“World’s longest wrestling match” raises $37K for cancer charity in 22-hour Twitch stream

A new unofficial record has been set for the longest professional wrestling match in history, and it ended with former AEW star Stu Grayson getting his hand raised.
Evil Uno’s Mystery Wrestling teamed up with Ottawa-based C4 Wrestling for a 16-person Cibernetico Match in Gatineau, Quebec, on August 11. The bout lasted an incredible 21 hours, 49 minutes, and 12 seconds before Grayson defeated Junior Benito with a Nightfall to end the marathon contest.
The match featured Dante Dubois, Gabriel Floyd, HADDY, Jeff Fury, Joe Jobber, Katrina Creed, KJ Swayde, Alvin Turner, Cecil Nyx, Dreya Mitchell, Jason Exile, Mathis Myre, Top Dog, and Xander Orion.
Grayson celebrated on X afterward, writing: “I’m the winner of the longest wrestling match ever! Praise me!”
He later claimed everyone involved in the match called it “the most difficult thing” they’ve ever done, but joked, “It was easy for me because I’m STU.”
Guinness won’t recognize new “world’s longest professional wrestling match”
The match narrowly surpassed the official Guinness World Record of 21 hours, 44 minutes, and 34 seconds set in Japan by Ehime Pro Wrestling in 2021. In a tense moment, Benito kicked out of a piledriver just seconds before they would have failed to break the record, keeping the dream alive.
The stream, broadcast in full on Twitch, peaked at over 15,000 concurrent viewers and reached more than 400,000 unique viewers. Evil Uno, joined by a rotation of guests including AEW’s Nyla Rose, Mike Bailey, Colt Cabana, and Adam Cole, provided commentary throughout.
Multiple referees worked in shifts to keep the match going, with fans able to watch for free on Twitch.
Despite breaking the time mark, the record won’t be official. Evil Uno revealed that Guinness required a $16,000 fee to verify the attempt, a cost they weren’t willing to cover.
“We just can’t spend that in good faith,” Uno explained.
Even without the Guinness stamp, the wrestlers are calling it a win. The Twitch stream raised $36,900 for the Canadian Cancer Society, and fans are hailing it as one of the most unique charity events in pro wrestling history.