Shawn Michaels addresses WWE backstage issues with The Rock

According to Shawn Michaels, rumors that he and Triple H mistreated The Rock during the Attitude Era are “blown way out of proportion.”

Michaels addressed rumors of backstage heat between himself and The Rock while appearing on NBA legend Carmelo Anthony’s 7PM in Brooklyn podcast. During the appearance, Michaels was asked why he and The Rock never faced each other.

“He didn’t like me,” Michaels responded before laughing. “No, I will say this — there’s a big kerfuffle in the wrestling business about me and Hunter, you know, doing stuff to him and being mean and stuff like that. All of it way blown out of proportion, none of it even accurate. But things that when he was younger was fed a lot. But, again, later on and to this day, we get along and we talk about stuff.

“That’s one I think everybody would have liked to have seen. But by the time I came back, he was well off into his Hollywood career and stuff like that.”

Michaels noted that, when The Rock first started in WWE, there was some ribbing in the locker room over the “Rocky sucks” chants that he was getting. But Rock was able to turn things around with a character change and gain acceptance from fans, who no longer saw him as just being Rocky Johnson’s son.

When Michaels watched The Rock on Saturday Night Live for the first time, he could tell Rock was going to become a big star in Hollywood.

“What he’s done has been pretty damn impressive,” Michaels said.

Michaels, Triple H, and The Rock all now hold important positions within WWE/TKO. Michaels is in charge of NXT, Triple H is WWE’s Chief Content Officer, and Rock is a member of TKO’s board of directors.

Next Monday (April 13), a new documentary — titled “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels” — will premiere on Peacock. It will cover Michaels’ career, his battle with addiction issues, and his NXT role.

Dave Meltzer’s WWE WrestleMania X-Seven review & star ratings 25 years later

WWE WrestleMania X-Seven took place 25 years ago today so in honor of that, the following is from Dave Meltzer’s April 9, 2001, edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter — available in our archives along with hundreds of back issues from 1991 through the current day for subscribers.

**********

WrestleMania X-Seven, in almost every way, was the culmination of the wrestling boom.

Much like the fantasy of WrestleMania III, which was the high peak of the 1980s wrestling boom at the Pontiac Silverdome, this show 14 years later, was the all-around greatest major show the World Wrestling Federation ever produced.

While Wrestlemania III was a good show overall and in front of a record crowd, it had an atrocious main event that time that memories have been very kind to and, really, only one great match. The in-ring standards of the WWF with the new crew of wrestlers has gone through the roof in the past two years, blowing away the quality of any previous time period.

From a business standpoint, the show on 4/1 at the Reliant Astrodome was most likely the biggest money overall revenue generating pro wrestling event of all-time. The show set not only the building attendance record with a sellout of 67,925 people, but drew the second-largest crowd in the history of pro wrestling in the United States behind only WrestleMania III for the Hulk Hogan vs. Andre the Giant match.

The paid attendance was 62,885 was also the second-largest paid crowd ever in North America. The live gate of $3,530,905 was the largest for pro wrestling anywhere outside of Japan and more than doubled the previous American record set at WrestleMania V at Trump Plaza in Atlantic city for the Hogan vs. Randy Savage match. It barely beat the previous record for both the WWF and for pro wrestling in North America set at WrestleMania VI at Toronto’s SkyDome for the Hogan vs. Ultimate Warrior match.

PPV figures won’t be available for a couple of weeks, but it was certainly thought to have a good shot at breaking the all-time record set for last year’s WrestleMania of 824,000 buys. With the price raised from last year’s $34.95 to $39.95, it likely broke the all-time revenue record but that isn’t a certainty because many fans last year purchased an all-day WrestleMania at $49.95.

The all-time merchandise record for pro wrestling outside of Japan was also destroyed with $1,111,343 in merchandise sales at the event, more than doubling the record set at WrestleMania III of $540,000.

From a production standpoint, it was state of the art and then some. In the ring, while there have been shows with no bad matches and maybe even some with more great matches both domestically as well as internationally, this topped any previous WrestleMania.

Whether it was the best show WWF ever presented is more debatable as there have been numerous great shows over the past year…and this show did have its bad points. Until the plethora of hot shows over the past year, the top WWF PPV has generally been considered to be 1997’s Calgary Stampede which was a two-hour event with only four matches, all of which were good-to-great, but with off the charts heat, particularly for the main event.

WrestleMania X-Seven had a few bad matches, but its three best matches were on par, and in some ways even better, than the main event of the Stampede. It was a four-hour show with far better production and it always seems better when the big show of the year delivers as opposed to just a monthly show being off the charts and then soon forgotten.

The big story in the ring was the Steve Austin heel turn, which went ignored by the live crowd in Houston who were largely there to cheer Austin to the WWF title by any means necessary. That included working heel style from the start, and gaining the title due to lots of help from Vince McMahon, including a handshake and a beer drinking toast. The Astrodome crowd largely ignored that McMahon was even there, only seeing Austin winning the title. It was very interesting because the crowd watching on television, led by the announcers’ reactions, no doubt reacted completely different than the fans in the building as shown on Raw the next night, while still in Texas.

The Austin turn had been on the books for months. Months ago, it seemed natural due to the ascension of the younger Rock who had eclipsed Austin’s mainstream popularity. In recent weeks, plans didn’t change even though the McMahon standard of listening to the audience would have made him take a different path as even with Austin’s nastier demeanor and playing the psychological heel role, the crowd was beginning to boo Rock when the two confronted each other and the company was having to confiscate signs at the TV tapings.

Even months back when the tease for the match began, a Rock interview where he started trash talking Austin saw the crowd turn on him briefly. By the final week, more due to tweaking of Rock’s character, having him punk Austin out a few times on television and be nicer to new employees, the crowd was split in their reactions. But it was a foregone conclusion that wouldn’t be the case at the beginning of the match in Houston. Every appearance on the screen of Rock was met with heavy boos while Austin received thunderous cheers.

Austin jumped him early, Rock made his trademark babyface comebacks, but the crowd booed Rock anyway. Before the show, security was removing tons of negative signs regarding Rock which is why they weren’t evident during the broadcast.

But there were numerous other stories.

The WWF, breaking with longstanding company policy, allowsed references to other federations (Chris Benoit as a former WCW champion who never lost the title, plus Paul Heyman’s repeated references to the defunct ECW championships) and even paid homage to its past with a gimmick battle royal. Sadly, that was more of a hit on the internet than it was to the crowd live, most of whom didn’t seem to know the majority of the competitors.

Quite frankly, the choice of many were strange, as some were big stars of the past, and others were gimmick flops of the past that nobody remembered. The sad end result of Iron Sheik winning was because his knees are so shaky he could barely move, and there was no way he could take any kind of a bump, so he had to be the last one in. Bobby Heenan and Gene Okerlund, in what may be their last major league television appearance after decades of being fixtures in the business, announced the match. They were encouraged to do all the dated 80s cliches they could in a short period of time to establish them as lovable characters from childhood, but that would always stay in the current fans’ childhood.

Generally speaking, except for the fitness buffs among the wrestlers who maintain their playing weight, old-timers matches are not kind to pro wrestlers and thankfully this one was kept short with the emphasis on the ring introductions and the time warp announcing.

Edge & Christian captured their record-setting seventh WWF Tag Team titles (a statistic so meaningless nowadays it was never referred to on the broadcast) in the TLC II match over the Dudleys and Hardys. While some of the wrestlers involved expressed disappointment with the match, it was superior to their SummerSlam match from a psychological standpoint. Even more remarkable was that nobody was seriously injured in a match filled with crazy spots.

From a pure wrestling standpoint, the first five minutes of Kurt Angle vs. Chris Benoit was the best stuff in American rings in years. They did a worked amateur style with Angle showcasing his obvious talents and allowing Benoit to escape. It says a lot for Angle’s ego and ability to recognize what he’s doing as a work to allow Benoit to appear to be able to outwrestle him in his own specialty.

Benoit, who hadn’t done anything remotely like that in a pro ring in his career and whose only real experience at learning that style was in the mid-80s at the New Japan dojo, had a match that would have been viewed as a near classic on most shows, but ended up fighting for third best of the night.

There were a few negatives. The introduction of WCW talent was a total flop on many levels. It was a damned if you do and damned if you don’t situation. The basic feeling was that it was too soon to shoot any kind of angle for WWF vs. WCW, since the belief is WCW needs to be rebuilt for a long time first. However, with all the talk regarding the sale and how huge the sale angle was played on television six days earlier, the feeling was there had to be some show of support for Shane McMahon but not at ringside where it would be imperative to shoot an angle.

They flew in Johnny Ace, Chavo Guerrero Jr., Mike Awesome, Lance Storm, Hugh Morrus, Sean O’Haire, Mark Jindrak, Chuck Palumbo, Mike Sanders, Stacey Keibler and Shawn Stasiak. All with the exception of Ace were people that WWF purchased the WCW contracts of in the sale. The wrestlers were told to bring their gear and their championship belts (in the case of Palumbo & O’Haire), so unless they were shooting publicity photos, they may have had a different idea originally what they were going to do.

They put them in a luxury box. As it turned out, they were brought in together, never brought backstage to talk to any of the wrestlers, and by the time they returned to the hotel, the WWF crew had already left. There is expected to be a meeting with the 24 wrestlers signed and WWF sometime this week. Another reason this group were the specific ones signed is because almost all, if not all of them, have their 90-day cycles expiring within a month so they can be cut loose and renegotiated with if need be imminently as WWF is under no obligation to honor their contracts if they cycle them out soon.

Even though Shane was the strong babyface in his match when he talked about WCW wrestlers and they were shown, without any graphics or mention of who they actually were which made it so rinky dink that the crowd booed them out of the building. The lack of star power meant the first impression of the angle took a lot of steam away from it without people like Ric Flair, DDP, Goldberg, Hulk Hogan or Scott Steiner that virtually all casual fans would think would be part of a purchase of WCW.

It was clear that revitalizing the brand and giving WCW its own television show was going to be an uphill battle, but it looked even steeper after this non-angle.

Some storyline gaffes regarding non-selling of injuries also made parts of the booking WCW-like. Chyna’s career -ending neck injury, which was supposed to give her an achilles heel and explain why she’s now wrestling women, saw her blow off the injury in an interview, saying she was fine, and then sell almost nothing in her one-sided squash title win over Ivory. The only positive is that the fans see her as a star, and the bookers know to keep her ring time short.

A similar situation was more minor involving Lita in the TLC II match. The announcers sold the idea early that she wouldn’t be at ringside (to set up her late run-in) due to injuries suffered on TV when Rhyno speared her. However, in a pre-tape package from festivities earlier in the week, she was shown without any signs of an injury before the announcers talked about that injury.

There were a couple of minor talent issues that surfaced during the week leading up to the show. The complete card was made clear after SmackDown the previous Tuesday, leading to a lot of the wrestlers who had been with the company on the road all year that weren’t booked on the show upset about not sharing in the biggest payday of the year.

By the latter part of the week, the word was out that virtually every full-timer on the roster would have a part in the show in some form except for a few on the bottom rung. The tradition has been those time-wasting battle royals or the hardcore match last year, but with the gimmick battle royal, doing another multi-person match would be overkill.

Then, the night before the show, apparently plans changed and everyone originally off the show was off the show again, likely because they were already doing a four-hour Mania and it wasn’t a good idea to add live matches to Heat. Several wrestlers were vocal, among them Steve Blackman because he had always done his job and been on the road all year, and X-Pac who until recently had always been kept as one of the main players on the squad. X-Pac said he was going to HHH and when show time came, many of the people originally off the show were back on.

Of the guys on the main roster, the ones not on the show were Rikishi (busted eardrum), Scotty 2 Hotty (neck injury), Tori (“Tough Enough”), Billy Gunn, Al Snow (“Tough Enough”), K-Kwik, Crash & Molly Holly, Bob Holly (injury), Big Bossman (his new gimmick hasn’t been introduced yet), Lo Down, Kaientai, Essa Rios, and Terri.

Also appearing on the show in cameos from WWF New York were Lou Albano, Fred Blassie, Jimmy Snuka, and Afa.

WWE WrestleMania X-Seven results & star ratings

Sunday Night Heat pre-show: Justin Credible & X-Pac defeated Steve Blackman & Grandmaster Sexay (2:46)

There didn’t seem any purpose to this and the crowd didn’t care. Albert took out GMS, allowing the other two to superkick Blackman and X-Pac pinned him. X & JC & Albert are now known collectively as The X Factor.

WWE Intercontinental Champion Chris Jericho defeated William Regal to retain (7:08)

Match was fine, in some ways well wrestled by Regal although Jericho had one of those matches where he was slightly off on things. Where it ended up disappointing is that it was just too short. Jericho opened by slightly overshooting on a pescado. Paul Heyman did a good job setting the stage for the match, which was built around Regal working on Jericho’s shoulder, saying Jericho was injured from being in the Regal stretch on SmackDown.

Regal posted Jericho’s shoulder twice. Jericho came back with a lionsault, but Regal got his knees up. Crowd was quiet except when they teased a signature move. Regal undid the turnbuckle pad and rammed Jericho’s left shoulder into it twice. Jericho came back with two enzuigiri’s and a missile dropkick for a near fall. Regal did a double-arm superplex off the top. Regal stretch but Jericho made the ropes, and came back with a lionsault for the pin. Crowd wasn’t ready for the match to end. **

Bradshaw, Faarooq & Tazz defeated The Goodfather, Bull Buchanan & Val Venis (3:53)

Jackie DDT’s Steven Richards right away, and it looked nasty. Mainly heat on Tazz, who had a spot messed up when he was sent into the ropes. Goodfather then sat on Tazz’ face while being off on a legdrop, which may have hurt Tazz. Match ended abruptly with Goodfather missing a tackle into the buckles, and Bradshaw pinning him with the clothesline. Nothing to the match. 1/2*

Kane defeated Raven (c) and Big Show in a three-way for the Hardcore title (9:18)

No Pete Rose this year in the Kane match. They tried to do something different from the rest of the show and have most of the match backstage but not before Kane did a flying clothesline off the top rope to the floor on Show. Backstage, Raven went flying through a plate glass window and ended up being all cut up. Show was whipped through a door. He and Kane fought in a small room and they went through the wall into another room Raven was in. They ended up driving golf carts and Kane ran over Raven’s ankle.

Match ended up going too long. Finish saw them back on the stage in front of the crowd and there was a crash pit by the stage. Show had Raven up for a press slam when Kane kicked them both off the stage. To make sure everyone knew it was a gimmicked spot, Kane jumped off the stage into the apparent foam rubber laden pit, bouncing like little kids at a playground, and pinned Show. This wouldn’t be the last time something this silly was on the show. *3/4

Eddy Guerrero defeated Test for the WWE European title (8:30)

Perry Saturn came out with Guerrero, wearing a funny hat which was a cross between a Buff Bagwell hat decorated with the furry stuff Bruiser Brody used to wear on his boots. Real visual size problem here with Test a legit 6-6 and Guerrero at 5-6 1/2. At one point, Test got his ankle caught in the ropes and the ref couldn’t break him loose. At another spot, Guerrero just fell out of the ring. Finally, after far too long, Guerrero and Saturn sort of had to break character and spread the ropes to get him free.

Test came back with a tilt-a-whirl slam and a tilt-a-whirl into a power bomb for a near fall. Saturn did sort of a fisherman’s buster on Test when the ref wasn’t looking, which they are giving a long silly name to. They talked a lot about Guerrero’s family history in wrestling. Test did a pump handle slam on Guerrero and punched Saturn, but Guerrero kicked out of the pin. Dean Malenko came out and distracted the ref while Guerrero got the title belt and hit Test with it for the pin. **1/4

Kurt Angle defeated Chris Benoit (14:02)

Angle insulted the Texas crowd to make sure Benoit got a decent face reaction, because the Benoit turn psychologically hasn’t been handled well and fans really haven’t seen it as any kind of a turn, because if you pay attention, it hasn’t been. They did awesome matwork early, like the best matwork in this country in years. Angle basically did all his amateur takedowns and was tremendous in doing so, and gave Benoit openings for escapes and reversals. Fans politely applauded the matwork, which was a risk because when you have such a large audience, the real wrestling fan percentage is usually low as compared to people who are going to the one show of their lifetime and aren’t going to be as into the wrestling itself as a smaller crowd would figure to be.

They kept this up for several minutes and the crowd still appreciated it until Angle did the subtle heel forearm and sending Benoit into steps. Angle started suplexing Benoit all over the place. Benoit came back with a superplex off the top and a rolling german suplex and then Benoit used Angle’s ankle lock on him. Benoit also got a crossface and Angle needed to make the ropes, but then Angle got the crossface, and actually did a more believable version of the move than Benoit, for a rope break.

There was a weak and needless ref bump here. This match was getting over in a different type of suspension of disbelief manner, and the ref bump really hurt the match because it woke everyone up to the fact what they were watching was the same as everything else on the show.

The ref bump was for Benoit to get the crossface and for Angle to tap, setting the stage for Benoit being screwed. But since they were already doing that in the post-match interview, it didn’t seem to serve a purpose. Angle used the newly named “Angle slam” for a near fall. He went for a moonsault, but Benoit got his knees up, which actually hit Angle in the face and his moonsault positioning was off. Benoit used a diving head-butt for a near fall but Angle got the pin out of nowhere using the tights.

This was the old Jack Brisco-Dory Funk Jr. psychology in that both would work a scientific match, but Funk would heel while keep world champion wrestler credibility by showing he could really wrestle, but take subtle shortcuts, which because of the context, got over better than all the overt heel tactics in the undercard usually.

Very similar to early Don Frye in Japan in that in the context of a match that looks real, something simple like not breaking clean on the ropes can generate a ton of heat. After the match, Angle did an interview and Benoit attacked him and put him in the crossface and Angle tapped again. ****1/4

Chyna defeated Ivory for the WWE Women’s title (2:39)

Chyna has dropped a lot of weight, slimming down but also dropping a lot of muscle mass to try and give her a more mainstream look. Match was terrible because it was a total ego show. Chyna blew off the injury angle. Ivory hit her with a belt shot at the bell, but she made a quick comeback and it was a one-sided squash.

Chyna gave her a power bomb, then lifted her up at two. She then gave her a press-slam and pinned her by just laying backwards like it was a piece of cake, showing no respect to her at all. -*

-Jeff Bagwell and Moises Alou of the Houston Astros were interviewed at ringside. Bagwell said wrestlers were great actors.

Shane McMahon defeated Vince McMahon in a street fight (14:12)

Shane pointed out the WCW talent in the building before the match which was a funny reaction since he was the face and the crowd turned on him. Stephanie McMahon came out with Vince and slapped Shane early. Shane got a kendo stick and started hitting his father. The gimmick with the kendo sticks is if you get hit in the middle, there is a lot of give, but on the ends, it hurts like hell.

Vince potato’d Shane at one point as late in the match he was getting a mouse on his eye. Vince isn’t a well trained worker physically in that his stuff looks bad, but he knows how to play a crowd and is willing to get hit. The big spot was Shane coming off the top rope through the spanish announcers’ table when Vince was pulled to safety by Stephanie.

Trish Stratus wheeled out Linda fMcMahon or the big spot. Trish slapped Vince, which was all the revenge this girl was getting. Stephanie and Trish brawled to the back. With Linda supposedly all doped up, Vince called her a bitch, pulled her out of her wheelchair and put her in a chair in the corner and kept verbally abusing her. Vince threatened to beat up Linda, but ref Mick Foley stopped him and he and Vince had their fights including Vince hitting him twice with chair shots.

Vince grabbed a garbage can to hit Shane, but Linda got up out of the chair and gave Vince a low blow. Shane then put a garbage can in front of Vince’s face and came off the top rope all the way across the ring with a dropkick to the garbage can, a modified Van Terminator for the pin. ***

Edge & Christian defeated The Dudleys (c) and The Hardys in a TLC match for the WWE Tag Team titles (15:50)

They announced Lita was injured, but had been airing stuff from the weekend showing her being fine. Christian took an early bump where it looked like he was supposed to crotch himself, but overshot the ropes and crashed on the floor and it looked like he’d be done for the match, but he got up and seemed fine. They brought the ladder in just 45 seconds in. Lots of bumps off the ladder. At one point Buh Buh power bombed Jeff onto Edge through a table.

They set up two stacks of two tables for the last stunt in the match. Spike Dudley showed up and gave the Acid drop to Edge and put Christian through a table. Rhyno came in and speared Buh Buh. He then put Matt through the table. Lita came out and hit a huracanrana on Rhyno. Dudleys did the old doomsday device on Rhyno. Lita then took off her shirt, revealing her bra, but for her trouble, they 3-D’d her through a table. Jeff pulled out a 14-foot ladder to set up the swanton dive off the top onto Rhyno and Spike and putting all three through a table.

Jeff was to set up a spot where he’d jump from ladder to ladder and grab the belts, although he’d be thwarted. However, he messed up the first time when the ladders lost balance. He went back to do it again and did it right, which momentarily conjured up thoughts of a Sabu stunt show. This time when he was hanging, Edge climbed halfway up the 14-foot ladder and gave him a flying spear causing Hardy to land from close to ten feet on his back. Matt and Buh Buh climbed up, but the ladders were shoved by Rhyno and they took a spectacular bump over the top rope crashing through the two sets of two stacked up tables set side by side.

The finish saw Rhyno pick Christian up on his shoulders and climb the ladder with Christian on his back so he could grab the belts and come down as the winner. ****3/4

Iron Sheik won a short old-timers battle royal (3:05)

The ring intros were campy, as was the commentary by Gene Okerlund and Bobby Heenan. Sheik was so immobile than coming down the aisle and moving so slowly, Heenan joked Sheik wouldn’t make it to the ring until WrestleMania 38.

Originally, Gillberg was to be in this, but he was pulled from the show because they were afraid it might start a “Goldberg” chant which was a smart move on their part.

Remainder of the guys in were Bushwhackers, Duke Droese, Earthquake (who has lost a lot of weight), Goon, Doink the Clown (without Dink, this was Gary Fall), Kamala, Kim Chee (Steve Lombardi), Repo Man, Jim Cornette, Nikolai Volkoff, Michael Hayes, One Man Gang (who apparently came as Gang instead of Akeem because he had lost so much weight his Akeem costume didn’t fit), Gobbledy Gooker (Hector Guerrero?), Tugboat, Hillbilly Jim, Brother Love and Sgt. Slaughter.

A lot of the wrestlers got no reaction which isn’t a surprise because many of them in their heyday also got no reaction. Bushwhackers as cult favorites, Hayes, who was big in Texas, Love, from Houston and Jim, more because of having catchy entrance music, got nice reactions. Guys were thrown out as quick as possible leaving Sheik alone in the ring as the winner.

Slaughter then put Sheik in a cobra clutch after the match and Sheik went out and Slaughter’s music played. DUD

Undertaker defeated HHH (18:17)

Motorhead played HHH’s music as he came to the ring. The lead singer didn’t know the words, so that was funny. It’s funny because HHH never does a clean job, and he did here, and instead of elevating a new star, he put over an established star which is so smart politically doing a clean job on the biggest show of the year while at the same time not making a new star.

Both guys worked really hard, as you’d figure. They quickly broke the second spanish announcers table. HHH got the sledge hammer early but ref Mike Chioda took it away. Undertaker catapulted HHH into Chioda. Undertaker used a choke slam but Chioda was groggy and got there slow, so HHH kicked out. Undertaker then kicked and elbow dropped the ref. Luckily, that is no longer a DQ. HHH took a nice bump over the top.

The two went into the stands and brawled. HHH gave Undertaker a hard chair shot to the back and a not so hard shot to the head, being he just got the staples out. HHH delivered eight more chair shots, which was strange in hindsight since that was the finish of the main event. They brawled into this camera pit and Undertaker choke slammed HHH over the pit into this gimmicked gymnastics pit.

This was so stupid because the camera just showed this unbelievable site of HHH going over this railing disappearing into thin air as Ross talked about a big drop onto concrete. They showed more replays of the same thing. Then they killed it with the final replay, actually showing his landing was into a gimmicked foam rubber pit, basically turning the match from serious to comedy and making Ross look bad trying to sell it as devastating.

Undertaker, like a young kid at a Jungle Gym, did an elbow drop into the pit making it even sillier since you could see the foam rubber protect his fall. Even sillier, the EMT’s came out for HHH and Undertaker attacked them. By the time they got back in the ring, it was nearly 14 minutes into the match. Undertaker got the sledge hammer and teased using it forever. Instead, HHH had time for a low blow.

They traded punches until Undertaker used the tombstone, but again no ref. Undertaker set up the last ride power bomb, but HHH hit him in the head with the sledge hammer and potatoed him, busting Undertaker up. Undertaker quickly came back and won with a last ride power bomb. ***1/2

Steve Austin defeated The Rock for the WWF Championship (28:06)

Hot pace early. The vast majority of the crowd cheered Austin. You couldn’t hear any boos for Austin, even when he did the full-fledged turn. There were always some cheers for Rock, but the boos would quickly overwhelm the cheers. Austin undid the turnbuckle padding. Austin hit Rock with the ring bell. Before this happened, Rock stumbled and fell down to grab the blade that Earl Hebner dropped on the ground for him. Very obvious as TV caught it all.

Austin beat on him to open the cut up worse. Rock came back and put Austin’s forehead into the exposed turnbuckle and he bladed. Austin catapulted Rock into the post and he juiced even more. Austin hit him with one of the monitors and put on the sharpshooter, with the bloody Austin being reminiscent of the Bret Hart vs. Austin match four years ago at Mania where Austin made his face turn. Austin made the ropes. Austin then put the sharpshooter on Rock, but Rock didn’t make the ropes and powered out. Austin put it on a second time and Rock made the ropes.

Austin used the cobra clutch, the old million dollar dream finisher he used as the Ringmaster in 1996 but Rock kicked off the ropes while in the old backwards for a near fall, the pin that Hart got on Austin at Survivor Series in 1996 (older fans will remember it as the finish of the 1971 match where Pedro Morales beat Ivan Koloff for the WWWF title).

Rock hit a stunner for a near fall when Vince came out. Austin hit Rock’s spinebuster for a near fall and Rock came back with a spinebuster and people’s elbow and McMahon broke up the pin with a save. Rock went after Vince but Austin gave him the rock bottom for a near fall. Austin used a low blow and held Rock for McMahon to hit him with a chair. Even at this point the crowd refused to turn on Austin even though the belief was the McMahon heel character was strong enough to turn him, they wouldn’t turn on this night.

They traded more near falls including Rock using the rock bottom and Austin using the stunner. McMahon gave Austin a chair to use again but Rock kicked out. Finally Austin went berserk using a chair and hit Rock up and down his body at least 15 times before scoring the pin. Austin and McMahon shook hands and drank beer together after the match. Fans still cheered Austin and after they left, when Rock finally recovered, he was still being booed. ****1/2

Read more about the fallout from WrestleMania X-Seven in our archives now.

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. 

The Rock responds to being named Disney Legend

Last week it announced that The Rock would be honored with the Disney Legends Award in August 2026. 

The Rock responded to the announcement that he will be honored with the award on August 16 at D23: The Ultimate Disney Fan Event. He expressed appreciation for the Disney team behind-the-scenes who made it possible.

“I was really moved when I received “the call” as that certain voice on the other line said I would be receiving Disney’s highest honor ~ Disney Legends Award.”

“This honor recognizes individuals with significant and global impacts on @Disney. I’m moved. THANK YOU.”

“I believe in hard work, being grateful, being humble, being good to people, taking care of people, and respecting that the trust they put in you to deliver, is sacred.”

“And where and when can, always, always, always try and deliver a little joy for folks around the world.”

“Thank you Josh, Alan, Dana, Asad, David, Steve, executive teams, Imagineers, every Disney employee and cast member around the world.”

“Looking forward to pulling up and showing my gratitude in person at the ceremony!”

“And course saying…YOU’RE WELCOOOOOOME #DisneyLegends” posted The Rock.

This year, the live-action remake for the 2016 animated film Moana is slated for release on July 10. The Rock voiced Maui in the original animated movie and reprises the role in the live-action adaptation.

From revenge quests to Attitude Era legends, who could be Gunther’s WrestleMania 42 opponent? | Opinion

His wrestling resume steadily growing after retiring John Cena and AJ Styles in back-to-back months, Gunther’s dominant streak has hit an abrupt halt since February.

He was not present for the past few episodes of Raw which has drawn concern from fans on what’s in store for him at WWE WrestleMania 42. 

There were reports of him hoping to add Rey Mysterio to the list of star careers to end at his hands. However, Mysterio’s rib injury altered those plans. 

Gunther has proven his spot among the top names of the WWE roster and it would be strange for him not to be part of WWE’s biggest shows of the year. So, let’s dive into a few fun potential opponents for the Ring General at The Grandest Stage of Them All. 

Dragon Lee fulfills his revenge quest against Gunther

Dragon Lee remains one of the most compelling options based on his storyline with Gunther, In February, Gunther showed no remorse when he attacked Lee and refused to let go of a sleeper hold. Lee was left unconscious in the ring despite Adam Pearce swooping out security to control the situation. 

At WrestleMania 42, the feud could come full circle if Lee stands up to Gunther and they battle it out in a rematch to settle the score once and for all. 

Penta confronts Gunther and raises the stakes

If it’s not Lee, Intercontinental Champion Penta could face off against Gunther for what he did to his friend and ally instead.

While they have worked together on house shows, the two have never crossed paths on TV.

With Dominik Mysterio otherwise occupied with Finn Balor’s exit from the Judgment Day, a rematch between him and Penta for the IC Title at WrestleMania seems unlikely. 

Penta could raise the stakes for a Gunther match by putting the Intercontinental title on the line against Gunther. After all, Gunther does hold the record as the longest reigning Intercontinental Champion for 666 days which could add a way to get to the match that makes sense.

Joe Hendry capitalizes on WrestleMania 41 momentum 

After Kevin Owens was pulled from action due to serious neck surgery in April 2025, Randy Orton walked into WrestleMania 41 without knowing who would be his opponent.

Joe Hendry, then TNA World Champion, responded and got the shot against Orton, Despite the loss, the positive fan reaction helped his smooth transition to NXT.

Hendry became a viral star during his TNA tenure with this entrance song and the “Say his name and he appears” catchphrase of sorts. He competed on NXT since 2024 amid the brand’s crossover feud with TNA. 

In November 2025, Hendry officially put pen to paper in a deal with WWE. After Oba Femi relinquished the NXT Championship for his move to the main roster, Hendry won a seven man ladder match in February to win the title.

Hendry could appear at WrestleMania 42 in a showdown against Gunther to sustain momentum from last year’s show, maybe in another mystery opponent presentation. This would also further sow the seeds for a potential main roster feud someday. 

A “Stone Cold” Steve Austin standoff leads to Kevin Owens’ return

With Gunther targeting WWE legends to keep in line with his ‘career- iller’ persona, he could find himself standing opposite an icon from the Attitude Era, “Stone Cold” Steve Austin.

Earlier this month, Austin commented on a potential WrestleMania 42 appearance, citing an interest in attending the event while hyping the current talent on the WWE roster.

If Gunther attempts a feud with Austin, Kevin Owens could step up and stand toe-to-toe with Gunther. The reports on his recovery suggest a return sometime this year after recovering from his neck surgery in 2025. He has also been spotted at the WWE Performance Center, signaling positive progress in his recovery.

Even if it doesn’t lead to a full-fledged in-ring return, an Owens appearance at WrestleMania 42 would elevate the moment. His alliance with Austin is solidified after their impromptu match at WrestleMania 38 with Owens using the Stunner as his signature move. 

If Owens has time, he would also have ample opportunity to reunite with Sami Zayn who is navigating a tough time on SmackDown.

The Rock might have more than CM Punk to worry about 

The Rock might already have his hands full with CM Punk following his remark about Sika Anoa’i. It further fuels their history from a little more than 12 years ago. 

Roman Reigns gave each member of his family free rein to take revenge on Punk for his comments. This statement was made after The Usos’ interference which begs the question: which other Anoa’i Family member might step up next? 

The Rock’s schedule around WrestleMania is uncertain in light of his movie filming and Hollywood commitments. 

However, if The Rock shows up at WrestleMania 42, Gunther might be tempted to provoke him into a match. After all, Gunther has built his reputation around retiring greats and what better name to add to that list than The Rock? 

Final thoughts

It is a tough call for WWE to make while considering a worthy opponent for Gunther especially with WrestleMania being the battlefield. Whether it’s a returning legend or an unexpected name from the current roster, the match has the potential to shape his next chapter in WWE. 

Either way, WrestleMania 42 remains the perfect stage for Gunther to continue defining his legacy. Perhaps we’ll find out on Monday’s Raw from Madison Square Garden who might help him get there.

The Rock to be honored as Disney Legend

Disney officially announced that The Rock will be honored as a Disney Legend on August 16 at D23: The Ultimate Disney Fan Event.  

He joins Anne Hathaway, Jerry Bruckheimer, Eric Goldberg, Alan Tudyk, and The Jonas Brothers as recipients of the award this year.

A Disney press release reads:

“Today, Disney revealed the extraordinary lineup of visionaries and talent who will receive the prestigious Disney Legends Award, the company’s highest honor. The Disney Legends Award ceremony will mark the final day of the highly anticipated D23: The Ultimate Disney Fan Event presented by Visa, taking place August 14, 15, and 16, 2026, in Anaheim, California.”

The Rock has starred in many box-office Disney hits including Moana in 2016 where he voiced Maui. The live-action remake of the animated film is slated for release in July this year. He was also a lead cast in The Game Plan in 2007 and Jungle Cruise in 2021.

The Rock also guest starred on an episode of Hannah Montana. The show recently celebrated its 20th anniversary.

The new accolade recognizes his contributions to films both on-screen and as a voice actor.

Did Roman Reigns subtly tease The Rock’s return at WrestleMania 42? | Opinion

Roman Reigns might have a trick or two up his sleeve, especially after dealing with CM Punk’s antics ever since Reigns chose him as his WWE WrestleMania 42 opponent. With tensions already at their peak, I think the situation could potentially draw in another member of Reigns’ family. 

The heart of the matter

On the March 16 edition of WWE Raw, Reigns bumped into The Usos backstage, a week after they confronted Punk about his statement about Reigns’ deceased father. Reigns acknowledged their efforts and that they were right in their course of action.

The OTC then looked into the camera and issued a message saying that everyone in the Bloodline should take offense to Punk’s remark about Sika Anoa’i. 

“At the end of the day if you run your mouth, there’s gotta be consequences. As a matter of fact, to all my family, all the Bloodline, cousins, you should be offended at what CM Punk said about my father, your Uncle. But here’s the thing, you got before and you have after WrestleMania, but on that weekend CM Punk is mine,” said Reigns.

Given Reigns’ demeanor for anyone to step up, there is one other person from his family whom we all know has long-term issues with Punk: The Rock. 

Why The Rock could return to be in Roman Reigns’ corner again

The WWE veteran showed solidarity with Reigns at WrestleMania XL against Cody Rhodes and Seth Rollins. However, the original motive behind his move was to initiate a feud with Reigns for WrestleMania. That was met with backlash from the WWE fanbase who instantly rallied behind Rhodes (#WeWantCody) who won the Royal Rumble and rightfully carved his path for WrestleMania.

Last year, The Rock influenced John Cena’s shocking turn heel at Elimination Chamber with Rhodes being the victim again. While Rhodes is feuding with Randy Orton on SmackDown, The Rock might be tempted to drop by and ensure he doesn’t get the win at WrestleMania 42.  

The Rock’s history with CM Punk

The Rock and Punk go a long way back. When Raw celebrated its 1000th episode in July 2012, The Rock returned as a special guest on the program while Punk and John Cena were battling it out for the WWE Championship. Big Show interrupted and attacked Cena, forcing Rock to rush out to even the odds.

Punk was already infuriated when The Rock dismissed him earlier that evening which shaped his decision to attack Rock with a GTS, instigating their rivalry further.

In January 2013, The Rock faced off with Punk and challenged him for the WWE Championship at the Royal Rumble. This was also where Punk’s signature “Your arms are too short to box with God” promo was used. 

It’s important to note that during this time, The Shield were running rampant in WWE. The stable (Reigns, Seth Rollins and Dean Ambrose) made their debut at Survivor Series 2012 and interfered in Punk’s match against Ryback.

At the 2013 Royal Rumble, The Rock and CM Punk collided in a WWE Championship match. The bout carried the stipulation that if The Shield got involved in any manner, he would be stripped of the title. 

Final thoughts

Thirteen years later, it seems Punk’s sentiments towards The Rock may have toned down considering he mentioned his respect for everyone in The Anoa’i family except for Sika

With Reigns now standing as one of the biggest names in the industry, let alone the WWE roster, he possesses the influence to shift the dynamic power play on his side and urge The Rock to return. 

If that scenario unfolds, The Rock’s appearance on the road to/or at WrestleMania 42 could amplify the momentum for Reigns and Punk’s rivalry.

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.”

JNPO: What did John Pollock learn about wrestling in 2025?

On a snowed in edition of Josh Nason’s Punch-Out, warm up by the podcast fire with the returning ⁠John Pollock⁠ of ⁠Post Wrestling⁠.

The guys talk for nearly an hour on what they learned about wrestling in 2025 with some hot takes about WWE, AEW, wrestlers, leadership and even some Linkin Park. (Yes, that Linkin Park.)

For example: Is TKO good for WWE and pro wrestling? Is WBD as good a partner to AEW as Netflix is for WWE? What is happening with DWAYNE and Triple H? Why are the rosters so damn bloated in the middle?

Revelations await. Join us.

Click here to listen for free or stream for free on either Spotify or Apple Podcasts. Just search Wrestling Observer.

The Rock teases ‘good’ conversations regarding WWE WrestleMania 43 participation

With a year left for WWE WrestleMania 43, The Rock has opened up and teased some “good news” surrounding his participation in the PLE.

For the first-time ever, the 2027 edition of WrestleMania is set to take place in Saudi Arabia, as a part of WWE’s relationship with KSA. However, with still a year left for the show, The Rock recently appeared with Raffi Boghosian of Raffi Talks, where he addressed the speculations surrounding his presence on the PLE.

I’m excited for the brand of WrestleMania, I’m excited for the Kingdom because that is a big show. I’m also excited not only for the brand, but I’m excited for our athletes to be able to participate in an event like that, and that is a global event,” The Rock said. “And so I can’t wait. In terms of the conversations I’ve been having, it’s all good. It will always be good.

WWE-Saudi Arabian events have often in the past hosted and brought some of the promotion’s biggest stars, such as Goldberg, Kane, The Undertaker, and even Shawn Michaels.

With The Rock’s in-ring performance and involvement at WrestleMania 40, rumors and speculations began to circulate about his possible participation in WrestleMania 43 in KSA. Despite the teases, Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson has not yet officially confirmed or denied any of the rumors.

Saudi Arabia is also set to host the upcoming 2026 Royal Rumble PLE on January 31st, 2026.

WOR: Drew new WWE Champion, weekend news and TV

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including an update on Funaki after a neck injury this weekend, Rock and the Golden Globes, Drew winning the WWE Title, RAW preview, CMLL update, ratings, the Smackdown and Collision reviews, and tons more! A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:
Start: Masakatsu Funaki suffers neck injury, Elton Prince undergoes neck fusion surgery
5:09: Drew McIntyre wins WWE Championship on SmackDown, upcoming lineups, The Rock doesn’t win Golden Globe award, Jaguars lose NFL playoff
18:02: Best matches from the weekend, ratings
26:39: BJ Penn fails to attend court hearing, Real American Freestyle recap
33:36: WWE SmackDown recap
52:17: AEW Collision recap

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The Rock doesn’t win Golden Globe award for ‘The Smashing Machine’

The Rock is not a Golden Globe winner.

Dwayne Johnson lost his bid for his first-ever Golden Globe award Sunday for his performance in ‘The Smashing Machine,’ losing to actor Wagner Moura for his role in ‘The Secret Agent.’ Others nominated for Best Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama included Oscar Issac for ‘Frankenstein,’ Michael B. Jordan for ‘Sinners,’ Joel Edgerton for ‘Train Dreams,’ and Jeremy Allen White for ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere.’

Emily Blunt, who was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her role in ‘The Smashing Machine,’ also lost. Teyana Taylor won the award for her performance in ‘One Battle After Another.’

The Rock played former MMA and UFC star Mark Kerr, with Blunt playing his girlfriend Dawn Staples. The film underperformed at the box office, only earning $21 million.

Future projects for The Rock include a live-action version of ‘Moana’ which is currently in post-production. Other projects include ‘Jumanji 3’, ‘Fast X: Part 2’, ‘The King’, and ‘Lizard Music’. He is also slated to be in an untitled film directed by Martin Scorcese.

Daily Update: Masakatsu Funaki, The Rock, BJ Penn

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

*Coverage of the Tokyo Dome show

*How did the show accomplish what should have been its key goals

*Thoughts on Aaron Wolf

*Business notes on the show

*Yota Tsuji and the title name change

*The end of the Bullet Club

*Shinsuke Nakamura and his thoughts

*Angle with Will Ospreay

*Records that Tanahashi set during his career

*Tanahashi’s background

*Notes on his last IWGP title win that wasn’t supposed to happen

*The unique way he became a mainstream figure in a news story

*How his career exploded from there

*How Tanahashi differed from prior IWGP champions and how that changed who could hold that title

*The Tanahashi era that turned around New Japan

*A look at his record setting 13 Tokyo Dome career main events

*Various title wins and career awards

*2025 Business Year in Review

*A look at all the shows that drew 15,000 fans

*Biggest individual draws of the year

*Crowds of 15,000 or more by promotion  and how the main companies did

*How UFC PPV gates wer

*The biggest pro wrestling drawing card every year from 1916 to 2025

*What wrestlers were No. 1 for the year the most years in their career

*The 50 biggest arena draws  in pro wrestling history based on the standards of their era

*New Year Dash coverage

*The year in matches, who had the most great matches in 2025, most over the course of a career, top ten arenas of all-time and new records set in 2025 by a promotion for a year as well as for a city

*A look at the life of Johnny Legend, a cult celebrity wrestling fan, his work with Freddie Blassie and Andy Kaufman, and his promotion, Incredibly Strange Wrestling.

*The most detailed look at the ratings of the pro wrestling TV shows and details regarding who watches

*Advanced ticket sales for WWE, AEW and TNA events

*AEW stars headed to CMLL next week

*Another Arena Mexico sellout

*Legendary pro wrestling promoter turns 101

*Old living wrestling personalities

*Ted DiBiase files lawsuit

*The Ted DiBiase Jr. case

*A look at the career of Bob Boyer/Bobby Bold Eagle, who wrestled from 1955 to 1987

*Documentary planned on 80s tag team

*Notes on WrestleMania week shows

*Update on the WBD sale

*Former UFC champion goes for boxing world title

*Update on the home for WWE’s library

*Plans for TV shows this month

*How much Dwayne Johnson has made from the WWE contract he signed two years ago

*Those added to WWE, those leaving, those injured and those they are interested in

*How the Holiday week house shows did

*Why WWE’s weekly  audience on Netflix should go up close to 12 percent over the next three months.

This Week’s Back Issue

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Sunday Update

[email protected]

— Bryan and I will be back tonight covering the weekend wrestling news. On our Friday show we were joined by John Pollock talking about the 2025 Wrestling Observer Awards.

— Hall of Fame Masakatu Funaki, who is now 56, suffered a neck injury in his match with Takanori Ito at the GLEAT show over the weekend. He took a half nelson suplex and was unable to get up. He lost the match he no doubt was scheduled to win. He suffered a cervical interspinous ligament injury. He is out of the hospital now.

— The Golden Globe Awards air tonight on CBS. Dwayne Johnson was nominated for Best Performance by a Male Actor in a drama for his role as Mark Kerr in “Smashing Machine.” Emily Blunt, who played Kerr’s girlfriend Dawn Staples, was nominated for Best Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting role. Zootopia, an animated movie where Johnson, Roman Reigns and CM Punk voiced characters also had a few nominations.

— Raw tomorrow from Dusseldorf, Germany airs live on Netflix at 2 p.m. Eastern time because it’s from a different time zone. AJ Styles vs. Gunther and Dragon Lee & Penta vs. Austin Theory & Bronson Reed have been announced.

— In the Google searches for this weekend, at press time No. 1 at 2 million searches when I had checked was the Bills-Jaguars NFL Wild Card playoff game that the Bills won 27-24 to knock the Jaguars out of the playoffs Real American Freestyle was No. 99 at 20,000 due to the Colby Covington vs. Luke Rockhold match. WWE was No. 177 at 20,000 for Smackdown based on the Drew McIntyre title win. Also making the top 500 were AJ Ferrari’s latest arrest, UFC 324 (which takes place in two weeks) and Lance Palmer, who also wrestled on the RAF show.

— The only international matches I’ve been told about to watch as far as the best matches this weekend not on US television were CMLL bouts from Neza, Arena Mexico and Arena Coliseo and today’s Hazuki vs. Mei Seira match from Stardom at Korakuen Hall. The highest profile was Friday night’s Mistico vs. Cavernario CMLL light heavyweight title match but others were Mistico & Mascara Dorada vs. Bandido & Soberano Jr. and Komander & Atlantis Jr. vs. Ultimo Guerrero & Hechicero from Thursday and last night’s Dorada & Atlantis Jr. vs. Soberano Jr. & Yutani from Arena Coliseo.

— We are only 11 days into the new year as Mistico has headlined eight sellouts and one crowd of 15,000 that was not a sellout.

— Add Starboy Charlie to the list of those who are going to the WWE tryout in Orlando. KJ Johnson, who was a senior last season at Louisiana State in gymnastics, is also at the tryout aside from names that have already been reported.

— Saya Kamitani’s return after time off to heal up on 2/7 in Osaka will be a World of Stardom title defense against Starlight Kid.

— From last night in Glasgow, Scotland with Drew McIntyre returning to Scotland as WWE champion:

  • Jey Uso b Finn Balor
  • AJ Styles & Dragon Lee b New Day
  • Alexa Bliss b Kairi Sane
  • Wyatt Sicks b Tama & Talla Tonga & JC Mateo & Tonga Loa
  • Drew McIntyre b Shinsuke Nakamura to retain the WWE title
  • Liv Morgan b Lyra Valkyria
  • Gunther b Sami Zayn
  • CM Punk b Bronson Reed to keep the world title

— We’re looking for reports from last night’s show in Glasgow as well as tonight’s WWE show in Copenhagen, Denmark, results, finishes and highlights to [email protected]

— Hall of Famer Salvador “Gori” Guerrero, the father of Eddy Guerrero as well as Chavo (Sr.), Mando and Hector, was born on this day in 1921. Haruka Eigen was born on this day in 1945.  Kuniaki Kobayashi was born on this day in 1956. Abdullah the Butcher turned 85 today. The Mascara Sagrada that worked in the early 1990s for AAA including at When Worlds Collide, considered the greatest mini of all-time, turned 61 today. Former amateur champion, MMA star and pro wrestler King Mo Lawal turned 45 today. Natalia Markova turned 37. Count Billy Varga, a top name made off 1950s television in Southern California which was on network TV, died 13 years ago today at the age of 94. The second La Parka in AAA died six years ago today after months of issues from an in-ring injury at the age of 54.  

— BJ Penn was back in court on Friday after he failed to undergo a court mandated mental health evaluation. Penn blamed his attorney for not informing him of the evaluation. Penn asked the judge to dismiss his current attorney so he could retain a new attorney. He also asked for the judge to be replaced. The judge ordered him to get his mental health evaluation by 2/23 and to be in front of the judge on 3/2 for the next ruling.

— At the RAF show last night in Hollywood, FL, the Yoel Romero vs. Bo Nickal match that was the most talked about on the show never happened. There was a lot of disorganization. The wrestlers expected weigh-ins on Friday, but they were moved to Saturday. Romero had scheduled a dinner with family and friends Friday night after weigh-ins. He went to the dinner anyway and weighed in seven pounds heavy. Nickal refused the match at that point because he missed weight by so much. In a weird fan reaction, Nickal was viewed as the bad guy and not the guy who missed weight by a lot. The feeling is Romero was 48 and Nickal probably would have beaten him. Romero did score a big win on the last show, but he fought Stephen Buchanan, who also missed weight at 205 but that was because he was told it was at 225.  Buchanan beat Romero via 10-0 tech fall. 

 In the main event, Colby Covington beat Luke Rockhold via tech fall at 12-0. While Rockhold is a naturally bigger guy, he was a high school wrestler who was good in high school but hardly great while Covington was a college champion, a totally different level, and several years younger. Covington came out of it saying he wanted to move to middleweight in UFC, and also issued a grandstand challenge to Georges St-Pierre for a wrestling match. I don’t expect we’ll see that but it got him pub.

— Maki Itoh debuted in Stardom today after signing a contract where. Aaya Sakura & Sayaka Kurara beat Itoh & Saori Anou when Sakurai pinned Itoh.

— Yota Tsuji was announced for the 2/27 New Japan show in Trenton, NJ, which will also have El Phantasmo vs. Konosuke Takeshita for the World TV title.

— CJ Perry said she was going to return to pro wrestling as a manager on independent shows.

The Rock reveals how wrestling shaped his acting career

From starting as The Rock in WWE to becoming one of the highest-paid actors in Hollywood, Dwayne Johnson has come a long way. Following the critical success of his film, ‘The Smashing Machine,’ Johnson appeared in an interview on the THR Actor Roundtable with Adam Sandler, Jacob Elordi, Michael B. Jordan, and more, where he revealed how his past as a wrestler shaped his acting career.

“I think performatively, yes. In wrestling, it’s very big and over the top as you’re performing for everybody for a stadium. But I think probably one of the main takeaways from wrestling was it really forced me live, and you guys know this in theater,” Johnson continued.

“It’s like it forces you, it’s almost like a forcing mechanism to listen. To really make sure that you’re really honing in on that skill set of just really listening to the audience and keeping you on your toes.”

In a career spanning over two decades, Johnson has appeared in nearly 50 films, with roles varying across full-length appearances, animations, and cameos.

Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson discusses his Hollywood jump

In the same interview, Johnson also opened up about his Hollywood jump from WWE in the early 2000s.

“Well, I think it was planned by something more powerful than me, for sure. Destiny, I believe in the universe, but I also wanted to grow, and I wanted to challenge myself.“

Extremely successful and popular, Johnson recently received his first-ever Golden Globes nomination for one of the spots in the Best Male Actor in a Motion Picture (Drama) category.

Undertaker reflects on initial John Cena & The Rock impressions: ‘Ain’t gonna make it’

On the latest edition of the Six Feet Under podcast, The Undertaker reflected on his initial impressions of John Cena and The Rock. Recalling his thoughts about how neither of them was going to “make it” in WWE, the Hall of Famer shared more details about it.

“Early on, there was two people that I watched them work day one, and I was like ‘This guy ain’t gonna make it’. I was wrong; I can admit when I’m wrong. There’s some people in the business who can’t do that. I will tell you when I was wrong, and I missed with him. You know who the other one was? Dwayne [Johnson].”

Reflecting on The Rock’s debut in WWE, the 60-year-old shared his honest thoughts about it.

“You’ve got to go back, though, you’ve got to go back to day one when he had the things hanging off of him [his outfit], and he came out there, and he was ‘Rah rah’, and he debuted in the Garden. I was like ‘Oh, this poor kid.'”

“And to have the legacy, obviously, his grandfather, High Chief Peter Maivia, his dad Rocky Johnson, and then you have these expectations and you come out with that thing on. I was like ‘Oh man, this is not gonna be good.’ It took them [Cena & Rock] a minute to find their stride, and I guess they had ok careers.”

Despite a rocky start to their careers, both Cena and The Rock transitioned into two of the most popular stars in the pro-wrestling industry, as well as in Hollywood. While The Rock hardly wrestles, Cena has now completely retired from in-ring action.