WOL: Backlash notes, mystery partners, Lesnar’s future, WWE cuts, more!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm is back with tons to talk about including previews of Smackdown and Backlash, who Danhausen’s mystery partner might be and why, Brock Lesnar’s future, more on the WWE cuts of late, tons of questions from the listeners and more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Brock Lesnar moved to alumni section of WWE website

Brock Lesnar has now been moved to the WWE website’s alumni section.

Lesnar seemingly retired after losing to the rising WWE wrestler Oba Femi at WWE WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Following the loss, Lesnar left behind his gloves and boots in the ring before sharing an embrace with Paul Heyman and walking away. WWE soon started playing video packages on Raw and SmackDown honoring his career and legacy. The promotion also started releasing merch related to Lesnar’s potential retirement.

Now, weeks after his WrestleMania 42 match, Lesnar has officially been moved to the alumni section on WWE’s website. Previously rumored to retire this year, potentially at SummerSlam, such does not seem the case anymore.

Remembering Brock Lesnar’s legacy

Lesnar made his debut in the early 2000s and became the youngest WWE champion. On a dominating run since his career’s early days, Lesnar left WWE to try a career in Japanese pro-wrestling, the NFL, and MMA.

He returned to WWE in 2012 and has stayed at the promotion since then, except for a few brief UFC stints. He is a seven-time WWE Champion and three-time WWE Universal Champion. Lesnar is also a former IWGP Heavyweight Champion and UFC Heavyweight Champion.

Apart from his title wins, he also won the 2003 and 2022 Royal Rumble matches, as well as defeated The Undertaker’s streak at WrestleMania 30.

WOL: Raw report, Kairi Sane update, Lesnar retirement, more!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm is back with tons to talk about including the latest on the wrestling fan who went missing over WrestleMania weekend, the situation with Kairi Sane, RAW injury updates, the full RAW report from Monday, Brock’s retirement, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Fight Game: Hulk Hogan Netflix docuseries review

John LaRocca and I return with a brand-new Tuesday edition of the Fight Game to discuss some of the most topical things going on in pro wrestling this week.

We gave out their thumbs up and thumbs down before jumping into two main topics:

  • Finding landing spots for the latest WWE releases
  • How to book the Brock Lesnar vs. Gunther storyline

We also did a full review of the new Netflix docuseries, Hulk Hogan: Real American.

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Tiffany Stratton on possible Brock Lesnar retirement: ‘He’s just a boy, it’s his first time living too’

Tiffany Stratton is hopeful Brock Lesnar returns for WWE SummerSlam after apparent retirement at WrestleMania 42. 

Stratton told Adrian Hernandez that she almost cried when Lesnar started unlacing his boots at WrestleMania 42 and hopes he returns for a last match at SummerSlam.

“I don’t know. When I saw Brock unlace his boots, I almost shed a tear. I was sad for him. He looked like he started crying a little bit too. He’s just a boy. It’s his first time living too. So hopefully it’s not his last match. Hopefully in SummerSlam in Minnesota we’ll get to see him. I think that would be iconic, retiring in your hometown. But yeah, I’m really sad but happy for him.”

Lesnar kicked off Night Two of WrestleMania Sunday going up against Oba Femi, who won his first match at the event. After the bout, Lesnar sat in the middle of the ring, took off his gloves and shoes, which is a common gesture when a wrestler retires. 

Paul Heyman had accompanied him for the showdown and was reduced to tears with what unfolded before him. On the Raw after Mania, WWE aired a video tribute to his career in the company. Additionally, there are multiple reports that not many within WWE are convinced that Lesnar has completely retired from wrestling.

WOL: WrestleMania weekend memories, RAW, Lesnar, WWE security, more

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm is back with TONS to talk about as Bryan has returned from an amazing WrestleMania weekend where he had the time of his life. Thoughts on all sorts of different topics, plus what’s up with Brock, the RAW after WrestleMania, WWE security issues, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Brock Lesnar update & whether those within WWE think he’s actually retired

Whether Brock Lesnar has officially retired is still a question within WWE, according to our Dave Meltzer.

On the post-Raw edition of Wrestling Observer Radio, Meltzer and Bryan Alvarez discussed the latest on Lesnar who took off his gear and shared an emotional embrace with Paul Heyman after his quick WrestleMania 42 Sunday loss to Oba Femi.

Meltzer said that based on some people he’s spoken with in WWE, “they believe he’s not retiring yet” although it’s likely to happen at this year at some point.

“No one knows. It might be one of those things where it’s being kept quiet like the Seth Rollins (injury angle),” he said. “I’m not saying for sure (whether he’s retired) as no one knows for sure.”

He later added that at one point, the plan was for Lesnar to keep feuding with Femi and not have it just be a one and done match. However, that decision was dropped and the idea was to do the Goldberg approach and go with Femi all the way.

Alvarez noted how it was odd Lesnar threw up an X to the crowd after the WrestleMania match,. how emotional Heyman was during his Raw promo, and his opinion that the tribute video on Raw felt more thrown together than other video packages as if Lesnar’s actions were unexpected and caught everyone off guard.

The favor that Heyman owes Gunther for taking on Seth Rollins at WrestleMania 42 was widely speculated to be a final match against Lesnar, likely for August’s SummerSlam in Lesnar’s home state of Minnesota. Gunther declined to discuss the favor on Raw as a feud with LA Knight appears imminent.

WOR: RAW after WrestleMania, Brock questions, Cody’s eye, debuts, more!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including a full recap of the RAW after WrestleMania, the very odd story of Brock Lesnar’s retirement, Cody Rhodes’ eye socket, new debuts on RAW, plus all the New Japan and ratings news and such. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Triple H comments on Brock Lesnar WWE retirement tease

Paul “Triple H” Levesque didn’t offer much clarity while addressing Brock Lesnar’s apparent retirement at WWE WrestleMania 42.

After losing to Oba Femi on Sunday night, Lesnar left his boots and gloves in the ring before becoming visibly emotional as he seemed to bid farewell to the crowd. There has been no official confirmation of a retirement yet — and Levesque claimed during an appearance on ESPN’s SportsCenter that he did not have a conversation with Lesnar backstage after the match.

“Well, it certainly seemed that way,” Levesque responded when asked if this was the end for Lesnar. “Brock is not a walk back through the curtain and have a long conversation guy. Brock is a walk back through the curtain very angry and go to his bus and that is the end of it. So there was not a discussion had after. I will say this — [Lesnar is] probably the most famous combat sport athlete of our generation. One of a kind, nobody like Brock Lesnar.”

It was expected that Lesnar would be retiring soon, with him admitting recently that he was only back in WWE for a short time. Most rumors suggested that Lesnar would retire at SummerSlam this August given that the PLE is being held in his former home state of Minnesota.

Levesque, keeping kayfabe, suggested to SportsCenter that the retirement decision was one Lesnar made in the moment after losing to Femi. Praising Femi, Levesque called this result a changing of the guard.

“The one thing that nobody gives him credit for is the intelligence of a fighter. They see Brock as this hulking brute. ‘The Beast,’ right? They see him as all that,” Levesque said. “There comes a point in time when somebody comes along that’s bigger and badder and just pushes you to a place that you can’t come back from. The smart ones know when that happens, and they call it a day.

“I don’t think that was a planned thing. I think Brock went to the ring, he walked into a wall called Oba Femi. Brock walked up to the next big thing and ran into a brick wall. And the intelligence in him said, ‘Maybe I should call it a day.’ And he took his boots off and he put his gloves down and he walked away. That is not a statement of Brock being afraid of it. That is an intelligent man meeting something that cannot be stopped. It is as much of a statement of Oba Femi as it is Brock Lesnar. You witnessed a changing of the guard at the apex of our business.”

Femi vs. Lesnar aired on the ESPN TV simulcast portion of the WrestleMania night two broadcast, with WWE clearly pushing Femi as one of the company’s biggest stars for both the present and future. It was Femi’s first-ever WrestleMania match after being called up from NXT at the start of 2026.

WOR: WrestleMania night 2, Lesnar, Punk vs. Reigns, Van Hammer, Cluster, more!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including a full recap of WrestleMania night 2, a show a million times better than night 1, Brock’s apparent retirement, Oba Femi, Punk vs. Reigns and more! Plus, more on Van Hammer, Saudi Arabia, the Clusterfuck, ratings and more. Thank you all for an incredible weekend, I appreciate you all!

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Kurt Angle congratulates Brock Lesnar following WWE WrestleMania 42 match

Kurt Angle just reacted to Brock Lesnar’s apparent retirement at WWE WrestleMania 42.

In the first match of the night at WWE WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas, Nevada, Oba Femi defeated Brock Lesnar in a match lasting less than five minutes.

After the match finished, fans saw Paul Heyman enter the ring and hug Lesnar. Shortly after, Lesnar exited the ring and made his way to the back with Heyman. While Lesnar did not officially confirm his retirement, both he and WWE’s commentary team strongly hinted at it when he left his gear in the ring.

Shortly after, WWE Hall of Famer Angle reacted to what happened on social media and wrote, “Love you my brother. There will only be one like you. Enjoy retirement Brock [Lesnar].”

Angle and Lesnar share a long history. The duo main-evented WrestleMania 19, where Lesnar defeated Angle for the WWE Championship. Both have also faced each other in several matches throughout their career.

Later, during the WWE WrestleMania 42 post-show, Joe Tessitore also teased Lesnar retiring after the match. However, there are currently no confirmed updates on it.

Brock Lesnar teases apparent retirement following WWE WrestleMania 42 loss

WrestleMania 42 appeared to be it for Brock Lesnar.

The former WWE and UFC Champion lost in under five minutes to Oba Femi on Sunday, falling to Femi’s pop-up powerbomb. After Femi left, an emotional Lesnar recovered and took his gloves off in the ring, then took off his boots. Heyman entered the ring and the two hugged. After some posing, Lesnar exited the ring and walked to the back with Heyman, all but saying his in-ring career was over.

Femi started off the match strong, dominating Lesnar in the early part of the match. Lesnar took control briefly, throwing him into the steps and planted Femi with the F5. But Femi quickly recovered, grabbed Lesnar for a chokeslam, then followed with the pop-up powerbomb for the win.

A NCAA standout, Lesnar was signed in the early 2000s by WWE and by 2002 was given a huge push on the main roster, defeating The Rock for his first world title at that year’s SummerSlam. He exited WWE in 2004 and eventually found himself in the UFC, winning their heavyweight title. Lesnar returned to WWE in 2012 and has been a pivotal part in big shows ever since.

Wrestling Weekly: WWE WrestleMania 42 weekend, the new AEW World Champion

It’s WWE WrestleMania 42 weekend and on a new Wrestling Weekly, Les Thatcher and Vic Sosa are back to make their predictions for all the matches on both nights.

They also discuss the new AEW World Champion Darby Allin.

Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!

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CJ Perry shares ‘incredible’ WWE advice Brock Lesnar gave her

CJ Perry detailed advice she received from Paul Heyman and Brock Lesnar for one of her promos in 2016. She recalled being particularly impressed by Lesnar’s knowledge of the industry. 

In her Yahoo Sports column, Uncrowned, Perry wrote about a promo from 2016 ahead of Rusev’s match with Lesnar for a WWE live event. Heyman shared his feedback which she followed up by noting Lesnar’s take on the same. 

“Back in 2016 in San Jose, I got to see up close how smart Brock is to this business. It was Brock vs. Rusev on some WWE live events, and my husband and I were just starting out. Before the show, Paul Heyman gave me pointers on part of my promo and then asked Brock what he thought about it.”

“Brock took a second and thought, and then gave me notes on how I could say it. He took what Paul and I had come up with, and spun it in a completely different direction by anticipating the audience’s reaction, and then having a plan to deal with that reaction.”

“We went out there that night and did our promo, and the match with Brock vs. Rusev was incredible. When we came back, Brock pulled me aside and gave me notes on my execution. He told me I was ‘stepping on my on pop by not allowing them to boo longer’ and to ‘wait a bit longer for the crowd to start chanting.’ It was incredible advice I got from Brock, and the whole experience really helped Miro and I grow as performers and on the mic,” Perry wrote. 

“But I was more blown away by how wise Brock was to this business. I guess I bought into what he wants us all to see, which is the viking destroyer character, but backstage there’s few smarter than him in knowing how to pull the most from a beat, or a movement or a moment.”

Perry made her WWE debut in 2013 as Rusev’s manager and competed in her first match at the WrestleMania 32 pre-show. She was released from the company in 2021 and a couple of years later joined AEW until November 2023. 

Last year, Perry signed a Legends deal with WWE. She has not officially retired from in-ring competition and expressed interest on numerous occasions on a potential return.

WWE Raw live results: WrestleMania 42 go-home show

Date: April 13, 2026
Location: Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, CA 

The Big Takeaway —

WrestleMania 42 is this weekend. 

**********

Show Recap — 

Raw kicked off immediately with a pre-taped Roman Reigns promo. Reigns said that when he won the Royal Rumble, he told CM Punk to enjoy his time as the World Champion, but instead, he lied and exposed himself as a hypocrite. 

The video cut to clips of Punk’s hypocritical statements. Punk claimed he brought in the Shield, even though when the angle first happened, he claimed he had nothing to do with it. Punk claimed the company treated him like garbage, even though he was champion for 400+ days. Punk claimed he didn’t surround himself with a wiseman or yes-men, even though he previously had Paul Heyman or the Straight Edge Society by his side. 

They also showed Pat McAfee’s comments about Punk taking the money to go to Saudi Arabia. Reigns said he liked McAfee, but never has a punter run his mouth to him. Nobody believed in Punk anymore because it wasn’t 2012. Reigns didn’t lie. That’s why people liked him and trusted him. Either Punk would tell the truth tonight, or Reigns would. 

(This was well done, and a good idea to start the show with this as a hook for their segment later tonight.) 

********

Wrestlers were shown arriving at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, and a video package for Brock Lesnar vs. Oba Femi aired. 

Brock Lesnar and Paul Heyman segment 

Adam Pearce and Paul “Triple H” Lesvesque stood in the ring together. Pearce wanted to ensure the Lesnar-Femi match actually happened, so he decided they would sign their match contract separately. 

Heyman marched out and agreed with Pearce’s sentiment. We were close to WrestleMania, and nobody should get close to Lesnar. 

Lesnar entered and signed the contract. Heyman said it might as well be a Nigerian death warrant. Lesnar ripped the microphone away from Heyman and said we wouldn’t even know Femi’s name after Sunday. Heyman gave us a spoiler for the real WrestleMania main event—Lesnar would win, and Femi would lose. 

********

After all the talking to kick off the show, we were treated to a video involving the Vision. IShowSpeed was having doubts about his upcoming match. Logan Paul and Austin Theory tried to psych him up and did some in-ring training with him. Speed was full of confidence following this short training session. 

During a break, Michael Cole said WrestleMania was all about the moments, and they aired a clip of Giannis Antetokounmpo saying his favourite Mania moment was Lesnar ending Undertaker’s streak. 

There was footage of the Mania stage being built at the stadium in Las Vegas. 

Charlotte Flair (w/ Alexa Bliss) vs. Lyra Valkyria (w/ Bayley)

Flair had control throughout a break after hitting a big boot, but Valkyria came back with a middle rope leg drop onto a hunched-over Flair for two. Flair responded with a moonsault for a nearfall before Valkyria hit a fisherman’s suplex for two. 

Flair chucked Valkyria outside the ring, knocking over Bayley in the process. Back in the ring, Flair rolled up Valkyria, but Bayley tripped up Flair, and Valkyria managed to fall backward into a cover for the pinfall win. 

Flair was pissed, and the two teams got into a shoving match until the referees backed them off. 

Match result: Lyra Valkyria defeated Charlotte Flair (10:25) 

********

Cole let us know there were still tickets available for the SmackDown and Raw surrounding WrestleMania. (Both shows are also in Vegas.) 

The MFTs confronted LA Knight and the Usos backstage. Solo Sikoa couldn’t believe Jimmy and Jey were hanging out with Knight every week. Knight challenged three of them to a six-man tag match tonight so he could smack them back to factory settings. 

Penta cut a commercial break promo plugging the Intercontinental title ladder match at Mania. He planned on bringing pain, and the match would be a war. 

They plugged the Hulk Hogan Netflix documentary. (The new one, not the one from 2017.) There was only a split-second crowd reaction to this because the video was followed by Stephanie Vaquer’s entrance, but it sounded like people were booing the Hogan plug. We’ll see what the live reports indicate. 

********

Stephanie Vaquer and Liv Morgan segment 

Vaquer entered the ring for an interview with Cathy Kelley, but she was immediately attacked from behind by Liv Morgan. (Morgan still has a knot on her forehead.) Vaquer collided with Kelley, who was knocked down (perhaps Kelley’s first ever bump). 

This led to our latest pull-apart brawl, as the two women brawled until officials broke things up. With Vaquer out of the ring, Morgan grabbed a mic and said, “I knew your mother was trash, but I didn’t know she raised a little bitch.” (Enlightening stuff.) 

Vaquer stormed back into the ring to brawl again until officials broke it up again. 

(Kelley was helped to the back, and later in the show, Cole said she was checked on by trainers and would be fine.)

********

Jackie Redmond interviewed Iyo Sky backstage. Sky said she may have lost to Jade Cargill on SmackDown, but she did not regret fighting for her friend, Rhea Ripley. Sky would be rooting for Ripley at WrestleMania. 

Asuka and Kairi Sane interrupted. Asuka said Sky went into Mania as the world champion last year, but this year, she was just Ripley’s sidekick. 

Sky said she had enough of Asuka and told Sane she didn’t have to put up with this. Asuka put Sane in a match against Sky tonight (presumably because Pearce didn’t make any matches himself). 

********

Six-man tag team match: LA Knight, Jimmy Uso & Jey Uso vs. Solo Sikoa, JC Mateo & Tanga Loa (w/ Talla Tonga)

This was a short match with a commercial break, so not much happened. 

Jey went for a suicide dive, but Sikoa caught him and drove him into the announce desk. Tama Tonga showed up behind the barricade and was confronted by Sikoa and Tonga. This distracted Loa, so Knight hit him with a BFT for the pinfall win. 

Match result: KA Knight & The Usos defeated Tanga Loa, JC Mateo & Solo Sikoa (6:45) 

********

Jelly Roll’s favourite WrestleMania was The Rock vs. Hulk Hogan at WrestleMania X8 in Toronto. There was one more of these segments later on, with a bunch of fans choosing Cody Rhodes’ win over Roman Reigns at WrestleMania 40 as their favourite.

Gunther and Seth Rollins segment 

Gunther entered for a promo, but like the earlier segment with Vaquer and Morgan, he was immediately attacked from behind by Seth Rollins. Gunther bailed. 

Rollins said Gunther jumped him two weeks in a row, so tonight was his receipt, and Rollins would finish the job at Mania. Rollins said if this really was personal for Gunther, like he claimed—and not just him seeking a favour from Heyman—he should return to the ring and tell him why he wanted this match at Mania. 

Gunther grabbed a mic and got back into the ring and into Rollins’ face. Gunther said he was indeed solving Heyman’s problem, but he was also doing it with a smile on his face, because Rollins was pissing him off. Rollins strutted around like he was the best in the ring, but he wasn’t—Gunther was, and Rollins never wanted to find that out. 

When he was the world champion, Rollins didn’t seek him out. Instead, Rollins became a useful idiot for Heyman. WrestleMania was personal for him because he wanted to expose that Rollins could not lace his boots. 

They butted heads before exchanging blows. Rollins got the better of this brawl and tried to curb-stomp Gunther’s head onto the ring steps, but Gunther escaped through the crowd. 

******** 

Dominik Mysterio confronted Pearce backstage. Dom didn’t like that Rey Mysterio was getting an IC title shot, while he had to face the Demon Finn Bálor. Dom said Bálor told him the demon was dead. He also signed a contract to fight Bálor, not the demon, and wanted the match cancelled. Pearce said Rey was a Hall of Famer and was getting the IC title match he deserved—and Dom would get what he deserved, too. 

Actor Yahya Abdul-Mateen II and Sacramento Kings player Dylan Cardwell were in the crowd. 

IYO SKY vs. Kairi Sane (w/ Asuka)

During a break, Asuka and Sky played tug-of-war with Sane until Asuka forcefully let go, and Sane collided with Sky as a result. Sane took over in the match, and Asuka took some cheap shots on Sky while the referee was distracted. Sky made her come back following the break with a missile dropkick and running corner meteora. 

Sane distracted the referee after being knocked off the top rope, allowing Asuka to shove Sky into the ring post. This made a loud thud, but Jessika Carr had to play dumb like she didn’t hear anything, even though she turned around and Sky was dead. 

Ripley ran out to her music and hit Asuka with a headbutt (which actually missed by a mile), but was attacked from behind by Jade Cargill. Sky wiped out Cargill in response. 

Sky went to the top rope, but with the referee distracted for at least the third time in the match, Asuka tripped her off, and Sane applied a small package for the pinfall win. 

Match result: Kairi Sane defeated IYO SKY (9:56)

That’s three straight singles losses for Sky, who does not have a singles win in 2026. 

This match probably would’ve been pretty good without all the outside stuff, but the outside stuff is what we’re paying for. 

*******

There was a video package for AJ Lee vs. Becky Lynch. 

Triple H and Pearce entered to Triple H’s music during a break for the next segment. 

Oba Femi segment 

Pearce called out Femi to sign the WrestleMania contract. Femi entered to a strong reaction, and he quickly signed the contract. Triple H alerted Femi to Heyman, who was suddenly standing on the stage. The crowd chanted for Femi. 

Heyman said he’s never seen someone come across as the biggest star in the industry as fast as Femi. Heyman knew when he was safe and knew when he was not, and knew Femi was a violent man. That was also the thing Heyman liked most about Femi. He was the most violent man to come to WWE since Lesnar. He was the fastest rising star since Lesnar. He was the most impressive athlete, fighter, and combat athlete— 

Heyman’s sentence was cut off by the crowd, who continued to chant loudly for Femi. Heyman informed them that it would all come to an end on WrestleMania Sunday. It would all come crashing down in Suplex City with an F5 by Lesnar. Heyman said Femi would have to rebuild his career after WrestleMania and that his door would be open. 

Femi said it was taking everything in his being not to beat Heyman pillar to post. The crowd chanted, “Beat his ass.” Femi wasn’t interested because Heyman’s physical scars would heal, but the emotional scars from his beast losing would last forever. Femi told Heyman to close his door, because the only door Femi needed was the door to WrestleMania. 

Femi said Heyman thought no one could beat Lesnar because of the past 25 years, but over the past four weeks, Femi showed that he absolutely can be beaten. It wasn’t personal for Femi, it was business. But it wasn’t business as usual because this was different. He could feel it, Heyman could feel it, and the fans could feel it. This was the end for Lesnar. 

Femi said Heyman has always been there with Lesnar as his mouthpiece, but he has never been an honest one. If Heyman were honest, he would have come out there and announced that his client was scared of him. He was the mountain that Lesnar could not climb, and he would win at WrestleMania. Femi was the one and always was. Everyone knew it, and at WrestleMania, Heyman would know it, too. 

(This was a good final segment for this match. Femi had to fight through some overwritten dialogue, but he was really good here, particularly when he got more and more fired up.) 

********

They aired Liv Morgan’s Terrible Trouble music video. 

Je’Von Evans & Dragon Lee vs. Rusev & JD McDonagh

There was an impressive spot during a break where Evans hit a frog splash with Rusev positioned more than halfway across the ring. The impressive spots continued when Dragon Lee made a hot tag. Lee leaped over the top rope and used a hurricanrana to yank McDonagh off the apron and into Rusev. 

Lee hit a snap German suplex, but McDonagh responded with a Spanish fly. Evans broke up the cover and wiped out Rusev with a dive. Lee followed moments later with a Styles Clash on McDonagh for the pinfall win. 

— Rusev attacked Lee and Evans after the match. Rey ran out to attack Rusev and went for a 619, but Rusev cut him off with a clothesline. Penta ran out next, but Rusev cut him off with a Machka Kick. Rusev laid out everyone (minus McDonagh) and put Lee in the Accolade. Rusev stood tall. 

Match result: Dragon Lee & Je’Von Evans defeated JD McDonagh & Rusev (8:13) 

Every Raw match is ten minutes or less with a commercial break in the middle, but at least the last 90 seconds of this was fun. And nobody interfered.

********

Danhausen accosted Pearce backstage. Danhausen assumed Pearce was on the phone with John Cena and wanted to talk to him. Pearce said no. The comedy here was Danhausen saying, “You can’t see me,” while Pearce was on the phone, then disappearing when Pearce turned back around. 

(Danhausen also came out in front of the live crowd during break earlier to do his usual bit.) 

Somebody in the crowd had a “We want Naomi” sign. You know why she’s out of action, right? 

******** 

Roman Reigns and CM Punk — WrestleMania 42 go-home segment

Roman Reigns entered. He told Sacramento to acknowledge him. They did. 

CM Punk’s music hit and entered through the crowd. He slapped hands with fans and really, really took his time to get to ringside. Punk stood atop the announce table and addressed Reigns’ cold-open promo. 

It sounded like a political smear campaign to Punk, and he assumed Reigns put it together himself. Punk wanted to tell his truth. The fans could be witnesses, and Reigns could be the judge. Punk wanted Reigns to tell him when he was telling lies. 

Punk made his way up the steps and started his promo while standing on the apron. Punk said he hated Reigns because he envied him. This was all he ever wanted. This was the only dream he wanted since he was a kid. He envied that it was handed to Reigns. He hated that Reigns was champion for 1,316 days because, after some self-reflection, Punk knew how hard he worked to be that great. 

In the history books, when they talk about legacy, they wouldn’t ask how, they would ask how many. Punk hated the number 1,316. He hated how many times Reigns main-evented WrestleMania. He hated that he felt this way. 

Sika was a great man, a great wrestler, a champion, and a Hall of Famer. Punk loved and respected the old-timers. He hated the fact that he invoked Reigns’ father’s name in vain, “and I sincerely apologize to you.” (Punk entered the ring and cut the rest of his promo face-to-face with Reigns.) 

Punk said there was more than one royal family in professional wrestling. He hated that he envied that he wasn’t born into a dynasty. He didn’t know what it was like having that kind of family. 

Punk was born in the backyard and back alleyways of Chicago. He was a misfit who had to find his own family. He found his own family in the streets of Sacramento. He found his family in the locker rooms of every VFW hall, dilapidated Midwest barns, bowling alleys, and abandoned churches. 

Punk found his family on the indies, then he conquered Japan. He went to England and Puerto Rico. He went around the world twice. He wasn’t born on third base with a silver spoon. He busted his ass and made pro wrestling his home, and made them his family. 

Punk hated that he felt this way, or that he had to share anything with Reigns, including his first singles match headlining WrestleMania. Just like he had gold on his shoes and around his waist tonight, on April 19th, there would be gold above his head with his blood-caked face when their match was over, and Las Vegas chanting his name. 

Reigns responded. He said that was probably the truest stuff he’s heard Punk say—until the last part. Reigns wanted to say something true, too. He hated Punk. He hated him for a long time. But the main reason was his relationship with the fans. 

Reigns hoped that when he left, the fans would miss him as much as they missed Punk for ten years. That was the truest thing Punk had, the relationship with their fanbase. No one could take that from him. On Sunday, that was Punk’s truth, but not the reality. 

The reality was that Punk’s time was up. He had months to be relevant (as the world champion), but did nothing with it. This nostalgia experiment would be done, and we would fix the mess that Punk started. They would make this place where they had it (before Punk returned)—at the very top worth every single dollar. 

On Sunday, the Tribal Chief would take over, and Punk, although with the rest of the world, would acknowledge him. 

They stared down as the show ended.