Dragon Lee gives WWE status update

We haven’t seen Dragon Lee compete in the ring since WWE WrestleMania 42, but it sounds like that will be changing soon.

Lee tweeted out a short message today where he only wrote “2-3 weeks.” While there was no further context provided, former Bodyslam reporter Cory Hays notes that Lee was said to be banged up coming out of WrestleMania.

At night two of the event on April 19, Lee was one of the competitors in a six-pack ladder match for the Intercontinental title. It ended with Penta defeating Lee, Rey Mysterio, Je’Von Evans, Rusev, and JD McDonagh to retain. Penta is now set to defend his title against the newly called up Ethan Page at Saturday Night’s Main Event on May 23.

Lee was not part of the card for Backlash last weekend, but he did make a public appearance for WWE that day, doing a meet and greet alongside Rey Fenix at Cosm in Los Angeles.

There’s been no confirmation regarding the physical issue Lee is dealing with. After the match at WrestleMania, he could be seen favoring his thigh/leg while heading to the back with Penta and Mysterio.

In the 2-3 week timeframe, WWE has AAA Noche de los Grandes taking place in Mexico on May 30. Lee makes appearances in AAA in addition to his WWE Raw role.

Andrew Yang: WWE wrestlers ‘should be SAG-AFTRA members already’

Andrew Yang has responded to a post suggesting WWE wrestlers should join SAG-AFTRA.

Kevin Nash recently said on his Kliq This podcast that WWE wrestlers should look into joining the union amid reports of WWE/TKO asking some wrestlers to take pay cuts. Several wrestling news sites published Nash’s comments, and Yang responded to a post from Cultaholic.

Yang wrote:

“Nash is right – WWE wrestlers participate in highly-rated scripted programming every week. They should be SAG-AFTRA members already.”

Yang has been critical of WWE’s treatment of its talent and classification of wrestlers as independent contractors in the past. In 2020, he criticized WWE introducing a new policy restricting talent from working with third parties, such as Twitch. The situation led to Zelina Vega’s brief departure from WWE at the time.

Yang was also critical of WWE earlier this year regarding celebrity involvement at WrestleMania, writing, “It seems that TKO has really screwed up WWE/Wrestlemania with ads and celebs and getting away from the heart of pro wrestling – and talented performers are paying the price.”

Correction on TKO/Arizona deal for WWE events

Update —

Arizona Sports & Events Alliance has reached out to us to clarify that our original report is incorrect.

“While I was told the TKO/Arizona deal involved Survivor Series, Royal Rumble and SNME, a source with the Arizona Sports & Events Alliance said today that this report is inaccurate,” our Bryan Alvarez writes.

***********

Original report —

More info on TKO’s new deal with Arizona.

WWE’s parent company alongside the Arizona Sports & Event Alliance announced on Tuesday that they will bring seven events to the state that will include WWE, UFC, Zuffa Boxing, and Professional Bull Riding. Bryan Alvarez has some new details regarding what WWE would be bringing to the table in the deal.

“The new Phoenix agreement is for a Survivor Series, Royal Rumble, and Saturday Night’s Main Event,” he writes.

WWE currently only has their event schedule set through Money in the Bank, which takes place on September 6 in New Orleans. They have yet to reveal locations for this year’s Survivor Series or the 2027 Royal Rumble.

Significant shows held in Arizona

Some prominent shows held in Arizona in the past include WrestleMania XXVI at State Farm Stadium back in 2010, which had the infamous second and final match between Shawn Michaels and The Undertaker. It was also home to the 2019 Royal Rumble at Chase Field that saw Becky Lynch and Seth Rollins win that year’s Rumble matches.

UFC has also run events in Arizona, including UFC 274 back in May 2022 at the Footprint Center that saw Charles Oliveira defeat Justin Gaethje to retain the UFC lightweight title.

Luchasaurus hoping to make AEW return before end of 2026

Luchasaurus is hoping that he’ll be able to return to the ring before the end of 2026.

In December 2025, Luchasaurus tore both of his shoulders during a battle royal on AEW Dynamite in the United Kingdom. He discussed the injury on a new episode of Talk is Jericho and said he has undergone one surgery and is now awaiting surgery on the other shoulder. Though his surgeon wanted him to wait six months between operations, Luchasaurus decided to move the timeline up with the aim of returning sooner.

“it was like kind of a freak thing, they both went,” he said. “I got the first one done in February and the surgeon wanted to wait six months, but we’re trying to do a faster timeline because we want to get back. So I’m going to do the next one only three months after, which is a little scary, but I’m going to try, you know, I really want to get back as soon as I can.”

Luchasaurus had already been wrestling on one partially torn rotator cuff before this injury happened. It occurred during a “fun spot” where Shelton Benjamin threw Ricochet at Luchasaurus for a chokeslam.

“He threw Ricochet at me and I caught him in a chokeslam,” Luchasaurus said. “Somehow my shoulders went pop-pop.”

After this second surgery is done, Luchasaurus expects to be out of action for approximately six more months, which could allow him to wrestle again before the end of the year.

“Once they’re both done, it’s six months at the most, I would hope,” he said. “If more than [that], it’s just because you gotta listen to the body. But I’m going to try my hardest to get back this year for sure. So we’ll see. Definitely just want to get the second one done because — this is not fun.”

After battling a life-threatening case of pneumonia in 2024, Luchasaurus is focused on enjoying his career, doing the best he can, and wants to help out other talent in AEW. He’s excited to team with Jack Perry again once back in action.

AEW notes: MyAEW expands platforms, update on next two Wednesdays

On Tuesday night, AEW announced their MyAEW service is expanding platforms, adding both Roku and Roku TV.

Launched in March, the service is the replacement for Triller, allowing international viewers and those using VPNs to get access to AEW programming and PPVs for either a monthly or annual price that is a big discount from traditional pay-per-view costs.

There is also a FAST channel element, giving potential viewers access to 24/7 streaming episodes of Dynamite.

In addition to Roku, MyAEW is available on Apple TV, Fire TV and Android TV.

**********

With the TBS and TNT schedules now updated for the next two weeks, there is clarity on how AEW is handling their upcoming Wednesday combo editions of Dynamite and Collision.

Both Wednesday, May 20, from Portland, Maine, and Wednesday, May 27 from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, will feature a two hour Dynamite and a one hour Collision.

In the case of May 27, AEW will also have a full two hour Collision the following Saturday from Huntsville, Alabama, giving them five total hours for the week.

Mauro Ranallo part of broadcast team for Netflix’s Rousey vs. Carano

Pro wrestling fans tuning into Ronda Rousey’s MMA return this weekend will hear a familiar voice on the commentary team.

MVP Promotions has announced that Mauro Ranallo will be the play-by-play announcer for Saturday’s broadcast on Netflix, working alongside former MMA fighter Kenny Florian. The main card begins at 9 p.m. Eastern time streaming live from the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California.

Ranallo has a long history calling marquee boxing and MMA events, along with having served as a commentator for WWE and NJPW. He still contributes to wrestling commentary with Scott D’Amore’s Maple Leaf Pro Wrestling in his native country of Canada. In 2018, Showtime released the documentary “Bipolar Rock ‘N Roller” focused on Ranallo and his struggle with bipolar disorder.

Elle Duncan, Tyron Woodley, and Ariel Helwani will anchor Netflix’s Rousey vs. Carano coverage as hosts of the event, with Jon Jones, Cain Velasquez, and Cat Zingano appearing as guests. The broadcast team also includes Sibley Scoles (reporter), Sean Wheelock (rules and scoring), and Kody “Big Mo” Mommaerts (in-cage announcer).

Jake Paul and Nakisa Bidarian of MVP are the promoters for this event, which is Netflix’s first time airing live MMA. The show has a five-fight main card:

Rousey vs. Carano fight card (Saturday, May 16) —

  • Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano
  • Nate Diaz vs. Mike Perry
  • Francis Ngannou vs. Philipe Lins
  • Salahdine Parnasse vs. Kenneth Cross
  • Junior dos Santos vs. Robelis Despaigne

There is also a slate of prelim fights airing live on YouTube at 6 p.m. Eastern leading into the main card.

AEW Collision ratings stay nearly even for Fairway To Hell episode

This past Saturday’s Fairway to Hell edition of AEW Collision went head-to-head with WWE Backlash, but didn’t see a significant hit as a result.

The hourlong show averaged 342,000 viewers on TBS, down just 1.4% from the previous week’s two hour Saturday show on TNT. It was the lowest audience for a Collision show since January 24.

The episode was down 20.3% from Wednesday night’s hourlong episode that followed the the two hour Dynamite (429,000).

The episode averaged a 0.05 rating in the 18-49 demo, down 28.6% from this past Wednesday (.07) and 16.7% from the previous Saturday (.06). It tied the lowest rating the show has done in that category since the January 24.

The hour finished tied for 38th on the cable charts in 18-49 and was 43rd on the night in total viewers.

As compared to the same week in 2025, overall viewership was down 10.5% while the 18-49 rating was down 44.4%.

Recent AEW Collision ratings

Listed below are the overall viewership and 18-49 demo ratings for the last 11 episodes of AEW Collision as well as the 10-week average in both categories. This week was down 18.9% in overall viewers and 28.6% in 18-49 as compared to recent averages.

Date18-49Viewers
3/7/20260.05370,000
3/14/20260.07458,000
3/21/20260.10470,000
3/28/20260.08476,000
4/2/20260.07373,000
4/11/20260.08423,000
4/16/20260.08473,000
4/25/20260.05397,000
5/2/20260.06347,000
5/6/2026 (one hour Wed.)0.07429,000
5/9/2026 (one hour Sat.)0.05342,000
*10 wk avg (through 5/6)0.07421,600

CMLL collaborates with NFL for Mexico City game announcement

For the international portion of its 2026/2027 schedule release, the NFL enlisted the help of CMLL and a couple of the promotion’s wrestlers.

It was revealed today that the NFL will return to Mexico City on November 22 when the San Francisco 49ers face off against the Minnesota Vikings on Sunday Night Football. The announcement was made via a video with CMLL’s Mascara Dorada and Soberano Jr. representing the respective teams. Estadio Banorte (Estadio Azteca) will be hosting the game.

“Whether you’re a rudo or tecnico, the showdown awaiting us on November 22 at Estadio Banorte will be unforgettable!,” NFL Mexico wrote. “Are you Team Vikings or Team Niners?”

CMLL had a stellar business year in 2025 and was voted Promotion of the Year in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Awards. The oldest active promotion still in existence, CMLL also collaborated with Pokemon for a show last year and recently had the South Korean K-pop supergroup BTS attend one of its events.

Lucha masks for each NFL team are currently on sale through a licensing partnership between the NFL and Tony Khan’s AEW.

The NFL revealed its slate of international games for the 2026/2027 season today ahead of the full schedule being unveiled this Thursday.

Three Big Issues With The John Cena Classic/Cena’s Brawl For All | Opinion

At Backlash this past weekend, we were told that John Cena would make an announcement that would that would shake the “foundation” of WWE. What we got was more like a powerpoint presentation to a shareholders meeting. 

To bring you up to speed, The John Cena Classic will be an event that features matches that showcase up and coming NXT talent in the ring against WWE Main Roster talent, competing for the ridiculously named John Cena Championship. If it sounds like an interesting idea, it gets worse. The fans will vote to see who wins the title based on performance, not who wins or loses

I survived living through the Brawl-For-All in the year of our Lord 1998 and I don’t think I’ve seen an idea more poorly thought out until now. I’m sure there are those that would jump at the chance to directly influence outcomes in WWE (The Road Dogg comes to mind) but there are some glaring issues with this concept that are simply just bad ideas for both talent and the audience. 

There Are Too Many Unanswered Questions

One of the things I’ve had the pleasure of doing over the last two years here at F4W is covering Ring of Honor. Every week, there are some really killer matches from a really good roster that largely flies under the radar because it lacks one simple thing that would put it into an NXT or TNA level: there’s virtually no stories. 

The John Cena Classic is reminding me of that. Granted, we don’t know when this thing is happening or who will be participating in it, but as it stands now there is zero actual reason behind it. It’s just a thing that’s happening that has Cena’s name on it. Which begs the question, why are we doing this? 

What does the “Champion” of this Classic get aside from another belt that everyone will forget about in a month? Will they defend it? How are the matchups determined? Is it a dedicated PLE or will it happen across TV shows? Live? Taped? Are we on the precipice of another Cruiserweight Title/205 Live, 24/7 or SPEED situation? 

In his announcement, Cena stated that the intent was to showcase new and up and coming talent, but if they are being put in the ring with Main Roster talent who are arguably supposed to be at a higher level than them, what reason do I have to watch? To see someone maybe win a match, but then actually lose it because the fans didn’t like their trunks? 

Lance Storm Is Right

When it comes to said Main Roster talent, Lance Storm made an excellent point on this week’s Wrestling Observer Live, saying “If I’m a $500,000 main roster talent and I’m in there with a $75,000 a year NXT guy, why would I use my skill and my experience to make him look good? If he wins the popularity contest and wins and gets the push to the championship, I could lose my job.” 

This absolutely makes sense and puts WWE talent in awkward positions where they are being asked to choose between protecting themselves, and their value as Independent Contractors, or putting over a newer talent. Given the amount of unguaranteed contracts and talent in WWE right now it seems entirely unnecessary to put anyone in a position to willfully lower their perceived value

Plus, as Storm points out “There is going to be a TKO executive saying, ‘well why are we paying this guy that lost the fan vote and is less over than this NXT guy that works for way less money?’”

What is a WWE Talent to do? Refuse to lose and be branded as “difficult?” Or be a team player and put over someone who may not be ready and could potentially replace them? When put in that context, this seems way less like a wrestling event and way more like middle management trying to see who’s a team player. 

Hot Take: I Blame TKO

It’s obvious to anyone watching WWE right now that the TKO corporate entity is what’s driving everything happening in WWE. This is, I suppose, inevitable in our megacorp-driven society. But what makes the proposed The John Cena Classic different is that it  feels like one thing to me: It feels like TKO is saying to WWE fans “you know wins and losses don’t matter because it’s not real, right?” 

TKO is removing all the fun of watching and following wrestling, squandering an opportunity to let WWE potentially make some new stars and doing it under the guise of “putting it in the fan’s hands” in a convoluted manner that says to this fan “fine, how about you decide who wins because it’s all pretend anyways.” Can you imagine them ever taking this kind of attitude with a UFC event? 

Wrestling at its best makes the viewer suspend their disbelief without even realizing they are doing it. When the incredible performers that make up the business can achieve that, wins and losses do very much matter. As a viewer, I would be completely disappointed if I watched a barnburner of a match, but then “the internet” decided someone else won.. 

It’d be like watching the Daytona 500, but in the middle of the winner’s celebration, someone stepped onto the stage and said the person who crashed out on the 30th lap actually won because their crash was more spectacular. 

I would absolutely love a John Cena Classic tournament that was heavily promoted, featured exciting matchups and told a story about what Cena embodies; working hard and not giving up. Unfortunately, his Classic as it stands now doesn’t really feel like it’s about either. 

Swerve Strickland explains storyline reason for AEW absence

Swerve Strickland posted a video to social media on Wednesday explaining the storyline reason why he hasn’t been on AEW programming.

Strickland hasn’t wrestled since the March 25 edition of Dynamite, when he lost a singles match to Kenny Omega. The match had the stipulation that if Omega won, he would receive Strickland’s number one contendership spot for the AEW World title, and if Strickland won, he would have earned Omega’s EVP status.

In the video Strickland posted on Wednesday, he stated that he’s not in Asheville, North Carolina for tonight’s episode of Dynamite. According to Strickland, AEW management is afraid of what he will do to Bandido.

Swerve Strickland comments on AEW absence:

Swerve says in the video:

“As you can see, everybody, I’m not at AEW right now. I’m not at AEW Dynamite tonight in Asheville, North Carolina. I’m here at home because of AEW management. They wanna keep me away from TV.

I’ve been shooting the last couple of promos you see off-site. I haven’t been at AEW TV. AEW management is responsible for that.

Shout out Tony Khan, thank you for having me doing some ambassador work for WWE events, for sending me to the NFL Draft to do the Jacksonville Jaguars fourth-round pick with Roger Goodell and everybody. I appreciate that, but you’re keeping me away from doing my freaking job, and that’s getting in the ring and hurting people.

The longer I’m away from the ring, the longer I’m away from championship gold, and you are keeping me away from doing what I do best, and that’s hurting people. And that’s why they’re banning me from AEW Dynamite because they’re afraid of what I’m going to do to Bandido. They’re afraid of what I’m gonna do to the rest of the people on the staff in the locker room of All Elite.

It’s going all the way back to what I did to Kenny Omega earlier this year. I’m a danger to AEW Dynamite, and now AEW Dynamite is gonna be keeping me away until further notice.

They’re gonna play games with my career, but like I said, I want power, and I want it all.”

Last month, Fightful Select reported that one reason Swerve had been absent from AEW programming is that he was filming promotional materials for Warner Bros. Discovery. Swerve also missed nearly five months between matches in 2025 due to knee surgery. He was out from the Forbidden Door pay-per-view on August 24 until his first match back on December 10.

Swerve’s full post is available below:

https://twitter.com/swerveconfident/status/2054581004933730334

Violent J says JCW wants to appeal to more than just Juggalos

Violent J says his Juggalo Championship Wrestling is “hungry for a new goal.”

During a recent appearance on The Bryan and Vinny Show, Violent J said JCW is looking to expand the reach of its promotion from appealing to Juggalos to appealing to a wider wrestling audience.

Violent J said:

“I feel like our whole company has been hungry for a new goal, a new pursuit. Because in music, we just kept accomplishing the same goal. We set a goal in the beginning and we reached it, and we reached it again and we reached it again as the years kept going by.”

“We decided to get serious about JCW and actually try to compete with these other companies and try to bring entertainment and be taken seriously, even if the show is a lot of times tongue-in-cheek, you know what I mean? We wanted to set out and really try to become something wrestling fans would enjoy and not just the fans of our music.”

While JCW programming can be over the top, Violent J says he wants the promotion’s shows to appeal to all wrestling fans and feature a variety of wrestling styles.

“I want it to appeal to all wrestling fans. I want a little bit of everything, of all types of wrestling. I want a little bit of everything in there so that, no matter who you are, what you’re into, you’re gonna see something you like, you know what I mean?

And I don’t want it to just appeal to Juggalos. JCW used to be really wild, with really offensive commentary, and we weren’t trying, though. It was just for Juggalos. It was for ICP’s fan base.”

Episodes of JCW Lunacy air Thursday nights on the Psychopathic Records YouTube channel. JCW also recently posted the full StrangleMania show from WrestleMania 42 week in Las Vegas.

The full episode of The Bryan and Vinny Show is available here.

Former Ridge Holland compares working environments under Triple H and Vince McMahon | Exclusive

The former Ridge Holland has now broken down how different it was working under both Triple H and Vince McMahon.

Rising from a small town in West Yorkshire near Leeds, Ridge Holland, aka Luke Menzies, was a rugby player before becoming a professional wrestler. Training in the UK and the European indie circuit, Menzies built himself a strong portfolio before flying out to the USA for WWE NXT.

Speaking to F4Wonline in an exclusive interview, Holland opened up about his time in NXT and the WWE main roster. Holland joined NXT in 2020 while it was still under Triple H’s leadership and in the Black & Gold era.

Yeah, I mean, it was always about opportunity, giving people opportunities. You know, you might have had to wait a little bit, but my personal experience was that everything was great. He had from what it seems and what I heard, he had big plans for me. Everything was going swimmingly, obviously, until I got, I got injured, which seems to be a kind of like a bit of a running theme in my career up until late. But yeah, you know, nothing but good experiences really. You know, obviously coming in and not experiencing that type of environment before and having someone who was firmly behind you was, you know, it was a massive boost in confidence,” Holland said.

However, shortly after, he was put on the main roster where he experienced a completely different environment under Vince McMahon. “So at that point, it was just Vince [McMahon] because Triple H had had his health scare.  All my dealings on the main roster were basically with Vince, Bruce [Prichard], and John Laurinaitis. So yeah, that was an experience [laughs].

Just as what you’ve probably heard from anyone else. Very intense. Obviously, he’s a crazy billionaire, you know. It’s intense. Being there and just watching him operate. I had a couple of interactions with him. And from what I can remember, that for the Brawling Brutes at least, he had some big plans, but, you know, and they kind of never really came to fruition, and I’m sure it’s just something that, you know, it happens. Yeah, nothing truly negative. But yeah, he was there, and it’s kind of like, ‘Oh, look, there’s Vince. There he is walking past’ and stuff, so. He’s got a bit of aura.'”

Many pro-wrestlers have communicated the same before and described how competitive and pressurised the situation was working under McMahon. When asked to compare the two working environments under McMahon and Triple H, Holland said that while one was like walking on eggshells, the other was much more relaxed.

“I  think the main thing was that around Vince and around that kind of the systems he had in place, there was a lot of kind of like people walking on eggshells. Just from how he liked everyone to be pretty high-strung in a really competitive environment. But when Triple H took over, it was more like just relax, and you could kind of more or less just take a deep breath and be yourself. And I think everyone felt a little bit more comfortable, if that’s the right term. Just a little bit more comfortable.”

Holland’s jump to the main roster saw him get paired with Sheamus and Butch (Pete Dunne) as part of The Brawling Brutes. While he enjoyed his time with the duo, Holland believes WWE never pulled the trigger on them.

It was good fun.  I think we had a lot more legs than what we were to achieve. I think we had a lot more in us. But it was fun, you know, traveling down the road, and obviously, Sheamus is, you know, Hall of Fame career, you know, certified Hall of Famer. And just to get in there and obviously be reintroduced back with Pete [Dunne], it was great. We managed to get ourselves organically over as babyfaces, and with that, Sheamus had one of his most babyface runs. But yeah, it just felt like they never really pulled the trigger. I mean, we wrestled a couple of times for the tag team belts. You know, we were in the War Games, the inaugural War Games on the main roster. Yeah. And then we had a really good kind of like Donnybrook match with Imperium. But yeah, it was fun. Although I think there was a lot more that we could have done. But I was grateful for the opportunity,” Holland said.

Despite feeling he could’ve done more with The Brawling Brutes, Holland expressed his gratitude for whatever plans WWE placed him in. Recalling being a part of the first main-roster WarGames match, he shared, “Yeah, just again, a big opportunity. I never realized that we’d be involved in that. But it was a funny situation because we didn’t really have the match down until like 20 minutes before bell time. Nerve-wracking. But we all the beats and made sure that The Bloodline and all of their story. That was the main point, the story of The Bloodline. You know, it was the main point of getting that out, you know, getting that across, and we managed to do it. I would’ve liked to have a bit of a bigger part in it and done some more things, but you know, you’ve just gotta play your part. You know, and play the role that you can. But I’m grateful for the opportunity, and I can say at least I was involved in that match.

Luke Menzies, fka Ridge Holland, recalls his memories working with Roman Reigns, Drew McIntyre, and Sheamus

Roman Reigns is regarded as one of the biggest names on the WWE roster. With an extremely successful portfolio, Reigns is often seen at the pinnacle of the company. When asked about his experience working with Reigns, Holland said, “We’ve been in a couple of six-man tags, and then obviously the War Games match. But he’s a huge star. He’s super cool behind the scenes. He just does his thing, you know? He is the marquee. His face is on the, you know, everything. So he carries himself like a star. He is a star. He performs like a star. He’s the man. Every encounter that I had with Roman Reigns, although fleeting, they were all positive. He was a cool guy.

The West Yorkshire native also had positive words to say about his fellow Irish and British Isles wrestlers, Sheamus and McIntyre. When asked what advice they gave him, Holland said, “Just basically, just to be physical, be aggressive. Obviously, those two guys are, you know, that’s their forte. So a lot of people pull from their own experiences in trying to give advice from the things that they’ve encountered. So, just be aggressive, bring it in the ring, and bring that mindset, which is what those guys did. Yeah, good times. More memories of, like, being on the road and being in the car with Drew and Sheamus, ’cause they are like a married old couple. You know, they’ve been friends forever, so hear them bickering and stuff. We used to call Drew ‘Sleepy’ ’cause he was always in the car sleeping, and Sheamus would be more or less be the wheel man. So we had some good times.”

A former rugby player, Holland experienced a run in the European indie wrestling circuit, which he believes has given rise to several top wrestlers in the world right now.

“Yeah, I mean, when you look, you look at the, the kind of like the plethora of talent that we’ve had from the British independent scene, right? You don’t have to look as far as NXT UK. The inaugural version of that, where you had like your Pete Dunnes, your Tyler Bates, your Trent Sevens, you know, your Jordan Devlins, even your Rampage Browns. I’m probably missing a ton of names out here, you know,” Holland said.
“And then you go across obviously, like the European side, where you have Ilja [Dragunov], you know, Imperium, Walter. And then obviously I’ve never really had much dealings with Will Ospreay, but he’s obviously a fantastic talent and, yeah, I think that it showed that there was a pathway for young budding wrestlers, passionate young wrestlers, that there was an actual avenue to get to where they wanted to be, which was obviously WWE. And now we’ve got even more options there with the AEW, TNA, MLW now and stuff, and so yeah, it showed people that there was an actual pathway.”

In his career, filled with ups and downs, the road was not always easy for Holland. From training under Marty Jones to getting his US visa rejected and then wrestling in the indies, Holland has made a name for himself. Now cleared to wrestle after his injury, Holland is gearing up for his comeback in the UK’s National Wrestling League.

WWE SmackDown ratings see notable increase for Backlash go-home show

Last Friday’s WWE SmackDown viewership was up nearly 11% for the Backlash go-home edition of the show while the 18-49 demo was also up big.

The broadcast averaged 1.279 million viewers on USA, up 10.9% from the previous week and the largest audience since the night before WrestleMania 42. It also averaged a 0.29 rating in the 18-49 demo, up 16% from the prior week. It was also the second lowest rating the show has done in that category since March 6.

It went head-to-head with an NHL playoff game on TNT that topped all television with a 0.33 rating in the key demo. SmackDown was second on both cable on all television in 18-49 and finished fifth on cable in overall viewers.

As compared to the same week in 2025, overall viewership was down 12.1% while the 18-49 rating was down 29.3%.

Recent WWE SmackDown ratings

Listed below are the last 11 weeks of overall viewership and 18-49 demo ratings for WWE SmackDown on USA as well as the 10-week average in both categories.

This past week’s show was down 6.3% in overall viewers and down 14.7% in 18-49 as compared to recent averages.

Date18-49Total viewers
2/27/20260.341,379,000
3/6/20260.271,190,000
3/13/20260.321,419,000
3/20/20260.321,439,000
3/27/20260.331,308,000
4/3/20260.431,508,000
4/10/20260.361,412,000
4/17/20260.421,580,000
4/24/20260.321,267,000
5/1/20260.251,153,000
5/8/20260.291,279,000
10 week average (through 5/1)0.341,365,500

NJPW announces fan voting for Best of the Super Juniors awards

New Japan Pro Wrestling has announced that fans will have the chance to vote for three different awards to be presented to participants in this year’s Best of the Super Juniors 33 tournament.

A press conference was held in Tokyo on May 13 announcing the news, with NJPW president Hiroshi Tanahashi revealing that following the conclusion of the round-robin portion of the tournament, fans will vote for the following three awards.

The Outstanding Performance Award will go to the wrestler fans feel “best exhibited their full potential and ability in the ring throughout the league.”

The Fighting Spirit Award will go to the wrestler fans feel exhibited a “never say die attitude in the face of overwhelming odds.”

The Technique Award will be given to the wrestler who best shows “creative offensive flair within their matches.”

Similar to the format proposed for John Cena’s John Cena Classic, voting for these awards will be open to wrestlers regardless of their win-loss record in the tournament.

This year’s tournament kicks off on Thursday at Korakuen Hall.

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors 33 lineups

The lineups for each block are below.

Block A:

  • DOUKI
  • Francesco Akira
  • Robbie X
  • Nick Wayne
  • Titan
  • Valiente Jr.
  • Kosei Fujita
  • Jun Kasai
  • Ryusuke Taguchi
  • Master Wato

Block B:

  • El Desperado
  • YOH
  • Daisuke Sasaki
  • KUSHIDA
  • Robbie Eagles
  • Jakob Austin Young
  • Taiji Ishimori
  • Hyo
  • SHO
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors 33 Schedule

The schedule for the tournament is below:

  • May 14: Kosei Fujita vs. Francesco Akira
  • May 16: El Desperado vs. Taiji Ishimori 
  • May 17: Robbie Eagles vs. El Desperado
  • May 20: Robbie X vs. Kosei Fujita
  • May 23: YOH vs. Robbie Eagles
  • May 24: Jun Kasai vs. Nick Wayne
  • May 27: Francesco Akira vs. Jun Kasai
  • May 29: Valiente Jr. vs. Kosei Fujita
  • May 30: SHO vs. Taiji Ishimori
  • June 2: El Desperado vs. YOH
  • June 3: Taiji Ishimori vs. KUSHIDA
  • June 5: Semifinals
  • June 7: Finals