Our AEW Revolution results for tonight include Hangman Adam Page challenging MJF for the AEW Men’s World Title in a Last Chance Texas Deathmatch, Thekla defending her AEW Women’s World Title against Kris Statlander in a Two out of Three Falls match, FTR vs. The Young Bucks for the AEW World Tag Team Championship, Brody King vs. Swerve Strickland, Toni Strom vs. Marina Shafir, and more.
AEW Revolution Zero Hour Pre-Show
- Ricochet (c) vs. Tommaso Ciampa vs. Trent Beretta vs. Rocky Romero vs. Dralístico vs. Rush vs. Scorpio Sky vs. Daniel Garcia vs. Anthony Bowens vs. Hook vs. Katsuyori Shibata vs. Juice Robinson vs. Austin Gunn vs. Ace Austin vs. “Jungle” Jack Perry vs. 6 TBA – 21-man Blackjack Battle Royal for the AEW National Championship
- Willow Nightingale (c) vs. Lena Kross – AEW TBS Championship Match
- Boom & Doom (“Big Boom!” A.J. and Q. T. Marshall) vs. The Infantry (Capt. Shawn Dean and Carlie Bravo)
AEW Revolution Card Main Card
- MJF (c) vs. Hangman Adam Page – Last Chance Texas Deathmatch (If Page loses, he can never challenge for the AEW World Championship again)
- Thekla (c) vs. Kris Statlander – AEW Women’s World Championship Two out of Three Falls Match
- FTR (c.) vs. The Young Bucks – AEW World Tag Team Championship Match
- Jon Moxley (c) vs. Konosuke Takeshita – AEW Continental Championship Match (No Time Limit)
- The Don Callis Family (Kazuchika Okada, Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis) (c) vs. Místico and JetSpeed (Kevin Knight & Speedball Mike Bailey) – AEW World Trios Championship Match
- The Babes of Wrath (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) (c) vs. The Divine Dominion (Megan Bayne & Lena Kross) – AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship Match
- Brody King vs. Swerve Strickland
- Bandido vs. Andrade El Ídolo
- Toni Storm vs. Marina Shafir
- Darby Allin, Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong vs. The Dogs (David Finlay, Clark Connors & Gabe Kidd)
AEW Revolution Zero Hour Pre-Show Results
The pre-show kicks off with Boom & Doom (“Big Boom!” A.J. and Q. T. Marshall) taking on The Infantry (Capt. Shawn Dean and Carlie Bravo) in traditional tag team action.
Boom & Doom (“Big Boom!” A.J. and Q. T. Marshall) vs. The Infantry (Capt. Shawn Dean and Carlie Bravo)
During the match, Shayne Taylor gets into a confrontation with Wayne Brady at ringside. Brady responds with a “bitch slap,” prompting Taylor to hurl him over the barricade.
The Rizzler tries to step up but gets shoved by Taylor before Big Justice plants the big man with a spear, setting up A.J.’s top-rope dive spot.
- The finish of the match saw “Big Boom!” A.J. and QT Marshall hit Carlie Bravo with the Boomsday Device for the win.
Winners: Boom & Doom
After the match, Wayne Brady gets in the ring and celebrates with the winning team.
Willow Nightingale (c) vs. Lena Kross – AEW TBS Championship Match
- The finish of the match saw Willow Nightingale counter Lena Kross’ Jackhammer attempt into a backslide pinfall for the win.
Winner and still AEW TBS Champion: Willow Nightingale
Megan Bayne shows up to deliver a post-match assault. Bayne and Kross gang up on Nightingale until Harley Cameron arrives with a pipe in her hand. The heels disperse as Cameron checks on her fellow Babe of Wrath.
AEW National Championship 21-man Blackjack Battle Royal
Jack Perry makes his entrance in a green bus driven to the arena by Luchasaurus. This is the first time we’ve seen the Dinosaur Man since he was taken out by The Demand on AEW Dynamite: New Year’s Smash.
Watch AEW Revolution Zero Hour Pre-Show below.
AEW Revolution Results
The 21-Man Blackjack Battle Royal bleeds into the AEW Revolution main show. El Clon, Jack Perry, and Ricochet are the final three men in the ring until two remain. Perry and Ricochet then engage in an amazing back-and-forth sequence.
- The finish of the match saw Ricochet carry Perry on his shoulders on the apron, only for Perry to hit a reverse hurricanrana, eliminating Ricochet and becoming the new AEW National Champion in the process.
Winner and new AEW National Champion: Jack Perry
Grade: B+
Since the match technically became part of the AEW Revolution main show, it deserves to be graded. Apart from a few botches, including Beast Moros accidentally eliminating himself, this bout was super entertaining. Ricochet and Jack Perry delivered a great closing stretch that saw Perry’s feet almost touch the ground before he reoriented himself and picked up the win with a brutal-looking hurricanrana.
FTR (with Stokely Hathaway) (c) vs. The Young Bucks – AEW World Tag Team Championship Match
It’s a Jackson family affair at the Crypto.com Arena as Matt and Nick bring their family members on stage for their entrance. The kids perform the Bucks’ signature muscle-up pose before joining them in the ring for an acrobatic display. This writer has a feeling tonight is going to be an emotional night for the Jackson family.
- The finish of the match saw FTR hit an avalanche Shatter Machine on Nick Jackson for the win.
Winners and still AEW World Tag Team Champions: FTR
After the match, FTR and Stokely Hathaway are in the ring ready to celebrate, but the lights go off. A familiar song plays and we witness the return of Adam Copeland. But the Rated R Superstar isn’t alone in his comeback, as Christian Cage has returned as well. Cage plants Cash Wheeler with the Killswitch while Cope takes out Harwood with a spear.
The pair then focus their attention on Stokely Hathaway, who is out of his wheelchair, only to get hit with a Killswitch from Cage before being tossed out of the ring by Cope. The Bucks enter the ring and have a staring contest with Cope and Christian, who have the AEW World Tag Team Championship in their hands, as FTR look on from the outside.
Grade: A-
This settles it. FTR will go down as the greatest tag team of the new millennium to compete in both AEW and WWE. Both teams carried the fans through an emotional roller coaster of a match filled with top-notch action, including The Young Bucks hitting both members of FTR with suplexes from the apron to the outside. Nick Jackson found himself on the Muta scale with all the blood he shed during the match.
To top it off, we got the return of both Cope and Christian in a single night. Cope and Cage holding the tag team titles while staring a hole through the Bucks suggests we have a tag team contest looming.
Toni Storm vs. Marina Shafir
- The finish of the match saw Toni Storm catch Marina Shafir with a small package for the win.
Winner: Toni Storm
After the match, Storm walks to the ring and collapses on the apron, similar to how she went down after beating Mariah May in their Hollywood Ending match. But wait, there’s commotion at ringside. What the hell, it’s Ronda Rousey in an AEW ring and she’s calling out Toni Storm. Rousey points toward Storm, who seemingly forgets her cue before getting up to see the former UFC star in the ring.
The Timeless One heads to the ring and comes breast to breast with Ronda, but security intervenes. Marina Shafir takes advantage of the distraction to take out Storm with a cheap shot before reuniting with her longtime friend outside the ring.
Grade: B+
If there was someone who could get Shafir to a solid match, it was Storm. Toni sold Shafir’s offense like her life depended on it. The “titty bite” would have been the highlight if Ronda Rousey had not decided to pop up and point toward Storm looking awkward as f*ck. This certainly is an interesting time for Ronda to show up on wrestling programming after previously suggesting she was done with wrestling. Or is it just a one-off appearance ahead of MMA clash against Gina Carano? Seriously, this writer has no clue.
Jon Moxley (c) vs. Konosuke Takeshita – AEW Continental Championship Match (No Time Limit)
- The match ended via referee stoppage after Konosuke Takeshita fell unconscious to Jon Moxley’s bulldog chokehold submission.
After the match, Moxley offers Takeshita a handshake, but The Alpha refuses, only to change his mind and show respect to the Death Rider. Both men bow to each other, and Moxley goes out to celebrate with his group. Then the lights go off.
We see a video package featuring Will Ospreay in a healing tank. The teaser ends with Ospreay taking his oxygen mask off and letting out a primal scream. The lights come back on, and the Death Riders are mocking whether Ospreay is really going to show up.
Then the music hits, and the Aerial Assassin is back. Ospreay goes straight for the kill as he takes out Moxley with the Hidden Blade. Garcia and Yuta try to stop Ospreay but get taken out, first in the ring and then on the outside with a beautiful corkscrew moonsault. Ospreay gets back in the ring and tries to set up Mox for the Tiger Driver, but the Continental Champion escapes. The angle ends with Ospreay standing tall as the Death Riders regroup outside.
Grade: A+
Takeshita took a sheer-drop Death Rider followed by an avalanche Death Rider and still kicked out. Then minutes later, he fell unconscious to the bulldog chokehold. This was the night to put an end to Jon Moxley’s Continental Title run, and AEW didn’t pull the trigger. The ending nearly ruined it until Ospreay’s comeback happened.
Ospreay vs. Moxley is the bigger feud, but I’m really looking forward to seeing Okada getting super petty toward Takeshita after tonight’s loss.
Update on Willow Nightingale
Renee Paquette is backstage asking Willow Nightingale if she’s cleared to compete after the beating she took at the hands of Megan Bayne and Lena Kross during the AEW Revolution Zero Hour Pre-Show. Willow confirms she’s ready to compete, but her voice is breaking. She’s clearly not in the best of health but will defend the tag team titles “because that’s what Double Champ Willow does.”
Willow Nightingale is in the middle of calling out Megan Bayne and Lena Kross before Harley Cameron cuts her off with, “We’re sick of your shit.”
The Babes of Wrath (Willow Nightingale & Harley Cameron) (c) vs. The Divine Dominion (Megan Bayne & Lena Kross) – AEW Women’s World Tag Team Championship Match
- The finish of the match saw Megan Bayne and Lena Kross plant Willow Nightingale with a double chokeslam for the win.
Winners and new AEW Women’s World Tag Team Champions: The Divine Dominion
Grade: B-
It appears Penelope Ford’s injury rushed AEW’s plans to take the title off the Babes of Wrath. I liked the dynamic between Cameron and Nightingale, but Bayne and Kross appear far more intimidating. Now let them run roughshod over the AEW women’s tag team division.
Brody King vs. Swerve Strickland
- The finish of the match saw Swerve Strickland hit Brody King with a third House Call for the win.
Winner: Swerve Strickland
After the match, Strickland motions for Prince Nana to introduce a cinder block into the ring. Nana places Brody King’s face on the block. Swerve climbs the turnbuckle but stops upon hearing Kenny Omega’s music.
The Cleaner is back, and his return causes Strickland and Nana to escape the ring. Omega checks on Brody as Swerve is having a maniacal laugh on the outside.
Grade: A-
Brody King looked strong even in defeat. That is how you protect someone who is super over with the crowd. I can’t recall if there were “F*ck ICE” chants during Brody King’s entrance tonight at AEW Revolution. Omega’s return sets up another match with Strickland somewhere down the line after their previous outing on AEW Dynamite.
Thekla (c) vs. Kris Statlander – AEW Women’s World Championship Two out of Three Falls Match
- The finish of the match saw Thekla hit Kris Statlander with a second stomp for the win.
Winner and still AEW Women’s World Champion: Thekla
Grade: B+
It appears Thekla’s feud with Kris Statlander is behind her after a successful title defense tonight at AEW Revolution. That was probably the only way to help build the Austrian in her first world title program. As for the match, it was slow-paced compared to the rest of the action but still featured some entertaining spots and a finish that was a textbook heel move.
The Don Callis Family (Kazuchika Okada, Kyle Fletcher & Mark Davis) (c) vs. Místico and JetSpeed (Kevin Knight & Speedball Mike Bailey) – AEW World Trios Championship Match
- The finish of the match saw Kevin Knight hit Mark Davis with his UFO Splash for the win.
Winners and new AEW World Trios Champions: Mistico and JetSpeed
Grade: A-
This match got better as time went on. I can’t get tired of watching Speedball kick the s*it out of much bigger opponents. Tony Schiavone raised an interesting point that Mistico is a trios champion in two different countries. That is a unique milestone in an already legendary career for the veteran luchador.
The post-match celebration, with Mistico’s song playing in the background, was awesome. After the match, Tony Khan announced that Mistico has officially signed with All Elite Wrestling, making the moment even bigger. That said, the outcome has me convinced that Hangman Adam Page is not walking out of the AEW Revolution main event with the Men’s World Championship.
Bandido vs. Andrade El Idolo
- The finish of the match saw Andrade plant Bandido with a DM from the second turnbuckle for the win.
Winner: Andrade
Grade: A+
I thought Jon Moxley vs. Konosuke Takeshita would be hard to top. Bandido vs. Andrade topped it by a mile. These two showcased excellent chemistry despite tonight being their first time colliding one-on-one. You can’t get a bad match out of Andrade. Bandido is a joy to watch.
The deadlift 21-Plex was top tier. As for the match distraction provided by the baddies, that first girl probably wanted to kiss Andrade, and he no sold her shot with a selfie.
Darby Allin, Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong vs. The Dogs (David Finlay, Clark Connors & Gabe Kidd)
- The finish of the match saw Clark Connors eat a flurry of offense from Roderick Strong and Orange Cassidy before Strong capped it off with the End of Heartache, allowing Orange to secure the pin for the win.
Winners: Darby Allin, Orange Cassidy & Roderick Strong
Grade: A-
This was a brawl I enjoyed from bell to bell. Clark Connors hitting Darby Allin with a suicide spear, landing on his neck, and continuing the match seconds later like nothing happened was a holy s*it moment.
I was expecting this match to be a three-minute squash for The Dogs. I’m glad it didn’t end up that way.
Tony Schiavone dropping an f-bomb followed by dead silence on commentary was a major LOL moment.
MJF (c) vs. Hangman Adam Page – AEW World Championship Last Chance Texas Deathmatch
Hangman doesn’t walk out to his usual theme song for the match. Instead, he gets a custom entrance for a match that has become his specialty of sorts.
As for our world champion, he starred in a vignette dressed as a cowboy, doing the accent, riding a horse, and symbolically marking Hangman’s “grave” with piss.
- The finish of the match saw MJF block Hangman Page’s Buckshot Lariat attempt with a forearm strike before choking the challenger with the dog collar chain. Page collapsed, allowing referee Remsburg to complete the 10-count.
Winner and still AEW World Champion: MJF
While medics are in the process of stretchering Page away, MJF stands on top of his vanquished foe to raise the AEW World Championship as the show goes off the air.
Grade: ???
I’m conflicted on this one. While the ending screamed poetic justice, a callback to Page choking out Jon Moxley in the final moments of their Texas Deathmatch at All In, the build-up felt arduous and, at times, convoluted. The exploding table spot had me thinking we were getting a double count-out to protect Page’s history with death matches.
But no. The AEW Revolution main event had a clean finish.
The shot of Page smashing his face into the camera during the final fall, causing the lens to be smeared with his blood, will go down as one of the greatest closing stretches in AEW history. The syringe spot also deserves a mention here. They had to make it different and gorier than the syringe spot from All Out 2024, and they succeeded on both counts.
Overall Grade: A-
AEW Revolution was a solid show from top to bottom. Between Mox vs. Takeshita and Andrade vs. Bandido, I’m going with the latter as the best match of AEW Revolution 2026 and one of the best AEW PPV matches of the year.
The returns were perfectly set up to continue storylines heading into the summer. I, for one, still can’t get over Ronda Rousey’s awkward comeback. That would probably be my pick for the worst moment or segment from AEW Revolution 2026.
Darby, OC, and Strong vs. The Dogs was surprisingly good. I may or may not grade the main event depending on whether I feel inclined to give it a rewatch.
Thank you for sticking with me this far, and I’ll see you next Wednesday for AEW Dynamite weekly coverage.
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How would you rate AEW Revolution on a scale of 1 to 10? Let us know in the comments!
