AEW Dynamite Results - June 24, 2026
- Sport @ Real Terryo

- 1 hour ago
- 5 min read

AEW Dynamite returned this week from Rio Rancho, New Mexico, live on TBS and HBO Max, and the message was clear from the opening bell: Forbidden Door 2026 is almost here, and nobody is backing down.
This was a high-energy, storyline-heavy episode packed with faction warfare, tournament qualifiers, and major momentum shifts heading into AEW’s crossover spectacle.
Death Riders Open the Show in War Mode
The show kicked off backstage with Jon Moxley standing shoulder-to-shoulder with The Death Riders, rallying his group in a tense pre-match huddle. No theatrics, no calm—just pure intimidation and focus.
But there was a subtle wrinkle.
As Moxley walked off with the group, Daniel Garcia and Will Ospreay exchanged a quiet, knowing look—a small moment that hinted at bigger fractures forming beneath the surface heading into Forbidden Door.
The Death Riders vs Brodido & Mistico
The opening trios match saw The Death Riders collide with Brody King, Bandido, and Mistico in a chaotic, high-impact opener.
This one had everything:
Mistico brought fast-paced lucha fire early
Bandido matched speed with creativity
Brody King changed the tone completely with raw power
Moxley and Castagnoli controlled the middle stretches with ruthless efficiency
The match broke down into full chaos with all six men flying, striking, and brawling across the ring and outside.
But as always with The Death Riders, the edge came from brutality and shortcuts. Castagnoli cracked Brody King with the AEW Continental Championship behind the referee’s back, setting up Moxley for the steal.
WINNERS: The Death Riders
No clean finish. No apology. Just results.
Backstage – The Conglomeration Lock In
Renee Paquette caught up with The Conglomeration, alongside Darby Allin and Konosuke Takeshita.
The vibe? Controlled chaos.
Darby Allin promised Mark Briscoe would walk out AEW World Champion
Roderick Strong called out MJF and the Don Callis Family with pure frustration
Kyle O’Reilly joked about “packing backpacks for war,” but made it clear he’s ready
Orange Cassidy, in classic form, acted like nothing was on fire… even though everything is
This group is aligned—but not exactly stable.
Harley Cameron Punches Her Ticket
Harley Cameron vs Marina Shafir
This Survival of the Fittest qualifier started before the bell even rang, with Shafir ambushing Cameron during her entrance.
Shafir dominated large portions of the match with grounded strikes and submission pressure, but Cameron refused to stay down.
The turning point came when Cameron reversed a rear-naked choke attempt into a sudden roll-up pin.
WINNER: Harley Cameron (qualifies for Survival of the Fittest)
A gritty, unexpected upset that adds a wildcard to the tournament field.
Will Ospreay Keeps Rolling
Will Ospreay vs ELP
This one was all speed, counters, and escalation.
Early stalemate of wrist locks and kick exchanges
ELP nearly stole it with a diving DDT and stunner sequence
Ospreay fired back with explosive aerial offense and a Spanish Fly
When it mattered most, Ospreay shifted gears:
Styles Clash → Hidden Blade → DONE
WINNER: Will Ospreay
Momentum firmly on his side heading into Forbidden Door.
Swerve Strickland Survives Daniel Garcia
Daniel Garcia vs Swerve Strickland
This match felt like a fight from the opening seconds.
Garcia attacked like a man trying to prove something, targeting Swerve’s leg and grinding him down with submissions and barricade punishment.
But Swerve is Swerve for a reason.
He weathered the storm, absorbed punishment, and slowly turned the match into his pace—sharp strikes, explosive counters, and controlled violence.
The finish came when Swerve finally found his window and hit the Hidden Blade for the win.
WINNER: Swerve Strickland
Post-Match Chaos
Will Ospreay immediately confronted Swerve
Prince Nana got involved and briefly changed the momentum
Swerve landed a House Call
A chair entered the equation
And suddenly, everything escalated toward violence
This rivalry is officially on a collision course.
Team MJF Sends a Warning
Backstage, MJF and Don Callis addressed their 12-man Steel Cage team ahead of Forbidden Door.
The tone was simple: arrogance wrapped in control.
Kevin Knight demanded a future title shot
MJF dismissed Briscoe but still played political chess
Callis unveiled “Team DCMJF” shirts like a corporate war machine
On paper, they’re unified. In reality, it still feels fragile.
Zack Sabre Jr. Outwrestles Jack Perry
Zack Sabre Jr. vs Jack Perry
This was pure technical wrestling from start to finish.
Sabre did what he does best:
Targeted joints
Controlled limbs
Turned every counter into punishment
Perry fought back with power bursts, including a strong powerbomb sequence, but Sabre’s submission game was relentless.
Eventually, Sabre locked in the finish and forced the tap.
WINNER: Zack Sabre Jr.
The Young Bucks Win, Chaos Follows
Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson defeated TMDK in a fast-paced tag match built on signature Bucks offence and quick combinations.
But the match result was almost secondary.
Post-match chaos exploded when:
Zack Sabre Jr. attacked The Bucks
Kenny Omega and Jack Perry ran in
Omega hit a Snap Dragon Suplex on Sabre Jr.
Then came the message from Kenny Omega:He’s ready for Forbidden Door, and he’s done waiting.
Queen Aminata Advances
Queen Aminata vs Red Velvet
A competitive qualifier that saw Red Velvet push hard with aerial offense and a late frog splash attempt.
But Aminata’s power and timing won out, finishing the match with a decisive running kick.
WINNER: Queen Aminata
Backstage Violence – Cope & Cage vs The Dogs
A wild backstage brawl erupted involving Cope, Cage, and The Dogs, spilling through corridors and production areas.
This wasn’t a segment—it was a full-scale fight, with cables, chokeholds, and chaos everywhere before security finally stepped in.
Konosuke Takeshita Retains
Konosuke Takeshita vs Ricochet
Ricochet came in flying—450 splash, dives, constant pressure—but Takeshita weathered it and slowly turned the tide with power-based offense.
When it mattered most, Takeshita hit Raging Fire to retain the AEW International Championship.
WINNER: Konosuke Takeshita
Still champion. Still dominant.
Final Segment – Briscoe Turns the War Up
Mark Briscoe closed the show by declaring war ahead of the 12-man Steel Cage match at Forbidden Door.
He made it clear:
This isn’t just a match—it’s survival
He already beat MJF once
And he’s not coming alone
Then everything collapsed.
MJF attacked from behind. The Don Callis Family jumped in. A full-scale brawl erupted. And in the chaos, MJF accidentally blasted Andrade El Idolo with the Dynamite Diamond Ring.
Briscoe capitalised with a Jay Driller on MJF as the babyface side cleared the ring.
Final image: Team Briscoe standing tall heading into Forbidden Door.
Final Word – Sport @ Real Terryo Takeaway
This episode didn’t just build Forbidden Door—it locked it in place.
Swerve vs Ospreay tension is peaking
MJF’s “perfect team” is already showing cracks
Takeshita and Moxley remain dominant champions
And Briscoe’s side is walking into war with momentum
Forbidden Door 2026 is no longer hype.It’s here.



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