WWE was ‘blindsided’ by fan reaction to John Cena vs. Gunther finish

WWE was not expecting the negative reaction fans had to the finish of John Cena vs. Gunther at Saturday Night’s Main Event.

Dave Meltzer and Bryan Alvarez addressed the company being “blindsided” by the response on the latest episode of Wrestling Observer Radio.

Meltzer said on the show:

“There are many people in WWE who did not agree with that decision, but the guy in charge did it. The one thing I can say is, even though they may say something different publicly, they were blindsided by that reaction.”

“The idea that like we did it, we knew it was going to get heat, just the price we pay. When they were all chanting and (Triple H) went ‘Ah, I thought’d be louder,’ that was a defense mechanism.”

“I don’t want to say there was no discussion of a reaction, but I was told there was no discussion of a reaction.”

Alvarez then added:

“Here’s the thing. I don’t think it would have gotten that reaction if John Cena would have just passed out in that sleeper hold. They got that reaction because for 20 years people have been sold on Never Give Up.”

Earlier in the conversation, Meltzer also discussed how the reaction to Gunther on WWE Raw could be viewed as a point in favor of the decision to have him win.

“The Gunther reaction was really impressive. If you want to argue that the decision was the right decision, that reaction he got tonight was a good argument because he was really hated and he played it up well.”

“This is not anything we can judge for six months or so,” he added.

The full episode of Wrestling Observer Radio is available for subscribers here.

Bryan Danielson: John Cena ‘deserves the last year of his career to be awesome’

Bryan Danielson says John Cena deserves for the last year of his career to be “awesome.”

Danielson recently spoke to Justin Barrasso of The Undisputed and mentioned that he hasn’t actually seen any of Cena’s retirement run but hopes that it’s gone well.

“I honestly haven’t watched,” said Danielson. “I’m entering this experimental phase of my life where I’m experiencing less input from media. When I went to visit my mother recently, I made a 13-hour drive. I didn’t listen to any music, I didn’t listen to any podcasts. There was nothing but silence. The only times there wasn’t silence was when my wife called, I got on an AEW call, or when I called mom.”

“As I experiment with less input, that also means less wrestling input. So I haven’t seen any of John Cena’s final run. I’m not watching, but I hope it goes really well for John. That guy deserves the last year of his career to be awesome.”

Danielson also addressed the possibility of him wrestling again during the interview. Danielson said he has “delusions” of wrestling a couple matches a year. However, he also noted that the traveling he does just to work commentary for AEW shows is taxing on his body.

“The traveling alone is so taxing on my body,” said Danielson. “So I’m not sure how I could go back to wrestling.”

According to Cagematch, the last time Cena and Danielson shared the ring together was at a WWE house show in Baltimore on December 28, 2018, when Danielson defeated Cena in a steel cage match. Their first time wrestling against one another took place on the February 4, 2003, episode of WWE Velocity, when Cena beat Danielson in a little under four minutes. Perhaps their most notable match came at SummerSlam 2013, when Danielson defeated Cena for the WWE Championship with Triple H as the special guest referee.

Danielson’s full interview with Justin Barrasso of The Undisputed is available here.