Report: AEW has ‘real’ interest in Mick Foley

AEW reportedly has “real” interest in bringing Mick Foley into the promotion.

The Takedown on SI reported today that, per multiple sources, AEW expressed interest in working with Foley this year. It’s not known if AEW would sign Foley to a contract or if his debut would just be a one-off appearance. Foley is currently under a WWE Legends deal but won’t be renewing the deal when it expires next month due to taking issue with the “close relationship” WWE has with President Donald Trump.

“Multiple sources tell The Takedown that AEW has expressed ‘real’ interest in working with Foley this year, though the capacity of which is not known,” the report says. “It was also not certain whether or not the organization would be interested in signing the 60-year-old, or if it would simply be an appearance.”

Foley at Double or Nothing?

Though he’s currently under the WWE Legends deal, Foley has made recent appearances for OVW and GCW. A source told The Takedown on SI that they wouldn’t be surprised if Foley showed up at AEW Double or Nothing later this month. The pay-per-view is being held in Foley’s home state of New York — and Long Island native MJF is putting his hair on the line against AEW World Champion Darby Allin at the event.

“One source indicated that while they did not have any direct knowledge of Foley coming in for the show at this time, they would not be surprised if there was a push to use him on it if a deal could get done,” The Takedown on SI wrote. “The extent of any conversation between the parties beyond initial inquiry is also unknown.”

Double or Nothing is being held at Louis Armstrong Stadium in Queens on Sunday, May 24.

When Foley was considering coming out of retirement for one last match in celebration of his 60th birthday in 2025, MJF was the opponent he wanted to face. But Foley called off any plans for an in-ring return after suffering a concussion while doing light training in 2024.

Foley has multiple Hollywood projects in the works at the moment, including a limited series that’s in development where actor/wrestler Paul Walter Hauser is attached to play the Hardcore Legend. Foley also has done voiceover work for A24’s upcoming death match documentary.

MLW Fusion reportedly returning for new season

MLW Fusion is reportedly set to return.

The last time MLW aired an episode of the show was December 14, 2023, on YouTube.

On Thursday, Fightful Select reported that a new season of the show is on its way and that details regarding a premiere date are said to be “imminent.”

MLW recent events

MLW has primarily been running full shows on YouTube since episodes of Fusion stopped airing.

The promotion is coming off a joint show with CMLL at Arena Mexico on Friday, May 1.

MLW also held an event on March 14 at Center Stage in Atlanta that has yet to air. The promotion recently taped a show from The Signal in Chattanooga, Tennessee, on May 9, that also has not aired.

MLW’s upcoming schedule includes an event at the Melrose Ballroom in New York City on June 11, followed by events at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia on June 12 and 13.

Reported timeline on Stephanie Vaquer’s WWE return 

WWE creative is reportedly already discussing plans for Stephanie Vaquer’s return. 

According to PWInsider, Vaquer is expected to make a comeback on Raw next week. There have been internal creative discussions already in motion for her return. 

On the April 27 edition of Raw, The Judgment Day attacked Vaquer backstage. Later, it was announced that she had suffered a second degree AC sprain in her shoulder which could force her to be out of in-ring action for the ‘foreseeable future’.

Liv Morgan defeated Vaquer at WrestleMania 42 and concluded her 210 day title reign. This was her first WWE title on the main roster, where she defeated IYO SKY at Wrestlepalooza to win the vacant title. 

The WrestleMania win also kicked off Morgan’s third Women’s World Championship reign. She was confronted by Sol Ruca on the Raw after Mania, officially marking her main roster move.

Bryan Alvarez’s AEW Dynamite report for subscribers

Bryan Alvarez returns with his insights and thoughts on the latest edition of AEW Dynamite.

Wednesday’s show saw a star-studded ten man tag team match, the reveals of both the men’s and women’s Owen Hart Tournament brackets, and the main event set for this month’s AEW Double or Nothing pay-per-view.

Click here to read (sub needed)

AAA Noche de Los Grandes 2026 Where to Watch: Start Time, Live Streaming and more

AAA Noche de los Grandes 2026 streams live on Saturday, May 30, 2026 from Arena Monterrey, with the broadcast starting at 7 PM ET / 4 PM PT / 12 AM UK (Sunday morning). The show is set to air globally across Fox Latin America, the official Lucha Libre AAA YouTube and Facebook channels, and WWE’s digital platforms.

DetailInfo
EventAAA Noche de los Grandes 2026
DateSaturday, May 30, 2026
VenueArena Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico
PromotersLucha Libre AAA Worldwide & WWE
Headline matchEl Grande Americano vs. “Original” El Grande Americano (Mask vs. Mask)
Title matchEl Hijo de Dr. Wagner Jr. (c) vs. El Hijo del Vikingo – AAA Latin American Championship

Start times by timezone

The card kicks off at 5 PM local Monterrey time. Here’s the full breakdown.

RegionTimezoneStart time
HawaiiHST1 PM, Sat May 30
AlaskaAKDT3 PM, Sat May 30
Los Angeles, VancouverPDT4 PM, Sat May 30
Denver, PhoenixMDT/MST5 PM, Sat May 30
Monterrey, Mexico CityCST5 PM, Sat May 30
Chicago, DallasCDT6 PM, Sat May 30
Bogotá, LimaCOT/PET6 PM, Sat May 30
New York, Toronto, MiamiEDT7 PM, Sat May 30
Santiago, CaracasCLT/VET7 PM, Sat May 30
HalifaxADT8 PM, Sat May 30
Buenos Aires, São PauloART/BRT8 PM, Sat May 30
St. John’sNDT8:30 PM, Sat May 30
AzoresAZOT10 PM, Sat May 30
Cape VerdeCVT10 PM, Sat May 30
UTCUTC11 PM, Sat May 30
London, Dublin, LisbonBST/WEST12 AM, Sun May 31
Madrid, Paris, Berlin, RomeCEST1 AM, Sun May 31
Athens, Istanbul, CairoEEST2 AM, Sun May 31
MoscowMSK2 AM, Sun May 31
Dubai, Abu DhabiGST3 AM, Sun May 31
Karachi, TashkentPKT4 AM, Sun May 31
Mumbai, DelhiIST4:30 AM, Sun May 31
DhakaBST5 AM, Sun May 31
Bangkok, JakartaICT/WIB6 AM, Sun May 31
Singapore, Manila, Hong Kong, BeijingSGT/CST7 AM, Sun May 31
Tokyo, SeoulJST/KST8 AM, Sun May 31
PerthAWST7 AM, Sun May 31
AdelaideACST8:30 AM, Sun May 31
Sydney, Melbourne, BrisbaneAEST9 AM, Sun May 31
AucklandNZST11 AM, Sun May 31

Global broadcast and streaming options

RegionChannel / platformType
United StatesFoxTV
United StatesTubi (Fox on-demand)Free streaming
MexicoSpacePay TV
MexicoHBO MaxStreaming
MexicoFox Sports Premium MXStreaming
MexicoLucha Libre AAA YouTubeFree streaming
Latin America (broadcast)Fox Latin AmericaPay TV
Latin America (streaming)HBO Max LATAMStreaming
BrazilHBO Max BrasilStreaming
UK & IrelandLucha Libre AAA YouTubeFree streaming
UK & IrelandWWE YouTubeFree streaming
Europe (all)Lucha Libre AAA FacebookFree streaming
SpainLucha Libre AAA YouTubeFree streaming
CanadaFox (via cable) / WWE YouTubeTV / Free streaming
Australia & NZLucha Libre AAA YouTubeFree streaming
Japan, South KoreaWWE YouTube / AAA FacebookFree streaming
India, MENA, AfricaLucha Libre AAA YouTubeFree streaming
Worldwide (no local broadcaster)luchalibreaaa.com & official socialsFree streaming

Joe Hendry claims ‘NXT was one of the most difficult challenges’ in his career

Joe Hendry discussed challenges he faced on NXT and gearing up for his transition to WWE.

On the latest episode of the Insight Podcast, Hendry talked about his transition from TNA to NXT and the challenges he faced in his development as a wrestler. He praised having the opportunity to work under Terry Taylor, Shawn Michaels and Triple H’s guidance.

“I mean, so NXT was one of the most difficult challenges I’ve had in my career and one of the best phases that I’ve had in terms of my growth and development as a wrestler. And I’m lucky that I’ve had the chance to work with. And like you say, Shawn Michaels, Terry Taylor, Triple H, because each of them have different approaches to wrestling. You can learn things from that like Shawn has this, he has this constant pursuit of excellence and this standard that obviously, in ring Shawn is like as good as it gets. He wants to hold you to that standard.”

Hendry appreciated Triple H’s efforts on the main roster’s success, and ability to perceive things from audiences’ perspective. 

“And then to go to the main roster and learn from Triple H there’s genius in all three that I’ve mentioned and there’s many geniuses in WWE and in wrestling. But those three to me are definitely geniuses in wrestling.”

“The great thing about working with Triple H is what he’s really good at is he can see the entire picture, the entire show of Raw within WWE and entertainment as a whole. And what I might just be thinking about, I’m just making this song and I’m going to put this joke here and this joke here. He’s able to not just see it through my eyes, but see it through the audience’s eyes and go, sure, totally get that.”

He stated interest in targeting the Intercontinental Championship as a response to fan’s query on which WWE Title he would like to pursue on the main roster

“I’m very grateful and I’m just blown away by the amount of knowledge I’ve been able to gain in such a short space of time. I feel like now I’m in a phase where I feel like if I just commit to entertaining the audience as best as I can and doing the absolute best job I can, all those things that I want will come to me. That said, Intercontinental Championship, please.” 

Hendry became popularized on TNA before the promotion’s crossover feuds with NXT. He signed with WWE in 2025 and was officially moved to Raw in April this year. 

WWE running increased house show schedule this summer

Domestic house shows have largely been a thing of the past for WWE, but that will be changing a bit this summer.

The company announced today that it has added 10 main roster house shows to its schedule for July-August. Branded as part of WWE’s “2026 Summer Tour,” they include stops in New Mexico, Pennsylvania, California, Illinois, Virginia, New Hampshire, Georgia, and South Carolina.

Here is the full list of dates, with all of the shows happening on Thursdays or weekends:

2026 WWE Summer Tour —

  • Saturday, July 11: WWE Summer Tour at Pan American Center in Las Cruces, New Mexico
  • Sunday, July 12: WWE Summer Tour at The Pit in Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Thursday, July 16: WWE Summer Tour at PPL Center in Allentown, Pennsylvania
  • Saturday, July 25: WWE Summer Tour at Adventist Health Arena in Stockton, California
  • Sunday, July 26: WWE Summer Tour at Dignity Health Arena in Bakersfield, California
  • Thursday, July 30: WWE Summer Tour at Bank of Springfield Center in Springfield, Illinois
  • Thursday, August 6: WWE Summer Tour at EagleBank Arena in Fairfax, Virginia
  • Thursday, August 13: WWE Summer Tour at SNHU Arena in Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Saturday, August 29: WWE Summer Tour at Enmarket Arena in Savannah, Georgia
  • Sunday, August 30: WWE Summer Tour at North Charleston Coliseum in Charleston, South Carolina

A mix of talent from Raw and SmackDown are advertised, with Cody Rhodes, Oba Femi, Rhea Ripley, Seth Rollins, Jade Cargill, Trick Williams, and Drew McIntyre featured on WWE’s graphic for the tour. Tickets are going on sale to the general public next Wednesday (May 20) at 10 a.m. local time.

Rhodes has been vocal about wanting WWE to run more house shows, feeling like they would help wrestlers get in reps while creating a team-like atmosphere in the locker room.

It’s unknown whether this will continue into the fall. Internationally, WWE has live event dates coming up in Europe, South America, and one in Canada. House shows in the United States were mostly phased out in the post-pandemic era aside from the annual Christmas-season WWE Holiday Tour.

Former Ridge Holland believes Vince McMahon & Bruce Prichard messed with him following Big E incident | Exclusive

Following Ridge Holland’s traumatic incident with Big E, the former WWE wrestler recently revealed how Vince McMahon and Bruce Prichard possibly messed with him after that.

In an exclusive interview with F4Wonline, Holland opened up on the ‘extremely difficult’ aftermath he faced following the incident with Big E. “ It was extremely difficult. Obviously, I’ll always preface it by saying the main point is that making sure that Big E was okay, and he’s all good now, and he’s healthy. But at the time, from a personal standpoint, it was probably one of the hardest times of my life. Coming in as a relatively unknown entertainer onto the main roster and then you know, being involved in an accident which put one of the biggest stars in the company on the shelf,” he said.

So, from like death threats to all the social media things, it kind of marred my…kind of like drove a certain perception of me with fans that I struggled to kind of shake. And I’m sure that kind of went up into the, you know, the higher up into the office and stuff. And I just think their confidence in me, and especially my confidence in my own performance, was definitely affected ’cause I didn’t really wanna get in the ring. I was very nervous about getting in the ring after that. It shook me. So, yeah, it affected everything, home life, everything.”

However, when asked how the incident affected his working relationship with WWE and the higher-ups, Holland revealed an incident that he believes Vince McMahon and Bruce Prichard did to mess with him.

So initially, I was offered to go to counseling and stuff like that. Like it would be like, you know, obviously, like speak to someone, which I declined at that minute. I just didn’t really wanna speak to anyone, to be honest. The initial backlash, obviously, it’s funny ’cause the week, the week after, which I thought was kind of rough, they wanted me to do an apology promo live before I went out for a match.

And I remember there were Vince [McMahon] and Bruce [Prichard] standing there, and they were counting down like thirty seconds till we go live. And I’m thinking, ‘I don’t know what I’m gonna say. I’m just gonna speak from the heart.’ And then it got to like five, four, and then they cut it. They just didn’t do promos right then. And then I had to go out and wrestle a match. So I think that was in poor taste. I think they did that to mess with me, and it really put a bad taste in my mouth, and I never really looked at those people the same, to be honest. I thought it was in really poor taste,” Holland finished.

Despite not being close friends with Big E, Holland respects the former WWE Champion and recently exchanged pleasantries with him at WWE WrestleMania 42. “I’ve had a couple of, you know, conversations with Big E. I actually saw him at WrestleMania. You know, I met his fiancée, and we just swapped pleasantries. You know, we were never close friends, but you know, I respect him, and I hope that goes both ways. I sent him some things, you know, to say sorry and profusely apologized, and I was in contact with him via text, you know, for days and weeks after, after the accident, checking in.

The incident led to a lack of confidence in Holland, which he believes kept hanging over him. “It was tough just trying to kinda find myself again as a performer because I really was, on the main roster, being kinda like a Sheamus’ lackey. I never really got to find that area of like character development and wrestle like how I wanted to wrestle or be given the time to develop. And then obviously, with that hanging over me came confidence issues and stuff. So it kind of affected me. And the fans kinda labeled me as being unsafe and not being able to wrestle, and that followed me through, and it probably will for quite a while. So just trying to prove to myself that I am good at this, which I know I am. And trying to prove the naysayers wrong.

Despite all the setbacks, Holland found his flow and enjoyed a successful second run in WWE NXT, Evolve, and TNA, before suffering an injury and getting released.

Ridge Holland looks back at his TNA injury and WWE release

Following a brief two-year run on the main roster, Holland returned to NXT. Looking back at his second NXT run under Shawn Michaels, he shared, “You know, we came in, and it was my idea to kind of run with the dangerous kinda, always injuring people. So that was my thing. I always wanted to come back, and the arc was to try a redemption arc. So I was always trying to do good, but things kept going wrong. And then the heel turn came. It’s when I started to realize, ‘Well, maybe I’m good at it. This is what I should do. Maybe I should be hurting people.’”

However, the incident with Ilja Dragunov became another turning point in his career. “But then, when the Ilja [Dragunov] thing happened, it got a great reaction. You know, it was all over social media and everything, and then I got the word that the higher-ups said it was too close to the bone, so they had to call me off. That’s what it felt like for my whole NXT run. I would get, you know, get hot and then something would happen. I’d get hot, and something would happen. But I thought I was probably the best heel on the show leading up to the Chase U thing. Yeah. I thought I was getting great heat, great reactions. There was never a silent moment in the crowd, and it was weird.”

Looking back at his second NXT and Evolve run, Holland believes he was lied to by WWE management, who kept assuring him everything was okay despite removing him from televised programs.

I just got dropped off TV after the, after I lost to Ricky Saints, actually. I just got dropped off TV, and then the next thing was like, ‘Oh, four months later you’re going to Evolve.’ And I kinda knew the writing was on the wall then. I asked if there was anything that I could’ve worked on. Is it my work, my promos? What is it? They said, ‘No, everything’s cool.’ Which is a lie, you know. Obviously, they took me off TV for a reason. So frustrating, but I took the jump to Evolve as another opportunity to kinda rebrand myself, trying to take the positive out of a negative.

Last year, in September 2025, Holland, aka Luke Menzies, made his TNA debut against Mike Santana. While he believes he had a good match with Santana and it showed him a “shimmer of hope,” things again fell apart when he injured himself during his bout against Moose.

Walking through the exact moment of the injury, Holland shared, “I was, uh, gonna give Moose a pop-up powerbomb, and because he’s so athletic and you know, he jumped so high, I thought I was gonna lose him. So I stepped forward, and he came down. I took a step back, and the foot that stepped back just twisted in my boot. Yeah. And that’s what caused the injury there. And obviously, I couldn’t really put weight on my foot, and I thought for his safety and my safety, I’ve been in that situation before, I don’t want anyone else to get hurt. I couldn’t continue. And then, went to the back, got seen by some medical personnel. And then it was just basically fly home, WWE paid for imaging, found out the extent of the injury, and then, you know, obviously went through surgery.

However, the 37-year-old believes WWE releasing him while injured was “bad company practice.” Reflecting on the situation, he said, “ I think it was just the fact that the situation was pretty murky. It could’ve been anyone who went through that situation. I think there’d have been a bit of an outcry, but, you know, as I said, I wasn’t able to wrestle and earn a living for seven months, and to be unemployed at that point. Couldn’t really walk, put weight on my foot, or anything. So it’s not as if I could go out and get a regular job. So yeah, it was a pretty poor situation. I thought it was bad business practice. I just don’t think that you do that to human beings. But unfortunately it’s, it’s corporate America, right? Things happen.”

Now gearing up for his indie comeback dates and a run in the UK’s National Wrestling League, Holland is looking forward to reinventing himself and not targeting any specific promotion, be it AEW or other companies.

So at the minute, my biggest thing is to totally reinvent myself, just work anywhere and everywhere, and not have my heart set on working for a particular company. It’s more or less starting from the ground up, just starting from scratch and creating a little bit of a buzz and just showing people, you know, what I can do. So yeah, it’s just a matter of picking up as many bookings as I can, and obviously trying to give back as well, trying to help in any way.

Holland believes he has now acquired knowledge that he believes will be valuable to elevate other wrestlers and himself. “I’ve learned some lessons, and I’ve learned some things. I’ve got a certain amount of knowledge that will be valuable to some other people. So if I can elevate myself, but elevate other people at the same time, that’s the goal.”

Joe Hendry announces exclusive WWE album

Joe Hendry has officially recorded an exclusive album with WWE music. 

Hendry told Chris Van Vliet on his Insight Podcast that he has recorded an exclusive album with WWE. He announced that it features only original songs and is set to release this summer. 

“I haven’t told anyone anywhere, but I have recorded an album with WWE music. And it’s going to drop this summer. And we recorded most of that in New York at the WWE Studios. So what I’ve done now is the microphones that we have there, I have basically replicated the set up back home now. So I don’t need to fly to New York to do it. I can send stuff in and we can work on it back and forth. So that’s one of the things that makes these songs work is because they’re fast and they’re topical. So we can basically like we obviously did the Logan Paul song on TV, but we were able to just get it done that week because we could send files back and forth. But yes, there is an album coming out this summer. They are all original songs.”

Hendry also talked about the influence of The Rock’s concerts on his persona. And how WWE video games were instrumental in his decision to consider a wrestling career. 

“So The Rock is the reason I got into the pro wrestling business. I was a fan of the video games before I was actually a fan of wrestling. I’d seen wrestling a couple of times on the TV.” 

It (SmackDown 2 video game) was revolutionary that when you did the people’s elbow, The Rock would take off his elbow pad and it would be gone for the rest of the match, right. It was like the graphics can never get better than this. So I decided I’m going to check out wrestling. It was The Rock’s promos that really got me into it. So seeing his concerts as well. The reason why his concerts worked so well is because he did a really good job as well as being funny. He was really good at it. He played super well, he sang well, He was super confident.”

Hendry’s song about Logan Paul on his WWE Raw debut went viral and immediately instigated a rivalry between the two. 

NJPW Best of the Super Juniors 33 night one results, initial standings

Tournament season in NJPW got underway on Thursday with Korakuen Hall hosting night one of Best of the Super Juniors 33.

It was a good day for outsiders with Nick Wayne (AEW), Daisuke Sasaki (DDT), and Hyo (Dragon Gate) all picking up victories over NJPW wrestlers. Two other outsiders — Jun Kasai (Pro Wrestling Freedoms) and Valiente Jr. (CMLL) — were not in action today and will kick off their BOSJ campaigns on Saturday.

Here are the quick results:

  • A Block: Kosei Fujita defeated Francesco Akira
  • B Block: Daisuke Sasaki defeated El Desperado
  • A Block: Titan defeated Master Wato
  • B Block: KUSHIDA defeated Robbie Eagles
  • A Block: Nick Wayne defeated Robbie X
  • B Block: Hyo defeated YOH
  • A Block: Ryusuke Taguchi defeated Daiki Nagai
  • B Block: SHO defeated Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • B Block: Taiji Ishimori defeated Jakob Austin Young

The tournament runs through June 7 and will determine the next challenger for IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion DOUKI, who is “boycotting” BOSJ this year instead of competing for bragging rights.

Next up for the tournament are shows in Tokyo this Saturday and Sunday, taking place at Esforta Arena Hachioji and Yoyogi National Stadium second gymnasium. The cards for those events are listed below:

Saturday, May 16 —

  • B Block: El Desperado vs. Taiji Ishimori
  • A Block: Kosei Fujita vs. Nick Wayne
  • B Block: Robbie Eagles vs. SHO
  • A Block: Titan vs. Jun Kasai
  • B Block: KUSHIDA vs. Daisuke Sasaki
  • A Block: Robbie X vs. Francesco Akira
  • B Block: YOH vs. Jakob Austin Young
  • A Block: Master Wato vs. Ryusuke Taguchi
  • A Block: Valiente Jr. vs. Daiki Nagai

Sunday, May 17 —

  • B Block: El Desperado vs. Robbie Eagles
  • A Block: Kosei Fujita vs. Jun Kasai
  • B Block: YOH vs. Taiji Ishimori
  • A Block: Master Wato vs. Robbie X
  • B Block: Hyo vs. Daisuke Sasaki
  • A Block: Nick Wayne vs. Francesco Akira
  • B Block: KUSHIDA vs. SHO
  • A Block: Ryusuke Taguchi vs. Valiente Jr.
  • B Block: Jakob Austin Young vs. Yoshinobu Kanemaru
  • A Block: Titan vs. Daiki Nagai

And here are the initial standings through the first night:

Best of the Super Juniors 33 standings —

A Block:

  • Kosei Fujita (1-0): 2 points
  • Titan (1-0): 2 points
  • Nick Wayne (1-0): 2 points
  • Ryusuke Taguchi (1-0): 2 points
  • Jun Kasai (0-0): 0 points
  • Valiente Jr. (0-0): 0 points
  • Daiki Nagai (0-1): 0 points
  • Robbie X (0-1): 0 points
  • Master Wato (0-1): 0 points
  • Francesco Akira (0-1): 0 points

B Block:

  • Daisuke Sasaki (1-0): 2 points
  • KUSHIDA (1-0): 2 points
  • Hyo (1-0): 2 points
  • SHO (1-0): 2 points
  • Taiji Ishimori (1-0): 2 points
  • Jakob Austin Young (0-1): 0 points
  • Yoshinobu Kanemaru (0-1): 0 points
  • YOH (0-1): 0 points
  • Robbie Eagles (0-1): 0 points
  • El Desperado (0-1): 0 points

Lawyers for ‘prolific texter’ Vince McMahon defend use of Signal, alleged missing messages

Even though Vince McMahon didn’t understand “What in the blue hell is ‘Langis’ lol,” his legal team defended his use of the Signal app and other messaging platforms as part of the ongoing WWE shareholders lawsuit.

The communication platform is best known for the ability to not retain a record of messages, hence the difficulty in providing information in lawsuits such as the aforementioned one where a group of shareholders feel McMahon’s decision to enter into an agreement with Endeavor to merge UFC with TKO was pre-determined and thus cost them money.

The plaintiffs filed a motion in April where they claimed “adverse inferences against Defendants related to Defendants’ spoliation of relevant Signal messages and other evidence.”

As noted in a Bloomberg Law article Wednesday, McMahon’s lawyers said there is no gap in traceable communication to be concerned with and that McMahon is “a prolific texter” with 22,000 messages from multiple platforms having already been provided.

From the article:

“McMahon’s attorneys preserved data from his personal devices, even after they were seized by federal authorities investigating sexual misconduct allegations against him, she said. But Signal data sought by the investors wasn’t available for retrieval until after those devices were returned in October 2025.

The investors argue messages apparently missing from chats on Signal, an encrypted platform that can be set to have content disappear, could’ve been relevant to the litigation.

Eric Leon of Latham & Watkins LLP, representing WWE who is also named in the lawsuit, stated, “These parties negotiated this deal really the old fashioned way. They did it with dinners and lunches, and they did it over the phone, and we produced all of the phone records.”

The judge has yet to rule on the motion.

The aforementioned “Langis” reference is to a message McMahon sent to WWE president Nick Khan in February 2023 after Khan wrote “Langis” in reply to McMahon about wanting to have a talk about creative. That exchange took place after Khan said McMahon was no longer involved in creative.

Gunther credits Triple H for changing WWE’s European talent strategy 

Gunther enjoys being a heel and the chaos that erupts with it. He also recognizes the impact his move from the European wrestling circuit to WWE has had on his own career and the future opportunities it could create for talent from the continent. 

In an interview with Enry Lazza, Gunther talked about the fan backlash after defeating John Cena in his retirement match. He stated it was a struggle for his WWE colleagues to deal with the negative reactions from crowds, but he personally thrives on it.

“It is and I feel like it’s a struggle that a lot of my colleagues sometimes have, where they struggle to get negative reactions, because it cannot feel nice, but I enjoy it, I have to say. I like to be the one that creates chaos and stirs the pot and that worked out really well with John (Cena).”

Gunther also elaborated on WWE scouting and discovering talents from across Europe. He emphasised on his transition to mainstream wrestling audiences through WWE, noting how his success at the global stage  creates more visibility for future European wrestlers. 

“Yeah, it was definitely the case that it was hard and because WWE wasn’t quite that open yet. That really just changed with Triple H when he took over NXT where they changed the strategy and basically looked at everybody out there. And I feel like Europe was under the radar for a very long time because especially Italy, I remember that when I started like 2008 or something had years, after that, had a really good wrestling scene.” 

“I remember there was a guy called Kyle that I used to wrestle here and there and if you’re looking up you find him. They had great crowds in Italy like thousands of people and then he changed up a little bit again but that would be something where back then you didn’t have the reach yet to get the eyes of WWE on the talent over here. And then I was there at the right time when the European indies really came up again and then WWE looked at it and actually said hey there’s a lot of talent we can look at and I wasn’t the first out of that scene or bubble that made the jump but I think I was most likely the guy made the biggest impact I never made a jump from that scene and that leads to kicking the door open for other guys.”

Gunther competed in Japan and Westside Xtreme Wrestling (wXw) in Germany before WWE NXT UK. He later enjoyed a dominant reign as NXT UK Champion before the branch was eventually merged with NXT. 

Gunther’s main roster debut in 2022 was marked by his longest reign as Intercontinental Champion, a reign which spanned across 666 days. 

Since last year, he further built his reputation as ‘the career killer’ after he went on a spree of retiring wrestling veterans like Goldberg, John Cena and AJ Styles.

Finn Balor admits WWE promos still make him nervous, recalls Paul Heyman’s advice 

Finn Balor is not fond of wrestling promos and he admitted that years of focusing on in-ring capabilities left him uncomfortable on the mic. 

Speaking with Stephanie McMahon on What’s Your Story? Podcast which was taped before WrestleMania 42, Balor discussed his demeanor to not talk much. He reflected on honing his mic skills in WWE given his extensive background focused on wrestling. 

“That’s another thing that’s been really difficult for me in my career is that trash talking and I’m not willing to sacrifice my dignity to say these things that I don’t mean right, because, and again, I know it would be better. I feel like I got to this position being myself, so I shouldn’t change that ever. And I kind of, I started in England where it was mostly based on mat wrestling. And then I went to Japan and it was based on strong style wrestling. It was not promos.”

“The first time I actually had to do a promo was when I came to NXT. And I remember being so nervous because the NXT tape and I had to come out and say ‘I’m Finn Balor and I’m the future.’ And I remember being so nervous having to remember that line because that becomes acting when I’m wrestling, I’m not acting right.I’m in flow. I’m just going with my emotions, following what I believe is right in my heart to do. But as soon as the speaking part started, that was a real learning curve.”

Balor expressed his improvement on promos during his nearly 12 year WWE run. He credited Paul Heyman’s advice on bettering his mic skills. 

“And one thing I’ve kind of only started to learn recently, and I’ll credit Paul Heyman with this, because he said you got to treat your promos like your matches, like you’re not nervous going into your match. You don’t know every move you’re going to do. You’re just flowing and you’re there and you’re in that state. But your promos, you’re trying to memorize every word.That’s not how you execute your matches.That’s not how you should execute your promos. So recently I’ve kind of been taking that more on board.”

Balor had built up a wrestling career prominently at NJPW before signing with WWE to compete on their NXT brand in 2014. A couple of years later he was moved to the main roster where he became the inaugural Universal Champion. However, he was forced to relinquish the title barely a day later due to a shoulder injury.

Balor was associated with The Judgment Day from 2022 until February this year. The group double crossed him for not assisting the team with their collective goals.  He also competed twice for the World Heavyweight Championship earlier this year. 

Rousey vs Carano Odds on Fight Week

The market is in near-total agreement for MVP’s first MMA event: Ronda Rousey wins, probably in round one, probably by submission, and the only real variable is by how much. The variance between books is so narrow it tells you the market has almost no uncertainty about the result.

Rousey’s price ranges from 1/7 (shortest quote on the board) to 2/11 (the majority position), translating to an implied win probability of roughly 85-88%. Carano sits at 4/1 with most books (drifting out to 421/100 on one major one in the UK), an implied probability of 19-22% before the bookmaker’s margin is stripped out.

Win market across 24 bookmakers

OutcomeBest priceMost commonImplied probability
Ronda Rousey1/72/1185-88%
Gina Carano421/100 (exchange)4/119-22%

Round odds tell the real story

The where-and-when market is more revealing than the straight winner. Books have priced Round 1 as the favorite by a long way, with Rousey-by-Round-1 alone implying a 47.6% chance she finishes the fight inside the first five minutes.

OutcomeOddsImplied probability
Rousey by Round 111/1047.6%
Rousey by Round 224/517.2%
Rousey by Round 311/18.3%
Rousey by Round 420/14.8%
Rousey by Round 535/12.8%
Rousey by decision14/16.7%
Carano by Round 112/17.7%
Carano by Round 219/15.0%
Carano by Round 328/13.4%
Carano by Round 445/12.2%
Carano by Round 566/11.5%
Carano by decision25/13.8%
Draw100/11.0%

Combine the two Round 1 outcomes and the market is signaling roughly a 55% chance the fight ends inside the opening five minutes, by either fighter. That’s an extraordinary number for a 145lb bout and reflects the punching power of Carano, the finishing rate of Rousey, and a shared profile of two fighters with no recent gas tank to fall back on.

Round group market

OutcomeOddsImplied probability
Rousey wins Round 1-33/1076.9%
Carano wins Round 1-35/116.7%
Rousey wins Round 4-decision7/112.5%
Carano wins Round 4-decision13/17.1%

The 3/10 quote on Rousey finishing inside three rounds is the strongest single number on the page. Books are saying there’s roughly a 77% chance she wraps this up before the ‘championship’ rounds, and only a 12.5% chance she’s still working past round three.

What the market consensus actually means

Three statistical signals stand out. First, there’s no divergence on the winner, Rousey’s price has barely moved in fight week, and no book is trying to attract action by stretching her price. Second, the decision market is effectively dead: the combined “fight goes the distance” implied probability across both fighters is only around 10.5%. Third, Carano’s path to victory is priced almost entirely as a Round 1 puncher’s chance. Past the first horn her implied probability collapses below 5% per round, which is the bookmakers’ way of saying she lands early, or she doesn’t land at all.

Rousey vs Carano Predictions: MVP MMA 1 Main Event

I think Ronda Rousey wins this, but it all depends on cage rust and where she is mentally. The market has her at -650 across major books, and I’d say that’s about right…maybe even a tad too low. My pick is Rousey winning by first-round armbar inside 90 seconds, but I’m not THAT confident.

Rousey averaged 4.8 submission attempts per 15 minutes in the UFC, the highest figure in women’s bantamweight history (via UFCStats). Her average fight time across 12 pro bouts is 3 minutes and 5 seconds. Eleven of her 12 wins are finishes, most by armbar. Carano has never been submitted in a pro MMA bout, but her last pro fight was way back in 2009, so I think that record potentially gets busted this weekend if Rousey comes in like the fighter she was in her prime (which isn’t a guarantee at all).

Rousey vs Carano Career stats compared

StatRouseyCarano
Record12-27-1
Wins by submission91
Wins by KO/TKO33
Wins by decision03
Sig. strikes landed/min4.174.50
Sig. strike accuracy52%47%
Sig. strikes absorbed/min4.142.66
Sig. strike defense44%64%
Takedown avg / 15 min6.261.24
Takedown accuracy68%66%
Takedown defense50%85%
Sub. attempts / 15 min4.81.6
Last fightDec 30, 2016 (KO loss, Nunes, R1 0:48)Aug 15, 2009 (TKO loss, Cyborg, R1 4:59)
Age at fight night3944
Height5’7″5’8″
Layoff~9.5 years~16.5 years

How Ronda Rousey wins this

Rousey closes the distance, ties up in the clinch, throws Carano with a hip toss or harai goshi, takes side control and isolates the arm. That’s been her template since 2011, and nothing on Carano’s resume suggests she is going to be able to stop it here.

Carano’s takedown defense was never tested against a truly elite level grappler (Cyborg didn’t need to wrestle her). Against an Olympic-level judoka who’s been drilling armbars for 20 years, a 16-year layoff isn’t going to do her any favors.

How Gina Carano wins this

The case for Carano, and there is a slight one, rests on Rousey’s chin and where she is mentally. Two of her last three fights ended with her unconscious: Holly Holm head-kicked her in 59 seconds of round two and Amanda Nunes obliterated her in 48 seconds. Carano hits hard, is naturally bigger at 145, and only needs one clean right hand to rock Rousey, so there’s a chance it happens.

My prediction

As I’ve already said, I can see Rousey by armbar, round one, inside 90 seconds. If Carano is able to survive the opening five minutes, the whole shape of the fight changes. Rousey’s gas tank after nine years out is the real unknown here, and Carano’s striking volume could start to work in her favor if Rousey starts to slow down. Having said that, if Rousey is where she needs to be from a confidence standpoint…I don’t see this fight reaching round two.

The honest weakness in my pick here is cage rust and the weight of the event on both fighters. Both women are deep into their layoffs, and timing under cage lights is always the first thing to go. If Rousey’s grip slips on that first armbar attempt, then it affects her confidence and the mental game starts to work against her.