AEW Dynamite + Collision Results – May 27, 2026

AEW Dynamite + Collision Results – May 27, 2026

AEW Dynamite + Collision Results – May 27, 2026 – Welcome to Wrestling Attitude’s live coverage for AEW Dynamite and AEW Collision on May 27, coming to you live from the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania at a special three‑hour run time.

AEW Dynamite kicked off with Excalibur welcoming us alongside Tony Schiavone and Taz, recapping Will Ospreay and Swerve Strickland advancing in the Owen Hart Foundation tournament at Double or Nothing, and noting that the remaining Quarterfinal matches would unfold tonight.

Backstage: Ospreay, Omega & Moxley Cross Paths

Renee Paquette caught up with Will Ospreay after his win on Sunday. He said he’d celebrate later — first he needed the doctor — but stopped when he found Kenny Omega already in the trainer’s room with an ice pack on his neck. Omega said they needed to address the obvious: the Death Riders. He’s dealt with them before, and his concern is simple — they’re not the type you can rely on forever. They follow through on everything they say, and both he and Ospreay have the scars to prove it. Omega asked why Ospreay didn’t come to him instead. Ospreay told him straight — Kenny wasn’t there.

Omega said he has his own way of bouncing back, in and out of the ring, and he understands the appeal of the Death Riders because they get results. He wasn’t telling Ospreay to cut ties, just to keep his eyes open — as a friend.

Jon Moxley walked in right on cue, saying Omega was giving solid advice, because everyone in that room has skeletons rattling around somewhere. Moxley handed Ospreay an ice pack and told him the truck was waiting outside. Omega told Ospreay he’d always be there for him. Ospreay told Omega not to give up on the World Title. Omega told him the same.

Kevin Knight Explains His Actions at Double or Nothing

They rolled the footage of Kevin Knight turning on Darby Allin after Sunday’s main event, and the arena immediately drowned him in “F*** You Kevin” and “Shut the F*** Up” chants. Knight tried to talk over them, saying he warned Allin not to let him or the fans down — and that’s exactly what Allin did. He blew it. Knight compared it to the Sixers collapsing against the Knicks, saying they let everyone down too. He said he’s done “trusting the process” and is taking control himself. Knight asked who the last man to humble MJF was — The Jet — and said it should’ve been him in the main event. Instead, he was stuck watching from the sidelines, and he asked the crowd if he looked like a bench player. They chanted yes. Knight said he’s here to take over the entire company. He trusted Allin, and Allin told him never to waste time — so Knight didn’t, leaving him in a pool of his own blood.

A sharply dressed Speedball Mike Bailey stormed out, saying he knows exactly how dangerous Knight can be — it’s both his best and worst trait, and it’s why they work so well together. Bailey said Knight gets impatient, jumps ahead, and screws up, which is what he did to Allin. Bailey told him it wasn’t too late; if Knight apologized, they could fix this. Bailey offered his hand. Knight brushed past him with a shoulder, turned back, and smashed Bailey in the face with the microphone. Knight pretended to leave, then spun around and drilled Bailey with a Rock Bottom. Taz was absolutely delighted with Knight’s behavior to open the show.

Backstage: The Demand Respond to Jericho’s Momentum

Renee Paquette was backstage with The Demand and asked if Chris Jericho had any momentum heading into tonight after scoring a pinfall at Double or Nothing. Ricochet immediately shot that down, saying Jericho didn’t gain anything — he just got lucky. Kaun added that the only reason Jericho even got that pin was because they were beating him down seven‑on‑one.

Ricochet said he’s already beaten Jericho twice, and tonight everyone will see what Jericho already knows — he’s Ricochet, and he’s on another level entirely.

Jericho vs. Ricochet – Everyone Banned from Ringside

Excalibur pointed out the nasty welt on Jericho’s leg from Stadium Stampede and that failed table dive as Ricochet came out firing. He blasted Jericho with rapid‑fire dropkicks, hit a slingshot dive to the floor, then sprang back inside with a springboard lariat and a running Shooting Star for an early two. Ricochet tried another springboard, but Jericho cut him out of the air with a right hand and answered with a dive of his own to the outside. Jericho wasted too much time clearing the announce table, letting Ricochet front‑suplex him onto it. They climbed up top, where Jericho suddenly dropped into a double‑leg and tried to wrench on the Walls of Jericho on the tabletop. Ricochet fought free on the apron, swept Jericho’s legs out, and smashed him into the steps to stay in control.

They battled back onto the apron, where Jericho slipped out of a fireman’s carry and drilled Ricochet with a Death Valley Driver, sending both men crashing to the floor. Back inside, they traded shots to dueling “Yay/Bald” chants. Jericho strung together shoulder tackles and a double sledge off the top, then hit a running bulldog. He went for the Lionsault, slipped on the ropes, recovered, and cracked Ricochet with a back elbow and a brainbuster for two. Ricochet yanked Jericho over the top by the hair, nailed a springboard dropkick, and followed with a tope suicida. A corkscrew plancha landed flush, and Ricochet spiked Jericho with a brainbuster on the floor before demanding Aubrey start the count. Jericho barely beat it, rolling right into position for a Phoenix Splash that Ricochet hit for another close call.

Ricochet missed the Spirit Gun, and Jericho swept the legs again into the Walls of Jericho. His bad knee buckled, he missed a Judas Effect, and Ricochet stumbled into Aubrey, nearly causing Jericho to hit her. That opening let Ricochet sneak in a low blow and hit the Rico‑sault for a near fall. Ricochet dragged Jericho into place, went for the 630, and crashed hard. Jericho popped up with a Codebreaker for two, then smashed Ricochet with a brutal Judas Effect. Instead of covering, Jericho hit the Lionsault to seal the win.

Winner: Chris Jericho

After the match, Tommaso Ciampa blindsided Jericho from behind, choking him with his own shirt and hammering him with punches. Ciampa pulled down the knee pad and blasted Jericho with a running knee, then mocked Jericho’s pose while standing over him.

Backstage: Andrade Sets His Sights on the World Title

Andrade El Idolo said now that the “stupid” Stadium Stampede is behind him, he can finally focus on what matters — winning the World Title and beating MJF. Andrade asked if MJF really thinks he’s better than him, then smirked and said, “How you know?”

Superstation Showcase 4‑Way: Rush vs. Brian Cage vs. Lio Rush vs. Orange Cassidy

This one was pure chaos from the opening bell — messy in spots, wild in others, but the crowd was locked in, especially for Lio Rush’s Blackheart persona. There’s clearly something there, and hopefully AEW has an actual direction for him after this. Rush himself still feels like he’s circling that AEW World Title challenge he called out last week, though commentary never clarified what the winner of this match actually earned. Jake Doyle also resurfaced in the middle of the madness, and hopefully he doesn’t get swallowed up in the Callis Family shuffle after being out injured.

Orange Cassidy came out wearing a new shirt that’s basically a sideways face on his chest, perfectly designed so your sunglasses rest on it like he’s wearing them — tremendous. During Rush’s entrance, Lio was already drooling black liquid and told the camera they were “twins,” which was ridiculous and hilarious at the same time.

Cassidy and Lio got tossed early, leaving Rush and Cage to slug it out. A botched headscissors still got Rush over, and both men no‑sold lariats before Rush hit a snap German. Cage answered with a pop‑up DVD for two. Cassidy and Lio jumped back in, and Cassidy looked genuinely spooked by Lio’s Blackheart energy as Lio ramped up the tiny kicks. Lio tried his misdirection sunset flip, but Cassidy went hands‑in‑pockets, rolled through, hit the dropkick, and kipped up. Lio avoided a dive with a handstand kick but ran straight into Cage’s arms. He wriggled free with a hurricanrana and another handstand kick before galloping around the ring for a dive — Cage caught him, so Cassidy launched himself with a tope to wipe them both out. Rush teased a dive, then hit the LFI pose instead.

Rush tried a superplex, but Lio bit his leg and cracked him with a twisting enzuigiri. Cassidy kept getting crotched in the corner by everyone, and Cage nearly cut Lio in half with a lariat. Cassidy fought Cage off long enough to hit a falling splash for two. Cage reminded everyone he’s a machine by suplexing Cassidy from the apron into the ring, but Rush flew in with a dropkick. Cage planted Rush with a Jackhammer for two, Lio returned with a flurry, and Cage spiked him with a Falcon Arrow — doing the deal — for another near fall.

Cassidy dove off the top, countered a suplex into a Stundog, then hit a spinning DDT for two. He followed with a diving tornado DDT to the floor on Cage. That’s when Rocky Romero and Lance Archer showed up. Archer blocked an Orange Punch, Romero got booted, and Archer ate an Orange Punch. Jake Doyle returned and blindsided Cassidy. Roderick Strong sprinted out and brawled with Doyle to the back, with Archer dragging Cassidy away in the chaos.

That left Rush and Lio alone. They squared up, and Lio blasted him with a rebound stunner and a misdirection spear for two. Lio leapt off the top, but Rush caught him with a right hand. Rush dragged him outside and smashed him into multiple barricades before choking him with a cable — legal in a 4‑way. Back inside, Rush stomped him down in the corner and drilled him with the Bulls Horns to win it.

Winner: Rush

Backstage: MJF, Kevin Knight, and the Callis Crew

Renee Paquette waited for word from MJF when he walked in dragging the AEW World Title and dropped it on the floor, carrying his Triple B instead. Kevin Knight stepped in, and MJF thanked him for what he did after the main event, saying he knew Knight wanted to impress him and he appreciated it. Knight corrected him — it wasn’t for MJF, it was because Darby Allin blew his chance. MJF shrugged and said that was fine, he’d see Knight around.

MJF left, and Kyle Fletcher walked in eyeing the TNT Title. Don Callis admired all the young athletic talent around him and wondered aloud if the territory was safe. Callis told Knight that if he ever wants to get serious about becoming Jet 2 Belts, he knows exactly where to find them.

– A video package aired for Mark Briscoe.

Backstage: The Brawling Birds Look Ahead

Renee Paquette was backstage with The Brawling Birds. Jamie Hayter said the next time she gets Thekla in the ring, she’s taking the title — at least she got to knock her head off at the pay‑per‑view. Alex Windsor addressed Willow Nightingale’s injury, saying it’s unfortunate, and when Willow is cleared, they can settle things properly. Renee asked about facing the Wild Card next week, and Windsor said she’s wrestled all over the world and is ready to prove she belongs in the conversation as one of the best anywhere. She mentioned both she and Hayter chasing their Wembley dreams — along with her Billy — and Hayter said no matter how it shakes out, The Birds will rise to the top. We learned Windsor faces the Wild Card next week on Dynamite.

MJF’s World Title Celebration Is Interrupted

The ring was decked out with balloons as Justin Roberts introduced the three‑time AEW World Champion. MJF was carried out on a throne, soaking it in. He said Darby Allin was probably sulking somewhere because once again he beat him with something as basic as a headlock takeover. MJF said pro wrestling has existed since the 1800s, and only eight men in major promotions have been World Champion before turning 30. He said history books will talk about him until the sun burns out. He hoped the fans understood how lucky they were to witness greatness in real time. This is the greatest era imaginable because it’s all about him — a three‑time, three‑time, three‑time World Champion. Number one. Nobody close. A generational talent. He told the fans to bow before the greatest of all time. A giant banner dropped celebrating his third title reign… and Mark Briscoe immediately tore it down.

Briscoe said MJF doesn’t fit in Philly — it’s like a penguin wandering through the desert, and not even one of the cool exotic ones. Philly is home to some of the toughest people alive, and MJF sticks out like a sore thumb. Tough is not what he is. Briscoe said MJF is so self‑absorbed he actually believes he’s better than everyone, so he reminded him that it wasn’t long ago that Briscoe pinned him. Briscoe demanded a World Title shot and asked if MJF would keep being a soft little b**** or if he’d Man Up. MJF said absolutely not. He said unlike everyone else in AEW, he understands this is a business, and optically it already looked bad that an “emo freak” like Darby Allin even sniffed the World Title. Mark Briscoe as champion? That would probably put the company out of business. MJF said Briscoe isn’t remotely on the Devil’s level.

MJF started heading up the aisle — and Rush walked out behind him. Rush said MJF calls himself a fighting champion, but it’s funny: Briscoe is a chicken farmer, while MJF is a chicken s. Rush said he’s come close to beating MJF before and reminded him of the challenge he issued. If you mess with the bull, you get the horns. MJF mocked Rush for thinking being bilingual made him cool, saying he can speak multiple languages too. He told Rush that if anyone has earned a title shot, it’s him — he’s got the look, the catchphrase, and he’s far more marketable than “that piece of s Briscoe.” MJF asked if Rush wanted the title match tonight. Rush agreed. MJF said “psych” — next week. The Bull meets The Devil for the AEW World Title.

Jungle Jack Perry Prepares for His Match

Jungle Jack Perry was on the Jurassic Express bus saying he’s had plenty of battles with Mark Davis, but tonight the stakes are higher than ever. He said this might be the start of his World Title Express Tour — and if anyone doesn’t like it, F*** You. Luchasaurus pulled the bus over, and Perry reluctantly followed him out. We then got a full Rocky‑style montage: raw eggs, running the steps, sprinting through the streets, and Perry hitting the Rocky pose to cap it off.

Brody King vs. Claudio Castagnoli – Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

Renee Paquette was at ringside before the bell and noted that King and Castagnoli split their matches during the 2023–2024 Continental Classic. Castagnoli opened with a hit‑and‑run approach, peppering King until the big man answered with echoing chops. Castagnoli fired back with uppercuts, and soon they were trading lariats until Claudio spilled outside to regroup. King followed, and they hammered each other through a long strike exchange on the floor, nearly getting counted out before diving back in to keep throwing shots straight through the commercial break. Tony Schiavone made a Kyle Schwarber home run reference that disgusted Taz, which somehow made the strikes sound even louder.

They collided with simultaneous lariats and dropped to their knees, chopping each other until both face‑planted. Castagnoli got up first and went into full uppercut mode, but King cut him off with a boot and unloaded a Violence Party in the corner. King barked at the crowd, turned around, and got blasted by another Claudio uppercut. King shook it off, dumped Claudio in the corner, and crushed him with a Cannonball — prompting Taz to ask if that was the first actual move of the match instead of a strike.

King lined up a dive, but Claudio uppercut him before he could launch. Castagnoli hit a discus uppercut, King flipped out of the Neutralizer, and they smashed into each other multiple times. King strung together a chop‑lariat‑elbow combo and tried for the Gonzo Bomb, but Claudio slipped out and went for a springboard — only to get cracked mid‑air with a forearm. King charged and ate a pop‑up uppercut, but he refused to go down, swung back, and crushed Claudio with the King Kong Lariat to advance.

Cope & Cage Have Their 5‑Second AEW Tag Team Title Pose Crashed

Christian Cage was about to tell the crowd to sit down and shut up when Cope cut him off, asking if he heard that reaction. Cage said he didn’t say he slept with anyone’s mother — though maybe he did. Cope shrugged and said the 90s were a wild time. Cage put over FTR as the best team they’ve ever shared a ring with, saying FTR brought out the absolute best in them and are Top Guys… just not the Tippy Top.

Cope said FTR agreed to an I Quit Match with the risk of never teaming again, but they didn’t quit — instead, Cope & Cage got their careers back. With FTR in the rearview, Cope said it was time to do something they haven’t done in 25 years. For the benefit of those with flash photography, they were going to hit a 5‑Second Pose. Cage refused, saying flash photography doesn’t even exist anymore. Cope said that’s where he’s wrong — he bought disposable cameras twenty years ago for this exact moment. He dumped a whole bag of them from under the ring and handed them out, explaining how to use them to anyone under 25. Taz swore that if Cope handed him one, he’d double‑leg him.

Before the pose could begin, The Dogs blindsided them. David Finlay and Clark Connors jumped Cage’s injured forearm on the floor, smashing the shillelagh against the steps. Finlay placed the steps on Cage’s hand and Connors double‑stomped it from the apron. Cope had already been blasted with the shillelagh, and Cage took another shot in the ring. Finlay held Cope up and told Connors to show him how it’s done — Connors speared Cope out of his boots. Connors then forced a ringside photographer to take a disposable‑camera photo of the fallen champions. He said The Dogs present a new 5‑Second Pose: the next AEW Tag Team Champions, standing over Cope & Cage.

Backstage: Swerve Strickland Sends a Message

Prince Nana stood with Swerve Strickland, who said he’s taking the Owen back to Wembley, and once he does, he’ll reclaim the AEW World Title. Swerve applauded Brody King and said if it weren’t for him, nobody would even know who King was. He said he doesn’t care about Bandido’s condition — conflict creates cash, and he plans to make plenty of it with King. Whose House.

TayJay (Tay Melo & Anna Jay) vs. Ava Everett & Allie Katch

Divine Dominion cut an inset promo saying they’d be timing TayJay and they’d fall like everyone else. Anna Jay immediately blasted Katch with a hook kick and a flying slam before tagging in Tay Melo for rapid‑fire corner strikes. Katch stumbled into a tag, and Everett walked straight into a pump kick. Jay returned with a running low Blockbuster, Melo followed with a running knee, and a Gory Special/Knee Lift combo ended it in seconds.

Winners: TayJay

Backstage: Speedball Mike Bailey Responds

A furious Speedball Mike Bailey said if Kevin Knight wants to walk a different path, fine — but he wants him one‑on‑one. We didn’t get a date, as the show cut to commercial.

Mark Davis (w/ Don Callis) vs. Jungle Jack Perry – Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

Luchasaurus pulled the Jurassic Express up to the arena, and Jungle Jack Perry hopped out with a loud “Woooo!” before heading inside.

Mark Davis came out wearing an eye patch — Excalibur explained it was from nearly losing an eye in Stadium Stampede. A highlight package aired, including Perry trying to run Davis over with the bus (and the cops being called). Don Callis joined commentary as Davis jumped Perry at the bell, crushing him with a corner splash and a standing senton. Perry immediately went after the bad eye, ripped the patch off, and slapped it on himself. He charged, bounced off Davis, and then sent Davis outside for three straight dives.

The fight spilled around ringside. Perry paused to stare down Callis, giving Davis the opening to hurl him over the barricade. Perry landed clutching his ankle. During the break, Taz compared Perry’s pants to Richard Simmons’ wardrobe, prompting Excalibur to note they’ve had to explain the Superstation, flash photography, and now Richard Simmons to younger viewers.

Davis continued mauling Perry around ringside and back in the ring, hammering him with clotheslines. He launched Perry from the apron into the barricade. Callis called Perry a punk but admitted he’s tough. Davis sat in the corner and hit a Taz‑style cross‑arm pose, which Taz called gimmick infringement. Perry barely beat the count, dodged a senton, and hit a hurricanrana off the apron to the floor. He followed with a moonsault outside and another inside for two.

Perry got the knees up on a senton, used Davis’ back as a springboard for a leaping senton, and got another near fall. He kept trying for a piledriver — Davis kept powering out — but Perry low‑bridged him and hit a baseball‑slide cazadora bulldog. On the apron, Davis smashed Perry back into the ring, yanked him out again, and delivered a brutal suplex on the edge that sent Perry flying out of his shoes.

Back inside, Davis tore off Perry’s socks and stomped on his bare feet. Excalibur popped Taz by saying he couldn’t recall anyone wrestling barefoot ever winning a match in Philadelphia. They fought into the corner, where Perry locked in a guillotine and fell with an avalanche DDT. Sliced Bread #2 got a near fall. Davis countered another piledriver attempt with an enzuigiri, went for his rebound lariat, but Perry had it scouted. They traded rapid pin attempts until Perry finally hit the piledriver — only for Davis to kick out.

Perry locked in the Snare Trap, but Davis barely reached the ropes. Perry tried the Sacrifice Knee, but Davis swatted him out of the air and turned him inside out with the rebound lariat — Perry still kicked out. Perry clung to Davis to avoid the gut‑wrench piledriver and slapped him repeatedly, only making Davis angrier. Perry tried a superplex but slipped due to being barefoot, and Davis muscled him up into a spinning avalanche piledriver to win it and close the Dynamite portion of the show.

Winner: Mark Davis (advances to the Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Semifinals)

Don Callis & Kyle Fletcher

Renee Paquette entered the ring with Davis and Callis. She announced Davis vs. Will Ospreay next week in the Semifinals. Callis said he hoped Ospreay was watching, because Davis would put him on the shelf. He said he knows Ospreay better than Ospreay’s own mother and that Ospreay was never the Chosen One — neither was Takeshita. The only true Chosen One of the Callis Family was Kyle By God Fletcher.

Fletcher walked out with Rocky Romero and hugged Callis. Fletcher addressed the “elephant in the room” — how he returned from a catastrophic double leg break in just two months. He said it’s because he’s a picture‑perfect performer and is now 100% cleared. But the real reason he came back was to cut the dead weight from the Don Callis Family. Fletcher said he spent a year trying to hold the group together while Takeshita tried to tear it apart. Takeshita never cared about The Family or Fletcher. Fletcher wanted to rule the wrestling world with him — ProtoShita running everything — but it would never happen because Takeshita is a selfish prick.

Right on cue, Takeshita’s music hit. The new International Champion walked out, raised the title, and was joined by The Conglomeration. They moved toward the ring, forcing Fletcher, Davis, and Romero to bail. Takeshita grabbed a mic and said he got his title back — and he wants Fletcher.

Backstage: Will Ospreay Responds

Will Ospreay applauded Davis’ win and talked about their long history dating back to the United Empire. He said the last time they faced off, he was at 50%, but now he’s at 100% and nothing is stopping him from Wembley. The Death Riders walked in — Moxley and Marina Shafir fist‑bumped him, PAC refused — and they headed out one way while Ospreay made his entrance through the stage.

Will Ospreay & Death Riders vs. The Rascalz

Moxley and PAC jumped The Rascalz before the bell, but Ospreay stayed on the apron until things officially settled. Once the match started, Dezmond Xavier tried a leapfrog and got absolutely erased by an Ospreay big boot mid‑air. PAC hesitated to tag Ospreay at first but eventually did. Quick tags brought in Moxley and Wentz, who showed no fear throwing chops until Moxley flattened him with a running elbow.

Ospreay rolled through Pip Pip Cheerio but got swarmed in the corner as Wentz and Reed hit a string of attacks and then wiped out Moxley and PAC with stereo dives. Ospreay was isolated, with Moxley and PAC yelling instructions from the apron. Wentz cracked him with a handspring pump knee — Ospreay answered with a handspring double Pele to both Wentz and Xavier.

Ospreay hesitated before tagging PAC, who stormed in and destroyed Reed with a lariat, hit a tilt‑a‑whirl backbreaker on Xavier, and launched Wentz with an overhead throw. PAC dumped Xavier on his head with a release German, then hit another to stack Reed on top of Wentz in the corner for two.

Moxley tagged back in, and he, PAC, and Ospreay ran a carousel of corner strikes. Moxley dropped Reed with a cutter. Ospreay and PAC hit stereo dives on Wentz and Xavier. Reed survived a piledriver and kipped up into a cutter of his own, but posing gave Moxley time to blast him with a lariat.

Ospreay double‑stomped Reed’s arm from the top and locked in La Mistica. Moxley and PAC trapped Xavier and Reed in a Rear Naked Choke and Brutalizer. Ospreay cinched in Death Ground on Reed, forcing the tap. After the bell, PAC gave Ospreay a nod and a fist bump — a sign of earned respect.

Winners: Will Ospreay & The Death Riders

Backstage: The Opps Regroup

Samoa Joe addressed The Opps, admitting it hasn’t been their best week, but the mission doesn’t change — they stand in opposition to anyone in their way. He mentioned HOOK finishing his first movie, Shibata running the hottest chain of pachinko parlors, and Bowens getting the opportunity he deserves. Hollywood is calling, so Joe said he’ll be stepping away for a few months and expects them to hold it down. He hugged each member, giving HOOK the final nod as HOOK stepped into the center. Bowens almost did, but held back. (Safe bet Joe is off to film Twisted Metal season 3.)

Video package: Kris Statlander vs. Hikaru Shida.

Backstage: TayJay Attacked

Lexy Nair tried to get a word with TayJay but ran into Divine Dominion first. Lena Kross mocked them, saying their match only lasted 30 seconds. Nair took two steps and found TayJay laid out on the floor. She asked if they were okay and told the camera they’d “need a minute” — instead of calling for help — which was unintentionally hilarious.

Andrade El Idolo vs. Ace Austin

They tore into this at a ridiculous pace. Ace Austin nearly hit his squatting DVD right out of the gate, but Andrade slipped free as they traded standing switches until Andrade launched himself into the ropes and struck his signature pose. Austin tried to use his speed to catch Andrade in the corner, but Andrade slammed the brakes and sent him crashing to the floor, following with a Tornillo out of the corner.

Andrade then did his weekly selfie spot — this time with a female fan who literally piggy‑backed him over the barricade. He took the photo, set her back in her seat, and only then did Austin finally recover enough to fight back. Austin hit a pump knee and a sit‑out suplex. He went for the squatting DVD again, Andrade blocked, but Austin cracked him with a corner enzuigiri. Austin hit a twisting headscissors from the apron back inside and finally landed the squatting DVD for two.

Austin carried Andrade up the ropes in another fireman’s carry, but Andrade countered into a powerbomb with a rough landing. Andrade went for the corner double knees, nobody home, and Austin drilled him with the springboard twisting kick. Austin called for The Fold — Andrade cut him off with the spinning back elbow and finished him with The DM.

Winner: Andrade El Idolo

Excalibur emphasized that win or lose, Ace Austin continues to show he can hang with top‑tier opponents.

Hikaru Shida vs. Kris Statlander in Lights Out Philadelphia Street Fight

Bell sounds and both ladies trade punches in bunches until a thrust kick from Statlander took Shida outside to regroup. Jumping knee off the apron from Statlander, who grabbed a chair under the ring, but literally slid it right to Shida, who popped Statlander in the ribs. Shida wedged the chair in the corner, but took too long and Statlander slingshot her into it. Shida responded with kendo stick shots, before going outside, where apparently a fan threw her an apple (is Carlito here or something?) that she punched Statlander with 10 times. Shida drove the apple into Statlander’s mouth and hit a Buzzsaw Kick. Taking too long on the apron, Statlander powerbombed Shida off to the floor. Both ladies brawl backstage (which garnered boos from the crowd), as Shida suplexed Statlander on a guard rail before they spilled back down the aisle.

Shida went backstage and rode out on a bicycle, running over Statlander’s hand before clocking her with the bike. Thankfully Excalibur delivered the Dusty Rhodes gem “He Got a Bicycle!” line during commercial to make us WCW fans happy. Shida suplexed Statlander into the corner where the chair was set-up before applying a crossface with the kendo stick. Sandman-esque White Russian Leg Sweep using the kendo stick before she placed a chair under Statlander’s face on the apron and hit a running knee lift. More chairs tossed into the ring by Shida, who took too long going up top, as Statlander met her with a superplex onto the chairs. Spinning sit-out fisherman’s suplex got Statlander a near fall, as she dragged Shida onto the chairs, but missed a top rope Moonsault. Meteora onto the chairs from Shida connected for two of her own.

Both ladies slug it out in the middle of the ring, as Shida did the deal with a Falcon Arrow, but Statlander kipped up, shocking Shida. Chucking a fastball chair shot right to the face of Shida, as Statlander went outside to set a table to really pop the crowd, as on the opposite side, Shida was stacking up chairs, as she caught a charging Statlander with a drop toe hold onto them. Statlander battled back with a DVD onto the seated chairs before going back under the ring for fluorescent light tubes. Shida pleaded that they were friends, as Statlander foolishly just put them down and had her eyes raked in the process, allowing Shida to hit a running knee. Back inside, Kitana decked Statlander before she smashed the light tubes over Statlander’s back and hit another Falcon Arrow, but Statlander kicked out.

Shida lit up the bloodied back of Statlander with kendo stick shots, awkwardly placing a chair against Statlander’s head in the ropes, which Statlander easily got out of, smashing it into Shida’s face. Both ladies fought to the apron, where Shida tried one last kendo stick shot, but Statlander blocked, smashed the kendo stick in half, stabbing Shida into the head with it before delivering Wednesday Night Fever off the apron through the table. Back inside, Statlander was going to finish it off, when Harley Cameron ran out, handed Statlander another kendo stick, as she got in one last shot before another Wednesday Night Fever got the win.

Winner: Kris Statlander

Cameron & Statlander hugged and headed up the aisle as Shida looked furious in the ring to end the show.

AEW Collision 5/30/26

  • The Conglomeration (Orange Cassidy, Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly) defend the AEW Trios Titles against Lance Archer, Rocky Romero & Trent Beretta
  • Status of the Vacant TBS Title Addressed
  • Divine Dominion vs. TayJay in a 5-Minute Tag Team Title Eliminator Match

AEW Dynamite 6/3/26

  • MJF defends the AEW World Title against Rush
  • Kevin Knight vs. Speedball Mike Bailey for the TNT Title
  • Will Ospreay vs. Mark Davis in a Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Semifinal
  • Alex Windsor vs. the Wild Card in a Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

–– Here is what’s in store for tonight’s show ––

  • MJF celebrates his AEW World Championship win
  • Lights Out Philly Street Fight: Kris Statlander vs. Hikaru Shida
  • Men’s Owen Hart Foundation tournament quarterfinal: Mark Davis vs. Jack Perry
  • Men’s Owen Hart Foundation tournament quarterfinal: Brody King vs. Claudio Castagnoli
  • Rush vs. Brian Cage vs. Lio Rush vs. Orange Cassidy in a Superstation Showcase
  • Everyone banned from ringside: Chris Jericho vs. Ricochet
  • Adam Copeland & Christian Cage five-second pose
  • We’ll hear from Kevin Knight
  • The fallout from Double or Nothing

AEW Dynamite + Collision Preview – May 27, 2026

MJF arrives tonight as a three‑time AEW World Champion. He won the title this past Sunday at Double or Nothing by defeating Darby Allin in a Title vs Hair Match. Allin jumped off the top of the entrance tunnel in the final moments, but MJF answered with a Tombstone from the ropes. After the match, TNT Champion Kevin Knight attacked Allin while he was being stretchered out. Because of all this, MJF will host a championship celebration, and Knight will also appear with something to say.

Kris Statlander faces her former friend Hikaru Shida in a Lights Out Philadelphia Street Fight. Statlander ignored warnings from Harley Cameron and Mina Shirakawa about trusting Shida. Their issues reached a breaking point at Double or Nothing during the AEW Women’s World Championship Four‑Way Match. Shida hit Statlander across the back with her kendo stick while Statlander had Thekla pinned. As a result, the two women now meet in a violent match with no rules.

Konosuke Takeshita won the AEW International Championship from Kazuchika Okada at Double or Nothing. However, Kyle Fletcher returned from injury right after the match and attacked Takeshita. Fletcher joined Don Callis, Rocky Romero, and Mark Davis in kicking Takeshita out of the Don Callis Family. Fletcher even hit Takeshita with the championship belt. Because of this, Fletcher and Callis will sit down with Renee Paquette tonight.

Ricochet and Chris Jericho meet in singles action with everyone barred from ringside. Ricochet holds a win over Jericho from AEW Dynasty on April 12. However, tensions have grown since then. Jericho, Bobby Lashley, Shelton Benjamin, Jack Perry, Matt Jackson, Nick Jackson, and Kenny Omega beat Ricochet, Toa Liona, Bishop Kaun, David Finlay, Clark Connors, Mark Davis, and Andrade El Idolo in the Stadium Stampede Match at Double or Nothing. Tonight, Jericho gets his chance to even the score.

Jack Perry and Mark Davis also compete tonight in a Quarterfinal Match for the 2026 Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Cup Tournament. Swerve Strickland and Will Ospreay already advanced to the semifinals at Double or Nothing by defeating Bandido and Samoa Joe. Now Perry and Davis fight to join them.

AEW Dynamite + Collision Results – May 27, 2026

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