Liv Morgan should be dropped from the WWE Queen of the Ring tournament | Opinion 

Liv Morgan’s surprise addition to the WWE Queen of the Ring tournament, announced after last Sunday’s Clash in Italy, sparked some interesting discussion online.

There’s good reason for that as there are some flaws in her inclusion.

Why is it a big deal?

The winner of the tournament for the men and women’s KOR/QOR tourneys earn a championship opportunity at SummerSlam. So, why is the Women’s World Champion featured in a tournament designed to determine her potential challenger? 

It naturally sparked a debate given the traditional expectation that all WWE champions will be featured at Night of Champions later this month in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Morgan positively reacted and explained how her eagerness to win it all got her featured in the tournament. She also appeared slightly taken aback by the announcement and responded while staying in character.

Morgan’s transition from the underdog to compelling fan favorite won her over with the WWE crowd. Her 2022 Money in the Bank win and subsequent cash-in accelerated her rise to stardom. At WrestleMania 42, she defeated Stephanie Vaquer to begin her third World title reign, and it looked like big things were on the horizon for the new champion in 2026. She even released a music video for a new theme song.

But the lack of a title defense since April raises the question on what WWE has in store for her. Even if WWE wants to do a storyline of her holding the World title and also winning the Queen of the Ring Tournament, that decision would invite some scrutiny. 

The Judgment Day trajectory adds another layer of intrigue with the tension among the group of late, lending credence to a theory on Raquel Rodriguez potentially betraying Morgan for the Women’s title as a central storyline. There has been little development and Morgan’s reign is being questioned due to the stagnant positioning and title defenses. It became more evident when the push was strong going into her winning the title.

And then there was this story that came out Thursday.

Morgan needs to defend at Night of Champions

For a champion like Morgan, who has a proven track record and is capable of delivering excellent title matches, to not defend the World Title at an event called Night of Champions diminishes both the title and her reign. Her potential absence also creates an unnecessary disconnect.

Her current path in WWE seems to be less about conventional title defenses and feuds and more about positioning her as the center of multiple stories at once. This strategy could either solidify her stance as champion or risk diluting her third World title reign. 

There is still time for WWE to adjust the Queen of the Ring bracket and replace Morgan with another competitor, allowing her to focus on a title defense. Alternatively, WWE could utilize the weeks leading to the event to determine a challenger for Morgan in a series of qualifying number one contender bouts.

WWE returning to Saudi Arabia for Night of Champions 2026

WWE has officially set a date for its return to Saudi Arabia.

Confirming what had previously been reported, the company announced today that Night of Champions 2026 will be held in Riyadh on Saturday, June 27. This is WWE’s second trip to Saudi Arabia this year, with the country already having hosted Royal Rumble at the end of January.

There had been some uncertainty over whether the war between United States & Israel and Iran would impact WWE’s plans for Saudi Arabia, but the promotion is continuing with this event and moving forward with WrestleMania 43 in Riyadh in 2027.

Night of Champions was also held in Saudi Arabia in 2023 and 2025, with the latter being headlined by a match between John Cena and CM Punk on Cena’s retirement tour.

With this addition, here’s a look at WWE’s updated PLE schedule for 2026:

  • Saturday, May 9: Backlash at Benchmark International Arena in Tampa, Florida
  • Sunday, May 31: Clash in Italy at Inalpi Arena in Turin, Italy
  • Saturday, June 27: Night of Champions at Kingdom Arena in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
  • Saturday, August 1 and Sunday, August 2: SummerSlam at US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Sunday, September 6: Money in the Bank at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana

WOL: New IWGP World Champion, Ben Askren update, WWE Night of Champions

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and “Filthy” Tom Lawlor returns with tons to talk about including an update on Ben Askren (seen above), Ric Flair, Tom’s back issues, the new IWGP Heavyweight Champion and why everything happened the way it did, WWE Night of Champions, what it means to bench someone, and more.

A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Column: CM Punk’s new brand of authenticity emerges in Saudi Arabia

This is a column that represents the views of the author and not the website.

We all change over time as does our outlook on life and our values, influenced by the different people we meet and experiences we have in our years above ground. For better or worse, it’s evolution, baby.

CM Punk is no different other than the fact his changes are displayed, packaged, and sold for a bigger audience.

The last half decade-plus has been quite a ride for Phil Brooks. Out of wrestling by his own choice, his tiptoe back in — FS1’s WWE Backstage — ended in mid-2020 as the world was in pandemic lockdown. He returned to wrestling in AEW in August 2021, was part of one of most infamous backstage brawls in modern wrestling history in September 2022 followed by months and months of unanswered questions, shot his way out of AEW a year later in spectacular fashion (assisted along the way by failed leadership), and then returned to WWE in November 2023 as a conquering hero.

A lot can happen over six minutes or six days, much less six years. Apparently, enough changed in Punk’s life in that time where he went from telling the largest sports podcast in the world in 2019 that he’s “not doing a single” Saudi Arabia show to not just doing that, but embracing the country in a 2025 about-face that was so brazen you almost have to appreciate it.

But, the man who wore his brand of “I’m not them, I’m you” authenticity like a tattoo for two decades has been changing before our eyes and behind the scenes for years. Punk may still be authentic, but just with a different set of principles and values that appeal to a segment of society you and I aren’t part of.

**********

If you’re reading this, you know the story. If you stumbled upon this column, allow me to catch you up in three bullet points:

  • In January 2020, after that 2019 Pardon My Take appearance and ahead of WWE’s February 2020 Saudi Arabia return, Punk tweeted at The Miz to “go suck a blood money covered d**k in Saudi Arabia.” It was during a time when that country wasn’t exactly a top destination to travel to and was coming just over a year after the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
  • After a turbulent few years in AEW, Punk made his surprise return to WWE in November 2023 as part of the Paul Levesque era.
  • This weekend, Punk wrapped up his first visit to Saudi Arabia – completing a storyline with John Cena at Saturday’s Night of Champions that danced around his past issues with the country/government where that damn heel Cena put the questions of his authenticity front and center.

This brings us to last Friday’s NOC kickoff party. A bemused Punk was getting booed (partially because of his previous comments and mostly because he was going against the retiring Cena) when he miraculously heard a fan in the front row who asked for an apology, someone two Post Wrestling observers thought might have been planted.

With an backing orchestra of “shut the f**k up,” Punk then told the crowd “it legitimately had nothing to do with Saudi Arabia.” He woke up crabby, you see, and wrote a mean tweet. He said he apologized to Miz and then apologized to the man, adding “I sincerely apologize to you and all of Saudi Arabia” which got a big pop.

It didn’t stop there.

“I am not perfect by any means. Sometimes, as human beings, we screw up. The beautiful thing is everything is a lesson learned and here I am. You’ve invited me to your beautiful country and I am grateful to be here. Thank you very much,” he said.

It was an incredible moment as if he fully decided to embody everything Cena accused him of in this promo. It was reportedly replayed for the live SmackDown crowd on Friday, was Christmas for his critics, an “incredibly proud” head-nodder for management, a gut punch for his staunchest supporters, and for those in the middle like me, it was validation of what we knew deep down for some time. Calling him a fraud feels like a bit much, but he ain’t that guy anymore and who knows if he ever was.

**********

Any issues with Saudi Arabia were checked at the door when he made his WWE return in what I assume was a a miraculously timed epiphany. We all knew Punk was going and this public conversation would happen. Wrestlers don’t skip the Saudi shows like they did in the Vince McMahon era when the threat level and public outcry felt much higher — a coincidence given what has gone on these past few weeks in Iran and Israel which involves a certain U.S. based WWE Hall of Famer. The lack of an allergic online reaction helps make those decisions easier.

It was the degree in which Punk’s change of heart happened that caught me off-guard, but honestly, I shouldn’t be that surprised. It’s career self-preservation.

As Cena aptly mentioned in the aforementioned promo, Punk isn’t against the billionaires – he is a millionaire himself. He indeed is Mr. TKO and exactly where he wants to be at age 46 with the end of his in-ring career a lot closer than the beginning. He’s with the biggest wrestling company in the world, making a ton of money, is popular, goes to events like the Netflix Tudum, has the respect he craves from the NXT kids, and is still put into big spots like Saturday.

He is also set up nicely to transition to the UFC analyst and/or broadcasting table given how much he loves MMA and Dana White’s love of him. He’s even said he wants to run NXT one day, something that seems as likely to happen as him returning to fight in the UFC as long as Levesque is around. The “CM stands for Company Man” jab has never seemed more apt.

Throughout all this, I couldn’t help but think of a few guys Punk idolizes in Terry Funk and Harley Race who both seem like they were men of conviction. Would those guys have done the same thing in Punk’s case or would they have stuck to their guns? Is that even possible in 2025 when posting on Instagram and cozying up to whoever pays the most seems to matter most to a good portion of the world? Maybe our standards are too high, but Brooks the man seemed different. I guess I was fooled too.

In the aftermath, Punk loyalists also have to question whether he will flip on other social issues in the future that he has proudly supported on TV like the Chicago Teachers Union, trans rights, abortion rights, etc. You might read that and say, “Of course he would never turn his back on those causes. He believes in them!” But would you have said the same thing in January 2020? That’s the point: he’s lost the benefit of the doubt

Don’t worry, though: he might change his mind. Just give him six years.

WOR: WWE’s weekend in Saudi Arabia, UFC 317 recap, notes & news

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the UFC PPV report with Paul Fontaine, a full recap of WWE in Saudi Arabia, both Smackdown and Night of Champions, the week CM Punk has had, RAW on Monday, AEW All In gate notes, ratings, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:

Start: UFC 317 recap

27:57: Notes from WWE SmackDown, CM Punk apologizes for ‘mean tweet’

34:13: WWE Night of Champions recap

57:04: WWE Raw start time & lineup, AEW All in advance

1:00:47: Ratings, Mistico vs. Bandido & other CMLL thoughts, Filthy Tom Lawlor update

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CM Punk apologizes to ‘all of Saudi Arabia’ for past ‘mean’ tweet

Ahead of competing in Saudi Arabia for the first time ever, CM Punk is apologizing for a “mean” tweet he posted five years ago.

Punk received a largely negative response from the Saudi fans today at a pre-Night of Champions kickoff event hosted by WWE. One of the fans in the crowd was a man named Mohammed who asked Punk to apologize for his 2020 tweet where he told The Miz to “go suck a blood money covered d**k in Saudi Arabia.”

“This guy wants me to apologize for a mean tweet I wrote six years ago. Hey, listen, legitimately had nothing to do with Saudi Arabia,” Punk responded. “I woke up and I was crabby and I wrote a mean tweet to The Miz. And I apologized to The Miz. And sir, what’s your name? Mohammed? Mohammed, I sincerely apologize to you and all of Saudi Arabia.”

Punk sent out that tweet during his seven-year absence from wrestling. Last year, Miz said he and Punk had a really good conversation and buried the hatchet in 2023 prior to Punk’s WWE return.

“I am not perfect by any means,” Punk said at today’s kickoff event. “Sometimes as human beings, we screw up. The beautiful thing is, everything is a lesson learned. And now here I am and you have invited me to your country and I am grateful to be here. Thank you very much.”

After Punk finished his promo at today’s event, he spoke privately with the fan Mohammed and the two hugged.

Punk is challenging John Cena for the Undisputed WWE Championship at Night of Champions in Riyadh this Saturday. During the build to the PLE, their has storyline referenced Punk’s seeming reluctance to wrestle in Saudi Arabia, with Cena choosing Saudi as the location for the match in an attempt to prove that Punk is a hypocrite.

Both Punk and Cena will be on SmackDown in Riyadh today on the eve of Night of Champions.

WWE’s Saudi events are part of a long-term partnership the promotion has with the government of Saudi Arabia. The business relationship between the two sides began in 2018 with WWE receiving approximately $50 million for each PLE.

WOR: Injury updates, AEW Dynamite & Collision, big news recaps

Image: AEW

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including an update on Jim Ross, Chad Gable, Dom, Kevin Owens and Pat McAfee, latest on Night of Champions, RAW ratings, a full recap of Dynamite and NXT, plus your Collision recap since Bryan attended the show live! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: Health updates on Jim Ross, Chad Gable, Dominik Mysterio, Kevin Owens
5:07: Cody Rhodes says he feels he’s at the end of his run as a babyface, Saudi Arabia update
13:52: Pat McAfee taking time off from WWE Raw announce team
17:07: Real American Freestyle Wrestling’s first show off to a slow start
22:18: Ben Askren update
25:08: Don Fale out of the G1 play-in, Dave’s thoughts on Jun Kasai vs. El Desperado
30:09: Ratings, Sedriques Dumas pulled from UFC show this weekend, Jon Jones update
43:36: AEW Dynamite recap
1:03:32: WWE NXT recap
1:09:45: Bryan’s live AEW Collision spoilers

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WOR: WWE Night of Champions update & Raw report, NJPW G1 news

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including RAW from Monday night, Night of Champions on as scheduled, the New Japan G-1 update, AARON WOLF the next huge NJPW star, Arena Mexico, ratings, and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: The latest on Night of Champions, Dominik Mysterio off the show
3:38: More on NJPW signing Aaron Wolf, G1 Climax tournament update
16:58: Buddy Murphy injury update, Arena Mexico notes
19:52: Dave’s thoughts on Syuri vs. Sareee
22:40: Ratings, Sedriques Dumas & UFC this weekend
31:56: WWE Raw recap
59:43: There is one person announced for AEW Dynamite

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WOL: WWE Night of Champions update, AEW Grand Slam Mexico ratings, SmackDown

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Filthy Tom Lawlor is back with the latest on the situation with WWE and Saudi Arabia, will the show happen and what are the alternative options, Dynamite does a huge number and what can be learned from it, Smackdown thoughts, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Sami Zayn on fan response at WWE Night of Champions: ‘Those are my people’

Sami Zayn has opened up about the hero’s welcome he received in Saudi Arabia at Night of Champions. 

Before the main event that night, Zayn spoke to the live crowd in Arabic to express pride in his Arabic heritage. It was his first time wrestling in Saudi Arabia since 2014 and his first time performing in the region since a pair of shows from Dubai in 2016.   

Zayn told Corey Graves on After the Bell recently that he had been waiting for a while to perform in front of his people.

Zayn said: 

I’m Arabic, I’m Muslim, all this stuff and that’s my part of the world. I understand those people, those are my people.

When I went there, I got to go to Mecca, which was just a surreal, surreal experience. And then I also saw my Uncles that I hadn’t seen in 25 years, I had cousins I hadn’t seen in 25 years. I met my Great Uncle I didn’t even know who existed. 

So, it was pretty heavy in a lot of ways, it had a lot of weight. And then the actual event itself and the reception from the audience, it’s kind of what I’ve been waiting for for a while in a way because, again, I always felt I would have been the natural representative for those shows and I just wasn’t. So, it was good to finally be put in that position. 

Zayn’s parents are from Syria but immigrated to Canada in the 1970s before he was born. Our own Dave Meltzer reported in 2019 that Zayn was not permitted to perform on WWE shows in the country due to his Syrian heritage but that changed earlier this year following Syria being welcomed back into the Arab League.

Jimmy Uso lays out Roman Reigns at WWE Night of Champions

The breakup of The Bloodline looks to finally be here.

Tensions within The Bloodline boiled over after botched interference by The Usos at Night of Champions. The situation led to Jimmy Uso laying out Roman Reigns with two superkicks.

After a referee bump, The Usos interfered in the main event of Saturday’s pay-per-view and tried to help Reigns & Solo Sikoa win the Undisputed WWE Tag Team titles from Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn. The Usos went to drop Zayn with a double superkick, but he moved out of the way and they accidentally hit Sikoa. That caused a furious Reigns to berate The Usos and pie-face both Jimmy and Jey.

Jimmy responded by hitting a superkick on Reigns. Jey was shocked and told Jimmy that he had to be better than that. But Jimmy said he was just doing what Jey should have done a long time ago. Jimmy then gave Reigns another superkick.

“It’s me and you now,” Jimmy told Jey. “We the ones, not him. I’m your brother, not him. I would never do you like that. I would never treat you like that.”

Though Jey was reluctant, The Usos eventually left together.

Owens then gave Sikoa a stunner and Zayn hit a Helluva Kick on Sikoa to retain the Undisputed WWE Tag Team titles.

Owens & Zayn became Tag Team Champions when they defeated The Usos at WrestleMania 39 this April. The tension between Reigns and The Usos had been rising since Jimmy & Jey lost their titles. On last night’s SmackDown, Reigns was mad at Jimmy for calling himself the “Tribal Chief.”

The Bloodline story will continue on SmackDown next Friday (June 2). The episode is set to feature a celebration for Reigns reaching 1,000 days as Universal Champion. Reigns’ title reign hit the 1,000-day mark today.

Asuka wins Raw Women’s title at WWE Night of Champions

For the first time in more than a year, the Raw Women’s Championship has changed hands.

Asuka put an end to Bianca Belair’s title reign by defeating her at Night of Champions in Saudi Arabia on Saturday. Belair was champion for 420 days before dropping the title to Asuka.

An innovative use of blue mist led to Asuka getting the victory over Belair. Before Belair went for the KOD, Asuka spit the mist into her own taped up fingers. Belair picked up Asuka for the KOD, but Asuka raked Belair’s eyes with the mist. With Belair blinded, Asuka hit two kicks and pinned Belair to win the Raw Women’s Championship.

Belair vs. Asuka was a rematch from WrestleMania 39. Asuka lost that first meeting but returned to WWE programming two weeks ago and resumed her feud with Belair.

Though she’s the Raw Women’s Champion, Asuka is a member of the SmackDown roster. Both Asuka and Belair moved to SmackDown in the WWE Draft.

SmackDown Women’s Champion Rhea Ripley was selected by Raw in the WWE Draft. Ripley retained her title against Natalya at Night of Champions.

Belair had been Raw Women’s Champion since winning the title from Becky Lynch at WrestleMania 38 in April 2022.

Zoey Stark helps Trish Stratus defeat Becky Lynch at WWE Night of Champions

Trish Stratus found a new ally at Saturday’s Night of Champions pay-per-view.

Stratus was able to defeat Becky Lynch in Saudi Arabia after getting help from Zoey Stark. Stark was recently called up from NXT in the WWE Draft.

Lynch hit the Manhandle Slam on Stratus near the end of their match, but Stratus was able to get her foot on the bottom rope. When Stratus rolled out of the ring, Lynch followed her and threw her back in. Stark, who had been hiding under the ring all match, then attacked Lynch while the referee was distracted. Stark hit her Z-360 knee strike on Lynch, busting Lynch’s nose open in the process.

Stark then sent Lynch back into the ring so that Stratus could hit Stratusfaction to get the victory.

Stratus and Stark celebrated on the ramp together after the match. Stratus taunted Lynch by saying that she outsmarted her.

Following her loss, Lynch tweeted out a message to Stratus and Stark: “Revenge is a dish best served cold. @trishstratuscom we have unfinished business.  @ZoeyStarkWWE you messed up. Plain and simple. #WWENOC”

The feud between Stratus and Lynch began when Stratus turned heel on Raw last month, attacking Lynch and Lita.

Stark joined the Raw roster in the WWE Draft. She’s gotten victories against Nikki Cross and Candice LeRae since then.

Seth Rollins crowned inaugural WWE World Heavyweight Champion

Seth Rollins is the inaugural holder of WWE’s new World Heavyweight Championship.

The title tournament wrapped up on Saturday with Rollins defeating AJ Styles in the opening match of Night of Champions. Despite Styles targeting his knee during the match, Rollins was able to hit a stomp on Styles to get the victory.

There was a moment leading into the finish where Styles was going for a Phenomenal Forearm but got caught with a superkick. Rollins went to follow it up with a stomp, but his knee was too hurt to hit the move. Rollins was able to avoid the Calf Crusher and give Styles a Pedigree. Rollins then hit a stomp to win the match.

Paul “Triple H” Levesque then entered the ring and presented Rollins with the World Heavyweight Championship belt.

This is the first World title Rollins has held since he was Universal Champion in 2019.

The creation of the new World Heavyweight Championship was announced by Levesque last month. The title is Raw’s World Championship, while Undisputed WWE Universal Champion Roman Reigns is the champion of SmackDown.

Rollins hasn’t appeared in person on Raw the last two weeks due to filming for the upcoming Marvel movie “Captain America: New World Order.”

WWE announces Cody Rhodes storyline injury update

In storyline, Cody Rhodes is entering his match against Brock Lesnar at Night of Champions with a “broken arm.”

A storyline injury update on Rhodes’ condition was given at WWE’s pre-Night of Champions press conference in Saudi Arabia on Friday. It was claimed that Rhodes has a broken arm but will still be competing against Lesnar at Saturday’s pay-per-view.

The injury isn’t legitimate and is just part of the story for the Rhodes vs. Lesnar match.

There was an angle on Monday’s episode of Raw where Lesnar attacked Rhodes’ arm multiple times. That included putting it in a Kimura and refusing to let go. On the episode, Rhodes refused to be treated by medical personnel because he didn’t want to be declared ineligible to compete.

At the Night of Champions press conference, Paul “Triple H” Levesque addressed Rhodes competing at the PPV.

“Cody does have a broken arm, obviously,” Levesque said. “Not the best situation in the world. I don’t know if it’s the smartest decision in the world. But here’s the thing: Brock Lesnar wants to fight. Cody Rhodes wants to fight. Do you want to see them fight? Then tomorrow, in this dome, they are going to fight.”

Rhodes vs. Lesnar is a rematch from Backlash. In their first meeting, Rhodes escaped with a victory when he was able to counter a Kimura into a pin.

Night of Champions stream live on Peacock this Saturday (May 27) starting at 1 p.m. Eastern time. Here’s everything that’s been announced for the show:

  • World Heavyweight Championship tournament finals: Seth Rollins vs. AJ Styles
  • Undisputed WWE Tag Team Champions Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn defend against Roman Reigns & Solo Sikoa
  • Cody Rhodes vs. Brock Lesnar
  • Raw Women’s Champion Bianca Belair defends against Asuka
  • SmackDown Women’s Champion Rhea Ripley defends against Natalya
  • Becky Lynch vs Trish Stratus
  • Intercontinental Champion Gunther defends against Mustafa Ali