AEW Dynamite Results June 3, 2026 — Will Ospreay Advances, Mercedes Moné Returns, MJF Retains
Ultimate Anarchy : AEW Dynamite Results June 3, 2026 — Will Ospreay Advances, Mercedes Moné Returns, MJF Retains. The landscape of professional wrestling shifted completely on the June 3, 2026, edition of AEW Dynamite. Emanating live from the packed Siegel Center in Richmond, Virginia, this highly anticipated episode was broadcasted directly to fans worldwide on TBS and HBO Max. With the summer heat rising, the stakes have never been higher as the roster marches forward on the tumultuous road to AEW All In: London. The night promised massive implications across the entire title landscape, featuring two prestigious championship defenses and two crucial matchups in the ongoing Owen Hart Foundation Tournament. Every single superstar scheduled for the broadcast entered the arena knowing that a victory could solidify their legacy, while a loss would send them straight to the back of the line.
The atmosphere in Richmond was absolutely electric, with fans eagerly anticipating a night filled with intense athletic competition and unresolved personal grievances. Major factions loomed large in the backstage areas, preparing to assert their dominance and alter the balance of power within the company. From personal betrayals that shattered long-standing tag teams to the unexpected return of dominant forces looking to capture tournament glory, the card was stacked from top to bottom. As the production crew finalized the final technical checks and the commentary team took their positions at ringside, the energy in the building reached a fever pitch. With championship gold hanging in the balance and tournament survival on the line, the lights dimmed and AEW Dynamite began.
AEW Dynamite Rundown
MJF and RUSH Brawl Before the Show
Earlier today, Renee Paquette caught up with RUSH in the backstage area to ask how he felt about finally challenging for the world title tonight. RUSH grew incredibly intense, shouting that after beating the entire roster, winning matches in less than one minute, and waiting three long years, he finally had his shot at the ultimate prize. As RUSH finished his passionate thoughts, AEW World Champion MJF walked right into his face and mockingly told him to finish his catchphrase. MJF then slapped RUSH across the face, triggering a chaotic brawl that required multiple officials to step in and separate the two men.
A No Count-Outs Announcement and a Surprising Pep Talk
Moments before the entrance began, Paquette found RUSH again as he prepared to walk down the ramp. She informed him that due to the earlier physical altercation, management declared the championship match would now have a strict no count-outs stipulation. Before RUSH could fully process the news, Andrade El Ídolo stepped into the frame to deliver a surprise pep talk, telling RUSH to fight for everyone who said people like them could never be a world champion and to show everyone that when you mess with the bull, you get the horns. RUSH marched out with massive intensity, while MJF entered dressed mockingly as a matador, complete with a cape, before having Justin Roberts remind the crowd that because he beat Hangman Adam Page, Page can never challenge for this title again.
AEW World Championship No Count Outs Match: MJF versus RUSH
At the opening bell, the two rivals met in the center of the ring and immediately exchanged heavy blows until MJF broke away to spit directly at RUSH. MJF tried to retreat, but RUSH caught his kick, prompting MJF to poke him in the eye to gain an advantage. MJF ran the ropes, but RUSH threw him completely over his head to the floor and followed up with a spectacular tope suicida to the outside. RUSH completely dismantled the champion on the floor, throwing MJF violently from barricade to barricade before choking him with a camera cable near the timekeeper’s table. MJF briefly fought back with a drop toehold into a chair and a running boot, but RUSH responded by backdropping MJF over the barricade and directly through the timekeeper’s table.
RUSH threw the champion back into the ring and ripped a top turnbuckle pad off, throwing the cover directly into the crowd. MJF begged for mercy in the corner, but RUSH blasted him in the jaw with a thunderous forearm before stomping him down. When RUSH tried to run MJF into the exposed steel, referee Bryce Remsburg stepped in to stop it, but RUSH shoved the official away, allowing MJF to capitalize by throwing RUSH head-first into the exposed turnbuckle. RUSH began bleeding profusely from a massive cut over his right eye, which MJF ruthlessly ripped at before hitting a huge spinebuster. Moments later, MJF tried to use the exposed steel himself, but Remsburg stopped him, allowing RUSH to return the favor by shoving MJF into the bare metal.
RUSH fired up and splashed MJF from pillar to post, executing a rebound release German suplex and a running knee to the face for a close two-count. RUSH followed up with a top-rope dropkick, but MJF managed to kick out again and executed a quick jackknife pin attempt and a powerbomb across his knee. MJF locked in the Salt of the Earth armbar, but RUSH rolled through for a near-fall to break the hold. The action returned to the apron, where RUSH licked his own blood to fire himself up before hitting a dangerous straightjacket piledriver on the hard edge. The move dislocated RUSH’s own shoulder, forcing him to use the ring post to violently pop it back into place. A medical official tried to stop the match, but RUSH headbutted him away to keep the contest going.
RUSH brought MJF back inside and delivered a massive Bull’s Horns double boot in the corner, but MJF barely managed to get his hand on the bottom rope to stop the count. RUSH argued with the referee, allowing MJF to roll outside where RUSH charged at him, missing completely and obliterating the ringside barricade. MJF fought through his own escalating knee pain to execute a jumping tombstone piledriver onto the broken barricade structure. Both men dragged themselves back into the ring, where RUSH attempted another top-rope dropkick, but MJF dodged it. MJF instantly locked in a LeBell Lock, grapevining the bad arm. Despite RUSH screaming directly into the champion’s face, he eventually lost consciousness from the pain.
Winner: MJF
Following the referee’s stoppage, a battered MJF grabbed the AEW World Championship belt and lined up the unconscious RUSH for a post-match assault. Suddenly, Mark Briscoe hit the ring to make the save, stopping the champion and attempting to hit a Jay Driller. MJF low-blowed Briscoe to stop the move and prepared to hit him with the title belt instead, but the rest of The Conglomeration—Orange Cassidy, Kyle O’Reilly, Roderick Strong, and Tomohiro Ishii—stormed down the ramp. Facing overwhelming numbers, MJF bailed out of the ring and retreated up the ramp, clutching his title.
Singles Match: Mark Briscoe versus Lio Rush
Mark Briscoe remained in the ring for the next scheduled match, while the rest of The Conglomeration stayed in the aisle as “Blackheart” Lio Rush made his entrance. Lio Rush used an unusual strategy, crawling slowly past the stable members on the floor under the assumption that if they did not move, they could not see them. The Conglomeration eventually left the ringside area, allowing Lio Rush to enter the squared circle. Lio Rush whispered something directly into Briscoe’s ear before attempting a surprise kick, but Briscoe caught it and flipped him away, leading to an intense mat sequence where Briscoe struck his signature Redneck Kung Fu pose and hit an enzuigiri.
Briscoe maintained control, hitting a thrust strike that knocked Lio Rush to the floor, but as Briscoe prepared for a Cactus Elbow off the apron, Lio Rush quickly returned to the ring. The two exchanged heavy strikes on the apron until Lio Rush bit Briscoe’s hand to break his momentum. Lio Rush ran around the ringside area, chasing Briscoe back inside, but Briscoe quickly turned the tables by hitting a scissor kick through the ropes and running down the apron to connect with a heavy blockbuster onto the floor. Lio Rush fought back, knocking Briscoe hard to the concrete and soaring through the ropes with a rapid torpedo dive.
Back in the ring, Lio Rush missed a frog splash but mocked Briscoe’s Redneck Kung Fu pose before hitting a quick flurry of strikes and a rebound stunner for a two-count. The two competitors openly screamed at each other before Briscoe unleashed a series of palm strikes, a spinning elbow, and a top-rope powerbomb. Lio Rush blocked a Jay Driller attempt and turned it into a jackknife near-fall, followed by a grounded enzuigiri. Lio Rush tried for another rebound stunner, but Briscoe caught him completely out of mid-air, picking him up and dumping him in the middle of the mat with a Cutthroat Driver to secure the three-count.
Winner: Mark Briscoe
Mark Briscoe Demands Justice and a Shot at the Devil
After the match, an emotional Briscoe called for a microphone and told the cameraman to get closer because he was speaking directly to MJF. Briscoe took everyone back to January 17, 2023, the day his brother, Jay Briscoe, passed away, noting that his own birthday was the next day and Jay’s was the week after. Instead of celebrating, Mark had to make his AEW debut completely alone, burying a whirlwind of emotions deep inside. He credited AEW with saving his life by giving him a way to channel his anger, but admitted he couldn’t find real joy until he found friends who were down to conglomerate.
Briscoe stated that ever since he crossed paths with MJF, all of the rage came back due to the nonsense coming out of the champion’s mouth. Briscoe screamed that he previously pinned MJF right in the middle of the ring, and now MJF has the one thing he wants: the AEW World Championship. Briscoe called out MJF’s manhood, pointing to a Hebrew tattoo on his chest that reads “Child of God” and stating that while MJF calls himself The Devil, the Book says The Devil loses. Briscoe demanded a title shot, calling the champion a scared, moist-ass bitch.
MJF Rejects Briscoe’s Demands from the Cold Tub
Later in the broadcast, MJF was shown sitting comfortably in a cold tub to soothe his injuries from the opening contest. Renee Paquette attempted to get his thoughts regarding the passionate challenge issued by Mark Briscoe moments prior. MJF flatly denied the request without hesitation, dismissively calling Briscoe a bumpkin and stating that the AEW World Championship is reserved exclusively for top-tier, generational talents like himself, meaning the match simply would not happen.
A Look Back at the Demise of JetSpeed
Before the next championship match, a video package aired looking back at the history of JetSpeed. The video highlighted the successful rise of the duo and the shocking end of their partnership last week when Kevin Knight turned on his partner and attacked Mike Bailey. The package concluded by highlighting Bailey’s subsequent challenge, setting the stage for the formal title defense.
Thekla Declares War and Death to STARDOM
From the crowd, AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla addressed the audience while being flanked by Skye Blue and Julia Hart. Thekla warned that if anyone from STARDOM came to AEW, she would burn the place to the ground, reminding everyone that she is known as the Idol Killer. She detailed the current goals of the Triangle of Madness, stating that Skye Blue must win the Owen Cup, Julia Hart must reclaim the TBS Title, and she has her eyes set on Forbidden Door. Thekla then climbed a ladder and spat directly on the STARDOM logo on the video wall, declaring death to the promotion.
Jon Moxley and the Death Riders Promise Protection
In the backstage area, Marina Shafir worked on Will Ospreay’s neck while Daniel Garcia tried to pump him up for the main event, reminding him of his history with Mark Davis. Jon Moxley interrupted and told Ospreay to get Davis out of his head permanently because Davis is not a movie monster. Moxley told Ospreay that Don Callis would need an 18-wheeler truck to stop him tonight, promising that while he doesn’t like gang warfare, the Death Riders would handle the outside interference so Ospreay could focus entirely on beating Davis. Ospreay thanked them as Moxley led his group away.
IWGP Global Heavyweight Championship Match: Andrade El Ídolo versus DK Vandu
Before the match officially began, the reigning champion Andrade El Ídolo paused on the outside to take a selfie with an admirer in the crowd. It was noted by the commentary team that Don Callis was not present at ringside to accompany Andrade for this particular contest. As the opening bell rang, DK Vandu attempted to secure an early advantage by locking in a waistlock from behind. Andrade showed his incredible power by executing a massive back-elbow to the mat to escape the hold, creating an impact sound that echoed throughout the entire arena.
Andrade did not let up on his opponent, moving across the ring with extreme confidence. He feigned a running boot before spinning around to deliver a devastating back elbow that knocked Vandu completely unconscious. Andrade pulled Vandu up off the mat at the referee’s two-count, refusing to end the match early, and then hit his signature finisher, The DM, to secure the definitive pinfall victory.
Winner: Andrade El Ídolo
Andrade Wants the World Title and Don Callis Reveals a New Family Member
Immediately after the three-count, Andrade grabbed the microphone to address the crowd and the locker room. He announced that now that MJF has reclaimed the AEW World Championship, he officially wants a shot at the gold. Andrade acknowledged that MJF just defeated his close friend RUSH earlier in the night, but openly questioned whether the champion truly believes he could defeat “The Real Latino Man,” closing his statement with his signature phrase, “How you know?”
Don Callis then walked down to the ring alongside Jake Doyle to shake Andrade’s hand and congratulate him on a phenomenal performance. Callis stated that he had a highly important announcement for the AEW universe, officially welcoming the newest member of the Don Callis Family. He introduced the reigning TNT Champion, “The Jet” Kevin Knight, who made his way down the ramp and received a massive hug from Callis in the center of the ring.
AEW TNT Championship Match: Kevin Knight versus Mike Bailey
Mike Bailey made his way to the ring wearing a completely different, intense look than usual, showing total focus on his former partner. The match started with a highly physical collar-and-elbow tie-up into the ropes. Knight broke the hold with a cheap shot attempt, but Bailey countered with a rapid roundhouse kick that forced Knight to drop to the floor. Bailey pursued him outside, but Knight caught his kick and flipped him head over heels onto the floor, causing Bailey to stumble and crash directly into the steel steps. Knight then threw Bailey into the barricade and delivered a heavy uppercut before rolling him inside.
Bailey managed to avoid a springboard attack and rolled Knight up for a quick two-count. The former partners countered each other’s signature offense at every turn, with Bailey missing a thrust kick by mere inches. Knight clotheslined Bailey over the top rope to the floor and tried for a step-up clothesline from the apron, but Bailey dodged it and launched himself off the apron to kick Knight in the face. Bailey followed up with a back kick from the apron and a spectacular corkscrew moonsault from the middle rope to the floor, leaving the champion in severe trouble.
Back inside, Bailey looked for a shooting star press but rolled through when Knight moved, running right into a massive dropkick from the champion. Knight pounced immediately, raining down punches and maintaining control for several minutes while the crowd chanted “You sold out!” at him. After a series of rapid pin attempts and a forearm exchange, Bailey connected with a roundhouse kick that crumpled Knight to the mat. Bailey pulled himself to the apron, locking eyes with Doyle, before Knight pushed him off a triangle moonsault attempt directly to the floor.
Knight hit a flying clothesline to the floor at the ten-minute mark, but inside the ring, Bailey countered with shooting star knees directly to Knight’s chest. Bailey delivered a spin kick in the corner, but as he climbed the ropes, Knight surged up to hit a top-rope hurricanrana followed by a nasty backbreaker. Bailey fought back, hitting a step-up enzuigiri, but Jake Doyle distracted the referee on the apron while Don Callis swept Bailey’s leg on the top rope. Knight capitalized immediately, executing a massive avalanche choke bomb from the top turnbuckle and following it up with a uranage to secure the pinfall.
Winner: Kevin Knight
Kevin Knight Declares His Intent to Become Jet2Belts
Following his successful title defense, Knight took the microphone to declare that his victory proved exactly how things are done when you get rid of the dead weight holding you down. He bragged about aligning himself with Don Callis and stated he is here to reach the absolute top of the industry. Knight concluded his promo by stating his ultimate goal is to become “Jet2Belts,” explicitly telling MJF that he is waiting for him.
The Young Bucks Confront The Dogs of War
The broadcast shifted backstage to Renee Paquette, who was interviewing Clark Connors and David Finlay regarding the brutal beatdown they gave to the AEW World Tag Team Champions, Cage and Cope. The duo displayed their new t-shirts featuring a five-second pose, bragged about beating the Bang Bang Gang on Collision, and celebrated with five-second brews and kazoos. The Young Bucks walked into the frame, with Nick Jackson mocking them, before Matt Jackson stated that the Bullet Club’s worst leader ever and his partner, “Temu Hangman,” were not next in line for a tag title shot. The Bucks challenged them to a fight tonight since they won at Stadium Stampede, but Finlay dismissed them, stating the number one contenders would wrestle only when they felt like it.
Owen Hart Foundation Women’s Tournament Quarterfinal Match: Mercedes Moné versus Alex Windsor
As Alex Windsor waited in the ring for her scheduled quarterfinal opponent, a massive abundance of pyrotechnics illuminated the arena stage. The mystery wild card competitor was officially revealed to be the returning “The CEO” Mercedes Moné, making her first appearance back in AEW with the explicit goal of winning back-to-back Owen Cup tournaments after her 2025 victory. Moné immediately backed Windsor into the corner and slapped her, showcasing immense confidence and swagger as she executed a quick dropkick and rolled Windsor up for an early near-fall.
Windsor quickly rallied, using a series of deep armdrags to throw Moné across the canvas. Moné tried to counter by coming off the turnbuckles into the Statement Maker submission hold, but Windsor fought out of the grip multiple times until Moné adjusted and hit a backstabber for a two-count. Moné began pulling Windsor’s hair to hit consecutive snap-mares and ran in for a Meteora, but Windsor caught her ankles to attempt a Sharpshooter. Moné escaped to the bottom rope, but as Windsor charged, Moné caught her between the ropes and hit a neckbreaker on the apron before delivering a heavy Meteora to the floor.
Moné dominated the next several minutes, executing the Three Amigos suplexes, but Windsor stopped her on the top rope and threw her down. Windsor hit a clothesline in the corner and a heavy lariat that sent Moné to the floor, following up with a cannonball off the apron and a diving lariat on the outside. Inside the ring, Windsor hit a pumphandle driver for a close two-count, but Moné responded with an Avalanche Meteora from the top rope and a sunset flip powerbomb into the turnbuckles. After a series of rapid reversals and pin exchanges, Moné connected with a knee strike, a backstabber, and locked in the Statement Maker, forcing Windsor to tap out.
Winner: Mercedes Moné
TayJay Prepare for a Tag Team Championship Opportunity
A video package aired focusing on the AEW Women’s World Tag Team Champions, Divine Dominion, and their upcoming challengers, TayJay, ahead of their title match this Saturday on Collision. The package detailed the history of their rivalry and highlighted how TayJay managed to survive a grueling five-minute eliminator match this past weekend to earn their championship opportunity.
Don Callis and Kazuchika Okada Issue a Warning to Takeshita
Backstage, Renee Paquette interviewed Don Callis about his successful recruitment of Kevin Knight. Callis bragged about how the stable would help Knight become the greatest TNT Champion in history, before shifting focus to the main event, claiming Mark Davis was about to break Will Ospreay’s neck to advance in the tournament. Kazuchika Okada then joined Callis, stating that Konosuke Takeshita screwed him and declaring that the AEW International Title belongs to the Don Callis Family, not in a backpack, before Callis led them away to handle business.
Tommaso Ciampa Warns Chris Jericho to Stay Away
A brief look back aired showing Tommaso Ciampa’s surprise attack on Chris Jericho last Wednesday on Dynamite, including Ciampa’s explanation that his hatred for Jericho justified the assault. Ciampa was shown backstage at tonight’s show, noting that Jericho was still absent to lick his wounds, and warned Jericho to stay away because he would be waiting to strike again unless he decided to hunt down Jericho first.
Owen Hart Foundation Men’s Tournament Semifinal Match: Will Ospreay versus Mark Davis
Will Ospreay walked down the entrance ramp completely alone, but Renee Paquette noted on commentary that Jon Moxley had confirmed the Death Riders would ensure the match remained fair. At the opening bell, AEW National Champion Mark Davis charged forward, but Ospreay immediately targeted his knee with a dropkick and a hurricanrana before mounting him for punches in the corner. Davis, still wearing his protective eyepatch from Stadium Stampede, countered with a heavy bodyslam, a running senton, and locked in a cravat to target Ospreay’s neck before transitioning into an abdominal stretch.
Ospreay escaped the hold and hit a corkscrew kick and a springboard forearm for a two-count, before knocking Davis to the floor with a dropkick. Ospreay went for a dive, but Davis moved, forcing Ospreay to land on the apron where Davis caught him and threw him into the barricade. Ospreay escaped a powerbomb attempt with a kick, but as he chased Davis ringside, Davis popped him up and flipped him into a release suplex directly onto the announce desk. Davis followed up by smashing Ospreay into the barricade with a jumping elbow and bringing him inside for a massive top-rope superplex.
Davis maintained total control with a series of heavy chops and a backdrop suplex, but Ospreay fired up and demanded more strikes, firing back with an enzuigiri, a flurry of kicks, and a fallaway enzuigiri. Ospreay connected with a hook kick, a roundhouse kick, and a corkscrew kick for a near-fall, before hitting a German suplex bridge and a Styles Clash for an incredibly close two-count. Ospreay went for an OsCutter, but Davis caught him, and during the reversal sequence, Davis accidentally knocked out referee Paul Turner. Ospreay immediately hit the Hidden Blade, but there was no official to count.
Trent Berretta and El Clon rushed the ring to assault Ospreay, prompting Daniel Garcia and Wheeler Yuta to run down for the save. Lance Archer hit the ring and took out Garcia and Yuta with a crossbody, before Claudio Castagnoli leveled Archer with a flying uppercut and Brian Cage dropped Claudio with a tornado slam. PAC kicked Cage out of the ring, but Jake Doyle entered, knocked down Ospreay, and got into a physical altercation with Marina Shafir and Jon Moxley. PAC took out the Callis Family with a top-rope moonsault to the floor as the stables brawled to the back, allowing Kyle Fletcher to slide in and drop Ospreay with a half-and-half suplex. Fletcher pulled out a screwdriver, but Konosuke Takeshita ran down to stop him, sparking a brawl between the stablemates. Davis grabbed the screwdriver, but Ospreay hit a Hidden Blade to disarm him, before hitting another Hidden Blade as Bryce Remsburg ran down to count a near-fall. Davis attempted a rebound lariat, but Ospreay rolled through and locked in Death Ground, forcing Davis to submit.
Winner: Will Ospreay
The road to AEW All In: London is growing more unpredictable by the week, and you can stay ahead of every single major development by following our dedicated platforms. For breaking news, comprehensive premium articles, and in-depth analytical reviews of every major wrestling event, make sure to visit our main website hub at AEWTalkDown.com. To ensure you never miss an episode breakdown, exclusive wrestler interviews, or post-show video podcasts, subscribe and turn on all notifications for our official YouTube Channel at @AEWTalkDownEng today!







