadium, and the pay‑per‑view is expected to become one of the highest‑grossing in company history. As a result, the company enters the night with major momentum.

Darby Allin defends the AEW World Championship against MJF in a Title vs Hair match. Allin won the title last month in under three minutes, and he has defended it seven times since then. MJF enters the match with heavy pressure, because he will lose his hair if he fails to win. Therefore, both men step into the main event with high stakes and strong motivation.

The AEW Women’s World Championship will also be on the line in a four‑way match. Thekla defends against Jamie Hayter, Kris Statlander, and Hikaru Shida. All four women are current or former champions, and this creates a rare matchup filled with proven names. In addition, Thekla can lose the title without being pinned, which increases the danger for her and adds tension to every moment of the match.

FTR defend the AEW World Tag Team Championship against Cage and Cope in an I Quit Match. Each team holds one win in their series, and tonight’s match breaks the tie. However, Cage and Cope face a major risk, because they will not be allowed to team again if they lose. Consequently, the stipulation raises the emotional stakes for both sides.

Kazuchika Okada defends the AEW International Championship against Konosuke Takeshita. The two men share a long history from their time in NJPW, and their rivalry grew stronger after Takeshita walked out on Okada during a tag match at AEW Dynasty. Because of that moment, the match now carries personal weight. Jim Ross even called it a potential show‑stealer, and many fans agree.

Jon Moxley defends the AEW Continental Championship against Kyle O’Reilly. O’Reilly earned the match after going to a time‑limit draw with Moxley on Wednesday’s Dynamite/Collision special. Since the draw left the result unresolved, both men now want a clear winner.

The Stadium Stampede match returns for the first time since AEW All In London 2023. This year’s match features fourteen total wrestlers, making it the largest version in AEW history. Chris Jericho leads The Elite and The Hurt Syndicate, while Ricochet leads The Demand, The Don Callis Family, and The Dogs. Because of the size of the match, chaos is guaranteed from the start.

The Owen Hart Foundation Cup Tournament begins tonight with three quarterfinal matches. Meanwhile, the Buy‑In preshow is hosted by Renee Paquette and Mick Foley. Foley makes his official AEW debut, since his WWE Legends deal expires in June. As a result, the preshow carries extra interest for longtime fans.

AEW Double or Nothing 2026 Results

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