Jacob Fatu challenges Roman Reigns to title match at WWE Backlash

Jacob Fatu didn’t waste any time in calling his shot, challenging new champion Roman Reigns to a World Heavyweight title match for next month’s WWE Backlash.

Reigns came out to close Monday’s Raw after WrestleMania, flanked by The Usos. Reigns discussed the issues the three had with people like CM Punk and rapper/podcast Cam’Ron calling them out, but that’s not happening anymore with Reigns as champion.

Enter Fatu, fresh off his WrestleMania 42 Saturday win over Drew McIntyre in their unsanctioned match. He said he doesn’t just want what Reigns has, but he needs it. That was why he was challenging Reigns for the title at Backlash.

Reigns didn’t commit to the match, but gave Fatu a week to think about what he was doing, questioning whether he was ready for everything that comes with being the World champion. He and The Usos then departed, leaving the show on a bit of a cliffhanger.

While not official, it would appear Fatu has now moved over to Raw after being solely a SmackDown wrestler where he was a former United States Champion and Tag Team Champion. His only Raw match came in a dark match street fight against Cody Rhodes in October 2024.

The two men were on opposite ends of The Bloodline implosion from late-2024 but have never had a singles match. Reigns defeated CM Punk on WrestleMania 42 Sunday for the World Heavyweight title.

Backlash takes place on May 9 from Tampa, Florida.

May 5, 2008 Observer Newsletter: Triple H wins 12th WWE world title, Michael Hayes suspension fallout, Keiji Muto wins IWGP Championship

It’s the second of two retro issues being added to the archives this weekend as our run toward uploading the entire set of Wrestling Observer Newsletters between 1991 to current nears its end.

In this issue from May 5, 2008, Dave Meltzer recaps WWE Backlash which saw Triple H win his 12th WWE world title in a four-way elimination main event.

Dave also recapped the fallout and entire situation of Michael Hayes’ WWE suspension following some words toward Mark Henry.

The issue also recaps another big title win with Keiji Muto returning to NJPW to win the IWGP Championshp.

All that and all the wrestling & MMA news from nearly 6500 days ago in a much simpler time.

Subscribers can click here to read (and check out our entire archive)

WWE reveals date and location for Backlash 2026

WWE Backlash 2026 will have a different location than expected.

Last month, it was reported that WWE was planning to hold Backlash in San Juan, Puerto Rico. That won’t be the case, though, with Paul “Triple H” Levesque announcing today that Tampa, Florida will host the PLE. It’s set for Benchmark International Arena on Saturday, May 9.

Backlash will be the first WWE PLE to take place after WrestleMania 42, which is being held in Las Vegas this April. The road to WrestleMania officially kicks off with today’s Royal Rumble event.

“We are moments away from the Royal Rumble here in Saudi Arabia. An epic night, the road to WrestleMania begins. But when WrestleMania finishes, there’s a big event called Backlash,” Levesque said. “Here tonight I’m going to let you know that on Saturday, May 9 [at] Benchmark International Arena, Tampa, Florida — Backlash returns. It’s going to be big. So Tampa, Florida, I’ve just got one question: are you ready?”

Benchmark International Arena is the home of NHL team the Tampa Bay Lightning.

Last year’s edition of Backlash took place in St. Louis, Missouri and was headlined by John Cena vs. Randy Orton. The two years prior to that, the PLE was held in Lyon, France and San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Here’s a look at the updated WWE PLE calendar over the next several months:

  • Saturday, January 31: Royal Rumble in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
  • Saturday, February 28: Elimination Chamber at United Center in Chicago, Illinois
  • Saturday, April 18 and Sunday, April 19: WrestleMania 42 at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas, Nevada.
  • Saturday, May 9: Backlash at Benchmark International Arena in Tampa, Florida
  • Saturday, August 1 and Sunday, August 2: SummerSlam at US Bank Stadium in Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • Sunday, September 6: Money in the Bank at Smoothie King Center in New Orleans, Louisiana

Cody Rhodes details why he was so proud of WWE Backlash France match

When Cody Rhodes looks back at his Undisputed WWE Championship reign, he’s especially proud of the match he had against AJ Styles in France.

Rhodes and Styles met in their first ever singles-match against each other when WWE Backlash took place in Lyon, France in May 2024. It was the first title defense for Rhodes after toppling Roman Reigns — and he was on a mission to prove that he could be an effective babyface champion. A red-hot crowd, and having Styles as his opponent, made the show a special experience for Rhodes.

“There’s two things that lingered with me in terms of being champion that I was very proud of. I was very proud that immediately, right after WrestleMania 40, we jumped right to this PLE in France in front of the greatest crowd wrestling may have ever seen,” Rhodes told Undisputed in a new interview. “I shared the ring with AJ Styles, a wrestler’s wrestler, who is as good as it possibly gets–on any given day, AJ could be the number one wrestler for any company in the world.

“We told a story for that incredibly loud crowd, and I wanted to show that this run would be different. Traditionally, you’ll hear people say that it is hard to be a babyface champion. It’s hard to be a babyface in general. But I’ve been blessed to have this connection, especially this unique connection with our younger audience, which grows at a speed like no other.”

Rhodes added that the other thing that resonates with him about his run with the title is how his identity became being the champion.

“And something else I was really proud of is when the cameramen say, ‘Hey, Champ.’ Or Joe [Tessitore] says, ‘Hey, Champ.’ I’m proud of how my identity became that of the champion,” he said.

Rhodes held the Undisputed WWE Championship for one year before dropping the belt to John Cena at WrestleMania 41. The two will face off in a rematch for the title this August at SummerSlam. If Rhodes wins, he’ll head back to France as champion when WWE Clash in Paris takes place on August 31. Following Backlash in Lyon, this is the second time France has ever hosted a WWE PLE.

For subscribers: Dave Meltzer on WWE Backlash & Raw ratings on Netflix

Dave Meltzer has a new premium article available on the website for subscribers looking at the Netflix ratings for WWE Backlash and the May 5 edition of WWE Raw.

“The 5/5 episode of Raw, which was the show headlined by Jey Uso vs. Seth Rollins for the WWE title, did what Netflix listed as 5.7 million viewer hours and 2.8 million homes worldwide.

Backlash on 5/10 did not crack the top ten for the week meaning it did less than 1.6 million views.  The Backlash number would not include the U.S., since the show airs on Peacock. In the seven markets we chart outside the U.S., Backlash did a larger viewership than Raw in the U.K., Saudi Arabia and Mexico and did a lower number in Australia, New Zealand, India and Canada, so the number overall was likely in the same ballpark...

Subscribers click here to read the full article.

WOL: WWE Backlash fallout

Editor’s Note: This week’s show was recorded prior to the announcement Sabu had passed away.

WWE Backlash took place Saturday and Andrew Zarian breaks everything down on today’s Wrestling Observer Live.

That includes the main event featuring John Cena vs. Randy Orton, taking us back to 2004. He also discusses the standout performers, including Jacob Fatu and Lyra Valkyria.

He looks at this past week’s AEW TV shows and how they are using these smaller venues to their advantage, also giving what seems like weekly praise to the character work of Toni Storm.

Plus, thoughts on this week’s SmackDown, Mercedes Mone dropping the NJPW Strong Women’s Title,, and the best thing of the week!

Click here to listen or watch on YouTube

WOR: Backlash, McIntyre, Saudi and Punk, UFC results, more

Wrestling Observer Radio with Bryan Alvarez and Dave Meltzer is back with tons to talk about including the WWE Backlash PPV from Saturday, Drew McIntyre health update, John Cena’s last match, the 300th edition of Dynamite, Saudi Arabia and CM Punk, New Japan, Collision and UFC results, and tons more. A fun show as always so check it out~!

Timestamps:

Start: Tony Rocco passes away

6:36: WWE Backlash recap

31:29: John Cena’s final match location announced, Dynamite 300 location, Night of Champions announced for Saudi Arabia with CM Punk advertised

38:55: NJPW Resurgence notes

43:35: AEW Collision ratings & recap

58:48: UFC 315 notes

Right Click Save As

Triple H provides update on Drew McIntyre following WWE Backlash

Drew McIntyre is apparently fine following his match at Backlash.

During the WWE Backlash press conference, Triple H said that Drew McIntyre is “a little banged up” but totally fine following his four-way United States title match at Backlash where Damian Priest grabbed McIntyre and gave him the south of heaven off a platform onto tables below. McIntyre’s head missed the table, instead landing on concrete.

According to PWinsider, McIntyre was checked out by WWE medical and was being evaluated after the match. Bryan Alvarez is reporting that McIntyre was being checked for a concussion.

The spot at Backlash took both McIntyre and Priest out of the match, leaving LA Knight and Jacob Fatu by themselves. Knight was going for an elbow off the ring and into the announce table when Solo Sikoa interfered. The distraction allowed the debuting Jeff Cobb to attack Knight, throwing him back in the ring. A confused Fatu capitalized and scored the win over Knight to retain the title.

John Cena retains Undisputed WWE Championship at Backlash

John Cena is still Undisputed WWE Champion after escaping Backlash with a victory over his longtime rival Randy Orton.

At Saturday night’s PLE, Cena and Orton faced off one last time as part of Cena’s retirement tour. This final meeting had a different dynamic than all of their previous matches with Orton — the beloved babyface in his hometown of St. Louis — challenging Cena for gold. But a low blow and a belt shot secured the win for Cena to remain Undisputed WWE Champion.

The match lasted nearly 30 minutes and was full of finishing moves and ref bumps. Whenever Orton had the title won, the referee was knocked out and unable to count the pin in time. Orton let his frustration out at one point by RKOing SmackDown General Manager Nick Aldis and other officials as they were checking on a referee. He then went to punt Cena in the head, but R-Truth — who claims Cena is his “childhood hero” — ran out to plead with Orton.

Orton dropped Truth with an RKO, but that gave Cena time to low blow Orton and strike him with the Undisputed WWE Championship belt. The referee woke up and counted the pin for Cena.

After the match, Cena got on the microphone for a quick promo:

“Cut the damn music. I don’t need music, what I need is competition. And I sure as hell don’t need you,” he said to the fans. “Drink it in, St. Louis — because this is what the Last Real Champion looks like.”

This was the first title defense of Cena’s 17th WWE Championship reign. He is set to retire as an in-ring competitor in December of this year.

Jeff Cobb makes WWE debut at Backlash

Former NJPW star Jeff Cobb has officially arrived in WWE — and he’ll be playing a part in the next chapter of The Bloodline’s story.

Cobb made his WWE debut by helping Jacob Fatu retain the United States Championship at Backlash on Saturday night. Though Fatu got help from Solo Sikoa and Cobb, it did not appear that he wanted any assistance. The angle saw Fatu look confused at what was going on as the debuting Cobb obliterated LA Knight.

The title match was a fatal four-way with Fatu defending against Knight, Drew McIntyre, and Damian Priest. The latter two were taken out of the equation during the match when, after fighting in the crowd, Priest gave McIntyre a South of Heaven chokeslam through tables set up in a production area.

Knight then had Fatu in position for a diving elbow through the announce table, but Sikoa moved Fatu out of the way before Knight could jump. Knight tried to go after Sikoa but was laid out by Cobb, who blindsided him with a clothesline. With no disqualifications in a fatal four-way, Cobb beat down Knight and sent him back into the ring so Fatu could score the pin. Despite looking uncertain about Cobb’s involvement, Fatu hit a double-jump moonsault and pinned Knight to retain the U.S. title.

“That’s one of the biggest free agents on the planet,” Michael Cole said on commentary. “That’s Jeff Cobb.”

News first broke in March that the 42-year-old Cobb was expected to join WWE. His final match for NJPW took place on April 19. Cobb, who represented Guam as an amateur wrestler in the 2004 Olympics, is a former IWGP Tag Team Champion and NJPW World Television Champion. He’s also competed for Lucha Underground, ROH, and PWG in the past.

Fatu won the United States Championship from Knight at WrestleMania 41, and tonight was his first title defense.

WWE Backlash live results: John Cena vs. Randy Orton, Gunther vs. Pat McAfee

WWE Backlash heads to the Enterprise Center in St. Louis, Missouri, headlined by new WWE Champion John Cena defending against former champion and longtime rival Randy Orton.

This will be Cena’s first title defense since winning the title from Cody Rhodes at last month’s WrestleMania 41 and his first singles match against Orton since February 2017.

After winning it at WrestleMania 41, Jacob Fatu defends the United States title for the first time as he faces former champion LA Knight, Drew McIntyre and Damian Priest in a four-way.

New WWE Intercontinental Champion Dominik Mysterio defends for the second time since WrestleMania 41 as he faces Penta in a rematch from April.

WWE Women’s Intercontinental Champion Lyra Valkyria defends against former partner Becky Lynch after Lynch turned on her on the Raw after WrestleMania.

Following his attack against Pat McAfee at the Raw after WrestleMania, former WWE World Heavyweight Champion Gunther takes on the announcer in his first bout since the 2024 Royal Rumble match.

The pre-show begins at 5 PM Eastern with the main card kicking off at 7 PM Eastern on Peacock (U.S.) and Netflix (everywhere else).

**********

Countdown to Backlash

– Michael Cole, Big E, and Wade Barrett welcomed us to the Countdown show as various wrestlers were shown arriving to the arena ahead of tonight’s show.

– An interview Barrett conducted with Randy Orton earlier in the week was teased.

– After a video package on Lyra Valkyria defending her Women’s Intercontinental Championship, Jackie Redmond was shown backstage talking about remarks that both Lynch and Valkyria gave to her ahead of their match. We then went to Byron Saxton interviewing Valkyria herself.

– NXT’s Vic Joseph joined the panel to talk about Valkyria’s career progression. The discussion turned to Penta versus Dominik Mysterio shortly after.

– The panel recapped the events that led up to Gunther facing Pat McAfee tonight. Michael Cole reiterated that he was entitled to share his opinions without having to face any reprisal. He said that McAfee would not go down without a fight, even in defeat, as he wished McAfee the best of luck in his match tonight.

– LA Knight was interviewed backstage about his chances of winning the U.S. Championship Fatal Four-Way match later tonight. Following that, a special look at the history of WWE in video games was shown.

– Peter Rosenberg and Jackie Redmond replaced Cole and Barrett on the panel as the talk turned to the card for tonight’s show. We then went to Barrett’s sitdown interview with Randy Orton.

– Orton said that the John Cena of 2025 is “selfish” when asked to describe him in one word. He then talked about the first time he met Cena in Ohio Valley Wrestling two decades ago, before he discussed how the many battles with Cena were the most fun he had in his career. Now, in Orton’s mind, he believed that Cena was being selfish because he wasn’t thinking of others with his recent change in attitude. Orton promised that if given the chance, he’d punt Cena tonight before going on a retirement run of his own that would last 5-10 years, and he’d have fun going on that run.

– The panel talked about the U.S. Championship Fatal Four Way match, which was confirmed as the opening match for the evening before the focused switched to Penta vs. Dominik Mysterio for the Intercontinental Title.

**********

Backlash 2025

– Following the U.S. Anthem being sung, we were shown footage of various wrestlers arriving at the arena before our commentary team of Michael Cole and Wade Barrett welcomed us to the show proper ahead of our opener.

Fatal-Four Way for the United States Championship: Jacob Fatu vs. Drew McIntyre vs. LA Knight vs. Damian Priest

The bell rang with Knight and Fatu, as well as McIntyre and Priest brawling it out in their own separate skirmishes. The U.S. Champion was sent into the turnbuckle as Knight had control early.

McIntyre was taken down by a Samoan Drop from Fatu, before he got crushed with a running corner hip charge from the U.S Champion. As Fatu went up top, McIntyre raked at the eyes and looked to hit a superplex before Knight intercepted the Scotsman and hit him with repeated stomps. Knight then headed up top to attempt to slam Fatu, but got pushed aside. McIntyre showed impressive core strength and got himself back up to throw Fatu onto Knight, but the U.S. Champion recovered and unleashed a flurry on Priest and Knight. We then got Fatu getting blasted with a BFT from Knight, who then got thrown down with South of Heaven by Priest, followed by McIntyre’s Claymore on his hated rival. Priest fell onto Fatu, but McIntyre pulled him away as the count was made.

Knight’s BFT got countered, as McIntyre nailed him with a Future Shock DDT. This led to a Claymore on Knight, and it appeared we’d have a new U.S. Champion. That was until Priest pulled the referee at the last second before he could make the three count. The two bitter rivals brawled and sent each other crashing over into the timekeepers’ area.

Fatu and Knight were left in the ring as the U.S. Champion had his challenger dead to rights for a jumping moonsault, but Knight dodged at the last minute. A set of dual elbows from Knight nearly had the match won, but Fatu kicked out at two.

In the crowd, Priest and McIntyre fought as their fight escalated to a high platform. Priest dropped McIntyre with a South of Heaven chokeslam through a pair of tables in the ensuing melee. Back at ringside, Knight continued to dominate by throwing Fatu into the ringpost once more, as he then planted him onto the announce table. Knight headed up to the top rope and looked to have Fatu done and dusted with a diving elbow, until Solo Sikoa pulled Fatu out of harm’s way. As Knight stared down Sikoa, a mystery person attacked him before the assailant stepped over the barricade.

The assailant was revealed to be Jeff Cobb, who waylaid Knight before the challenger got thrown into the ring. As Fatu recovered, he stared down Cobb and Sikoa briefly before he entered the ring to continue the attack on Knight. One hip charge and moonsault later, and Fatu made the winning pin to retain his U.S. Championship.

Post-match, Fatu continued to stare down Sikoa and Cobb and appeared to leave on his own without the two.

Jacob Fatu def. LA Knight, Drew McIntyre, and Damian Priest to retain the United States Championship (Fatu pinned Knight)

Solid opening bout with lots of big meat being slapped around and Jeff Cobb’s surprise debut spicing things up. The interactions between champion Fatu and Cobb make it clear that there’ll certainly be a feud inevitably coming between these two down the line.

**********

Women’s Intercontinental Championship Match: Lyra Valkyria (c) vs. Becky Lynch

Lynch and Valkyria opened with a shoving contest, followed by the challenger keeping Valkyria grounded early on. Valkyria eventually recovered as we got a stalemate between these two.

Valkyria trapped Lynch in a swinging pendulum submission hold, as she then caught her in a surfboard stretch submission to maintain control against the veteran. Lynch got dropped with a dropkick from Valkyria, but she recovered to avoid a top rope attack from the Women’s IC Champion. Lynch continued to punish Valkyria to keep her grounded.

Valkyria stormed back with an impressive superplex, but Lynch kicked out in the nick of time. Lynch responded with a neckbreaker, but Valkyria kicked out. Valkyria got the better of Lynch and connected with a top rope legdrop. One, two, no! In the middle of the ring, a skirmish between champion and challenger turned into a duel of armbars that ended with Lynch seemingly having the Dis-Arm-Her locked in.

Lynch caught Valkyria with the Manhandle Slam, but the plucky Women’s I.C. champion managed to kick out at to, much to Lynch’s shock. Frustrated, Lynch headed to the timekeepers area to take a steel chair, but that was a distraction as she exposed the turnbuckle behind referee Jessika Carr’s back.

Lynch sent Valkyria into the middle turnbuckle as she hit another Manhandle Slam, but Valkyria kicked out yet again. Lynch tried to send Valkyria into the ringpost, but the referee saw it. In the ensuing scuffle, Lynch connected with Night Wing, but Lynch kicked out thanks to the referee taking too long.

After a pinfall exchange, Valkyria scored a flash rollup pin to retain. However, the Women’s I.C. Champion had no time to celebrate as Lynch snapped and locked Valkyria in the Dis-Arm-Her. The usual gaggle of former wrestlers, referees, and Adam Pearce made their way to the ring to stop Lynch’s rampage.

Lyra Valkyria def. Becky Lynch via pinfall to retain the Women’s Intercontinental Championship

A heck of a title bout that did not miss a step. Would not be against Lynch and Valkyria running back for the third time.

**********

Intercontinental Championship Match: “Dirty” Dominik Mysterio versus Penta

Lots of fast-paced offence to start us off with neither Dominik or Penta getting any sort of clear advantage, at least until Penta landed a Backstabber on his opponent for a two-count. Dominik secured the advantage as he sent Penta for a ride on the ropes, which then led to an impressive suicide dive turned into a DDT at ringside. Dominik sent Penta into the ring and landed a slingshot splash for another near-fall.

Dominik continued to have the command on Penta at this stage in the match. Penta fought out of a chinlock as he connected with a slingblade on the Intercontinental Champion. With Dominik on the outside, Penta headed up top and stepped on the top of the turnbuckle post itself as he connected with a splash on his champion opponent at ringside. In the ring, Dominik caught Penta and looked to connect with the Three Amigos, but Penta fought out of it. A 619 attempt from Dominik was dodged by Penta, who then delivered a crucifix bomb pin for the near-fall.

Dominik channeled his girlfriend Liv Morgan as he hit Penta with ObLIVion, but that was not enough to get the victory. The battle spilled onto the apron with Penta landing the Mexican Destroyer piledriver right on the apron! Carlito made his way down the ring at this point as Finn Balor and JD McDonagh entered. Some miscommunication between Balor and McDonagh led to the referee catching the Judgment Day duo in the act, prompting to a kickout. Penta responded in kind with a dive over the referee to take out Carlito and McDonagh. On the apron, Balor provided a distraction as El Grande Americano (who may or may not be Chad Gable) headbutted Penta, which gave Dominik the opening to connect with the Frog Splash to retain his coveted Intercontinental Championship.

Dominik Mysterio def. Penta via pinfall to retain the Intercontinental Championship

Decent match, but having yet another match conclude with interference after the opener had a similar finish seems rather disappointing and feels more at home on a weekly WWE show rather than a PPV. That said, it’s nice to see Dominik progress as an in-ring talent, and he got some nice moves in during this match, like the suicide dive/DDT combo.

**********

Gunther vs. Pat McAfee

Gunther started things off by pushing McAfee into the corner before the two sized each other up once more. Gunther nonchalantly threw McAfee from a headlock position as he then utilized his technical prowess to trap McAfee with an arm wrench. McAfee escaped and barely avoided a Gunther chop attempt with a dodge. McAfee answered with a headlock of his own as he got sent to the apron. McAfee responded to Gunther mocking him with an attempt at a strike (after slipping off the top rope), but got met with a clothesline from the Austrian.

McAfee tried to hit Gunther with some chops of his own, but got floored by a hard chop by Gunther. With McAfee prone in the corner, Gunther continued to punish him with his patented chops, which began to turn McAfee’s chest red. Gunther absorbed a punt kick to the back from McAfee and once again looked to have the upper hand.

McAfee hyped himself up as he tried once again to hit Gunther with chops, but he got dropped with a fierce boot to the face. Gunther taunted Cole and invited him to get into the ring to witness the brutality firsthand. McAfee recovered, but couldn’t maintain a second win as Gunther connected with a German suplex. Gunther tried to apply his sleeper hold, but McAfee attempted an escape. Another German suplex from Gunther kept McAfee’s comeback a fleeting one.

Gunther continued to play with his food as he put McAfee on the top rope and looked for an avalanche German suplex. McAfee managed to avoid that calamity, and tried for a moonsault. Gunther avoided it, and tried for a German suplex. McAfee landed on his feet and hit a series of punts on Gunther. That, however, wasn’t enough to even get a two-count as Gunther kicked out at one. McAfee and Gunther faced off in the middle of the ring and exchanged strikes until McAfee’s attempt at keeping Gunther floored was met with a powerbomb.

In the middle of the ring, McAfee was trapped in a Boston Crab by Gunther as Michael Cole got off his commentary seat and tried to will McAfee on. Gunther took notice and dragged Cole into the ring as he attempted to hit a powerbomb on the commentator. McAfee intervened with a boot, but was met with a boot from Gunther for his troubles. Cole grabbed onto Gunther’s feet as McAfee tried for a pin, but Gunther kicked out.

McAfee’s sleeper hold attempt was stopped as Gunther destroyed him with a lariat. Gunther caught McAfee with his patented sleeper hold and appeared to have it all wrapped up. McAfee struggled and tried to fight out of it, but simply could not escape as Gunther scored the victory via referee stoppage.

Post-match, Gunther appeared to give McAfee credit for his efforts in the match.

Gunther def. Pat McAfee via submission

I can’t quite put into words how I felt about this match, since this wasn’t really going to be a classic bout. In any case, this match was certainly one of the matches of all time. Gunther did the best he could and certainly played his role, and I can’t really say much about McAfee’s in-ring abilities (or lack thereof). In short, this felt like a match that lasted a bit too longer than it should’ve.

**********

Undisputed WWE Championship Match: John Cena vs. Randy Orton

As expected, Orton got a huge hometown reaction from the crowd inside the Enterprise Center, complete with the now-familiar singalong of “Voices” serenading Orton’s arrival to the ring for this main event.

Following the introductions, the bell rang as Cena and Orton locked up in the middle of the ring with a test of strength that nobody won out in. The two would then stare one another down as Cena offered a handshake, before he poked Orton in the eye. The Viper answered back with a shot of his own to Cena’s eye, which sent the WWE Champion outside to reassess the situation.

In the ring, Orton dropped Cena with a shoulder block as he then applied a headlock. Cena escaped, but got taken down with another shoulder block, which caused him to take a powder and attempt to walk out on the match. Orton ran him down and refused to let Cena escape. In the ring, Cena struck Orton with a surprise clothesline to gain control of this match. Orton fought back and caught Cena with a set of 20 punches in the corner.

Orton began to target the downed Cena with his patented stomps, followed by a knee drop to the face of the Champ. Cena reversed an Irish whip from Orton and trapped him in a sleeper hold. This led to a series of dueling sleepers from both men that ended with Orton delivering a back suplex on Cena as both men were left down and out in the ring. Cena recovered and hit his shoulder charges, spinout Protoplex, followed by the Five Knuckle Shuffle. Orton fought out of an AA attempt from Cena as he answered with a vintage powerslam. Cena countered a draped DDT attempt with a rollup, followed by the STFU locked in. Orton escaped the hold and connected with his trademark DDT to leave Cena out cold.

The Viper sized up his prey as he looked for the RKO, but Cena countered and attempted an Attitude Adjustment. Cena appeared to connect, but Orton countered it into a sort-of RKO as he was being dropped on his back. Once both men got back to their feet, we got an exchange of strikes between Orton and Cena. In the melee, Cena caught Orton with the Attitude Adjustment. One, two… Orton kicked out!

Cena tried for another AA, but Orton used the ropes to escape. Cena’s attempt at hitting the shoulder tackles was met with an RKO out of nowhere. Cena managed to roll out of harms way to avoid Orton pinning him. Orton tried to go for the Punt with Cena in position, but the Undisputed WWE Champion escaped and hit one more AA. However, Orton kicked out at 2.99999999 to keep this match going.

Cena mocked Orton’s pose and tried for a Punt of his own. Orton dodged, and looked for an RKO, but Cena pushed him right into the referee. Cena hit an AA on Orton and grabbed the WWE Championship belt from ringside. As Cena entered the ring, he got met with an RKO from Orton. One, two…. Cena kicked out! As Cena rolled out of the ring, Orton looked towards the commentary table and cleared it away with bad intentions on his mind. Cena once again pushed Orton into the referee, which sent him into the steel steps as a result.

Cena took Orton and put him on his shoulders, as he looked for an AA onto the table, but Orton escaped and turned the tables with an AA of his own to Cena. The table itself fell apart five seconds after after Cena kicked around while sprawled in pain. Orton looked around under the ring and found a table as he set it up next to the ring. Cena took advantage and once again tried the AA, but Orton escaped yet again and threw Cena with an AA through the regular table.

Inside the ring, Cena got himself up and was taken down by an RKO. As a referee ran down to make the count, Cena kicked out at two. Orton argued with the referee as Cena grabbed the WWE Championship belt. Orton hit an RKO on Cena, but there was no referee to make the count. SmackDown GM Nick Aldis and several officials ran down to the ring to survey the chaos, much to Orton’s irritation.

Orton snapped and dropped Aldis and the other officials with a barrage of RKOs, to the St. Louis crowd’s delight. Cena was again in position for a Punt, but R-Truth ran in to stop Orton at the last second. He got dropped with an RKO for his troubles. This allowed Cena to hit a low blow on Orton, followed by a shot with the title. As the referee crawled back to the ring, Cena made the pin and that’s it, over. The so-called “Last Real Champion” retains in the Backlash main event.

After the match, Cena took the microphone and had the music cut. He said that he didn’t need music, and he needed competition. Cena said that this is what the “Last Real Champion” looks like and despite the obvious set up for a surprise, the show just ended there.

John Cena def. Randy Orton via pinfall to retain the Undisputed WWE Championship

That got a bit overbooked towards the end, but it was the fun kind of overbooked, which did make the main event a decent way to end an otherwise okay show that felt like “Saturday Night Raw” at times. Of course, the main highlight of the night was the excellent Lynch/Valkyria Women’s I.C. Title match, but other than that, everything just felt like a “kinda there” moment.

It’s clear that the 5-match PLE format that the Paul Levesque-led WWE braintrust have adhered to is a double-edged sword. When the majority of the matches are solid, it elevates the show greatly. On the other hand, when the show is filled with 3-4 mediocre-to-decent matches, it ends up making the show fall a bit flat. Unfortunately, Backlash 2025 falls under that latter category.

WWE Backlash 2025 Live Stream: How to watch

WWE Backlash 2025 takes place tonight (Saturday May 10, 2025) live from the Enterprise Center in St. Louis, Missouri. As the first Premium Live Event following WrestleMania 41, Backlash will be setting the tone for the company as we head into the summer. For those who want to watch the event via live stream, we’ve got everything you need to know right here.

How to Watch WWE Backlash 2025 Live in the United States

In the United States, WWE Backlash 2025 will stream exclusively on Peacock. Subscribers to either the Premium or Premium Plus tiers can watch the event live at 7 p.m. ET / 4 p.m. PT. Even with the ad-free Premium Plus plan, live WWE events may still include commercials.

How to Watch WWE Backlash 2025 Live in the United Kingdom

For fans in the United Kingdom, WWE Backlash 2025 will be available to stream live on Netflix. A standard Netflix subscription, starting at ÂŁ4.99 per month, is required to access the event.

How to Watch WWE Backlash 2025 Live in Australia

Australian viewers can watch WWE Backlash 2025 live on Netflix. The event will be available in the early hours of Sunday, May 11, 2025. A standard Netflix subscription is needed to stream the event.

How to Watch WWE Backlash 2025 Live in Europe

In most European countries, including Germany, France, and Spain, WWE Backlash 2025 will stream live on Netflix. Fans can watch the event with their regular Netflix subscription, with coverage starting at 1 a.m. CET on Sunday, May 11, 2025.

How to Watch WWE Backlash 2025 Live in Japan

Japanese fans can stream WWE Backlash 2025 live on Netflix. The event will be available on Sunday, May 11, 2025, with the exact start time depending on local time zones. A standard Netflix subscription is required.

WWE Backlash 2025 Match Card Highlights

  • Undisputed WWE Championship: John Cena (c) vs. Randy Orton
  • Women’s Intercontinental Championship: Lyra Valkyria (c) vs. Becky Lynch
  • United States Championship – Fatal Four-Way Match: Jacob Fatu (c) vs. LA Knight vs. Damian Priest vs. Drew McIntyre
  • Intercontinental Championship: Dominik Mysterio (c) vs. Penta
  • Singles Match: Gunther vs. Pat McAfee

WWE Backlash predictions: Historical odds, predictable outcomes, Dominik’s mustache

Tonight’s WWE Backlash in St. Louis, Missouri, (Peacock in the U.S. & Netflix outside the U.S.) will be a highly predictable event with some of the longest odds in wrestling history, according to the oddsmakers.

Unsurprisingly, one of the heavy favorites is WWE Champion John Cena who has been given a 98% chance of retaining against Randy Orton. The other two percent is likely if Cena gets injured mid-match and they have to call an audible. I don’t think too many people believe WWE’s plan was for Cena to beat Rhodes and then lose it in his first defense, still many months away from his final appearance.

But the show is all built around the match, the second-ever last-ever bout between the two, and having it take place in Orton’s hometown.

Cena is not the only heavy favorite at Backlash, however. New United States Champion Jacob Fatu has also been given a 98% chance of retaining his title on Saturday in a fatal four-way match against LA Knight, Drew McIntyre, and Damian Priest. Fatu will likely win, but I don’t know how Las Vegas has decided him not retaining would be amongst the biggest upsets in wrestling history. 

Becky Lynch, Dominik Mysterio, and Gunther are all big favorites as well. Below are previews and predictions for each match at WWE Backlash 2025.

WWE Champion John Cena defends against Randy Orton

Cena heads into this one as a whopping -5000 favorite — often the unofficial cap for wrestling odds, although not always. 

To put this into perspective, Mike Tyson went into his fight with James “Buster” Douglas a -4200 favorite, and Ronda Rousey went into her fight with Holly Holm a -2000 favorite. So if Cena does tear a muscle mid-match, this will be among the biggest upset in combat sports history, only not really because it’s wrestling, but you get my point.

The only wrestling matches I can find that ever went over -5000 odds were some of the Undertaker’s WrestleMania matches during the streak and Rousey’s debut tag match at WrestleMania 34. A famous example of why betting on wrestling is not advised took place in 2014 when a man in the UK bet his life savings on the Undertaker to beat Brock Lesnar and lost £35,000.

Of course, everyone’s confidence in Cena comes from his storyline requiring him to retain the title until just before he’s about to retire. Each chapter of the story is going to end the same way, but it won’t necessarily take the same journey to get there. The story Cena and Orton tell in the match should be interesting with Orton as the babyface and Cena the heel, leading to a unique version of a match we’ve seen a billion times before.

I also wouldn’t be surprised if an angle is tacked onto the end to build to Cena’s next defense, although they might save that for TV.

Prediction: Cena retains

WWE Women’s Intercontinental Champion Lyra Valkyria defends against Becky Lynch

Lynch is currently listed as a -400 favorite to defeat Valkyria which I think is a pretty safe bet.

Valkyria defeated Lynch the last time they had a singles match which was for the NXT title at Halloween Havoc 2023. So, Lynch winning is the more likely move to keep the story moving forward with Valkyria winning it back in the eventual blowoff match.

Evidently, it was Lynch’s decision to turn heel, probably because she wants to work against a babyface Valkyria. It was also her decision to turn heel immediately after returning in 2021 for her run as “Big Time Becks.” Why does Lynch want to be a bad guy so much? Lynch wants to be a heel and Charlotte Flair wants to be a babyface, but it’s going to be a tall order to sell the fans on either of those.

Lynch will use dirty, underhanded tactics to defeat Valkyria and become the new Women’s Intercontinental Champion.

Prediction: Lynch wins the Intercontinental title

WWE United States Champion Jacob Fatu defends against LA Knight, Drew McIntyre and Damian Priest in a four-way match

There are a bunch of reasons why Fatu is most likely going to retain the title at Backlash and is a heavy favorite to do so:

  • Gigantic rising star
  • Everybody likes him
  • Just won the title at WrestleMania 41
  • Everyone else in the match has issues with each other
  • Winning the title doesn’t really do much for Priest, McIntyre or Knight at this point
  • He’s a werewolf

I just can’t get behind him being -5000 in a four-way match though. To the best of what I can find, there has never been this heavy of a favorite in a multi-person match. 

Maybe something happens between him and Solo Sikoa that leads to him not retaining. Who knows? 

If you said Fatu was a -2000 favorite, that would make sense. That’s still considered “a lock” for him to win. But saying that him not winning this match would be one of the largest upsets in wrestling history up there with Lesnar defeating Undertaker at WrestleMania 30 seems a little bizarre.

Even if I received an email from Triple H that said, “Off the record: Jacob Fatu is winning at Backlash. If this information is incorrect, I will agree to speak positively about AEW for a year,” I still wouldn’t put Fatu as a -5000 favorite. Maybe like -3000 if I got that email, but no more than that. 

Anyway, after all that, I’m still picking Fatu to win and retain.

Prediction: Fatu retains in what was, according to oddsmakers, one of the most predictable outcomes in wrestling history

Gunther vs. Pat McAfee

There is no reason for this to be anything other than a squash match.

Gunther is a -1000 favorite and the most likely reason for this bout happening is that it’s a chance for the company to rehab him after he lost clean to Jey Uso at WrestleMania 41. There’s also the possibility that Gunther continues his attack after the bell which could set up his next rivalry, possibly with Goldberg, depending on whether he’s cleared.

McAfee will get in a little bit of offense, and some hope spots, but will walk away with a heavily chopped chest in defeat and then maybe take a vacation so Corey Graves can come back to Raw. 

Prediction: Gunther

WWE Intercontinental Champion Dominik Mysterio defends against Penta

Dominik is listed as a -900 favorite to defeat Penta at Backlash.

He’s likely a heavy favorite because he just won the title and fans like him, or at least enjoy not liking him. His title win at WrestleMania felt almost like a thank you from WWE to him. Almost a “Hey, Rhea Ripley and Liv Morgan are bigger stars now than they were before they worked with you” kind of acknowledgment.

WWE doesn’t hesitate to beat Penta even though it appears they have him slotted as a star in the making. But, I’m going to go against the grain on this one and pick the underdog to score a huge upset. Admittedly, I’m partly doing this because I feel obligated to pick at least one underdog per show. Well, this is the one I’m picking.

I think Penta wins fairly clean, but I also think Finn Balor does something accidentally to cost his Judgment Day stablemate the title.

Prediction: Penta wins the title

Our live coverage kicks off at 5 PM Eastern with the pre-show with the main card kicking off at 7 PM Eastern.

Fight Game: WWE Backlash & AEW Dynamite Beach Break previews

John LaRocca and I, Garrett Gonzales, are back to talk about the major topics in the world of wrestling on this week’s Fight Game Podcast.

We kicked off this show by giving out our Thumbs Up/Thumbs Down winners and losers of the week before hitting the major AEW and WWE topics of the week.

Here are some of the things we talked about:

  • WWE Backlash preview
  • AEW Dynamite Beach Break preview
  • The new party match review segment
  • Who Tony Khan should sign from the WWE releases
  • Becky Lynch’s comment on a major double standard
  • Dark Side of the Ring on Billy Jack Haynes

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)