AEW Dynamite Results - November 12, 2025: Violence & Vengeance—Blood & Guts Takes Over Greensboro
AEW Dynamite emanated from the historic Greensboro Coliseum, and from the opening bell to the final gasp, this was one of the most savage Blood & Guts nights in company history. Two wars inside the double-cage, multiple backstage ambushes, legends returning, and flaming tables… this was AEW at its most chaotic and compelling.
Let’s get into the carnage.
Women’s Blood & Guts Match
Babes of Wrath, Jamie Hayter, Kris Statlander, Mina Shirakawa & Toni Storm vs. Marina Shafir, Megan Bayne, Mercedes Mone & Triangle of Madness (Julia Hart, Skye Blue & Thekla)
Winners: Shafir, Bayne, Mone & Triangle of Madness (Toni Storm submits)
Dynamite opened immediately inside the cage as Willow Nightingale and Skye Blue set the tone: wild, fast, and violent. Willow rag-dolled Skye into the cage wall twice, busting her open barely five minutes into the broadcast.
Julia Hart entered third, unleashing the first true shift in momentum — joining Skye for a brutal double-powerbomb and ripping a turnbuckle pad off for repeated head-shots on Willow. The Sisters of Sin swarmed like hyenas until…
Harley Cameron entered fourth, cosplaying Tifa Lockhart and swinging a steel chair like she was unlocking limit breaks. Her cannonball senton crashed Skye into a wedged trash can as the match hit its first commercial break.
When the match resumed, Thekla entered fifth, immediately whipping people with her belt. Blue and Thekla ran stereo boots before the countdown hit again and…
Jamie Hayter entered sixth, armed with a bag of thumbtacks that burst open on impact. Jamie went wild with barbed-wire kendo sticks until Megan Bayne arrived.
Megan Bayne entered seventh, instantly flattening the Babes of Wrath, swatting Cameron out of mid-attack, and German suplexing Hayter like a cruiserweight.
Kris Statlander entered eighth with a pool cue and a championship belt, going straight after Bayne. Statlander and Megan collided like two kaiju in a steel city. Meanwhile, Willow and Cameron powerbombed Bayne off the cage pylon in a highlight-reel moment.
Mercedes Mone entered ninth, hitting a tornado DDT on the championship belt she placed there herself before tossing several of her many title belts into the cage for her team to use as weapons. Thekla whipped Willow with one. Bayne did the same to Statlander.
Mina Shirakawa entered tenth, sprinting in with a barbed-wire baseball bat and hitting a Van Terminator on Bayne that nearly folded her in half. Mina, bleeding heavily, delivered an assisted Frankensteiner on Mone before striking elbows with reckless abandon.
Marina Shafir entered eleventh, dragging Statlander out of the cage and revealing a bed of nails under a barricade. She kicked Stat into it, took her shoes off, flipped everyone off, then returned to the ring to judo-throw Hayter.
Finally…
Toni Storm entered twelfth, triggering the Match Beyond and unleashing the chaos she’s famous for.
Storm taped her fists, dipped them into a bucket of broken glass, and started throwing Taipei death punches like she was challenging the entire building to a fight. Mina and Toni hit stereo hip attacks on Bayne and Shafir before hugging — a hilarious, brief reprieve in the middle of a bloodbath.
But the turning point came fast.
Mercedes kissed Storm, hit Mone Maker, and nearly stole the win until Cameron decked her with brass knuckles hidden in her Mini Mone puppet. Chaos exploded everywhere as Thekla and Hart knocked out the referee and tried to steal the key to escape, while Mone and Statlander fought up the truss.
Statlander hit a Samoan Drop off the truss through a ringside table, the first of several brutal landings.
Inside the cage, Marina Shafir delivered the visual of the night —
Storm set up a mirror to smash Shafir with, but Marina hurled the mirror straight into Storm’s face, sending glass everywhere.
Mina locked a barbed-wire figure-four on Bayne, but Shafir — now barefoot and dangerous — stomped Mina’s hand with a glass-covered foot.
The heels tied Storm up, forced her to watch Bayne whip Mina mercilessly, and that was the breaking point.
Toni Storm submitted to save Mina Shirakawa.
The heel team stood tall as referees swarmed to stop the assault.
They're making "Timeless" Toni Storm watch as they brutalize @MinaShirakawa!
— All Elite Wrestling (@AEW) November 13, 2025
Watch #AEWDynamite Blood & Guts LIVE on TBS & HBO Max pic.twitter.com/itIclaNHqc
Backstage Attack: Don Callis Family Sends a Message
In the loading dock, Don Callis’ Family ambushed Jurassic Express. Jungle Man and Luchasaurus fought valiantly but were overwhelmed as Kazuchika Okada and the Young Bucks emerged from a trailer.
Josh Alexander told the camera the Family was returning last week’s message. Don Callis revealed Kenny Omega returns next week and wants him to know the Bucks are fully aligned with them.
The Bucks looked uneasy but walked off without denying it.
Falls Count Anywhere: “Hangman” Adam Page vs. Powerhouse Will Hobbs
Winner: Adam Page (pinfall, balcony boot through electrical table)
Hobbs ripped off a turnbuckle pad before the bell, Page followed suit, and they met center-ring with heavy fists. Hobbs overpowered Hangman early, lawn-darting him and slamming him into the barricade and apron.
Page fired back, low-bridging Hobbs between the rings, but Powerhouse plowed him over again and hit a World’s Strongest Slam onto steel steps heading into commercial.
Back live, Hobbs tried a running powerslam, but Page escaped and back-body-dropped him off the announce desk to the floor. Hangman hit an Orihara moonsault from ringside steps, then smashed Hobbs with a trash can and went for Deadeye — but his back failed.
Hobbs hit a spinning spinebuster through a table, but Page kicked out.
They fought into the stands, up a set of stairs, and Hangman removed his boot, sprinted up higher, and launched himself—
BOOM — a running boot off a balcony sent Hobbs crashing through an electrical table.
Hangman covered him for the win.
Post-match, Katsuyori Shibata blindsided Page. Samoa Joe joined in, but Eddie Kingston and HOOK hit the ring to stop the onslaught.
Page challenged Joe to a steel cage match at Full Gear — without Shibata, without Hobbs.
Ricky Steamboat Returns to Greensboro
Tony Schiavone introduced Ricky “The Dragon” Steamboat for a special moment celebrating the venue’s legacy. Steamboat reminisced about Ric Flair, Dusty Rhodes, and the iconic Mid-Atlantic era.
But FTR (with Stokely Hathaway) interrupted.
The segment escalated as Dax Harwood insulted Steamboat, claiming Dax had become a bigger legend than The Dragon ever was. Harwood got in Steamboat’s face until Ricky finally snapped and shoved him.
Cash Wheeler blindsided Steamboat from behind and FTR prepared a spike piledriver — until Brodido (Brody King & Bandido) made the save.
Steamboat got one last burst of fire, lighting Dax up with palm strikes before Brody sent FTR retreating.
IT'S HEATING UP IN GREENSBORO!
— All Elite Wrestling (@AEW) November 13, 2025
Watch #AEWDynamite Blood & Guts LIVE on TBS & HBO Max pic.twitter.com/M98Slm1rrg
Men’s Blood & Guts Match
Darby Allin, Roderick Strong & The Conglomeration (Kyle O’Reilly, Mark Briscoe & Orange Cassidy) vs. The Death Riders (Jon Moxley, Claudio Castagnoli, Daniel Garcia, PAC & Wheeler YUTA)
Winners: Darby Allin, Roderick Strong & The Conglomeration (Kyle O’Reilly submits Jon Moxley)
The second Blood & Guts match began with Darby Allin and Wheeler YUTA — and YUTA immediately bailed out of the cage. Darby gave chase, dropkicking him into the barricade before they returned inside.
Cassidy entered third, stabbed YUTA in the face with broken sunglasses, and worked with Darby to smash Wheeler with a tack-covered skateboard.
Garcia entered and gained control, choking Darby and Cassidy until…
Roderick Strong entered (subbing for an injured Mark Briscoe) and delivered a run of backbreakers.
Claudio came in next and performed the visual spectacle of the night —
a Giant Swing with Orange Cassidy clinging to his back.
Kyle O’Reilly entered seventh with suplexes and submissions everywhere, followed by a blood-drunk Moxley, who immediately stabbed everyone with a fork and dragged it across Darby’s back.
PAC finally entered to begin the Match Beyond.
With Mark Briscoe medically removed from the match due to a backstage attack, hope seemed dead… until:
MARK BRISCOE HOBBLED DOWN THE RAMP WITH BOLT CUTTERS.
He broke the padlock, tossed weapons inside, brawled with YUTA on top of the cage, and hauled chairs up using a carabiner and rope from Kyle.
This led to the insane moment:
Mark Briscoe hit a Jay Driller on Wheeler YUTA on top of the cage.
From there all hell broke loose.
Cassidy had his hands stapled into his pockets by Moxley. PAC military-pressed Darby off the entrance tunnel through two flaming tables lit by Gabe Kidd in a shocking run-in.
Back inside, Kyle O’Reilly, covered head-to-toe in blood, fought Moxley alone. Jon locked the bulldog choke. Kyle reversed to an armbar. Moxley reversed back. Kyle transitioned to the ankle lock—
—and locked in a deep kneebar in a pile of debris, leaving Moxley nowhere to go.
Jon Moxley tapped out.
Kyle O’Reilly collapsed in the corner, soaked in his own blood, as the Conglomeration celebrated the biggest Blood & Guts victory of their careers.
WHAT A RALLY! THE DEATH RIDERS GO DOWN!
— All Elite Wrestling (@AEW) November 13, 2025
Watch #AEWDynamite Blood & Guts LIVE on TBS & HBO Max pic.twitter.com/NM9lCSIi71
“The word of the day is ‘coagulation!’ Look at this man right here! That’s what Blood & Guts is all about, baby!”
— All Elite Wrestling (@AEW) November 13, 2025
EXCLUSIVE: After victory for his team at #AEWDynamite Blood & Guts, @SussexCoChicken says there’s no rest for the wicked — and he wants payback on @DUNKZILLADavis! pic.twitter.com/e18aemrid4
🗣️ Wrestling.news | Backstage Take
This was one of the most violent television matches in AEW history — and yet both Blood & Guts bouts told clear, emotional stories rather than relying solely on shock value.
- The women’s match elevated Marina Shafir and Megan Bayne to monstrous levels.
- Mercedes Mone proved again she’s one of wrestling’s best big-match performers.
- Toni Storm’s surrender to protect Mina was perfect character storytelling.
- Kyle O’Reilly submitting Jon Moxley wasn’t just shocking — it was symbolic. AEW is clearly building O’Reilly as a gritty, never-say-die standout heading into the winter run.
And the Don Callis Family’s fingerprints being all over the show? That’s the kind of long-form storytelling Dynamite needs more of.
Top to bottom, this show was an absolute war and one of the most memorable Dynamite episodes of the year.
