A look back at every April 1 WWE WrestleMania main event in history

April 1 has proven to be a significant historical date for wrestling fans with five different WWE WrestleManias taking place through the decades: 12% of the entire history, to be exact.

As you might imagine, each featured their share of memorable main events and big moments that grew over time. It seems doubtful that a WrestleMania ever takes place on the date again given recent history and wanting to get away from competition like the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.

Without any jokes or pranks, here’s every main event from WrestleManias held on April 1.

WrestleMania VI (1990): Intercontinental Champion Ultimate Warrior vs. World Champion Hulk Hogan in a winner take all match

Promoted as “The Ultimate Challenge,” the feud featured the company’s two biggest fan favorites going head-to-head. Hogan entered the bout as WWF Champion, while Ultimate Warrior was the Intercontinental Champion with both belts on the line. The show was held at the SkyDome in Toronto, Canada — now the Rogers Centre.

The magnitude of stardom at the time made it a noteworthy part of WWE history. After the loss, Hogan handed over the title belt to Warrior and they embraced in the middle of the ring.

It symbolized WWE’s attempt at a passing-of-the-torch moment to position Warrior as the company’s next top star after Hogan. As history would show, that didn’t go too well.

WrestleMania X-Seven (2001): Steve Austin vs. The Rock for the WWE Championship 

This match is widely regarded as one of the most career-altering and memorable matches in WWE history. At the time, both Austin and The Rock were at the peak of their wrestling careers, and represented the best of the Attitude Era. 

Held at the Reliant (NRG) Astrodome in Austin’s home turf of Texas, the match carried high stakes. It was a no DQ title match, paving the way for a brutal and dramatic showdown between the two stars.

The big shocker happened when the referee was knocked out and Vince McMahon entered the ring with a steel chair. Austin then instructed him to use it on Rock as he held his hands behind his back. Austin won the match, weaponizing the chair against Rock as McMahon looked on. The Texas Rattlesnake stunned everyone when he joined forces with his arch rival in a move fans never anticipated. 

The WrestleMania X-Seven main event remains a marquee match in WWE history.

WrestleMania 23 (2007): John Cena vs. Shawn Michaels for the WWE Championship 

The Undertaker won the 2007 Royal Rumble and faced Batista for the World Heavyweight Championship in a streak vs. title match while Michaels was the Rumble runner-up and on the following edition of Raw, he won a number one contenders match for the WWE Championship. 

Along the road to WrestleMania, Michaels and Cena were teamed together and dethroned Rated RKO to become WWE Tag Team Champions in January 2007 and were still champions when they faced each other in the WrestleMania 23 main event.

Cena retained the title by putting Michaels in the STFU. The following night on Raw, they put the Tag Team titles on the line against the Hardy Boyz. During the match, Michaels accidentally kicked Cena with Sweet Chin Music, opening the door for Jeff Hardy to pin him for the titles.

WrestleMania XXVIII (2012): John Cena vs. The Rock

Dubbed a once in a lifetime clash, Cena and The Rock’s collision at WrestleMania XXVIII was after a year’s worth of build.

There was no title involved unlike the following year where they rematched in the WrestleMania 29 main event for the WWE Championship.

The build for their rivalry spanned across a year since The Rock returned at WrestleMania 27, the same show where Cena was facing The Miz with the WWE title on the line. The Rock interfered, hitting Cena with an unsuspecting Rock Bottom and costing him the match.

That set the stage for their confrontation on the following Raw where the two megastars stood opposite each other in the ring and finalized their first-ever match for a year later. 

Cena’s obsession to get even after “the biggest failure of his career” in his inability to defeat The Rock at that WrestleMania 28 led to the rematch the next year. 

WrestleMania 39 (2023 night one): Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn vs. The Usos for the WWE undisputed Tag Team titles

Throughout 2022, The Bloodline terrorized the roster with their dominance. In May of that year, The Usos defeated RK-Bro (Randy Orton & Matt Riddle) in a Tag Team title unification match for the Raw and SmackDown versions of the title.

During this time, Sami Zayn joined The Bloodline and was an honorary Uce. His friend/rival Owens was unhappy about the decision and attempted to get Zayn away from his Bloodline pals.

Things escalated at the 2023 Royal Rumble. Owens faced Roman Reigns for the undisputed WWE Universal Championship with Zayn and Paul Heyman at ringside. 

After his victory over Owens, Reigns instructed The Usos to handcuff him to the ropes and attack him. Reigns picked up a steel chair and Zayn then intervened, pleading with him not to weaponize it against his friend. Reigns handed him the steel chair to strike Owens, but Zayn used it on Reigns instead in a huge moment.

In the months that followed, Owens and Zayn were reunited and vowed to get revenge on The Bloodline, ultimately leading to the WrestleMania 39 match where they ended The Usos’ long title reign. 

Jim Ross suggests new WWE role for John Cena

Months after his retirement from WWE, John Cena received a major career-changing suggestion from wrestling veteran Jim Ross.

Ross recently opened up on his Grillin JR Podcast and suggested WWE utilize Cena in a commentary role amid his WrestleMania 42 return as the PLE’s host (H/T WrestleTalk).

I’d like to hear John’s commentary. He’s smart, he’s got a way with words. I’m curious as to how he might do in that role. There’s no doubt in my mind he’s got the talent for it. But I don’t know if he would be content with that or not,” Ross said. “But he would do a good job, no doubt about that in my view.

Last year in December, 2025, Cena tapped out and lost his retirement match against Gunther at Saturday Night’s Main Event. Focusing on his Hollywood career, Cena has remained absent from WWE television since then.

John Cena opens up about his potential new WWE role

A few days ago, while taking part in the Q&A panel at MegaCon Orlando 2026, John Cena opened up in detail about his potential new WWE role.

These panels are great because I always give one piece of information that the world catches and then it makes the headlines the next day. This is that moment,” Cena said. “I am working diligently to try to figure out my next path as a contributing, useful member of WWE. I think I might’ve cracked the code, and I think we have something. And if the stars align and everybody signs off, I will be a whole lot more integrated in the system, and I’m very excited about the road ahead. And I’m just crossing my fingers that it works.”

WOR: WrestleMania card, Cena returns, non-Mania big matches, RAW report, more!

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the WrestleMania card filling up, what should headline night one, John Cena added to boost ticket sales, new Mania weekend non-WWE matches, Arena Mexico, Best of the Super Juniors, the RAW report, ratings and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Among the topics covered:

  • A look back at the career of Dennis Condrey of Midnight Express fame
  • Update on WrestleMania, both the matches, business update the ticket demand at the present time
  • An updated look at AEW’s All In on 8/30 at Wembley Stadium as well as a look at the Dynasty show and ticket demand for the show
  • Coverage of El Homenaje a Dos Leyendas, CMLL’s second biggest show of the year, with El Satanico’s retirement at 76, The Death Riders appear, the heavyweight title changes hands and Mistico returns
  • A look at the NCAA Division I tournament including a look back 79 years when future pro wrestling legends dominated the heavyweight division and how it ties into the most recent tournament. We also look at the rivalry that could define college wrestling for years to come between a coach and his former pupil, a guy who was in high school in December and wins the NCAA title in March, as well business notes on the show, both attendance and television ratings
  • A look back at Sid Vicious, Badnews Allen and Dennis Rodman’s pro wrestling days
  • Trying to explain the latest controversy in television ratings and how this related to pro wrestling
  • How ratings differ from a sports survey about wrestling fans
  • The most complete look at the ratings for all the pro wrestling television shows over the past week,including competition, demos and comparisons with one year ago, as well as competition in the time slot.
  • Notes on CMLL talent coming to WrestleMania week
  • Major injury to arguably CMLL’s best worker
  • Notes on the 83rd anniversary of pro wrestling in one of its most famous arenas
  • Notes on tentative plans for a major mask vs. mask match
  • Callum Newman and Yuya Uemura tear it up in the New Japan Cup finals
  • Next major New Japan show thoughts with Ospreay’s returnh
  • Tanahashi talks goals to turn the company around
  • Kazusada Higuchi retirement notes
  • Thoughts on Satoru Sayama and his impact on pro wrestling
  • Aja Kongs 40th anniversary show
  • Gable Stevesn and RAF
  • Ted DiBiase Jr acquitted in his case
  • The end of CBS News Radio and what former WCW announcer was an anchor there
  • Notes on the announcing at the orignal When Worlds Collide AAA show
  • Lots of WrestleMania week show notes
  • FantasticaMania comes to the U.K.
  • Update on WBD sale to Paramount Skydance
  • Update on Revolution PPV buys
  • Jeff Jarrett becomes co-owner of a sports franchise
  • Jericho talks about working today
  • More on the Ali Revival Act
  • A list of a lot of PPV buy numbers for UFC
  • Ari Emanuel’s role in getting President Trump to stop the case against Ticketmaster/Live Nation.
  • WWE star training for a bodybuilding contest soon
  • Jesse Ventura rants but his timeline makes sense

This Week’s Back Issue

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Monday Update

WWE Raw at MSG
WWE Raw at MSG

— Bryan and I will be back tonight talking Raw, John Cena, Tony Khan, Scott D’Amore and several other subjects with Wrestling Observer Radio tonight.

— Raw is tonight in Madison Square Garden. MSG is considered a special place in WWE and whenever they have Raw there they try and shoot a major angle. They had 16,443 tickets out earlier today so they don’t have the big stage and can probably get around 18,000 in so either a sellout (and it will be announced as such) or very close. Roman Reigns,CM Punk and Brock Lesnar are on the show meaning Oba Femi most likely as well. The Usos defend the tag titles against Logan Paul & Austin Theory in a street fight. Lash Legend & Nia Jax defend the tag titles against Bayley & Lyra Valkyria. Penta defends the IC title against Kofi Kingston and Iyo Sky faces Raquel Rodriguez. I would think they should be adding a few new matches to Mania this week.

— I have no idea why there is any controversy regarding John Cena as a guest host for WrestleMania this year. He made it very clear he wouldn’t wrestle, bugt would always have an affiliation with the company. The move was made because they are trying to boost ticket sales and there is nothing wrong with that. In recent days they’ve fallen even farther behind last year’s pace.

— The NXT show tomorrow at the Theater in Madison Square Garden has 2,280 tickets out.

— We are looking for reports from this past Friday night’s NXT show in Oklahoma City, results, finishes and highlights, to [email protected]

— Collision will air twice this week. The show is being taped Wednesday night in Winnipeg. It will air Thursday at 8 p.m. and again on Saturday night. TNT is listing a TBA at 11:30 p.m. Saturday night but it is scheduled as a Collision replay. There will be games through 11 p.m. that will have a gigantic viewership number. They are scheduled for a 30 minute post-game show and then Collision after that. The replay could do a very strong number, especially the first 30 minutes although it will tail off greatly from there.

— Penn State’s Mitchell Mesenbrink, a junior from Penn State who was the favorite to win the Hodge Trophy in 2026, did in the most dominant fashion in the history of the award. Mesenbring, who won the NCAA title on 3/31 at 165 pounds, was listed by 93.0 percent of those voting for first place after going 27-0 with 26 bonus point wins. Spencer Lee in 2020 got 91.2 percent of the first place votes. Kyle Dake in 2013 got 90.7 percent. The Hodge trophy is the college wrestling equivalent to the Heisman Trophy,named after Danny Hodge, one of America’s best real wrestlers of all-time as well as a Hall of Fame pro wrestler.

— Arena Mexico has its biggest Tuesday show in a while this week with four title matches. Averno defends the Historic light heavyweight title against Atlantis Jr. Mascara Dorada defends the Historic welterweight title against Yutani. Flip Gordon defends the Historic middleweight title against Volador Jr. And Magia Blanca defends the Mexican national welterweight title against Capitan Sucida. I expect some title changes because they are starting the Tournament of champions on Friday.

— Given the rating of 256,000 viewers with an 0.05 in 18-49, and the competition, Thursday’s TNA show did what I would call the most impressive rating of their short sting thus far on AMC. Competition included two NCAA basketball games, one of which drew 9.4 million viewers, as well as the Los Angeles Dodgers opening game on NBC, it was far harder competition than usual.

— Mike Santana vs. Eddie Edwards will be the TNA title match at Rebellion on 4/11 in Cleveland.

— Wrestle Pro has its tenth anniversary show on Saturday in Rahway,NJ at the Rec Center with Ricochet vs. Sidney Akeem, Anthony Bowens vs. Max Caster, plus the Gates of Agony,Lady Frost, Scotty 2 Hotty and Brian Myers are the show.

— Former NWA champion Ron Garvin turned 81 today. Mike Rotunda turned 68. Conrad Efraim/SD Jones was born on this day in 1945. (thanks to Tony Richrds)

— Defy and Dragon Gate are doing a joint show on 4/10 at the Hawthorne Theater in Portland, OR. Bryan Keith derends the Defy title against Susumu Yokouska. Marina Shafir defends her women’s titel against AMira. Steven Borden & Cody Chhun & Guillermo Rosas face MadoktaKikuta & Kai & Ishin, plus Dragon Kid, Yamato, Ho Ho Lun, Midnight Heat, Judas Icarus & Travis Williams, La Estrella, Kzy, Ben K and Adam Brooks are n the show.

— The New Japan Sakura Genesis show starts on Friday night at 1:40 a.m. (late Friday) Eastern and 10:40 p.m. Pacific. The opening match actually goes against the main event of Smackdown if you live on the West Coast. Sakura Genesis is from Sumo Hall in Tokyo and is a loaded show with Yota Tsuji vs. Callum Newman for the IWGP title, Oskar & Yuto-Ice defend the IWGP tag titles against Zack Sabre Jr. & Ryohei Oiwa, Will Ospreay & Great O’Khan & Henare vs. Yuya Uemur & Taichi & El Desperado, Konosuke Takeshita defends the TV title against Shota Umino and Hirooki Goto & Yoshi-Hashi & Oleg Boltin defend the trios titles against Ren Narita & Yujiro Takahashi & Chase Owens.

John Cena to host WWE WrestleMania 42

John Cena says he will be at WWE WrestleMania 42 as the host for the weekend.

The recently retired WWE star posted a video on X from Hollywood where he is currently filming for a Netflix movie. He said that Las Vegas is in close proximity to where WrestleMania will be held and since the show is in need of a host, it’s a role he’s looking forward to pursue.

“Ah, retired life in the sun. I’m kidding! Check out the backdrop. I’m shooting a movie for Netflix called ‘One Attempt Remaining’ which you can see when it comes out. I’m also on the road which is ironic cause there’s a road to WrestleMania going on. And, Hollywood is really close to Vegas. Rumor around this town is WrestleMania needs a host. Well, I’m already on that road so I will see you at WrestleMania,” he said.

The Netflix comedy film also features Jennifer Garner and is expected for release in October this year. 

Cena retired and competed in his final WWE match on December 13, 2025, following a year-long tour. He tapped out to Gunther before walking away for good. Shortly after, Paul “Triple H” Levesque said that while his in-ring duties were done, Cena would be involved with the company in a backstage capacity. 

WrestleMania 42 will take place on April 18 and 19 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

John Cena, other WWE stars appear on Netflix MLB opening night broadcast

John Cena thankfully found some work to do post-WWE retirement, appearing during Netflix’s inaugural Major League Baseball broadcast Wednesday.

Cena wasn’t live in San Francisco for the Giants vs. New York Yankees but appeared in a two-minute video, explaining the new automated balls and strikes (ABS) challenge system being rolled out this season (seen below). Clips of Cena doing wrestling moves were intertwined with his presentation.

Cena is currently involved with six projects at various stages of production with the first two — Acme vs. Coyote and Matchbox The Movie — set to be released this year.

WWE World Tag Team Champion Jey Uso and Jacob Fatu were also in attendance, sitting in the stands. The two were interviewed by NFL quarterback Jameis Winston with Winston doing a Rock promo line (seen below) when telling a story about people booing him not giving a ball to a kid.

Jimmy Uso did not appear as advertised, replaced by Fatu. It’s unclear what the reason was for the change.

WWE and Netflix are in year two of a five-year rights contract with MLB’s Netflix contract kicking off this season.

John Cena reflects on AJ Styles match at WWE Crown Jewel

John Cena says he doesn’t typically watch his matches back, but made an exception for his bout with AJ Styles at WWE Crown Jewel last year.

Cena’s fifth final match took place at the October 11, 2025 event in Perth, Australia, where he defeated Styles in a bout that ran just under 30 minutes and included multiple tributes to past opponents of both wrestlers.

Cena discussed the match during a Q&A appearance at MegaCon Orlando 2026 this weekend.

Cena said:

“The atmosphere in Perth was like something I’d never seen. I’d never seen that many t-shirts. I know for a fact we didn’t give them away, but it’s like we gave them away. I wore yellow that night and the whole crowd was yellow. I’m used to it being 50/50, or sometimes people wear an older shirt. So the atmosphere really swept everybody up, and because the audience was smart enough to understand what we were doing as well. You can do all this cool stuff that you think is cool, but if you guys don’t get it, I’m kind of being selfish.”

Cena also revealed that Styles had told him in advance that he was planning to retire in January.

“AJ had shared with me that he was going to retire in January. I really think the world of him and wanted to do something special and make it special. And then you had an audience that kind of understood that.”

I don’t watch a lot of matches back because I like to live the moment. I don’t like to get into my head about what I could have done different. I can’t. It’s done. That’s one that I have watched back, and man, the audience was calling spots for us. It was great. It was just a moment where everyone in the arena was in on it.”

Clips of Cena’s full Q&A appearance at MegaCon Orlando 2026 are available below. The video is queued to his comments about wrestling Styles at WWE Crown Jewel 2025.

John Cena: ‘I think we have something’ on potential new WWE role

John Cena says he believes a new role for himself in WWE is in his future.

Cena took part in a Q&A panel at MegaCon Orlando 2026 this weekend. In a clip later posted to YouTube, he said he’s very excited about what’s ahead with the company and that he expects to be “a whole lot more integrated in the system.”

Cena said:

“These panels are great because I always give one piece of information that the world catches and then it makes the headlines the next day. This is that moment,” Cena said. “I am working diligently to try to figure out my next path as a contributing, useful member of WWE. I think I might’ve cracked the code, and I think we have something. And if the stars align and everybody signs off, I will be a whole lot more integrated in the system, and I’m very excited about the road ahead. And I’m just crossing my fingers that it works.”

With Cena now retired from the ring, his schedule is focused on acting projects. He stars in Matchbox, directed by Sam Hargrave, which is set for release later this year. The comedy Little Brother with Eric Andre is also expected out in 2026. Additionally, Coyote vs. Acme, which had previously been shelved, is now slated for a summer release.

Clips from Cena’s appearance at MegaCon Orlando 2026 are included below, with the video queued to his comments about a potential new role in WWE.

Chris Masters says he and John Cena ‘never mixed too well’ in WWE

Chris Masters and John Cena never got along well when they were both coming up together in WWE.

Appearing on a new episode of Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Masters addressed whether he ever came close to winning a WWE championship. There were plans for him to win the Tag Team titles and Intercontinental Championship that never came to fruition. Masters feels like Vince McMahon was even giving him some consideration for a World Championship run. That never happened either, and Masters thinks the differences between him and Cena could have played a part in McMahon’s decision.

“Oh, all of them,” Masters responded when asked if he ever came close to winning a title. “There was a point, I mean, Carlito and me were supposed to win them at that WrestleMania [22], but it literally got switched like the day before. We were penciled in to win it, but then Carlito, they wanted him to turn baby. And the Spirit Squad, they kind of wanted to get the belts on them somehow to give them some steam. And so that was that.

“And then the Intercontinental title, I was actually supposed to win that, but it was the same point where they had given me an intervention for my prescription painkiller abuse at the time. And they even told me, I remember having the meeting with Johnny [Laurinaitis], because there was a four-way match that night. It was in Vegas for the Intercontinental title that I was slated to win, but then they have caught wind that I had the issues I had and I had a little intervention. Basically told me, ‘You’re going to rehab.’ And so, I screwed that.”

Masters said he thinks McMahon was feeling out a lot of options at one point in the 2000s to see if they had World Champion potential. Though he doesn’t know for sure if Cena was against him getting a World title push, Masters suspects that he was.

“Tag belts, I had no control over, that just happened. [Intercontinental], I effed up. And then, there was a point there, cause you can even watch back to those old Raws where Vince was playing with the idea of making me the youngest champion. But he was feeling out a lot of guys at that point. And I’m pretty sure Cena gave me probably the thumbs down at some point. So I don’t know, maybe,” Masters said.

“We never mixed too well, for whatever reason, you know what I mean? I don’t know. Massachusetts guy, California guy, I don’t know. Just kind of oil and water. But I don’t take away anything from the fact that he’s this generation’s [Hulk] Hogan. And he definitely worked harder than anybody probably would have in that spot, especially for that long.”

Reflecting further on the time he was sent to rehab, Masters said he was initially bitter about it but is happy about the ways the wrestling industry has changed for the better.

“The business is such a cleaner place than it was when I entered,” he said. “It’s nice to not walk into a locker room and have somebody who has issues like that going on or passing out in the locker room. And it’s just a cleaner business now.”

Masters and Cena both trained together at UPW in California when they started out their wrestling careers. Masters still competes on the indies and was formerly part of the NWA roster.

In December of 2025, Cena retired from the ring with a loss to Gunther. He remains under contract with WWE as an ambassador as he transitions into post-wrestling life.

Cody Rhodes says Nattie Neidhart slapped him harder than Travis Scott

Cody Rhodes says Travis Scott’s slap at Elimination Chamber 2025 wasn’t the hardest he’s been hit.

During an interview with Chris Van Vliet, the WWE Champion said he was unfazed by Scott’s attack, despite it leaving him with a busted eardrum and black eye.

Rhodes said:

“Travis Scott did not hurt me. It looks like he hurt me. I took a photo with Travis Scott at the OBB studio event and I never saw that photo which, I like Travis Scott. I think it’s safe to say at this point I like Travis Scott. I like that he lended us his time and that we had moments with him. I mean, he took a Cross Rhodes. Most people just remember the slap and I’m going to be on this side of history with it. I know it wasn’t everyone’s favorite thing.”

Rhodes said Scott’s slap was the third hardest he’s been hit, naming Bob Holly and Nattie Neidhart as number one and two, respectively.

“I’ll give you the list of slaps. Number two, Bob Holly in London. I think he says, ‘Fire up out there, kid.’  And I think, I don’t want to say something nefarious that gets anyone in trouble. I think someone told him to try and knock me out because the way he slapped me was trying to knock a man out. It didn’t. I have a decent little jaw. So, I took said splash.

The number one might shock you, but I felt it in both of my heels. I felt it in my feet. I had to plant my feet. It was so hard. Nattie Neidhart. Nattie Neidhart hit me, it felt like an MLB batter swinging the bat. And I walked into it. She leveled me.So, Nattie’s one, Hardcore Holly two, Travis Scott, I’d say maybe three.”

Scott joined The Rock and John Cena in an attack on Rhodes at the PLE from Toronto on March 1, 2025. He delivered what appeared to be stiff punches to Rhodes’ face during the segment. WWE also reportedly had long term plans for Scott integrated into the storyline but those plans ultimately fell through.

Rhodes discussed the slap last year with Complex, saying that Scott “hit him with the power of a thousand suns.”

“The next day after the incident, I told everyone, ‘He didn’t hit me.’ I didn’t realize there was a fan video circulating of him hitting me with the power of a thousand suns and the noise deafening. And then I had a Tommy Boy situation where the entire side of my face was black and blue and I kept saying, ‘Oh no, I’m good. I’m good.’ And then I had a little flutter in the eardrum because it popped.”

Dominik Mysterio reflects on being John Cena’s final PLE opponent

Dominik Mysterio recently shared insight on being John Cena’s last PLE opponent.

Mysterio appeared on The Collection with Brad Gilmore and discussed several moments from his career, including beating Cena at Survivor Series to regain the Intercontinental Championship.

He said:

“Super, super surreal. Not only was it John Cena’s last PLE, last Survivor Series, it was the first wrestling event ever held at Petco Park in San Diego. Bro, I’m born and raised in San Diego. I’ve gone to (San Diego) Padres games my whole life. I lived there. Did a bunch of sh*t I shouldn’t have done downtown San Diego as well, but, got some great stories I can’t tell. But man, that was just so surreal for me. Walking in, in the city where I’m from, walking out as a double champion, beating John Cena, that sh*t’s insane. You can’t write it. Stuff like that, it just writes itself. It’s like a fairytale ending for me.”

Mysterio also discussed fan reactions he has received throughout his career and said his AAA debut last year produced the loudest response.

“You want to know something crazy? I think the wildest one for me was showing up in AAA for the first time in Juan de la Barrera. Obviously, winning my I.C. Championship at WrestleMania, insane. Beating John Cena at Survivor Series, insane. WrestleMania against my deadbeat dad, two hours from San Diego in L.A., insane. But the reaction, the thing is all of those were very large, open stadiums. Like, massive, massive crowds. Juan de la Barrera, AAA, people weren’t expecting me. I showed up, I think that show was on a Saturday. The show started at 8. I got to the arena at like 8:15. So, no one knew I was coming, and I showed up, it was insane” said Mysterio. 

What I was told, this could all be bullsh*t, but I was told this. Allegedly, when they were recording, the speakers, it was so loud that the speakers blew out of the cameras. They couldn’t capture the full audio of it because it was so loud, and it gave me goosebumps and for me, it was just something that I always wanted to do and it was like wrestle in Mexico with AAA, and getting that reaction, showing up randomly, out of nowhere, nobody knew about it. It was f*cking insane, and showing up with the I.C. Championship too, of all things.”

Mysterio dropped the Intercontinental Championship to Penta on the March 2, 2026 edition of WWE Raw. It was his second reign with the title. His first began at WrestleMania 41, where he took it off Bron Breakker in a four-way match that also included Balor and Penta. Mysterio later lost the belt to Cena on the November 10 edition of WWE Raw in Boston. He regained it from Cena at Survivor Series: WarGames later that month in San Diego.

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.

DragonKingKarl: February question & answer show

You have the questions and Karl Stern hopefully has the answers on a new DragonKingKarl Show and no matter what era of pro wrestling history, from the pioneer era to the 2000s, nothing is off limits.

Today’s show takes a number of questions and topic suggestions including the recent retirements of John Cena and Hiroshi Tanahashi and opponents they had in common, Jim Londos’ place in wrestling history (pictured above), theme music, Bubba Ray Dudley, and a few retro pop culture questions as well.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

Drew McIntyre reveals details on canceled John Cena match

Drew McIntyre vs. John Cena sounds like a WWE dream match, and though it was scheduled to take place last year, it never happened. 

McIntyre discussed the missed opportunity with Shakiel Mahjouri of SHAK Wrestling at the WWE 2K26 hands-on event.

“I mean, I can’t change the creative direction,” McIntyre said. “I talked about getting that match with Cena, getting in a situation on the microphone with Cena, just to prove what I’m capable of. Because I want to compete with the best, and he is, or was, the best on the microphone.”

McIntyre was originally scheduled to wrestle Cena at Crown Jewel in Australia last October. Those plans were scrapped shortly after Cena sent out a post on X asking if fans wanted to see him wrestle AJ Styles, and sure enough Styles eventually got the match at Crown Jewel. Cena later said his opponent was switched to AJ Styles so they could give the crowd “a feel-good moment.” 

“I heard the quote. I heard what John said. Whatever people weren’t feeling what was going on, they decided to pivot. He outright asked, ‘Do you want AJ?‘ And the match was incredible. So, I could sit there and go, ‘Damn, what if?’ Or, ‘What if he Tweeted my name?’ But the reality is, he’s retired and I’m World Champion, so I think it worked out just fine for Drew McIntyre.”

McIntyre reiterated there is nothing he could have done to force his way into the match.

“I keep my head down and I keep working, no matter what happens. I can’t take his phone and say ‘Just Tweet my name.’”

McIntyre and Cena never had a singles match. They have shared the ring for tag matches and multi-person matches, including three times in 2025: at the Elimination Chamber, Royal Rumble, and when Cena and Cody Rhodes defeated McIntyre and Logan Paul on the August 8 SmackDown.

Daily Update: Blake Monroe, Kerwin Silfies, John Cena

Daily Update

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Our annual awards issue is out covering the following topics:

  • Winners, top place winners, comments and every winner of every award dating back to 1980, from Wrestler of the Year, MMA MVP, Most Outstanding, Most Outstanding MMA Fighter, Tag Team of the Year, Best on Interviews, Promotion of the Year, Best Weekly TV show, Match of the Year, MMA Fight of the year, U.S./Canada MPV, Japanese MVP, Mexico MVP, Europe MVP, Best non-heavyweight, Women’s MVP, Women’s MMA MVP, Feud of the Year, Best Box Office Draw, Most Improved, Most Charismatic, Best Technical, Best Brawler, Best Flying Wrestler, Most Overrated, Most Underrated, Rookie of the Year, Best Non-WRestler, Best Television Announcer, Worst Television Announcer, Most major show, Worst major show, Best maneuver, Most Disgusting Promotional Tactic, Worst TV show, Worst match, Worst feud, Worst promotion, Best Booker of the Year, Promoter of the Year, Best Gimmick, Worst Gimmick, Best Book and Best Documentary.
  • Tons of news related to the build to WrestleMania, why the card may be changing, a major concern regarding ticket sales, predictability vs. surprises, How Bron Breakker’s injury changes things, Brock Lesnar situation, Becky Lynch situation, situation in Las Vegas, concerns in Las Vegas, why ticket sales are down, plus build to Elimination Chamber
  • Tadao Yasuda, a unique life of a former sumo star, IWGP champion, one of the biggest upsets in MMA history, the birth of the New Year’s Eve fighting tradition, gambling issues and more
  • Coverage of the New Beginning in Osaka, talent leaving, talent staying, what is the direction for New Japan the next few months and a worst and best match of the year candidate one right after the other
  • Betting odds for this week’s wrestling
  • Most detailed look at the TV ratings, a look at the red flags, streaming numbers and more.
  • Notes on the honoring and retirement of El Satanico and career highlights
  • Mistico sellout updates
  • The last Friday for a month at Arena Mexico with the biggest names
  • AAA TV tapings with WWE talent
  • Starddom PPV notes
  • Epstein files wrestling references
  • Biggest UK women’s show coming
  • Show coming up attempting to be the largest attendance for an all-women’s show in three decades
  • Paramount again trying to get WBD
  • How politics affects pro wrestling
  • Grand Slam Australia notes
  • MJF talks Punk
  • TV reviews
  • YouTube notes
  • CBS airing UFC on 3/7
  • Zuffa boxing defies Ali Act with world title announcement
  • WWE injury updates
  • Bad Bunny Super Bowl controversy
  • WWE Hall of Famer threatens to quit if another person isn’t removed
  • Reigns upcoming schedule

This Week’s Back Issue

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Thursday Update

Kirwin Silfies

WWE

  • WWE and 2K Games held a Creator Fest event at WWE headquarters today to promote the upcoming release of WWE 2K26. Blake Monroe was among the talent there, with this being her first visit to HQ. She appeared on Busted Open Radio and discussed what her time in WWE NXT has been like so far:
    • Oh, it’s been amazing. I mean, wrestling is a real roller coaster. But for me, I always just come back to as a kid, I wanted to be a WWE Superstar. And then to be in somewhere like the WWE HQ where the walls are just covered in legends and then people from now. For me, that’s just really cool. Because it’s like, ‘Hey, I remember being a kid.’ And like, ‘I remember that match and I remember this.’ And it’s like, hey, I’m a part of this and I will build a legacy here.
    • Once we get rid of Thea Hail [in their NXT feud], I can get back on track and build a legacy here and be a part of that. So I think it’s a balance of, like, having the humility of, hey, this was always my dream, but also like I earned my spot here and loads of people want to be a WWE Superstar and they can’t.
  • Michael Hayes posted a tribute to former WWE director Kerwin Silfies following his passing:
    • I was so sorry to hear about Kerwin passing.
    • Kerwin was one of the nicest people I’ve ever met at WWE.
    • You may think you don’t know Kerwin, but, you know his body of work.
    • If there was ever a WWE childhood memory you have, it was most likely directed by Kerwin from 1985-2020. Kerwin will surely be missed.
    • NEVER FORGOTTEN!!
    • RIP Kerwin
  • Shawn Michaels sent his condolences to Silfies’ family and friends:
    • The @WWE family lost a very special part of our team.
    • Kerwin Silfies was our Director during my entire career. If you were there, you know how important that role was. He helped shape the sound, the feel, and the rhythm of what fans watched every week.
    • Raw, SmackDown, WrestleMania… he was in the chair, leading the way.
    • Kerwin loved the work. He loved the crew. And he took pride in getting it right. I’m grateful I got to work alongside him.
    • My thoughts are with his family and everyone who called him a friend.
  • Stephanie McMahon, Mark Henry, Matt Hardy, and Jeff Jarrett are among the others who posted tweets remembering Silfies.
  • In an interview with The Takedown on SI, John Cena named some of the opponents he learned a lot from early in his WWE career:
    • Oh my goodness, that list is long and distinguished. So you’re talking about a short period of time, so I’m going to leave out a lot of names that continued to, quote unquote, carry me from that point beyond. But up until then, Booker T, Eddie Guerrero, John Layfield, Kurt Angle, Rikishi.
    • Man, the list goes on and on. Every performer with time in front of a live audience, who wasn’t from my OVW class, I was able to learn from. They took care of me. Matt Bloom, who was A-Train, guys like Kidman on Velocity, heck even matches I had with a young Bryan Danielson, Paul London, Brian Kendrick, Renee Dupree.
    • To be able to learn from those guys. I was able to learn from every person I was put in the ring with, until I won the championship from a mentor who really took care of me, and toughened me up too, but showed me the ropes, in John Layfield. I’m grateful to them all.
  • PWInsider reports that Sean “X-Pac” Waltman was at the WWE Performance Center today.
  • Shawn Michaels shared a brief clip from WWE’s Performance Center tryouts.
  • TalkSport interviewed Drew McIntyre.
  • Raquel Rodriguez appeared on TMZ’s Inside the Ring podcast.

Other Wrestling

  • Rocky Romero spoke to Undisputed about how Kazuchika Okada was able to help get him acclimated to Japan when they were faction mates in NJPW:
    • We’ve also spent a lot of time together on the road. Dinners in the middle of nowhere, him helping me navigate all different parts of Japan to make sure I was getting culture in our days off and not just in my room watching TV. There’s no one like Okada.
  • Matt & Jeff Hardy have been announced for Battle for the Brave in Rahway, New Jersey on June 6. It’s a wrestling event that Deonna Purrazzo and Steve Maclin are putting on to benefit the charity Tunnels to Towers.
  • Former WWE wrestler Eva Marie was the guest on a new episode of Insight with Chris Van Vliet.
  • SoCalVal interviewed Christy Hemme for WrestlingNewsCo.