Titus O’Neil: I feel safer in Saudi Arabia than most places in US

WWE ambassador Titus O’Neil is fully on board with the company’s decision to bring WrestleMania to Saudi Arabia.

Appearing on TMZ’s Inside the Ring podcast, O’Neil responded to the backlash that WWE holding WrestleMania 43 in Saudi Arabia in 2027 has received. O’Neil said he feels safer in Saudi Arabia than a lot of places in the United States — and he doesn’t believe we as Americans have the right to point fingers at anyone.

“I can say this, you know, because I’ve been to Saudi Arabia several times now: I feel safer in Saudi Arabia than I do in most places — or a lot of places — in the United States of America,” O Neil said.

“I think in the United States, we have this mindset that we’re the greatest country in the world. And we are a great country, but people don’t move to the United States because we’re the greatest country in the world. They move because we have the greatest amount of opportunity. And I think that the biggest difference between places like overseas in Japan, Saudi Arabia, Middle East, all those places and the United States are morals and convictions. They actually live by theirs, whether you like them or not. They’re going to pray five times a day. They’re going to stop during the day, and they’re going to do their thing no matter what, who likes it and don’t like it.

“You don’t hear about mass shootings in Saudi Arabia. You don’t hear about mass shootings in China. You don’t hear about mass shooters in Japan. I think if people went over to Saudi Arabia or had a chance to go there, their views would change dramatically. And I’m not saying that they get it all right, but we don’t get it all right either to be pointing fingers at anybody.”

O’Neil said there were a lot of “scare tactics” and “scare verbiage” when he went to Saudi Arabia the first time for WWE, but he saw a group of kids playing on the beach at 1 a.m. one night. When he asked his driver the next morning if people in Saudi Arabia were worried about that, the driver said no because there would be an automatic death sentence if the kids were sexually assaulted, beaten, kidnapped, or brutalized.

“So kids are safe over there, but kids are not safe in the United States,” O’Neil said. “My perspective of us going to Saudi Arabia for WWE — yeah, it’s business, but it’s also changing cultures. When we first went over there, women were just now, they were just now getting introduced and being able to drive. Things are changing over there.”

O’Neil said WWE doesn’t care what color fans are, what religion they practice or don’t practice, or where they come from. He believes holding WrestleMania in Riyadh is a chance to show what unity can look like and how other cultures embrace what WWE does.

“So if there’s ever a platform for us as a company to take and utilize, to show what unity can look like, to show what good business looks like, to show what other cultures look like, and how they embrace what we do, no matter where they are and what they come from, and how they dress — Saudi Arabia is definitely one of those places, in my opinion,” O’Neil said. “I think if the WWE brass and TKO brass didn’t feel that way, the decision would not have been made.

“So for anyone that — first and foremost, most of the people that are complaining about the show being over there, would never book a ticket to go over there anyway. Watch the show on TV, it’s going to be a spectacle. Saudi Arabia does nothing small, and WWE does nothing small. So get ready for a hell of a show and a hell of an experience on a global stage that’s going to show everyone why this business, and particularly TKO and WWE, do it better than anyone in the world.”

The Saudi WrestleMania is the first time WWE’s biggest event has ever been held outside of North America. WWE and the Saudi government have been business partners since 2018. That controversial relationship has grown to the point where Saudi Arabia is hosting the Royal Rumble in 2026 and WrestleMania in 2027.

It’s been five years since O’Neil last competed in the ring. When asked about potentially wrestling again at some point, the 48-year-old O’Neil left the door open to the possibility if WWE wants him to. But he’s enjoying everything he’s doing outside of the ring right now. He was recently featured on the Bravo reality show “Kings Court” and has hopes of breaking into Hollywood like his friend Dave Bautista has.

Nick Khan: WWE believes fans will travel to Saudi Arabia for WrestleMania

WWE isn’t concerned about the logistical issues presented by bringing WrestleMania to Saudi Arabia.

Last month, it was confirmed that Saudi Arabia will host WrestleMania 43 in 2027 with the event being held in Riyadh. It’s the first time WrestleMania will take place outside of the United States or Canada. That means an earlier start time for the two-night broadcast and a longer trip for most fans who usually travel to the show, but Nick Khan believes viewership will be strong and fans will still travel.

Khan was in Saudi Arabia on Thursday for a panel at Joy Forum 2025. He spoke about the decision to take WrestleMania outside of North America for the first time.

“It was a natural next step for us,” the WWE president said. “I think at WWE, we realized a number of years ago — you can’t simply pipe American product out globally and hope to be a global product. You actually have to have boots on the ground. So if you look at what we’ve done with our Premium Live Events — formerly known as pay-per-views — over the last few years, about half of those now take place outside of the United States.

“We’re in the eighth year of a long-term partnership with Turki Alalshikh and the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia… We’re bringing Royal Rumble here at the end of January [2026]. It’s the first time Royal Rumble, which is our second or third biggest event, will take place outside of the United States or Canada. And WrestleMania 2027, as you just mentioned, will be here in April of that year, first time ever WrestleMania, as you also said, outside of the US or Canada. We’re excited. We think viewership is going to be strong. We think people will come to the Kingdom to see our show, and we’re going to put on a spectacle.”

WWE is believed to be receiving a lucrative amount of money to hold WrestleMania in Saudi Arabia. The controversial business relationship between the promotion and the Saudi government began in 2018 and continues to expand.

When asked why Saudi Arabia specifically was chosen as the location for the first non-North American WrestleMania, Khan pointed to that strong partnership as the reason.

“So when Turki expressed interest in having it here, we got together for a couple of different meetings, worked out the deal in short order and then had the good fortune of announcing it the day before Canelo vs. Crawford, our first [boxing] fight together in Las Vegas,” Khan said.

It was noted at Joy Forum that hosting WrestleMania is something that Saudi officials first mentioned as a goal seven years ago.

WOL: WWE WrestleMania 43 going global despite backlash

Andrew Zarian is back with another episode of Wrestling Observer Live Sunday edition, this week on location, talking all things professional wrestling.

The big story of the week was WWE’s announcement that the 2027 edition of WrestleMania will be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He discusses how this is being perceived and if the country has evolved enough to become a tourism destination that can support such an event.

He also discusses the impact on all the independent shows that are usually part of WrestleMania weekend.

He also talks about the comments from TKO’s Mark Shapiro where he said that Vince McMahon priced his product for families and didn’t take full advantage of the potential. This is further proof of this not being McMahon’s company anymore.

Also, AAA x WWE Worlds Collide took place, and Dominik Mysterio is the new AAA Mega Champion after what turned out to be a very entertaining show.

Plus, early previews of AEW All Out, WWE Wrestlepalooza, and the quiet release of Andrade.

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Crowd boos WrestleMania 43 announcement during WWE x AAA Worlds Collide

Some people aren’t fans of WWE’s big WrestleMania announcement that took place on Friday.

During WWE x AAA Worlds Collide, a video package aired featuring highlights of WWE’s announcement earlier in the day that WrestleMania 43 would be held in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia in 2027. The crowd in Las Vegas could be heard audibly booing the video, chanting “you sold out.”

WWE held a press conference on Friday to make the announcement official after word accidentally got out earlier in the week. Exact dates were not announced, but it will be held as part of the Riyadh season festival. Triple H, Saudi official Turki Alalshikh, Shawn Michaels, The Undertaker, Charlotte Flair, Bianca Belair, Liv Morgan, Stephnaie Vaquer, Logan Paul, and Seth Rollins all attended the press conference, which was closed both to the media and public.

WWE’s relationship with Saudi Arabia dates back to 2018, with the company holding multiple events in the country each year. For the first time, the 2026 Royal Rumble will be held in Riyadh on January 31.

WWE Royal Rumble 2026 date revealed

The date for this January’s WWE Royal Rumble is now official.

Announced on Friday during an event to confirm that WrestleMania will head to Saudi Arabia in 2027, it was also revealed that the Rumble will take place on Saturday, January 31 in Riyadh.

A start time was not revealed, but is assumed to be beginning at an early start time for U.S. fans given past WWE shows in the country.

It will be the first-ever Rumble held outside North America and the first outside the United States since the inaugural one in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, in 1988.

A discussion of the Rumble heading to Saudi Arabia was first revealed in May 2024 and later became more real this past January with the first report that the deal was done and then later confirmed.

WWE/TKO and the Saudis are currently in a partnership that began in 2018 with two annual events with the exception of 2020 and 2021 (one each). Events like the Greatest Royal Rumble, Crown Jewel, King & Queen of the Ring, Elimination Chamber, and Night of Champions have also been held in the country.

A date was not revealed for WrestleMania in 2027, but was said to be taking place during Riyadh Season which runs from October through March.

September 15, 2025 Observer Newsletter: WWE WrestleMania heading to Saudi Arabia, John Cena’s remaining schedule revealed

Image: WWE

The newest issue of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter is here for subscribers.

Dave Meltzer leads off with one of the bigger stories of the week: WWE is planning on bringing WrestleMania 43 to Saudi Arabia in 2027 — an announcement that should be made official on Friday afternoon.

The final roadmap to the end of John Cena’s in-ring career has been laid out and ending in a place that wasn’t initially expected. Dave looks at the end of the road for Cena.

All that and more await. So, let’s get reading as reading is your friend.

Click here to read.

WWE ‘special announcement’ set for Friday

WWE is making a “special announcement” on Friday that many believe will be the official reveal of WrestleMania 43 heading to Saudi Arabia.

Revealed via the company’s YouTube channel and by Triple H on X Thursday night, the description reads:

“Tune in LIVE for a special announcement at 3:00pm ET | 12:00pm PT featuring Triple H, The Undertaker, Shawn Michaels, Seth Rollins, Logan Paul, Bianca Belair, Liv Morgan, Stephanie Vaquer and Charlotte Flair!”

“I told you we’d change the game. And we’re just getting started,” Triple H wrote in his post on X.

While SmackDown is being held in Norfolk, Virginia, Friday, WWE is holding Worlds Collide in Las Vegas directly after the show. The announcement is expected to take place in Las Vegas according to Fightful’s Sean Ross Sapp.

It will be a big weekend in Sin City for TKO with Saturday’s Canelo Alvarez vs. Terence Crawford boxing match that is being put on by TKO and is sponsored by Riyadh Season.

On Wednesday, it was revealed that the 2027 edition of WrestleMania would be held in Saudi Arabia with our Bryan Alvarez reporting that the deal is believe to be in the $100 million range for the entire weekend of shows (Raw and SmackDown as well). Dave Meltzer shared what he had heard as well.

WOL: WWE to Saudi, two WrestleManias?, Dynamite TV

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm is back with tons to talk about including WWE heading to Saudi Arabia with tons of details, the potential for two WrestleManias in 2027, Stephanie Vaquer update, International title update, Dynamite TV recap, Jerry Lawler, and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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Update on WWE WrestleMania in Saudi Arabia

On Wrestling Observer Radio, Dave Meltzer shared the latest on WWE WrestleMania coming to Saudi Arabia.

News broke last night that Saudi Arabia will host WrestleMania in 2027. An official announcement from WWE has not been made yet, but Meltzer reports that he first heard last month that it was “for sure” that Saudi Arabia would be getting WrestleMania. At that time, there were rumors that there could potentially be two WrestleManias in 2027 with the United States and Saudi Arabia each hosting one. But Meltzer presumes WrestleMania 43 in Saudi Arabia will be the only WrestleMania that year.

Meltzer notes that Saudi official Turki Alalshikh — the Chairman of the General Entertainment Authority — is the key person behind this, and Saudi Arabia is putting up “a ridiculous amount of money” to get the event.

“They’re putting up an incredible amount of money — a ridiculous amount of money,” Meltzer said. “And the idea is to present the most star-studded show ever, you know, by far. Everyone, anyone, money is no object. Any name you can imagine, obviously they’re going to be after. I presume it’s the only WrestleMania of that year, but when I first heard — one of the ideas was to do a two WrestleMania year one year so that way it keeps the American fans not upset about Saudi Arabia. But I think perhaps the deal is also that as Saudi Arabia has become more and more normalized, it appears that the outrage that probably would’ve been there even a year ago or two years ago, probably won’t be. I hardly saw any today, but we’ll see.”

Meltzer said that, because WWE had other commitments, they originally wanted 2028 to be the year for the Saudi WrestleMania event. It ended up being 2027 because that’s what Saudi Arabia pushed for, with that year marking a celebration of the 300th anniversary of the first Saudi state being formed.

The controversial WWE-Saudi Arabia business relationship began in 2018 and continues to grow. As was announced earlier this year, Saudi Arabia will host the Royal Rumble in January 2026. WrestleMania 42 will then be held in Las Vegas a few months later.

WWE WrestleMania 43 set for Saudi Arabia

WWE WrestleMania looks to be headed to Saudi Arabia in 2027.

Late Wednesday afternoon, a Snapchat video ad from Turki Al-Sheikh — the Chairman of the Saudi General Entertainment Authority — emerged online with Al-Sheikh appearing to announce that WrestleMania 43 is coming to Saudi.

There has been no official announcement from WWE yet, but PWInsider reports that the news is legitimate. Our Bryan Alvarez followed up and confirmed, adding that Saudi Arabia will be getting the entire weekend including SmackDown and Raw and that he believes the deal is in the neighborhood of $100 million.

“PWInsider.com can confirm, however, that the story is 100% legitimate and an announcement is coming very soon, bringing WrestleMania to an international location outside of North American for the first time ever,” the report said.

WWE began its controversial business relationship with the Saudi regime in 2018 with Saudi hosting annual PLEs for an estimated $50 million per event. The relationship has continued to grow in recent years with Saudi Arabia set to host the Royal Rumble in 2026.

In April 2026, WrestleMania 42 will be held at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, with Vegas getting WWE’s signature event for the second straight year.

Triple H says he’s ‘incredibly proud’ of CM Punk for apologizing to Saudi Arabia

Triple H is proud of CM Punk for apologizing.

During the Night of Champions post show, Triple H sat down with Byron Saxton and Jackie Redmond talking about the show in general. When discussing the main event between John Cena and CM Punk, he brought up how both men had matured in the last fifteen years, especially Punk.

“I was privileged to watch him grow as a human being, to step out here and apologize to the people of Saudi, to just cherish where he is at in life and his career and the things that he gets to do and the opportunities that he has,” he said. “And I was incredibly proud of him.”

Punk took the time during Friday’s Night of Champions kickoff event to apologize to Saudi Arabia after previously tweeting disparaging comments to The Miz about wrestling in the country.

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

WWE’s CCO took time on the post show to thank Turki Al-Sheikh, who is the Chair of Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority. He also told the crowd to get excited for the upcoming Royal Rumble event in Riyadh in 2026.

WOL: Smackdown TWO HOURS! Punk apologizes, more!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm returns today. After a rocky start we have a ton to get into including SMACKDOWN TO TWO HOURS CONFIRMED, CM Punk apologizes for the Miz tweet, Dynamite is back to normal after a huge Arena Mexico show, a bunch of injury notes and more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

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WWE SmackDown Netflix live broadcast delayed due to power outage

This story has been updated.

Friday’s live WWE SmackDown on Netflix was delayed for nearly 40 minutes due to a power issue in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Cody Rhodes kicked off the show which started at 1 PM Eastern on the streaming giant. Before he could begin, Randy Orton interrupted and started talking about the Rhodes vs. Jey Uso King of the Ring semifinal when the feed went out.

The show was then paused in the Kingdom Arena, resuming around 2 PM Eastern. PWInsider reported a power loss in Riyadh “affected WWE’s entire production including the control room and the gorilla position.” The issue had nothing to do with Netflix.

WWE is in Saudi Arabia for Saturday’s Night of Champions in addition to Friday’s SmackDown.

WWE initially posted the following on X at 1:33 PM Eastern:

“To our international audiences watching #SmackDown on Netflix: We apologize for any technical difficulties and should be back up and running shortly.”

And then the following at 2:01 PM Eastern:

#SmackDown on Netflix is back up and running, and you’ll see it in its entirety!”

The show will air in its normal time slot at 8 PM on USA Network for U.S. viewers.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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