Big Show documentary to air on WWE Network after Smackville

A documentary on Big Show will be airing after WWE’s Smackville Network special.

The updated WWE Network schedule lists that “Rebuilding Big Show” will premiere at 10 p.m. Eastern time on Saturday, July 27. Here’s the description for the documentary: “Join Big Show as he reflects on his 25-year career in sports-entertainment while he recovers from a serious surgery and rehabilitation.”

Big Show was most recently on WWE television during his brief partnership with Cesaro and Sheamus last fall.

“Rebuilding Big Show” is listed in an hour-long time slot.

Smackville is also listed as being an hour long on the WWE Network. Kofi Kingston defending the WWE Championship against Samoa Joe and Dolph Ziggler in a triple threat match, Intercontinental Champion Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Finn Balor in a rematch from Extreme Rules, and a musical performance by Elias have been announced for the special.

Smackville is taking place at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee.

WWE announces Smackville Network special, two matches set

WWE has announced a new in-ring Network special for later this month.

“Smackville” will take place at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, Tennessee on Saturday, July 27 and will air live on the WWE Network. The event was previously scheduled as just being a house show.

Two matches have been confirmed for the special, and it will also feature a musical performance by Elias. Kofi Kingston will defend the WWE Championship against Samoa Joe and Dolph Ziggler in a triple threat match. Plus, Finn Balor will face Intercontinental Champion Shinsuke Nakamura in a rematch from Extreme Rules.

Kingston retained the WWE Championship against Joe at Extreme Rules this Sunday. He also retained against Ziggler at both Super ShowDown and Stomping Grounds.

Nakamura won the Intercontinental title from Balor on the Extreme Rules pre-show.

Smackville will begin on the WWE Network at 9 p.m. Eastern time on July 27. WWE hasn’t announced how long the special will be.

EVOLVE 10th Anniversary live results: Adam Cole vs. Akira Tozawa

Live from the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, PA, it’s EVOLVE’s 10th anniversary show live on WWE Network.

An EVOLVE history package airs with Cesaro, Tony Nese, Ricochet, and Daniel Bryan talking about their pasts. Bryan says that he came up with the name to show how the industry has evolved, while Drew McIntyre credits it for crafting him into who he is today.

Lenny Leonard talks mid-ring about the roster in the ring right now being the future and Josh Briggs grabs the mic and says he’s taking his opportunity. He wants to start things off with Anthony Greene, who gets some great heat with Brandi Lauren and her bedazzled fanny pack.

Josh Briggs pinned Anthony Greene

Josh misses a shoulder charge, but lands a modified backbreaker out of the corner. Greene lands a running rana before eating a backbreaker throw for 2. Brandi grabs the foot and Greene kicks the rope into Josh’s crotch to get an edge. Greene goes for a tope, but gets caught and chokeslammed on the apron. Greene winds up sending Briggs onto the apron several times and clubs the chest. Greene gets 2 off a nice crossbody. Leonard talks about Greene spending four years from his first tryout to get his contract with the company. Greene stomps away at the leg in the corner before Brandi cheapshots him. 

Brandi is outraged at the “Retro sucks” chant, which seems to fire up Briggs for an X plex. Briggs avoids a lariat and lands his own Taker-esque flying lariat with a flip. He charges into a superkick, but winds up trapping him in the corner for a yakuza kick. Briggs lands a series of backbreakers, including an X plex variant for 2. Briggs spins out of a half crab and boots him. Shoulder-mounted Michinoku driver hits and gets 2 for Briggs. Briggs gets slammed hard and locked in a half crab until he gets to the rope.

Greene misses a 450 and gets thrown into the corner, but lands an enziguri and schoolboys him into the buckle. Briggs wants a super iconoclasm, but Brandi grabs the foot and gets ejected. Greene gets a super victory roll after they just wait up top forever, but it only gets 2. Superkick series hits Briggs, but Briggs comes back with Go to Hell and an M6 powerbomb to win it. Lenny Leonard talks about the history of The Unwanted, with Eddie Kingston cutting an intense promo about years of getting paid in hot dogs, that they’re not going to let AR Fox and his buddy beat them on the Network. 

Stephen Wolf won a four-way freestyle match over Sean Maluta, Curt Stallion and Harlem Brovado

Stallion eats a buzzsaw kick from Maluta after a quick failed double team. Wolf lands a slick springboard crossbody before Bravado sends him down. Wolf overshoots on a dive and lands on his feet, and thankfully doesn’t seem to blow his knees out. Stallion lands a Fosbury flop on the pile. Stallion lands a deadlift German on Maluta for 2. Bravado lands a combo DDT/flatliner for 2. Maluta eats a jawbreaker before a double-down off of each man wanting a crossbody and meeting in the middle. Stallion and Wolf seemingly hit stereo kicks in the corner, but the camera misses Wolf. Stereo covers get a 2 count. 

A Stallion/Wolf chant breaks out, so they elbow and forearm each other. Wolf gets a rolling elbow, but Brovado yakuza kicks him. Wolf lands a 619 feint into a nice lariat on Maluta. Bravado lands a pop-up death valley driver on Wolf for 2. Maluta lands a Magnum codebreaker onto Stallion. Nasty standing blue thunder bomb hits for Wolf, but Bravado prevents him from going off the top. Wolf lands a shooting star press on Brovado after Brovado hits the Angels Wings and wins it in 10 minutes. Anthony Henry gets a highlight video showing off his MMA training and talking about all of his experience.

Arturo Ruas pinned Anthony Henry

Lenny talks about Henry winning in MMA by both an armbar and a triangle. Henry goes for an armbar, but Ruas slips out. Henry wants another armbar, but eats a Rampage bomb before eating some quick punches for 2. Ruas lands a series of kicks in the corner and wants a delayed German, but it gets turned into a victory roll and a double stomp. Henry goes for muay thai knees, but Ruas avoids them, but can’t avoid a backdrop driver. Henry wants another armbar, but gets stacked up for 2.

Ruas rolls out and eats a flying knee off the apron. Henry wants a double stomp off the top, but rolls through it and eats a series of knees and a sliding kick for 2. Henry gets an RNC, but gets tossed into the corner before letting go to kick the leg out. Ruas lands a snap German for 2. Henry lands a Jon Jones-style kick to the knee and then buzzsaw kicks him down. 

Henry goes up top, but Ruas tries to take him down only to eat a mushroom stomp to the back. Henry sends him down and lands a double stomp off the top for 2 before getting an ankle lock. Ruas gets a kneebar before they just slap the tar out of each other. They go at it with wild strikes for a while before Ruas lands a high kick for a flash knockout and a pin at around 13 minutes. 

Lenny Leonard talks about the issues between Shotzi Blackheart and Brandi Lauren before we get a recap video of their brawl at EVOLVE 128. Both of them have been in Impact before, with Shotzi coming off like a star thanks to her unique appearance with green hair, while Brandi worked as Ava Storie there briefly and looked good.

Brandi Lauren pinned Shotzi Blackheart

Natalia Markova jumps Shotzi at the bell before landing a spinning X factor. Markova lands a corner spin kick before Shotzi chops away at her and lands a 619 alongside a missile dropkick. Markova tries to run, but Brandi tries to throw her back in before they eat a dive. Shotzi comes up bloody after this. Brandi goes to hit her with a chair before Shotzi ends that, but Shotzi eats a baseball slide dropkick into the chair to an “ECW” chant.

Brandi sets up a chair bridge and posts Shotzi. Shotzi recovers and sends Brandi through a chair on the floor. Shotzi goes for a rana off the apron before eating an apron bomb that gets 2. Shotzi lands a corner knee and mid-ring knee before a rolling elbow and an enziguri sends Brandi into the buckle. A cannonball sends Brandi to the floor. Shotzi goes for a sliced bread off the apron, but Brandi blocks it. Shotzi sends her into a chair. Greene comes to save Brandi and she goes to dive on him, but misses and goes through the chair bridge. 

Greene throws Shotzi into the ring for 2. Greene hands Brnadi a kendo stick before Curt Stallion comes down to send Grene to the back. A series of kendo stick shots end it and Brandi Lauren wins it at the 13 minute mark. So she gets the win, but it took two others to win it – and Shotzi leaves with a “Shotzi” chant. Colby Corino walks down with Sean Maluta, while Babatunde gets his own chant and Lenny talks about him facing off with Strowman at the Greatest Royal Rumble.

Babatunde pinned Colby Corino (w/Sean Maluta)

Colby slaps him and then gets a chant alerting him that he may have made a large mistake. Babatunde tosses him around as Colby plays the role of his dad in his enhancement match against Balls Mahoney on ECW PPV in ’98. Babatunde tosses Colby on the apron and then chops his chest from the floor – now that’s impressive. Colby hits a sliding knee and a swanton for 2. Colby goes for a splash, but eats a choke bomb into the corner. Corner avalanche leads to a big running elbow and a charging frog splash for the win.

AR Fox and Leon Ruff defeated Eddie Kingston and Joe Gacy to win the EVOLVE tag team titles

Eddie Kingston comes down and asks Colby if he’s okay as he struggles to breathe. Eddie puts over his boys and says he’s the Unwanted King and they’re the EVOLVE tag champs. Eddie says that they’re gonna take out Babatunde and do to him what they did to the Street Profits. AR Fox and Leon Ruff come down and brawl to start off the match. Fox hits a springboard flip dive into the guys on the floor and bonks his head on the barricade.

Fox and Ruff land a billion things in a row to Gacy before a German gets 2. Fox accidentally hits a springboard cutter to Ruff before eating a Lethal Injection from Gacy. The Unwanted land a front and back elbow for 2. Kingston hits a super powerslam for 2. Kingston lands a nasty chop to the chest before superplexing Ruff into a Gacy powerbomb for 2! Fox lands Lo Mein Pain for 2! Gacy lands a big lariat for 2. Gacy grabs a table, but Ruff lands a Ruff Ride onto Gacy before Fox landa a 450 on Kingston to win. This was a crazy 10 minute sprint, but it was a lot of fun. The faces and their entourage dance after the win.

A Drew Gulak EVOLVE history video airs showcasing what Catch Point was in the company and then Riddle talks about his philosophy about the group. Matt Riddle is shown accepting Drew’s open challenge and then they tell the story about Gulak’s own words biting him with Riddle now being a rival. Riddle comes out as the King of Bros, which is a pleasant mild surprise and has Curt Stallion with him. Riddle fist bumps everyone and just comes off as the coolest dude ever. A slew of guys in Catch Point gear and tracksuits run down and Gulak comes off as a real star with his own squad to come through.

Matt Riddle pinned Drew Gulak

Gulak and Riddle exchange some quick matwork. Riddle shoves him into the corner before a clean break. Riddle gets a hammerlock, but Gulak tries to turn it into the Goluck, but Riddle evades. Riddle backs him into a corner for some kicks to the stomach and then a flying knee before a broton gets 2. Riddle wants a Bromission, but Gulak cradles him for 2. Gulak gets a cravat and he demands that the ref ask him if he wants to quit. Gulak chops the back and gets a headscissors that Riddle handstands out of.

Gulak avoids the penalty kick that Riddle throws. Drew catches the foot and gets a powerbomb and stacks him for 2 before locking on a half crab. Riddle lands a V trigger for 2. Gulak sets him up and gets 2 off a belly to back superplex. Drew goes for a single leg before eating a series of kicks to the back and then a PK lands for 2. Riddle gets the Gulock on Gulak before he escapes that, but then eats a triangle before getting to the rope to escape. Gods Last Gift hits and gets 2 for Riddle.

Riddle lands a deadlift German off the apron to a “zowie wowie!” chant. Riddle goes off the top, but lands right in the Gulock! Riddle escapes and lands the Bro Derek tombstone slam to win in about 15 minutes.

Drew grabs the mic and says that Catch Point was founded on teamwork, opportunity, and respect and he stands here as the WWE Cruiserweight Champion in the middle of an EVOLVE ring, and he respects Riddle. They hug and display the Catch Point pose and Gulak tells Stallion that he hopes he’s up for the test.

A JD Drake vs. Austin Theory video package airs. JD Drake says that he looks like he should be driving the ring truck instead of being the WWN Champion. Austin Theory says that he’ll take JD Drake’s title and go onto Takeover before then main eventing WrestleMania. Drake says he’s lost a marriage and nearly lost his kids over the business. He’s a struggling man who battled addiction, depression, and suicide and he fights for them. Bryan Idol comes down and says nothing to a chant letting him know that the fans would like him to remain quiet. He coughs while the fans chant “Corbin” as the new boring chant.

The lights go out and Paul Heyman returns to the ECW Arena for the first time in 19 years! He gets a thank you chant and thanks the fans and says he’s back home. Heyman says that he doesn’t do conventions and he doesn’t do guest appearances. He wasn’t invited to be here- he asked to be here. Heyman yells back at a heckler and gets a chant to mess him up. Heyman says that he’s here to see the future because he doesn’t want to be the old guy who watches black and white film – he wants to watch the show and learn more about today than he ever has and he wants to announce the next match because in five years, people will say this was the match where the industry evolved. That alone puts over both men in this match in a big way. Heyman shakes the hand of the guys and says that they have pyro and even Raw doesn’t have pyro! Heyman gives them their introductions and JD Drake unveils the largest pair of trunks in human history hiked up higher than Nikolai Volkoff ever did.

Austin Theory defeated JD Drake to unify the EVOLVE and WWN titles

Theory jabs him and each man goes for their finish early, but avoid it and Theory lands a dropkick before Drake responds with one of his own that sends him outside. Drake goes for a tope before eating a forearm. They fight on the floor and Drake chops the tar out of him and turns his chest red three minutes in. Drake wants a piledriver on the ramp, but eats a backdrop. Drake chops him, but eats a PK in the rope. Theory gets 2 off a snap suplex. Drake fights out of the corner with more chops. 

He tells Theory to hit him harder than life has, so Theory gives it a go and doesn’t succeed. Drake lands a desperation lariat. Rolling thunder dropkick by Theory lands and sends Drake into the corner. Drake pops him onto the apron from the floor and slugs him. JD lands a tope and a corner chop. A slam leads to a Vader bomb for 2. Drake goes up, but gets clubbed and then sends Theory down with a super leg lariat. Theory lands a blockbuster for 2.

Theory goes for Ataxia, but Drake just shoves him into the corner to nix that. He puts him up top and overhand chops him. Theory lands a spinning torture rack powerbomb for 2.9! Drake lands a stunner and Theory takes two stunner bumps! Cannonball and a Drillbit hit for 2.9! A Drake moonsault gets 2!  They fight on their knees with Theory landing forearms and Drake landing overhand chops. Standing, they land more forearms and chops before Theory goes for Ataxia, that Drake flips out of and misses the moonsault before eating a trio of superkicks and Ataxia wins it to unify the WWN and EVOLVE Championships.

NXT Champion Adam Cole pinned Akira Tozawa to retain

Cole dominates him into the corner before cheering himself on and bowing. Tozawa grinds away with a long headlock before Cole escapes and shoulderblocks him down. Tozawa gets the Iron Octopus before Cole escapes that. Tozawa goes up, but gets tripped up. Cole snapmares him and knees the back a few times and grinds away with his own chinlock. They exchange a variety of forearm strikes and Tozawa gets the fireman’s carry facebuster.

Cole goes outside and eats a somersault senton off the apron. They go back and forth on German attempts before Cole lands a backstabber. Cole hits an ushigoroshi for 2. More forearm strikes land for each man before Tozawa wins that war and wants a shining wizard, but eats a yakuza kick. Both men land big boots and both go down. Cole goes for a superplex but gets shoves off. Tozawa dives off into a superkick and a brainbuster to the knee gets 2. Cole grabs the belt to hit Tozawa, but Johnny Gargano comes down and distracts Cole for a schoolboy and a 2 count. Tozawa misses one tornado kick, but lands a second. He wants the senton, but Cole gets the knees up and lands the Panama Sunrise and the Last Shot to end it.

Johnny stares a whole through Cole and wants a fight. Cole bails and says Johnny’s on his time and leaves to an ADAM COLE BAY-BAY! Johnny checks on Tozawa and asks for a round of applause for Tozawa. Johnny says that he’s been around EVOLVE for 10 years and beyond that telling him he’s getting old, wrestling in 2019 is pretty cool and it’s due to the fans. Johnny and Tozawa ask if the fans enjoyed the show, to a giant Yes! chant and one guy’s giant YOOOOWWWW, which Johnny was surprised by, so he asks for another and the fan obliges. Johnny says he loves the fans and EVOLVE. Tozawa takes a bow while Johnny slaps hands with the fans and autographs some signs. 

Batista episode of WWE 24, Ricochet Chronicle set to premiere

New episodes of WWE 24 and Chronicle are set to debut on the WWE Network over the next week-plus.

After Raw on Monday (July 8), a new edition of WWE 24 called “Batista: Dream Chaser” will air. Here’s the description for the show: “Batista chased his dreams of becoming a WWE Legend and Hollywood megastar. At WrestleMania 35, he returned for the last match of his career.”

Batista returned to WWE in February and furthered his program with Triple H after it was set up at SmackDown 1000 last year. Triple H defeated Batista in a no holds barred match at WrestleMania 35, with Batista announcing his retirement from professional wrestling the next day.

Ricochet will be the subject of a new WWE Chronicle that will premiere after EVOLVE’s 10th Anniversary Celebration on Saturday, July 13. The description for the episode is: “Get a look into the life of Ricochet as he captures his first title and shows why he’s one of the WWE’s fastest-rising stars.”

At Stomping Grounds last month, Ricochet defeated Samoa Joe to become the new United States Champion. He’s been involved in a program with AJ Styles since.

The WWE 24 episode is listed as being an hour long, while Chronicle is in a 30-minute time slot.

WWE reveals lineup for EVOLVE’s 10th Anniversary Celebration

Ahead of the show airing on the WWE Network later this month, the card has been revealed for EVOLVE’s 10th Anniversary Celebration.

The card was announced by WWE.com today, with six matches being added to the two that had already been confirmed. NXT Champion Adam Cole will defend his title against Akira Tozawa, and Matt Riddle will face off with Drew Gulak.

There will be a “winner-take-all match” as EVOLVE Champion Austin Theory faces WWN Champion JD Drake. The EVOLVE Tag Team titles will also be on the line, with Eddie Kingston & Joe Gacy defending against AR Fox & Leon Ruff.

The EVOLVE/Dragon Gate USA anniversary event will be the first non-WWE wrestling show to air live on the WWE Network. It’s taking place at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Saturday, July 13 and will go head-to-head with AEW Fight for the Fallen.

WWE’s Extreme Rules pay-per-view is being held at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia on July 14.

The full lineup for EVOLVE’s 10th Anniversary Celebration is listed below: 

  • NXT Champion Adam Cole defending against Akira Tozawa
  • EVOLVE Champion Austin Theory vs. WWN Champion JD Drake in a winner-take-all match
  • EVOLVE Tag Team Champions Eddie Kingston & Joe Gacy defending against AR Fox & Leon Ruff (w/ Ayla Fox and The Skulk)
  • Matt Riddle vs. WWE Cruiserweight Champion Drew Gulak in a non-title match
  • Anthony Henry vs. Arturo Ruas
  • Babatunde vs. Colby Corino
  • Curt Stallion vs. Sean Maluta vs. Stephen Wolf vs. Harlem Bravado in a fatal four-way match
  • Josh Briggs vs. Anthony Greene (w/ Brandi Lauren)

EVOLVE 10th anniversary show to air live on WWE Network

For the first time ever, an EVOLVE show is set to stream on the WWE Network.

It was announced via The Wrap today that EVOLVE’s 10th Anniversary Celebration will air live on the WWE Network at 8 p.m. Eastern time on Saturday, July 13. The show is taking place at the 2300 Arena in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and is in celebration of 10 years of EVOLVE/Dragon Gate USA.

NXT Champion Adam Cole will defend his title against Akira Tozawa at the anniversary event, Matt Riddle is set to face Drew Gulak, and EVOLVE Champion Austin Theory, EVOLVE Tag Team Champions Eddie Kingston & Joe Gacy, and NXT’s Arturo Ruas and Babatunde are also advertised.

“EVOLVE was the birthplace for many current WWE and NXT Superstars so it is only fitting that their 10th Anniversary Celebration will be showcased live on WWE Network,” Paul “Triple H” Levesque said.

EVOLVE’s 10th Anniversary Celebration will be going head-to-head with AEW Fight for the Fallen. Fight for the Fallen is airing for free on Bleacher Report Live in the United States and Canada and will be available to purchase via Fite TV elsewhere.

EVOLVE 129 and EVOLVE 130 are taking place this Saturday and Sunday. The anniversary show is EVOLVE 131.

1986 Crockett Cup added to WWE Hidden Gems

The 1986 Crockett Cup is now available on the WWE Network.

WWE added the tournament as part of this week’s Hidden Gems content. It features over four hours of footage, including the tournament itself which was eventually won by the Road Warriors. It also has two non-tournament matches including Jim Duggan vs. Dick Slater for the UWF North American title and Ric Flair vs. Dusty Rhodes for the NWA World Heavyweight title.

This was the first of three Crockett Cup events that were held in the 1980s, with the second and third being held in 1987 and 1988. The Super Powers (Nikita Koloff and Dusty Rhodes) and the team of Sting and Lex Luger won the tournament in the following years before being abandoned in 1989.

The tournament was revived earlier this year by the National Wrestling Alliance under new owner Billy Corgan. ROH’s Villain Enterprises (Brody King and PCO) defeated Royce Issacs and Thomas Latimer to win not only the tournament but also the vacant NWA World tag team titles.

Ronda Rousey episode of WWE 24 to premiere after Monday’s Raw

Ronda Rousey’s first year in professional wrestling will be the subject of the next episode of WWE 24.

The WWE 24 episode on Rousey will premiere on the WWE Network after Raw on Monday (June 3). It’s called “Revolutionary: The Year of Ronda Rousey” and is listed as airing from 11 p.m. Eastern time to midnight.

WWE’s brief description for the show is: “Relive Ronda Rousey’s impressive championship run, and her history-making performance in the first-ever all women’s WrestleMania main event!”

Rousey lost the Raw Women’s Championship to Becky Lynch in a triple threat match in the main event of WrestleMania 35. Rousey is currently on hiatus from WWE and wants to start a family with her husband, UFC fighter Travis Browne.

It was confirmed that Rousey had signed with WWE when she appeared at the 2018 Royal Rumble. She made her in-ring debut at WrestleMania 34, then won the Raw Women’s Championship from Alexa Bliss at last year’s SummerSlam. Rousey held the title until losing it to Lynch at WrestleMania 35.

WWE uploaded a clip from the 24 episode where Rousey trains in the ring outside of her home:

WWE Network notes: New episode of Ride Along, Target: NXT TakeOver

A new episode of Ride Along and a preview special for two of the top matches at NXT TakeOver XXV are set to air on the WWE Network this coming week.

The new Ride Along episode will premiere on the Network after Monday’s Raw, with Ride Along featuring Lana & Rusev in one car and Mandy Rose & Sonya Deville in the other. Here’s the description for it: “Lana and Rusev compete to prove who is No. 1, while Mandy Rose and Sonya Deville satisfy their sweet cravings en route to SmackDown Live!”

A special called “Target: NXT TakeOver” will premiere on the Network at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time on Wednesday, which is right before NXT’s go-home show for TakeOver XXV airs at 8 p.m. Eastern.

The description for Target: NXT TakeOver is: “Johnny Gargano and Adam Cole train for their NXT Title rematch, and Io Shirai and Shayna Baszler prepare for an NXT Women’s Title duel.”

The Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, Connecticut is hosting TakeOver XXV next Saturday (June 1). Here’s the card for the show:

  • NXT Champion Johnny Gargano defending against Adam Cole
  • NXT Women’s Champion Shayna Baszler defending against Io Shirai
  • The Undisputed Era (Kyle O’Reilly & Bobby Fish) vs. The Street Profits (Angelo Dawkins & Montez Ford) vs. Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch vs. The Forgotten Sons (Wesley Blake & Steve Cutler) in a ladder match for the vacant NXT Tag Team titles
  • NXT North American Champion Velveteen Dream defending against Tyler Breeze
  • Matt Riddle vs. Roderick Strong

PC Combine special, new Untold episode to air on WWE Network

A Performance Center Combine special and a new episode of Untold will air on the WWE Network next weekend.

The updated WWE Network schedule for next week lists that a WWE Performance Center Combine special will begin at noon Eastern time on Sunday, May 26. No other programming is listed on the schedule until the new Untold episode starts at 8 p.m. Eastern, so it appears that the combine special, which was filmed in advance, will be eight hours long.

The brief description for the combine special is: “NXT Superstars put their strength, speed and athleticism to the test in a battery of competitive events.”

WWE has done Performance Center Combines in previous years, which are similar to combines in professional sports. The events test the athletic ability of wrestlers at the Performance Center.

The Untold episode that premieres at 8 p.m. Eastern on May 26 is focused on Eric Bischoff’s planned WCW relaunch from 2001 and their Big Bang pay-per-view that never came to be. The episode is listed as being 30 minutes long. Here’s the description of it: “Eric Bischoff, Booker T and more tell the true story of how WCW almost relaunched with a ‘big bang’ in 2001.”

More WCW Thunder episodes being added to WWE Network

More episodes of WCW Thunder are set to be added to the WWE Network.

WWE Network News reported today that more episodes of the show are set to be added on May 20. It wasn’t specified how many new episodes would be included. The first set of shows were added a year ago, with the first 77 episodes being uploaded. Twenty more episodes were added in March, bringing the series through January of 2000.

Thunder first premiered in 1998 on TBS as a show designed to be just in big of scope as WCW’s flagship show Nitro. But the show was soon relegated to B-show status, and attempts to make it similar to Nitro in terms of star power failed. The show also faced problems when WWE countered with their own Thursday show, SmackDown. Thunder was moved to Wednesdays toward the end of its run but ratings failed to improve.

The show, along with the rest of WCW’s programing, was cancelled in March of 2001. That opened the door for WWE to purchase WCW shortly after.

New WWE 24, Chronicle episodes to premiere next weekend

New episodes of WWE Chronicle and WWE 24 are set to premiere on the Network next weekend.

The updated WWE Network schedule for next week lists that a new Chronicle episode focused on Mustafa Ali will air at 8 p.m. Eastern time next Saturday (May 18), while a new edition of WWE 24 focused on Becky Lynch will then premiere after Money in the Bank on Sunday, May 19.

Both documentary-style specials are listed in hour-long time slots.

Here’s the brief description for Ali’s Chronicle episode: “Get an inside look into Ali’s Muslim faith, his climb back to the World title picture and his career aspirations as a WWE Superstar.”

The description for Lynch’s WWE 24 episode is: “Witness the rise of ‘The Man’ Becky Lynch from her Irish wrestling days to competing in WrestleMania’s first all-women’s main event!”

Lynch will have two matches at Money in the Bank, defending the Raw Women’s Championship against Lacey Evans and defending the SmackDown Women’s Championship against Charlotte Flair. Ali will be one of the participants in this year’s men’s Money in the Bank ladder match.

WWE Network to air Bret Hart vs. Tom Magee match, documentary

Bret Hart and Tom Magee’s long-lost match is finally being made available to the public.

WWE has announced that Hart vs. Magee will air on the WWE Network after Monday’s episode of Raw. It will be accompanied by a documentary explaining the relevance of the match, how the tape was discovered, and what happened to Magee.

The special is called “The Holy Grail: The Search for WWE’s Most Infamous Lost Match.”

Hart vs. Magee was a dark match that took place at a WWF Wrestling Challenge television taping in Rochester,  New York on October 7, 1986. Dave Meltzer noted that both Vince McMahon and Pat Patterson thought Magee would be the eventual replacement for Hulk Hogan after the match, but Magee never lived up to that hype in the ring and his career ended in 1990.

The VHS tape of Hart vs. Magee was found by Mary-Kate Anthony in March from tapes Hart’s assistant, Marcy Engelstein, had her convert to DVD years ago.

Hart and Magee will be discussing the match together at Starrcast II in Las Vegas on May 25.

Meltzer and Colt Cabana discussed the story of Hart vs. Magee on an episode of Cabana’s Pro Wrestling Fringe podcast:

Triple H documentary airing after NXT TakeOver XXV

Triple H will be the subject of a documentary airing after NXT’s next TakeOver special.

A commercial that aired during this week’s NXT UK announced that “Creation and Destruction: Triple H’s Road to WrestleMania” will premiere on the WWE Network after NXT TakeOver XXV on Saturday, June 1. The trailer includes clips that were uploaded to YouTube as part of Triple H’s Road to WrestleMania 35 video diary.

The length of the documentary has yet to be revealed.

Triple H defeated Batista at WrestleMania 35, with Triple H returning to the ring in time for WrestleMania after suffering a torn pectoral muscle at Crown Jewel in November 2018. NXT also had a TakeOver special on the Friday of WrestleMania week, and D-Generation X (Triple H, Shawn Michaels, Chyna, X-Pac, Road Dogg & Billy Gunn) were inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame on the night before WrestleMania.

It was officially confirmed this Monday that the Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport, Connecticut will host TakeOver XXV. The June TakeOver had been scheduled for San Jose, California, but WWE’s next Saudi Arabia show moving from May to June caused changes in their schedule.

The branding for TakeOver XXV is focused on it being the 25th TakeOver special, which doesn’t include the first NXT Arrival event.

WWE Worlds Collide results: An evening of battle royals

Two battle royals closed out the Worlds Collide finae Wednesday, recorded during WrestleMania weekend as part of Axxess.

Vic Joseph and Percy Watson were drowned out of their own introduction at the beginning of the show from the background music being way too loud, so we’re off and running already.

Bianca Belair won the women’s Worlds Collide battle royal

Participants: Bianca Belair, Taynara Conti, Kacy Catanzaro, Deonna Purazzo, Jessamyn Duke, Marina Shaffir, Io Shirai, Lacey Lane, Jess E, Xia Li, Kavita Devi, Mia Yim, Reina Gonzalez, Aaliyah, Vanessa Borne, Kay Lee Ray (NXT UK), Piper Niven (NXT UK) and Toni Storm (NXT UK).

This match didn’t start until around ten minutes into the broadcast. Everyone got their own introduction and some even got their own choreographed pose spots in the middle of the ring. 

Niven eliminated Kay Lee Ray, implying a program between the two. Borne and Conti clawed at each other a bit. I note them specifically because that is what production chose to show the audience. 

Reina Gonzalez eliminated Kacy Catanzaro. See above. At times, it was still difficult to hear the commentary over music or ringside mics. M

Yim had a few exchanges with Duke and Shaffir. Duke’s high kicks look great. Shaffir accidentally eliminated her partner, but then Shaffir eliminated Yim, a quick narrative receipt. 

The formula they used was two wrestlers in the middle of the ring while seven or eight other wrestlers conveniently sold in each corner. Rotate, repeat. The formula usually works if the crowd responds to the spots and in some cases toward the end of this match, they did. Borne and Aaliyah eliminated Piper, but as they taunted Niven on the floor, they themselves were eliminated which got a hilariously loud reaction. I wonder why people don’t like them.

Shirai eliminated Gonzalez and Belair eliminated Storm. The crowd chanted for Shirai for about four bars, then four bars for Belair, then half and half. Once they tied up, the two got in a few good minutes of action and drama. Belair press slammed Shirai to the floor with ease for the dominant looking win. 

This wasn’t good, but really, when are battle royals ever good? They are vessels for new narratives and new faces. If that was the case, it served its purpose here.

Roderick Strong won the men’s Worlds Collide battle royal

Participants: Ariya Davari (205 Live), The Brian Kendrick (205 Live), Eric Bugenhagen (NXT), Drew Gulak (205 Live), Dave Mastiff (NXT UK), Humberto Carrillo (205 Live), The Coffey Brothers (NXT UK), Dominik Dijakovic (NXT), Fabian Aichner (NXT), Ligero (NXT UK), Matt Riddle (NXT), Rinku Singh & Saurav Gurjar (NXT), Akira Tozawa (205 Live), The Forgotten Sons (NXT), Roderick Strong (NXT), Travis Banks (NXT UK), and Tyler Bate (NXT UK).

Sidebar: Bate’s music is just a funny rendition of Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer”, right?

After we got five minutes of walkouts to the ring, the match got underway. Riddle and Bugenhagen somehow ended up outside the ring. They had what I’d call a “rock off” with both playing air guitar together. 

We got lots of punches and kicks for a while. Dijokavic did his “Feast Your Eyes” pose, so everyone in the ring feasted their eyes on him, then jumped him. Cute. 

Eric Bugenhagen eliminated Ariya Davari. This was my first time seeing Singh and Gurjar and they had a good big monster feel to them. They eliminated Banks together. 

Mastiff eliminated Gulak and Kendrick at the same time. Mastiff and Riddle then went at it for a little while. Singh eliminated his own partner, Gurjar. Alright, let’s see where that goes. Strong eliminated Mastiff and Bate launched Joe Coffey over the top rope to eliminate him.

The final four: Rinku Singh, Matt Riddle, Tyler Bate and Strong.

The other three ganged up on Singh at first. Singh later eliminated Riddle which really seemed to bum people out. Bate was able to eliminate Singh and got a “Thank you, Tyler” chant.  This led to the highlight of the match which was the equivalent of the last few minutes of a match between Strong and Bate. 

At one point, Bate did an airplane spin and WWE’s production zoomed in and out with each rotation he made, rendering the spinning effect of the move useless since you never see a full spin. The production choices actually lessened the effect of what the wrestlers were doing and ruined a perfectly good airplane spin.

Complaints aside, the two had themselves an excellent exchange. Bate’s athleticism is scary. Strong continues to be, arguably, the most underrated in-ring talent on the roster. They exchanged big moves for a short while, and Strong’s backbreaker variations were notable. They teased a few spots on the apron but brought things back in the ring, then out again.

While Bate was on the apron, Strong landed a high dropkick, thus eliminating the recently, and hilariously, named Big Strong Boi.

Final thoughts:

This show was just two battel royals with one that was pretty awful and one that was less bad. Strong and Bate’s last few minutes were really good, and the crowd responded especially to the final four wrestlers in the bout: Singh, Riddle, Bate and Stong.

The production quality was annoying and at points made the show difficult to take seriously, particularly with regard to the announce team often being drowned out by ring music or the crowd, and with the directorial choices the production team made like the zooming in and out on the in-ring work.