AAA on Fox Results – April 11, 2026

AAA on Fox Results – April 11, 2026

AAA on Fox Results – April 11, 2026 – The show opens with the ring decorated in Flammer’s honor — photos, balloons, and her championship belt displayed on a table. Lady Maravilla and La Hiedra, the other members of Las Tóxicas, introduce Flammer, who makes her entrance without the belt, letting it sit in the center of the celebration. As of tonight, she has held the title for 974 days.

A video package plays, highlighting Flammer’s dominant reign, featuring congratulations from Mexican entertainment figures, TV personalities, and fellow luchadores. When it ends, Flammer grabs the mic and immediately reminds the crowd that they don’t deserve her. She sarcastically thanks every woman she’s beaten over the last 974 days — including the “foreigners” from Raw and SmackDown like Bayley and Natalya.

Flammer declares herself the best in all of lucha libre, insisting there is no one left she hasn’t defeated. She says her coronation will never end… and then the lights go out.

A video appears on the screen: someone with bright red hair driving a pink lowrider. The camera zooms in on the license plate — “La Catalina.” Moments later, La Catalina herself steps onto the stage. After a brief NXT run, a stint in CMLL, and a short, unhappy stay in AEW, she has now arrived in AAA.

Catalina congratulates Flammer and turns to leave — but stops to add one more thing: Flammer has never beaten La Catalina. The moment the words leave her mouth, a brawl erupts. Catalina fights off Las Tóxicas, then grabs Flammer and drives her face into the celebratory cake, fulfilling the eternal wrestling law: if there is cake, someone’s face is going into it.

Catalina picks up the championship belt and raises it high while Las Tóxicas help a furious, frosting‑covered Flammer retreat up the ramp.

“OG” El Grande Americano vs. Octagón Jr.

The crowd rains boos on OG El Grande Americano as he makes his entrance, swatting at fan signs and antagonizing anyone within reach. Octagón Jr. gets a strong reaction of his own, and the two engage in a brief battle of crowd work before the bell.

They open with fast exchanges and quick pin attempts, neither man able to keep the other down. Americano rolls to the floor to reset, then charges back in and boots Octagón into the corner. Octagón explodes out, walks the ropes, and hits a missile dropkick.

Americano bails again, and Octagón follows with a suicide dive. Octagón goes for a moonsault off the apron, but Americano moves, and the fight spills up and down the ramp. Americano backdrops Octagón onto the apron — the lucha‑est part of the ring — and throws him back inside for a series of whips and shoulder tackles.

Americano starts yanking at Octagón’s mask but can’t get it off. Octagón fires up with heel kicks and a high knee in the corner for a two‑count. He goes for a crossbody, but Americano gets his legs up and follows with an exploder suplex into the corner. Americano climbs for a moonsault, Octagón gets the knees up, and Americano transitions immediately into an ankle lock — ripping Octagón’s mask off in the process.

Octagón Jr. is forced to tap while Americano parades around the ring holding the stolen mask high.

Winner: “OG” El Grande Americano

After the match, several Mexican celebrities at ringside are introduced, including comedian Ojitos de Huevo. Americano immediately goes over to harass him — which brings out El Verde Americano.

The two Americanos brawl at ringside, with OG slamming Verde into the announce table. Security rushes in but can’t contain them. Verde eventually sends OG sprawling up the ramp as they fight their way into the back.

WWE Intercontinental Championship Penta (c) vs. El Hijo del Vikingo

Vikingo enters with Dorian Roldán and a pair of axes — which, if actually used, would make this the easiest title defense in history. Penta arrives to a massive ovation, one of the biggest stars in AAA, WWE, and frankly, the beating heart of the building.

They circle and work the crowd before locking up and trading waistlocks. Vikingo transitions into a headlock, but Penta breaks it and applies one of his own. Vikingo stomps Penta’s feet and shoots him off the ropes for a stiff kick. Vikingo tries to steal one with a roll‑up, but Penta kicks out. Vikingo goes for a headscissors, Penta bails, and Vikingo dives — only for Penta to catch him midair and slam him onto the announce table.

Vikingo recovers by targeting Penta’s knee, sending him into the barricade. Back in the ring, Vikingo ties Penta’s mask to the bottom rope and does push‑ups while Penta struggles with his knee and the knot. Vikingo chokes him, unties the mask, and superkicks him. He twists and wrenches the knee, then applies a fish‑hook camel clutch until the referee forces a break.

Vikingo goes for a back body drop, but Penta counters with a spiked bulldog. He hits a corner dropkick for two. Penta tries the Penta Driver, but Vikingo counters and hangs him in the ropes for a double stomp. They trade strikes until Penta sweeps the leg and dropkicks Vikingo for another near fall. Vikingo dodges a corner charge, hits a meteora, and goes for a 450 — but Penta catches him and powerbombs him for two.

Penta limps into a charge, but Vikingo catches him with a standing Spanish Fly. Vikingo hits a top‑rope double stomp for 2.5. They fight onto the apron and trade chops. Vikingo climbs, Penta catches him, and Vikingo counters into a poisonrana on the apron — the most poisonous part of the ring — then hits a running shooting star press on the floor.

Vikingo throws Penta back inside… and suddenly the two Americanos, still fighting from earlier, spill onto the entrance ramp. The distraction allows Penta to hit a suicide dive, then a Penta Driver back in the ring — but Vikingo kicks out.

Dorian grabs Penta’s ankle, the referee catches him, and ejects him. Vikingo grabs the title belt, but Mini Vikingo sprints out and snatches it away. Mini clocks Vikingo with the belt. Penta capitalizes with a Mexican Destroyer and gets the three‑count to retain.

Winner and STILL Intercontinental Champion: Penta

After the match, the Americanos are shown still fighting in the crowd. They brawl to ringside, then into the ring. Security tries — and fails — to separate them, proving once again that WWE‑backed security is the least effective force in the known universe.

El Verde Americano grabs a mic and declares their fight far from over. He says OG crossed a line, and now it must be settled “blood for blood.” Verde challenges OG to a mask‑vs‑mask match.

We go to credits.

AAA on Fox Results – April 11, 2026

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