Daily Update: UFC & WWE Backlash fallout, BTS at Arena Mexico

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Among the topics covered:

  • Ted Turner’s legacy in sports
  • The history of pro wrestling on the Turner Networks
  • The skyrocketing success and rapid decline of WCW
  • The television heyday of Georgia Championship Wrestling
  • How Ted Turner first got involved in pro wrestling
  • Why Vince McMahon hated Ted Turner and how irrational it was at times
  • The local TV business in the early 70s
  • The 1972-74 Atlanta wrestling war, how it started and ended
  • The start of Gordon Solie and Tony Schiavone on TBS
  • The growth of TBS
  • The launching of CNN
  • How Vince McMahon got on TBS
  • Why McMahon and Turner had issues during their year working together
  • The role Jim Barnett played
  • The death of Mid South Wrestling
  • The death of Jim Crockett Promotions
  • The death of WCW
  • How Barnett manipulated the Crocketts getting on TBS
  • Vince McMahon’s cable power plays and Turner’s reactions
  • The signing of Hulk Hogan and rise of Eric Bischoff
  • Hall, Nash and Bret Hart come to WCW
  • How Bischoff nearly purchased WCW and how it fell through
  • A reprint of a 2001 article on the closing of WCW that Ted Turner himself read and praised
  • Reaction to the death of WCW
  • Numerous people react to the death
  • The tribute on AEW television
  • His exploits in other sports
  • Rupert Murdoch, Ric Flair, Jane Fonda, Tony Khan and others in sports comment on Turner’s death
  • Turner’s life after he lost control of the networks
  • His charitable work
  • Update on Tanea “Rebel” Brooks
  • A first look at how UFC is performing and its revenue driven vs. expense for Paramount
  • WWE cuts continue and are looked at
  • A crazy note about the income of just four of TKO’s top executives and how it compares to the pay for UFC and WWE athletes. This is absolutely shocking
  • Nick Khan’s new contract with TKO
  • Why so many cuts were made this year and more notes on the pay cuts
  • New Day bid farewell
  • WWE & UFC first quarter financials looked at
  • More talk regarding Middle East shows, Zuffa Boxing, and complaints regarding WWE and UFC
  • Backlash preview, business notes and odds
  • Notes on AEW Double or Nothing
  • New Japan Dontaku coverage
  • Nico Ali Walsh on Nick Khan’s testimony before Congress
  • NOAH big show notes
  • The most detailed look at the TV ratings from the pro wrestling and MMA shows this past week
  • Fantastica Mania Mexico
  • CMLL vs. MLW at Arena Mexico notes
  • Grande Americano vs. Grande Americano
  • Lots of injury updates
  • Who in AEW was set for a major push that is now on hold
  • Champion Carnival down to final four
  • Cuatrero convicted in domestic violence case involving Stephanie Vaquer
  • Raja Jackson case coming to a close
  • Former WWE wrestler murder case makes pub again
  • Worldwide YouTuber numbers
  • Dana White talks McGregor’s return
  • Notes on Roman Reigns and his schedule
  • When did Nick Khan learn Vince McMahon was being investigate for sex trafficking
  • Janel Grant gets more public
  • Notes from WWE’s television contracts

This Week’s Back Issue

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Sunday Update

Mistico wears a BTS-influenced jacket
Mistico wears a BTS-influenced jacket (Image credit: CMLL)

— We have two weekend shows up right now. Last night Bryan and I talked about Backlash, Collision, Ted Turner, Mistico, WWE business and other subjects. Today’s show with Garret, with questions from the current issue of the Observer, the UFC 328 show and more on Ted Turner, wrestling, baseball and cable.

— Happy Mother’s Day for all the mothers out there.

— Last night’s UFC show did the largest numbers the company has done since the first major show on Paramount. So I expect big numbers for CBS when they come out on Tuesday. It was the No. 1 rated show worldwide on Paramount+ for the day, even beating South Park. In fact it was so big that old UFC shows placed No. 10 for the day. Outside of Europe and Australia (where it aired after midnight so it wouldn’t be listed until tomorrow), it was the No. 1 show in every market it aired in on Paramount + other than the U.S., where it was No. 2 to South Park.

— Not a lot coming out of Backlash, although the post-match made it appear that Roman Reigns would be doing something to try and get Jacob Fatu out of WWE starting on tomorrow’s Raw.

— Regarding the details of the John Cena Invitational, we were just told today that this is a work in progress. They wanted to make the announcement but as far as what it is, that is not decided so any speculation of tournament vs. individual matches or how the champions will be set up is just speculation.

— We’re looking for your thoughts on Backlash, so you can leave a thumbs up, thumbs down or thumbs in the middle along with a best and worst match to dave@wrestliing observer.com

— For Google searches, last night’s UFC show led by Sean Strickland’s middleweight title win over Khamzat Chimaev did 1,360,000 searches. WWE Backlash did 254,000. Ronda Rousey vs. Gina Carano did 10,000.

— There were two very close decisions on last night’s UFC show. Sean Strickland beat Khamzat Chimaev on 47-48, 48-47 and 48-47 scores. I had Chimaev clearly winning rounds and and four, Strickland winning round two and I did have Strickland three and five but both were so close they could have gone the other way. Media scores were 54 percent for Chimaev. This could have gone either way. I still had it open in the last ten seconds that if Chimaev landed strongly I had him winning. Chimaev is not going to ask for a rematch because he’s moving to light heavyweight. He had way too much weight to cut and it made a difference with his stamina.

— Judge Eric Clon went for Strickland winning rounds two, three and five. Sal D’Amato gave Strickland the same three rounds. Sue Sanidad had Strickland winning two and three and Chimaev winning one, four and five. In Alexander Volkov vs. Waldo Cortes-Acosta, had Cortez-Acosta winning one and three but most had it the other way. Media scores were 80 percent in favor of Volkov, who won. Judge Jon Bilyk had all three rounds for Vokov. Henry Krawiec had one and two for Volkov. Dave Tirelli had two and three for Volkov.

— Not much in the way of reports on great matches this weekend. Aside from Backlash and the Darby Allin vs. Pac match, we didn’t get anything in the way of recommendations.

— At Arena Mexico on Friday, members of the band BTS were in the front row. Mistico came out with a BTS jacket. Then last night at the BTS concert before 65,000 fans at Estadio GNP Seguros, Jin had a Mistico jacket on and they led the crowd in chants for Mistico. BTS ran three shows in Mexico City. It was reported that when tickets were put on sale that there were 2.1 million people in the queue to buy tickets. Reports were that they turned away 40,000 fans at the stadium last night.

— Group member Yoongi talked last night about being a lifelong fan and his favorites being Rey Mystreio and Eddy Guerrero. Backstage group members were trying to do Mistico moves on each other last night.

— Tonight at Arena Mexico has Mistico & Mascara Drada & Atlantis Jr. vs Averno & Soberano Jr. & Hechicero as the main event.

— The A&E Biography today is on The Four Horsemen at 8 p.m. LFG airs at 10 p.m. and WWE’s Greatest Moments air at 11 and 11:30 p.m. The 11 p.m. show will be on Nitro and the 11:30 p.m. show will be a history of Backlash.

— Tito Santana, born Merced Solis, turned 73 today. Frankie Hill Murdoch, the father of Dick Murdoch, was born on this day in 1909. Billy Sandow, one of the most important figures in pro wrestling history, was born on this day in 1912. Jerry Brown of the Hollywood Blonds tag team was born on this day 1937. Hall of Fame promoter Frank Tunney of Toronto died 43 years ago today at the age of 70. He was the uncle of Jack Tunney, who took over Maple Leaf Wrestling after Frank’s death. Ilio DiPaolo, the biggest pro wrestling regional star ever in Buffalo and also well known for the Italian Restaurant DiPaolo’s (which still exists today after 61 years), died 21 years ago today at 68. Mack York was 90 when he died ten years ago today. Bob Bruggers was 80 when he died two years ago today. So this week’s Observer in 2024 had the story on the 1972 Class of Verne Gagne and Billy Robinson trainees, which included Bruggers, Ric Flair, Ken Patera, Iron Sheik, Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell. The two expected to be the biggest stars were Patera and Bruggers, who was a high school basketball legend and former NFL player. (thanks to Tony Richards)

— CNN aired a documentary last night on the life of Ted Turner. There was no mention of pro wrestling in the documentary.

Trick Williams on possible Carmelo Hayes match: ‘Let’s see what happens’

Could a match between Trick Williams and Carmelo Hayes happen again? It’s possible.

During the WWE Backlash post-show, fans in the background began to chant for the former United States Champion as Williams and Lil Yachty sat with the post-show panel following his win against Sami Zayn. Williams reacted to the crowd, not dismissing another future match between the two.

“Y’all wanna see Trick versus Melo?” he asked the crowd, which responded positively. “The people have spoken. I mean, shoot. Let’s see what happens.”

“Melo can get it too,” Yachty added.

The two friends have a long history

Williams and Hayes have an extensive history with one another, with Williams first being introduced as Melo’s associate years ago in NXT. Hayes eventually turned against his former friend leading to a bitter rivalry that lasted months. Williams eventually emerged as one of NXT’s biggest stars following the feud, winning the NXT Championship as well as the TNA Championship during his time on the brand.

Hayes and Williams have already met on the main roster, with the former beating the latter in an Elimination Chamber qualifying match back in February. Hayes hasn’t been on television since losing a United States title rematch to Sami Zayn on SmackDown prior to WrestleMania 42.

Jacob Fatu assaults Roman Reigns following WWE Backlash loss

Jacob Fatu lost, but was standing tall at the end of WWE Backlash.

Throughout his match against Roman Reigns on Saturday in Tampa, Fatu attempted to use the Tongan death grip, something he had established over the course of the last few weeks as a devastating move that could end Roman Reigns’ short run with the World Heavyweight Championship. Despite this, Reigns held on while caught in the hold, managed to send Fatu into an exposed turnbuckle nearby, then scored the win with a spear.

But Fatu wasn’t done after the match, immediately putting the Tongan death grip back on. The referee attempted to stop the assault, but Fatu laid him out then attacked Shane Helms and Adam Pearce who had tried to intervene. Fatu put the hold on again until more officials came in, eventually letting go. He started to leave, but then came back to the ring again and applied it once more. After he finally stopped, he grabbed the World Heavyweight title and held it high to close out the show.

Post-match comments

After the match, Fatu cut a promo on the stage, saying it’s not about how you start but how you finish and pointed out he had left Reigns a mess in the ring.

Reigns, however, saw things differently. In the opening minutes of the post-show, Reigns shared his feelings toward his relative in blunt terms.

“This is why we should have never let Jacob into this family,” Reigns told Cathy Kelley on stage. “You don’t belong here, Jacob. There is no order with you. This is your last night here.”

WWE reveals new event, championship named after John Cena

The John Cena Classic is coming.

John Cena revealed on Saturday during WWE Backlash that a brand new event and championship would be coming to WWE, the John Cena Classic. This event would feature both NXT and WWE stars doing battle with the intention of winning the new John Cena Classic Championship. 

Cena explained that he would look for a certain level of excellence as he is personally putting his name on the project. He also emphasized that the audience will vote to crown the champion of the event. Every participant will qualify, meaning that even if someone loses, their hustle could get them the championship.

The WWE legend said he hoped to do this event for a long time to come and thanked the likes of Oba Femi for making something like this a reality. He also thanked Tampa Bay before sending it to the main event between Jacob Fatu and Roman Reigns. 

Cena hyped up his announcement in the last week

In the week prior to Backlash, the Benchmark Arena in Tampa had advertised John Cena would be making an appearance. Cena confirmed the news shortly thereafter, saying his announcement at the show would “shock the very foundation of WWE” and would be ‘another defining moment of my WWE career.’

Once he arrived on Saturday, Cena put over his final match undercard at Saturday Night’s Main Event back in December, saying he was happy that the event was a showcase of the future. He put over stars like Sol Ruca, Je’Von Evans, and Oba Femi, saying they got the spotlight that night.

Danhausen & a mini clone defeat The Miz & Kit Wilson at WWE Backlash

Danhausen’s mystery tag team partner was…a mini.

When it was time to reveal Danhausen’s mystery opponent on Saturday during Backlash, Danhausen’s cloning machine from SmackDown emerged. When the chamber door opened, a mini version of Danhausen came out, which caused Danhausen’s opponents The Miz and Kit Wilson to become elated. Although the two men were stronger than their smaller opponent, the mini Danhausen showcased some excellent lucha-style offense, surprising both. 

At one point, the Danhausen clone re-entered the machine. The cloning device made noises and when the chamber door re-opened more minis arrived, overwhelming Miz and Wilson. Miz tried to use a fire extinguisher at one point, but instead set it on himself due to being cursed. The mini-hausen wiped out Wilson with a dive, allowing Danhausen to connect with a kick to The Miz for the win.

Who was the mystery tag team partner?

Bryan Alvarez is reporting that Mascarita Dorada from AAA was Danhausen’s main tag team partner.

He additionally notes that Danhausen face painting booths will be set up at future WWE events.

A mystery tag team partner

Danhausen has been feuding with both The Miz and Wilson for weeks, with the turning point coming a few weeks ago in an in-ring segment. The Miz initially seemed interested in becoming Danhausen’s mentor, but it ended up being a trap as both Miz and Wilson laid out Danhausen. SmackDown GM Nick Aldis then told Danhausen he could face the two at Backlash, but would need a tag team partner. Danhausen came up with the idea for a clone after The Miz told him the only way he’d find a tag team partner is if he cloned himself.

WWE Backlash live results: Roman Reigns vs. Jacob Fatu, IYO SKY vs. Asuka

Date: May 9, 2026
Location:
  Benchmark International Arena in Tampa, FL

***************

Show Recap — 

COUNTDOWN SHOW 

Wrestlers were shown arriving. Triple H was shown, too, and he was booed by fans outside the arena watching the pre-show. Everyone else was cheered. 

Michael Cole, Big E, Corey Graves and Peter Rosenberg hosted the first portion of the pre-show. I believe this would be Big E’s first live appearance since the departures of Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods. 

There was a sit-down interview with Seth Rollins. They were open about Rollins turning 40 soon, and he acknowledged he may not be doing this much longer. 

Fans chanted, “New Day rocks” as Big E talked about Rollins. He ignored it.

Jacob Fatu cut a backstage promo. He said he would kick Roman Reigns’ ass. Cole demonstrated the Tongan Death Grip on Rosenberg, who passed out. Rosenberg was pretending, unfortunately. 

Cathy Kelley interviewed Sami Zayn. He calmly stated that he didn’t appreciate people, including Kelley, disrespecting him, and it was Trick Williams who enabled them to do so. Zayn planned on winning the US title back. 

Because Backlash is held in Tampa, there was an FCW video package, which included interview clips of Bayley, Charlotte Flair, Rollins, Big E, and Sheamus. They also credited Dusty Rhodes, particularly when it came to wrestlers learning promos. Triple H was credited with transforming the old FCW into the new, shiny Performance Center. 

The Usos showed up to the panel to continue the FCW discussions. The fans were excited to see Jimmy and Jey. They also spoke briefly about tonight’s world title match.

The Miz and Kit Wilson told Kelley that they would get rid of Danhausen tonight. Byron Saxton interviewed Danhausen and asked for a hint about his partner. Danhausen warned him not to ask that question again, or else he’d be cursed. 

They counted down the top ten Roman Reigns title defences. Not included in that list was Reigns beating both Edge and Daniel Bryan at WrestleMania 37. 

Sonya Bryson-Kirksey sang the American national anthem. 

**********

BACKLASH 2026 RESULTS

Wrestlers arrived, the show intro aired, fireworks exploded in Tampa, and it’s time for the opening match. Michael Cole and Wade Barrett are tonight’s announcers. They didn’t waste time getting going, as the opening match began at 6:07 pm local time.

On the pre-show, they mentioned repeatedly that Seth Rollins was on the verge of turning 40, and he acknowledged that he wouldn’t be doing this forever. Bron Breakker, obviously, is a guy looking to take his place. Barrett said that seems to be the theme tonight (along with Jacob Fatu/Roman Reigns and Trick Williams/Sami Zayn). 

Seth Rollins vs. Bron Breakker (w/ Paul Heyman) 

They battled back and forth and fought around ringside, but Breakker cut Rollins off in the ring with a suplex and took over. The crowd was really behind Rollins. 

Breakker cut him off again by hitting a running shoulder tackle and multiple German suplexes. (With Brock Lesnar gone, at least for now, I wonder if Heyman suggested that Breakker start using this move more.) 

Rollins bit Breakker’s face out of desperation while on the top rope, but it wasn’t enough because Breakker hit a Frankensteiner anyway for two. With Rollins outside the ring, Breakker tried a running sneak attack, but Rollins superkicked him out of mid-air. 

Rollins hit a clothesline back in the ring for two. Rollins set up for a curb stomp, but Breakker got up to his knees, so Rollins hit a knee strike instead for two. (Rollins seemed to say something to Breakker as he made the cover, so I’m not sure if this spot got screwed up, but it looked fine.) 

Rollins went for the stomp, but Breakker blocked it by simply catching his foot. Breakker hit a press slam gutbuster and went for a spear, but Rollins kicked him to block it. 

Rollins tried a tilt-a-whirl into a DDT or a Pedigree attempt, but he slipped and fell down by accident. It seemed like they couldn’t get on the same page on the spot, but Breakker made up for it by immediately hitting a standing moonsault for two. 

Rollins responded with a buckle bomb, but Breakker popped right back with a clothesline. The crowd chanted, “This is awesome.” Rollins wound up outside the ring, leaning against the announce table, so Breakker hit a flying clothesline off the apron. 

Breakker went to the top rope, but Rollins met him there and hit a superplex. Rollins tried to transition into the Falcon Arrow, but Breakker hit the Falcon Arrow instead for a nearfall. (The crowd popped big for that.) 

Breakker hit another Frankensteiner moments later. He tried another, but Rollins landed on his feet and fired up as Breakker looked on in disbelief. Rollins hit a superkick and a Pedigree. 

Rollins followed with a curb stomp, but Heyman went on the apron to distract the referee. Rollins smiled and grabbed a steel chair, realizing what was coming. 

Austin Theory and Logan Paul tried a sneak attack, but Rollins attacked them with the chair. He gave Theory a curb stomp and chased Paul to the back. 

Rollins sprinted back into the ring but was met with a Breakker spear for a nearfall. Breakker went for another spear, but Rollins countered it into a Pedigree (which didn’t look great). 

Rollins went for a stomp off the ropes, but Breakker speared him out of the air. Breakker followed with another spear for the pinfall win. 

— Cole called this the biggest win of Breakker’s career and stated, “Bron Breakker has arrived.” 

Match result: Bron Breakker defeated Seth Rollins (21:25)

This was a strong match despite some miscommunication in the middle, and it helped that the crowd was hot for the whole thing. It was nice to see Breakker go over; I was expecting Rollins to win after weeks of Breakker getting the better of him. Rollins has a bit of an out after the Vision got involved, so this isn’t over. 

******** 

Cathy Kelley interviewed Trick Williams in Gorilla. He said he was the puppetmaster, and this was his world. The time for games was over, and Sami Zayn would find that out tonight. 

United States Championship match: Trick Williams (c) (w/ Lil Yachty) vs. Sami Zayn

Williams booted Zayn in the corner to the cadence of “Whoop that Trick.” Zayn rolled to the outside to recover and chucked Williams into the steel steps when he joined him. Zayn was about to use the steel steps as a weapon, but stopped when Lil Yachty got in the way. 

Zayn hammered away at Williams in the ring. Fans booed this, and Zayn smirked while looking around in confusion. A few fans chanted for Zayn, but they were drowned out by chants of “Sami sucks,” and Zayn looked around at them again. 

Williams fought back with an upkick and neckbreaker. They traded counters until Williams hit a Book End for two. Zayn responded later with a sunset flip powerbomb off the ropes for two. They traded counters again, but this time Zayn got the better of it and hit a Blue Thunder Bomb for two. 

Zayn feigned a knee injury after springboarding off the ropes. Williams waited a moment before going after him, and Zayn caught him in a small package for two. Lil Yachty argued with the referee, and the distraction allowed Zayn to hit Williams with a candy cane kendo stick for a nearfall. 

Zayn aggressively booted Williams until the referee stopped him for some reason. As the ref checked on Williams, Lil Yachty hit Zayn with the kendo stick, and Williams followed with a Trick Kick for a nearfall. 

They wound up outside, and Zayn decked Yachty with a right hand. Yachty went down like a man who’s never taken a bump in his life (not an insult). Zayn also hit him with a kendo stick. 

Williams went after Zayn, but Zayn gave him a DDT onto the top of the steep steps. Before entering the ring, Zayn gave an unsuspecting Lil Yachty a Helluva Kick into the barricade. (I laughed, especially when Lil Yachty went down awkwardly again.) 

Back in the ring, Zayn went for a Helluva Kick, but Williams dodged it and hit a Trick Shot for the pinfall win. 

— Lil Yachty quickly recovered from Zayn’s finisher and joined Williams in the ring to celebrate. He tossed cash into the air. 

Match result: Trick Williams defeated Sami Zayn to retain the United States Championship (12:45)

This match was alright. They worked around Williams’ limitations as best they could. The crowd liked Williams, and they resented Zayn. 

Zayn has lost two in a row to Williams, so he’ll have to find something else to do now. 

******** 

The Miz and Kit Wilson entered first, and there was a long video package to explain why this match was happening. 

Danhausen entered on his custom vehicle and walked over to the cloning machine box to reveal his partner. The box opened, and a little person dressed as Danhausen popped out. They entered the Danhausen-mobile and rode around ringside. They entered the ring, and Miz laughed at Danhausen’s partner. 

The crowd seemed to play along during the entrance, but there was a smattering of boos when the bell rang and the match actually started with this man as Danhausen’s partner.

Danhausen & Mini-hausen vs. The Miz & Kit Wilson

The Danhausen clone could actually wrestle and used a tilt-a-whirl leg scissors takedown to knock Miz out of the ring. This cheered up the paying audience. 

The heels took control after posting Danhausen. They beat up little Danhausen for a while until he hit a springboard moonsault to knock down Wilson. Danhausen made a hot tag and ran wild on both guys, and his offence included a German suplex on Wilson and a tornado DDT on Miz. 

Danhausen hit a running boot on Wilson, but he wasn’t the legal man. Miz booted Danhausen into the corner, so little Danhausen tagged himself in and wiped out both heels with a suicide dive. Mini-hausen chased Wilson up the ramp, but Wilson kicked him in the head and shoved him back into the box. 

The cloning box percolated and reopened, and about five or six more little Danhausens entered. The original clone gave Wilson an airplane spin. He tried to curse Wilson, but Wilson held up a mirror, so Mini-hausen wound up cursing himself. Miz gave him a Skull Crushing Finale, but Danhausen broke up the cover. 

Danhausen tagged in and gave Miz a Thesz press (at least he tried to). Miz tried to use a fire extinguisher, but he was cursed, I guess, and it went off in his face and in his partner’s. 

Mini-hausen wiped out Wilson with a dive, and Danhausen hit Miz with a pump kick for the pinfall. 

— Cole said, “This is wrestling!” and Barrett vehemently disagreed, asking, “What happened to the business I love?” 

Match result: Danhausen & Mini-hausen defeated The Miz & Kit Wilson (11:38) 

This nonsense match was longer than every women’s match on both nights of WrestleMania 42. 

********

They announced a two-night AAA Triplemanía in September (over two non-consecutive nights). 

There was a commercial for Riyadh season. 

IYO SKY vs. Asuka

Kairi Sane did not appear. The post-match could leave people speculating on Asuka’s future. 

The match started with chants of, “We want Kairi.” It wasn’t super loud at first, but it got much louder as Asuka controlled the opening moments of the match. 

Sky fired up with some offence, which got the crowd to focus on the match instead. Asuka took control after driving Sky’s head into the ring post. The crowd chanted for Sky to get back into the match before once again chanting for Kairi Sane. (The chants pretty much stopped after this.)

Asuka hit kicks to the chest until Sky blocked one and hit a double foot stomp. Sky followed with a back elbow, an uppercut, a missile dropkick, and a running meteora in the corner for two. Asuka responded with strikes of her own and a knee strike for two. 

Sky hit a German suplex into a bridging cover for two. Asuka tried an armbar, but Sky quickly escaped. They traded kicks, and both women went down. Asuka tried an armbar again, but Sky slipped out and applied her own version of the Asuka Lock until Asuka got a rope break. 

Asuka went to the top, but Sky hit an uppercut and hurricanrana. However, Asuka rolled through into a cradle for a nearfall. Sky avoided a running hip attack and dropkicked Asuka out of the ring. Asuka blocked a dive and placed Sky on the announce table. 

While standing on the announce table, Asuka tried to mist Sky, but Sky held up Barrett’s laptop to block it. Sky tripped Asuka and hit a flying crossbody off the table. The crowd chanted for Sky as she hit an Asai moonsault. 

Asuka dodged a moonsault and locked in the armbar. Sky countered it, but Asuka caught her in the Asuka Lock. It looked like Sky was about to pass out, but she just barely caught Asuka in a cradle for two. 

Asuka blocked a kick and hit a German suplex. However, Sky blocked a kick moments later and hit a German suplex of her own. Sky followed with a running corner meteora and a moonsault for the pinfall win. 

— Sky bowed to Asuka after the match. Asuka broke down in tears and gave Sky a big hug. They embraced and Asuka held up Sky’s hand. 

That’s interesting. 

Match result: IYO SKY defeated Asuka (18:06)

A really good match that built as it went. 

******** 

Steve Keirn and Dan Spivey were in the crowd, along with members of the Tampa Bay Lightning, who have some extra time on their hands. 

John Cena’s announcement 

Cena entered. He said he had to consider what the next stage of his career would be. The crowd chanted, “One more match,” and Cena said he knew that was coming. He thought a lot about his final match and how it went. 

Cena was happy with it and happy with the event being a showcase of the future. He wanted his final opponent to earn the spot, and that’s what happened. 

That night gave a spotlight to some of the new NXT stars like Sol Ruca, Je’Von Evans, and Oba Femi. (Femi got a big reaction.) Cena was impressed with Femi and his win over Brock Lesnar. 

Cena was so happy with how that night went that it led to his announcement tonight: the John Cena Classic. 

Over one evening, the best of today would face the best of tomorrow. Members of WWE and NXT would battle for the chance to win a new championship. The championship would have Cena’s name on it, and he would strive to make the event a memorable one. 

Cena also announced that fans would vote to determine the champion. During this showcase event, even if a wrestler didn’t win their match, they could win over the fans with their performance, and that wrestler could still be voted by the fans to become the new champion. 

Cena was excited and wanted to make this an annual event. He thanked the company for making this happen and thanked the fans for their support.

(To summarize, there will be an event with matches where the actual results don’t matter, only the individual performances, because a fan vote will determine the winner. At least, the results will matter as much as the fans determine they do. It doesn’t really sound like a title that will be defended; rather, an annual trophy like the Andre the Giant battle royal, but we’ll see. The live fans cheered the pandering announcement. It certainly different.) 

******** 

World Heavyweight Championship match: Roman Reigns (c) vs. Jacob Fatu

Reigns knocked down Fatu with a shoulder tackle and posed to the crowd, but Fatu immediately got to his feet and stared down Reigns. Fatu no-sold a clothesline and knocked Reigns out of the ring. Fatu went for a dive, but when it seemed like Reigns blocked it, Fatu applied the Tongan Death Grip instead. 

Fatu let go of the hold because they were outside the ring. When Fatu went after him again, Reigns wrenched him against the ropes. Reigns drove Fatu’s hand into the ring post to prevent him from doing the move again. There were loud duelling crowd chants. 

Reigns hit clotheslines in the corner, but Fatu stopped it by simply grabbing Reigns’ arm. Fatu hit a clothesline and drove Reigns shoulder-first into the ring post. Fatu missed a corner splash, and Reigns came back with more clotheslines and a big boot. 

Reigns hit a Superman punch, but Fatu kicked out at one and popped right to his feet. Fans chanted for Fatu, who no-sold Reigns’ offence before hitting a clothesline and a senton. Fatu headbutted Reigns ten times in the corner and hit a running hip attack. 

Fatu set up for another hip attack, but Reigns exploded out of the corner with a Superman punch for two. They went to the outside, where Fatu powerbombed Reigns through the announce table. Fatu rolled Reigns back into the ring, but Reigns speared him for a nearfall. 

Reigns went for another spear, but Fatu countered into a pop-up Samoan drop. The crowd went crazy as Fatu followed with the Mighty Moonsault, but Reigns kicked out. 

Fatu went for a senton bomb, but Reigns got his knees up to block it. They slowly got to their feet and traded right hands. Fatu got the better of the exchange as Reigns fell into the corner. Fatu immediately hit consecutive running hip attacks. 

Fatu applied the Tongan Death Grip. Reigns appeared to be going out, but he fired up and put his fingers in Fatu’s eyes. Reigns shoved Fatu into the corner as he did, and the referee was knocked down (he was only dazed, not knocked out). 

Fatu tried a pop-up Samoan Drop, but Reigns countered with a Superman punch, and he followed with a spear for a close nearfall. (This was one of those nearfalls that was probably a three, but it wasn’t the finish, so the ref held up the count.) 

Fatu applied the Death Grip, and Reigns held onto the top turnbuckle for leverage. The buckle cover came off in the process. Fatu still held the Death Grip, but Reigns shoved his head into the exposed buckle and followed with a spear for the pinfall win. Reigns retains. 

— Fatu attacked Reigns after the match and put him in the Death Grip. The ref tried to stop him, so Fatu gave him a Samoan drop. 

Officials ran out to stop Fatu, but he superkicked Shane Helms and shoved Adam Pearce out of the ring. Fatu put Reigns in the hold again as five officials desperately tried to stop him, and he eventually let go. 

Fatu left the ring, but he returned to put Reigns in the hold again. Fatu let go of the hold and held the title belt up high as the show ended. 

Match result: Roman Reigns defeated Jacob Fatu to retain the World Heavyweight Championship (18:03)

This was a really good match. On some level, we’ve probably seen a few too many Reigns main events, but Fatu comes across as totally unique from everyone else on this show, so this felt different, and he should really win the title at some point. 

WWE Backlash 2026 ticket update ahead of show tonight

WWE Backlash 2026 takes place tonight from Tampa’s Benchmark International Arena, and the latest ticket numbers have been released by WrestleTix. As of writing, 14,220 have been distributed for tonight’s card, with the cheapest ticket available (Standard Admission) currently priced at $83.95.

The number is way up from the last time WWE ran a show at the venue, but that was a Live Holiday Tour event on 12/27/2025 where they managed to move 7,442 tickets.

WWE Backlash 2026 – Confirmed Match Card

Here is the full card for tonight’s show:

#MatchStipulationChampionship
1Roman Reigns (c) vs. Jacob FatuSinglesWorld Heavyweight Championship
2Trick Williams (c) vs. Sami ZaynSinglesWWE United States Championship
3Seth Rollins vs. Bron BreakkerSinglesn/a
4Iyo Sky vs. AsukaSinglesn/a
5Danhausen & Mystery Partner vs. The Miz & Kit WilsonTag Teamn/a

John Cena hypes Backlash as another ‘defining moment’ in WWE career

John Cena isn’t doing anything to cool down the hype for his appearance at WWE Backlash.

At tonight’s PLE in Tampa, Florida, Cena is set to deliver what he’s promised will be history-making news. He’s said the announcement will “shock the very foundation of WWE” for both wrestlers and fans. There’s been no confirmation of what Cena’s announcement will be, but it’s expected to have something to do with the new Club WWE membership program that the company is introducing.

Cena sent out one more tweet before Backlash stating that tonight will be another defining moment of his time in WWE.

“My time in @WWE has been filled with defining moments. We’re hours away from what will certainly be another,” he wrote. “C U Tonight at #WWEBacklash!”

Club WWE was first announced last month, with fans who sign up set to receive benefits like exclusive ticket pre-sales, merchandise collections, and bonus WWE content. There will be an annual fee for the gold tier, but WWE has not disclosed the price as of now. Sign-ups for the program are not officially open yet.

Since retiring from the ring in December 2025, Cena has shifted into an ambassadorial role for WWE. He’s been the promotional face of Club WWE’s launch, along with hosting both nights of WrestleMania 42.

Backlash begins at 6 p.m. Eastern time tonight. Here is the announced card:

WWE Backlash 2026 (Saturday, May 9) —

  • World Heavyweight Champion Roman Reigns defends against Jacob Fatu
  • IYO SKY vs. Asuka
  • Danhausen and a mystery partner vs. The Miz & Kit Wilson
  • John Cena delivers an announcement
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bron Breakker
  • United States Champion Trick Williams defends against Sami Zayn

WWE Backlash 2026 ticket update following fan reaction to WrestleMania prices

WWE Backlash 2026 is set to take place this weekend from the Benchmark International Arena in Tampa, FL. According to the latest report from WrestleTix, 12,234 of the 13,737 allocation have been shifted as of writing, leaving around 1,503 left available to purchase.

The number is way up from the last time WWE ran a show at the venue, but that was a Live Holiday Tour event on 12/27/2025 where they managed to move 7,442 tickets. 3 new upper tier sections have been added to boost the available number of seats available, but it is still way below the full capacity of the stadium (18,069).

There has been a lot of….erm….backlash, to the price of tickets for WWE events, especially over the past year. Speaking at a recent investors call, Mark Shapiro noted that TKO has fielded investor questions “about WWE demand and the state of creative, driven by online commentary and the year-over-year WrestleMania ticket sales performance,” saying they weren’t concerned about the sales as it was “unrealistic” to expect WrestleMania 42 to surpass what 41 did.

“As it relates to the creative, there will always be periodic fan dissatisfaction around creative execution, commercial load, and celebrity usage. We listen to all the feedback. We do not turn a deaf ear, but these are not new criticisms,” Shapiro added.

Although the tickets for this show are far lower than ‘Mania 42, with the cheapest ticket right now being $94.95 (down from $101.30), it’s still a big cost in general following the biggest weekend in the company’s calendar. One Redditor made the point perfectly, saying “Much like WrestleMania, there are still plenty of tickets left for Backlash just days before it kicks off in Tampa. The difference is WWE doesn’t seem willing to address the obvious issue—pricing. When lower-level seats won’t drop below $260, it’s hard to justify. I’d honestly like to go since it’s only about a two-hour drive for me, but after what I already spent on WrestleMania weekend, there’s nothing about these prices that makes the trip appealing.”

WWE Backlash 2026 Card

Here is the card for WWE Backlash 2026 as it stands:

  • Roman Reigns vs. Jacob Fatu for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship
  • Trick Williams vs. Sami Zayn for the WWE United States Championship
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bron Breakker
  • IYO SKY vs. Asuka
  • Danhausen and a mystery partner vs. The Miz and Kit Wilson

WWE Backlash 2026 Odds: Reigns vs Fatu, Danhausen mystery partner and more

WWE Backlash 2026 takes place this weekend (Saturday May 9), and the current betting odds for the show are starting to paint a pretty clear picture of what we can expect on the night.

Here are the current odds for Backlash, including Roman Reigns vs Jacob Fatu, Trick Williams vs Sami Zayn and Iyo Sky vs Asuka:

Roman Reigns vs Jacob Fatu Odds

Reigns originally opened at a staggering -3000 to retain the World Heavyweight Championship. By Tuesday, the line had drifted to -700, and MyBookie now lists him at -900. The Fatu money has moved despite the gap, which probably signals bettors expecting something like a Solo Sikoa or Usos run-in DQ finish rather than a clean title change.

MatchFavoriteUnderdogImplied probability (favorite)
World Heavyweight ChampionshipRoman Reigns -900Jacob Fatu +50090.0%
US ChampionshipTrick Williams -1000Sami Zayn +55090.9%
SinglesIyo Sky -1000Asuka +55090.9%
SinglesSeth Rollins -120Bron Breakker -120~52.4%
TagDanhausen & Partner -5000Miz & Kit Wilson +120098.0%

Seth Rollins vs Bron Breakker Oddss

Both men in this one sit at -120, so a true pick’em. Breakker returned at WrestleMania to cost Rollins his match against Gunther, which almost telegraphs Breakker going over here. But Rollins lost at Mania, has been fairly adrift since The Vision splintered, and there’s an expectation that Rollins might be facing Reigns at SummerSlam.

Iyo Sky vs Asuka Odds

Sky’s number has moved really hard in the last few days. She opened at -400 and has moved up to -1000. The Kairi Sane release gutted some of the storyline payoff here, but Sky is expected to take this one and the market reflects that.

Danhausen’s mystery partner odds

CM Punk is the heavy favorite to be Danhausen’s mystery partner following his Mania classic with Reigns and his history with the former Very Nice, Very Evil AEW star. Cena at +2000 is interesting as he will be at Backlash, but he is retired and seems intent on keeping it that way.

PartnerOddsImplied probability
CM Punk-20066.7%
Joe Hendry+20033.3%
Mr. Iguana+30025.0%
Jelly Roll+40020.0%
Carmelo Hayes+50016.7%
John Cena+20004.8%
Stephen A. Smith+50002.0%

Major WWE star the odds on favorite to be Danhausen’s tag partner at WWE Backlash 2026

Danhausen has been looking for a tag team partner to join him at WWE Backlash 2026 to face The Miz and Kit Wilson. According to odds from MyBookie, Punk is -200 to appear as Danhausen’s mystery tag team partner on the night.

Punk is not currently confirmed for any other matches on the card, so there is a good chance that he ends up being the tag partner. Danhausen and Punk have a longstanding friendship going back years and Punk was one of the major voices backstage pushing to bring the Very Nice, Very Evil character into the company, so it’s not out of the question that he could help put over the Danhausen character even more on the PLE this weekend.

Danhausen Mystery Tag Team Partner Odds

Other notable odds for the potential mystery tag team partner include:

  • CM Punk -200
  • Jelly Roll +400
  • John Cena +2000
  • Stephen A. Smith +5000

WWE Backlash Card

The card for Backlash on Saturday, May 9th currently stands as follows:

  • World Heavyweight Championship: Roman Reigns (c) vs. Jacob Fatu
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bron Breakker
  • United States Championship: Trick Williams (c) vs. Sami Zayn
  • Danhausen must find a partner against The Miz and Kit Wilson
  • IYO SKY vs. Asuka

Benchmark Arena, Tampa Venue Guide for WWE Backlash 2026

WWE Backlash 2026 takes place this weekend at Tampa’s Benchmark International Arena (Saturday, May 9, 2026), in what is effectively the post‑WrestleMania 42 fallout show. Fans heading to the building need to understand the arena’s hard numbers, seating tiers and more are inside this modern NHL barn.

Event basics

  • Date: Saturday, May 9, 2026
  • Local start time (bell time): 5:30 p.m. ET (doors typically 60–90 minutes before)
  • Branding: Backlash: Tampa, the 21st Backlash event, and the first major WWE PLE in Tampa since the ThunderDome‑era Hell in a Cell 2021.
  • Venue: Benchmark International Arena, home of the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Arena capacity and configuration

Benchmark International Arena is a multi‑purpose building that flexes its capacity depending on configuration. For WWE, the hard cam, entrance stage, and production kill some upper‑bowl real estate, but you’re still looking at a potential decent amount of people in the crowd.

MetricFigure / Notes
Max hockey capacity19,092 (Tampa Bay Lightning) 
Max basketball capacity20,500 
Max concert capacity21,500 
Estimated WWE Backlash configured cap~18,000–19,000 (stage and tech build‑out) 
Seating levelsPromenade, Club, Suite, Terrace levels 
VIP areasExecutive/Super Suites, RSM & Heritage Lofts, UPEXI Loge 

Best seats

Here are some of the best seats in the building:

Section typeExample section/rowTypical price band*Analyst take
FloorFloor 7Top of market Good for entrances and seeing everything, but sometimes being too low can actually hinder the experience if you’re more used to watching on TV.
Club Level228 Row BUpper‑mid tier Arguably the sweetspot: elevated enough to track pacing, close enough to actually see what’s going on in-ring.
Upper Level330 Row JValue tier (around mid‑$100s) Great budget option if you center yourself opposite hard cam and try to avoid the corners.

*Prices are dynamic and vary by marketplace and demand, but listings as low as approximately $130-$135 are appearing on major ticketing platforms for upper levels as of writing.

Logistics and in‑building experience

Benchmark International Arena’s renovation era left it with all‑padded seats, reworked concourses, and improved climate control that keeps both the ice surface (when in hockey mode) and crowd comfort in a good place. ADA seating is available at all levels, and there are multiple premium options, including suites and club experiences that can be arranged directly with the venue’s premium sales team.

Gates typically open 60-90 minutes before show time, which lines up with pre‑show panels and dark matches.

WWE reveals which Backlash matches will air live on ESPN 2

Two matches from WWE Backlash will air on ESPN 2.

During Raw, it was announced that Bron Breakker vs. Seth Rollins and Trick Williams vs. Sami Zayn for the United States title will air in the first hour of Backlash that will air on cable this Saturday. This continues a trend that began last month, when WWE aired the first hour of WrestleMania Saturday on ESPN 2 while the first hour of WrestleMania Sunday aired on ESPN.

WWE continued the build towards Seth Rollins and Bron Breakker on Monday’s Raw. Rollins was jumped by Breakker at the start of the show, but later retaliated during a Joe Hendry/Austin Theory match. However, a dive by Montez Ford distracted Rollins long enough for Breakker to retaliate with another spear.

Meanwhile, Williams granted Zayn a rematch for the United States title on Friday’s SmackDown after Zayn destroyed the Gingerbread Man outfit, “killing” the inanimate object in the process. The angle will continue with a funeral for the Gingerbread Man on this Friday’s show, just one day prior to their title match.

WWE Backlash (May 9)

  • World Heavyweight Champion Roman Reigns defends against Jacob Fatu
  • United States Champion Trick Williams defends against Sami Zayn (airing on ESPN 2)
  • IYO SKY vs. Asuka
  • Seth Rollins vs. Bron Breakker (airing on ESPN 2)
  • The Miz & Kit Wilson vs. Danhausen and a tag team partner TBD
  • John Cena promises “history-making news”

Is WWE Backlash 2026 on TV? How to watch via Live Stream, ESPN and Netflix

WWE Backlash 2026 is absolutely on TV in the United States and streams worldwide, but the platform depends on where you live and whether you want traditional cable, ESPN’s app, or Netflix’s global live service.

Is WWE Backlash 2026 on TV?

In 2026, Backlash: Tampa is the first Backlash to air under WWE’s new ESPN-era domestic deal. In the United States, the show’s first hour will be broadcast live on ESPN2 as a special linear TV lead‑in from 6 p.m. ET, giving casual sports fans an easy on‑ramp before the main card goes fully behind the streaming paywall.

Internationally, Backlash is not airing on local sports TV in most markets, because WWE has centralized distribution around Netflix’s global live infrastructure. That means if you’re outside the U.S. and your country is part of the official Netflix live‑event footprint, you’ll be watching Backlash via app, browser, or smart TV rather than a traditional channel.

How to watch via ESPN (U.S.)

For U.S. fans, ESPN Unlimited is the new home base for WWE Premium Live Events that used to live on Peacock. Backlash 2026 streams live on the ESPN app through an active ESPN Unlimited subscription, with the event promoted heavily as part of ESPN’s combat‑sports vertical.

On top of the standalone subscription, ESPN’s distribution tree pushes Backlash through several virtual cable bundles that authenticate into the ESPN app: Fubo, Hulu + Live TV, DirecTV Stream, Spectrum and Verizon’s TV offerings all carry ESPN Unlimited access tiers. The first hour airing on ESPN2 from 6 p.m. ET functions as a simulcast, but once that window closes, the remainder is exclusive to ESPN Unlimited and PPV providers.

U.S. viewing options breakdown

PlatformTypeBacklash access details
ESPN Unlimited appStreamingFull live PLE with subscription. 
ESPN2Cable / linearFirst hour live at 6 p.m. ET only. 
Fubo / Hulu + Live TV / DirecTV StreamvMVPD bundlesAuthenticate to ESPN app, then stream Backlash via ESPN Unlimited. 
Traditional PPV (cable/satellite)PPVStill listed in many systems as a standalone purchase. 

How to watch on Netflix (international)

Backlash 2026 is part of WWE’s global Netflix era, which covers every Premium Live Event outside the United States in most regions. Fans in countries including the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Spain, the Netherlands, New Zealand and many more can watch Backlash live on Netflix at no extra charge beyond their standard plan.

Selected Netflix territories for Backlash 2026

RegionExample countries listed for live WWE on Netflix
EuropeUK, Spain, Portugal, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Poland, Czech Republic, Greece. 
AmericasCanada, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador. 
Middle EastSaudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt. 
Asia-PacificAustralia, New Zealand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Hong Kong, Taiwan.