Rey Mysterio earns WWE Intercontinental Championship match on Raw

Rey Mysterio has a lot on his plate these days. Outside the ring, he’s going to a major onscreen character in Mexico. And inside the ring, he’s still in major championship contention.

Over the weekend, Mysterio was named the new General Manager in AAA. Just a few days later, on Monday Night Raw, he earned a shot at the WWE Intercontinental Championship. 

Mysterio defeated Rusev to win the IC title shot. He hung Rusev in the ropes and attempted a 619, but Rusev caught the swinging kick and dragged Mysterio to the middle of the ring to apply the accolade. Mysterio slipped out of the submission hold and hooked a schoolboy for the win. 

Afterwards, Mysterio was attacked by Rusev and Ethan Page. Dragon Lee hit the ring to even the odds, and the babyfaces sent the heels packing.

Penta is the reigning Intercontinental Champion. He won the belt from Rey’s son Dominik Mysterio at Survivor Series: War Games last November, and most recently defended it against Je’Von Evans tonight on Monday Night Raw. 

The elder Mysterio is a two-time former Intercontintal champion himself. He first won the title from John “Bradshaw” Layfield at WrestleMania 25 in 2009. (To date, this remains JBL’s last singles match.) He lost the title to Chris Jericho at Extreme Rules in June that same year, then beat Jericho to win it back in a mask vs. title match The Bash later that month. 

He eventually lost the championship to John Morrison on SmackDown the following September. 

He has unsuccessfully challenged for the title several times since then, most recently in a six-man ladder match at WrestleMania 42. Penta walked in and out of that match as champion. JD McDonagh, Rusev, Dragon Lee, and Evans were the other combatants in the match. 

Rusev and WWE veteran launch wrestling school in Nashville

Rusev and WWE veteran Gangrel have now officially launched their own wrestling school.

Previously vocal about launching his own pro-wrestling school, WWE star Rusev has now officially fulfilled that goal. Collaborating with his former trainer, Gangrel, the duo has now launched the pro-wrestling school, KECH Pro Wrestling, in Nashville, Tennessee.

“The mats are down. The ring is up. The doors are open. Thank you to everyone who showed up, trained, watched, asked questions, and believed in what we’re building. This is only the beginning. KECH Pro Wrestling Academy is officially underway. Train like a pro. Trained by a pro,” the promotion’s social media upload read.

Dedicated to training both adults and kids, KECH Pro Wrestling is now open in Nashville, TN.

Rusev on his partnership with Gangrel for KECH Pro Wrestling

A few months ago, during his appearance on Chris Van Vliet’s Insight, Rusev opened up about his partnership with Gangrel for KECH Pro Wrestling.

“We have Gangrel who’s going to be the other trainer as well,” Rusev said. “He is [moving to Nashville], yes. He’s a Florida guy, but he’s been screwed so many times by all these people who promise him things. And he’s helped me so much. He helped this other Bulgarian kid who came from Bulgaria to wrestle, Metal. He trained him as well. So it was time for me and him to do something that he’ll be able to finally be like, ‘Hey, this is it.’ He’s great, man. His training is great. It’s very old-school training. And maybe some people don’t want to hear that, but he’s real. He’s going to keep it real. He’s going to teach you real. He’s not going to be like, ‘Hey, let’s do a little bit of this, a little bit of that.’ No. He’s really big on basics, and that’s what people lack a lot of the times.”

Rusev cuts social media promo on Penta ahead of WWE Raw Intercontinental title match

Rusev will be challenging Penta for the WWE Intercontinental Championship tonight on WWE RAW, and he cut a promo on social media ahead of the match hyping the bout.

“It’s a happy day at the Rusev household. Just got the word that tomorrow night, Monday Night Raw, Penta vs Rusev is happening. Finally, finally, finally I’m gonna get my hands one-on-one on Penta. No other five fools trying to jump around from ladders, trying to get between me and my title.

“And I know, I know, I’m not taking Penta lightly. I know about all his fancy tricks, but Rusev is big, Rusev is strong and Rusev is mean, and he’s pissed off. I’m not fighting for another house, for another car, I’m fighting for the thing that matters the most to me, and that is the WWE Intercontinental Title, because I want to go home as a champion. I want to represent my people, my fans, as a champion. They expect it from me and I am going to deliver it for them. So tomorrow night… Rusev crush.”

credit to WrestleTalk for the transcription

Rusev vs PENTA WWE RAW Tonight

As noted Rusev vs PENTA will be taking place tonight on RAW, you can check out the full lineup here which includes:

  • Joe Hendry will make his official Raw debut.
  • Roman Reigns will confront Jacob Fatu after Fatu challenged him for the World Heavyweight Championship.
  • The new Women’s Intercontinental Champion, Becky Lynch, will return.

CJ Perry shares ‘incredible’ WWE advice Brock Lesnar gave her

CJ Perry detailed advice she received from Paul Heyman and Brock Lesnar for one of her promos in 2016. She recalled being particularly impressed by Lesnar’s knowledge of the industry. 

In her Yahoo Sports column, Uncrowned, Perry wrote about a promo from 2016 ahead of Rusev’s match with Lesnar for a WWE live event. Heyman shared his feedback which she followed up by noting Lesnar’s take on the same. 

“Back in 2016 in San Jose, I got to see up close how smart Brock is to this business. It was Brock vs. Rusev on some WWE live events, and my husband and I were just starting out. Before the show, Paul Heyman gave me pointers on part of my promo and then asked Brock what he thought about it.”

“Brock took a second and thought, and then gave me notes on how I could say it. He took what Paul and I had come up with, and spun it in a completely different direction by anticipating the audience’s reaction, and then having a plan to deal with that reaction.”

“We went out there that night and did our promo, and the match with Brock vs. Rusev was incredible. When we came back, Brock pulled me aside and gave me notes on my execution. He told me I was ‘stepping on my on pop by not allowing them to boo longer’ and to ‘wait a bit longer for the crowd to start chanting.’ It was incredible advice I got from Brock, and the whole experience really helped Miro and I grow as performers and on the mic,” Perry wrote. 

“But I was more blown away by how wise Brock was to this business. I guess I bought into what he wants us all to see, which is the viking destroyer character, but backstage there’s few smarter than him in knowing how to pull the most from a beat, or a movement or a moment.”

Perry made her WWE debut in 2013 as Rusev’s manager and competed in her first match at the WrestleMania 32 pre-show. She was released from the company in 2021 and a couple of years later joined AEW until November 2023. 

Last year, Perry signed a Legends deal with WWE. She has not officially retired from in-ring competition and expressed interest on numerous occasions on a potential return.

Rey Mysterio added to WWE WrestleMania 42 ladder match

The five-man ladder match at WrestleMania 42 now has a sixth man: Rey Mysterio.

The announcement was made on Monday Night Raw. After Penta & Dragon Lee & Je’Von Evans teamed up to defeat Los Americanos in a trios match (Evans pinned Bravo with the OG cutter), Mysterio interrupted their celebration.

Going back and forth between English and Spanish, Mysterio congratulated Penta on his Intercontinental Championship reign. He noted that their match at Mania might be one of the best ladder matches in history.

“But last year, I missed WrestleMania due to an injury,” he continued. “This year, I just spoke to Adam Pearce, and we both agreed on one thing: This ladder match at WrestleMania is missing one more person. It’s missing Rey Mysterio.”

Penta welcomed Mysterio to the match, saying “let’s make history” and shouting his catchphrase.

Your updated Mania card after the events of Monday Night Raw:

  • CM Punk vs. Roman Reigns for the World Heavyweight Championship
  • Stephanie Vaquer vs. Liv Morgan for the Women’s World Championship
  • Cody Rhodes vs. Randy Orton (with Pat McAfee) for the Undisputed WWE Championship
  • Jade Cargill vs. Rhea Ripley for the WWE Women’s Championship
  • Oba Femi vs. Brock Lesnar
  • AJ Lee vs. Becky Lynch for the WWE Women’s Intercontinental Championship
  • Sami Zayn vs. Trick Williams for the WWE United States Championship
  • Jacob Fatu vs. Drew McIntyre in an unsanctioned match
  • Finn Bálor vs. Dominik Mysterio
  • Penta vs. Je’Von Evans vs. Dragon Lee vs. JD McDonagh vs. Rusev vs. Rey Mysterio in a ladder match for the WWE Intercontinental Championship
  • Nia Jax and Lash Legend vs. Charlotte Flair & Alexa Bliss vs. Bayley & Lyra Valkyria vs. Bella Twins in a four-way match for the WWE Women’s Tag Team Championship
  • Seth Rollins vs. Gunther
  • LA Knight & The Usos vs. Austin Theory & Logan Paul & IShowSpeed
  • The Vision & iShowSpeed vs. LA Knight & The Usos

WrestleMania 42 takes place on Saturday and Sunday, April 18 and 19, at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada. It remains to be seen which matches will be on which night.

Rusev addresses upcoming WWE WrestleMania 42 ladder match

Rusev is aware of the concerns surrounding his lack of experience with ladder matches and cautioned his WrestleMania 42 opponents. 

Rusev took to Instagram with a message for his opponents in the high-stakes match. He acknowledged reservations about his participation in the stipulation match and is determined to prove everyone wrong. 

“Ladder match at WrestleMania. All week I keep hearing how “This is not Rusev’s type of match”. How my power fears their speed. I’m not afraid of my opponents, I’m afraid for my opponents.”

“It’s kinda hard to climb anything with a broken back, so I will handle the ground warfare and I will catch them from the sky one by one. I may not fly like those guys, but I’ve been climbing ladders my entire life. When I left my home country Bulgaria, when I slept in my car, when I broke my neck, or when I rode a freakin’ tank into WrestleMania.”

“So this is kind of a poetic moment, ladder match, WrestleMania. This lone soldier (statue) behind me reminds me of me. Just sitting on top of the world looking down on everybody else. And you know when it’s your time.”

“This is my time. This is my match. And at this WrestleMania, Rusev will have his day, and become the new WWE Intercontinental Champion.”

On the March 30 edition of Raw, Penta announced the ladder match for his Intercontinental Championship at WrestleMania 42. The bout will feature Je’Von Evans, JD McDonagh, Rusev and Penta. The last time a ladder match for the Intercontinental Title took place at WrestleMania was in 2016.

Rusev has a brief history competing in the stipulated match when he was a participant in the 2018 Money in the Bank signature bout.

WWE Raw live results: Intercontinental title defense, Oba Femi vs. Rusev

Date: March 9, 2026
Location: Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, WA 

The Big Takeaway —

Raw concluded with another heated exchange, this time between CM Punk and The Usos. 

Also, Judgment Day turned on Finn Bálor and laid him out. Notably, JD McDonagh aligned himself with Dom and the rest of Judgment Day.

**********

Show Recap — 

Penta (wearing no makeup under his mask), Asuka and Kairi Sane (with Iyo Sky looking on from the hallway), Oba Femi, Rusev, and CM Punk were shown arriving at Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle.

There was a long recap video of Seth Rollins attacking Paul Heyman last week. 

Adam Pearce was in the ring to start the show. Pearce said he had some unfortunate business to attend to, and he called out Seth Rollins. He figured Rollins was in the building because he knew The Vision was. 

At least a dozen masked men appeared ringside (and the crowd chanted, “Holy shit” for some reason). They scampered around the ring to cause confusion and, as Michael Cole stated, played some sort of shell game. This was pointless. They all left the ring to leave one man standing—Seth Rollins, of course. Rollins works there, so I’m not sure why he went through all this trouble. Even Pearce questioned why he did this. 

Pearce also questioned Rollins’ recent attacks on the Vision, wondering what would happen once Rollins’ plan didn’t work. Pearce reiterated that Rollins was not cleared, and if the Vision got their hands on him, it would be the end of Seth Rollins. 

Logan Paul and Austin Theory, the remaining members of the Vision, interrupted. They wanted to be the ones responsible for Rollins’ end. They hit the apron, but the many masked men entered the ring to guard Rollins. Rollins put his mask back on as the others played their distraction game again, allowing Rollins to escape. (This looked so silly.) 

With Rollins gone, LA Knight marched out to attack Theory and Paul. He was overwhelmed, so The Usos ran out to help him out and clear the ring. The three babyfaces posed together as the heels left.

(This was a nonsense segment. I understand Rollins being elusive to escape The Vision at full strength, but they’re down to their two least intimidating members.) 

Cole announced there was no timetable for Heyman’s return. 

Jackie Redmon caught up to the Usos, who seemed like they were about to leave the arena already. They said they had receipts for the Vision. Jey was red-hot, but Jimmy was more even-keeled. Redmond asked about CM Punk’s comments to Roman Reigns. Jey didn’t want to comment, and he was ready to go, but Jimmy did have something he wanted to say. They made their way back in the direction they came from. 

********

Women’s Intercontinental Championship #1 Contender’s Gauntlet Match 

Lyra Valkyria vs. IYO SKY 

Valkyria dropped Sky off the top rope to take control ahead of a break. Sky hit a flapjack as they returned and continued with strikes, a butterfly backbreaker, and a corner meteora. Valkyria came back with an enziguri, a tornado DDT, and a high-angle fisherman’s suplex for two. Sky countered a Nightwing with a double foot stomp, buzzsaw kick to the head, and a moonsault for the pinfall win. 

Match result: IYO SKY eliminated Lyra Valkyria (9:21) 

IYO SKY vs. Raquel Rodriguez

Rodriguez had control from the onset and hit a shoulder tackle, which saw Sky take a great-looking bump. As in the previous match, Sky was worked over throughout the entirety of a commercial break. When they returned, Sky hit a hurricanrana off the top and followed with a missile dropkick. 

Sky woke up the crowd by doing her pose. She hit the meteora and went for a moonsault, but Liv Morgan appeared at ringside to distract her, and Rodriguez knocked her off the top. 

Stephanie Vaquer ran out to attack Morgan all the way to the back. Sky flew off the top and captured Rodriguez in a small package for the pinfall win. 

— Rodriguez was pissed, so she booted Sky out of the ring, lawn-darted her into the ring post, and hit a Tejana Bomb onto the edge of the ring. 

Match result: IYO SKY eliminated Raquel Rodriguez (6:18) 

Ivy Nile vs. IYO SKY

Ivy Nile sprinted out and immediately covered Sky for the surprise elimination. 

The crowd liked Sky, so the Rodriguez post-match beat-down and this elimination got a lot of heat. 

Match result: Ivy Nile eliminated IYO SKY (0:05)

– Ivy Nile vs. Bayley

Bayley made the mistake of checking on Sky as she entered, so Nile attacked her from behind and held control throughout an early commercial break. Bayley fought back when they returned with suplexes and a diving elbow drop for two. Nile responded with a German suplex for two. With Nile seated on the middle turnbuckle, Bayley ran up from behind and hit her own German suplex for two. 

Nile followed with an impressive delayed vertical suplex (which got a round of applause) for two. Nile then hit a superplex and a spinning Uranage, but Bayley fell out of the ring. Nile went after her, so Bayley drove her into the ring steps. 

Bayley hit an elbow drop on the apron and followed with Bayley-to-belly for the pinfall elimination. 

Match result: Bayley eliminated Ivy Nile (9:10) 

Bayley vs. Asuka (w/ Kairi Sane)

This was the final match in the gauntlet. 

As Asuka entered with Sane, Bayley immediately nailed her with a suicide dive. (There was a great slow-motion replay of this. Sane was posing for the camera as her friend got wiped out behind her.) Despite the dive, they had to follow their usual pattern. Sane distracted Bayley, and Asuka kicked her in the head to take control ahead of an early break. 

Asuka had control through the break, but when they returned, Bayley hit a sunset flip powerbomb into the bottom turnbuckle for two. Asuka applied an ankle lock, but as Bayley got close to the rope, Asuka dropped into a cradle for two. Bayley applied an ankle lock/leg lock of her own, but Asuka got a rope break. Asuka hit an elevated knee, but Bayley fought back with a running knee strike for two. Asuka hit a series of strikes, which led to a two count. They traded counters until Bayley hit a Bayley-to-belly for a nearfall. 

Asuka distracted the referee so that Sane could attack Bayley outside the ring, but Valkyria flew in and dropkicked Sane into the side of the ring. Bayley tried a diving elbow, but Asuka countered into an Asuka Lock. Bayley countered into a cover, but Asuka’s shoulders were up, so Bayley picked her up and hit Rose Plant for the pinfall win. 

Bayley is now the number one contender for AJ Lee’s IC title. Bayley posed with Valkyria in the ring, while Asuka confronted Sane outside of it. 

Match result: Bayley eliminated Asuka to win the gauntlet match (8:48)

******** 

There was a video package of Punk’s encounter with Reigns last week. 

Nattie cut a promo on the stage on Maxxine Dupri during a break until she was attacked from behind by Dupri. Officials pulled Dupri away, so Nattie popped up and decked her. 

Danhausen approached Original Grande Americano (Chad Gable) backstage. Danhausen was cheered. He tried to take Americano’s mask to try it on, but Americano told him never to touch a luchador’s mask. Americano wanted him to leave so he could focus on his upcoming IC title match. Danhausen didn’t appreciate being shooed away, so he cursed Gable (and the crowd sang along). Gable was unconcerned with being cursed. 

******** 

Penta entered with his new IC title belt, and he cut a strong promo. He thanked his family, his friends, the company, and the fans. He thanked anyone who believed in him. He also thanked himself because he believed he could achieve the IC title. The title was not just for him; it was for everyone who did not give up. He represented all of them. He was their new IC champion, ready to make history. He fired up and cut the rest of his promo in Spanish, and the fans were into him. 

El Grande Americano (Ludwig Kaiser) entered, but of course, he is not Penta’s opponent. Penta was hot over this, but he invited El Grande into the ring anyway. 

Cole wasn’t sure what was going on because Penta was supposed to face Gable Americano, but Corey Graves said this could be because of Danhausen’s curse. 

Intercontinental Championship: Penta (c) vs. El Grande Americano (Ludwig Kaiser)

This started during a break, and they went to another break minutes later. So the first 9 minutes or so included about 5 minutes of commercials. 

I mentioned last week that Dominik Mysterio tied Penta’s mask to the bottom rope, a spot they always seem to do exclusively during commercial breaks. Well, sure enough, Americano did the spot during a break again. 

Penta fought back after the break, hitting a flip dive and flying crossbody for two. Americano responded with a spinebuster for two. Penta hit a superkick, but Americano countered a Destroyer attempt into a Finlay roll for two. 

Americano came off the middle rope, but Penta caught him with a Codebreaker and followed with a Canadian Destroyer for the decisive pinfall win. 

Match result: Penta defeated El Grande Americano to retain the Intercontinental Championship (12:10)

******** 

Stephanie Vaquer cut a pre-taped promo on Liv Morgan (which included subtitles, as she went back and forth between English and Spanish). Vaquer said she knew how good Morgan was and how hard she had trained since being signed at 20. But she hated Morgan’s stupid laugh and that she was too ignorant to use her skills. Morgan hid behind a trashy man and sent her friends to do her dirty work. Morgan claimed Vaquer came from “mud huts,” but she was proud of where she came from. 

Vaquer was forged from her experiences. They took different roads to get there, but both had the skill to be there. The difference was that Morgan became lazy. Morgan saw herself as a cheap blonde and always took the easy way to win championships. She would need to bring every trick to WrestleMania because Vaquer would bring blood, sweat, and her experience. Vaquer would continue to make history as world champion. 

They cut to Morgan backstage, pissed at Vaquer for saying she hid behind her friends. She was with JD McDonagh and Rodriguez, and she told Rodriguez she would help her get back in the title picture. Dom stormed in and asked if they’d seen Finn Bálor. They said no, but McDonagh went to look for him. 

******** 

Danhausen entered during a break. He was universally cheered. (Doing this during a break was likely a test to see how the fans  would react.) Danhausen handed out t-shirts and did his catchphrase. (The t-shirts were probably also a backup plan in case he got booed. I think they’re in the clear now.) 

******** 

José Valenzuela was in the front row, as were Mike Morris and Ernest Jones of the Super Bowl Champion Seattle Seahawks. 

Dominik Mysterio and Finn Bálor segment

Dom entered with Morgan and Rodriguez. He was upset about losing the IC title. He wanted a rematch and thought he should still be champion, but he wasn’t because of Finn Bálor. Dom didn’t want to do this in public, but Bálor was making him. 

Bálor entered with McDonagh. Dom asked where the hell he’s been. Dom hoped Bálor was there to tell him that he got him an IC title rematch. 

Bálor said Dom was right. If it weren’t for him, Dom would still be IC champion. For that, Bálor was sorry. Bálor was just trying to help and teach him a lesson. Judgment Day was a family, and they’d always have Dom’s back. 

Bálor knew Dom wanted to be the greatest Mysterio of all-time, but he had to learn to fight his own battles. Bálor has been trying to guide him for two years, but the more he did that, the more he realized Dom’s dad was right. “Maybe you are just a spoiled little prick.” (I think he said “prick” anyway. They censored it. Since when is “prick” a swear?)  

Dom shoved Bálor, so Bálor dropped him with a Pelé Kick. Bálor was about to pummel Dom, but McDonagh pulled him off to calm him down. Dom tried to sneak attack, so Bálor hit him with a slingblade. 

Bálor set up for a running dropkick, but McDonagh levelled him with a clothesline. (This was meant to be a shocking moment with JD turning on his long-time friend, and the crowd reacted as such, but Cole sure didn’t.) 

The entire Judgment Day (Dom, Morgan, Rodriguez and JD) put the boots to Bálor before Dom grabbed the bell hammer. Bálor tried to fight back, but Dom clocked him with the hammer. 

McDonagh held Bálor down against the rope allowing Dom to hit a 619, as the crowd told Dom that he sucked. Dom hit a frog splash. McDonagh placed a steel chair on Bálor, and Dom hit another frog splash.

(This was a good, simple angle. Bálor is finally a babyface and finally out of Judgment Day.) 

********

Backstage, Pearce put over Je’Von Evans’ performance in the Elimination Chamber and saw big things for him in 2026. Evans said he wouldn’t let him down. Pearce told him to enjoy the week, and Evans was pleasantly surprised to hear he had the whole week off. 

Evans was approached by Kofi Kingston and Grayson Waller. Waller tried confronting him, but Kingston told Waller to leave. 

Kingston told Evans that they got off on the wrong foot. Xavier Woods got injured, and Offset was out of line. Kinston got offended and took it out on Evans. But the truth was, Evans reminded him of himself. 

Kingston became WWE Champion and thought Evans could do the same. Evans just needed the right team behind him. Evans was about to turn him down, but Kingston told him to think about it. Kingston offered a handshake. Evans didn’t shake his hand, but did say he’d think about it. 

********

Redmond interviewed Bayley about her IC title match next week. Bayley thanked Valkyria for having her back earlier. She called AJ Lee a legend, and if it wasn’t for her, a lot of them wouldn’t be there now. The IC title was one she’s wanted to win since it was created. Bayley also offered Valkyria a shot if she won. 

Oba Femi vs. Rusev 

Femi was in control until Rusev kicked him off the apron, drove him into the ring post, and hit a spinning heel kick that sent Femi into the announce table. Rusev hit a Machka kick in the ring, but Femi exploded out of the corner with an uppercut. Femi followed with a biel and Fall from Grace for the pinfall win. 

This was all this needed to be. 

Match result: Oba Femi defeated Rusev (3:07) 

******** 

Next week on Raw in San Antonio: 

  • Brock Lesnar appears (presumably without Paul Heyman) 
  • AJ Lee (c) vs. Bayley for the Women’s Intercontinental Championship 
  • Original El Grande Americano vs. El Grande Americano 
  • Roman Reigns appears 

********

Main event segment with CM Punk and The Usos  

Punk entered to a big reaction. He signed autographs and shook hands with fans during a break. He gave a shout-out to the Seahawks. 

Punk admitted he wasn’t sure how the fans would react to him. He thought some of them would be mad at him. Some people were upset about things he said last week. One thing in particular was categorized as disrespectful. 

He knew Roman Reigns never respected him. But Punk would force him to respect the position he held. Championships were made to find out who the best were. The best go on to defend their championships. This title, in particular, was created because Reigns shunned his championship responsibilities and refused to defend his title. 

Punk defended his title because he was proud of it, and the fans deserved a fighting champion. When Punk defended the title, he levelled up the competition. If you faced him, you had to level up physically and verbally. Otherwise, he would leave you dumbfounded and slack-jawed like Reigns was last week. Unfortunately, Punk lowered himself to Reigns’ level, and it’s been on his mind all week. 

The Usos entered. Jey was red hot and told Punk to apologize right now. Punk asked why Reigns was still sending his cousins to do his heavy-lifting. Jey said they came out there on their own and told him again to apologize. 

Jimmy said this had nothing to do with Reigns and everything to do with respect. Jimmy told “Phil” that he respected him because he spoke from his mind and ran right through his obstacles. Jimmy said Punk called himself the voice of the voiceless, and he could talk trash about Reigns all he wanted, but he disrespected their late uncle, who had no voice. Jimmy told Punk to apologize. 

Punk said Jimmy was right. Sika didn’t have a voice. Punk wasn’t spiritual, but he knew the Usos were. He asked if they believed Sika could hear them now. Jimmy said yes. Punk hoped he could hear this. 

Punk said he was friends with the Usos, and he went back a long way with their family. He respected Sika, but didn’t know him as well as he knew Afa. When he lived in Philadelphia, he would drive to Allentown, Pennsylvania, to wrestle. He wouldn’t say he wrestled for free. Afa was generous enough to give him gas money, food or a roof over his head if needed. But Punk was really paid in knowledge, sitting under the Wild Samoan’s learning tree. It was a thrill to sit in the back of a pick-up truck with Samu and have him drop knowledge. 

Everyone in their family showed him respect—except for that one son of a bitch. If the Usos believed that Sika could hear and see this, then Sika could also see what a lying, conniving, backstabbing, manipulative, gaslighting, egotistical, narcissistic, plastic, politician his son Roman is. 

Jey got in Punk’s face and reminded him that this wasn’t about Reigns. He told Punk to apologize. (Some fans chanted, “Say ‘you’re sorry.’”)

Punk shook each of their hands and said, “I’m sorry. I’m sorry Roman Reigns treated the two of you and the rest of his family in the Bloodline like garbage for years and never once came out here publicly to apologize for the way he treated his ‘family’ that he loves.” 

Punk was sorry that Reigns disrespected one of his mentors, Dusty Rhodes, when he called him irrelevant and was somehow not on the hook for apologizing, but Punk somehow was. He was sorry that Reigns had tricked everyone into thinking that he gave a single damn about any of them or any of this. Because if Reigns did care about them or the people or him or the business, Punk would be talking to him right now instead of his young boys. 

Punk shoved the mic into Jey’s chest, so Jey shoved him back. Punk was about to return the favour, but Jimmy dropped him with a right hand. Punk sat up and watched as Jimmy and Jey left the ring.

Number one contender’s gauntlet match part of next week’s WWE Raw lineup

The next contender for the Women’s Intercontinental title will be set on next week’s Raw.

New champion AJ Lee came out on Monday and issued an open challenge for anyone in the back to challenge her next, saying the next time she was in the ring, it would be to defend the title. Throughout the night Raquel Rodriguez, Bayley, Lyra Valkyria, and IYO SKY all made it clear they wanted the shot. Later in the night, it was confirmed that those four women, Asuka, and Ivy Nile would compete in a gauntlet match to determine Lee’s next challenger.

Lee won the title at Elimination Chamber this past Saturday, submitting Becky Lynch who didn’t appear on Monday’s show.

Meanwhile, Oba Femi will face Rusev in a battle of behemoths. After the two had a staredown last week, Rusev came to the ring this week and challenged Femi, who came out. The two had a brawl but it was Femi who emerged as the winner of their battle after he laid out Rusev with a chokeslam.

WWE Raw (March 9)

  • Women’s Intercontinental title number one contender’s gauntlet match: Raquel Rodriguez vs. Bayley vs. Lyra Valkyria vs. IYO SKY vs. Asuka vs. Ivy Nile
  • Oba Femi vs. Rusev

Rusev on working with John Cena: ‘I love that man, he taught me so much’

Getting to travel the world and work matches against John Cena helped Rusev become a much better wrestler.

On Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Rusev reflected on working with veterans like Cena, Mark Henry, and Big Show as he was starting out in WWE. Rusev and Cena were frequent TV opponents and even faced each other at WrestleMania 31, but most of their bouts took place at untelevised house shows.

“I love that man, he taught me so much,” Rusev said about Cena. “You know, people seen us probably wrestle like 10, 15 times on TV, but we wrestled probably 1500 times on live events. We traveled all over the world just to wrestle. And even in European tours, we used to do Red, then Blue, then Raw, then SmackDown, then maybe SmackDown, then again Raw. Like, we would just jump everywhere to do this match.

“And just learning from him, just listening, paying attention to what he does, why he does it, keeping my ears open, my mouth shut. And I’ve learned so much, man. If it wasn’t for him, but even him, of course, but even leading up to that with Mark Henry, with the Big Show, with all these veterans that I got to work with. Big Show would say, ‘Hey, I’ll see you in the ring.’ Like, that’s it? You’re just going to see me in the ring? Like, you’re 7-foot-2 and 500 pounds. But okay. I was so nervous. But all these veterans prepared me for that moment. And I’m very thankful for every single one of them.”

Rusev returned to WWE in 2025 but, despite hoping it would happen, did not have the opportunity to face Cena one more time before retirement. Cena is now an ambassador for WWE following the end of his in-ring career.

Van Vliet asked Rusev what the biggest lesson he learned from Cena was.

“Just timing, timing. Take my time,” he responded. “There’s no such thing as a TV match and a live event match. Like, there’s no such thing as a bad crowd. If they’re not reacting, it’s because you’re not giving them what they want to see. Him listening, ‘Okay, is it high pitch? Is it low pitch? Who’s out there tonight? What’s the vibe?’ He’s always there watching and learning the crowd as much as everything else…

“[You’ve] got to take your time and listen to the crowd. I think that’s the most important thing. Just listen to the crowd. They’ll tell you what to do.”

Former WWE wrestler partnering with Rusev for new training school

Rusev is partnering with one of his own trainers to launch a new pro wrestling school.

The school, named KECH Pro Wrestling Academy, is slated to open in Nashville next month. On Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Rusev gave an update on plans for the project and revealed that former WWE wrestler Gangrel (David Heath) will be working there as a trainer. Gangrel already has experience in this type of role and is currently the head trainer at Coastal Championship Wrestling in Florida.

“We have Gangrel who’s going to be the other trainer as well,” Rusev said. “He is [moving to Nashville], yes. He’s a Florida guy, but he’s been screwed so many times by all these people who promise him things. And he’s helped me so much. He helped this other Bulgarian kid who came from Bulgaria to wrestle, Metal. He trained him as well. So it was time for me and him to do something that he’ll be able to finally be like, ‘Hey, this is it.’ He’s great, man. His training is great. It’s very old-school training. And maybe some people don’t want to hear that, but he’s real. He’s going to keep it real. He’s going to teach you real. He’s not going to be like, ‘Hey, let’s do a little bit of this, a little bit of that.’ No. He’s really big on basics, and that’s what people lack a lot of the times.”

Rusev said the school is slated for a mid-March opening. They’re catering to a wide net of students, ranging from already experienced wrestlers to kids as young as eight who can learn wrestling as an activity.

“The ring is ordered. The building is being, I already got the building,” Rusev said. “So officially should be probably mid-March, should be the grand opening. I’m really, really stoked, really excited for it.”

Rusev, who returned to WWE in 2025, is set to join Seth Rollins and Cody Rhodes among the list of current WWE stars who own their own wrestling schools. Natalya and her husband TJ Wilson also operate their own invite-only training facility for established wrestlers.

Rusev explains why he returned to WWE: ‘I wanted to wrestle more and more’

Wanting to wrestle more often was a big reason that Rusev made the decision to return to WWE last year.

In May 2025, Rusev returned to WWE five years after having been released during a round of pandemic-related roster cuts. He was signed to AEW between those WWE stints but was off television for a considerable amount of time near the end of his AEW run. That period was difficult for Rusev given how much he likes to have a busy schedule.

“I wanted to wrestle, man. I wanted to mix it up with the best,” Rusev said on a new episode of Insight with Chris Van Vliet when asked what brought him back to WWE. “And I know that the roster is stacked, clearly. Their roster is really stacked. I don’t remember the last time it was this stacked, but I just want to mix it [up] with everybody. I wanted to wrestle more and more and all these European tours and everything.”

“I love all that. I love the grind. Because when we first started, we were five days on the road: Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, you go home Wednesday, you’re out on the road again on Friday. And that’s just how life was. As hard as it was, that’s how you get better, just by putting the work. Because every day you work different towns, you travel. And now the people can only hear about that and be like, ‘Oh, really, that’s what it was?’ But it was so cool, man. Like wrestling, you know, getting beat up, getting the rental car, driving three hours to the next town, getting the hotel, waking up, working out, doing the same thing. Just like makes you feel like a real professional wrestler. I missed the grind. I missed that. I really, really do.”

Rusev has denied rumors that he was reluctant to lose matches during his time with AEW. When asked about the situation, Tony Khan said he and Rusev had “different visions of things,” but he wishes Rusev the best now that he’s back with WWE.

On Insight, Rusev pointed to one of his matches from AEW as a highlight he wishes people would talk about more. Rusev loves his match against Fuego Del Sol from the first-ever episode of AEW Rampage. They only went two minutes before Rusev got the win, but they were able to convince the audience that Del Sol had a legitimate chance of getting the victory.

“Me and Fuego in AEW,” Rusev said. “It was a great match because we had two minutes or three minutes and they wanted me to squash them. I said, ‘What is that going to do for anything?’ We already know, people walking down the aisle, everybody knows who’s going to win. But we got them good, man. Because with those two minutes, we got them into such a great spot to think that he was able to win. I think that’s one of the great things that I’ve done, even though it was just two minutes.”

Rusev believes, compared to his first WWE run, he’s much better in the ring now due to the experience he’s gained. A matchup with Oba Femi could be up next for him. Those two had a confrontation on Raw last night, though WWE has yet to confirm which brand Femi will be joining following his call-up from NXT.

Report: Reason for Rusev’s absence from WWE TV

An update is available regarding Rusev.

Rusev has not wrestled on SmackDown since losing to Jey Uso in the quarterfinals of The Last Time Is Now tournament on the November 21 episode.

According to a report from PWInsider, Rusev’s absence is due to WWE wanting to keep wrestlers who are not currently involved in storylines fresh by not having them on television.

Dave Meltzer reported a similar reason for The Street Profits’ absence in last week’s edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, writing, “Neither of the Street Profits are hurt. The decision was just made to take them off TV to allow them to freshen up.”

Rusev returned to WWE last April after a five-year absence. He reportedly signed a two-year deal with the company. He also announced earlier this month plans to open a wrestling school. The KECH Pro Wrestling Academy is set to open in Nashville, TN on March 1.

WWE star opening wrestling school this March

The first quarter of 2026 will see WWE star Rusev open up his own wrestling school.

Named KECH Pro Wrestling Academy, the school is scheduled for a March 1 opening. It’ll be located in Nashville, Tennessee and will accommodate everyone from kids to adults to wrestlers who already have experience in the ring.

“We’re opening a new pro wrestling school for adults and kids. Real pro wrestling training — from fundamentals to character work,” Rusev announced. “Also, we’ll have advanced training sessions for experienced wrestlers only. The ring is on the way. The building is locked in. If you ever wanted to train like a pro, now is your chance.”

Rusev returned to WWE in 2025 following a run with AEW. When he was coming up in wrestling, he trained at the Knokx Pro Wrestling Academy in California — which is owned by WWE Hall of Famer Rikishi.

Current WWE stars Seth Rollins and Cody Rhodes also own wrestling schools, while Natalya works with other wrestlers at her Dungeon facility. Bayley — who hopes to open her own school one day — recently held a seminar for up-and-coming wrestlers.

Lana on Rusev’s AEW departure: ‘He wanted to wrestle every week on TV’

On a new episode of Insight with Chris Van Vliet, Lana opened up a bit about her husband Rusev’s departure from AEW and return to WWE.

Rusev (Miro) spent nearly five years under AEW contract before his departure from the company this February. Toward the end of his run, he was off television for a considerable amount of time amid rumors that he was reluctant to lose matches. Tony Khan recently explained that he and Rusev had different visions of what they wanted, but he wished Rusev the best now that he’s back with WWE.

Lana explained on Insight that she does not like to speak for her husband too much because it creates controversy and goes viral on social media whenever she does. But she said the period where Rusev was off AEW TV was “really hard” for him given that he wants to wrestle every week. Rusev also loves the style of storytelling that WWE does.

“Both him and I love telling stories, and WWE is a storytelling factory. And he is incredible at what he does. He’s the ‘Super Athlete.’ He loves playing a villain. He loves, absolutely loves WWE-style storytelling,” Lana said. “And so I think it was — and he wanted to wrestle every week on TV. That was a big thing for him. He loves wrestling. It wasn’t about a check for him. So it was like, yeah, maybe he made more money at AEW or something, but he wanted — it was more important for him to get out there and be wrestling, it was really hard for him to not be working.”

Rusev was part of WWE’s Last Time is Now tournament to determine John Cena’s final opponent, defeating Damian Priest in the first round before losing to Jey Uso in the quarterfinals. The tournament is down to Gunther and LA Knight with those two set to face off on SmackDown this Friday.

Along with Rusev’s return, Lana — who also was previously with AEW — has signed a WWE Legends contract. She has not popped back up on WWE TV yet but is always ready for the opportunity if it arises.

Tony Khan says he & Miro ‘at times had different visions of things’ during AEW run

Image: JJ Williams

AEW head Tony Khan addressed Miro’s departure from the company earlier this year and acknowledged they had some differences on the creative end of things.

Khan spoke to Ariel Helwani on Tuesday and during a segment in which he was asked about specific wrestlers, Helwani inquired about the current Rusev in WWE and what happened in AEW.

“I think he and I just, at times, had different visions of things. That’s ok because everyone is entitled to different opinions and different ideas,” Khan said. “We just kind of drifted into some different ideas of what we should be doing and that’s ok.”

Khan noted Miro/Rusev had worked in WWE before and “clearly that was a good experience for him so clearly he was excited to go back and did go back. I wish him the best.”

The 39-year-old was released from his AEW contract this past February after requesting it initially in the early fall of 2024. The former TNT Champion hadn’t wrestled in AEW since December 2023’s Worlds End pay-per-view after initially debuting in September 2020. He wrestled just 36 times for AEW during his run.

He returned to WWE this past April on the Raw after WrestleMania. His wife, Lana/CJ Perry, signed a WWE Legends deal at the same time but has not been seen on TV.