AEW Dynamite: Spring Breakthrough Results – April 15, 2026

AEW Dynamite: Spring Breakthrough Results – April 15, 2026

AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru Results – April 15, 2026 – Welcome to WrestlingAttitude.com’s coverage of AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru for April 15, airing live from the Wind Arena in Everett, Washington.

AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru comes on the air with Renee Paquette outside the arena as a car pulls up and AEW World Champion MJF steps out. Every time Paquette tries to speak, MJF cuts her off so he can run down the list of everyone he’s beaten during his current title reign and brag about kicking out of the One‑Winged Angel. Paquette tries again to tell him something, but Don Callis walks in to wish MJF luck tonight and apologizes for the Andrade situation.

MJF says he didn’t even know Andrade lost at the pay‑per‑view because he was too busy preparing for the main event of Dynasty. He tells Callis he still loves him, Callis owes him a favor, and to let Andrade know he’s not championship material.

Paquette finally yells at MJF that Darby Allin is challenging him tonight — right now. MJF shouts “what the f*ck?” as we cut straight to the ring for Allin’s entrance.

Darby Allin Confronts MJF

Excalibur, Bryan Danielson, and Tony Schiavone are on commentary as the crowd loudly chants for Allin in his hometown. MJF storms to the ring in his suit and tells Allin he’s as stupid as he looks if he thinks MJF is wrestling an impromptu title match. He says the fans are too braindead to understand how much money he has — if he doesn’t want something to happen, it won’t. He’ll sue everyone, including referee Aubrey Edwards, Justin Roberts, Tony Khan, and anyone who chooses to live in Washington.

MJF says his back hurts from wrestling Kenny Omega for almost an hour at Dynasty and asks what the company would look like if they forced him to wrestle tonight. He tells Allin he’s doing him a favor — he’s good, not great, not championship material. With love and respect, Allin isn’t ready to be World…

Allin rips the mic away. He says all it takes is one night to drop the wrestling world on its head. If he’s not ready now, he’ll never be. He’s killed himself for this company. He taped posters around the city for this show. He hung the AEW flag atop Mount Rushmore for this company. In tears, he says his career started ten miles from here at the Buddy Wayne Academy. On his first day, he told himself he’d succeed or fail as Darby Allin, without changing who he is. Tonight, he’ll climb to the top of the sport — so ring the bell.

MJF refuses, but Danielson stands up at commentary and says he just got a message from Tony Khan. Khan agrees with MJF — it’s unfair to wrestle unprepared — so the match will happen in the main event, giving MJF plenty of time. If MJF refuses, he’ll be stripped of the title.

Allin spins MJF around and screams he’s beating his ass with a headlock takeover. Allin dives out of the ring, slams himself into the railings, and heads to the back.

Backstage at Dynasty — Kenny Omega & Will Ospreay

Tony Schiavone catches up with Kenny Omega after the main event of Dynasty. Omega says he’s got nothing left and apologizes. The camera moves into the trainers’ room where Will Ospreay is still being worked on. Omega asks if he’s okay. Ospreay says no — but welcome to the club.

Omega says this isn’t how he pictured things for either of them and feels like he let everyone down. Ospreay cuts him off, saying he was there when Omega lost to Okada in the Tokyo Dome in 2017 and saw him fight back and win the big one. Omega says he doesn’t have time left, but Ospreay does — it’s his time, and he knows Ospreay can take it back.

Ospreay says they’ve still got this. He’s been crying for forty minutes, but his dream is still becoming AEW World Champion. He hopes Omega hasn’t given up on his own dream either, because he knows Omega can do it. They agree to have each other’s backs.

Ospreay leaves. Omega sits alone and says quietly to himself, “I’m your hero, huh? Maybe I can’t give up, maybe there’s still a chance.”

Tommaso Ciampa vs. Dezmond Xavier

Ciampa charges Xavier at the bell, attacking immediately in the ring and briefly on the floor before dragging the fight back inside. Xavier uses his speed to fire back for a moment, but Ciampa shuts him down with a running knee off the apron. Xavier vaults over the ring steps to avoid further damage. Back inside, they trade strikes until Xavier snaps off a sharp dropkick that forces Ciampa to regroup on the floor.

The crowd tries to start bald chants, and Ciampa snaps back that he’s not Ricochet. He regains control with a kitchen sink knee and keeps Xavier grounded. Xavier escapes a headlock and mounts a comeback with a springboard tornado DDT. He quickly heads up top, rolls through a missed 450, and runs straight into a rolling elbow from Ciampa.

Xavier counters Project Ciampa into a hurricanrana pin for two. He trips Ciampa to the outside and hits a low‑angle tope. Back inside, Xavier shows urgency, landing a frog splash for a near fall. A thrust kick staggers Ciampa. Xavier tries another springboard DDT, but Ciampa catches him in mid‑air with a pump knee.

Project Ciampa destroys Xavier. Ciampa lowers the kneepad and blasts Xavier with a final knee strike to score the win.

Winner: Tommaso Ciampa

Ciampa grabs a mic and says this match was an example. He’s sick of waiting. He wants all the gold. If it’s not clear enough, whether it’s Darby Allin or Maxwell Jacob Friedman, whoever wins tonight — the Psycho Killer is coming for the AEW World Title.

Ciampa then punt‑kicks Xavier in the ribs for good measure and rips up fans’ signs at ringside before leaving.

Darby Allin Video Package

A video package airs highlighting the hell Darby Allin has gone through during his time in AEW to reach this moment tonight. It revisits the first meeting between MJF and Allin, where MJF won via side headlock with help from the Dynamite Diamond Ring. We see Allin defeating Andrade and MJF defeating Kenny Omega at Dynasty. The package also includes a post‑match promo where MJF told Renee Paquette he was going to celebrate his win and go dark on social media — explaining why he had no idea about tonight’s title match.

FTR Talk Their Dynasty Victory

Dax Harwood says he’s heard the chatter online, and apparently FTR winning again has made everyone angry — and he understands why. Fans love an underdog story because they relate to it, but FTR aren’t underdogs. The people they beat are losers. Speaking of losers, they gave Adam Copeland and Christian Cage a brush with relevancy, and those two still couldn’t get the job done. As long as FTR are AEW Tag Team Champions, Copeland and Cage will never get another shot.

Stokely Hathaway says the “sickos” online think they know everything, so they must know the story of David vs. Goliath. FTR are Goliath. Meanwhile, the locker room is full of Milli Vanilli’s like Brodido, the Bang Bang Gang, Cope & Christian — and every time David steps up to Goliath, they get bitched out. Stokely says Tony Khan will sign every chud he can find to throw into the tag division, but they’ll all fall to the giants known as FTR.

TNT Championship — Kevin Knight vs. Claudio Castagnoli

Renee Paquette is at ringside and notes that Washington is where Kevin Knight began his career — also at the Buddy Wayne Academy — making it the perfect place to kick off his TNT Title reign. She says Knight has spent plenty of time studying for this match. As she speaks, Castagnoli makes his entrance right behind her, standing on the guardrail and staring down at her while she continues talking, creating a striking visual.

Castagnoli charges at the bell, but Knight is ready with multiple quick pin attempts and a high dropkick. A clothesline sends Castagnoli to the floor. Back inside, Castagnoli flattens Knight mid‑takeoff with a lariat and follows with heavy boots. He keeps Knight grounded with a neck crank, but Knight manages a hip toss to the outside and launches off the apron with a flying clothesline.

Back in the ring, Castagnoli regains control with his power advantage, wearing Knight down as the crowd starts “Let’s Go Jet” chants. Knight uses his speed to counter the strength, scoring more pin attempts before leaping over Castagnoli into a lariat, leaving both men down.

Knight absorbs a series of uppercuts before finally bodyslamming Castagnoli — something he failed to do earlier. A leaping standing splash gets a near fall. Castagnoli is dropkicked off the top to the floor, and Knight clears the top rope with a huge dive. Back inside, Knight attempts his standing jump hurricanrana from the corner, but Castagnoli catches him, powers him back up the ropes, and sets for an Avalanche Neutralizer. Knight fights it off. The timing isn’t perfect, but Castagnoli throws Knight off the top and leaps with him into a massive uppercut for two.

Knight tries another springboard, but Castagnoli snatches him out of the air for a tilt‑a‑whirl backbreaker for two. Castagnoli delivers the Giant Swing and transitions into a Sharpshooter attempt, but Knight fights it off, dodges a catapult, and hits a leaping lariat. Knight heads up top and connects with the UFO Splash to score the three‑count.

Winner: Kevin Knight (retains the TNT Championship)

Post‑Match — Kevin Knight Speaks

Knight puts over Castagnoli as one of the hardest‑hitting opponents he’s ever faced. He says The Jet is looking good as the new TNT Champion and brings up losing the Trios Titles the night before Dynasty. He mentions how Speedball Mike Bailey is still beating himself up over the loss, but tells him not to let it get him down — things can change fast.

Knight says he’ll be keeping a close eye on tonight’s main event, because Jet 2 Belts sounds Jet 2 Fly.

Renee Paquette Interviews Chris Jericho

Jericho receives a loud ovation from the Washington crowd as Renee Paquette asks how it feels to be back. Jericho says his performance at Dynasty was one of his favorites, even though he lost — which he attributes to being outnumbered three‑on‑one — but he still gives credit where it’s due.

The Demand’s music hits immediately. Ricochet walks out and tells the fans to sit down and shut up. He says he respects Jericho, especially after his valiant performance at Dynasty, but Jericho didn’t listen, so the opportunity presented itself for Ricochet to take him out with Jericho’s own move — now renamed The Ricosault. Ricochet says Jericho didn’t embarrass himself, but it wasn’t enough to stop the Rise of Ricochet. He advises Jericho to quit while he’s ahead. Ricochet says Jericho has had many reincarnations over the years, but maybe this new one should be the version that stays home after getting his ass kicked by The Demand — and that might be the best run of his career.

Jericho takes the mic and calls The Ricosault brutal. He starts slipping “bald, dumb, and ugly” into his promo like he’s doing Mr. Subliminal. Ricochet refuses to bite, saying he knows exactly what Jericho is doing. Jericho calls him scared — and bald — prompting Ricochet to tell Kaun and Liona to stay on the ramp while he handles this himself.

Ricochet hits the ring and immediately gets overwhelmed, calling for Kaun and Liona. The three‑on‑one beatdown begins. They plant Jericho with Open the Gates, and Ricochet hits The Ricosault again as The Demand stands tall.

Backstage — After Dynasty

Following Dynasty, Renee Paquette asks Don Callis and Kazuchika Okada what happened out there. Konosuke Takeshita walks by, claiming it was an accident and mockingly saying, “I’m so sorry!” Okada has to be held back by Callis as Takeshita walks away smiling.

Will Ospreay vs. Hechicero

Will Ospreay winces heavily as he removes his entrance robe, his body still wrecked from the war with Jon Moxley at Dynasty. Bryan Danielson immediately questions whether wrestling tonight is a terrible idea. Don Callis walks out and gives Hechicero a full Callis‑style entrance — complete with what looked like a Super Nintendo in the presentation.

Despite Ospreay being taped up everywhere, the opening is even, both men trading grounded grappling. Ospreay fires off a snap hurricanrana that sends Hechicero outside, following with a slingshot crossbody. Back inside, Ospreay hits ten corner punches and locks in a Figure Four to keep Hechicero grounded. Marina Shafir is shown watching from the front row.

A series of standing switches leads to Hechicero hitting a spinning hammerlock backbreaker and a corner step‑up knee to the back for two. He transitions into a Surfboard Stretch, pulling Ospreay’s hair to crank the neck even further. Hechicero stays in control until Ospreay lands a desperation handspring corkscrew kick to reset the match.

Ospreay hits Pip Pip Cheerio and a standing Sky Twister Press, both earning near falls. Hechicero pulls the straps down and dodges a flurry of strikes until Ospreay floats over a hip toss into an enzuigiri. Ospreay sets for Hidden Blade, but Hechicero counters into his Guillotine Head Scissors Driver for two, with Ospreay barely reaching the ropes.

Callis leaves commentary, furious, arguing with referee Rick Knox. Hechicero remains relentless, prompting Doc Sampson to check on Ospreay. Hechicero drags Ospreay outside and slams him onto the railing, then back inside applies a head scissors, continuing to target the neck. Hechicero clears the top rope with a huge dive, then hits a diving bulldog off the top for two.

Out of nowhere, Ospreay hits a desperation Stundog Millionaire, then a Cheeky Nandos Kick. He tries a reverse slam, but Hechicero counters into a roll‑up for two. They trade rapid‑fire pin attempts until Ospreay lands a thrust kick. He goes for the Oscutter, but Hechicero blocks it and rolls Ospreay into a cross arm‑breaker, transitioning into a triangle choke. Ospreay powers up, hits a Styles Clash, and follows with Hidden Blade to score the win.

Winner: Will Ospreay

Ospreay stares down Don Callis and Lance Archer — but Mark Davis blindsides him from behind. Davis crushes Ospreay and stands over him as the segment ends.

Thekla & Alex Windsor Confrontation

Renee Paquette is mid‑interview when AEW Women’s World Champion Thekla interrupts, stepping in to brag about successfully defending the title against Jamie Hayter at Dynasty. Before she can get too far, Alex Windsor comes out, leading to a tense verbal exchange between the two.

Windsor fires the first real shot, saying Thekla was stupid enough to get fired from Japan. Thekla immediately denies it — then quickly admits she did, which gets a laugh from the crowd. The back‑and‑forth continues until a match between them is made official for Collision.

TBS Championship — Willow Nightingale (c) vs. Kamille

Streaming issues hit during the match, but Willow Nightingale continued her streak of defeating returning wrestlers. Kamille looked strong, but Willow countered into a backslide and scored the pin, successfully defending the TBS Championship.

Kris Statlander & Hikaru Shida Backstage

Kris Statlander and Hikaru Shida are shown backstage. Shida mocks Willow Nightingale, while Statlander looks slightly embarrassed and not fully committed to the bit. Shida says they had so much fun tagging last week that they’re doing it again on Collision. The segment carries an underlying tone — two former AEW Women’s World Champions who feel like Tony Khan has no idea what to do with them anymore. Shida even points out the trend: Riho, Nyla Rose, Britt… “what’s her name?”

Darby Allin Prepares — Sting Appears

Darby Allin is preparing to walk to the ring when Renee Paquette approaches with a question. Before he can answer, Sting walks up — fully painted. Allin asks him for advice, then says, “It’s showtime.” Sting immediately corrects him: “It’s not showtime. It’s YOUR TIME.”

AEW World Championship MJF (c) vs. Darby Allin

The bell rings and the match is officially underway. MJF immediately calls for a timeout, pulls the Dynamite Diamond Ring out of his trunks, and hands it to the referee. As the ref turns away, MJF low‑blows Darby Allin behind his back.

MJF clamps on a headlock, but Allin shoves him toward the ropes. MJF stops short before colliding with the referee — and Allin fires back with a low blow of his own. Allin plants MJF with a Scorpion Death Drop.

Allin heads up top and hits a Coffin Drop. He climbs again — another Coffin Drop. He goes up a third time — a third Coffin Drop connects. Allin climbs once more and lands a fourth Coffin Drop from the top rope.

Allin grabs the headlock, rolls MJF back, and hooks him tight.

Darby Allin scores the three‑count with the side headlock takeover.

Just like that, the torch is passed. AEW has a brand‑new World Champion.

Darby Allin breaks down in emotional celebration, clutching the title as the locker room pours out to join him. Sting steps into the ring with him as the crowd roars, closing out the show on a massive moment.

Winner and NEW AEW World Champion: Darby Allin

AEW Dynamite: Spring Breakthrough goes off the air with Allin holding the championship high.

–– Here is what’s in store for AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru on April 15 ––

  • Kevin Knight vs. Claudio Castagnoli — TNT Championship
  • Kamille vs. Willow Nightingale — TBS Championship
  • MJF vs. Darby Allin — AEW World Championship
  • Chris Jericho interviewed by Renee Paquette

AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru comes to you live tonight from the Angels of the Wind Arena in Everett, Washington, as the company rolls forward just days removed from Sunday’s AEW Dynasty pay‑per‑view in Vancouver. With momentum high and fallout still unfolding, AEW has stacked the card with three championship matches.

Fresh off capturing the TNT Championship at Dynasty, Kevin Knight will make his first televised defense as he puts the title on the line against Claudio Castagnoli. Knight’s rise has been rapid, but Castagnoli’s experience and power make him a dangerous first challenger.

The TBS Championship will also be defended as Willow Nightingale faces the newly returned Kamille. Kamille’s comeback has already shaken the division, and tonight she looks to reclaim championship gold at Willow’s expense.

In the night’s biggest match, MJF defends the AEW World Championship for the second time in just a matter of days, this time against Darby Allin. Allin is coming off a grueling weekend and a chaotic stretch of matches, but the Seattle‑area crowd will be firmly behind him as he tries to dethrone the champion.

Elsewhere on the show, Chris Jericho will sit down with Renee Paquette for an in‑ring interview. Jericho is coming off a tough loss to Ricochet in his return match at Dynasty, and with emotions running high, his next move is anyone’s guess.

AEW Dynamite: Spring BreakThru Results – April 15, 2026

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