Tag: Bray Wyatt

  • A Wyatt Sicks Retrospective: The Rise And Fall Of One Of WWE’s Strangest Factions

    A Wyatt Sicks Retrospective: The Rise And Fall Of One Of WWE’s Strangest Factions

    A scourge of releases hit WWE less than a week after WrestleMania 42. Some of the Superstars leaving the company were more surprising than others.

    On one hand, it was not shocking to see The Wyatt Sicks let go in the sense that WWE had not done a lot with them in their 22-month tenure on the main roster and the faction missed back-to-back WrestleMania main cards. On the other hand, the stable was a cult favorite with an incredible presence on their ring entrance. That’s besides their emotional tie-in to the beloved late Bray Wyatt.

    As the run for Uncle Howdy and company has come to a close it’s time to look back at their legacy in the company and what went wrong for the group of talented performers who never quite hit their stride in WWE storylines.

    The Wyatt Sicks Had An Introduction To WWE Like No Other

    Wyatt Sicks.

    WWE fans first got an inkling of The Wyatt Sicks were on their way in watching the Bray Wyatt: Becoming Immortal documentary WWE produced about the life and legacy of the late Eater of Worlds. His brother, Bo Dallas, had already debuted the mysterious Uncle Howdy persona alongside Wyatt in his later appearances and the end of the doc spoke to his desire to carry forward in his family’s honor, bringing back the dark character.

    The group’s formal introduction came in a June 2024 episode of Raw with a variety of WWE personnel shown incapacitated backstage before the creepiest version of Nikki Cross to date emerged from a mysterious doorway, en route to the whole faction emerging. There was reason to be optimistic about the group’s prospects to follow as WWE gave them room for a unique presentation via vignettes of interviews between Bo Dallas and his Uncle Howdy alterego. The Wyatt Sicks would go on to best American Made in their first program.

    The writing may have been on the wall about the limitations The Wyatt Sicks would face when the months to follow saw them feud with The Final Testament before transitioning their focus to the SmackDown tag team division. Whereas the most optimistic takes may have foreseen the group—Uncle Howdy in particular—entering the upper mid-card if not main event picture, they missed significant chunks of time on TV and seemed firmly planted in the mid-card and tag ranks.

    The Wyatt Sicks Faction Was Defined By Missed Opportunities

    Credit: WWE.com

    There was a lot of potential surrounding The Wyatt Sicks, but the group never seemed to move on from their initial impression—they looked creepy, and they paid tribute to Bray Wyatt.

    Erick Rowan was a legacy character—a bridge between the original Wyatt Family and this new group, besides offering a big body to play the heater in a supporting role. It’s telling, though, that despite her history as a Women’s Champion, Nikki Cross never got much to sink her teeth into as part of the group.

    Dexter Lumis and Joe Gacy represented further stunted potential. Both men seemed like fits for this style of stable for having played dark, unstable characters in developmental. However, after graduating from NXT, they all but lost all their individual personalities when they joined this group—Lumis not a cold-blooded killer type, Gacy not a charismatic cult leader—each downgraded to more generic eccentrics who wore dark makeup. Not only were their more interesting, individualistic personas tamped down, but WWE forewent any and all opportunities for internal power struggle and strife.

    Uncle Howdy, in particular, looked to be the breakout star of this faction as Wyatt’s brother and a proven in-ring talent who’d shown his first real character chops in his introductory promos for the group. A real push might have seen him flirt with the main event scene, perhaps posing an especially intriguing, chaotic Mr. Money in the Bank or offering an offbeat, memorable rival for Cody Rhodes at the top of the card.

    Saying Farewell To The Wyatt Sicks

    Credit: WWE.com

    The Wyatt Sicks lost their televised match, going down in defeat to The MFTs in a Street Fight during the episode of SmackDown that kicked off WrestleMania 42 weekend. The bout came across like the end of the feud and, as such, a case can be made WWE resolved their outstanding storyline business en route to showing them the door.

    There are ways of looking at WWE’s release of this group as a dismissal of Bray Wyatt’s legacy, besides being a more direct insult to the talented performers involved in the group. This perspective does demand the question, though, would the group be any better off relegated to the treadmill of mid-card purgatory than let go?

    The failings of The Wyatt Sicks seem reflective of WWE’s own reluctance to push supernatural characters in the modern era. It’s a part of what made Wyatt himself such a square peg in main event round holes for the length of his tenure and, with all due respect to his legacy faction members, none of them captured the imagination to demand a spotlight the way he did. Indeed, it seems like the extent WWE is willing to engage with an act of that ilk is embodied in Danhausen, whose role is at least equal parts comedic as it is dark or truly magical. Perhaps The Wyatt Sicks alumni will find better luck rallying elsewhere—including, as some fans have already pushed for—jumping to AEW.

    Time will tell the full scope of The Wyatt Sicks legacy or what’s next for its component members. Regardless, they remain a unique spectacle in WWE lore, unlike anyone else working before them, alongside them, or likely to follow.

  • Alexa Bliss Retires Dark Character Out of Respect for Bray Wyatt

    Alexa Bliss Retires Dark Character Out of Respect for Bray Wyatt

    Alexa Bliss recently confirmed that her “Dark Alexa” character is permanently retired out of respect for late WWE star Bray Wyatt and his family. The darker persona was closely tied to her on-screen alliance with Wyatt before his passing in August 2023.

    Bliss made the announcement in a Cameo video for a fan, explaining the significance of the character and why she has chosen to leave it in the past. She returned to WWE in January 2025 with a completely new character after months away from television.

    Bliss Explains Decision to Retire Dark Persona

    In the Cameo video, Bliss addressed questions about whether she would ever bring back the darker version of her character. She made it clear that chapter of her career is closed.

    “Now, about Dark Alexa. While I love that it meant something to you, it meant so much to me as well. That chapter is very special and very close tied with my time with Bray [Wyatt],” Bliss said. “Out of respect for him and the Wyatts, I like to keep that version of myself exactly where it is. For the time, it is retired and untouched.”

    Current Status in WWE

    Bliss is currently teaming with Charlotte Flair in the women’s tag team division. The duo recently competed for the women’s tag team titles at WWE WrestleMania 42 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Her new character marks a fresh direction for the former multiple-time champion as she continues her WWE career without the darker elements that defined her previous persona.

  • Oba Femi Reveals Hall of Fame Inspiration for His Unique Entrance

    Oba Femi Reveals Hall of Fame Inspiration for His Unique Entrance

    Oba Femi loved the work of Bray Wyatt.

    The former NXT Champion was the most recent guest on What’s Your Story? With Steph McMahon. He talked about things such as his Nigerian roots, his long-term goals in wrestling and more.

    During the interview, The Ruler also discussed his love for the work of the late great Bray Wyatt. Oba Femi said that he specifically felt passionate about the original iteration of the Wyatt Family, featuring Luke Harper and Erick Rowan. He recalled paying tribute to the former World Champion by using one of his lines in a promo:

    “I loved Bray. I love the original Wyatt Family. I just felt so passionately about that. The NXT version and when they first got to the main roster. I remember there was one line that they hit — I actually used that line in a promo a few years ago. He said, ‘You can send anybody after us but, don’t send anyone that you want back,’ and I was like, ‘This is the greatest bar ever.’”

    It’s Catching Fire Right Now: Oba Femi

    Apart from this, Oba Femi also discussed his entrance becoming popular among fans, and his unique walk that has been dubbed as the Oba strut. He revealed that the inspiration for it comes from Ric Flair’s entrance and he’s tried to make it more modern:

    “I mean, it’s kind of a twist on Ric Flair. It’s a different one. I made it more modern. It’s more arm action, more shoulders. It’s catching fire right now. I really should start a TikTok because it’s going crazy on there.”

    Bray Wyatt, real name Windham Lawrence Rotunda, passed away back in August 2023 at the age of 36. He suffered a heart attack while asleep at his home in Brooksville, Florida.

  • Seth Rollins Defends Bray Wyatt\’s Legacy and Their 2019 HIAC Trainwreck

    Seth Rollins recently opened up about his infamous 2019 Hell in a Cell match with the late Bray Wyatt, expressing regret that WWE cameras didn\’t capture the full behind-the-scenes story of that controversial weekend.

    Speaking on the My Mom\’s Basement podcast with Robbie Fox, Rollins revealed he wishes the reality of what happened backstage had been documented.

    \”I wish they were there for the Hell in a Cell match with Bray Wyatt. I wish they were there for that whole weekend so they could really see what went down,\” Rollins said. \”No one really knows what happened there and I can\’t describe it to a point that it makes sense where people have a different feeling about it.\”

    The October 6, 2019 match at Hell in a Cell has gone down as one of the most criticized matches in WWE history. The Universal Championship bout ended in a controversial referee stoppage after Rollins used a sledgehammer on Wyatt, leading to a disqualification finish that defied the no-disqualification nature of Hell in a Cell matches. The match was later voted \”Worst Match of 2019\” by the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

    Rollins emphasized his comments were primarily about defending Wyatt\’s legacy. \”That one I can name and say it mostly because it\’s a defense for Windham, who\’s not here to defend himself, and I know that experience really bothered him,\” Rollins explained, referencing Wyatt by his real name, Windham Rotunda, who passed away in May 2023.

    Seth Rollins says WWE fans don\’t know the full story

    The former WWE Champion suggested that seeing the complete context of that week would give fans more empathy for both performers.

    \”If you could have seen that from start to finish that week, all the way up to the end of that match and the next day, I think people would have a different… not appreciation, but a little more empathy, maybe,\” Rollins said.

    Rollins concluded by expressing his wish that both he and Wyatt could have had another opportunity to deliver what fans deserved. \”I wish we would have had an opportunity to show what happened there, and then come back and do it better.\”

    Both Rollins and Wyatt have previously stated the controversial finish was not their decision, with Rollins revealing in past interviews that Vince McMahon refused to budge on the creative direction despite their objections.

  • CM Punk Reveals Bray Wyatt’s WrestleMania Prophecy That Never Came True

    CM Punk has shared a poignant memory of the late Bray Wyatt, revealing that Wyatt once predicted the two would eventually face off at WrestleMania.

    During WWE’s “Break It Down” series, the World Heavyweight Champion recalled an encounter with Wyatt after he was sent back to developmental as the Husky Harris character.

    “He was in high spirits and he said to me, ‘Hey, don’t worry man,’ he’s like, ‘I’m gonna go back down there, I’m gonna figure myself out and I’m gonna come back up here and someday me and you are gonna meet at WrestleMania,’ and I thought that was really cool.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RalNIOc8CC8

    The dream match never came to fruition. Wyatt tragically passed away in August 2023 at the age of 36. Punk himself departed WWE in 2014 and didn’t return until late 2023, making it impossible for the two to ever share a WrestleMania stage together.

    Punk’s reflection on Wyatt’s optimism and determination during a low point in his career paints a picture of the man behind the character – someone who believed in his ability to reinvent himself and reach the pinnacle of the industry.

    Wyatt did indeed transform himself, creating the iconic Bray Wyatt character and later “The Fiend,” becoming one of WWE’s most beloved and creative performers before his untimely death.

    The revelation adds to the legacy of both men – Wyatt’s unwavering belief in his destiny, and the unfulfilled potential of what could have been one of WWE’s most compelling WrestleMania matches.