Two advance in WWE King & Queen of the Ring (spoiler)

Note: This article mentions developments from Friday’s WWE SmackDown episode in Bologna, Italy that has yet to air in the United States.

Judgment Day’s Dominik Mysterio and Raquel Rodriguez are heading to the semifinals of WWE’s respective King & Queen of the Ring tournaments.

Friday’s SmackDown in Bologna, Italy saw Mysterio and Rodriguez advance by winning fatal four-way matches. Mysterio defeated Damian Priest, Trick Williams and Bron Breakker on the men’s side, while Rodriguez defeated Kiana James, Jacy Jayne, and Bayley in the women’s division match.

In the Queen of the Ring semifinals, it will be Rodriguez vs. IYO SKY. The first round of the other side of the bracket will play out on Raw and SmackDown next week with Liv Morgan, Becky Lynch, Alexa Bliss, Chelsea Green, Sol Ruca, Lyra Valkyria, Charlotte Flair, and Jade Cargill still in contention.

Mysterio has a difficult path with Oba Femi as his semifinal opponent. Seth Rollins, Je’Von Evans, Talla Tonga, Ricky Saints, Jey Uso, LA Knight, Royce Keys, and Finn Balor are the competitors on the opposite side of the bracket.

Both tournament finals are happening at WWE Night of Champions in Saudi Arabia on June 27. The winners earn World title shots at SummerSlam.

Updated WWE King & Queen of the Ring betting odds released

Betting odds are available for who will win the 2026 King and Queen of the Ring tournaments.

Both tournaments kicked off on Monday’s edition of Raw. Oba Femi was the first to qualify for the King of the Ring semifinals and is tied for the best odds of anyone in the tournament at -200 with Seth Rollins.

Bron Breakker has the next best odds at +200. Finn Balor and LA Knight are both listed at +800. Trick Williams is at +1200, Royce Keys is at +1400, and Je’Von Evans and Jey Uso are both listed at +1600. Dominik Mysterio is at +2000, Ricky Saints is at +2500, Damian Priest is at +3000, and Solo Sikoa, who already failed to advance in the tournament on Monday, is listed at +4000.

In the Queen of the Ring tournament, IYO SKY, who qualified for the semifinals on Monday, has the best odds at -200. She is followed by Raquel Rodriguez at +200, Charlotte Flair at +300, Jacy Jayne at +500, Becky Lynch at +600, Jade Cargill at +800, Liv Morgan at +1200, Lyra Valkyria at +1400, Chelsea Green at +1600, Alexa Bliss at +1800, Bayley and Kiana James at +2500, and Sol Ruca at +3000.

The odds below are via Bet US as of Wednesday morning:

WWE King of the Ring tournament winner odds:

  • Oba Femi: -200
  • Seth Rollins: -200
  • Bron Breakker: +200
  • Finn Balor: +800
  • LA Knight: +800
  • Trick Williams: +1200
  • Royce Keys: +1400
  • Je’Von Evans: +1600
  • Jey Uso: +1600
  • Dominik Mysterio +2000
  • Ricky Saints: +2500
  • Damian Priest: +3000
  • Solo Sikoa: +4000

For the three remaining men’s first-round matches, Bron Breakker is the favorite at -200 for his four-way match, and Trick Williams is at +200. Dominik Mysterio is listed at +300, and Damian Priest is listed at +500.

Rollins is favored to win his four-way at -600. He is followed by Je’Von Evans at +400, Ricky Saints at +600, and Talla Tonga at +800.

Royce Keys is the favorite to win his four-way at -125. He is followed by LA Knight at +200, while Jey Uso and Finn Balor are both listed at +300.

Remaining King of the Ring first-round match odds:

Bron Breakker vs. Trick Williams vs. Dominik Mysterio vs. Damian Priest

  • Bron Breakker: -200
  • Trick Williams: +200
  • Dominik Mysterio: +300
  • Damian Priest: +500

Seth Rollins vs. Je’Von Evans vs. Ricky Saints vs. Talla Tonga

  • Seth Rollins: -600
  • Je’Von Evans: +400
  • Ricky Saints: +600
  • Talla Tonga: +800

Royce Keys vs. LA Knight vs. Jey Uso vs. Finn Balor

  • Royce Keys: -125
  • LA Knight: +200
  • Jey Uso: +300
  • Finn Balor: +300

WWE Queen of the Ring tournament winner odds:

  • IYO SKY: -200
  • Raquel Rodriguez: +200
  • Charlotte Flair: +300
  • Jacy Jayne: +500
  • Becky Lynch: +600
  • Jade Cargill: +800
  • Liv Morgan: +1200
  • Lyra Valkyria: +1400
  • Chelsea Green: +1600
  • Alexa Bliss: +1800
  • Bayley: +2500
  • Kiana James: +2500
  • Sol Ruca: +3000

For the three remaining women’s first-round matches, Liv Morgan is favored to win her four-way at +125. She is followed by Becky Lynch at +150, Chelsea Green at +175, and Alexa Bliss at +400.

Charlotte Flair is the favorite to win her four-way at -300. She is followed by Jade Cargill at +200, Sol Ruca at +300, and Lyra Valkyria at +500.

Jacy Jayne is favored to win her four-way at -200. She is followed by Raquel Rodriguez at +150, Kiana James at +300, and Bayley at +500.

Remaining WWE Queen of the Ring first-round match odds:

Liv Morgan vs. Becky Lynch vs. Chelsea Green vs. Alexa Bliss

  • Liv Morgan: +125
  • Becky Lynch: +150
  • Chelsea Green: +175
  • Alexa Bliss: +400

Charlotte Flair vs. Jade Cargill vs. Sol Ruca vs. Lyra Valkyria

  • Charlotte Flair: -300
  • Jade Cargill: +200
  • Sol Ruca: +300
  • Lyra Valkyria: +500

Jacy Jayne vs. Raquel Rodriguez vs. Kiana James vs. Bayley

  • Jacy Jayne: -200
  • Raquel Rodriguez: +150
  • Kiana James: +300
  • Bayley: +500

Giulia responds to crowd support at WWE Raw in Italy

Giulia received a thunderous reaction to her WWE Raw appearance in Italy, with fans cheering for her throughout the match. 

She later expressed gratitude for the fans rallying behind her during her Raw match. She took to X citing her love for wrestling and the extensive audience support received. 

“I love wrestling, I love stepping into the ring and fighting, I feel sensations I don’t know how to describe. It brought me back here to Italy where I found a magnificent audience that has given me an extraordinary experience, an impressive affection. Thank you so much I love you all. Long live Italy Arrivederci‼︎”  

Giulia is of Italian and Japanese descent, with her father hailing from Italy and mother from Japan. Despite her wrestling heritage being associated with Japan, Raw marked a rare opportunity for her to perform in front of an audience from her family’s roots. 

While this was her first singles match on Raw since her transition to the main roster last year. It is uncertain whether Giulia is officially a part of the Raw brand or the match was a one time appearance. 

On Raw, she competed in the first qualifying match for the Queen of the Ring tournament against Roxanne Perez, Lash Legend and IYO SKY. Meanwhile, the same transpired for the men’s division too with Oba Femi gaining victory over Carmelo Hayes, Solo Sikoa and Penta. 

WWE Raw took place at the Inalpi Arena in Turin where they hosted Clash in Italy the previous night. 

First name advances to WWE Queen of the Ring semifinals

IYO SKY is moving forward in her quest to be crowned WWE’s Queen of the Ring for 2026.

The tournament began on Raw in Turin, Italy today with SKY winning a fatal four-way match to advance to the semifinals. Her opponents in the bout were Giulia, Roxanne Perez, and Lash Legend — and a moonsault onto Giulia got the victory for SKY.

In the next round, it will be SKY facing either Bayley, Raquel Rodriguez, Jacy Jayne, or Kiana James.

SKY is attempting to become the third-ever Queen of the Ring in WWE history, following victories by Jade Cargill and Nia Jax in 2025 and 2024. Zelina Vega also won a similarly named Queen’s Crown tournament in 2021 before WWE secured rights to the Queen of the Ring trademark.

This year’s Queen & King of the Ring are set to conclude at WWE Night of Champions in Saudi Arabia on June 27. World title shots at SummerSlam will be awarded to the winner of each tournament.

Updated WWE Queen of the Ring bracket —

Thirteen competitors are still in contention to win Queen of the Ring: SKY, Bayley, Rodriguez, Jayne, James, Liv Morgan, Becky Lynch, Alexa Bliss, Chelsea Green, Sol Ruca, Lyra Valkyria, Charlotte Flair, and Cargill.

The updated bracket can be seen below:

WWE Queen of the Ring bracket
WWE Queen of the Ring 2026 bracket. (Image credit: WWE)

WWE Night of Champions live results: John Cena vs. CM Punk

WWE returns to Saudi Arabia for one of its annual premium live events with today’s Night of Champions from Riyadh, streaming on Peacock for U.S. viewers and Netflix for international viewers.

Undisputed WWE Champion John Cena makes his final appearance in the country as an active wrestler, defending against longtime rival CM Punk in their first singles bout since February 2013.

The King of the Ring finals will take place as former champions and former stablemates Cody Rhodes and Randy Orton do battle with a SummerSlam title shot on the line.

In the Queen of the Ring finals, Jade Cargill takes on Asuka to determine who gets a SummerSlam title shot.

In a grudge match with the United States title on the line, reigning champion Jacob Fatu defends against former Bloodline faction member Solo Sikoa.

In a street fight, Rhea Ripley goes one-on-one with Raquel Rodriguez while Sami Zayn vs. Karrion Kross rounds out the card.

**********

Show Recap — 

COUNTDOWN SHOW 

There was an establishing shot of the city, wrestlers arriving, and an intro narrated by Tom Rinaldi — all things I’m sure we’ll see again when the actual show starts. 

The pre-show was hosted by Michael Cole, Jackie Redmond, and Wade Barrett. Cole said it was 109 degrees outside, turned to the fans behind him, and said, “No idea how you people live in this heat.”

They talked and they talked and they talked as the fans chanted everything they could think of in the background. Cole said, “There’s a reason that WWE has this growing relationship with this country of Saudi Arabia.” Indeed, there is. They cut to a video package of past events in the country.

They aired the final 2-3 minutes of Kurt Angle beating Rikishi to win KOTR 2000. 

Jade Cargill told Byron Saxton she was focused and planned on taking the crown home to her daughter. 

Rhea Ripley spoke to Redmond about her relationship with Raquel Rodriguez and their upcoming street fight. Ripley planned on putting her through the ground. There was no point being in this business if you weren’t going for the title, and she wanted to remind everyone that this was her division. 

They aired the final few minutes of Nia Jax beating Lyra Valkyria to win QOTR last year, and highlights of Giulia’s U.S. title win over Zelina Vega last night. 

Saxton interviewed Karrion Kross (with Scarlett). Kross said Sami Zayn was not a good guy. It was a charade. Zayn collected sympathy and used it to put himself in advantageous situations. Kross was annoyed nobody talked about his goals the way they talked about Zayn’s. He cut his own interview short because he didn’t want to get in trouble.

The panel spoke about Jacob Fatu/Solo Sikoa. One hour to go. 

They aired the final few minutes of Xavier Woods beating Finn Bálor to win KOTR 2021, and more highlights from last night’s SmackDown. Redmond loved CM Punk’s thuganomics promo. She admitted there was some cringe, but that made it better.

They plugged Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford, a new season of LFG, and aired the final few minutes of Zelina Vega beating “Doudrop” (Piper Niven) to win the Queen’s Crown in 2021. 

Saxton replaced Cole and Barrett, and he spoke with Redmond about the KOTR and QOTR finals. 

Nathalie Mamo, who always corresponds with WWE for these shows, spoke to actor/comedian Ibrahim Al Hajjaj. He did not get much of a reaction, and the fans continued to chant for the regular WWE personalities in the background.

They showed Gunther beating Orton to win KOTR last year, and a long feature on Steve Austin winning KOTR 1996. 

The panel ran down the card one final time, and the pre-show is mercifully over. 

NIGHT OF CHAMPIONS 2025

There was an establishing shot of the city. Randy Orton, Cody Rhodes, Sami Zayn, Karrion Kross and Scarlett (whose outfit may be pushing the boundaries), Rhea Ripley, Raquel Rodriguez, Asuka, Jade Cargill, and CM Punk were shown arriving. Most of them got big reactions. The intro was narrated by Tom Rinaldi. 

Michael Cole and Wade Barrett are tonight’s announcers. We were also welcomed by the Arabic announcers. 

If you didn’t see SmackDown last night, the stage is gigantic. 

King of the Ring final: Randy Orton vs. Cody Rhodes

Orton entered first, Rhodes second. Both men received huge reactions, with the fans singing their songs. Rhodes looked emotional as the match began, their first since 2013. The crowd was electric as it began. 

They didn’t do much for the first few minutes, and they didn’t really have to. Rhodes went to the top about five minutes in, but Orton brought him down with a superplex. 

Orton sold it like he hurt his back. Rhodes took advantage and hit a Disaster kick for two. Orton responded with a backbreaker, but hurt his own back in the process. Rhodes wrenched Orton’s back around the ring post and followed with a missile dropkick. 

Orton fought back and hit a powerslam, but the injury prevented him from making a cover fast enough, and Rhodes kicked out. Rhodes forearmed Orton repeatedly in his lower back before hitting a Cody Cutter for two. (Rhodes got a smattering of boos for targeting his back.) Rhodes followed with a super Cody Cutter for two. 

Orton came back with a draping DDT, but Rhodes countered an RKO into a Cross Rhodes for a nearfall. Rhodes stalled for too long, perhaps thinking Orton was down for good, but Orton popped up with an RKO for a nearfall. 

Orton set up for the punt but began second-guessing himself. The crowd chanted, “Yes,” as Orton talked himself into it. Orton went for the punt, but Rhodes blocked it and applied a figure four until Orton got a rope break. 

They exchanged right hands until Rhodes went for a Cody Cutter, but Orton caught him mid-air with an RKO for a nearfall. 

Orton brought a chair into the ring, but Charles Robinson took it away. As the referee was distracted, Orton exposed the top turnbuckle. Rhodes blocked Orton’s attempt to use the exposed buckle and shoved him into it instead. Rhodes followed with a Cross Rhodes for the pinfall win. 

Cody Rhodes has earned a shot at the WWE Championship at SummerSlam. 

— Orton left the ring as Rhodes was presented with the crown. Orton had his back turned as Saxton interviewed Rhodes. Rhodes thanked Orton, who mentored him and spoke up for him. Rhodes said this would not be Orton’s final stop in Saudi Arabia and asked the fans to give him an ovation. Orton turned around to see this. 

Rhodes said he would face either CM Punk or John Cena. He knew how the audience felt when he went up against these beloved characters, but no matter who the champion was, they were only holding it for him, because he would get the ball back at SummerSlam. Fireworks went off as Rhodes held up the crown. 

Match result: Cody Rhodes defeated Randy Orton (19:48)

This was a good, simple, and well-laid-out match, although the finish felt a bit abrupt. Rhodes wasn’t acting like a heel, but Orton was definitely the babyface until the end when his frustration got the better of him. 

********

The Street Profits were shown in the crowd. 

There was a video package for the upcoming match. It highlighted their real friendship in the past, leading to their eventual TV feud. 

Riyadh Boulevard Street Fight: Rhea Ripley vs. Tag Team Champion Raquel Rodriguez

Ripley entered to a massive reaction. Their outfits were a bit too similar, with Ripley wearing an all-black bodysuit with metal eyelets and Rodriguez wearing a dark blue (almost black) bodysuit with metal eyelets.  

Ripley got trapped in the ropes, so Rodriguez hit her repeatedly with a kendo stick. Ripley managed to kick a chair into her face and escape from the ropes. 

Ripley cleared the announce table and set up for a vertical suplex, but Rodriguez escaped. Ripley tried a cannonball off the table instead, but Rodriguez caught her and powerbombed her through the top of the barricade. (It was built to break, but this still looked great.) 

Rodriguez set up the steel steps, but Ripley rammed her into them, took off her belt, and repeatedly whipped Rodriguez with it. Ripley followed with Razor’s Edge and a running kick for two. 

Ripley applied a Prism Trap, but was attacked from behind by Roxanne Perez (also wearing the same type of body suit as the other two, although hers had purple lining to match Judgment Day). Ripley fought her off outside the ring and hit a vertical suplex. Ripley put a trash can over Perez and hit a sliding kick. 

Rodriguez used the distraction to drive Ripley into the steel post and into the steep steps. Rodriguez followed with a twisting elbow drop for two. Rodriguez booted Ripley and placed a table over the top rope, but Ripley shoved her into the edge of the table. 

They climbed on top of the wobbling table that sat atop the top rope, and Ripley hit an avalanche Rip-tide for the pinfall win. 

Match result: Rhea Ripley defeated Raquel Rodriguez (14:04)

This was a really good match. The crowd didn’t care at all about Ripley, or even Perez, but they loved Ripley. 

The announcers pushed that Ripley wants to go for the world title again, and she mentioned it on the pre-show. 

********

This match did not get a video package, but they did show their segment from Raw. 

Zayn entered wearing a keffiyeh (headdress), and wrestled in black, green, red and white tights.

Karrion Kross (w/Scarlett) vs. Sami Zayn

Kross tried being the aggressor with strikes, but Zayn fought back with strikes of his own and clotheslined Kross out of the ring. Zayn teased a dive as Kross backed away up the ramp. Kross was frustrated until Scarlett whispered something in his ear. Zayn fought off Kross again, hitting a moonsault off the barricade. Back in the ring, Kross responded with a Saito suplex to take over. 

Zayn came back with a clothesline, ten punches in the corner, and a double axe-handle. Kross responded with a DVD for two. Kross avoided a Blue Thunder Bomb and hit another Saito suplex for two. Kross ducked a clothesline and hit a Blue Thunder Bomb for two. Kross acted like he couldn’t get up, but suddenly caught Zayn with consecutive German suplexes.

 Zayn came back with an exploder in the corner, but Kross intercepted his Helluva kick and applied a Kross Jacket sleeper. The referee raised Zayn’s hand three times to check if he was still alive, and he raised his arm up on the third one. Zayn got a rope break. 

Kross hit consecutive running clotheslines in the corner. Kross taunted Zayn and wanted him to admit he was right. However, as Kross set up for another clothesline, Zayn nailed a Helluva Kick for the pinfall win. Cole, for some reason, called this a miracle. 

This match was fine. 

Scarlett checked on Kross after the match. Zayn celebrated and smiled as he looked down at Kross. 

Match result: Sami Zayn defeated Karrion Kross (13:32) 

******** 

They showed Los Garza winning the AAA tag team titles. Santos Escobar and Los Garza were shown in the crowd. 

There was a video package for the upcoming match. 

Fatu’s entrance looked pretty cool with this stage setup. 

United States Championship: Jacob Fatu (c) vs. Solo Sikoa 

Sikoa beat Fatu. 

Sikoa hit Fatu with a cheap shot right before the bell rang to begin. Fatu fought back pretty quickly, but Sikoa blocked his suicide dive attempt and slammed him on the ring apron and black mats with uranages. Sikoa hit a running hip attack and applied a sleeper hold for a long time. Cole said Fatu was fading. He’s not the only one. 

Fatu eventually got up and fought back until Sikoa turned him around with a somewhat nasty-looking German suplex. Fatu landed right on his face. He no-sold it and fought back, hitting a running hip attack, impaler DDT, and senton bomb for two. 

JC Mateo ran out to distract the referee as the returning Tonga Loa attacked Fatu with an elevated neckbreaker. Sikoa rolled into a cover, but Fatu kicked out. Fatu wiped out Mateo and Loa with a Fosbury flop. 

Fatu hit Sikoa with a Samoan drop and a moonsault, but Sikoa was pulled out of the ring by Hikuleo. He was not named, only referred to as the brother of Tama Tonga and Tonga Loa. 

Hikuleo chokeslammed Fatu onto the announce table and rolled him back in the ring. (The referee was somehow distracted this entire time.) Sikoa hit Fatu with a Samoan spike for the pinfall win. The crowd liked Fatu, so they were surprised by the title change. 

Sikoa posed on the ramp with his crew as fireworks went off. 

Match result: Solo Sikoa defeated Jacob Fatu to win the United States Championship (12:07) 

This was not a particularly interesting match, and Fatu losing feels like a big mistake. 

********

Queen of the Ring final: Asuka vs. Jade Cargill 

Asuka kept targeting the leg, while Cargill kept fighting her off. Cargill hit a fallaway slam and a chokeslam for two. Asuka responded with kicks, a Codebreaker and a missile dropkick for two. Cargill ducked a kick and hit a sit-out powerbomb for two. Cargill fought out of an armbar and hit a big boot. Asuka avoided Jaded and went for an Asuka Lock, but Cargill rolled out. 

Asuka went for a running hip attack, but Cargill caught her and hit Jaded for the pinfall win. 

— Cargill was presented with the crown before being interviewed by Saxton. She told people who felt down to fight through it and show people who you are. A storm was coming for SummerSlam. 

Match result: Jade Cargill defeated Asuka (8:35) 

Asuka looked really good here, Cargill did not. Asuka was the crowd favourite, but they were never that into this at any point. They were particularly quiet when Cargill was on offence, and there was a smattering of boos when she won.

******** 

Undisputed WWE Championship: John Cena (c) vs. CM Punk

John Cena’s heel run may be coming to an end soon—but not yet. 

Punk entered first to a huge reaction. He sat cross-legged in the ring as he awaited Cena. (Incidentally, he sat right behind the words “Riyadh Season” on the mat.) 

Like the opening match, the crowd was electric as they got going, and the wrestlers didn’t do too much in the first five minutes. Punk avoided a shoulder tackle and went for a GTS, but Cena slipped out. Punk tried a version of AJ Lee’s octopus hold (which Barrett mentioned), but Cena fought out of that, too. 

Cena did his usual comeback and five knuckle shuffle, but Punk avoided an AA and hit a neckbreaker and a corner knee strike. (Barrett acknowledged that we were getting the ‘greatest hits’ from both men with this exchange.) 

Punk hit a flying elbow drop and went for a GTS, but Cena countered into an STF. Punk countered that into an Anaconda Vice, but Cena fought out and hit an AA for two. Punk slipped out of another AA, hit a DDT and applied an STF, but Cena got a rope break. 

They (slowly) exchanged counters until Cena hit another AA for a nearfall. Punk tried a flying crossbody, but Cena rolled through, hoisted him up and hit an AA for a close nearfall. 

In the opening match, Orton’s RKO wasn’t enough, so he grabbed a chair. Here, Cena’s AA wasn’t enough, so he grabbed his title belt. However, Cena had second thoughts (like Orton did with the punt) and put the belt down. That hesitation allowed Punk to hit a GTS for a nearfall. 

Punk ducked a shoulder tackle, and Cena tackled the ref by mistake. Punk hit a GTS and got a visual pin, but the ref was down. 

Punk called for another ref, but he got Seth Rollins instead. Rollins entered with Paul Heyman (holding the MITB briefcase), Bron Breakker and Bronson Reed. 

Punk fought off Bron and Bronson with the ref still dead from a shoulder tackle. Punk tried a dive, and I think they were supposed to catch him, but he overshot them. Bron and Bronson grabbed Punk and tried a double chokeslam, but Punk didn’t really get up for it, so they basically shoved him through the announce table. 

With Punk down, Rollins called for a new ref. Charles Robinson sprinted down the ramp (as we’ve seen him do before), but he was obliterated by Cena, who tackled him down. Cena got in Rollins’ face and eventually laid him out with an AA. 

Bron and Bronson put the boots to Cena until Penta ran out to make the save. Bron went after him, so Sami Zayn ran out to even the odds. Penta wiped out Bron and Zayn with a dive. 

Back in the ring, Reed was about to give Cena a Tsunami, but Punk shoved him off the top, and Cena laid out Reed with an impressive AA. 

Punk and Cena stood face-to-face in the ring and seemed on the same page. Punk offered a handshake. Cena shook his hand, but looked sternly into the camera as he did when he turned on Rhodes. 

Cena tried to kick Punk low, but Punk saw it coming and went for a GTS. However, Rollins hit Punk with the briefcase and hit a curb stomp. Cena shoved Rollins out of the ring and covered Punk for the pinfall win (the referee sprang to life at precisely the right moment). 

Cena smiled into the camera and posed with his belt as the show ended. 

Match result: John Cena defeated CM Punk to retain the Undisputed WWE Championship (26:17)

The match was exactly as it could be between these two at this stage of their careers, which is not much. Adding in all of the interference made a mess of a main event. The closing sequence accomplished what they wanted, though. Cena teased going back babyface, Punk got screwed again, and Rollins almost became champion again (without officially cashing in).

WWE Night of Champions preview & predictions: Is John Cena’s heel run nearing its end?

Image: WWE

The days leading up to Saturday’s WWE Night of Champions have been eventful, though not for any reason related to wrestling.

Rather than unpack complex global conflicts in a wrestling preview, I’ll just note that “world events” have created “obstacles” for Night of Champions (1 PM Eastern Saturday on Peacock/Netflix). But there was never much chance WWE would pull out unless they were told, in no uncertain terms, not to go. Saudi Arabia is WWE’s second-largest revenue source, and unless non-negotiable trade or travel restrictions are in place, the show was always happening.

Regarding the venue, this is the first time WWE will be running an event from the Kingdom Arena in Riyadh which officially opened last year. Similar to Natalya, the stadium holds multiple Guinness Book of World Records including for being the largest covered football stadium in the world and having the largest seating capacity for an indoor covered stadium.

In terms of the actual show itself, there are several matches at Night of Champions worth paying attention to.

Below are previews, predictions and betting odds for each.

WWE Night of Champions 2025 predictions

WWE Champion John Cena defends against CM Punk

Cena is currently a -3000 favorite to retain the title and there is little reason to go against those odds.

While the title retention is likely, there are signs his heel turn and title reign may not last much longer. He got cheered heavily when delivering his version of Punk’s “pipe bomb promo” on SmackDown last week, and those cheers were coming from a crowd which seemed ready to play along with the story and boo him when the segment started. However, as it continued, it seems the fans couldn’t help but cheer him on.

Even the fans who used to boo Cena have come around. Perhaps they’ve grown up, maybe had kids, and are better able to see the positive impact he’s had on this industry, even if his in-ring skills don’t measure up to everyone’s expectations.

But in a business that has been embarrassed by several less-than-savory characters who have become rich and famous through it, Cena stands out for all the right reasons. He’s never going to embarrass wrestling the way others in his position have. The fans who cheered for Cena as kids won’t grow up to be disappointed when they find out who the real Cena is as has happened with other top babyfaces.

There are enough fans out there who want to give Cena his flowers before he retires that WWE may pivot and end things early. However, it won’t happen at Night of Champions and he’ll eventually drop the belt back to Cody Rhodes, not Punk. But Cena vs. Punk for the last time ever is a big match to make on a show WWE will be paid a lot of money for.

As for the possibility of R-Truth getting involved here and furthering his storyline with Cena, I don’t know. It probably comes down to if Ron Killings wants to be there or not, but regardless, he and Cena aren’t through yet.

Prediction: John Cena wins & retains

King of the Ring finals: Cody Rhodes vs. Randy Orton

Rhodes is listed as a -700 favorite to beat his former Legacy stablemate.

Rhodes winning the King of the Ring and going on to take the title back from Cena at SummerSlam seems like a nice way to wrap up Cena’s heel turn and get the belt back on your number one babyface. It also could be a good place to start planting the seeds of an Orton heel turn and feud with Rhodes.

Last year, Orton’s match with Gunther in the King of the Ring finals ended in controversy when Orton’s shoulder appeared to be off the mat during the pin. Ultimately, this led to Orton challenging Gunther for the title at Bash in Berlin. I wonder if a similar controversial ending here could send Orton’s character down a path that ultimately leads to him targeting Rhodes later as well.

Prediction: Rhodes becomes 2025 King of the Ring

Queen of the Ring finals: Jade Cargill vs. Asuka

Cargill is currently listed as a -500 favorite to win Queen of the Ring, but I’d honestly give her much higher odds than that.

With Cargill, WWE sees a star in the making and likely was hoping she would be in a main event role months ago. This is a chance to finally move her into a bigger spotlight. She will only ever be paired with great wrestlers on her rise (like Roxanne Perez and Asuka) so that will probably work out okay.

A Cargill win would set her up for a match against Tiffany Stratton at SummerSlam with Naomi and the Money in the Bank briefcase looming in the background. Bianca Belair will also likely have a role to play here too.

But nothing to do with the title will take place at Night of Champions. Cargill will get a clean victory over Asuka that commentary will put over as the biggest test for her yet.

Prediction: Jade Cargill becomes 2025 Queen of the Ring

Sami Zayn vs. Karrion Kross

Zayn is currently a -250 favorite to beat Kross, but I’d give him higher odds than that.

I think Kross probably will get, at least, one victory over Zayn as the story plays out but I don’t believe that will take place here. WWE will want to give the Saudi fans a chance to cheer Zayn on to victory.

Ignoring any political discussion regarding the nature of the events in Saudi, one thing I have grown to really appreciate about them is the fans. When WWE first began running these shows, it seemed like the audience didn’t know much about wrestling, but that’s definitely not the case anymore. These are fun crowds who are knowledgeable on the product and Zayn is their guy. They LOVE him and you can see on Sami’s face how much he loves performing there and being their favorite. Sami’s connection with this audience is really heartwarming, inspiring, and a bunch of other words that basically mean the same thing.

On the other hand though, Kross has been gaining momentum since WrestleMania and has turned it into a singles match on a PLE. I can see people thinking that Kross will win here because he needs to be established a bit more, but I just don’t think they are going to beat Sami in Saudi just yet.

Prediction: Sami Zayn

Women’s Street Fight: Rhea Ripley vs. Raquel Rodriguez

Ripley is currently listed as a -700 favorite to defeat Rodriguez which sounds about right.

With Liv Morgan getting shoulder surgery, plans for several performers have changed. Morgan’s planned match with Nikki Bella at Evolution 2 is off the table now and reports have Morgan replaced by Roxanne Perez in her team with Rodriguez. The growing partnership between Perez and Rodriguez could be on display here, especially since it’s a street fight.

Even though WWE will want to establish Perez and Rodriguez as a dominant force, I still don’t think they will beat Ripley here. It doesn’t feel like a big enough match for someone with Ripley’s star power to lose.

Prediction: Rhea Ripley

United States Champion Jacob Fatu defends against Solo Sikoa

Fatu is currently a -220 favorite to retain the United States title, but I’m going against the grain and picking Sikoa to win the title.

Granted, WWE realizes Fatu is the bigger star and the one the fans have latched onto, but don’t discredit Sikoa’s performances as this angle has played out. He looks more comfortable playing his current character opposite Fatu than he has since he got called up to the main roster.

The other thing working for Sikoa here is the pending debut of Hikuleo. This seems like a perfect opportunity for a new member of his Bloodline to debut and help Sikoa to a title win.

Prediction: Solo Sikoa wins the United States Championship

Follow along with all our live coverage Saturday at 1 PM Eastern.

Three tournament matches added to WWE SmackDown lineup

The King & Queen of the Ring tournaments are set to continue on WWE SmackDown tonight with three matches taking place.

– On the men’s side, there will be two fatal four-ways: Cody Rhodes vs. Damian Priest vs. Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Andrade and Randy Orton vs. Carmelo Hayes vs. LA Knight vs. Aleister Black.

A matchup against Sami Zayn will be awaiting the Orton vs. Hayes vs. Knight vs. Black winner in the semifinals after Zayn became the first wrestler to advance in the tournament earlier this week.

– There will also be one women’s fatal four-way on SmackDown tonight: Charlotte Flair vs. Alexa Bliss vs. Chelsea Green vs. Candice LeRae.

Roxanne Perez is the only competitor who has advanced to the Queen of the Ring semifinals so far.

Both tournaments will conclude at Night of Champions in Saudi Arabia later this month with the winners earning the right to challenge the World Champion of their brand at SummerSlam.

Tonight’s SmackDown is being held at Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky and is the Money in the Bank fallout edition of the show. Here is everything that’s been announced:

WWE SmackDown (Friday, June 13) —

  • Undisputed WWE Champion John Cena appears
  • Women’s Money in the Bank winner Naomi appears
  • United States Champion Jacob Fatu appears
  • King of the Ring first-round match: Cody Rhodes vs. Damian Priest vs. Shinsuke Nakamura vs. Andrade
  • King of the Ring first-round match: Randy Orton vs. Carmelo Hayes vs. LA Knight vs. Aleister Black
  • Queen of the Ring first-round match: Charlotte Flair vs. Alexa Bliss vs. Chelsea Green vs. Candice LeRae

Wrestling Weekly: The real ‘Truth’ arrives in WWE

Image: WWE

This past week, WWE said goodbye to R-Truth and said hello to Ron “The Truth” Killings in WWE.

On a new Wrestling Weekly, Vic Sosa and Les Thatcher discusses that character change and how TKO might be getting more than they bargained for.

Also on the list of topics today:

  • Some early picks for WWE King & Queen of the Ring
  • The match of the week in both WWE and AEW
  • AEW Grand Slam Mexico preview

Thanks for listening and have a great weekend~!

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March 17, 2025 Observer Newsletter: AEW Revolution recap, Queen of the Ring review & Mildred Burke retrospective

Image: AEW

The new issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter is live.

The lead story focuses on last Sunday’s AEW Revolution which saw several high-level matches in front of a big crowd in Los Angeles. Dave Meltzer recaps the shows and gives his ratings for all the action.

Dave also reviews the new Queen of the Ring film and adds some additional retrospective to the career of Mildred Burke with the help of an old friend.

Dave also looks at the latest in Grant vs. McMahon, a new top match in the works for WrestleMania, news of the week, and more.

Click here to read.

Queen of the Ring actress apologizes for comment at AEW Revolution

Actor Damaris Lewis got a taste of the wrestling business in her role as Babs Wingo in the new Queen of the Ring film and then learned a bit more after she made a comment about match finishes during this past Sunday’s AEW Revolution in Los Angeles.

Pictured above, Lewis was at ringside with fellow actor Kelli Berglund (Nell Stewart) and director/writer Ash Avildsen where they were interviewed in-arena by AEW’s Tony Schiavone. In talking about playing the character, Lewis said that, “One thing I learned about pro wrestlers, y’all know you’re going to win before anybody else does so thank you for teaching me that.”

The comment didn’t hit well on social media to say the least.

Lewis appeared on Busted Open Radio Thursday to promote the film where she was asked about the comment. She apologized as said that wasn’t what she intended and that she “completely, completely take(s) accountability for how it came out.”

She said that during their press tour for the movie, she has been reiterating that she learned from wrestlers that they carry something inside where a voice tells them inside that they are going to win. When she tried to convey that, it didn’t work and even she thought the comment was “ehh” and not what she meant.

“It is a sport, it is real. People are in there, in that ring, doing what they gotta do. It’s tough and dangerous at times. I respect it fully with my whole heart. So yes, I will say it again: I am so sorry if it came out that way. But like you said, you have to know the house you’re in. I know that these fans love their sport and that they were defending their sport so I can’t be mad,” she said.

AEW wrestler Kamille, who is also in the film, defended Lewis on her Instagram feed this week.

TNA announces Queen of the Ring movie partnership for Sacrifice

Those watching Friday’s TNA Sacrifice will see extensive branding for the new Queen of the Ring movie on the life of the legendary Mildred Burke.

The promotion announced a partnership/sponsorship on Thursday, stating that for Friday’s streaming special from El Paso, Texas, fans will see branding on the ring canvas, a match sponsorship, behind-the-scenes footage and both “digital and social support.”

The match sponsorship will be for Masha Slamovich’s Knockouts title defense against NXT’s Cora Jade.

The film on Burke hit theatres last weekend and features current day wrestlers like Toni Storm and Kamille in key roles. According to Box Office Mojo, the film has brought in nearly $500,000 domestically as of Thursday.

Actors from the movie appeared at last Sunday’s AEW Revolution with Damaris Lewis’ innocent comment about how wrestlers know they’re going to win before anyone else does sticking out to those on social media. It was not stated whether any actors or director/writer Ash Avildsen will be in attendance Friday.

Here’s the current lineup:

  • TNA Knockouts World Champion Masha Slamovich defends against Cora Jade
  • Joe Hendry, Matt Hardy, Elijah, Leon Slater & Nic Nemeth vs. Eddie Edwards, Brian Myers, JDC, Epico Colon & Primo Colon in a steel cage match
  • TNA X-Division Champion Moose defends against Jeff Hardy in a ladder match
  • Mustafa Ali vs. Mike Santana
  • Tessa Blanchard vs. Lei Ying Lee
  • Wes Lee, Tyriek Igwe & Tyson Dupont vs. Zachary Wentz, Trey Miguel & Ace Austin
  • Sami Callihan vs. Mance Warner in a street fight

Daily Update: UFC 313 fallout, AEW Revolution, Queen of the Ring

Daily Update

Latest News

Latest Audio

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Among the highlights:

  • The background of the John Cena angle and different versions of the story
  • What changed on the day of Elimination Chamber and different versions as to why
  • The turn itself
  • Travis Scott injures Rhodes
  • Comparisons with other turns
  • Art imitating real life
  • WrestleMania lineup
  • Elimination Chamber business and how it performed around the world
  • Pat McAfee controversy
  • TKO getting into boxing, what has and hasn’t been talked about and what we know about the details on how Nick Khan and Dana White are involved as well as why this is no risk for TKO
  • Linda McMahon confirmed for Secretary of Education, and then to wipe it all out
  • AEW Revolution preview, business numbers and interest level
  • Why the March 6, 1972 match with Antonio Inoki vs. Karl Gotch is still talked about 53 years after it happened
  • New Japan anniversary show notes, early New Japan Cup news
  • Saya Kamitani vs. Tam Nakano becomes a classic match, as well as a controversial one
  • Fantastica Mania final day coverage
  • Coverage of the deaths of Ciclon Ramirez and Australian Suicide
  • How did SmackDown and Dynamite place in the weekly standings
  • The unique Dynamite rating pattern
  • Full weekly ratings notes including what milestone did Raw on Netflix fall below
  • Notes on the high SmackDown number
  • Takeshita goes to Arena Mexico
  • Arguably the greatest freestyle wrestler of all-time passes away
  • Queen of the Ring notes
  • Giant mask match of legends being teased
  • Tony Khan changes philosophy
  • Forbidden Door title match tease
  • Tony Khan talks Wembley Stadium attendance record
  • Ospreay talks difference between New Japan and AEW
  • Mark Shapiro talks a lot of the future WWE and UFC business deals
  • A look at what level of value UFC PPVs could bring to Netflix and the value WWE brings to Netflix
  • Tom Aspinall vs. Jon Jones update
  • Freak show fight between two of the strongest men who ever lived
  • Big Tokyo Dome event planned
  • WWE in talks for a unique PPV event including date and place it is tentative for
  • Evolve notes
  • Sonya Deville and Carmella talk being dropped by WWE

This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter Back Issue

Sunday Update

— We have a number of weekend shows on the site today. Friday Garrett and I were with Scott D’Amore talking about his days with TNA, owning the Tunney tape library, goals for Maple Leaf Wrestling, stars to watch out for, relationship with New Japan and more. Plus we talked a lot of the news of the week.

We also did a show last night talking about UFC, Queen of the Ring, Jade Cargill (more detailed than in the Observer), and why tonight ‘s AEW numbers are so important to learn from. Bryan and I will be back tonight talking AEW and the rest of the weekend news.

— We’re looking for your thoughts on AEW Revolution, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to [email protected]

— ESPN+ will be putting up last night’s UFC for free due to all the issues with people having trouble ordering and viewing the show. There have been issues for years but this is the first time they were so bad ESPN made this decision.

— AEW Revolution starts at just before 4 p.m. Eastern with a 13 match show from the Crypto.com arena in Los Angeles. More than 11,000 tickets are out and the gate was almost $1 million as of last night. This is an amazingly deep show.

Zero Hour starting at maybe 6:45 p.m.Eastern:

  • Komander & Hologram vs. Lee Johnson & Blake Christian
  • Daniel Garcia & Adam Cole & Roderick Strong & Kyle O’Reilly vs. Shane Taylor & The Infantry & Lee Moriarty
  • Chris Jericho vs Gravity for the ROH title
  • Big Boom AJ & Orange Cassidy & Mark Briscoe vs. Johnny TV & MxM Collection

PPV at 8 p.m. Eastern

  • Bobby Lashley & Shelton Benjamin vs. Outrunners for tag titles (The Hurt Syndicate are -3000 favorites)
  • Kazuchika Okada vs. Brody King for the Continental title (Okada is a -3000 favorite)
  • Mercedes Mone vs. Momo Watanabe for TBS title (Mone is a -3000 favorite)
  • Swerve Strickland vs. Ricochet for an AEW title shot (Strickland is a -1000 favorite)
  • MJF vs. Adam Page (MJF is a -200 favorite)
  • Will Ospreay vs. Kyle Fletcher cage match (Ospreay is a -1000 favorite)
  • Toni Storm vs. Mariah May falls count anywhere Hollywood ending match for AEW women’s title (Storm is a -2500 favorite)
  • Konosuke Takesita vs. Kenny Omega for the International title (Omega is a -1000 favorite)
  • Jon Moxley vs. Adam Copeland for the AEW title (Moxley is a -220 favorite)

— I saw something was sent out in the market which listed the doors opening at 6 p.m. and the first match at 7 p.m. Of course that’s Eastern time, but the show is Pacific time so the doors are to open at 3 p.m.

— Jim Ross had a health issue earlier this week but we were told yesterday that he flew in for the show.

— Both Raw in Madison Square Garden and NXT at the Hulu Theater in MSG will be sold out this week. They are doing limited staging for both shows. So the crowds will be larger than usual for pro wrestling in those arenas. There are 16,600 tickets out at this point for MSG and 4,500 for the Hulu Theater. Fightful reported Meiko Satomura would be at Tuesday’s show. Undertaker, Bully Ray and Mickie James will be there as well.

— SmackDown numbers won’t be out until tomorrow afternoon, but we were told that on Netflix, every significant country was up from last week which I think comes from the interest level in the Cody Rhodes vs. John Cena match since Rhodes wasn’t on Raw to address it. The ratings have been very strong the past two weeks. 

— The UFC main event last night where Magomed Ankalaev won the light heavyweight title from Alex Pereira was a very close call. Pretty much everyone had rounds one and five for Pereira and two and four for Ankalaev. It came down to round three. That round was very close although Pereira did have a 22-14 edge in strikes landed. If I was to judge the fight, I gave round three to Pereira and had him winning 48-47, but this was not a robbery and could have gone either way. If I could have given a 10-10 round I’d have had it a draw, but if judging the fight as a whole, which I think is the best way, I’d go with Ankalaev since his round two win was the strongest round win and also the only time the fight was in danger of finishing. Basically the best way to judge a fight is who do you think should have won–that’s Ankalaev. Once you start putting numbers in, the numbers don’t always reflect who should have won. Usually they do, this fight was the exception. I’ve always said Pride style scoring is the best and that will never be used in the U.S. 

— Judge Michael Bell and Derek Cleary both gave round three to Ankalaev, while Sal D’Amto gave both three and five to Ankalaev. Of media scores, every single one had it 48-47 depending on round three. Media scores on MMA Decisions, which didn’t include mine, were 52 percent for Ankalaev, 43 percent for Pereira and five percent a draw. Fan scores were 58 percent for Pereira, 37 percent for Ankalaev and five percent even.

— Dana White said after the fight that because of how close it was that they would probably rematch them next. White said the fight wasn’t what he expected and that he expected more action, that the decision wasn’t a robbery (either way it was close). White said he thought Anaklaev won.

— It also should be noted Justin Gaethje vs. Rafael Fiziev had a hell of a fight.

— We talked quite a bit last night on the site about the history of Mildred Burke and the movie Queen of the Ring and what was and wasn’t accurate (it was more accurate than I expected but obviously it’s a Hollywood movie and some liberties were taken). At press time for reasons I don’t know, the movie wasn’t even listed in the Friday rankings and they had 22 movies listed including one that grossed $377 for the week. The Saturday numbers are usually in by now but they aren’t either. We should have numbers tonight. Between hearing from people who saw it at empty theaters and our lack of feedback, I don’t expect major numbers.

— I heard today’s Saito Brothers vs. Kento Miyahara & Yuma Aoyagi match where Miyahara & Aoyagi won the All Japan world tag titles was an excellent match.

— Robbie Lawler was announced as the latest inductee into the UFC Hall of Fame. Very deserved. Also want to mention Lex Luger, which for all the obvious reasons, I was very happy to see being announced for the WWE Hall of Fame.

— Google searches for last night’s UFC show were about 1.4 million. An interesting one is that the Big 10 wrestling championships had 70,000 searches and the finals aren’t even until today.

–The Big 10 finals are tonight at 5:30 p.m. Eastern on the Big 10 network. The main event is the biggest match in college wrestling so far this season with Gable Steveson of Minnesota (11-0, with 63 wins in a row in college), the 2021 gold medalist, facing Greg Kerkvliet of Penn State (16-0 and the 2023 NCAA champion). This is expected to be a preview of the NCAA championship match at heavyweight in two weeks as they are by far the class of the division this year. The two wrestled in high school in 2018 and Steveson won 3-2 in his most competitive match in his high school career. Steveson beat him 9-4 in 2021 and 8-3 in 2022 in the NCAA tournament but Kerkvliet has improved significantly since that point. 

— Logan Paul participated in a celebrity soccer game at Wembley Stadium yesterday before almost 90,000 fans. Paul scored a goal on a header and also suplexed Joe Weller and pinned him in a goal celebration for the YouTube All Stars who played Sidemen FC. The game included KSI, IShowSpeed and Kai Cenat.

–The New Japan Cup matches held earlier today in Amagasaki saw Oleg Boltin over Bad Luck Fale, Great O’Khan over TV champion El Phantasmo, Drilla Moloney pinned Tomohiro Ishii (people were raving about this one), and Tetsuya Naito over Callum Newman.

— As far as next matches, you’ve got Evil vs David Finlay on Tuesday, Yuya Uemura vs. Yoshi-Hashi on Tuesday, Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Ryohei Oiwa (both TMDK members) on Tuesday, Gabe Kidd vs. Taichi on Wednesday, O’Khan vs. Shota Umino on Wednesday, Naito vs. Jeff Cobb on Friday, Moloney vs. TJP on Friday and Boltin vs. Shingo Takagi on Friday.

— A&E has LFG tonight with Eric Bischoff and Sean Waltman as guests, Rivals at 9:30 is about HHH vs. Shawn Michaels and the Greatest Moments show is about the Emergence of the NWO.

— Defy announced Streets of Rage on 4/13 at 4 p.m. at Washington Hall in Seattle with Zack Sabre Jr. vs. Timothy Thatcher.

— The Patricio Pitbull Freire UFC debut against Yair Rodriguez on 4/12 is currently listed as being on the television prelims but Dana White said that positioning is not definite. A lot of people feel that the debut of Pitbull, generally considered the greatest Bellator fighter (although past his prime now) should be on the PPV, especially with an all action exciting fighter like Rodriguez.

— There will be a proclamation tomorrow in El Paso, TX to set up TNA Wrestling Day in El Paso County for this coming Friday, where TNA is running a big show. Tessa Blanchard will represent TNA tomorrow.

— The criminal charges against Thomas Wainsaw (Bear Boulder) from 1/13 were dropped. Wainsaw was charged with battery by strangulation. The alleged victim did not want the charges to go forward. She had not wanted him prosecuted from the start.

Wrestling Observer Radio: Queen of the Ring review, UFC 313 recap

Dave Meltzer and I are back with our post-UFC 313 episode of Wrestling Observer Radio. Paul Fontaine joined us to go over the show as well as the news coming out of it.

Here were some of the rest of the topics we covered:

  • Queen of the Ring
  • Janel Grant
  • Jade Cargill & Shayna Baszler
  • Carmella
  • New Japan Cup
  • SmackDown highlights
  • AEW Revolution Zero Hour

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WOL: Reviewing WWE SmackDown & ‘Queen of the Ring,’ AEW Revolution lookahead

Image: WWE

The road to WrestleMania heated up on Friday’s WWE SmackDown.

Naomi took out Jade for Bianca, Cody told Cena to come get some, Damien Priest attacked Drew, and a new U.S. Champion are just a few of the events from a very newsworthy show.

Let’s talk all about it on today’s Wrestling Observer Live.

‘Queen of the Ring’ — the new movie on wrestling legend Mildred Burke — is in theaters now. I will let you know if it’s worth seeing.

Plus, I talk about The Rock, Travis Scott, Cena, ratings and Sunday’s AEW Revolution.

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Pacific Rim: Osamu Nishimura memories, Mildred Burke’s influence in Japan

On a new Pacific Rim, Fumi Saito and I talk about his friend, the late Osamu Nishimura, who started in NJPW’s all-star class of 1991, wrestled all over the world in more places than you realize, and had a unique deal with NJPW.

Fumi went to Nishimura’s wake and talks about all the legendary wrestlers who respected and were influenced by Nishimura.

With “Queen of the Ring” in theaters, Fumi and I also talk about Mildred Burke’s influence in Japan and how she helped to create the WWWA World Championship.

Plus, we chat Hirooki Goto, Tam Nakano and Saya Kamitani.

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