
AEW Dynamite is live tonight at 8/7c on TBS and HBO Max from the Memorial Auditorium in Sacramento, CA.
The following are complete AEW Dynamite results from Wednesday, February 18, 2026. The following report was written by PWMania.com reporter Matt Boone (@MattBoone0709) as the show aired live from 8-10pm EST. on TBS and HBO Max.
AEW DYNAMITE RESULTS – FEBRUARY 18, 2026
This week’s show kicks off with some talking heads direct-to-camera backstage, with the four women involved in the TBS title tilt, as well as Swerve Strickland and Kenny Omega ahead of their showdown.
Renee Paquette Interviews Orange Cassidy
We then see a live shot inside the arena, where the commentators welcome us to the show. We shoot backstage, where Renee Paquette is standing by with Orange Cassidy. Up walks Tomohiro Ishii.
AEW Continental Championship Eliminator
Jon Moxley (c) vs. Mark Davis
Inside the arena, the theme for The Death Riders hits. Out through the crowd comes reigning AEW Continental Champion Jon Moxley. He settles inside the ring and then his music dies down. The theme for his opponent from The Don Callis Family, Mark Davis, hits.
He makes his way to the ring. The bell sounds and we’re officially off-and-running with this title eliminator opening bout. Davis shoves Mox into the corner. He backs off as Mox regroups, going for a waistlock that Davis counters.
Mox counters back, wringing the arm of Davis who struggles to break free of a hammerlock. He pushes Mox into the ropes for the break, before taking the champ down with a shoulder tackle. He heads back to the ropes and takes Mox down again, mocking the crowd as they boo him.
They then let the absent Don Callis know what they think of him as Davis continues to go to work on the champ, bringing him to the corner for some strikes. Mox fires back with some shots of his own, sending Davis to the ropes before looking for a sunset flip.
Davis channels his inner Aloha Arn to counter, dropping his hips onto the champ to break free. He sends the champ to the corner for a hip attack, and Mox escapes the ring for a breather. Mark follows close behind, landing some hard shots until Mox dodges a right hand that forces him to slam it against the ring post instead.
This gives the champ an opening as he slides back into the ring, building up momentum for a dive that slams Davis into the guardrail! The impact busts open Mark’s hand, and Mox goes right after it as he pulls at the fingers before taking a bite of the hand…and stomps it against the ring steps for added damage.
He slides into the ring to break the ref’s count, and Davis is not looking good as we head into a mid-match commercial break. When the show returns, we see Davis regain control, sending the champ into the guardrail with a hammer throw.
He brings Mox back in before going up top, only for Mox to intercept him and attack his busted hand once more. He follows with a super-plex sending Davis down hard to the mat amidst a “let’s go Moxley chant.” Both men make it to their feet exchanging shots.
Another sunset flip attempt brings out Aloha Mark once more, only for Mox to slide out of the way. Mox starts fighting back as we find out ten minutes remain, but Davis takes the champ down hard. Both men are back up as Davis fights off a shot from Mox to land a lariat off the ropes.
Piledriver is blocked as Mox escapes to the corner, catching Mark with a roll up for two. Davis is back in it with a gut-wrench into a piledriver, but the champ narrowly kicks out at two. Davis cinches in a side headlock on Mox now, but the champ fights to his feet before catching Mark with a stomp. He gets a bulldog choke for the win.
Winner via submission: Jon Moxley
Hangman Page Vows To End MJF
The commentators run down the lineup for tonight’s show. We then hear from Hangman Adam Page after his match at Grand Slam Australia. He promises that if MJF makes it to Revolution as champ he will ruin him. Look into his eyes, Max, and know he is telling the truth. He is going to end MJF.
FTR Come To The Ring
With that, we head back to ringside as FTR make their way out. It seems we’ll be hearing from the AEW World Tag Team Championships up next. On that note, we shift gears and settle into a quick commercial break. When the show returns, we see Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler in the ring.
Harwood says he has been thinking and racking his brain over why The Young Bucks came down and cheap-shotted then. Then it dawned on them. In 2016 they were the best team in wrestling, and they even coined the term FTR. Fast forward ten years, and they are sitting second place to the best team of this generation.
Stoke says that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. It pisses him off, and it also pisses him off that the Bucks shook hands with The Rascalz and Private Party. Why? Because a year ago, they tried to run Private Party out of AEW.
Stoke hates that about AEW and wrestling in general. Who is on the top of the hate list? Nick and Matt Jackson. Below them, their parents. And below them, their children. The Young Bucks sneak into the ring, oblivious to Stoke, as he keeps talking.
We then see The Bucks blast FTR with a super kick. Stoke finally realizes what is going on. Stoke slowly turns around and begs off, but gets blasted with a super kick as well. Nick Jackson says they are the number one contender for these tag team titles, and they want to challenge for them at AEW Revolution.
Brody King Wants The AEW Title
Now we see more digital exclusive backstage footage from AEW Grand Slam: Australia, with Brody King in the locker room with Bandido after coming up short in his attempt to capture the AEW World Championship from MJF. He warns MJF that he was that close, got a taste for it, and is coming back for the title.
TBS Championship
Willow Nightingale (c) vs. Megan Bayne vs. Marina Shafir vs. Mina Shirakawa
Now it’s time for four-way championship action. Bayne and Shafir take out Mina and Willow to start things off, sending Mina out of the ring before taking the champ to the corner to gang up on her. They take Nightingale down to the mat before sending her across the ring, but the champ manages to fight back.
She sends both women out of the ring for a cannonball senton off the apron to send them to the floor. Mina climbs up top for a dive, sending all three of them back down before bringing Marina back in the ring for a springboard attack and a near-fall.
Shafir fights back, sending Mina out of the ring before WIllow goes after her. This doesn’t last long as Megan steps back in, and the pair go after Nightingale before she fights back. Shafir turns things around, sending Bayne into the champ to set up for some jabs in the corner by Marina.
Megan follows up with a hurricanrana sending Willow to the ropes, and Shafir sends her out of the ring as Bayne hoists Mina up to launch her at the other three women! They crash to the floor, and Bayne is left standing. On that note, the show heads into a mid-match commercial break.
When the show returns, we see Willow and Bayne going at it, with the latter being sent to the canvas before Marina comes in to go after the champ. She turns her attention to Mina who drops Shafir, using Bayne as a platform to get the drop on Marina for a near-fall.
Bayne goes for a senton but lands on Shafir, and Mina gets a two count on her before Willow breaks it up. Willow shoves her away before landing a spinebuster on all three opponents for good measure. Cover by the champ on Mina, only for Shafir to break it up.
Mina makes it back to her feet, landing a Hurriken before Willow knocks her and Shafir down. Bayne goes after the champ now, and the two women hit the ropes and end up doubling down with a clothesline. They slowly rise to their feet, trading offense.
Willow lands a Death Valley Driver on Bayne, only to take a spear by Shafir. Mina goes after Marina, sending her out of the ring before Bayne lays her out. She sends Kirashawa out of the ring and lands a dive taking all three women to the floor.
Bayne is back up, but so is Shafir and we finally see these two go at each other, until Megan sends Shafir onto the timekeeper’s table, knocking her out. She goes back into the ring and goes up top, only to be hit with an avalanche German suplex sending her down hard.
She gets back up, but takes a missile dropkick from Mina who sets up for a Hurriken that lays the champ out. She looks to lock in a figure four…but gets cradled by the champ, who takes the win to retain. Willow celebrates as Megan and Marina retreat up the ramp.
Winner and STILL TBS Champion: Willow Nightingale
AEW Pays Tribute To Kerwin Silfies
We see a video package looking back at Grand Slam Australia, culminating in MJF retaining his World Title in the main event. Up next is the face-to-face between MJF and Hangman Adam Page. But first, the commentary team takes a moment to address the passing of Kerwin Silfies, with Tony Schiavone and Bryan Danielson paying tribute.
AEW World Champion MJF & No. 1 Contender Hangman Page Face-To-Face
On that note, we head to a quick commercial break. When the show returns, we head back to ringside as Hangman Adam Page makes his way to the ring. Commentary talks about there being no physicality allowed tonight, ahead of the World Title match at Revolution.
Page enters the ring, and MJF makes his entrance amidst a mixed reaction from the crowd. MJF takes the mic as he starts running down Hangman, insisting that Page isn’t as good as these fans make him out to be. He claims that he deserves to be the “main character” of AEW over Page.
He hates the crowd chanting “Cowboy S–t” whenever Page walks around. What he hates most is that Page holds two wins over him, but insists that Hangman is just a lucky shot. He sees something the fans can’t. He can smell it. He can see it in Adam’s eyes. Something’s off about him, and he can’t work out why.
Maybe Page is in his own head because his boyfriends Omega and Swerve are fighting, or because he’s climbed the mountain to be world champ twice…and both times he’s crumbled under the pressure. Maybe Adam thinks winning the title a third time might finally help him, but this is not the same man MJF faced last year.
Page is a lucky shot, but MJF thinks he’s all out of bullets. On March 15, MJF’s birthday, he looks forward to ending the myth of Hangman Adam Page and his “Cowboy S–t.” This gets the chant from the fans, before Page speaks up now. Page talks about the people carrying him to winning the world title twice, and saw him beat MJF twice.
He runs down MJF for picking his shot at Worlds End to take the title to “collect the spoils of greater men.” Max says he hated Adam Page, but Page hates MJF so much worse. It’s not because of the years of lying, cheating, and depravity, it’s because when Adam looks at MJF, he has to admit he has never met someone more like Page.
All the desperation he sees out of MJF, he is no better than that and he hates it. As much as everyone wants the title, Max and Page have always needed it. At Revolution, Page wants to end this for good…forever. He thinks Max knows that this can’t just be a normal wrestling match, can it?
So why don’t MJF think about a stipulation and pitch it, because he has always known what this match should be, so once they decide, they should let the people decide what this match should be. MJF is hearing people chant “Texas Death.”
If Page thinks we’re doing anything but a regular, normal, real wrestling match, for Max’s world title, Page is out of his mind. Page says he figured Max would say that, because he is a coward, but if he agrees to this, he will give the champ something. If he’ll agree, Page will give him his word.
He’ll give all of these people his word that if he doesn’t win this championship, then he will never challenge for the All Elite Wrestling Men’s World Championship as long as he lives. Max says Page may have himself a deal, but unlike the cowboy he doesn’t shoot first and ask questions later.
So, he’ll need a week to think it over. Page tells him to think it over, because he knows what he wants. Hangman, MJF, Revolution, Texas Death. He drops the mic, leaving the ring as his music hits. MJF looks nervous or even worried in the ring as we cut away.
Backstage With The Death Riders
Backstage, we hear from Mox and the Death Riders (aside from a silent Wheeler Yuta, keeping his head low and covered from Grand Slam Australia). Mox calls the group coyotes, because they are survivors. PAC says the Don Callis Family are not like the Death Riders.
He then challenges them to a match for Collision. Garcia says family is not just some title for them. Mox wraps up by calling out Takeshita for a Continental Title match with a twist: no time limit. He gets Konosuke, or Takeshita gets him. Whatever it takes to determine a winner.
Orange Cassidy & Tomohiro Ishii vs. Gabe Kidd & Clark Connors
We start off with Cassidy and Kidd, with Orange getting out of the way of Kidd’s reach before tagging in Ishii. Ishii and Kidd circle the mat before Connors blindsides the Stone Pitbull. This allows the Dogs to double-team him in the corner before Connors gets the official tag in.
He lays in some shots until Tomohiro stands tall, laying some hard chops to send Clark to the corner. Tag made to Cassidy and they trade shots (Cassidy’s much lighter than Ishii’s) before Cassidy gets the cover for two. Connors fights back until Cassidy knocks him back, targeting Kidd for a dive only to be caught for an exploder.
Connors blindsides Cassidy again as Kidd drops Ishii on the floor heading into break. Back from break we see Cassidy with hands in pockets on a dropkick taking Connors down. Tag made to Ishii and Kidd, who trade chops before Kidd bites the head of the Stone Pitbull.
He hits the ropes but gets knocked down by Ishii, only to block a delayed suplex. The two go back to trading strikes. Kidd hits the ropes but gets laid out with a lariat by Ishii. Clark gets the tag as he goes after Tomohiro, who takes him down before looking for a tag, only for Kidd to come running in after him.
Ishii fights him off with a lariat, forcing him out of the ring as Cassidy gets the drop on him with a dive. The two fight into the crowd until Darby Allin blindsides Kidd, pulling him away through the crowd as Cassidy gets back into the ring, assisting Ishii to pick up the win.
Winners: Orange Cassidy & Tomohiro Ishii
Backstage With The Don Callis Family
Backstage, the Don Callis Family gets back to beating up random dudes as Callis accepts the challenge for Mox and Takeshita at Revolution. Okada addresses being here because he’s a champion, before hyping up the “uncrowned World Champion” Andrade El Idolo. Callis proposes a challenge to Claudio Castagnoli regarding the CMLL title.
The Latest From HOOK
We get a vignette from HOOK, who was appointed the new boss of The Opps in light of Samoa Joe’s injury. He talks about the group recruiting, handling the domestic side while Shibata heads to Japan to handle international matters.
The Brawling Birds vs. B3CCA & Viva Van
With that we head back to ringside, as the Brawling Birds make their entrance for our next match. Already in the ring are B3CCA and Viva Van, and this match gets underway. Van and Windsor start things off, with Alex locking in a side headlock to bring Viva to the ropes for a right hand.
Van starts to fight back before Hayter gets the tag, laying into Viva on the mat for good measure. Windsor comes in for a double-team, the two chopping in sync to take Van down hard. Windsor gets knocked away on a submission attempt, and Van is able to fight out of the corner.
Alex takes control. Double team is fended off as Van rushes away for a tag to B3CCA. She takes the fight to the Birds, running to the ropes for a double springboard stunner. Windsor catches her for a hammer throw to the corner with authority.
After that, we see her catapulting her into a lariat by Hayter. This is followed up by Windsor with a lariat of her own before the pair land a double shot, finishing things off with what’s being dubbed Two Birds One Stone for the win in their tag-team debut.
Winners: The Brawling Birds
Backstage With Kris Statlander
Backstage, we hear from Kris Statlander and the returning Thunder Rosa. The two address the Triangle of Madness before Rosa offers to go after Thekla in Stat’s place due to a potential injury coming out of the title match last week.
The Beast Mortos vs. Kevin “The Jet” Knight
We head back to ringside as Kevin Knight is accompanied by “Speedball” Mike Bailey on his way to the ring. JetSpeed with an inset promo addressing The Beast Mortos, offering a trios title shot for LFI if he can beat the Jet tonight.
Mortos makes his entrance next, and this match is underway. Knight quickly sends the Beast to the outside for a dive, bringing Mortos back before the latter goes toe to toe on agility with the Jet. He takes Knight down with authority.
He then follows that up by sending him to the corner…but Kevin dodges in the nick of time, forcing the Beast back to the outside for another big dive sending him to the floor. Kevin lands a clubbing blow to the back of Mortos for good measure.
On that note, the show shifts gears and settles into another mid-match commercial break as the action continues. When the show returns, we see the action still in progress. Mortos has regained control with a bearhug before a rope break is enforced.
Knight tries to fight back but is sent to the outside and it is now the Beast who goes flying, sending the Jet to the floor! He brings Kevin back in the ring for a lariat in the corner, followed by a giant Samoan drop sending Knight into the mat for a close two-count.
Knight manages to fight back with a dropkick before both men are back to their feet, and Kevin gets sent to the ropes before taking the Beast down. Kevin manages to hoist Mortos off his feet for a body slam, followed by a splash.
He follows up with a pin attempt, but only gets a count of two, so the match continues. Mortos blocks a DDT from the corner for a headbutt, but Knight manages to get a hurricanrana on him followed by the DDT. Knight goes up top and lands the UFO Splash for the victory.
Winner: Kevin “The Jet” Knight
Latest From Will Ospreay
A video package airs. Will Ospreay wants to show that AEW isn’t where the best wrestle…it’s where the Billy GOAT wrestles. We head to another commercial break after this wraps up.
Backstage With The Demand
Backstage, The Demand address the World Trios Champions as they challenge Jet Set Rodeo for the titles at Collision. Ha HA…they stop when they see a knife on the door of their dressing room. They chill out before stepping into the room.
Kenny Omega vs. Swerve Strickland
It’s main event time!
Back at ringside, Swerve Strickland makes his entrance to a big pop from the crowd. Loud as they were for Swerve, they get absolutely electric for the arrival of Kenny Omega as he heads to the ring to get this match underway. The two quickly go at it, with Omega being sent to the mat.
Kenny fights back as he’s sent to the ropes, taking Strickland down with a shoulder tackle. Swerve and Kenny trade shots before Strickland gets sent to the outside, but he cuts Kenny off on a Terminator dive attempt before sending Kenny out for a double stomp to the floor.
He stays on the fight as he sends Omega to the ring steps, but Kenny ends up sending him over the barricade and into the crowd. He climbs onto the barricade but slips, readjusting to land a moonsault onto Strickland for a big pop from the Sacramento fans.
On that note, the show shifts gears and heads into what is likely to be the final commercial break of the evening. When the show returns, we see the match still in progress, with the pace starting to pick up and the crowd getting more lively all-the-while.
The match is back in the ring. Omega and Swerve are trading strikes. Swerve lands a hip toss. He floats over, but Omega counters into a vertical suplex and both men are down, but not for long, as they go right back at it. Omega dodges a clothesline for a basement dropkick.
He follows that up with a well-timed leg-lariat. He sends Strickland to the mat for a cover, but Swerve kicks out at two to keep things alive. Chants break out for both guys. Omega hoists Swerve up for a slam, going up the turnbuckle for a moonsault.
Strickland is back in it as he sends Kenny to the corner before mounting up for something…but Kenny slips free, driving Swerve into the turnbuckle instead. He lands a snap dragon suplex and a knee strike. He follows up with a pin attempt, but it isn’t enough to seal the deal.
He sets Swerve up for another knee strike, and a third for good measure. He starts mouthing off at Strickland as he sets up for one more…but Swerve intercepts, landing a backbreaker and a dropkick instead! Omega lands onto the apron as Swerve sizes him up.
He slams Omega’s head into the top turnbuckle as the ref admonishes him, and this continues into the middle turnbuckle amidst a “fight forever” chant from the crowd. He hoists Kenny up for a Verte-breaker but Omega counters out of it.
He lands a snap dragon suplex that sends Strickland onto the hardest part of the ring. Despite this, Swerve is getting back up as Omega looks for a snap dragon suplex off the apron to the floor. Swerve tries to break free and Kenny transitions to a waist-lock.
Swerve hangs onto the ropes for dear life as Kenny tries to break him away, and this leads to Omega sending Swerve off the apron for a German suplex, only for Strickland to land on his feet. Kenny is down, knocking his head on the floor before Strickland brings him up for a vertical suplex to the ground.
He brings Omega back into the ring for a 450 splash off the top turnbuckle, but Kenny narrowly kicks out. Strickland brings Omega back up to his feet, only for Kenny to fight back with a wheel kick sending Swerve to the corner.
Omega sets him up on the top turnbuckle for an avalanche snap dragon suplex, and it connects, driving Strickland down hard to the mat. He makes the cover, but Strickland kicks out just in time. That keeps this match alive and going. And the crowd loves it.
From there, we see Swerve go to the ropes. He calls the ref to show his shoulder, as Kenny hits the ropes. Swerve appears to have pulled the ref right into a V-Trigger by Omega. Now the ref is down and out as Swerve fights back here, nailing a House Call.
Unfortunately, as he goes for the pin, there is no count to come. As Nana tries to get the ref awake, Swerve goes up top for a Swerve Stomp that drives Kenny into the apron. He also removes a bit of padding in the corner, catapulting Omega into the exposed spot for good measure.
He goes back up top as we see another ref coming to the ring, and a Swerve Stomp connects, but it’s only good for a two-count. He sets up for one more House Call, but Omega dodges it for a snap dragon suplex. Knee strike followed by a reverse rana, but Swerve breaks free from a One-Winged Angel.
He hits the ropes, running into a V-Trigger, but catches Omega with a House Call. He follows up with Big Pressure, and it’s enough to finally take the win. Strickland leaves little time to celebrate post-match, as he goes right back after Omega with some strikes.
He shoves the ref out of the ring, taking a chain from Prince Nana to wrap around the throat of Kenny Omega before hanging him up from the top rope. He lets go of the chain before leaving the ring, clearing off the announce table and grabbing the ring steps.
As the wild post-match scene continues, we see Swerve pick a lifeless Omega up onto the steel ring steps. He hoists him up in the air, looking for a Vertebreaker. He connects, putting Omega through the table. He looks into the camera and says, “I needed this!” The show wraps up on that note. Thanks for joining us!
Winner: Swerve Strickland











