AERS packs June with ranking events across the United States
AERS logged a June burst of ranked pulls, from a June 11 supermatch to June 13 stops in Youngstown, Wyoming and Watsontown, while East vs West 24 lit up Little Rock.

AERS turned June into a fast-moving ranking gauntlet, and the month’s calendar shows how arm wrestling’s middle tier now drives much of the sport’s competitive traffic. The Arm Wrestling Elo Rating System says it tracks rankings, statistics and match history, and its database already spans 26,238 pullers, 238,186 matches and 1,851 tournaments.
That scale makes the June slate more than a list of dates. It becomes a live pipeline, with a June 11 Supermatch entry followed by a dense June 13 block that includes Eoaw Youngstown Event #2, the 2026 Wyoming Open in Wyoming, Ohio, the 2026 Monster On The Mountain and Eoaw Event 2. AERS also keeps June 6 results and listings in the system, including 2026 East Vs West 24, 2026 Arizona State, 2026 Mayhem 6, 2026 Summer Kick Off 6, Call To Arms V and 2026 Forge Evw24 Watch Party.

The clearest reminder that the ranking grind and the marquee stage now feed each other came from East vs West 24. EVW Sports said the card took place June 6 in Little Rock, Arkansas, and the promotion built it around title bouts such as Oleg Petrenko vs. Michael Todd for the right arm light heavyweight world title, Ermes Gasparini vs. Artyom Morozov and Todd Hutchings vs. Bogdan Stoica for the right arm middleweight world title. Those are the kinds of matchups that dominate the headlines, but AERS’s June board shows that the sport’s deeper ecosystem is just as active at the local and regional level.
The June 13 Monster On The Mountain listing adds another layer. Third-party event pages identify it as the 2026 Warrior Run Monster On The Mountain Arm Wrestling Championship in Watsontown, Pennsylvania, at 15 S Main St, with a 4:00 pm EDT start. That gives the event a concrete home on South Main Street and places it inside the same June window as the Ohio and Wyoming entries, underscoring how spread out the circuit has become.
Taken together, the June slate shows a sport where rankings are built event by event, not only at the top. AERS’s ledger links Little Rock’s supermatches to Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wyoming brackets, and in that structure activity matters as much as headline strength. For pullers chasing movement in the system, June is not a pause between major events. It is the mechanism that keeps the ladder moving.
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