AEW Dynamite “Summer Blockbuster” Results – June 10, 2026

AEW Dynamite "Summer Blockbuster" Results – June 10, 2026

AEW Dynamite “Summer Blockbuster” Results – June 10, 2026 – Welcome to Wrestling Attitude’s live coverage for AEW Dynamite “Summer Blockbuster” on June 10, live from the Andrew J. Brady Music Center in Cincinnati, Ohio!

AEW Dynamite Summer Blockbuster opens with Excalibur and Taz welcoming us before sending things to Tony Schiavone in the ring, who introduces Tommaso Ciampa.

Ciampa immediately cuts Schiavone off, demanding he repeat what he said on Collision — that Tommaso Ciampa is better than Jericho. Schiavone said it on Saturday, but he refuses tonight, so Ciampa backs him into the corner and calls him an old, senile bastard who better say it or he’ll break his back. Schiavone is about to give in when pyro hits and Jericho walks out.

Ciampa orders the music cut and asks what Jericho has to say for himself. Jericho wonders who he has to talk to in this company to face someone with hair. He says they got off on the wrong foot, so he introduces himself. Ciampa says he knows exactly who Jericho is — and Jericho knows who Ciampa is, The Psycho Killer who left him laying two weeks ago. Jericho calls him Tommy, mocking that Tommaso isn’t marketable and wouldn’t sell a t‑shirt.

Ciampa snaps that not even his mother calls him Tommy, and Jericho fires back asking if she’s Tommy’s Mommy. Jericho wants to know the real reason Ciampa hates him, slipping in insults between every line like his old Mr. Subliminal routine. Ciampa says the whole thing is a joke, but Jericho says it isn’t — he knows why Ciampa hates him. Because Ciampa isn’t Jericho. Jericho says Ciampa came to AEW with hype, but when Jericho returned, it wasn’t the reaction Ciampa hoped for. Jericho tells him to pull the stick out of his ass before he shoves it in deeper, Tommy.

Ciampa swings first, but Jericho lands the shot. Referees and security rush in as the two brawl. They break free multiple times, fighting all the way backstage before finally being separated as the show moves on.

Kevin Knight, Don Callis, and Andrade El Idolo Confrontation Backstage

Kevin Knight arrives backstage with Don Callis and is immediately approached by Renee Paquette, who asks about everything that went down last week. Andrade El Idolo walks in and tells Callis he wants a shot at the AEW World Title too, telling Knight he’s new to The Family and needs to get to the back of the line. Andrade asks Callis directly if he’s with him or with Knight. Callis leaves with Knight, but reassures Andrade he’s getting his title shot and shouldn’t worry. Excalibur wonders aloud if the Callis Family has grown too big for its own good.

Jon Moxley vs. Shane Taylor for the AEW Continental Title

Death Riders and Shane Taylor Promotions were out for the entrances, but all seconded personnel headed to the back per Continental Title rules. Moxley and Taylor wasted no time trading heavy shots, with Taylor winning the early exchange until he hesitated long enough for Moxley to hit a dropkick off the apron and follow with a tope. Moxley tried to keep the pressure on outside, but Taylor hurled him into the timekeeper’s area as the slugfest continued. Moxley clawed at the eyes, but Taylor answered with a uranage through the table.

Taylor controlled the entire commercial break, punishing Moxley’s midsection. When the show returned, Taylor draped the ring skirt over Moxley and crushed him with a blind leg drop on the apron. Multiple corner splashes dropped Moxley, who rose up, slapped Taylor, flipped him off, and fired back with strikes. Taylor rocked him with a huge right hand, but Moxley stayed upright long enough to throw a desperation lariat to reset things.

Moxley bit Taylor’s head in the corner, raked the back, and tried to set him up top, but Taylor fought back with headbutts. Taylor hit a massive second‑rope splash for a near fall at the ten‑minute call. Moxley ate a comeback lariat for another two before Taylor locked in a Cobra Clutch. Moxley battled to his feet, but Taylor returned to body shots and forearms. They traded Yay/Boo strikes until Moxley hit a cutter for his first near fall and transitioned into an armbar. Taylor escaped and drilled Moxley with a knee lift followed by punches in bunches. He signaled for the powerbomb, but Moxley grabbed the ankle. Taylor kicked free of the ankle lock, but Moxley rebounded off the ropes into a curb stomp and then locked in the Bulldog Choke. Taylor fought it, but eventually tapped.

Winner: Jon Moxley

Post‑match, Taylor blasted Moxley with a right hand. Carlie Bravo rushed out and handed Taylor his belt, which Taylor used to whip Moxley repeatedly. Daniel Garcia jumped the rail to help but was beaten down by The Infantry. Marina Shafir ran out, only for Trish Adora to crack her with a kendo stick. Lee Moriarty stood at ringside but barely participated, continuing the tease of a split from STP. Taylor finished by hitting another second‑rope splash before calling his crew up the stage, leaving the Death Riders laid out in a rare post‑match beating.

Mercedes Mone Video Package

A video package airs on Mercedes Mone, who says that for six months she watched the women’s division suffer and saw their heroes taken out. Mone says she’s back to remind everyone exactly who she is. No one is taking the Owen Cup from her. She isn’t here for redemption or to chase titles she once lost — she returned to defend what belongs to her. Hazuki is next, and the CEO always collects. Mone vs. Hazuki is set for next week.

The Jet Calls Out MJF… Gets More Than He Bargained For

Don Callis walks out to a wall of boos and introduces the newest member of the Callis Family — the man everyone looks up to, The Jet, Kevin Knight. They head to the ring, and Knight thanks Callis for the glowing introduction. Knight says everyone seems mad at him, when they should be mad at Darby Allin for failing and letting everyone down. Maybe they should be mad at Speedball Mike Bailey for breaking up JetSpeed. The fans shouldn’t be mad at him — he’s still the face of TNT. While the “bums in the back” wrestle for stars, Don Perignon made him the number‑one asset, and they’re working toward Jet 2 Belts. Knight says he loved his signing bonus and calls out MJF.

Darby Allin’s music hits — but Allin appears behind Knight and cracks him with his skateboard. Allin yells that he hopes New York was worth it, b*tch. He climbs for a Coffin Drop, but the second the Don Callis Family storms the ring, Allin bolts straight out the door.

PAC vs. Mark Briscoe

They start with grappling and quick takedowns, with Briscoe getting the early edge. PAC eats a shoulder block, kips up, and the two pie‑face each other until PAC misses a corner charge and Briscoe lights him up with loud chops. Briscoe floats over in the corner but gets blasted with a pump kick that sends him outside. Briscoe avoids a charge, hits a baseball slide, bodyslams PAC on the floor, and follows with the Cactus Elbow off the apron. Briscoe sits PAC in a ringside chair, but taking too long lets PAC recover and brainbuster him onto the chair.

PAC controls through the break, targeting the midsection. When the show returns, PAC drapes the ring skirt over Briscoe and crushes him with a blind leg drop on the apron. Briscoe fights out of the corner with Redneck Kung‑Fu and launches PAC with an Exploder. He sets PAC up and hits an Iconoclasm for two.

Briscoe tries for the Froggy Bow, but PAC rolls away. PAC floats over from the apron and looks shaken for a moment, but fires a pump kick and they start slugging it out. They trade kicks until PAC hits a bounce‑back German. Briscoe floats out of a brainbuster, boots PAC, and tries a suplex, but PAC hangs on and both men tumble hard to the floor.

Briscoe hits a Blockbuster off the apron and gets two back inside. He immediately goes up top for the Froggy Bow, but PAC gets the knees up. PAC climbs now, rolls through on a missed Shooting Star, and launches Briscoe across the ring with a release belly‑to‑belly. PAC goes up again, but Briscoe gets the knees up a second time, rolls through, and spikes PAC with the Jay Driller for the win.

Winner: Mark Briscoe

Post‑match, Briscoe grabs a mic and calls out MJF for ducking his title challenge, calling him a b*tch. He says he now has a direct path to that match and demands MJF come out. MJF’s music hits as they cut to commercial.

MJF Answers Mark Briscoe… Then All Hell Breaks Loose

MJF’s music is still playing coming out of the break, and he finally appears in the crowd. He says they’re not on Briscoe time — they’re on MJF time. For the millionth time, he’s the final word and the law in AEW, and no one is more important than him. So for the final time, the answer is no. A rising tide lifts all ships, and MJF claims he is that rising tide. If Briscoe ever got near the Triple B, he’d be an anchor, and the fans should thank him for protecting the title from Briscoe. He tells Briscoe to bless his heart for thinking The Conglomeration are his friends — they’re liabilities. MJF has the only thing that matters: money, and money talks.

The Lethal Twist — Jay Lethal, Lee Johnson, and Blake Christian — hit the ring and jump Briscoe from behind. Lethal goes for Lethal Injection, but Briscoe kicks free and fights off Johnson and Christian. He tries for the Jay Driller on Lethal, but Johnson hits a thrust kick and Christian follows with a pump knee. The beatdown continues until The Conglomeration storm the ring. Tomohiro Ishii destroys Lethal with a lariat, Kyle O’Reilly sends Johnson packing, and Roderick Strong drops Christian with an Angle Slam. Orange Cassidy casually strolls out behind them.

MJF walks up the ramp as Briscoe grabs a mic. Briscoe says he knows something Max doesn’t — MJF isn’t the boss, he’s just an a**hole. And now he’ll have to find some friends. Tony Khan has ordered a 5‑on‑5 match for the main event of Forbidden Door. Briscoe must find five, MJF must find five, and if Briscoe’s team wins, he gets his World Title shot. And because Tony Khan is a sicko, it’s happening inside a Steel Cage.

MJF is furious. Andrade El Idolo’s music hits and he walks out, staring MJF down and eyeing the AEW World Title. MJF bails immediately. Don Callis rushes out after MJF leaves and stands beside Andrade. The Conglomeration exit with Briscoe, leaving Orange Cassidy alone for his upcoming match.

Orange Cassidy vs. Andrade El Idolo (w/ Don Callis)

Callis joins commentary and actually puts Cassidy over as a fantastic wrestler. Cassidy has Andrade’s offense scouted early, but when Andrade poses in the ropes and stops Cassidy from putting his hands in his pockets, Cassidy zips up Andrade’s pockets instead. After a brief test of strength, Andrade loses the pants entirely, drawing a huge reaction. Cassidy then takes off his own pants to reveal another pair of jeans underneath, popping the crowd and commentary. Cassidy hits multiple hurricanranas and a dropkick that sends Andrade outside. Andrade cuts off a dive, teases a Figure Four, and Callis yells for him to stomp Cassidy’s nuts while Schiavone groans about the commentary table being an adventure. Andrade sends Cassidy crashing outside heading into the break. Callis sneaks in cheap shots while Andrade distracts the ref, then takes a selfie with a fan.

Cassidy mounts a comeback, sending Andrade head‑first into buckles before hitting a flying elbow off the top. Andrade counters a satellite DDT into two of the Three Amigos, but the third is countered into a Stundog Millionaire. Cassidy goes for the tope DDT, but Andrade blocks it and hits the third suplex on the floor, then takes another selfie with a female fan — which Callis loves because it’s another $40. The delay lets Cassidy hit his tope. Cassidy approaches the same fan, but Lio Rush appears, steals her phone, and takes a selfie with a terrified Cassidy. Andrade attacks while Rush demands another selfie. They go back and forth with “How You Know?” and “It’s Mine,” and Andrade leans in for the selfie — only to get spiked with a satellite DDT from Cassidy.

Back inside, Cassidy climbs slowly, but Andrade crotches him. Andrade crushes him with running double knees in the corner for two. Andrade goes for The DM, but Cassidy counters into a snap hurricanrana pin for a near fall. Andrade hits his back elbow, but Cassidy fires back with a right hand and both men go down.

They trade forearms on their knees — Cassidy with his little strikes, Andrade with full‑force shots. Cassidy lands a thrust kick and goes for a springboard, Andrade meets him, they stumble, and Cassidy sends Andrade onto the stage. Cassidy hits a diving DDT on the ramp, then another off the top inside for a close two. Cassidy signals for Orange Punch, but Andrade wipes him out with the spinning back elbow and finishes him with The DM.

Winner: Andrade El Idolo

Post‑match, Andrade grabs the mic and asks Cincinnati one question: How You Know?

Will Ospreay Backstage After His Match with Mark Davis

A video from last week airs showing Will Ospreay reflecting on his match with Mark Davis. Ospreay says Davis has gotten so much stronger since they last wrestled, but nothing was going to stop him from heading to Wembley and the main event. He admits — surprisingly, even to himself — that he owes a lot to the Death Riders.

Alex Windsor suddenly rushes in, hugging Ospreay while in tears, devastated after losing to Mercedes Mone and seeing her Owen Hart Tournament hopes end. Ospreay notices the camera capturing the moment and shoves it away as the footage cuts.

Thekla Video Package

A video package airs highlighting Thekla’s chaotic exit from Japan and Stardom, showing footage of her attacking the company’s owner and getting fired. Thekla says she’s closing that door for good and declares death to Stardom at Forbidden Door.

Backstage Challenge

Backstage, Jon Moxley, Marina Shafir, and Daniel Garcia are furious after the earlier beatdown and challenge Shane Taylor Promotions to a 5‑on‑5 Street Fight for Collision this weekend.

Skye Blue vs. Maya World – Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Quarterfinal

Both women come in with heavy emotion behind them, especially World, who’s wrestling through a heartbreaking week after losing her younger brother. Tony Khan announced earlier today that Sareee wasn’t cleared due to a lingering neck injury, and World asked to step in to fight in her brother’s honor. Triangle of Madness cut an inset promo, with Thekla saying Japan fears them and Blue mocking Sareee for backing out.

They start by trading strikes, with World landing a spinning leg lariat and a corner kick. Blue dodges a rope dive and unloads with punches. She hits a snap suplex, but World fires back with a double stomp from the corner that sends Blue to the ramp. Blue avoids a charge and hits a draping swinging neckbreaker heading into the break.

Blue controls during commercial, hitting a running face wash and keeping World grounded. World rallies with a diving roll‑up into a double stomp. They trade standing switches until Blue hits a pump knee, misses a lariat, and gets stacked with a bridging German for two. World climbs, but Blue cuts her off with a Cheeky Nandos Kick and a nasty high‑angle Liger Bomb for another two. World blocks the charging knee and hits a bridging fallaway slam for her own near fall. A flying Shining Wizard gets her another close call.

They trade forearms and thrust kicks. World rolls through a German, hits an enzuigiri, and lands a release German, but Blue explodes up with her running knee for the double down. World fires off more near falls, so Blue answers with multiple thrust kicks and a TKO for two. Blue goes for Code Blue, but World shrugs her off, stacks her high, bridges, and scores the flash upset to advance.

Winner: Maya World

ZSJ Package

A Zack Sabre Jr. video package airs. Sabre talks about beating Nigel McGuinness last year and wanting AEW’s best again — someone he hasn’t faced in years and never in America. He calls out Kenny Omega, asking if he’s still the best. Omega has accepted, and the match is official for Forbidden Door. Omega faces Bad Dude Tito on Collision as a preview.

Callis Family Segment

The Don Callis Family are backstage when MJF walks in. He brings up the 6‑on‑6 Cage Match at Forbidden Door and says he needs five of Callis’ top guys. Callis refuses at first, saying he’s not a pimp and his men aren’t meat — until MJF opens a briefcase of cash. Callis immediately agrees and says he’s buying a boat.

Andrade tries to speak, but Kevin Knight cuts him off, saying he’ll join MJF’s team only if he gets a World Title shot. MJF agrees, saying Knight wasn’t one of his top picks, but fine — and after this, there won’t be another rematch. MJF leaves. Callis celebrates with Knight, saying Jet 2 Belts is coming, but Andrade stops him and asks about his title shot. Callis promises he’ll get it, and they shake hands.

Swerve Strickland (w/Prince Nana) vs. Brody King – Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Semifinal

Renee Paquette stands at the side stage and talks about the lengths Strickland goes to in order to get what he wants, reminding us of Revolution and the last time he faced Brody King. Earlier today, Strickland told her to expect the rules to be stretched — maybe even broken — tonight.

Cincinnati erupts in loud F*ck ICE chants as King unloads chops on Strickland to start. King locks in a hanging sleeper and drags Strickland onto the ramp. Strickland recovers enough to snap King throat‑first across the ropes, but King immediately launches him head‑first into the post and crushes him with a somersault senton off the apron. Nana distracts King long enough for Strickland to drop toe hold him into a chair, sit him down, and hit a running Swerve Stomp off the apron heading into the break.

During commercial, Strickland wastes time intimidating referee Aubrey Edwards, giving King the opening to blast him with a huge chop and a running senton. King climbs for a superplex, but Strickland slips out and tries a corner powerbomb. King holds on, ripping the top buckle pad off in the process. Strickland hits something close to an avalanche Russian leg sweep, then completely whiffs on a House Call — commentary insists King ducked — before charging again. King pops him up, but Strickland adjusts mid‑air and hits a Swerve Stomp, sending King outside. Strickland follows with a float‑over dive, but King catches him and choke bombs him onto the announce table, which doesn’t break. Backstage, MJF watches while clutching the Triple B.

Back inside, they trade heavy shots. King hits a swinging back suplex, Strickland pops up with House Call, but King stays on his feet and crushes him with a lariat for two. King locks in a sleeper, but Strickland repeatedly drives him into the exposed corner. King’s head hits the steel, busting him open. Strickland hits another House Call, but King rises to his feet again, so Strickland goes up top and lands a top‑rope House Call for the closest near fall of the match.

Strickland tries for a Vertebreaker, but King powers out and hits a running Death Valley Driver into the corner. Nana distracts King again, and King grabs him in the hanging choke off the apron before smashing Strickland with a running cannonball and a piledriver for a close two as the crowd goes wild. King sets up for the Gonzo Bomb, but Strickland escapes and tries to send King into Aubrey. She jumps out of the way, giving Nana the opening to blast King — likely with the ring bell — right into Strickland’s waiting arms. Strickland hits the Vertebreaker and gets the win.

Winner: Swerve Strickland

The Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Finals are now officially Swerve Strickland vs. Will Ospreay at Forbidden Door.

AEW Collision Summer Blockbuster – 6/13/26
Kenny Omega vs. Bad Dude Tito
The Young Bucks (Matt & Nick Jackson) vs. The Dogs (David Finlay & Clark Connors)
Death Riders vs. Shane Taylor Promotions – 5 on 5 Cincinnati Street Fight
Persephone vs. Julia Hart – TBS Title Survival of the Fittest Qualifier

AEW Dynamite – 6/17/26
Mercedes Mone vs. Hazuki – Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Tournament Semifinal

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

  • AEW Continental Championship: Jon Moxley defends against Shane Taylor
  • Owen Hart Foundation Tournament men’s semifinal: Swerve Strickland vs. Brody King
  • Owen Hart Foundation Tournament women’s quarterfinal: Skye Blue vs. Sareee
  • PAC vs. Mark Briscoe
  • Orange Cassidy vs. Andrade El Idolo
  • The Young Bucks vs. The Dogs

AEW Dynamite “Summer Blockbuster” Preview – June 10, 2026

Jon Moxley of The Death Riders puts the Continental Championship on the line for the first time since beating Kyle O’Reilly at Double or Nothing on May 24. He defends against Shane Taylor. Taylor’s partners Lee Moriarty, Capt. Shawn Dean, and Carlie Bravo came up short against Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, and PAC in trios action on Saturday’s episode of AEW Collision. Because of that loss, Taylor now steps in looking to shift the momentum.

Skye Blue of Triangle of Madness faces Japanese freelance star Sareee in a quarterfinal match for the 2026 Women’s Owen Hart Foundation Cup Tournament. The winner moves on to face Athena in the semifinals. On the other side of the bracket, Mercedes Mone and Stardom’s Hazuki will meet in the semifinals after advancing earlier in the tournament.

The 2026 Men’s Owen Hart Foundation Cup Tournament also continues tonight as Swerve Strickland goes one‑on‑one with Brody King in a semifinals match. The two men share a long history. Strickland advanced by defeating Bandido at Double or Nothing, while King earned his spot by beating Claudio Castagnoli during the May 27 Dynamite and Collision television special.

Andrade El Idolo of The Don Callis Family will also be in action as he faces Orange Cassidy of The Conglomeration in singles competition.

AEW Dynamite “Summer Blockbuster” Results

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