Fight Game: Does CM Punk vs. Roman Reigns feel big enough yet?

John LaRocca and I return with a brand-new Fight Game to discuss some of the most interesting topics in pro wrestling.

We give out our thumbs up and thumbs down before talking about Brian “Road Dogg” James resigning from WWE creative, David Finlay’s AEW debut and why he didn’t choose WWE, and whether or not CM Punk vs. Roman Reigns is cooking yet.

We finish up the show with our new Observe This segment talking about stories from Dave Meltzer’s 1985 Observer Book. We cover the infamous 20/20 segment with John Stossel about whether wrestling was fake or not and give Dave’s thoughts at the time.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Joe Hendry applying lessons from CM Punk, John Cena as NXT Champion

During his NXT Championship reign, Joe Hendry is applying lessons he’s learned from CM Punk and John Cena.

Hendry told The Takedown on SI that elevating the NXT Championship and helping to elevate NXT as a brand is the major objective he has for his title reign. He is keeping a close eye on business metrics like live attendance and TV ratings, which is a habit Hendry picked up by seeing top guys like Punk and Cena do the same.

“It’s a huge responsibility. Being the champion is a rare privilege,” Hendry said. “And when you are the champion, there is now pressure on your shoulder to try and help elevate the ticket sales. You need to be aware of ratings. You need to be aware of locker room morale. You need to try and lead by example. There’s a lot of pressure. But like I said, I’ve spent a lot of time at the Performance Center. I’m really, really enjoying the training, and I feel like we’ve got a real team environment down there. We’re divided into different groups, and I feel like my group is just — we’re so motivated, the roster is hungry, and it’s an exciting time. So to be the one that gets to wear this championship and spearhead the brand right now, it’s a huge honor and it’s a responsibility that I take very seriously. Every championship title reign has a story, and I want the story to be that I was able to elevate the championship and help elevate the brand…

“Anytime I get to a live event, my first question is to ask, ‘Where are we at with the draw? Where were we last time?’ And I’ve learned that from, CM Punk does that, John Cena did that, all the top talents did that. So I’ve tried to learn as much as I can from these guys. I’ve been fortunate enough to spend time with these guys and learn from them. And that is one thing I’ve noticed, is that they’re very hands-on with the stats and knowing what they are. And, yes, it’s pressure, but in this game pressure is a privilege.”

Cena, Punk, and Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson are some of Hendry’s biggest insipirations. He hasn’t gotten the chance to meet Johnson yet, but Hendry did work with Johnson’s daughter Simone (Ava) when she was the NXT general manager.

“I was happy to let her know that it was her dad that inspired me to get into the business, so we had a really nice conversation about that,” Hendry told The Takedown on SI. “I absolutely wish her the best. I think she was doing an awesome job. We had some great moments on TV. So whatever’s next, I wish her the absolute best. And it was fun working with her.”

Hendry is defending the NXT Championship against Ricky Saints at Vengeance Day this Saturday. On NXT last night, Hendry stood tall heading into the PLE.

WWE Raw live results: Elimination Chamber fallout

Date: March 2, 2026
Location: Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, IN

The Big Takeaway —

CM Punk and Roman Reigns had their latest war of words. Reigns got the last word in their first encounter, while Punk got it here. After Reigns threatened to retire Punk, Punk threatened to bury Reigns next to his father. 

Also, Penta won the Intercontinental Championship. 

**********

Show Recap — 

There was a full recap video of all four matches at Elimination Chamber, plus the debut of Danhausen (no crowd reaction included, of course).

CM Punk and AJ Lee, Judgment Day (minus Finn Bálor), and Gunther arrived at the arena. 

They abruptly cut to Paul Heyman as he led Logan Paul and Austin Theory to the ring. Heyman wasn’t interested in starting the show the same way as always. So he gave us a talking segment. Heyman said, “I hate to piss on everyone’s parade, but excuse me while I whip this out. We are here to talk about Seth freakin’ Rollins.” 

Heyman hated Rollins and his song. He said Rollins stole the credit for co-founding the Vision. He stole the credit for co-founding the Shield. He didn’t deserve credit for the Shield, but that wasn’t Heyman’s problem. Rollins stole the Elimination Chamber and the WrestleMania main event from Logan Paul. 

Heyman said Rollins thieved oxygen from every human being on the planet that was worthy of living, and Mr. Lynch (Rollins) was not one of them. They planned on stomping Rollins’ ass the next time he stepped into a ring. That wasn’t a spoiler—that was a personal guarantee from the Vision. 

Theory grabbed the mic to cut a useless promo. Fans drowned him out with “You suck” chants, and he responded, “Rollins ain’t in the ring right now, so you can’t chant that,” which is not a good comeback. Paul was pissed because he had eliminated three people in the Chamber, and the last person to do that was Brock Lesnar. 

Paul called out Rollins, but he got Adam Pearce, who was not interested in hearing them complain. Pearce also accused them of taking out Jey Uso last week. Heyman didn’t appreciate that. Heyman remarked about Rollins, but Pearce said he would deal with Rollins personally because he wasn’t cleared to compete. 

If you thought they were done with the masked men, you were wrong. Three different masked men appeared in the crowd, and they were chased away by the two idiots, Theory and Paul, as well as Pearce’s security. 

That left Heyman alone in the ring. A fourth masked man appeared in the aisle, now abandoned by Pearce, who also fell for Rollins’ trick. Heyman pleaded with him as a fifth masked man appeared behind Heyman. 

Rollins unmasked and hit Heyman in the back with a steel chair (like he did to Roman Reigns). Rollins curb stomped Heyman as the crowd went wild. Rollins left through the crowd as medical staff checked on Heyman. 

Heyman was dragged away during a break, and his face was covered in fake blood. After the break, Theory and Paul ran to check on Heyman as he was being loaded into an ambulance. Paul left to get their car while Theory remained. 

Theory wanted the ambulance to leave, but it didn’t. Theory checked on an SUV that pulled up, thinking it was Paul, but it was actually Jimmy Uso. Jimmy punched Theory and tossed him into some equipment boxes. Jimmy checked on the ambulance driver, who was LA Knight. Knight said he’d take great care of Heyman, and he drove off. 

********

Gunther vs. Dragon Lee

Dragon Lee attacked Gunther from behind during his entrance. He blindsided Gunther a few weeks ago, got beaten up, and it happened again here. Gunther fought him off and gave him a back body drop into the timekeeper’s area. 

The match started during a break, and Gunther dominated throughout the break, when they came back from break, and through a second break. (Dragon got a brief flash of offence, but Gunther blocked his dive attempt and cut him down with a chop.) 

Dragon fired back in time from them to return from break. He hit an enziguri and a low dropkick, but Gunther cut him off with a powerslam and hit two consecutive powerbombs. Gunther covered Lee and had it won, but lifted him up at the two count. 

Gunther rolled Lee outside the ring before powerbombing him into the edge of the ring and onto the announce table. Gunther could have taken a count-out win, but he left the ring to try another powerbomb, but Lee countered into a sunset flip. Lee followed with a suicide dive and Operation Dragon. 

Lee almost won by count-out, but Gunther slipped back in at nine. Lee managed to drop Gunther with a clothesline (after trying unsuccessfully a few times earlier). 

Lee fired up and went for Operation Dragon again, but Gunther caught him in a sleeper. As they started going down to the mat, Gunther ripped Lee’s mask off (and you could see his face for a split second). Lee immediately tapped out as a result. 

Match result: Gunther defeated Dragon Lee (14:19)

This was pretty fun by the end. Dragon Lee firing back after getting powerbombed on the apron and the table was a bit much, though. The crowd was into this, and it already seems like a much better crowd than they’ve had the past few weeks. 

********

Asuka admonished Kairi Sane backstage until Sane was stunned into silence. AJ Lee walked by and checked on Sane, who was frozen and staring out into space until Asuka called her away. AJ made her way to the ring. 

AJ Lee segment 

Lee said she wasn’t sure how they got here. She returned to snatch the pretty hair off Becky Lynch’s big-ass head, but she wound up snatching her title. There was a modest, “You deserve it” chant. 

She said the fans thought she could still go. They believed in her and had her back for a decade. They remembered her when some people wished that they would forget. They made her believe that she could still fight the very best. 

That’s exactly what Lynch was. She was the best of the best, but Lee beat her. Lynch gave her the fight of her life—and she had the scars to prove it—but she proved to herself she could still be championship material. She was still who she thought she was. But now that “Becky boo-boo” was behind her, WrestleMania was ahead of her. 

She wanted to be a fighting champion. It’s been 12 years since she won a title, and she wouldn’t waste any time. She called on anyone who wanted a shot because she planned on defending the Intercontinental Championship the next time she stepped into the ring. 

********

The Original El Grande Americano (Chad Gable) wished Penta luck on his IC title match, but said he’d be first in line for a title match if he won. Penta was cool with this. 

El Grande Americano (Ludwig Kaiser) and the other two confronted the Original after Penta left. Kaiser referenced their upcoming match on the next AAA show on March 14th. Gable wanted to fight tonight, but would gladly face Bravo or Rayo instead. 

Liv Morgan promo 

Liv Morgan cut a pre-taped promo on Stephanie Vaquer. She said Vaquer didn’t know anything about her or her struggles. But Vaquer was right about her being privileged. She got signed to WWE when she was 20 years old, while Vaquer was rejected in her first tryout. She had the best of the best, while Vaquer grew up with mud hut wrestling in flea-infested rings. That all happened because Morgan was a star. 

Morgan didn’t dwell on her past as Vaquer did. Despite everything that’s happened, she sees some of herself in Vaquer. She was hard-working, talented, and a great champion. So Morgan would give her something at WrestleMania—the privilege of facing the Liv Morgan. 

********

Original El Grande Americano vs. Rayo Americano (w/ El Grande Americano & Bravo Americano) 

Gable Americano had control until a Kaiser Americano distraction allowed Rayo to hit a dive and take control through a break. Gable fought back in time for them to return from break. Gable tried ripping off the masks of Bravo and Rayo, but the distractions allowed Kaiser to hit a headbutt. Rayo followed with a running headbutt and a diving headbutt for a nearfall. 

More distractions and more interference led to a schoolboy and nearfall for Bravo. Gable came back with a Chaos Theory suplex for the pinfall win. 

Match result: Original El Grande Americano defeated Rayo Americano (10:10) 

It’s about time they move on from this gimmick for Gable. I know Kaiser has a good thing going in AAA, but the American crowds aren’t into this anymore, and Gable in particular feels miscast. Not to mention the other two guys. 

********

Morgan and Raquel Rodriguez played darts backstage. Morgan suggested that Rodriguez challenge AJ Lee for the IC title, win the belt, and go into Mania as champion. Rodriguez liked that idea (and acted like she never thought of this). 

Dominik Mysterio was stressed out about his title defence. JD McDonagh said they had his back. Finn Bálor entered the room. He wasn’t happy about the result on Saturday, but he was at peace with it. 

Dom said they could now focus on his title match. Bálor said this was something he had to do on his own, like he said last week. Dom simply meant that he wanted to celebrate with them post-match. Bálor said they could count on him to celebrate together.

******* 

Rusev and Oba Femi segment 

After a clip of Oba Femi beating The Miz on SmackDown, Rusev marched out through the crowd and stood on the announce desk. Rusev was tired of hearing about Femi and called him out for a fight right now. 

Femi entered the ring and told Rusev to join him. They traded right hands, and Femi got the better of it, but Rusev avoided a chokeslam and hit consecutive kicks. Femi dropped him with a chokeslam anyway and clotheslined him out of the ring. 

********

Bayley and Lyra Valkyria spoke backstage. They had one of those conversations that makes you wonder if they ever talk outside of the show. Bayley was frustrated that they both missed out on the Chamber, and she felt stuck. 

Valkyria didn’t want to see Bayley miss Mania again. She suggested that Bayley go after AJ Lee and her title. Like Rodriguez earlier, Bayley somehow never thought of this idea. Valkyria told Bayley to go talk to Pearce and get a title match. Bayley was about to leave, but she recalled costing Valkyria her IC shot with Lynch, so she invited Valkyria to join her. 

Bayley and Valkyria walked to Pearce’s office, which happened to be around the corner. Iyo Sky left his office the moment they arrived, and she was not in a good mood. 

******** 

Jimmy Uso vs. Austin Theory

This ended quickly by DQ. Jimmy set up Theory for a splash through the table, but turned his attention to Paul, who slipped into the ring. Jimmy attacked Paul as the referee watched. Theory tried to save Paul but was tackled by Jimmy, and the referee finally called for a DQ when Paul attacked Jimmy from behind. 

— The Vision hammered away on Jimmy until Jey Uso’s music hit. Jey appeared from behind (like Rollins earlier) and slid a crutch to Jimmy. They attacked Paul and Theory with crutches and laid out Theory with a 1D. 

Match result: Jimmy Uso defeated Austin Theory via disqualification (2:41)

They don’t want Theory to lose, but they’re afraid to have him beat anybody. 

********

Danhausen approached Pearce backstage. (He only received a modest pop, but at least he wasn’t booed.) Danhausen said he debuted to thunderous applause, so he had a list of demands written on a napkin. He wanted a blimp, his face on all the trucks, a Hall of Fame induction this year, a personal assistant, and a Triple H pointing photo. Pearce asked why the napkin was soggy. Danhausen said it fell in the toilet. 

Judgment Day walked by, and Pearce took the opportunity to bail so they could deal with Danhausen instead. Danhausan was happy to see them, but didn’t know McDonagh’s name. Danhausen also liked the look of Dom’s IC title belt. 

Danhausen cursed Dom, and they laughed him off. But when they turned their attention back to Danhausen, he was gone. 

********

Rhea Ripley interview 

Jackie Redmond interviewed Rhea Ripley, accompanied by Iyo Sky, on the stage. Ripley said it’s been a whirlwind couple of days. Losing the tag titles on SmackDown sucked. It especially sucked because Sky meant a lot to her, including being her best friend. Ripley thanked her for always being there for her and pulling her out of a dark situation. 

Sky said Ripley did the same for her. Sky said Ripley won the Chamber and showed everyone why Mami was always on top. Sky told Ripley she would be fine on Raw and told Ripley to go handle her business and win the title at WrestleMania. They hugged. (In fact, they held each other the entire segment until the end.) Ripley said she would win the title for Sky. 

Ripley told Sky to hold down Raw because she was headed to SmackDown on Friday to see Jade Cargill face-to-face, and at WrestleMania, she would leave as champion. Sky leaped into Ripley’s arms. 

********

Next week on Raw in Seattle: 

  • Women’s Intercontinental Championship #1 Contender’s Gauntlet Match: IYO SKY, Lyra Valkyria, Bayley, Raquel Rodriguez, Asuka and Ivy Nile 
  • Oba Femi vs. Rusev 

******** 

Intercontinental Championship: Dominik Mysterio (c) (w/ Finn Bálor & JD McDonagh) vs. Penta

Penta hit a flip dive, and they went to break one minute into the match. (I wish I kept track of how many times that’s happened in a Penta match.) Bálor and McDonagh watched peacefully while seated at ringside. Penta took too much time staring them down, which allowed Dom to take over. Even Michael Cole noted this was Penta’s own fault. 

Dom cut off Penta’s comeback attempt after a break and hit an Edge-o-matic. (Cole had a new name for it, but I’m not sure what he said.) Dom went for three amigos, but Penta countered the last suplex into one of his own. Dom cut him off again, this time with a DDT onto the apron. After Dom used a dive to take out Penta outside the ring, Dom also hit a running crossbody, sending them both over the barricade and into the timekeeper’s area. (Cole said Penta was once again staring over at Bálor and JD as this happened.) 

During a break, Dom tied Penta’s mask to the bottom rope and stomped away at him. (For whatever reason, they always seem to do this spot to Penta, and sometimes Dargon Lee, only during commercial breaks. It’s happened multiple times.) 

Penta fought back in time for them to return from break (again). Penta hit a superkick with Dom trapped upside down in the corner, followed by a backstabber for two. Penta went for a Destroyer, but Dom countered into a Michinoku Driver for two. 

Dom went for a frog splash, but Penta blocked it and snapped his arm, followed by a Penta Driver for a close nearfall. A frustrated Penta repeatedly booted Dom in the corner until the referee made him stop. Penta tried driving Dom into the corner, but Dom ducked, and Penta went shoulder-first into the post. 

Penta sold like he was hurt, so the ref checked on him as Dom told McDonagh to grab the ring bell hammer. McDonagh grabbed it, but Bálor stopped him, and the fans cheered. As McDonagh and Bálor argued, Penta wiped them out with a dive. 

Back in the ring, Penta set up a Destroyer, but Dom tripped him onto the middle rope. However, Penta ducked a 619 and hit a Canadian Destroyer for the pinfall win. Penta is the new champion. The crowd was happy. 

— Penta posed with his new belt as fireworks went off. 

Match result: Penta defeated Dominik Mysterio (16:24)

This was the right call here. Penta was long overdue for a win like this, and frankly, Dom isn’t much of a champion. 

******** 

Roman Reigns and CM Punk main event segment 

Roman Reigns entered. He told Indianapolis to acknowledge him. They did. Before he could say anything else, CM Punk entered. They both got big reactions. 

Punk asked why Reigns why he was mean-mugging him. Punk was just feeding his ego and acknowledging him. Punk hoped Reigns would say more than “acknowledge me” because they pay a lot of money for one of Reigns’ dates, and that could’ve been a tweet. 

Reigns asked “Phil” if his tweet (following Elimination Chamber) hurt his feelings because, for a champion, Punk had thin skin. 

Punk said the tweet didn’t hurt his feelings. He didn’t care what people tweeted. He didn’t hold grudges about what people said about him on podcasts (like Reigns did). Reigns’ tweet was accurate, though, because Punk was tired. It was a good thing Punk had bags under his eyes because he had to carry Reigns’ bullshit all the way to WrestleMania. 

Punk said they had history here in Indianapolis. This was where the Shield debuted and where Punk brought him to the dance. Reigns corrected him because Punk only brought in the other two, not him. 

Punk said they remembered things differently. But if Punk didn’t pick him, Reigns certainly picked Punk for the main event of WrestleMania. If you ask the fans, they’d tell you he (Punk) already won. The last time they were face-to-face, Reigns told him that he hated him. Now, Punk said, “I got you right where I want you. I made you this emotional lady.” (An odd thing to say, but not the first time Punk’s had a line like that.) Punk said he was in Reigns’ head—as empty as it was. 

Reigns reiterated that he hated Phil. But if he didn’t have the title, Phil wouldn’t even be on his radar. Reigns said we brought Phil back to entertain the 30- to 40-year-old virgins who lived with their parents. To sell a few t-shirts and maybe draw a house in Chicago. But not to be the champion. That was too much responsibility and power for Punk. It was above his paygrade. 

Reigns said we can’t trust Phil because he is a liar. He lied to the people. He has them thinking that he was having a good time, that he was a leader, that he was smiling as he made every town, hanging out with his cousins (the Usos). But we knew the truth. His cousins told him all about Phil’s bitching and moaning. He wasn’t CM Punk—he was just a punk-ass bitch. 

Reigns would end Punk’s backup plan (his WWE return) at WrestleMania. After taking his title, Reigns would put him on a John Cena retirement tour. They would make as much money off Punk as they could until they sent him to NXT, where Punk would teach the next generation until they sent them to the main roster so the Tribal Chief could snatch everyone of them. 

Reigns was about to leave, but Punk pulled him back. Punk said they weren’t done. Punk wondered who Reigns meant when he kept saying “we” because he was all alone. Alone on his bus, alone in his room. His cousins weren’t with him. The Shield couldn’t help him. The wiseman was gone because Punk took him away. This all illustrated Reigns’ entire career: “You chasing me.” 

Punk was the champion, and Reigns was in the main event because Punk was in the main event. This was Punk’s show. He was in the locker room and hanging out with the Usos while Reigns was alone. Reigns could hate him all he wanted, but Reigns would not disrespect him. 

Punk took particular offence to Reigns saying he would retire him. Because now, Punk said, he wouldn’t just beat Reigns at Mania, he’d bury him. “And then you won’t be all alone anymore because I’m going to bury you next to your father.” 

Punk slammed the mic down and left as Reigns was left speechless.

CM Punk and AJ Lee announced for WWE Raw

WWE Raw General Manager Adam Pearce has announced the lineup for Monday’s show.

In a video posted to social media on Sunday, Pearce revealed that both the World Heavyweight Champion CM Punk and Women’s Intercontinental Champion AJ Lee will appear, fresh off their victories at Elimination Chamber.

Punk’s WrestleMania opponent, Roman Reigns, is already confirmed for Raw.

“Roman and Punk in the building at the same time. It’s live TV. What the hell could possibly go wrong? Tune in to find out,” Pearce said.

Pearce also said he will address the Seth Rollins situation after Rollins interfered in the men’s Elimination Chamber match at Saturday’s PLE in Chicago.

Monday’s episode of WWE Raw takes place at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. As of press time for Friday’s edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, 7,436 tickets had been distributed for the show.

The updated lineup is below:

WWE Raw lineup for March 2, 2026:

  • Roman Reigns returns
  • Intercontinental title: Dominik Mysterio defends against Penta
  • Gunther vs. Dragon Lee
  • World Heavyweight Champion CM Punk will appear live
  • WWE Women’s Intercontinental Champion AJ Lee will appear live
  • Raw General Manager Adam Pearce to address the Seth Rollins situation

CM Punk discusses Chicago Bulls-inspired entrance at WWE Elimination Chamber

CM Punk discussed the significance of his ring entrance at the United Center during the WWE Elimination Chamber post-show.

Before Punk’s theme music played and he walked through the curtain for his match against Finn Balor, he was shown backstage as “Sirius” by The Alan Parsons Project played throughout the arena. The song was famously used for the Chicago Bulls’ starting lineup introductions during the Michael Jordan era. The PA announcer also gave Punk a Bulls-style introduction before “Cult of Personality” hit.

Punk said:

“That song, Alan Parsons Project, obviously has a connection with the United Center being the intro for the Bulls dynasty. There’s a statue of a man named Michael Jordan right over there at the vestibule. It was also Ricky Steamboat’s entrance for a lot of his time here in WWE.”

“It’s a magical song ladies and gentleman and I got goosebumps just thinking about it and talking about it. But the best part about that entrance are these people behind me,” Punk said while motioning at the live crowd attending the post-show. “And when I say the people behind me, I mean the entirety of the city of Chicago, because they are always behind me.”

When asked about Punk’s association with his hometown, he responded:

“I am one of them so it is always humbling to know that I come from this city, and I have watched such megastars and mega athletes like Michael Jordan, Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman, Jeremy Roenick, Ed Belfour, Jonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Seabrook, Duncan Keith, the ’85 Bears. If you put me on a list with any of them, no matter how low on that list, I’m still on the list. Chicago, man, Chicago is the city that works.”

The full WWE Elimination Chamber post-show is available below. The video is cued to Punk’s comments.

WOR: Elimination Chamber, New Japan, Collision, news!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including a full recap of Elimination Chamber, the New Japan PPV from Friday night, Collision, Ricky Steamboat, ratings, CMLL and UFC notes, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: Elimination Chamber fallout & recap
28:05: NJPW New Beginning USA recap
40:32: Ricky Steamboat turns 73, AEW Dynamite rating
46:50: Johnny Consejo shaved bald in Arena Mexico, Brodie Lee Jr. challenging Joey Janela for Spring Break X
52:06: UFC notes, RAF incident
58:07: AEW Collision report

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CM Punk posts risque photo with WWE title belts following Elimination Chamber

CM Punk recently celebrated his and his wife’s title wins at WWE Elimination Chamber with a risque photo.

On Saturday, February 28, AJ Lee defeated Becky Lynch to win the WWE Women’s Intercontinental title. Shortly after, Punk defeated Finn Balor to retain his World Heavyweight Championship.

Celebrating the couple’s PLE win, Punk soon uploaded a risque and NSFW photo on social media celebrating the victorious night.

Taking a dig at Seth Rollins and Lynch’s risque title celebration from years ago, where Rollins had covered his lower region with the Universal title, and Lynch used two of her Women’s titles to cover her top and lower region. Reflecting on it, Punk performed something similar. He used his World title to cover his lower groin region, while his wife’s Intercontinental title to cover his chest.

The photo immediately went viral with several WWE stars, including Lee, commenting. Lee wrote, “He is my emergency contact.” While Rhea Ripley commented, “I’m f***in dead!” AEW’s Johnny TV also wrote, “love this!”

Punk is now scheduled to face Roman Reigns in the main event of WWE WrestleMania 42.

CM Punk names his least favorite wrestling trope

CM Punk doesn’t have any plans to team up with Roman Reigns on the road to WrestleMania 42.

Ahead of Elimination Chamber in his hometown of Chicago, Punk made an appearance on The Morning Mosh Pit radio show. When asked to name one wrestling trope he would ban, Punk pointed to the overdone storyline of whether rivals will be able to form a tag team and get on the same page. Punk said he and Reigns will not be attempting to get along at any point over the next several weeks.

“How about the ‘can the guys that are wrestling form a tag team and get along?’ On the road to, say, WrestleMania. I’m not trying to tag with Roman over the next eight weeks. ‘Can they coexist?’ Man, shut up,” Punk said. “The answer is no, and I’ll see you in Las Vegas.”

The Punk vs. Reigns match will officially become locked in for WrestleMania if Punk retains his World Heavyweight Championship against Finn Balor at Elimination Chamber. WrestleMania is being held at Allegiant Stadium in Vegas on Saturday, April 18 and Sunday, April 19.

Punk told The Morning Mosh Pit that he does not know the match order for Saturday’s PLE yet. Another trope he does not like is always needing to have one of the Elimination Chamber matches open the card and the other close it. Punk thinks either his match against Balor or his wife AJ Lee vs. Becky Lynch would be good choices to open the night. Punk joked that, at this point in his career, the only way he’s throwing his weight around backstage is to go on first.

“People often talk about wrestling being political and like people throwing their weight around. ‘Oh, I gotta win, I gotta main event, this, this, that.’ I’m at the stage where if I do have any kind of political power, I’m trying to use it to wrestle first,” he said.

The United Center in Chicago is hosting Saturday’s event. Punk noted that, outside of his match, he plans on watching as much of the show as he can from the stands so he can feel the crowd.

CM Punk stars in WWE Elimination Chamber opening video

Chicago native CM Punk stars in the opening video for WWE Elimination Chamber 2026.

On Saturday, WWE heads to the United Center in Chicago for one of the last major stops on the road to WrestleMania. Punk has a World Heavyweight Championship defense against Finn Balor at the PLE — and he’ll also be featured at the start of the broadcast in the cold open. WWE uploaded the Chicago-themed video to its social media channels today:

“People ask me, ‘Does pressure bother you?’ Pressure feels like this city I grew up in,” Punk says. “Like the walls that shake when the trains go by, the wind that hits you head on. Growing up here, you learn how to stay calm when it’s loud. To think straight when everything is closing in. That’s why the Chamber never rattled me. Whether it’s one-on-one on the outside or a battle on the inside, when that door slams shut and the world goes quiet, everyone feels that weight. Getting through it isn’t a win, it’s the price for chasing what matters most. So all this pressure? Feels like home.”

If Punk retains against Balor, he’ll head to WrestleMania 42 to defend the World Heavyweight Championship against Roman Reigns.

AJ Lee could add gold to the Punk family at Elimination Chamber, where she’s challenging Becky Lynch for the Women’s Intercontinental Championship. It’s Lee’s first singles match in more than a decade and only the third time she’s wrestled since coming out of retirement in 2025.

The United Center is the home of the NBA’s Chicago Bulls and NHL’s Chicago Blackhawks. Elimination Chamber marks the first WWE PLE/PPV to be held at the venue since 1994. Since then, WWE’s major Chicago-area shows have typically been held at Allstate Arena in nearby Rosemont, Illinois.

With a start time of 7 p.m. Eastern, Elimination Chamber will stream live on the ESPN app in the United States and on Netflix internationally. Here is the announced card:

WWE Elimination Chamber 2026 (Saturday, February 28) —

  • Men’s Elimination Chamber match: Cody Rhodes vs. Randy Orton vs. Je’Von Evans vs. Trick Williams vs. LA Knight vs. Jey Uso
  • Women’s Elimination Chamber match: Rhea Ripley vs. Asuka vs. Raquel Rodriguez vs. Tiffany Stratton vs. Alexa Bliss vs. Kiana James
  • World Heavyweight Champion CM Punk defends against Finn Balor
  • Women’s Intercontinental Champion Becky Lynch defends against AJ Lee

CM Punk reflects on fan support following Larry’s passing

CM Punk commented on the outpouring of support he has received since the passing of his dog Larry during a recent interview.

On Thursday, Punk appeared on ESPN to promote Saturday’s Elimination Chamber in his hometown of Chicago. During the interview, he was asked how much the fan support he has received since Larry’s passing has meant to him.

Punk answered:

“I haven’t been able to really kind of process or put into words the outpouring of support. Not just monetarily, although people donated a sick amount of money to PAWS locally. It’s going to help a lot of stray dogs, a lot of shelter rescue puppies, cats too. They do both.”

“For me, seeing the signs that people make and bring all over the world. I did a two-week European tour. We were in 10 different countries in like three weeks, and every show had a sign about Larry. Every show stateside has a sign about Larry.”

“People have written nice messages. They’ve given me gifts regarding Larry. It means a lot. It’s hard to put into words exactly everything it means. So if you want a pet, consider adopting instead of getting one of those expensive pure breeds.”

Punk announced on December 2, 2025, that Larry had passed away. In January, Punk partnered with PAWS Chicago, the no-kill shelter where he rescued Larry, for a fundraising campaign that raised $51,100.

The campaign was run through Piece Chicago, a local pizza restaurant that sold a specialty pizza named The Larry, designed by Punk, from January 8 through February 7. Proceeds from the pizza sales went to the shelter.

Up next, Punk will defend the World Heavyweight Championship against Finn Balor at the United Center in Chicago on Saturday.

His full interview with ESPN is available below, with the video queued to his comments about Larry.

CM Punk says Seth Rollins is one of the greatest superstars of the last decade

WWE World Champion CM Punk recently broke kayfabe to heap praise on one of his arch rivals, Seth Rollins, calling him one of the greatest superstars of the last decade.

Recently appearing on ESPN’s Unsportsmanlike with his wife, AJ Lee, Punk opened up on the emergence and rise of indie wrestlers in WWE before citing his name as an example.

Gosh, I’m conflicted when I talk about this stuff because then people will point and say, ‘oh, you’re egotistical, you’re this, you’re that.’ The truth of the matter is, the first guy through the wall gets bloodied. I was the first guy through the wall. Independent wrestling was looked down upon. It was the land of the giants. I have to the casual observer some pretty ridiculous tattoos, but like everything else, tattoos are subjective. I wasn’t supposed to make it as far as I did, but I would not be denied,” Punk said.

There are many more men and women that are just like that, that they bet on themselves, they believe in themselves, but they don’t have a look that fits a certain person’s idea of what a pro wrestler is. And that was definitely me. So being able to try to always reach down and pull up the next generation, or you know, I’m not pulling the ladder up. I’m trying to help other people get here,” he added.

Punk continued and added Rollins’ name as another example, who, despite the odds, made it big in WWE.

I think Seth Rollins is a great example of that. You know, he’s a guy that fit the same mold as I did. He didn’t have the size. You wouldn’t look at him and be like, oh yeah, he’s a world champion. And now he’s multiple time, you know, heavyweight champion. And one of the, it pains me to say it, but he’s one of the greatest superstars over the last 10, 12 years.”

Before joining WWE in 2010, Rollins wrestled on the independent circuit and Ring of Honor (ROH) from 2004 to 2010, where he won multiple titles, including the ROH World Championship.

CM Punk honors Larry on anniversary of rescue from shelter

CM Punk honored his dog Larry on the 10-year anniversary of rescuing him from a shelter.

On Friday, Punk shared a message on Instagram along with several photos of himself and Larry.

He wrote:

“Happy gotcha day, or birthday. Today is ten years since we rescued Larry from @pawschicago and a good excuse to post these pics. That first one is such a favorite of mine. We tried to bring him everywhere and experience everything. Thank you to everyone who made a sign for him these last months. Thank you to all who bought some @piecechicago pizza in his name. Please consider adopting if you want a dog, and be careful in the streets, you never know who is lurking behind the hedges. Larry forever.”

Punk announced on December 2, 2025, that Larry had passed away.

Earlier this year, Punk partnered with PAWS Chicago, the no-kill shelter where he and AJ Lee rescued Larry, on a fundraising campaign alongside pizza restaurant Piece Chicago. From January 8 through February 7, Piece Chicago sold a pizza named “The Larry,” with proceeds benefiting the shelter. The campaign raised $51,100.

Punk will return to Chicago later this month. He and AJ Lee are scheduled to wrestle at WWE Elimination Chamber on Saturday, February 28 at the United Center in Chicago.

Punk’s post is below:

CM Punk, Paul Heyman, Oba Femi respond to Tom Brady calling WWE ‘cute’

Several wrestlers have responded to Tom Brady’s recent comments.

Brady was a guest on Logan Paul’s Impaulsive podcast earlier this month and referred to Paul’s work in WWE as “cute.”

On Thursday, Sports Illustrated published a video featuring CM Punk, Paul Heyman, Drew McIntyre, Oba Femi and Tyler Breeze reacting to Brady’s remarks.

Heyman said:

“What’s Tom Brady done? He’s thrown a football across a field that was caught by Gronkowski. Gronkowski deserves the credit. Belichick and his girlfriend deserves the credit. But Tom Brady? Eh.”

Punk said:

“What’s wrong with cute? I’m cute, Tom.”

Femi said:

“For those who think it’s cute and it’s fluffy and it’s all sweet and stuff, so you can come and try, you can lace up some boots, and then let’s watch you puke.”

Brady’s comments to Paul came as the two were trash-talking about the upcoming Fanatics Flag Football Classic, which will be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on March 21, 2026. Paul will be participating in the game, and Brady said to him, “It’s cute. I love WWE. It’s very cute. But honestly, this is like real football. This is real competition.”

Video of Heyman, Punk, Femi and others reacting to Brady is available below.

CM Punk on Ronda Rousey’s MMA return: ‘We’re gonna find out if she’s still got it’

CM Punk shared his thoughts on the upcoming Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano fight during a recent interview.

While speaking with TalkSport, Punk was asked whether he feels Rousey still “has it” as she prepares for her first fight in nearly a decade.

Punk responded:

“I think it’s great. We’re gonna find out if she’s still got it. I think fighting at an older age, trust me, I am an expert on this. It’s not the easiest thing to do, but she’s fighting somebody who is age comparable, who also has had a long layoff. Both big names, both big superstars. I think people are gonna tune in to watch this, and I know I will.”

Rousey vs. Carano is set for Saturday, May 16, 2026, at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California. The event is being promoted by Jake Paul’s Most Valuable Promotions and will air live on Netflix.

Up next, Punk is scheduled to defend his World Heavyweight Championship against Finn Balor at Elimination Chamber on February 28 at the United Center in Chicago. He is then scheduled to face Roman Reigns at WWE WrestleMania 42.

Punk’s full interview with TalkSport is embedded below. The video is queued to his comments about Rousey vs. Carano.

Royce Keys shares how Cody Rhodes, CM Punk helped him after death of mother

Cody Rhodes and CM Punk helped Royce Keys get through a difficult time when his mother passed away in 2021.

All three of Rhodes, Punk, and Keys were with AEW at the time Keys’ mother passed away five years ago. On a new episode of Stephanie McMahon’s “What’s Your Story?” podcast, the former Powerhouse Hobbs detailed how he reached out to Rhodes when his mother was sick. Though Rhodes’ daughter had just been born, he dropped everything to check on Keys.

“I remember getting on the phone and I called Cody Rhodes to tell him, like, I don’t know what to do. I just got off the phone with my sister, my dad, my mom’s sister, my auntie Joy. And she went straight up to the hospital. And it’s just like, I guess maybe Cody thought I was talking about wrestling because I always bug him with wrestling,” Keys said. “And I’m like, ‘No, my mom is sick.’ He immediately dropped everything and called me. Like, he called me, he checked on me. I believe his daughter might have been a month old, and he still called me.”

Keys worked a match against Punk on AEW Rampage shortly after his mother’s death. Punk made sure to dedicate the moment to his mother and let Keys know that her presence was still there, even if she couldn’t be in the building physically.

“And I remember having a match with CM Punk a month after my mom died,” Keys said. “And he goes, ‘None of this sh*t matters. Your mom’s sitting front row there tonight.’ And after the match he pins me and he taps me on the chest. And, you know, my mom’s nickname was Nita. And he goes, ‘This was for Nita.’ And I just lost it.”

Keys has been through a lot of tragedy in his life, but he’s grateful to have been surrounded by love throughout it all. He’s also grateful to be raising amazing children, including his son Royce who his WWE name is inspired by.

In the environment Keys grew up in, being open about your struggles wasn’t encouraged. But he hopes that he can help other people by sharing his story. Keys also hopes that his deceased loved ones are proud of him for what he’s accomplished in wrestling.

“Everything that’s happened to me, whether it’s just like being shot, losing my mother, you know, I’ve had guns pulled on me, knives, like guns jam up in my face where I shouldn’t be here. All that has shaped me to be here,” Keys said. “And I think to myself, like, there’s somebody out there in this big world that if I tell them my story, it could help them.”

Keys spent nearly six years with AEW before arriving in WWE last month as an entrant in the 2026 Royal Rumble. His goal is to make his mark on WWE and become a Hall of Famer.