Tag: Triple H

  • TKO Face Accusations Of Restricting Triple H In WWE Creative Decisions

    TKO Face Accusations Of Restricting Triple H In WWE Creative Decisions

    TKO is being accused of restraining WWE Chief Content Officer Triple H. Former TNA star Chris Harris argues that WWE’s “money-hungry” parent company has stripped Triple H of real creative authority and forced him to publicly back decisions he may privately oppose.

    Harris made the claim on the Tagging in with Chris Harris podcast while assessing how Triple H is handling his role as WWE’s creative leader. His comments land as TKO faces backlash over reports of cost-cutting and pushes for talent to accept reduced contract deals, the backdrop that gives his criticism stakes.

    Harris was quick to separate Triple H from the corporate decisions fans have soured on. He praised having someone with an old-school wrestling mind in charge, citing what he saw in the Unreal program, but said the real power sits above him.

    “I’m glad we have an old-school guy in charge. I think he’s got some good ideas, at least from what they allow us to see, and I’ve seen a lot of that from that Unreal program,” Harris said.

    From there, he turned on TKO directly, accusing the company of prioritizing profit over the product.

    “It looks like he’s open to other ideas, and they try to come together on things creatively. So I’m glad we have that old-school mindset leading the way.

    However, I also feel like since TKO has taken over, there’s only so much that a guy in his position can do, because you’ve got higher-ups that it’s very clear are so money-hungry and are doing everything just to make a buck. And I get that, that’s part of business,” Harris said.

    Triple H’s “Hands Are Tied”

    Harris believes many of WWE’s recent calls would look different if Triple H had full control. In his view, TKO holds final say, leaving Triple H boxed in.

    “But I also feel like there’s probably a lot that would have gone differently if it was all up to Triple H in the decision-making. But because TKO has the final say, I think they’ve stepped in a lot of situations, and it may not be what Triple H wants, but his hands are tied,” Harris said.

    He added that Triple H has no choice but to publicly defend decisions he may not personally agree with.

    “If they tell him to do something, he’s got to do it, and not just do it, but do it with a smile. He can’t go out and say, ‘I didn’t agree with this.’ That’s not how it works. They want someone to be the face of the company and defend every decision,” Harris said. “So personally, I feel like we have a good guy in charge, but I don’t think TKO cares as much about the wrestling side of things as they do about the business side. And that’s unfortunate, but that’s what they’re doing.”

    Harris is not the first to frame WWE’s direction as a TKO-driven business call rather than a wrestling one. The narrative echoes earlier claims that TKO was behind WWE’s purge of dark characters, and follows other instances where Triple H has been defended over decisions perceived as out of his hands.

  • Cody Rhodes Backs Triple H WWE Creative Booking Amid Criticism

    Cody Rhodes Backs Triple H WWE Creative Booking Amid Criticism

    The Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes is stepping into one of the louder debates surrounding WWE right now, throwing his support behind Triple H’s creative leadership at a time when critics have been openly questioning whether the WWE Chief Content Officer belongs in the role.

    As one of the promotion’s top stars working inside the system every week, ‘The American Nightmare’ offered a candid endorsement of how the creative process operates.

    Speaking on his What Do You Wanna Talk About? podcast, Cody Rhodes explained why he enjoys working under Triple H’s approach. He said Triple H operates differently from Vince McMahon and other bookers because he gives talent room to bring ideas forward and collaborate.

    Rhodes described himself as a performer who wants ownership over his story and character while still trusting WWE’s machine to polish and produce it.

    “Most of the time this is my story. It’s my character. I want to get it as good as I can and then you guys fix it up, filter it, produce it for me. One of the things I love about WWE is taking talented people, but then producing them. You’re producing them and funneling and right now Hunter has a different style funnel, Triple H that being, than Vince had, than any other booker’s,” Rhodes said.

    Inside Triple H’s Creative “Sandbox”

    Rhodes said the style is especially fun for talent because it lets performers try ideas inside the structure WWE provides. He framed it as a back-and-forth where talent pitches and Triple H helps shape those ideas inside his creative “sandbox.”

    “He has a different style that’s really fun if you’re a player for him to go, ‘Hey, I want to be your main guy. I want to be, but this is my, what about this? Try it.’ And to try his sandbox, to try and collab and match that idea,” Rhodes said.

    A Response To The Critics

    Cody Rhodes’ comments land against a backdrop of public criticism aimed at Triple H’s booking. Vince Russo recently ripped Triple H’s comments about WWE creative and accused him of being unfit for the job, arguing his “ebb and flow” explanation sounded like an excuse.

    Rhodes has spoken often about valuing creative input over his work, including moments inside the ring and recent on-screen storylines like his rematch offer to Gunther after WWE Clash In Italy.

  • Never Been Hunter’s Favorite: Ex-WWE Star Says Triple H Didn’t Understand His Character

    Never Been Hunter’s Favorite: Ex-WWE Star Says Triple H Didn’t Understand His Character

    Carlito believes Triple H never understood his character.

    The former WWE star was the most recent guest on Chris Van Vliet’s Insight podcast. Among other things, the former US Champion also discussed his abrupt exit from the company last year in June when his contract expired. The wrestling veteran revealed that the officials had actually offered him a three-year deal in 2023, but he opted to sign for two years only because he wasn’t sure how his run would go.

    Chris mentioned that being part of the Judgment Day gave him a lot more to do on WWE TV, saying he doesn’t know where the 47-year-old would fit on the show otherwise. Carlito agreed with the sentiment, suggesting that the current creative head Triple H is not a fan of his character:

    “Me neither. Yeah, I don’t know, because I’ve never been Hunter’s favorite. I don’t think he gets Carlito or the character. So it is what it is. But I was gonna make whatever I did work. So Judgment Day came by, and it was fun for me.”

    Elsewhere in the session, Carlito also revealed that WWE didn’t actually have a plan for his storyline with Raquel Rodriguez and wished that the company had written him off TV with an angle instead of just pulling him from the programming without an explanation.

    Apart from this, Carlito discussed celebrity involvement in wrestling, the difference between his first and second run with the company, and more. You can check out his full interview below:

  • Vince McMahon And Triple H To Testify In Upcoming WWE Trial

    Vince McMahon And Triple H To Testify In Upcoming WWE Trial

    Vince McMahon, Triple H, and several other TKO executives are set to testify in a shareholder trial beginning June 8 in Delaware. The case centers on claims that the WWE-UFC merger was predetermined to keep McMahon in power rather than maximize shareholder value.

    According to Post Wrestling’s Brandon Thurston, the witness list includes McMahon, Nick Khan, Paul Levesque (Triple H), Ari Emanuel, and Mark Shapiro. The shareholders filing the lawsuit argue the merger process was designed to benefit McMahon at the expense of getting full value for WWE.

    Former WWE Executives Among Witnesses

    Other notable witnesses include former WWE executives and Board members George Barrios, Michelle Wilson, and Frank Riddick. Former WWE Board member Steve Koonin, banker Jeff Sine who advised WWE on the deal, TKO CFO Andrew Schleimer, and TKO chief strategy officer Mark Zhu are also scheduled to testify.

    Some witnesses will appear live while others may appear via video or pre-recorded deposition testimony. Stephanie McMahon, Jeffrey Speed, and Steve Pamon are among those expected to provide pre-recorded depositions.

    Liberty Media CEO On Witness List

    Liberty Media CEO Marty Patterson is also listed as a witness, as the company was among those bidding for WWE during the sale process. McMahon remained in power through the merger until January 2024, when he resigned following the Janel Grant lawsuit.

    The trial could still be settled before it begins or even after proceedings start. The shareholders claim they did not receive the full potential value of a WWE sale due to the predetermined nature of the merger process.

  • Triple H Defended After Being Called Coward and Liar

    Triple H Defended After Being Called Coward and Liar

    Former WWE writer Vince Russo recently defended Triple H after AEW star MVP publicly criticized WWE management over communication and respect issues.

    The former WWE writer, typically a vocal critic of Triple H, blamed WWE’s corporate structure rather than the Chief Content Officer’s leadership abilities.

    MVP aired grievances on Triple H, stating he felt disrespected by WWE management and suggesting a lack of direct communication as a major issue. MVP mentioned Triple H by name.

    Russo took the opportunity to defend Triple H, highlighting the pressures that come with leading WWE’s creative operations under TKO Group Holdings.

    “Listen, it’s a tough spot to be in, especially when you’re booking a program that involves so many talents,” Russo explained.

    “But when you’re wearing 27 hats, you can’t do that. It’s that simple. If there was one person who was head of creative and that’s all they did and people could approach them about creative, you wouldn’t have that issue.”

    “When you’re wearing seven hats, it’s impossible to talk to everybody. And again, that’s a structural problem in WWE,” Russo added.

    Coachman Agrees on Executive Challenges

    Jonathan Coachman agreed that Triple H faces significant challenges juggling multiple executive responsibilities within WWE’s corporate framework. The podcast host offered his own perspective on how Triple H manages interactions with talent.

    “They need a complete overhaul, because what Vince is talking about is Triple H is a genius at doing this. He’ll walk up to you like, ‘Hey, Coach, what’s going on? You good? Good. Good. Good to see you.’ And I call it doing the Jesse Jackson. I met Jesse Jackson, and he could meet you while his head was already turned as he was shaking your hand. So you never had the chance to actually start a conversation,” Coachman said.

    Triple H has been serving as WWE’s Chief Content Officer, overseeing creative across all WWE programming.

  • AEW Star Calls Triple H Coward and Liar

    AEW Star Calls Triple H Coward and Liar

    AEW star MVP has unleashed a scathing verbal attack on Triple H during a recent podcast interview, delivering some of the harshest criticism heard from a former WWE performer in recent memory. The former United States Champion did not hold back when discussing his views on WWE’s Chief Content Officer.

    Speaking on “Marking Out with MVP and Dwayne Swayze” podcast, MVP made his feelings crystal clear about the WWE executive.

    MVP said he decided he no longer wanted to stay in WWE after seeing Shelton Benjamin released without being offered a backstage role despite his long career and talent.

    The former WWE star praised Benjamin as an underappreciated all-time great and explained that the breakup of the Hurt Business, combined with Benjamin’s release, heavily influenced his decision about his own future in WWE.

    He said:

    “And if Triple H is in charge, then I definitely want to be here. Because I don’t like Triple H. I don’t respect Triple H. I think he’s a coward and a liar. And there have been many situations where he was dealing with Bobby, where he didn’t tell Bobby the truth creatively what he wanted to do. There are multiple times that I tried to talk to him.

    And he would always, I’ll get with you in a little bit or the few times that I got a chance to get him in his office alone, he would call somebody to come in. He didn’t want to deal with me. I don’t respect that. Tell me. I’m a professional. Tell me how you feel. We’re doing business. Based on it, you ain’t got to like me. There’s lots of people throughout my career that I’ve worked with that I don’t like. We’re making money. We’re doing business.”

    The comments represent a dramatic escalation in public criticism from MVP, who previously worked under Triple H’s leadership structure during his most recent WWE run.

    MVP is best known for his championship runs in WWE, including his United States Championship reign and his role as the leader and manager of The Hurt Business stable alongside Bobby Lashley, Shelton Benjamin, and Cedric Alexander from 2020 to 2021.

    The Hurt Business Legacy

    The Hurt Business was one of WWE’s most prominent factions during its run on Raw, with MVP serving as the group’s mouthpiece and strategist. The stable currently goes by the name The Hurt Syndicate in AEW and has been a dominant force in the promotion.

    Most recently, at AEW Double or Nothing, Lashley and Benjamin teamed up with Chris Jericho and The Elite to win a chaotic Stadium Stampede match.

  • Triple H Reached Out To Top WWE Star After Embarrassing Botch

    Triple H Reached Out To Top WWE Star After Embarrassing Botch

    Sol Ruca recently revealed that Triple H personally reached out to reassure her after she slipped on the ropes during a Sol Snatcher attempt in a segment with Becky Lynch on WWE Raw.

    The former NXT Women’s North American Champion opened up about the incident and the mental toll of social media criticism during an appearance on The Ringer Wrestling Show.

    Ruca discussed how online reactions can heavily affect wrestlers mentally, even when most feedback is positive. She admitted that negative comments tend to stick with performers despite overwhelming support.

    “Social media is tough, especially with the trolls and people hating,” Ruca said. “I feel like a lot of us just want to know what people think. We want to know if people like our matches. We want to know if they’re invested and whatnot. But I feel like it doesn’t matter how many good comments we see, if we see one of those bad ones that strikes a nerve, we’re just like ‘Oh my God, I’m the worst. I did terribly.’”

    She acknowledged that handling criticism is an ongoing battle for wrestlers.

    “Yeah it’s just something you have to learn to work through, I think it’s going to be an ongoing thing. I don’t think any of us are ever going to completely get over that.”

    Triple H Reaches Out After Botched Spot

    Ruca reflected on the widely discussed moment where she tripped on the ropes while attempting her Sol Snatcher finisher during the Raw segment. Triple H contacted her afterward and immediately tried to calm any concerns she had.

    “I did have Triple H call me after my debut with Becky and the promo and stuff and he was like, ‘I just want you to know you did a great job.’ I was like ‘Yeah, I’m just gonna stay off social media, not 100% happy with how it turned out.’ But he was like ‘We think you did amazing, don’t worry about it, don’t go on social media.’”

    The support from WWE’s Chief Content Officer clearly meant a lot to Ruca, who said the conversation helped her tune out the negativity surrounding the moment.

    “He really just gave me that ok of like ‘You’re fine, don’t care what people say, we think you did amazing and just keep doing what you’re doing.’”

    WWE later edited the segment clips before posting them across social media platforms.

    Sol Ruca is set to face WWE Women’s Intercontinental Champion Becky Lynch at Saturday Night’s Main Event on May 23.

  • WWE Summer House Show Tour Could Lead To A Full Winter Loop

    WWE Summer House Show Tour Could Lead To A Full Winter Loop

    WWE’s summer house show tour could be a precursor to a more extensive winter loop, with the success of the summer dates and talent health as key factors in that decision, according to WrestleVotes Radio on Fightful Select.

    WrestleVotes also reports that select main event talent were approached about working the events and given the option to decline if they chose. Approximately 25-30 talents are expected per show.

    WWE announced 10 main roster house shows across July and August, running on Thursdays and weekends with stops in New Mexico, Pennsylvania, California, Illinois, Virginia, New Hampshire, Georgia, and South Carolina. Cody Rhodes, Oba Femi, Rhea Ripley, Seth Rollins, Jade Cargill, Trick Williams, and Drew McIntyre are advertised for the tour. Ticket prices are expected to be significantly lower than standard WWE events.

    Triple H and Nick Khan addressed the rationale directly at a staff town hall this week, per PWInsider, framing house shows as both a developmental tool for younger talent and a creative testing ground for trying different things before committing them to television. 

    The full WWE Summer Tour schedule is as follows:

    • Saturday, July 11 — Pan American Center, Las Cruces, NM
    • Sunday, July 12 — The Pit, Albuquerque, NM
    • Thursday, July 16 — PPL Center, Allentown, PA
    • Saturday, July 25 — Adventist Health Arena, Stockton, CA
    • Sunday, July 26 — Dignity Health Arena, Bakersfield, CA
    • Thursday, July 30 — Bank of Springfield Center, Springfield, IL
    • Thursday, August 6 — EagleBank Arena, Fairfax, VA
    • Thursday, August 13 — SNHU Arena, Manchester, NH
    • Saturday, August 29 — Enmarket Arena, Savannah, GA
    • Sunday, August 30 — North Charleston Coliseum, Charleston, SC
  • Triple H And Nick Khan Explained To WWE Talent Why House Shows Are Coming Back This Summer

    Triple H And Nick Khan Explained To WWE Talent Why House Shows Are Coming Back This Summer

    Triple H and Nick Khan told WWE talent during a town hall meeting that house shows are returning this summer not only to give younger wrestlers more ring time, but also to serve as a testing ground for new ideas in front of live crowds, according to PWInsider.

    The meeting provided internal context for the recently announced WWE Summer Tour, which begins July 11 in New Mexico and spans stops in Pennsylvania, California, Illinois, Virginia, New Hampshire, Georgia, and South Carolina.

    Both Triple H and Nick Khan emphasized that the shows would feature a balance of younger talent gaining experience alongside established main roster stars and that injury prevention would be a priority in how the events are structured.

    When Endeavor purchased WWE in 2023, one of the early changes was a significant reduction in the house show schedule. While non-televised events continued on a limited basis, the cutback reduced the number of matches wrestlers compete in per year. The summer tour represents a notable reversal of that trend.

    Dave Meltzer previously reported in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter that the decision was driven by the influx of younger talent on the roster who need more in-ring reps before live crowds.

  • Logan Paul Shows Off Locker Room Next To Roman Reigns And Triple H

    Logan Paul Shows Off Locker Room Next To Roman Reigns And Triple H

    Logan Paul recently revealed that a handful of WWE stars initially disliked him when he joined the company in 2022 due to the special treatment he received and his rapid rise to prominence. One-half of the WWE World Tag Team Champion made the admission in a backstage vlog filmed during WWE Raw in Knoxville, Tennessee.

    Paul debuted in WWE at WrestleMania 38 on April 3, 2022, and quickly became featured in high-profile matches and major storylines despite coming from outside the wrestling industry. His fast track to the top drew resentment from some roster members who had worked years to reach similar positions.

    Logan Paul Claims Spot Next To Roman Reigns and Triple H

    In the vlog posted to his YouTube channel, ‘The Maverick’ walked through the backstage area and pointed out his locker room location near Roman Reigns and WWE CCO Triple H. He used the placement to illustrate the privileges he received early in his WWE tenure.

    “Just to give everyone in the WWE Universe an idea of how it works backstage. They tend to put the greats together, the best of the best. We kind of usually have our own little alley, our own little section. Like you can see me here. Then just across the hall here, Roman Reigns, of course. And then, you know, our boss, the big man himself, Paul Levesque,” Paul said.

    “But I think when I got in the WWE, a lot of my peers disliked me because, you know, I was good. And because I was good, quickly, I got privileges like a giant green room next to the big dogs. But I think now, you know, it’s like tag team champion, member of the most dominant faction in the WWE, future Hall of Famer type sh*t.”

    Paul also called himself WWE’s biggest entrepreneur and biggest star during the vlog.

    “Only real paper billionaire, WWE’s biggest entrepreneur, and to be honest with you, I’ll just say it, biggest star. But it’s not all about followers. It’s about drive. It’s about power. It actually is my followers,” he said.

    Over time, many wrestlers have come to respect the effort Paul has put into learning the business and his in-ring performances, though his comments suggest the initial reception was far from welcoming.

  • Triple H is Aware of WWE’s Ad Placement Problem

    Triple H is Aware of WWE’s Ad Placement Problem

    Actor O’Shea Jackson Jr. told Triple H and Stephanie McMahon directly that WWE’s ad placement has become nearly unwatchable.

    Jackson, a self-described WWE superfan and son of Ice Cube, appeared on The Ariel Helwani Show and described a conversation he had with Triple and McMahon around the start of 2026, following a guest appearance on McMahon’s podcast.

    “I told this to Triple H and Stephanie when I did Stephanie’s show. I told them, the ads and the timing of them are horrendous. This was like five, six months ago or something crazy like that when I went to do Stephanie McMahon’s pod. Afterwards, because I did it at WWE headquarters, Triple H comes down, we’re all talking, and I brought up my transgressions. And I was like, ‘Dude, the ads are crazy. Like, it’s almost unwatchable.’ And, like, they know. It’s just about, they’re working on placement of them maybe.”

    Jackson singled out entrances as a particular pain point.

    “I get it, Roman Reigns’ entrance is seven minutes long, but that doesn’t mean that’s the time to throw the ads in. I should not — there should never be a moment where I miss IYO SKY’s entrance because ‘we are back from commercial break.’ It’s a level of respect for them. It’s fine in the middle of a match, but at least picture-in-picture me.”

    Neither Triple H nor McMahon pushed back on his complaints. Fan frustration with ads peaked at WrestleMania 42, where WWE touted a record 32 marketing partners.

    McMahon’s podcast episode with Jackson aired in January 2026. Jackson co-hosts “No-Contest Wrestling,” produced by ESPN and The Rich Eisen Show.

  • Young Bucks Reveal 2018 Talks With Triple H Over New Day Match

    Young Bucks Reveal 2018 Talks With Triple H Over New Day Match

    The Elite vs The New Day

    Matt Jackson called Triple H in 2018 to pitch a New Day vs. The Elite dream match. The revelation, dropped on the latest episode of Being The Elite, re-contextualizes years of social media teasing into something that was nearly real, and lands at the exact moment Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods are weeks away from being able to sign with All Elite Wrestling.

    “We truly were trying to get a New Day, Young Bucks, Kenny match to happen. An Elite vs. New Day match actively,” Matt Jackson said on the show. “They said they were trying on their side. We were definitely talking to our bosses.”

    Jackson then disclosed the call itself.

    “Even to the point in 2018 when we got on the phone with Triple H and we talked to him and said, ‘Hey, we would really like to do this match.’ I don’t know if he was necessarily interested in just doing that match. I think he was more interested in pursuing us to work for him, but we talked to him about it. We were serious about doing the match and we thought we’d probably be able to do it, and unfortunately we never did.”

    The Episode Doubles As A Tease

    The episode itself is a watchalong of Being The Elite episode 107, the 2018 “It’s a New Day” installment that documented The Elite facing off against The New Day in Street Fighter V at E3. Kenny Omega complemented the timing by posting throwback video footage of himself gaming with The New Day from that same event, making the back-to-back teases impossible to read as coincidence.

    The footage and the 2018 phone call paint the same picture. The Elite have wanted this match for nearly a decade, and they are surfacing the evidence at the precise moment it might finally happen.

    Why Now

    Kingston and Woods mutually parted ways with WWE on May 2. Dave Meltzer reported in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter that TKO offered the duo reduced deals just one year into a five-year contract set to run through 2030, and both men declined and walked, per the backstage update from Meltzer’s reporting.

    Standard WWE deals include a 90-day non-compete clause. If Kingston and Woods are operating under that timeline, they would be eligible to sign with another promotion at the end of July, opening a runway to a potential AEW debut during the summer build to All In London.

    The Young Bucks and FTR were among the first to tweet teases in the immediate aftermath of the news, per Meltzer. MJF and Cash Wheeler invoked The New Day’s signature catchphrase in their own posts. Swerve Strickland told TMZ’s Inside the Ring podcast that he texted Kingston after the release and considers him “one of the top five greatest ever to do it.” The New Day name remains WWE property, so any AEW arrival would likely see Kingston and Woods working under their individual names.

  • Triple H Thanks CM Punk for WrestleMania 42 Attendance

    Triple H Thanks CM Punk for WrestleMania 42 Attendance

    A behind-the-scenes moment between Triple H and CM Punk before WrestleMania 42 has been captured on video, showing the WWE Chief Content Officer crediting Punk directly for the crowd inside Allegiant Stadium.

    WWE released production footage showing the exchange on the stage before Saturday’s show, with both men looking out at the venue as Triple H delivered his message.

    “It’s a big f***ing deal, right? It’s because of you, man. Thanks for the house.”

    Punk deflected the credit rather than accept it outright.

    “It was a team effort, you know that. It always has been. Thank you, those are kind words.”

    Triple H added that he was glad to have Punk there, and Punk responded in kind.

    “I’m happy to be here, you know that. Thank you for the opportunity.”

    Punk headlined Night Two of WrestleMania 42, defending the WWE World Heavyweight Championship against Roman Reigns in the main event before losing the title. The footage was part of Triple H’s behind-the-scenes production walkthrough from both nights of the event.

  • Triple H’s WWE Future Was Internally Questioned Before New Deal

    Triple H’s WWE Future Was Internally Questioned Before New Deal

    Triple H’s new WWE contract sealed his immediate future, but the conversation about whether he would even be in the role much longer was happening inside the company well before WrestleMania 42, not just on Wrestling Twitter.

    That’s the picture painted by Bryan Alvarez on the April 28 episode of Wrestling Observer Live. Alvarez reported that the question of Paul Levesque’s standing was an active discussion topic inside WWE leading into Las Vegas, driven less by what he was doing and more by how often he was getting overruled.

    Why The Internal Doubt Existed

    Alvarez was clear that the backstage conversation was not a referendum on Levesque’s creative work. It was a referendum on his actual authority.

    “Sometimes there will be some things that are booked and fans won’t like it, and then they’ll try to get this traction going that maybe we need to replace Triple H,” Alvarez said. “I will say that this year, leading to WrestleMania, unlike previous years when fans were discussing it, it was a topic of conversation in WWE leading up to WrestleMania 42.”

    The reason, per Alvarez, was the volume of late changes coming from above him on the org chart.

    “I want to make it very clear, the people discussing this within WWE were not discussing this in the sense that, ‘We think he’s doing a horrible job, we need him to be replaced.’ It was being discussed specifically because so much stuff was being done at the last second by people outside. The decision to bring in Pat McAfee, the decision to insert him into the storyline, the thing with Jelly Roll. I had heard about it prior to that as well with other things that had come from above.”

    The McAfee Decision Came From The Top

    The McAfee insertion is the cleanest example of the friction Alvarez is describing. Dave Meltzer previously reported that the call to bring Pat McAfee into the Cody Rhodes vs. Randy Orton program came from TKO CEO Ari Emanuel, who also represents McAfee. McAfee initially turned the offer down before WWE eventually got him in the door for the April 4 SmackDown reveal as Orton’s mystery caller.

    Jelly Roll was layered onto the angle separately. The cumulative effect, per Alvarez, was a sense inside the building that the people writing the checks did not fully trust the person running the show.

    “It was just kind of there was a feeling that perhaps these people keep getting involved and why would they be getting involved if they had so much faith in this guy. And there were people that thought, ‘I don’t know if this guy is going to be around this time next year.’”

    The New Deal Settles It For Now

    Levesque’s new agreement, announced by WWE President Nick Khan during a TKO town hall on April 27, is reportedly a multi-year deal that PWInsider says could run as long as three years. The deal was reportedly completed before WrestleMania weekend, meaning the internal hand-wringing Alvarez described was happening even as the paperwork was being finalized.

    Khan publicly backed Levesque during that town hall, telling staff he would remain Chief Content Officer for the foreseeable future. Sources told Bodyslam that TKO is satisfied with the work Levesque has done despite the corporate overrides during WrestleMania season.

    “Turns out he ends up getting his deal extended, so he will be around,” Alvarez said. “But it was definitely a discussion point that this may not be his thing for a long period of time. It could be over soon.”

    The contract removes the immediate question. The structural one, who actually gets the final say when WWE’s biggest weekend rolls around, is a separate problem entirely. Court filings from 2023 already showed Levesque navigating outside creative interference once before. The names have changed. The dynamic, by Alvarez’s account, has not.

  • Triple H, Nick Khan Using AI for WWE Storylines, Says TKO COO

    Triple H, Nick Khan Using AI for WWE Storylines, Says TKO COO

    WWE’s creative process is being shaped, at least in part, by artificial intelligence. TKO President and COO Mark Shapiro told staff during a Monday town hall that Nick Khan and Paul “Triple H” Levesque are leaning on AI tools to help guide storyline decisions, according to audio of the internal call obtained by Post Wrestling.

    Shapiro framed AI adoption as a “major priority” for the company, pointing to its potential to make employees more efficient and citing UFC’s existing use of AI for fighter rankings as an internal proof point.

    Shapiro’s Comments on WWE Creative

    “Nick Khan and Triple H are using AI for storylines with the WWE,” Shapiro said. “What’s resonating? What superstars are resonating? In what pockets of the country are they resonating? That helps us with, obviously, our content, our editorial, our creative, our mapping, our touring, and of course, maximizing revenue and getting our product out to the fans most in need of it.”

    The framing positions AI not as a script-writing tool but as a market-research engine feeding creative decisions. Which talent is over in which markets, what storylines are landing with the audience, and where to route the touring schedule are all questions Shapiro indicated AI is now helping answer.

    It also follows weeks of public messaging from Shapiro about TKO’s grip on WWE. Earlier this month, Shapiro told a University of Alabama class that TKO has “complete control” over WWE creative, on the record acknowledgment of a chain of command fans had spent weeks debating after WrestleMania 42.

    TKO CFO Says It’s Still Early

    TKO Chief Financial Officer Andrew Schleimer also addressed AI during the same town hall, offering a more measured view. Schleimer said the company has only run “tests and pilots” so far and remains in the early stages of implementation, with current uses focused on data and analytics for WWE and UFC consumers, plus minor broadcast enhancements.

    The disclosure lands at a moment when Triple H’s grip on creative has just been formally locked in. PWInsider reported earlier this week that Paul Levesque signed a new multi-year deal to remain WWE Chief Content Officer, with TKO publicly endorsing his work in the role despite ongoing fan criticism over recent creative decisions.

    Context for the AI Push

    The AI commentary was one of several headlines from the town hall. Khan also told staff that WWE is “monitoring” the security situation in the Middle East ahead of Night of Champions on June 27 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and acknowledged that running back-to-back WrestleManias in Las Vegas was “ultimately my decision,” conceding the company may not repeat that choice.

    WWE communications staff did not immediately respond to Post Wrestling’s request for comment.

  • Triple H’s WWE Future Secured as TKO Signs Him to New Contract

    Triple H’s WWE Future Secured as TKO Signs Him to New Contract

    Triple H is staying in his role as WWE Chief Content Officer, and the deal has been signed, making it official.

    PWInsider first reported that Paul Levesque has signed a new multi-year contract with WWE and TKO to remain in his creative leadership position.

    Sources indicated to Bodyslam that TKO is satisfied with the work Levesque has done, despite ongoing backlash surrounding TKO’s direct involvement in the creative direction heading into WrestleMania for multiple consecutive years.

    The formal announcement follows a staff town hall on Monday in which WWE President Nick Khan addressed employees directly. According to sources who viewed the town hall and informed POST Wrestling, Khan told staff that Levesque would remain in his role.

    Khan also addressed the wave of online criticism surrounding WWE’s recent creative decisions during the town hall, particularly the perception that WrestleMania 42 Night One was less well received than Night Two. Khan noted the criticism came from a vocal minority and cited messages from around 2015 that were critical of WWE’s product at the time to argue that online commentary has historically been an unreliable way to gauge the company’s actual standing.

    The deal comes at a complicated moment for WWE’s creative side. TKO’s involvement in the Pat McAfee and Jelly Roll angle leading into WrestleMania 42, which originated with TKO CEO Ari Emanuel rather than WWE’s own creative team.

  • Brock Lesnar Allegedly Has ‘Zero Respect’ For Triple H

    Brock Lesnar Allegedly Has ‘Zero Respect’ For Triple H

    Brock Lesnar allegedly has major heat with WWE Chief Content Officer Triple H.

    According to former WWE writer Vince Russo, the tension could explain Lesnar’s shocking WrestleMania 42 moment. On his YouTube channel, Russo didn’t hold back when discussing what he’s heard about the relationship between the two. He suggested Lesnar’s actions at WrestleMania 42, where he left his boots in the ring after losing to Oba Femi, may have been done without Triple H’s knowledge.

    “I hear that Brock Lesnar just absolutely hates Triple H,” Russo said. “And I can see that Triple H has put himself in a position for people to hate him. He has put himself in the forefront of everything. He has put himself first in front of his own talent, and a lot of times in wrestling, that is a no-no.”

    Russo Questions Lesnar’s WrestleMania Exit

    Russo connected the alleged backstage tension to WWE’s recent creative direction. He argued that bad creative decisions are catching up with the company and may be causing frustration among top talent.

    “And even to the point of what it looks like of Brock Lesnar saying, ‘Man, I need out of here.’ I mean, if the Brock Lesnar thing is a shoot and nobody knew about it, and he didn’t smarten up Triple H, that means he has zero respect for Triple H. Zero, none, bro,” Russo stated.

    Power Shift in WWE Leadership

    He compared the situation to how things would have been handled under Vince McMahon. Russo believes McMahon would never have tolerated a top star making such a move without approval.

    “Can you imagine one of the talents pulling that on Vince McMahon, bro? That would have never happened,” Russo said. “You wouldn’t have even dreamed of doing something like that, bro. You would have been gone so fast, Vince would have blackballed you, man.”

    Russo suggested that if Lesnar acted independently, it could signal a vulnerability in Triple H’s leadership position. He theorized that Lesnar may view this as an opportunity to force change within the company.

    “But I guess in Brock Lesnar’s case, if it is indeed a shoot, Brock’s simply asking the question, what is Triple H going to do? And I would also think that Triple H would have to be at a point of vulnerability, him being very vulnerable at that point. And maybe Brock does something like that because he feels it’s the nail in the coffin,” Russo explained.

    While WWE internally believes Lesnar’s WrestleMania 42 moment was a planned retirement angle, Russo’s claims introduce a different narrative. There has been speculation about a possible final match for Lesnar at SummerSlam, though nothing has been confirmed.

  • Backstage Reason Behind 2026 WWE Wrestlers Releases Revealed

    Backstage Reason Behind 2026 WWE Wrestlers Releases Revealed

    WWE Chief Content Officer Triple H and WWE President Nick Khan were the masterminds behind the latest roster cuts following WrestleMania 42, as per Fightful.

    It has been reported that TKO was not the driving force behind the releases. The outlet noted that Sources within WWE confirmed the cuts were handled internally by the promotion’s leadership team.

    Reason Behind The Cuts

    Fightful reported that most of the releases were due to clearing the way for new talent. The possibility of SmackDown returning to two hours in the near future was also noted as another reason.

    Bodyslam has reported that SmackDown will switch back to two hours within the next few weeks.

    The April 25 cuts saw a handful of wrestlers let go, including The Wyatt Sicks, Aleister Black, Kairi Sane, and Zelina Vega. The report clarifies that TKO, WWE’s parent company, did not mandate the roster reductions.

    Triple H and Khan worked with talent relations to determine which performers would be released following the company’s biggest event of the year.

  • Triple H’s Role In 2026 WWE Wrestlers Releases Revealed

    Triple H’s Role In 2026 WWE Wrestlers Releases Revealed

    WWE Chief Content Officer Triple H is the primary decision-maker behind WWE’s recent wave of talent releases, as per new report. The April 25 cuts saw a handful of wrestlers let go, including The Wyatt Sicks, Aleister Black, Kairi Sane, and Zelina Vega.

    Triple H Has Final Say on Roster Decisions

    Many fans initially speculated that TKO Group Holdings executives like Ari Emanuel or WWE President Nick Khan were behind the firings. However, Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer clarified that the assumption is incorrect.

    “Nobody above Levesque is saying who to cut. Maybe [WWE President] Nick Khan, maybe not,” Meltzer reported.

    “Ari Emanuel isn’t sitting there saying we have to fire Zelina [Vega] and Kairi. By and large the decision maker, for good or for bad, here is Paul. It’s like in other years where people blamed this person or that person when the decision was 100 percent Vince [McMahon].”

    Meltzer highlighted that TKO is not ordering specific cuts.

    “There’s not a chance TKO is ordering who to cut,” he stated. “It is possible they’ve got an unofficial salary cap and Levesque as the manager has to keep the number below that.”

    How WWE’s Decision-Making Process Works

    According to Meltzer, Nick Khan likely handles salary totals, while Triple H makes the key personnel decisions.

    “Most likely the salary total would be a Khan decision, and as far as the key in the personnel decision, that’s Levesque although Khan having input and others having input is likely,” he explained.

    Meltzer compared the current structure to Vince McMahon’s tenure.

    “It’s like Vince would consult with a few people but at the end, it was Vince’s call, not evil Jim Ross or evil Johnny Ace or evil JJ Dillon,” he said.

    The April 25 releases mark one of the largest single-day cuts in recent WWE history. Triple H now faces the task of reshaping the roster while managing budget constraints from TKO.

  • 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.

  • Cam’ron Calls Out Roman Reigns, Challenges Usos for SummerSlam

    Cam’ron Calls Out Roman Reigns, Challenges Usos for SummerSlam

    Cam’ron is calling out Roman Reigns and challenging The Usos to a match at WWE SummerSlam – escalating a beef that began during WrestleMania 42 week.

    Firing back on Instagram after Reigns took shots at him on Raw, Cam’ron called Reigns a “little dog” and declared himself the Paramount Chief. “I was never washed, I’ll take you to the fucking cleaners,” he wrote. He then addressed Triple H directly, demanding the full Uso family show up in August. “I can’t wait,” he added.

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DXb-95SDpQN/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

    Cam’ron also mocked Reigns for staying at Raw the night after WrestleMania: “All I can do is laugh at you @romanreigns staying for Monday Night Raw after WrestleMania is like eating thanksgiving leftovers on Monday after thxgvn. The Rock would Never.”

    He took aim at Reigns’ position within WWE as well: “But you’re @tripleh lil lil employee. You better do what he says.” The challenge to Jey Uso was direct: “@uceyjucey bring ya whole family and let’s settle this in August at #SummerSlam.”

    What Started It

    The feud began during WrestleMania week when Jey Uso appeared on Cam’ron and Ma$e’s It Is What It Is podcast. Cam’ron mocked Jey for being featured on Night 1 of WrestleMania 42 rather than Night 2, dismissing the spot as lesser. Jey grabbed Cam’ron and pulled him over the desk before security intervened. Cam’ron did not appear at WrestleMania 42.

    On the Raw after WrestleMania, a newly crowned Reigns addressed the situation during a Bloodline reunion promo, referencing “some washed rapper from the 90s running his mouth” to Jey without naming Cam’ron directly.

    Reigns won the WWE World Heavyweight Title by defeating CM Punk on Night 2 of WrestleMania 42. The Usos teamed with LA Knight on Night 1 to defeat Logan Paul, Austin Theory, and IShowSpeed.

    No response from WWE or Triple H has been issued regarding Cam’ron’s SummerSlam challenge.

  • Triple H Asked If Brock Lesnar Has Really Retired

    Triple H Asked If Brock Lesnar Has Really Retired

    Triple H has commented on Brock Lesnar’s actions.

    The Beast Incarnate was involved in a short but physical encounter with Oba Femi in the opening match of WrestleMania 42 Night 2. The Ruler was the one who picked up the victory in the end. After his defeat, the former UFC star left his gloves and boots in the ring, and he was visibly emotional as he made his way to the back after sharing a moment with Paul Heyman.

    Triple H, who skipped the WrestleMania post-show in favor of an appearance on ESPN SportsCenter, was asked if we have seen the last of Brock Lesnar. The WWE Executive suggested that he doesn’t know the answer either, as he did not get a chance to speak with the former World Champion after his loss:

    “It certainly seemed that way. Brock is not a walk back through the curtain and have a long conversation guy. Brock is a walk back through the curtain, very angry, and go to his bus and that is the end of it. So there was not a discussion had after.”

    I Don’t Think That Was Planned: Triple H

    The Game then mentioned that the intelligence of Brock Lesnar is an underrated trait, as people gravitate more towards his destructive power. Triple H explained that the 48-year-old leaving his boots might be his acceptance of the changing of the guard, after meeting a force that cannot be stopped:

    “There comes a point in time when somebody comes along that’s bigger and badder and just pushes you to a place that you can’t come back from. The smart ones know when that happens and they call it a day. I don’t think that was a planned thing. I think Brock went to the ring. He walked into a wall called Oba Femi. Brock walked up to the next big thing and ran into a brick wall, and the intelligence in him said, ‘maybe I should call it a day.’”

    WWE has been careful not to promote Brock’s actions as a definite retirement, and some fans have tried to connect the dots between Paul Heyman owing a favor to Gunther and rumors of Lesnar having his retirement match at SummerSlam this year from his hometown.

    Do you think we will see Brock Lesnar inside a WWE ring again? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

  • Triple H Skips WrestleMania Post Show As Crowds Chant ‘F**k TKO’

    Triple H Skips WrestleMania Post Show As Crowds Chant ‘F**k TKO’

    Triple H wants no part of this.

    Despite scrapping the press conference format of WWE PPV post-shows, the WWE Chief Content Officer has not been spared embarrassment. The Game has been faced with negative crowd reactions in his last few appearances.

    The fans were especially unhappy with the top brass leading into the WrestleMania 42. The high-ticket prices, overwhelming amount of ads on shows, and the TKO officials forcing storylines that did not fit the top matches had led to a lot of criticism for the company before the Show of Shows.

    Crowd Chants Fuck TKO

    With no record attendance to announce for this year’s event either, it was no surprise that Triple H made the decision to skip both nights of WrestleMania post-show. Though the fans still made their voices heard.

    In absence of the King of Kings, Roman Reigns was the final guest of the Mania post show. The crowd booed loudly when the new World Champion mentioned TKO in his speech and loud ‘Fuck TKO’ chants followed:

    Though the Tribal Chief knew how to win back the crowd and he received huge cheers as he ended his interview with a big announcement. You can check out more about it here.

  • WrestleMania 42 Attendance Falls Short of Last Year’s Record

    WrestleMania 42 Attendance Falls Short of Last Year’s Record

    WWE’s announced WrestleMania 42 attendance came in nearly 19,000 fans short of last year’s record-setting weekend at the same venue.

    WrestleMania 42 host John Cena revealed the official two-night total during Sunday’s broadcast from Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas. Saturday’s Night 1 drew 50,816 fans, a number Cena later bumped to 50,817 after Bianca Belair’s surprise pregnancy announcement. Sunday’s Night 2 brought in 55,256, pushing the cumulative total to 106,072.

    Those figures fall well below the 124,693 fans WWE announced for WrestleMania 41 in April 2025. The company billed that event as the most-successful and highest-grossing in its history. WrestleMania 41 drew 61,467 on Night 1 and 63,226 on Night 2, both staged at Allegiant Stadium.

    Cena Addresses Ticket Sales Speculation

    Slow ticket sales had become a talking point in the build to WrestleMania 42, with WrestleTix tracking distribution figures well behind last year’s pace in the weeks leading up to the event. Cena addressed that speculation directly before announcing the Saturday number, framing the crowd inside Allegiant Stadium as proof the show had still drawn a major audience.

    Cena initially announced 50,860 for Saturday before correcting himself to the official 50,816 figure. He then adjusted the number again to 50,817 after Belair appeared on stage to reveal she and husband Montez Ford are expecting their first child.

    Comparing Announced Numbers to Stadium Authority Data

    WWE’s announced WrestleMania figures have historically run higher than independent counts. The Las Vegas Stadium Authority later reported actual WrestleMania 41 attendance at 58,538 on Saturday and 60,103 on Sunday, a combined 118,641. That worked out to roughly 2.4% lower than WWE’s announced totals.

    If a similar gap holds for WrestleMania 42, the actual two-night attendance could land closer to 103,500. The Stadium Authority typically releases its quarterly activity report several months after each event.

    WrestleMania 42 marked the first WWE event under the company’s new ESPN streaming partnership and the second consecutive WrestleMania held at Allegiant Stadium.

  • Undertaker Chokeslams Tony Hinchcliffe Through Table At Kill TonyMania

    Undertaker Chokeslams Tony Hinchcliffe Through Table At Kill TonyMania

    The Undertaker made sure Kill Tony’s WrestleMania crossover delivered a genuine WWE moment. During Saturday night’s taping of Kill TonyMania at Dolby Live at Park MGM in Las Vegas, The Deadman chokeslammed host Tony Hinchcliffe through a table in front of the live crowd.

    The special, filmed immediately after Night 1 of WrestleMania 42 at Allegiant Stadium, is now listed on Netflix as Kill TonyMania and drops Monday, April 20 alongside the Raw after WrestleMania broadcast.

    Which WWE Names Showed Up

    Per PWInsider, the taping drew a heavy WWE contingent. The Undertaker, Triple H, Kane, Jey Uso, Nia Jax, and Sami Zayn were all in attendance for the comedy special, which blends Kill Tony’s standard open-mic format with WWE Superstars and Legends on the panel.

    Hinchcliffe, a lifelong WWE fan who has previously appeared on The Undertaker’s Six Feet Under podcast, has made his wrestling fandom a recurring bit on Kill Tony. Taking a chokeslam through a table from The Deadman himself is a logical escalation of that relationship.

    Undertaker Joining Kevin Hart Roast

    The taping also produced a separate news item. During Kill TonyMania, it was revealed that The Undertaker will take part in an upcoming roast of Kevin Hart, extending his recent run of mainstream crossover appearances.

    Kill TonyMania was first announced in March as a partnership between WWE, Hinchcliffe, and Netflix. The closed-doors event was held at Dolby Live at Park MGM on Saturday, April 18, timed to follow the opening night of WrestleMania 42.

    The special streams on Netflix beginning Monday.