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Kevin Knight Attacks “Speedball” Mike Bailey on 5/27 AEW Dynamite, Ending JetSpeed in Shocking Fashion

  • 1 day ago
  • 4 min read



Kevin Knight Turns on Mike Bailey on AEW Dynamite

Kevin Knight Turns on Mike Bailey on AEW Dynamite


The Jet has officially gone solo.


On the May 27 edition of AEW Dynamite, TNT Champion Kevin Knight shocked fans by attacking his own tag team partner, “Speedball” Mike Bailey, during a tense in-ring confrontation. The segment came just days after Knight’s controversial attack on Darby Allin at Double or Nothing, and instead of showing remorse, Knight made it clear that this new version of “The Jet” is done apologizing.


Bailey came to the ring looking for answers. As Knight defended his actions and leaned into the crowd’s backlash, Bailey tried to reason with him. He offered Knight a chance to rethink what he had done, seemingly trying to save their partnership before it completely fell apart.


Knight’s response was loud and clear.


He attacked Bailey with the microphone, laying him out and sending a message that JetSpeed is over.



JetSpeed Appears to Be Finished


For fans who followed Kevin Knight and Mike Bailey as JetSpeed, this was a major shift. The duo had been presented as one of AEW’s most exciting pairings, blending Knight’s explosive athleticism with Bailey’s creative, strike-heavy offense.


Their chemistry made them feel like more than a thrown-together tag team. They had speed, style, and real fan support. That is what made the betrayal hit harder.

Knight did not just attack another wrestler. He attacked someone who had been positioned as his partner, ally, and possible brother-in-arms inside AEW.


That instantly changes the story.


Instead of JetSpeed chasing tag team glory or standing together in the TNT Championship picture, AEW now has a personal feud with real emotional weight.


Why Kevin Knight’s Heel Turn Matters


Kevin Knight’s attack on Mike Bailey feels like the next stage of his evolution as TNT Champion.


Knight has always had confidence, but this version feels colder, more selfish, and more dangerous. By attacking Darby Allin after Double or Nothing and then laying out Bailey on Dynamite, Knight is no longer just acting like a champion trying to prove himself.


He is acting like someone who believes the spotlight belongs only to him.


That is an important distinction.


The TNT Championship has often been at its best when the champion feels like a fighting star with something to prove. Knight now has a chance to make the title feel personal again.


Every challenger is not just coming after the belt — they are coming after his ego.

And with Bailey now directly in his path, the title picture suddenly has a fresh rivalry built on betrayal.



Mike Bailey Challenges Kevin Knight


After the attack, Mike Bailey made it clear that he wants Knight one-on-one.


That is the natural next step. Bailey tried to be the voice of reason, but Knight answered with violence. Now Bailey has every reason to go after him, and fans have every reason to want to see the match.


A Kevin Knight vs. Mike Bailey singles match has the potential to be one of AEW’s most exciting TV bouts in the current TNT Championship scene. Both men can work at a fast pace, both can deliver highlight-reel offense, and now the match has a personal issue behind it.


This is not just a competitive matchup anymore.


It is revenge.


A TNT Championship Match Feels Inevitable


With Knight holding the TNT Championship, Bailey challenging him feels like the obvious direction.


The story writes itself: former partners, broken trust, one champion, one betrayed friend, and a title that could become the centerpiece of the feud.


Bailey does not even need to cut a complicated promo to explain his motivation. Knight embarrassed him, attacked him, and ended their partnership in front of the AEW audience.


That is enough.


The question now is whether AEW saves the match for a bigger stage or lets it explode quickly on Dynamite or Collision.


Either way, the feud already has momentum.



AEW May Have Found Knight’s Breakout Character Arc


Kevin Knight has the tools to be a major singles player in AEW. He has the athletic ability, the look, the confidence, and now the championship.


What he needed was a defining character shift.


This may be it.


Turning on Mike Bailey gives Knight something more than matches and title defenses. It gives him an edge. It gives fans a reason to boo him. It gives Bailey a reason to chase him.


And it gives the TNT Championship division a storyline that feels emotionally driven instead of random.


If AEW handles this correctly, Knight’s heel turn could become one of the more important mid-card developments coming out of Double or Nothing.


Final Thoughts


Kevin Knight attacking “Speedball” Mike Bailey on the May 27 episode of AEW Dynamite was more than just a shocking segment. It was the official breakup of JetSpeed and possibly the beginning of Knight’s most important run yet as TNT Champion.


Bailey tried to reach his partner.


Knight chose the microphone shot instead.


Now the story shifts from friendship to payback, and AEW has a fresh TNT Championship feud that could deliver both strong storytelling and a must-watch match.

The Jet has taken off — but he may have just created his most dangerous challenger.


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