
AEW Dynamite Results – July 15, 2026 – Welcome to Wrestling Attitude’s live coverage results for AEW Dynamite on July 15, live from the MGM Music Hall in Boston, Massachusetts.
Earlier today we see Will Ospreay grinding through a brutal training session backstage. He’s hammering forearms into a heavy bag while Daniel Garcia, Claudio Castagnoli, and Wheeler Yuta shout at him to keep pushing. Jon Moxley walks in and tells them to quit playing grab‑ass because it’s game time. He says he doesn’t care what Hall of Fame Cope and Cage belong to — you go out there and get the job done.
Garcia and Yuta head out as Moxley tells Ospreay the important work is finished, but the last steps are the ones that matter most. People complicate simple things. They see the target, they see the finish line, and they hesitate. Moxley says Ospreay earned this moment, and eventually he’ll face a decision that isn’t easy. But his dream isn’t one of those decisions. This part is simple — you take the shot, you don’t hesitate, you pull the trigger, no matter who the target is.
Moxley leaves, and Ospreay goes right back to smashing the heavy bag with even more intensity.
Cope & Cage vs. Death Riders — AEW Tag Team Titles
Boston sings along to Copeland’s theme, and as soon as it ends, Taz blurts out that the song “sucks,” cracking up the commentary desk. Renee Paquette is at ringside and mentions she tried to get a word with Christian Cage earlier, which obviously went nowhere. Copeland tells her the Death Riders are real pieces of work, and he and Cage have never been more locked in.
The crowd lets Wheeler Yuta have it as he starts with Copeland, who immediately boots him down. Cage and Garcia tag in. Cage teases Garcia’s dance, then flips him off. Copeland and Cage lure Garcia in and hit a double hip toss, but Yuta traps Copeland in the ring skirt and stomps away while Cage argues with the ref. The Death Riders isolate Copeland through the commercial break.
Back live, Copeland fades in a Garcia sleeper, but rolls through into a snap powerslam. Yuta cuts off the tag and fights Copeland in the corner. Copeland bites free and dives to Cage. Cage unloads corner punches, Yuta slips out, Cage reverses, tries a Killswitch, settles for a reverse DDT for two. Garcia charges, but Cage slams him face‑first onto Yuta. Cage hits his slingshot uppercut and backdrops Garcia to the floor. Back inside, Cage hits a diving headbutt on Yuta for two and signals for the Killswitch, but gets cut off.
Copeland leapfrogs Cage and knocks down both Yuta and Garcia. Copeland and Garcia tumble to the ramp. Cage tricks Bryce into thinking he’s removing the turnbuckle pad, then goes for a low blow, but Yuta blocks it and hits a German suplex for two. Cage bites Yuta’s head, climbs the corner, but Garcia crotches him and hits repeated corner strikes. They repeat the turnbuckle distraction spot with Yuta, but this time Cage lands the low blow kick and Copeland hits a pop‑up Spear for the win.
Winners: Cope & Cage (still champions)
Post‑match, The Young Bucks applaud from the balcony as Copeland nods back. The Dogs and Claudio Castagnoli hit the ring and swarm Copeland and Cage in a five‑on‑two beatdown. The Bang Bang Gang’s music hits and they clear the ring, brawling everywhere. Finlay ends up alone with Cage and raises the shillelagh — until Switchblade Jay White appears and snatches it away. Finlay bolts through the crowd with the Death Riders. Cage and Finlay stare each other down as Copeland and the Bang Bang Gang step between them. The crowd chants for them to hug it out. Copeland shakes everyone’s hand, but Cage walks off while White hilariously plays air drums with the shillelagh as Finlay screams from the crowd demanding it back.
Andrade El Idolo — Video Package & Interview
A video package shows Andrade El Idolo relaxing on a yacht with a woman at his side. He says becoming champion is his destiny. How You Know? Soon, everyone will.
We go backstage to Renee Paquette with Andrade. He says he’ll fight every member of the Callis Family and take every title they have. His destiny is the AEW World Championship. Renee reminds him how many members the Family actually has. Andrade pulls out a box containing MJF’s Dynamite Diamond Ring. He says he has a good friend. Renee asks if that friend is Will Ospreay.
Andrade simply replies — How You Know?
The Conglomeration — Backstage
Renee Paquette is with The Conglomeration, who say plenty of teams want the Trios Titles. Roderick Strong asks where they all are. Orange Cassidy says this would be the perfect moment for someone to walk in and challenge them.
Right on cue, The Demand step in and say it’s time to take those titles out of those backpacks.
Before anything else can happen, The Lethal Twist jump The Conglomeration from behind. Ricochet says he promised not to touch the champs until they’re ready — but The Lethal Twist aren’t part of The Demand… yet.
Andrade El Idolo vs. Jake Doyle
Andrade arrives with two women at his side. They take his robe and show off the Dynamite Diamond Ring, which Andrade puts on before the bell. Doyle jumps him immediately on the floor, then back inside crushes him with repeated corner splashes. Doyle charges again, but Andrade boots him and hits a hurricanrana off the second rope, then another off the apron outside. Andrade removes his shirt to reveal a censored “F*ck Don Callis” shirt and takes a selfie with a female fan. The delay costs him — Doyle crotches Andrade on re‑entry, grabs him by the throat, and both tumble over the top. Doyle hangs on and chokeslams Andrade onto the apron. Doyle controls the match through the break.
Back live, Andrade tries to rally but gets flattened by multiple shoulder tackles. On the fourth, Andrade hits an enzuigiri and resets. Andrade kips up, takes off his shirt again, and the crowd erupts like he just won a belt. Andrade plays to the fans too long and Doyle blasts him with a huge tackle. Doyle overcommits on a corner charge and spills outside, where Andrade hits a moonsault off the buckle. Back inside, Andrade goes for a slingshot hurricanrana, but Doyle catches him with a slick Liger Bomb for two.
Doyle tries to follow up, but Andrade blocks a suplex and hits the Three Amigos for a near fall. Andrade connects with his corner double knees, but Doyle kicks out again. Andrade heads up top, does the Eddie Guerrero shimmy, but Doyle cracks him with a massive forearm in mid‑air and another for a close two. Andrade spins out of a Boss Man Slam into a crucifix for two. They rise, Andrade hits the spinning back elbow and finishes with The DM for the win.
Winner: Andrade El Idolo
After the match, it’s announced Andrade will challenge Mark Davis for the AEW National Title at Redemption. Davis comes out swinging the title, ready to storm the ring, but Andrade slips on the Dynamite Diamond Ring and forces Davis and Doyle to back off.
– Video package of Kenny Omega winning the AEW World Title from MJF last week. As it stands now, it will be Omega vs. Will Ospreay for the World Title at All In: London.
Kenny Omega’s AEW World Championship Celebration
Tony Schiavone stands in a ring covered in red carpet with a giant Omega symbol surrounded by photos of Kenny Omega. He introduces the new AEW World Champion, and Omega walks out to a massive ovation and pyro. Before he can speak, The Young Bucks’ music hits. They come out with a bag in hand. Matt says they’ll keep it short — they’ve been best friends for nearly twenty years, and last year Omega won the big one alone. They’re proud of him, and he proved he’s still the best wrestler on the planet. But they admit seeing him wear the Triple B annoys them, so Nick pulls out the classic AEW World Title and makes the switch official.
Omega says it’s been so long he can’t even remember the exact number of days since he last held this championship. The difference wasn’t believing in himself — it was his friends, his family, the fans, and the AEW locker room. He says he would’ve given up on himself long ago, because this wasn’t supposed to happen, yet here they are. Less than fifty days until Wembley. As much as he’d like to say he’s ready, he still has work to do. Omega promises that in fifty days, everyone will see the best version of Kenny Omega in AEW.
Will Ospreay’s music hits and he gets a huge ovation. He tells The Bucks he’s glad they landed on their feet after he cost them their EVP jobs last year, then asks for a one‑on‑one talk with Omega. They step aside. Ospreay says it was important Omega believed in himself, and he watched Omega wrestle twenty‑five minutes in brutal heat without giving up. He thought Omega was finished after taking a belt shot, but then Omega kicked out at one “like a cheeky slag.” The Cleaner is back. The Best Bout Machine is back. As they get closer to Wembley, things will heat up — they’re two alpha males. Ospreay says for ten years Omega has been his hero and inspiration, and he thanks him every time they share a ring. When he thinks of AEW, he thinks of Kenny Omega. All he ever wanted was to be a fraction of what Omega is, but he’s not satisfied being second — and Omega tells him he shouldn’t be. Ospreay says every week they’ll show everyone why they’re in this position. Wembley Stadium. Main event. AEW World Title. They’ll show the world this is where the best wrestle.
They’re about to do a Mega Powers‑style handshake when Kevin Knight’s music hits. The TNT Champion walks out. Knight says he doesn’t mean to interrupt the love fest, but he has champion‑to‑champion business with Ospreay. Omega tells Ospreay he can stay. Knight congratulates Omega face‑to‑face, but says while they can talk about Wembley, The Jet is still owed a World Title shot thanks to Maxwell Jacob Fraudman, and that debt hasn’t been paid. Omega may be a God — but what’s a God to a non‑believer? Knight challenges Omega for the AEW World Title at Redemption. The crowd loudly chants “No.”
Omega says Knight is trying to hold him accountable for a promise MJF made? They’re not doing that. But maybe Omega will give him a shot anyway — because he’s a nice guy. Maybe because the first time he saw Knight, he saw someone special. Someone with IT. Someone who looked the part, moved faster, jumped higher, and was hungry. But that’s where it ended, because Knight aligned himself with Don Callis. Omega says he’d be a hypocrite if he pretended he never believed in Callis — the last time he was World Champion was thanks to Callis. It was during the pandemic, when no one could show up. But Omega realized that even if they could have, they wouldn’t have, because his worth had fallen into the toilet. He didn’t deserve them.
Omega tells Knight he doesn’t need Callis. Speedball Bailey believes that. Ospreay believes that. The fans believe that. Knight could do this on his own. Omega says call MJF what you want, but he wasn’t a fraud — he defended the title when he said he would. The only fraud Omega sees is Knight, because deep down the things Knight is saying aren’t from the heart. Omega thinks there’s still good in Knight, and he doesn’t need Don Callis to beat Kenny Omega. If they’re going to face each other at Redemption, Omega wants The Jet — not Callis’ little b*tch. If Knight wants to be Jet‑2‑Belts, he needs to do it on his own.
Knight says Omega makes a good point — but he’s wrong about one thing. There’s no goodness in his heart. Only greatness. Knight cracks Omega in the head with the microphone. Ospreay charges in for a Hidden Blade, but Knight ducks and escapes up the ramp — where Darby Allin sprints out and attacks him.
Brian Cage blindsides Allin. The Don Callis Family come out, but Rocky Romero and Trent Beretta get dropped by Omega and Ospreay. Cage, Hechicero, Knight, and Jake Doyle stand on the ramp. Death Riders’ music hits and Jon Moxley and Claudio Castagnoli arrive to even the odds. The Callis Family retreat.
Jungle Jack Perry — Backstage
Jungle Jack Perry says he’s officially put pen to paper on Chapter 2 of his AEW career. Chapter 1 saw him come close to breaking through, but now he’s ready to start fresh. This Saturday, he’s issuing an open challenge to anyone who feels like they’re in the same spot he once was — someone hungry, someone who wants to prove what the future of pro wrestling really looks like.
As Perry finishes, we see Luchasaurus quietly standing behind him…holding a boom mic…as Perry walks away.
Brodido vs. Nick Comoroto & Aaron Solo
Comoroto shows off his strength early, hoisting Bandido up for a gorilla press, but Bandido slips free and hits a press slam of his own. Brody King tags in and crushes Comoroto with an assisted splash, then follows with a senton for a two count. Solo breaks it up, only to get hammered with corner strikes for his trouble.
King hits a Stun Gun into a back suplex, then slams Comoroto right onto Solo. Bandido flies in with a Frog Splash onto the pile, and that’s enough to put away the former Factory duo in quick fashion.
– Renee Paquette is backstage with Kyle Fletcher & Don Callis, but are ran into (literally) by Brodido, who put a Most Wanted poster to Fletcher’s chest before walking off.
Kyle Fletcher vs. Komander — AEW International Title
Komander comes out firing, hitting lightning‑quick offense and stacking early near‑fall attempts. Fletcher low‑bridges him, catches Komander leaping off the apron, drops him face‑first, and boots him down. Fletcher hugs Don Callis, but Komander battles back inside and hits his insane rope‑walk dive, sending the crowd into a frenzy as we head to break. Komander tweaks his leg on the landing, letting Fletcher take over through the commercial.
Back live, Komander blasts Fletcher with a huge thrust kick. Fletcher answers with an enzuigiri and tries a deadlift avalanche brainbuster from the apron, but Komander slips out and hits a double‑jump snap hurricanrana. Fletcher spills outside, and Komander follows with another diving hurricanrana that sends Fletcher face‑first into the corner of the commentary table, busting him open. Komander hits a spinning 450 back inside for two. He goes for the rope‑walk Shooting Star, Fletcher sweeps the legs, but Komander flips out to his feet and nails an unreal springboard Destroyer for another near fall as the crowd erupts with “Holy Sh*t” chants.
Komander hits a thrust kick, but runs straight into a Michinoku Driver for two. Fletcher misses the Lawn Dart. Komander tries a spinning moonsault, but Fletcher snatches him and spikes him with a brainbuster to retain in a wild sprint.
Winner: Kyle Fletcher (still AEW International Champion)
Post‑Match
Fletcher tries to rip Komander’s mask off, but Konosuke Takeshita hits the ring and drills him with a stiff forearm. Takeshita picks up the International Title — and with his back turned, Kazuchika Okada appears and crushes him with a Rainmaker. Okada and Fletcher both grab the title at the same time and stare each other down.
Brodido hit the ring. Bandido springboards in with a dropkick that sends “ProtOkada” to the floor, and Brody King follows with a tope wiping out both Okada and Fletcher. Brodido help Takeshita up, and Bandido is the one holding the International Title high as the segment ends.
Kenny Omega & Darby Allin — Backstage
Renee Paquette is with Kenny Omega when Darby Allin walks in. Darby says Kevin Knight needs to be humbled next week, and he’ll be the one to take the TNT Title from him. Omega can waste time talking, or he can beat the truth out of Knight. Omega says he’ll leave that part to Darby, who heads out.
Jon Moxley steps in next. He tells Omega that Darby’s right — some people are exactly what they are, and they can’t pretend to be anything else, no matter how hard they try.
The Brawling Birds — On‑Stage Segment
Renee Paquette brings us back and introduces The Brawling Birds. Jamie Hayter asks Boston if they’re up for a few words from The Birds. Alex Windsor says if any city knows about drinking and fighting, it’s Boston. They’re gutted over the World Cup results earlier today, but not to worry — these Brits with the Tits won’t let anyone down.
Wembley is right in front of them, close enough to taste. They’ll beat the piss out of anyone to prove they’re the best team in AEW. They tell the crowd it’s time to get pissed, first round on them, and they head out with Paquette.
Chris Jericho & Tommaso Ciampa — Backstage
Jericho appears in a dark room, staring into the camera as he issues a challenge to Ciampa for Redemption. Ciampa brings the pain — but Jericho says he’ll bring The Painmaker. He promises hell is coming for Ciampa.
We cut to Ciampa, who says the truth hasn’t changed: Tommaso Ciampa is better than Chris Jericho. At Redemption, they’ll find out if The Painmaker is better than The Psycho Killer. But before they get there, Ciampa has one more night in his hometown. He issues an open challenge to anyone on Collision, telling Jericho he hopes he’s watching. Welcome to the City of Champions — the City of Ciampa.
Darby Allin vs. Brian Cage
Brian Cage walks out wearing a bodybuilding medal, and Darby Allin immediately launches a Tope — but he bounces off Cage like he hit a brick wall. Cage suplexes Allin while walking up the stairs and dumps him on the stage. Cage then hits a vicious suplex from inside the ring out onto the stage, and the landing looks like it rattled Cage himself. Taz says Cage eats meals bigger than Allin as Cage does reps with Darby’s body before hitting an F5 heading into commercial.
Cage repositions the ring steps and keeps mauling Allin. Darby clears the steps and launches off them with a shotgun dropkick. He follows with a Coffin Drop off the top rope to the floor. Back inside, Darby climbs again, but Cage cuts him off. Cage goes up with him, but Darby hits an Avalanche Code Red for a two count. Darby hits a low Tope with Cage seated on the stage, but Cage answers with a brutal bounce‑back lariat.
Cage presses Allin high and hurls him off the stage — Allin’s head smacks the post on the way down, completely unprotected, and the replay is violent even by Darby standards. Allin barely beats the count, but Cage drags him right back out. Cage tries pulling him up the steps, but Darby uses his belt to sweep Cage’s legs and hits a Coffin Drop off the top onto the stairs. Cage beats the count at nine, but rolls straight into multiple Coffin Drops, giving Darby the win.
Winner: Darby Allin
ProtOkada — Backstage
A furious ProtOkada stand together backstage — Kazuchika Okada looming in the background while “The Prototype” Kyle Fletcher vents in front of the camera. Fletcher says he’ll defend the International Title against anyone and he’s going to become the greatest International Champion of all time. He wants Bandido next. For the first time ever, he wants The Protostar vs. The Most Wanted at Redemption.
Okada barely reacts behind him, giving a half‑shrug that makes it clear he isn’t exactly impressed with Fletcher’s International Title ambitions.
Kevin Knight & Don Callis — Backstage
Renee Paquette is backstage with Kevin Knight and Don Callis. Callis says Knight can handle everything on his plate. He mocks Kenny Omega, saying woe is Kenny — Callis gave him the World Title, so suck it up, buttercup. Everything good Omega has ever had in life has been because of Don Callis. He orders Knight to take care of that punk and become Jet‑2‑Belt. Callis walks off.
Speedball Bailey steps in. He tells Knight the façade he’s putting on isn’t working. The fans love him. Bailey loves him. They’re ready to forgive him. Knight says he doesn’t need Bailey’s love — let him be.
Mercedes Mone & Divine Dominion vs. Willow Nightingale, Hyan & Maya World
The Boston crowd is loudly behind the heel Mercedes Mone from the start. Things break down fast, with Bayne and Kross eating double dropkicks from World and Hyan, but they catch both on cross‑body attempts and deliver stereo fallaway slams. World and Hyan still fight back and tag in Willow Nightingale, who gets a huge reaction. She misses her first enzugiri but lands the second. The babyfaces run a series of quick tags, hitting locomotion corner strikes on Kross, followed by an assisted head‑scissors and a cannonball. Mone tries to intervene but gets dumped outside onto her partners, and all three heels get wiped out by a trio of somersault sentons as we head to commercial. Ten minutes past the hour, Taz cracks a joke about Hyan’s brother “High‑Off,” sending the commentary desk into hysterics.
World is worked over through most of the break. Mone and Bayne hit a double lungblower/double German on World and Hyan. Mone misses a corner Meteora and tries a suplex, but World reverses. Kross tags in, World fights free, and Willow gets the hot tag. She comes in blazing, smashing Bayne with a corner splash and boot. Mone gets clipped on the apron, and Willow plants Bayne with a spinebuster for two.
The match breaks down again. Hyan boots Mone in the corner but gets wiped out by Kross. World flies in to take out Kross, but Bayne saves her partner. Willow returns with a discus lariat on Bayne for the reset.
Mone and World tag in officially and run a fast sequence, trading rolling cradles for near falls. World hits a shotgun dropkick and tries a suplex, but Mone counters into the Three Amigos. She goes up for a Frog Splash, but World gets the knees up. Kross tags in. World hits an up‑kick, then they go for a back suplex spot where Kross lands rough on her arm and World on her head.
Hyan tags in and dropkicks Kross, staggering her. Kross backdrops out of a piledriver attempt. Bayne makes a blind tag, and Divine Dominion ramp things up with a Bayne release German and a Falcon Arrow — doing the deal — for a near fall until Willow breaks it up. Kross saves Bayne, and they set up the double chokeslam on Willow, but she fights them off, sends Kross outside, ducks Bayne’s lariat, and hits a huge Pounce.
Mone launches Willow out of the ring. Hyan, who made a blind tag, rolls Mone up with a jackknife for two, then folds her in half with a brutal spear for another near fall. They rise, and Mone finally hits the Mone Maker to secure the victory.
Winner: Mercedes Mone & Divine Dominion
We go to credits.
AEW Collision 7/16/26
- Hikaru Shida defends the TBS Title against Queen Aminata
- Jungle Jack Perry vs. Nick Wayne
- Tommaso Ciampa Open Challenge
AEW Dynamite 7/22/26
- Kevin Knight defends the TNT Title against Darby Allin
- Kenny Omega, Will Ospreay & Jon Moxley vs. Hechicero, Brian Cage & Jake Doyle
–– Here is what’s in store for tonight’s show ––
- Kenny Omega championship celebration
- Willow Nightingale, Maya World, and Hyan vs. Mercedes Mone, Megan Bayne, and Lena Kross
- Andrade El Idolo vs. Jake Doyle
- Cope & Cage defend the AEW Tag Team Titles against Wheeler Yuta & Daniel Garcia of the Death Riders
- Darby Allin vs. Brian Cage
- Kyle Fletcher defends the AEW International Title against Komander
AEW Dynamite Results – July 15, 2026


