Tag: Shawn Michaels

  • Shawn Michaels Names WWE PLE That is ‘More Fun’ Than WrestleMania

    Shawn Michaels Names WWE PLE That is ‘More Fun’ Than WrestleMania

    Shawn Michaels has a confession that will surprise fans who know him as Mr. WrestleMania: he prefers the Royal Rumble. Speaking on the Club 520 podcast, Michaels explained the reasoning behind the preference, framing it in terms of the very different kinds of pressure each event places on the performers involved. 

    He described WrestleMania as requiring total individual focus and accountability for every element of a performance, a singular pressure that intensifies as the calendar approaches the event.

    “From a pure fun standpoint, the Rumble is more fun because it’s not as pressure and 100% focused on you,” Michaels said. “It’s more about the entire match and just the idea. I’m very happy. I feel like the Rumble has gotten bigger than it was in our day. I think it’s become so much more special over time. People have really began to appreciate the Rumble and everything that goes on with it. When it’s 100% on you like it is at WrestleMania, that’s when you have the stress, the anxiety, the pressure of making sure you go out there and deliver.” he added

    Michaels won the Royal Rumble in both 1995 and 1996, making him the second back-to-back winner in the event’s history after Hulk Hogan. His 1995 victory remains one of the more memorable in Rumble history, with Michaels entering at number one and lasting the full duration of the match to claim the win and earn his first WrestleMania main event opportunity.

    Michaels currently serves as WWE’s Senior Vice President of Talent Development Creative and NXT head coach, overseeing the next generation of talent from the WWE Performance Center in Orlando.

  • WWE LFG Format Change Revealed on Season 3 Premiere

    WWE LFG Format Change Revealed on Season 3 Premiere

    Shawn Michaels revealed a sweeping format change for WWE LFG during the Season 3 premiere on A&E Sunday night, confirming the show is moving away from its teams-and-points competition structure entirely.

    Opening the season alongside Matt Bloom, Booker T, and Bubba Ray Dudley, Michaels made clear the new priority is pipeline building over competition.

    “I kind of want to do away with the points and the teams,” he said, citing injuries and roster changes as reasons WWE needs more NXT-ready talent available at any moment.

    Under the new format, competitors will no longer be working toward a single contract earned through a bracket system. Instead, talent can be called up to NXT television at any point throughout the season, with no set timeline for when appearances might happen.

    Michaels also addressed the absence of The Undertaker, who featured prominently in Seasons 1 and 2. According to Michaels, The Undertaker has been written off the show due to his commitments helping run AAA.

    New Coaching Lineup for Season 3

    Joining returning coaches Booker T and Bubba Ray Dudley this season are Kevin Owens and Natalya, replacing Michelle McCool and The Undertaker from the previous season. Owens is participating while recovering from neck surgery, taking on a mentorship role as he works toward his return to in-ring action.

    The season premiere also carried a notable storyline off-screen, as Carlee Bright revealed her WWE departure just hours before the episode aired. WWE LFG Season 3 airs Sundays on A&E.

  • The story of Jeremy Ganger, pro wrestler who saved dozens during Dayton mass shooting

    The story of Jeremy Ganger, pro wrestler who saved dozens during Dayton mass shooting

    Jeremy Ganger’s retirement match is scheduled for Saturday at Wrestling Revolver: Revolver Strong, at the Calumet Center in Dayton, Ohio.

    When Ganger walks to the ring, embedded in his leg is a piece of shrapnel. A reminder of the night his life and that of a city upended into a national tragedy.

    He received the injury when a gunman killed nine people and injured 27 others in Dayton’s Oregon District in 2019. Ganger was working as a bouncer at a local club called Ned Pepper’s when it occurred. Where he saved dozens of lives with his quick thinking and courageous actions.

    Police were getting ready to question him when an officer noticed he was bleeding from the leg. Ganger had been hit during the shooting, but was so busy rushing people to safety, he hadn’t noticed. He was taken to hospital.

    “I refuse to get it taken out,” Ganger said. “It’s my way of remembering the nine people we lost that night.”

    Ganger knew six of the nine who died. If he wasn’t there that night, it would have been dozens more.

    August 4, 2019

    After having dinner with a friend, Ganger went to work at Ned Pepper’s, checking ID’s outside the front door. An experienced bouncer, Ganger knew most of the customers and the people who frequented Dayton’s Oregon District. He recalled the area as one big family, one he’s always happy to visit.

    As he worked outside, he heard a gunshot down the street. Ganger, who grew up in rural Miami County, knew the sound of a rifle being fired.

    When the second shot fired, Ganger saw the shooter coming from an alley.

    “We saw people running from the Blind Bob’s area,” Ganger said. “I was yelling and freaking out like everyone else. I saw the shooter coming down the street and the muzzle of his gun lighting up.”

    Ganger said staffers at Ned Pepper’s, Blind Bob’s and other clubs in the district had active shooter training at the time. Ganger began yelling for people to run into the bar and began guiding them in as people began falling from the gunfire.

    Security camera video of the shooting showed Ganger guiding dozens of people in through the door of the club and clearing the patio as fast as he could. He kept standing outside the door as the gunman approached.

    The gunman was carrying a rifle with a 100-round drum magazine. He was wearing Kevlar and a tactical helmet. Law enforcement reports later stated he had substances in his system.

    Dozens of people began hiding behind the bar at the back of the building. Many of the male staffers dropped down to cover female staffers. Reports said as many as 300 people had fled into Ned Pepper’s for protection.

    The club had two doors at the entrance. Ganger locked and shut the first as the gunman approached.

    “My thought was to get everyone safe,” Ganger said. “And he wasn’t getting into the building no matter what.”

    The gunman paused, long enough for Dayton police officers to shoot and kill him. Officers wearing summer gear were armed only with handguns and had fired dozens of rounds at the gunman before he fell. The autopsy report said he was shot 30 times.

    Ganger, not knowing if the shooter was dead, grabbed his weapon as police entered and swept the building. People began running out of the other restaurants and clubs, tending to victims with towels, performing CPR and helping anyway they could.

    As Ganger saw people tending to the wounded, he glanced at the door he was standing in front of as he ushered dozens to safety. It was riddled with bullet holes.

    In less than 30 seconds, nine people were dead, 17 others had been shot and 10 more suffered injuries related to the shooting. Dayton police officers responded, killing the shooter, in just seconds. Among those on the scene that night were staffers from a local professional baseball team, the daughter of a U.S. Congressman and hundreds of others whose lives changed in less than half a minute.

    A wrestling fan turned wrestler

    Ganger began wrestling in the early 2000s. He worked local independents before meeting Cody Hawk, a long-time trainer and later owner of the Heartland Wrestling Association. The HWA was a developmental territory for both WCW and WWE during the Monday night era and was founded by Les Thatcher, considered by many to be the among the best trainers in the world.

    Thatcher sold the company to Hawk. Hawk trained former WWE, AEW and IWGP champion Jon Moxley and trained Ganger, who discovered there were advantages to having a third-shift job as a wrestler.

    ”My roommate at the time was Sami Callahan,” Ganger said. “I was working later and that allowed me to get a lot of one-on-one time with Cody in the daytime when it wasn’t busy. He took me under his wing.”

    Ohio’s competitive independent scene didn’t keep wrestlers from helping each other. Ganger said he was surprised at how veterans and more established stars were always generous with their time, showing him the ropes.

    He recalled Shaun Ricker, who wrestles as LA Knight in the WWE, being especially helpful, along with Nigel McGuinness and Moxley.

    “Those one-on-one sessions were amazing for me,” Ganger said.

    Ganger, a fan of Mick Foley as a kid, adopted the death match style after working with Alex Colon, a friend he would task with being his opponent in his retirement match. He was highly influenced by Callihan, his former roommate and friend, who will be at Saturday’s show. He considers Callihan to be family.

    ”Since he introduced me to wrestling, I really wanted (my final opponent) to be Sami,” Ganger said. “But wrestling Alex means so much.”

    After the shooting

    Most of the victims of the shooting were taken to Grandview Medical Center, blocks from the Oregon District. Many walked there.

    In his teens, Ganger was told by doctors that he had epilepsy. One of the triggers for seizures was stress. After arriving at the hospital, he had several seizures and was sedated by physicians. He slept for two days after the shooting.

    When he was released by doctors, he demanded to be taken to Ned Pepper’s before going home. He hobbled into the bar on crutches and was greeted by the staff, all of whom survived.

    The shooting sparked a decline in his mental health. Ganger couldn’t stand crowds. When he did venture out in public, he would see visions of the shooter in crowds. He was invited by All Elite Wrestling to be a special guest at its inaugural Double or Nothing pay-per-view, but the ordeal presented by his mental health kept him from attending.

    ”It changed my life dramatically,” Ganger said. “I had PTSD, I didn’t sleep well.”

    Tragedy sparks new mission, career

    Since the shooting, Ganger became a mental health counselor and a caseworker. He was diagnosed with superior survivor’s guilt. While Ganger saved dozens, the loss of those who were killed were too much for him to bear. One woman, who was killed in front of him on the patio of the bar, was staring at him the moment she was shot. They were friends.

    Ganger said his interactions were mixed. With the press, reporters were friendly and showed appreciation for his actions . He recalled one reporter telling him how grateful he was he lived in the same community as Ganger.

    Other interactions weren’t so friendly. He often received social media messages blaming him for not saving a relative or friend. People in public would criticize him for how he handled the situation.

    What kept his hopes up the most was messages he received from military members and law enforcement. Officers from Las Vegas and Virginia, who responded to mass shootings, praised Ganger for his quick thinking and bravery. Military members who had returned from deployment also thanked him for what he did for the city.

    In his darkest moments he became suicidal, dealing with PTSD, survivor’s guilt and depression, even as he took classes to become a counselor. What turned his life around was the birth of his 5-year-old daughter.

    ”My daughter, she’s 5 and she saved my life,” Ganger said. “I was told I could never have kids, and here I am, at 42 years old, having a daughter. She saved me.”

    You’ve done so much

    Ganger kept receiving calls and voice mails from people saying they worked for NXT, World Wrestling Entertainment’s then developmental brand. Still wrestling, Ganger dismissed the calls as ribs from fellow wrestlers. He found out later one of the calls was from Paul Levesque.

    “Sami (Callihan) called me,” Ganger said. “He just says, ‘Pick up your phone. It’s real, dude.”

    In a better place mentally by that time, Ganger made the trip to Florida with a friend who was a nurse. After missing a chance to see AEW, he was determined to make it to NXT.

    ”When AEW contacted me to come to Chicago, it was too much for me, the crowd was too much for me,” Ganger said. “I felt horrible about it. I wish I could have went. I just wasn’t in the right mental state.”

    Over a couple days, Ganger was shown the WWE Performance Center.

    He walked backstage before a taping and saw Tommaso Ciampa talking with a group of wrestlers and staffers. Ciampa saw Ganger, walked up to him and grabbed him in a bear hug. He called Ganger, “Mr. Hero”, and then introduced him to everyone there.

    Ganger said Ciampa’s embrace and warm greeting was the highlight of his trip.

    ”That gentleman made me feel so awesome,” Ganger said.

    Ganger was interviewed with Paul Levesque, who ran NXT at the time. He was invited backstage to watch the show with NXT staffers Shawn Michaels, Jeremy Borash and Brian “Road Dogg” Armstrong.

    Levesque entered the ring before the taping was set to begin. He gave a speech while the screen showed news clips of the Oregon District shooting and interview footage of Ganger.

    Ganger, confused, turned to Borash, who told him, “We forgot to tell you, but you’re going to the ring.

    Levesque introduced Ganger as “one of their own,” a professional wrestler. Ganger went down to the ring and climbed the steps to the apron. Levesque mentioned, “Hey, you even remembered to wipe your feet.”

    Ganger was presented with an NXT title belt. Video of the presentation was put on WWE’s website and made news across the country.

    Before the presentation ended, Levesque grabbed Ganger for a private conversation.

    “It was touching,” Ganger said. “He told me he loved me and respected me. It was a private moment.”

    Most of the NXT staffers didn’t know why Ganger was at the event until the presentation. When he reached the back, he was immediately grabbed by Michaels. who

    Michaels took him outside with a rosary in his hand and grabbed Ganger’s and began praying for him.

    Weeks later, Mick Foley was on tour and was scheduled for an appearance at a Dayton-area comedy club. Ganger received an invite from Foley, one of his biggest inspirations. Foley wanted to talk to him personally.

    ”He told me, what you did that night was tremendous not just for the people there but for the wrestling world,” Ganger said. “We get so much bad advertising because people think all wrestlers are scumbags. You showed we are people. And we can do tremendous things. You’ve done so much.”

    Ganger has revisited the shooting regularly. After years of dealing with the after effects he said his one regret was not reaching out to someone sooner, “Or just talked to someone.”

    He tried handling the emotions and the mental toll like traditional men were taught – by bottling it up. Later, he was overwhelmed with thoughts of suicide. He said that was a mistake. Ganger said anyone who suffers a traumatic event should seek help or counseling immediately.

    ”I needed help a lot sooner than later,” Ganger said. “I wish I had talked about what was going on, but I was a traditional man and we are taught to keep our feelings to ourselves. I wouldn’t have been suicidal, I wouldn’t have talked about taking my own life. I wish I had asked for help sooner.”

    Ganger said one source of help was surprising – the wrestling business. Whether it was his friends he wrestled with for 20 years in Ohio or stars in other states and on national TV, the business he gave his blood and body to gave back when he needed it most.

  • Shawn Michaels Defends Jacy Jayne’s Title Reign After Backlash

    Shawn Michaels Defends Jacy Jayne’s Title Reign After Backlash

    Shawn Michaels is not apologizing for putting the NXT Women’s Championship on Jacy Jayne, and nearly 280 days of hindsight has given him plenty of ammunition to defend the decision.

    The WWE Hall of Famer and NXT Head of Creative joined Peter Rosenberg on Cheap Heat during WrestleMania 42 weekend in Las Vegas to discuss the booking philosophy behind one of NXT’s most criticized title changes in recent memory.

    When Jayne defeated Stephanie Vaquer for the NXT Women’s Championship in May 2025 with help from her Fatal Influence stablemates, the backlash was immediate and loud. Michaels was not spared from it.

    “I was the worst dude in the world when Jacy Jayne beat Stephanie Vaquer for the title,” Michaels told Rosenberg. “Worst decision in the world, dumbest thing I’ve ever seen.”

    Jayne held the title across two reigns spanning roughly 280 days before losing it to Lola Vice in a triple threat at Stand and Deliver on April 4. The length of that run, and what Jayne became during it, is Michaels’ answer to every critic.

    “280-some odd days later, she is a complete superstar,” Michaels said. “I would argue that a lot of people when it came to Toxic Attraction, she was number three. And that is not the case these years later.”

    He credited Jayne’s own self-awareness for the growth, suggesting the extended championship run served as the development tool she needed. “I have no doubt, and I’m sure Jacy would say the same, that at some point many of those years earlier, she felt she was ready then. She’s a more complete individual now. And we have to balance that.”

    Michaels also used the moment to explain why NXT resists the pressure to reward rising talent too quickly, warning that modern wrestling audiences move on almost immediately when a title change does not land with the intended impact.

    “It’s always kind of easy to go for the instant gratification. Sometimes that will work and be a positive thing,” Michaels said. “But my feeling is in today’s environment, they move on pretty quick. So you have to be very careful about when and where you do it.”

    Jayne is now reportedly being considered for a main roster call-up following her Stand and Deliver loss, joining a list that includes Ethan Page, Ricky Saints, and Blake Monroe.

  • Shawn Michaels Says Evolve Has Been One of NXT’s Biggest Assets as Talent Losses to Main Roster Accelerate

    Shawn Michaels Says Evolve Has Been One of NXT’s Biggest Assets as Talent Losses to Main Roster Accelerate

    Shawn Michaels says WWE’s revived Evolve brand has become one of NXT’s most important behind-the-scenes assets, and the talents generating the most excitement internally are the ones nobody predicted would connect with audiences.

    Speaking with Peter Rosenberg on Cheap Heat during WrestleMania 42 weekend in Las Vegas, the NXT Head of Creative explained how Evolve has functioned as a developmental safety net during a period when NXT has been sending significant talent to the main roster at an accelerated pace.

    “The idea of having been able to move them up into NXT in such a quick fashion has been a huge plus for us,” Michaels said. “All coincidental at the time, we obviously lose a lot of people. So the timing there was really positive for us.”

    The 2025 and early 2026 period saw NXT lose Stephanie Vaquer, Oba Femi, and others to Raw and SmackDown, creating exactly the kind of roster vacancy that Evolve was positioned to backfill. Michaels has also reportedly pushed back internally when creative has sought to promote talent before he believes they are ready.

    On the subject of standout prospects, Michaels said his greatest excitement comes not from the names everyone is already buzzing about but from the performers who find traction in ways that surprise even the people booking them.

    “What’s been honestly even more positive is those people that you may not have had your eye on, and you see a few people getting over in ways that, oh, I didn’t know that would happen. That’s pretty interesting,” Michaels said. “I’m always more excited about the ones that you couldn’t quite call.”

    He also addressed the double-edged nature of fast-moving fan enthusiasm, warning that today’s environment can crown a prospect too quickly and create problems for the talent themselves.

    “In today’s environment, in about two or three weeks they’re putting you in the Hall of Fame,” Michaels said. “So yes, you have to be careful. And then what it does to the superstars themselves, you never know on a personal level, are they starting to believe their own hype or are they not.”

    He singled out Kendal Grey as a talent who has remained grounded despite the rapid expectations placed on her since arriving in NXT. Grey competed in the Stand and Deliver triple threat that crowned Lola Vice the new NXT Women’s Champion on April 4.

  • Shawn Michaels: “When Should I Be Dead?” On Aging In WWE

    Shawn Michaels: “When Should I Be Dead?” On Aging In WWE

    Shawn Michaels has a theory about why WrestleMania 42’s main event card skewed older than ever, and it comes down to one number: 40.

    Speaking with Peter Rosenberg on Cheap Heat during WrestleMania 42 weekend, the WWE Hall of Famer made the case that pro wrestling rewards accumulated experience in ways most sports simply don’t.

    The Late-Peak Theory

    Michaels, 60, compared the trajectory of a pro wrestler to elite NFL quarterbacks, arguing that physical tools matter far less than timing, psychology, and the thousands of small decisions that only experience teaches.

    “I feel like you’re really peaking at 40, to really know what it is you’re doing out there and to be able to put all of it together,” Michaels said. “I know from a sporting standpoint we want that to happen earlier, but a lot of times some of the best quarterbacks in the league are around 35 to 40 when they really understand and know the game and execute at a high level.”

    The former Mr. WrestleMania said the progression is actually a cycle of false summits.

    “At 25 you feel like, okay, I’m starting to get a handle on this stuff. And you reach 30 and you go, I didn’t have any idea. But now I’ve got a handle. And another five years go by,” he said. “You never stop learning in this stuff.”

    WrestleMania 42’s Senior Class

    Michaels pointed directly at the 2026 main event lineup to make his point. Night 1 featured Cody Rhodes, 40, defending the Undisputed WWE Championship against 46-year-old Randy Orton. Night 2 saw 47-year-old CM Punk face Roman Reigns, 40, for the World Heavyweight Championship.

    “If you look at the main events at WrestleMania this weekend, there are no spring chickens,” Michaels said. “Who’s the baby of the bunch? Cody. Cody is the youngest of the main eventers.”

    The HBK then zoomed out even further on the industry’s relationship with age.

    “Think about where we’ve gotten to, where 38 is old. What is 61? When should I be dead? I’m almost 61 and I don’t know.”

    Reps, Reps, Reps

    Michaels closed the thought with a reminder that the path to the peak is paved with accumulated ring time, not raw physical talent.

    “A lot of it comes with time and wisdom, and as always, reps, reps, reps,” he said.

    Michaels turns 61 on July 22.

  • Nick Khan Details WWE’s Youth Initiative

    Nick Khan Details WWE’s Youth Initiative

    WWE President Nick Khan addressed concerns about the company’s aging top stars and explained how a conversation with Shawn Michaels led to NXT hitting the road, directly accelerating the rise of Oba Femi, Trick Williams, and Je’Von Evans.

    Speaking on the Bill Simmons Podcast, Khan said the issue came into focus shortly after WrestleMania last year.

    “A year ago, right after WrestleMania last year, Triple H and I got together and we said, ‘Let’s take a look at the future, let’s look at our top male superstars,’” Khan explained.

    He laid out the reality of WWE’s current top tier.

    “Cena, it was obviously his retirement year. We have, in some order, Roman, Cody, Punk, Seth, Brock. They’re all 40 years or older. So we said, ‘Alright, we’ve gotta make sure we’re preparing for the future here.’”

    Shawn Michaels Identified the Problem

    Khan said the answer came from a visit to the WWE Performance Center, where Michaels and Matt Bloom run NXT day-to-day.

    The key issue was that performing in a studio environment denied young talent the authentic crowd feedback they needed to grow.

    “Doing it from the studio every week, you don’t get the authentic fan response that young wrestlers need to know if their work is working or not,” Khan said, paraphrasing Michaels. “Randy Orton shows up in St. Louis, he’s getting all the cheers in the world, he shows up in a different city, he doesn’t. You need to know how to react to that.”

    Michaels made the ask simple: take NXT on the road. Khan said WWE delivered within a month.

    “We came back to Shawn, ‘Let’s take it on the road starting in a month,’ or whatever it was.”

    Immediate Results on the Main Roster

    Khan directly connected that decision to the fast-track promotions that followed.

    “Then you saw the quick acceleration of Oba Femi, Trick Williams, Je’Von Evans, soon to be others coming up from NXT.”

    All three have since been called up to the main roster and are booked for WrestleMania 42.

    Femi faces Brock Lesnar, Williams challenges Sami Zayn for the United States Championship, and Evans competes in a ladder match for the Intercontinental Title.

    Michaels has spoken openly about the NXT pipeline as well. He recently revealed he actually pushed back against Evans’ call-up, saying he wanted to keep the high-flyer in NXT for at least another six months before WWE pulled him to the main roster ahead of schedule.

  • Je’Von Evans Names The Legends Mentoring Him Before WrestleMania

    Je’Von Evans Names The Legends Mentoring Him Before WrestleMania

    Je’Von Evans is 21 years old and headed to his first WrestleMania, but the calmest part of the build has been the locker room around him.

    The Young OG appeared on the Battleground Podcast ahead of his Intercontinental Championship Ladder Match and credited a short list of WWE icons with shaping how he approaches the biggest stage of his career so far.

    The first lesson came from Randy Orton, after the two shared a ring.

    “I learned this from Uncle Randy, that it’s okay to be nervous. He was like, ‘Bro, you should look nervous. You’re going against a legend.’ Ever since then, I was like, dang, it makes sense to be nervous in certain situations.”

    From Childhood Hero To Mentor

    Evans grew up watching John Cena and now finds himself in regular conversation with him. The relationship has shifted from poster-on-the-wall fandom into something closer to a working mentorship, which is exactly what he needed in a year that’s pushed him from a fast-tracked NXT call-up straight to the WrestleMania card.

    Shawn Michaels added the simplest piece of advice on the list, and Evans said it’s the one he leans on hardest.

    “Just be yourself.”

    Coming from a Hall of Famer who openly pushed to keep Evans in NXT longer, the line carries weight. Michaels watched Evans build his entire identity in the developmental brand and trusts him to bring that same identity to Raw without re-engineering it for a bigger crowd.

    The Royal Rumble Reality Check

    Evans tries to keep his fan side in check around the people he came up watching, but one entrance theme broke through during the Royal Rumble.

    “I heard Brock Lesnar’s theme song. I was looking, I was like, ‘Dang, I’m really here.’ I was still in the ring to experience all this.”

    Evans steps into the Intercontinental Championship Ladder Match at WrestleMania 42 this weekend, with a homecoming Raw scheduled for May 18 at the Greensboro Coliseum waiting on the other side.

  • AEW Star Reveals Bret Hart’s Hilarious Reaction On First Meet

    AEW Star Reveals Bret Hart’s Hilarious Reaction On First Meet

    Kyle O’Reilly says his perception of Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels has completely flipped.

    The Canadian star recently spoke to This is VANCOLOUR for a new interview. He talked about things such as sacrifices you have to make in a wrestling career, the different styles of wrestling featured in AEW, and more.

    During the interview, the current Trios Champion also talked about the difference between Shawn Michaels and Bret Hart and how his perspective has changed over the years. Kyle O’Reilly, who got to work with the former closely during his time in NXT, mentioned that HBK was very hands on with talent and working with him was an amazing experience:

    “It was really amazing, especially as growing as such a huge Bret guy and such an anti-Shawn guy. Now that I’m an adult, it’s totally flipped.”

    Yeah I Was The Best

    The Conglomeration member then revealed how his perspective on Bret Hart changed after meeting the wrestling veteran for the first time at a musical show:

    “The first time I met Bret — I mean, don’t get me wrong, I love Bret Hart. Don’t get me wrong. But the first time I met Bret, after the Aladdin show,

    I was like, ‘Hey Bret, man, I’m just such a big fan of you. Your match with Davey Boy in ‘92 is one of my favorite matches of all time’ and he just looked off, he’s like, ‘Yeah, I was the best.’”

    Kyle O’Reilly mentioned how Michaels never touted himself as the greatest, and he was always a little bit more humble than his arch-rival. Though he later added that he has nothing but respect for both the wrestling veterans.

  • Shawn Michaels’ Real Goal With WWE NXT Has Nothing To Do With Wrestling Ability

    Shawn Michaels’ Real Goal With WWE NXT Has Nothing To Do With Wrestling Ability

    Shawn Michaels has a simple philosophy driving his work at the WWE Performance Center, and it has very little to do with what happens inside the ring. Speaking with Big Gold Belt Media, the NXT head of creative explained that his primary goal when working with talent is not to produce the best wrestlers in the world but to develop good people first.

    “You’re not trying to make people into the best pro wrestlers in the world. You’re making them into good people,” Michaels said.

    Much of his day-to-day work, he explained, centers on the personal challenges that come with being young, uprooted, and under pressure in an unfamiliar environment. The NXT roster is full of people navigating far more than what appears on screen each week.

    “A lot of these people are very young. They’re moving from home, making a new life. It’s more about just trying to help them navigate those struggles,” Michaels said.

    He pointed to Drew McIntyre and Cody Rhodes as examples he uses to illustrate that career paths in wrestling are rarely straight lines, and that leaving the company does not mean a story is over. “Not everybody has the road I had, which is in the WWE from the time you’re 23 and growing up in there. You may have to go away, but that doesn’t mean it’s over. There’s a lot of different ways to get to the same destination,” Michaels said.

    The WWE Hall of Famer also addressed how his Christian faith factors into his leadership style, making clear that he leads by example rather than by preaching.

    “I simply try to live it and not talk about it that much,” he said. He was equally clear about the limits of his role. “Not focusing on their salvation. I’m not the one that’s going to save them. Jesus is the salvation, not Shawn Michaels. I can barely save myself from stumbling over myself.”

    His goal for NXT as a workplace is straightforward. “If they struggle in areas of their life, I want them, if they’re comfortable, to be able to allow me to help them with it. Or if I can’t help them, get them to people who can, who are far more skilled than I am at it.”

  • Shawn Michaels Says New Documentary Is About Redemption, Not Wrestling

    Shawn Michaels Says New Documentary Is About Redemption, Not Wrestling

    Shawn Michaels says his new Peacock documentary is not the career retrospective fans might expect, and that was entirely intentional.

    Speaking with Big Gold Belt Media ahead of the premiere, Michaels explained that “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels” deliberately pushes past the highlight reel and into the personal chapters of his life that have rarely been examined in depth.

    “A lot of this was really less about the wrestling career. It was the personal life, the salvation, being able to come back and ask these guys you’re sorry and ask for forgiveness, and having them be gracious enough to give that to you, and to be able to rebuild and reconcile those relationships,” Michaels said. “As mushy as it might sound, it’s more about that than it was the actual wrestling career, because we do feel like that has been covered. The guy that was the showstopper and the performer, yeah, that’s been well documented.”

    Michaels admitted he went into the project with some uncertainty about how it would differentiate itself from previous work about his life and career.

    “I never like to be dismissive of my story by any stretch, but felt like, ‘Oh well, we’ve kind of told it before. How will this one be different?’” he said.

    The answer came in the film’s focus on his current role in WWE and his work in NXT rather than a straightforward career retrospective. Michaels said he made a point of staying out of the filmmakers’ way during production, trusting people who know the craft better than he does.

    “I’m very hands-off. There’s people that know more about this and are better at these kinds of jobs than I am,” he said.

    He also noted that the finished product contained footage he had never seen himself. “Stuff that I’ve never seen before. I’ve got to be more careful when cameras are around,” he joked.

    When asked whether his controversial 2018 return match at Crown Jewel was considered for inclusion in the documentary, Michaels kept his answer brief. “No, not that I’m aware of. No.”

    The documentary features commentary from Triple H, The Undertaker, Kevin Nash, and Bret Hart. “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels” premieres Monday, April 13 on Peacock.

  • Shawn Michaels Reacts to Pop Culture Crossovers at Age 60

    Shawn Michaels Reacts to Pop Culture Crossovers at Age 60

    Shawn Michaels keeps going viral, and he has no idea how it keeps happening.

    In an interview with Big Gold Belt Media, the 60-year-old WWE Hall of Famer reflected on his recent pop culture crossovers, from Deontay Wilder recreating his iconic WrestleMania 24 farewell to Ric Flair mid-boxing match, to his Sexyy Red collaboration on NXT. His take on all of it? He’s the last person who should be cool.

    “I’m almost 61 now and I’m the uncoolest guy in the entire world. Trust me, my family can tell you I’m so not [cool],” Michaels said, laughing.

    ‘Something Romantic About Wrestling’

    Rather than taking credit for the moments, Michaels expressed genuine surprise that his career continues to resonate across different audiences and sports.

    “I feel very blessed and fortunate in that respect,” he said of the Wilder moment.

    He compared the emotional pull of wrestling to the way baseball is romanticized in film.

    “There are sometimes I’ve felt like, am I the only one that feels this way about this stuff? It’s always like in Bull Durham, there’s something romantic about baseball, and I feel like in our world there’s often times something romantic about WWE and wrestling. Thankfully I’m not the only one that feels like that.”

    Walking Through Open Doors

    Michaels said the key to these crossover moments is that he never chases them. The Sexyy Red appearance and similar viral moments happened because he stayed open rather than trying to manufacture something.

    “One of the things I’ve learned in my life is if I try to push for too many things to make them happen, I end up screwing them up,” he said. “I kind of just do my best to walk through the doors that are open and not try to kick open the ones that don’t appear to be.”

    Despite the pop culture attention, Michaels said his priority hasn’t shifted.

    “Right now it’s just focusing on NXT, continuing to build stars for Raw and SmackDown and for the future of WWE, allowing those good things to happen as they happen, taking advantage of them when they’re there, and enjoying them when they’re there.”

    Michaels’ Peacock documentary, “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels,” premieres Monday, April 13.

    The quotes in this article have been lightly edited for clarity.

  • Shawn Michaels Takes Hands-Off Approach to New Documentary

    Shawn Michaels Takes Hands-Off Approach to New Documentary

    Shawn Michaels says he takes a hands-off approach when it comes to documentaries about his career. The WWE Hall of Famer discussed his involvement in the new Peacock original documentary, The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels, set to release on April 13.

    In an interview with Big Gold Media, Michaels explained his philosophy on letting filmmakers tell his story without interference. He questioned how this documentary would differ from previous ones about his career.

    Focus on NXT Role

    “I will say one of the things when it comes to these documentaries, I’m very hands off. Especially, I guess, this one, I was just curious how it was going to be different than the other ones, and I never like to be dismissive of, I don’t know, of my story by any stretch, but it felt like, ‘oh, well, we’ve kind of told it (all) before.’ How will this one be different?” Michaels said.

    The documentary distinguishes itself by focusing heavily on Michaels’ current work as WWE NXT’s Senior Vice President of Talent Development Creative. He expressed satisfaction that the film highlights his role mentoring the next generation of WWE superstars.

    “Obviously that was the idea is that it’s so much more focused on what it is we do in NXT and just how important and what a big part of certainly my life and even to some extent the life of my family, how big it is,” Michaels explained.

    “So that was something that, again, that I was pleased to see that we would be focusing a lot on that because that is, again, the biggest part of my life right now, and having the opportunity to give back to an industry that’s been so good to me and to do it through the young men and women that come through our doors in NXT.”

    The Peacock original documentary premieres April 13 and will explore both Michaels’ legendary in-ring career and his current leadership position in NXT.

  • Shawn Michaels Names One Talent He ‘Begged’ To Keep In NXT

    Shawn Michaels Names One Talent He ‘Begged’ To Keep In NXT

    Shawn Michaels wanted to keep Je’Von Evans in NXT a little bit longer.

    The WWE Hall of Famer was asked if there was any one talent he would have liked to keep in NXT forever if he could during his recent interview with Ringer Wrestling. The wrestling veteran explained that the goal of the brand is to make people ready for the main roster, but he then said that he would have liked to keep Je’Von Evans around a little longer:

    “Well not forever because you’re not doing a good job if you got them forever. But certainly Je’Von obviously was somebody I was begging to like ‘Can we just keep him for another six months.’”

    We Were Going To Build Around Je’Von: Shawn Michaels

    The Young OG joined the main roster along with names such as Trick Williams and Oba Femi when he signed with the Raw brand in January this year. Je’Von Evans had made his NXT debut back in April 2024 so his run with the development brand came to an end three months short of two years.

    Shawn Michaels revealed he was informed about Evans’ call-up very late. He was a little bit surprised by it, as they had plans to make the high-flying star a central figure of NXT programming in the coming months. Though HBK looks at the whole thing positively, as the call-ups indicate a success for the WWE development program:

    “From an NXT standpoint we were in our minds, going to obviously build around Je’Von for the next year. And that was, you know, that was kind of the model and then they’re like, ‘Oh, no, no, we’re taking him too.’

    I pushed back a little bit like, ‘Can we just [keep him for] six months?’ ‘No.’ Then I’m like ‘Three?’ They’re like ‘No.’ Then I’m like ‘Alright, fair enough.’ But come on, if that’s the worst news you have to have is that they’re taking too many of your people. That means we’re doing a pretty good job.”

    Apart from this, Michaels also responded to Bret Hart’s claim about his relationship with Vince McMahon. You can check out his remarks here.

    The quotes in this article have been edited for clarity.

  • Shawn Michaels Denies Bret Hart ‘Lovers’ Claim About Vince McMahon

    Shawn Michaels Denies Bret Hart ‘Lovers’ Claim About Vince McMahon

    WWE Hall of Famer Shawn Michaels recently directly addressed Bret Hart’s bold allegations from late 2025, flatly denying claims that he and Vince McMahon had a relationship. The NXT head spoke candidly on The Ringer Wrestling Show on April 10, 2026, marking his first public response to the controversy.

    Last year, during an interview, Bret Hart stated that he felt “caught between two lovers” and claimed that he was betrayed and “screwed over,” and argued that HBK was jealous of his position in WWE. ‘The Hitman’ reckoned this jealousy led to Michaels sleeping with McMahon.

    Michaels acknowledged hearing the claims but made his position immediately clear. He said:

    “You know, so—and I’ve heard him, yeah. So I hear about whatever—doing things with Vince—which you go like, ‘What are you going to do?’ It never happened.”

    Shawn Michaels Chooses Not to Escalate

    Rather than firing back at Hart, Michaels took a measured approach to the situation. HBK suggested the narrative is simply part of the wrestling business and doesn’t warrant serious attention.

    “But, you know, it’s the wrestling business. I don’t know what’s out there anymore. I’m never sure what’s out there to get a rise out of people or to make things—it’s the wrestling business, and I just don’t put a lot of stock in that.”

    The Hall of Famer then referenced a conversation with Hart, noting that not everyone will interpret things the same way.

    “All I know is we had a nice conversation in the room—how to put his suspenders on. He went out there. I—you know, there might be things that he doesn’t like. I understand that. And there’s lots of things people don’t like. Everybody has a right to their opinion on everything these days. I don’t begrudge anyone that,” he said.

    With Shawn Michaels now on record denying the allegations outright, the ball is back in Hart’s court if he chooses to continue the public exchange.

  • Shawn Michaels Addresses Criticism of The ‘Superkick Party’

    Shawn Michaels Addresses Criticism of The ‘Superkick Party’

    Shawn Michaels doesn’t mind people using his finisher.

    The NXT head recently had a lengthy interview with Carmelo Anthony. He talked about things such as rumors about his backstage rift with The Rock during the Attitude Era, his emotional growth in NXT and more.

    During the talk, HBK was also asked about other talents using the Superkick after his retirement. Shawn Michaels recalled the first time someone asked him to use his finisher and revealed his response to it:

    “I can remember with Sweet Chin Music—the superkick—it was a couple years after I retired, getting a phone call. One guy wanted to use it, and you know, asked if it was okay. I said, ‘Yeah, it didn’t matter to me.’ I want to say it was Dolph Ziggler. And I just thought, like I said, ‘sure.’ I’m not there anymore.”

    Hardly Anything To Complain About: Shawn Michaels

    A lot of people have incorporated the move into their routine after Dolph Ziggler, and there is a section of fans and industry veterans who are very critical of its overuse in today’s wrestling.

    Addressing this complaint, Shawn Michaels explained that he never wanted to be the old guy who stopped the progression of the business. The former World Champion claimed that he runs into those complains a lot but doesn’t want to be a part of that community:

    “So once I said yes to that one, it was like opening a floodgate. I guess I’ll say this: I’m always happy, because that question comes up in nearly every interview I do. I still feel like the move is always going to be synonymous with me, which I appreciate.

    And I think to myself, if I’m lying there on my deathbed and my biggest problem is that too many people were using the damn move, then I did good. I mean, come on—there’s hardly anything to complain about.”

    A new documentary titled The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels is set to premiere before WrestleMania on Peacock on April 13.

  • Shawn Michaels Addresses Rock Feud Rumors: ‘Blown Out of Proportion’

    Shawn Michaels Addresses Rock Feud Rumors: ‘Blown Out of Proportion’

    Shawn Michaels addressed long-standing rumors about tension between himself and The Rock during an appearance on 7PM in Brooklyn with Carmelo Anthony and Kazeem Famuyide. The WWE Hall of Famer dismissed claims that he and Triple H mistreated The Rock during his early WWE days.

    “There is a big kerfluffle in the wrestling business about me and Hunter doing stuff to him and being mean. All of it way blown out of proportion, none of it even accurate,” Michaels said. “Things that, when he was younger, were said a lot. Later on, and to this day, we get along, and we talk about stuff.”

    The Rock’s Early WWE Struggles

    Michaels explained the context of The Rock’s difficult start in WWE. When Rocky Maivia debuted in 1996, he was met with “Rocky Sucks” chants from fans who rejected his clean-cut babyface persona.

    “When he first came in, he was just Rocky Maivia’s [Rocky Johnson’s] son. He was one of the first legacies and people at that time were rebelling against that kind of stuff,” Michaels explained. “I think he recognized that and felt like he had to come back with something a little harder and more aggressive.”

    The NXT creative head noted that typical locker room ribbing occurred during this period. After taking time off to rethink his approach, The Rock returned with the aggressive persona that would make him a star.

    Why They Never Faced Each Other

    Michaels was WWE Champion when The Rock debuted in 1996, but the two never had a singles match. By the time Michaels returned from his back injury in 2002, The Rock was transitioning to his Hollywood career.

    “That’s one I think everybody would have liked to have seen. By the time I came back, he was well off into his Hollywood career,” Michaels said. He admitted he would pick The Rock to win in their hypothetical matchup.

    The two did work together in limited capacities. Michaels served as special guest referee for Rock matches and aligned with him when Rock was the corporate champion and Michaels was commissioner.

    Michaels also worked with The Rock’s daughter Ava during her time in NXT before she left WWE earlier this year.

  • Shawn Michaels Shares Perspective on Emotional Growth in NXT

    Shawn Michaels Shares Perspective on Emotional Growth in NXT

    WWE Hall of Famer Shawn Michaels recently revealed his approach to dealing with NXT wrestlers behind the scenes.

    During an appearance on 7PM in Brooklyn with Carmelo Anthony, Michaels explained that he aims to create an environment where talent feels comfortable about sharing their thoughts without fear of being judged.

    “Again, some of it is the experiences you have. I always try to tell them, you’re not going to have a thought in your head that I haven’t had at one time. So if you’re comfortable with it, you can be honest with me and open.”

    HBK believes his generation didn’t have a safe space to express vulnerability. He’s actively trying to change that for the current generation of talents.

    “One of the things our generation didn’t have was the old-timers saying that it’s okay to be scared, to cry and be emotional, intimidated—it’s okay to say, ‘I don’t know.’ To know that everything is okay—you’re not coming to be judged, certainly by me, because I don’t have that right and I have made every mistake”

    Guiding Talent Through Difficult Conversations

    He described how he handles different emotions of the wrestlers and said those emotions aren’t a problem.

    “So that’s something that I do use, as best I can, to help them and guide them. I understand the people that are passionate, or when they get angry or they’ve got a chip on their shoulder—they’re all things that I can relate to, and I can at least validate the way they’re feeling and then do my best to try and help guide them in the midst of those emotions.”

    Michaels is currently working as Senior Vice President of Talent Development, Creative at NXT. He’s managing personalities and their emotions while trying to give today’s generation something he feels he’s never had.

  • The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels Documentary Premieres On April 13

    The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels Documentary Premieres On April 13

    WWE and Peacock announced a new original documentary titled “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels.” The project chronicles the WWE legend’s career from controversy to comeback with exclusive behind-the-scenes access.

    The documentary represents Peacock’s latest original production in partnership with WWE. According to the announcement, the film will provide an unfiltered look at one of wrestling’s most iconic figures.

    Documentary Focus

    “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels” premieres on Monday, April 13th and it will explore the superstar’s journey through professional wrestling. The documentary promises exclusive content and behind-the-scenes footage not previously available to fans.

    The documentary is set to feature commentary from several WWE Hall of Famers, including WWE Chief Content Officer Paul “Triple H” Levesque, The Undertaker, Kevin Nash and Bret Hart, as well as WWE Superstars Trick Williams and Je’Von Evans.

    Additional interviews include NXT Superstars Joe Hendry, Ethan Page, Jacy Jayne, Sol Ruca and Shawn Spears.

    “The Heartbreak Kid: Becoming Shawn Michaels,” is executive produced by Paul Levesque, Lee Fitting and Ben Houser, produced by WWE, and directed by Matt Braine.

    Michaels, who retired from in-ring competition, currently serves as WWE’s Senior Vice President of Talent Development Creative. He oversees NXT’s creative direction and talent development.

    Peacock WWE Partnership

    This documentary continues Peacock’s ongoing collaboration with WWE on original content. The streaming service has produced multiple wrestling documentaries and specials since becoming WWE’s exclusive streaming home.

  • Shawn Michaels Makes NXT Appearance After Confusing End To Big Match

    Shawn Michaels Makes NXT Appearance After Confusing End To Big Match

    Shawn Michaels made an appearance on NXT.

    The main event of the development show this week was a Women’s Championship #1 Contenders match between Kendal Grey and Lola Vice.

    The Champion Jacy Jayne and the rest of the Fatal Influence showed up at the ringside halfway through the bout, with a second referee coming out behind them to stop the faction from getting involved in the match.

    The ending of the bout saw Vice locking her opponent in a choke, with Grey almost passing out. In a last-ditch effort, Kendal countered the hold into a Suplex, landing on top of Lola Vice in a pinning position.

    The referee in the ring counted to three and declared Kendal Grey the winner. The second referee, however, then entered the ring and informed his colleague that Vice never let go of her hold and that Grey actually tapped out during the pin sequence.

    The broadcast showed an alternate angle of the finishing sequence as Shawn Michaels made his entrance. HBK entered the ring as everyone argued but the show went off air without the confirmation on which talent would be heading to Stand & Deliver to challenge Jayne. 

  • WWE Elimination Chamber: 2002 Original Remains the Best

    Elimination Chamber takes center stage this coming weekend as the last PLE stop on the Road to WrestleMania is guaranteed to have a big impact on The Showcase of the Immortals. It\’s a fitting time to look back on the history of what has become a near-quarter-century institution on the WWE landscape.

    Thirty-six Chamber matches have occurred to date with two more set to join that catalog. For all the passage of time and different faces who\’ve made their way through this particular WWE battlefield, a surprising truth emerges. The original Elimination Chamber match is still the best of all time.

    The Roster For The First Elimination Chamber Match Was Perfect

    The Elimination Chamber has more often than not either seen a world champion put his or her title on the line or had WrestleMania implications with the winner getting a world title shot at the biggest show of the year. As such, the bout tends to be filled with big names.

    It\’s debatable whether the first Elimination Chamber had the most star-studded field of competitors of all time. It\’s undeniable, however, that the match represented a combination of big stars, well-respected talents, and performers who played very different yet complementary roles.

    Triple H and Shawn Michaels were the surest main eventers, not to mention that they had a world-class rivalry with one another underway. Add into the mix Kane as a big man base, crucial to a lot of the spots of a multi-man match like this. Then there was RVD, still an ahead-of-his-time athletic spectacle, in the hunt for his first world title. WWE was still putting the pieces together on Booker T, but two and a half years into his run with the company, he had become one of the top athletes on the roster. Rounding out the field? None other than Chris Jericho, quite arguably in his prime and on a short list of the best all-around wrestlers of the day.

    These talents were well-suited to establish a new gimmick match and, indeed, delivered at the highest level when they came together at Survivor Series 2002.

    The First Elimination Chamber Arrived At A Perfect Ending

    There are those moments in wrestling history that went on to shape an era, like Shawn Michaels winning his first world championship at WrestleMania 12 in a victory that cemented his place as a defining main eventer for WWE for two years to follow, not to mention his \”second act\” after four years away from the ring.

    By contrast, Michaels\’s fourth and final world title victory resulted in a reign that lasted less than a month. HBK would remain a top-level act for much of the following seven years, but this title win itself was less a watershed moment than a quintessential feel-good triumph for fans to relish for the victory itself.

    The first Elimination Chamber delivered that moment of satisfaction and vindication as top heel Triple H dropped the title to a beloved legend who was still fresh off returning to the ring just three months earlier.

    The moment\’s all the more remarkable in consideration that it came just shy of the forty-minute mark and with a pin on The Game, who\’d been badly hurt earlier in the match off an RVD frog splash gone wrong from the top of a Chamber entry pod. This element of unplanned near-catastrophe only adds to the story of a unique moment in wrestling when veteran hands worked together to preserve the magic moment planned despite nearly insurmountable obstacles.

    The Elimination Chamber Is A Tricky Match To Diversify And Improve Upon

    The original Elimination Chamber match was excellent. One reason why it remains the best version of this gimmick match, though, also relates to the match format itself.

    While bouts like the Royal Rumble have enough different variations on entries, stories to tell, and high spots possible to remain thoroughly entertaining spectacles time and again, the Chamber is simply more limited. The structure can\’t quite compare to Hell in a Cell or War Games. The six-man format struggles to keep up with the Rumble, War Games, or even traditional Survivor Series elimination tag matches. For whatever combination of reasons, Elimination Chambers rarely compete with multi-person Ladder Matches like Money in the Bank.

    Yes, there have been other good and arguably even great Elimination Chambers. Ultimately, though, it\’s one of WWE\’s less inspired annual spectacles. Most years, the match tends to be more engaging for its WrestleMania implications than the action inside the specialty cage itself.

    Will WWE ever pull off an Elimination Chamber match that tops the original outing? Only time will tell. For now, though, a combination of the right talents, the right storytelling, and precisely the right booking for the debut bout seem to have realized the gimmick\’s fullest potential.

  • WWE Working On New Shawn Michaels Project

    A new Shawn Michaels documentary is coming soon.

    The latest WrestleVotes Radio show reported that WWE has been working on a new documentary centered around the Heartbreak Kid. The full-length feature is expected to include several new interviews with his peers and longtime adversaries.

    While the main subject of the documentary is not confirmed, the speculation is that it could be centered around the 30-year anniversary of Michaels realizing his boyhood dream. Fans should find more about it soon in any case, as the new feature is expected to air before WrestleMania 42.

    Shawn Michaels\’ First World Title

    After teasing retirement, Shawn Michaels made a surprise return at the 1996 Royal Rumble event, winning the battle royal for the second year in a row for a WWF title opportunity at WrestleMania.

    The following Iron Man match with Bret Hart is considered one of the best matches in all of pro wrestling. After both contestants failed to get any pins under the 60-minute time limit, Bret started to leave with his title. President Gorilla Monsoon, however, instructed the match to be restarted under the sudden death rules.

    Michaels went on to defeat the Hitman for his first world title after pinning him with not one but two Sweet Chin Music. The line delivered by Vince McMahon on commentary after the match then became wrestling history.

  • From The Vault: 1996 Shawn Michaels Talks Hollywood Hogan, Demeaning Drug Testing And More

    Late 1996 was an interesting time for the wrestling world. WCW was dominating the Monday Night Wars with the help of Hulk Hogan\’s recent heel turn, while WWF was also starting to experiment with their programming more. A recently resurfaced interview of then-WWF Champion Shawn Michaels gives us an intriguing look at that era.

    Below are some of the highlights from this interview where HBK is promoting his Survivor Series main event match against Sycho Sid:

    If he will ever go to WCW: \”Nah, I don\’t think so, of course, you\’re never supposed to say never, in this line of work. But I\’m comfortable where I\’m at. I mean, the outlook that the WWF has on our business today and mine are the same, and I can\’t say that\’s the same for the other group. So I\’m happy where I\’m at. I\’d like to see this through. I\’d like to be one of the few guys that you know sticks around, and gives back to the company that has given him so much. You know, I don\’t know a whole lot of guys that would do that in our line of work. I\’d like to do it. Bret Hart has obviously made that choice, which I think is great, and I\’d just like to follow in his footsteps. I think there\’s some of us that believe that WWF has been very kind to us and we\’d like to someday be able to give something back.\”

    Is the ticket-buying public buying the Hollywood Hulk Hogan persona: \”Well, I don\’t know if in the last couple years, they were buying any persona he\’s been putting forward. With all due respect to him, it\’s just because our business, finally, you know, is starting to evolve. People are accepting the fact that, just like in every other line of work or sports franchise that you know, the younger athletes are going to come up and they\’re going to get better, and they will start to steal the spotlight. That\’s finally what\’s happened. A number of wrestlers from years ago have stuck around and have tried to hold on to what they once were, but time takes its toll on everybody. That\’s not to take away from those guys, doesn\’t mean they don\’t have something great to give to the business, but none of them seem to want to give back, they\’re still in position to where they want to take. They don\’t really have the ability to be taking anymore. I think it\’s probably time for them to make the decision to, if they\’re going to continue to be around this line of work, they should start to do it in a different capacity.\”

    If he finds regular drug testing demeaning: \”Given the past, and with everything that the WWF has been up against in the past, and who knows in the future? I don\’t, because it\’s just one of those things where you have to prove to people. Even though I don\’t think we\’re in a position where we should have to, because it wasn\’t my generation that got in trouble for all this. It was another generation. We\’re sort of paying the price for it. But if that\’s what it takes to get a clean slate with everybody, then that\’s fine. It doesn\’t really affect me anyway. I was never of that genre in the first place, and I\’m obviously not now, so.\”

    What if someone were to tell him that wrestlers were cartoon characters and not real athletes: \”Well, I mean, it\’s something that you get used to hearing. But I\’m certainly, I\’m not a cartoon. I mean, I\’m far from cartoon. I\’m a working human being. But I would ask the guy, what exactly he\’d like me to do to try to change his mind. I\’ll put myself, my schedule, my training regimen, anything that makes up who I am as an athlete, what I feel I am as an athlete. I will put up against any other athlete, doing anything else. I can pretty much guarantee anybody, I was, as in good a physical condition as any athlete they see on Sunday afternoon, easy.\”

    Apart from this, Shawn Michaels also discussed the potential of Randy Savage making a WWF return, the Brian Pillman – Steve Austin gun angle and more. You can check out the full interview below:

  • The Undertaker Reveals The One Match He\’s Most Fond Of

    The Undertaker has explained what made Shawn Michaels so great.

    The Dead Man recently had an interview with Comedian Tom Segura. They talked about things such as the origin of WrestleMania, the birth of The Dead Man character, injuries in his career and more.

    The former World Champion was asked to name one match he is fond of above all others in his illustrious career. The Undertaker picked his WrestleMania 25 match with HBK, saying that it was as close to perfect as he ever got:

    \”So the match I\’m probably [most fond of] as far as a wrestling purist kind of matches, would have to be WrestleMania 25, Shawn Michaels. That was as close to perfect that I ever got, right?

    It was just one of those things when you\’re in the moment. And obviously, Shawn is probably one of the greatest, if not the greatest in-ring talent ever.\”

    He Was Ahead of His Time: The Undertaker

    When asked what made Michaels such a great talent, The Last Outlaw explained that not only did Shawn had all the qualities required in a great wrestler but he was also a believable fighter:

    \”He just was an exceptional talent. He loved the business. He was a phenomenal athlete. He had this incredible personality. He just, he had it all. He was good on the mic. His character was good.

    And for a smaller guy…for me, in a wrestling match, it always broke down, like you can do all the wrestling and everything, it always, at some point, breaks down to where it\’s just dukes, right? It\’s just a fight. And not everybody had that.

    They didn\’t have that edge. He did. He was ahead of his time with his inward ability. But when it came down to the, even if it came down to just the fight, he was believable. He\’s recognized as one of the greats, but I don\’t think people really understand how good he was.\”

    The Quotes In This Article Have Been Edited For Clarity

  • Stephanie Vaquer Thanks Shawn Michaels & More After World Title Win

    Stephanie Vaquer captured the WWE Women’s World Championship at Wrestlepalooza, marking another major milestone for the Chilean star in 2025. Inside Indianapolis’ Gainbridge Fieldhouse, Vaquer defeated former champion IYO SKY to claim the vacant title.

    After the match, Vaquer celebrated with her father, who had traveled from Chile to watch her perform. WWE NXT head Shawn Michaels later praised her victory on X, and Vaquer expressed gratitude to the family she found within WWE’s silver brand.

    Michaels wasn’t the only name to acknowledge her achievement. On X, Vaquer also responded to congratulatory messages from Triple H, Stephanie McMahon, and the Bella Twins.

    This win adds to an already remarkable rookie year for Vaquer, who signed with WWE in 2024. She made her NXT debut that September and quickly rose through the ranks, winning three championships in less than a year. In February 2025, she captured the NXT Women’s North American Championship, followed by the NXT Women’s Title just a month later.

    Now, with the Women’s World Championship on her shoulder, Vaquer stands at the top of WWE Raw’s women’s division. With Crown Jewel on the horizon and a match for the Crown Jewel Women’s Title looming, it appears more gold could be in her future.