Tag: WWE

  • Joe Coffey Talks MLW, Training With Dwayne Johnson & Future

    Joe Coffey Talks MLW, Training With Dwayne Johnson & Future

    Joe Coffey has been wrestling for more than 17 years, and the chip on his shoulder remains. The well-traveled veteran feels renewed motivation these days, especially when it comes to thinking about all the potential opportunities in MLW. He made his debut alongside his brother Mark and longtime running mate Wolfgang. Together the trio known as GBOT (Glasgow Boys on Top) made their presence felt during MLW Fusion’s premiere on May 30.

    “It was great seeing Fusion on Saturday. It was really good. It was fantastic,” Coffey said, “MLW has a very high quality setup. I think seeing that back on Saturday just proved it’s a major promotion. It’s making a lot of noise. I’ve gotten a lot of great feedback as a whole…We’re just getting started here. I’m excited to see where it goes.” 

    During the show, the Coffey brothers faced the Good Brothers (Doc Gallows and “Machine Gun” Karl Anderson). It was a match Joe had wanted with the tag division starting to heat up. 

    “They are great in the locker room,” Coffey said. “They are great to have around. That’s why they are called the Good Brothers. It was a great experience…To be able to do it on a platform like MLW with the crowd that was there that night and to showcase that during the premiere for Fusion. There was no better fit I think.”  

    The performer enjoyed his time in MLW so much he committed to the company by signing a contract in March. He felt like it was the right fit. 

    “To speak with Court [Bauer] as well, it’s something we thought would be a good idea. I think I have a lot to prove as well,” Coffey said. “…I feel like I’ve been wasted the last couple of years. I just want to go prove myself and show character work and show what I can do in the ring. I want to show people who I am again. I thought MLW was a good place to do that.” 

    Beyond the ring, the driven Scot also upped his training in the gym as well. For him, it’s not just for maintenance and health reasons. It’s about building a “suit of armor” to lessen the chance of injury. Confidence has never been an issue for the talent, even after his time with WWE ended. After all, not many could say they trained and helped Dwayne Johnson get ready for WrestleMania like he and the rest of the formerly named Gallus did in 2024. 

    “We’re very thankful to be trusted to have that opportunity,” Coffey said. “…It was on us. He was really good. He was super cool with us. Proper humble as well. It was just a good experience. Of course, he is The Rock and has the aura and that. Once I laced my boots up it was more let’s go, come on. I don’t care who you are.

    “When you step through the ropes, you’re anyone. It doesn’t matter. You’re just another pro wrestler to me. I just wanted to get going. I just wanted to get in and wrestle and test myself. Being in there with Dwayne, it’s amazing to see how he works on a different level taking into account how the crowd would react. There are only certain people in the world who can do that. It’s just really cool to work with him. It was absolutely brilliant.”

    The landscape of the industry is constantly changing and evolving. Big news came from across the pond that Nikki Cross and her husband Big Damo acquired Progress Wrestling. Coffey has high hopes for the promotion’s future under this power couple. 

    “I was as shocked as anyone [when I found out]. He kept it quiet, and I was traveling with him the last couple of weeks,” Coffey said. “It’s great. I think Progress couldn’t be in the hands of two better people. Two great human beings. It will be interesting to see where they go with it. Progress has always had a history with high level professional wrestling. I think it’s only going to go up. The sky is the limit. I’m looking forward to seeing what will happen with it.”

    Coffey feels the same way about MLW when it not only comes to tag teams, but in the singles ranks as well. He has enjoyed sharing the squared circle with opponents from all walks of life.  

    “The roster is stacked. I’ve got to mix it up a little bit with Diego HIll in Battle Riot. It would be great to work and wrestle with him. Even someone like Paul Waler Hauser. Someone who still has very much a massive name value but very much new to this job,” Coffey said. 

    “That would be a fun and interesting one, going back to being in the Battle Riot with him. There are so many people. Even people who I worked alongside with but not necessarily got the chance to get in the ring with like Bishop Dyer, Dijak. Kross is another one. He has that big shiny MLW title, which I have my eye on as well. There is such a good mix of people who have been doing this for a while and who are familiar with the fans. Then you have got people who are starting out and making things for themselves. I’m hoping I can check a few off the MLW bucket list as well.”

    Watch MLW Fusion on Saturdays 6:05 p.m. ET on YouTube, 9 p.m. ET on Veeps, and 10 p.m. ET on beIN Sports

  • Jade Cargill Warns WWE Faction, Rejects Rhea Ripley’s ‘Mommy’ Catchphrase

    Jade Cargill Warns WWE Faction, Rejects Rhea Ripley’s ‘Mommy’ Catchphrase

    Jade Cargill is laying down the law, both to her opponents and her allies. During a fiery appearance on ESPN’s First Take to promote her Women’s World Championship match at WWE Clash in Italy, Cargill revealed that her WrestleMania loss wasn’t entirely her own fault, pointing a direct finger at her faction’s failure to intervene.

    “I had a good talking to them afterwards. I was like, listen, if you are going to stand next to me—cuz to stand next to me is a blessing. My presence is a blessing,” Cargill stated. “So, don’t just come up here and think that you’re just taking a cakewalk standing next to me. You need to work for it.”

    The Boss Speaks

    Cargill detailed her strict expectations for the group, making it clear that hesitation will no longer be tolerated at ringside. “When I tell you to jump, you jump as high as I want you to go and they didn’t do that,” she told the ESPN panel. When asked by Stephen A. Smith if anyone had been fired from her ranks, she offered a cold response: “I didn’t fire anybody yet, but they gonna have to bring the heat this time.”

    With her locker room issues seemingly handled, Cargill turned her sharp words toward the reigning champion, Rhea Ripley. Known for her undeniable charisma and commanding presence, Cargill made it clear she is thoroughly unimpressed by Ripley’s popular branding.

    “Since everybody keep running with the same schtick, ‘mommy’s on top, mommy’s on top’—I mean, that’s so old. It’s so played out. It’s been going for about two years,” Cargill declared. “I think the headline should say Jade Cargill is back on top. They keep saying mommy’s on top. I guess I’m daddy.”

    Embracing the polarization she causes among WWE fans, Cargill welcomed the noise heading into Sunday. Borrowing a line from her First Take hosts, she confidently signed off: “The haters keep you paid. We love the critics. Please, we welcome you.”

  • Trevor Lee Opens Up About MLW, Becoming Dad & Post-WWE Run

    Trevor Lee Opens Up About MLW, Becoming Dad & Post-WWE Run

    Trevor Lee has a fresh perspective now more than two years after his WWE release. The chapter for the former Cameron Grimes may have ended, but his pro wrestling dream has not. His love of the business continued to grow, especially knowing the quality of promotions for him to work. Among them is Major League Wrestling, which is gearing up for its own next era as it brings back MLW Fusion. The weekly series returns May 30 at 6:05 p.m. ET on YouTube and Live Nation’s streaming platform Veeps for the first time in three years.  

    “I think it’s very exciting,” Lee said. “A lot of fans have been wondering where this MLW content is because they’ve been seeing MLW running live shows. But they have been wanting that digital footprint, the storylines to follow along with. It’s very exciting that we have that now.”

    During the premiere episode, Lee steps into the ring with veteran Austin Aries. He believes the episode will showcase why MLW has been a place to spotlight new talent like Diego Hill and established names like his first-time opponent. 

    “When it comes to me and Austin Aries, I remember around 2008 when I was a kid getting into watching more Ring of Honor and stuff like that. Austin Aries was one of those guys who was a prime at that time,” Lee said. “Then you watch his career from TNA up into WWE, he was always a top guy and always had great matches. I’ve always wanted to wrestle him. For MLW to give me that opportunity was awesome.” 

    Lee is looking forward to what else 2026 brings to him and MLW. He cited partnerships with CMLL and now Stardom only adding to the possibilities. He added, “It’s very exciting to see where MLW is going.”

    It has been a life-changing time for Lee, who became a father in April. Having his daughter Aubrey added another layer of purpose for him.  He is also grateful to wife Emily Profitt for helping find the work-life balance. 

    “I was always leaving my wife behind., but she is a grown woman and can take care of herself. But now I’m leaving her and my newborn daughter behind. That’s a bigger workload that gets put on my wife. That’s tough,” Lee said. “That’s the type of thing I think about now in wrestling gear wrestling. That’s okay because that is what got our beautiful future. That’s what led me to this point where I’m good to be a father, have a safety net where I feel I can raise someone in this world. It sucks to leave, but it’s great to know I have the ability to do [what I do]. It gives you a little bit more something to fight for. I used to feel like I did wrestling as a very selfish endeavor. It was always very fun for me. Now it’s not. It’s cool to go into that next chapter of my career and be able to do it for a new fan.” 

    When it comes to transitioning into being a parent, he turned to one of his best friends Joaquin Wilde for guidance. Lee said the current WWE superstar inspired him. 

    “He has a five-year-old daughter right now. Watching that whole process going from being DJ and playing the DJ horn to being a great dad was truly incredible to watch,” he added. “It’s kind of funny because what I’m finding and learning is that a lot of the wrestlers are apparently cursed. That if you’re a wrestler you end up having your first child as a daughter. It’s a great curse to have. I’ve seen a lot of my peers now being little suckers. It’s cool to watch that process. Now I completely get where they are coming from.”

    From losing family to losing his job at WWE, Lee has been through it all. The 32-year-old found all the adversity made him tougher. 

    “When I was very young I had a brother and sister who passed away. That was my first trauma in life,” he said. “I didn’t know how to handle it as a kid. It led to rage. It led to me having this rage where I would get into fights at school and didn’t know how to control that. Professional wrestling helped me contain that monster, that little demon I was. From that point on, it always came back to that. Wrestling would  help with that. Wrestling would help get me better. It did suck to lose my dream job. The best part of professional wrestling is there is not just one company to wrestle for now. You can continue to do this and do this on a great level without being at WWE. It was very interesting to fight that battle, that sadness, but I’m glad to be where I’m at today. To be performing for MLW and be on the first episode of the three-year wait for MLW and glad to be in a match people will be pretty excited to see.” 

    The Battle RIOT VIII in Orlando reinforced his belief that MLW was the place he wanted to be. It also helped lead to his decision to sign with the promotion. 

    “It was also nice to see how calm the atmosphere was,” Lee remembered. “Every business is moving into a very corporate structure. That is okay. That’s how you maximize profits and do all that stuff and go to the moon if you will. At the same time, this is still professional wrestling. It still is rugged, carnival stuff. MLW has that good mix where there is a lot of good talent there. For instance ,Austin Aries, Donovan Dijak, Bishop Dyer, Matthew Riddle. Guys who have been all over. Why micromanage these guys when they’ve gotten themselves to this point. Let us be the talent we think we are and we are and help create as well and have this as a group process and see what we can do together. MLW has done that very well.”

  • AEW Still Unable To Secure Madison Square Garden Events

    AEW Still Unable To Secure Madison Square Garden Events

    AEW has never held an event at the iconic Madison Square Garden, and reports suggest that the iconic venue remains unwilling to host the promotion.

    The report suggests resistance from WWE may be a factor, though MSG and WWE have not officially confirmed any such arrangement.

    WWE Blocking AEW From Holding Events At MSG

    Mike Johnson of PWInsider reported in a recent Q&A that current Madison Square Garden management has not been willing to let AEW use the facility. The report added that it remains unclear whether that stance could change in the future.

    AEW President Tony Khan has previously hinted at WWE’s involvement in blocking the promotion from MSG. During the December 24 taping of Dynamite at the Hammerstein Ballroom last year, Khan told the crowd that Madison Square Garden had originally shown interest in hosting AEW’s debut episode of Dynamite in 2019.

    Khan claimed the offer was pulled as it would have upset “someone,” strongly implying WWE. AEW then held its first Dynamite episode at the Capital One Arena in Washington, D.C., on October 2, 2019.

    Despite being shut out of MSG, AEW has established Arthur Ashe Stadium in Queens as its marquee New York City venue. The promotion has run its annual Grand Slam events there since 2021, drawing strong crowds to the tennis facility.

    WWE maintains a long-standing relationship with Madison Square Garden and continues to book the venue for live events and premium live events. No legal filings or official statements have confirmed that WWE is actively preventing AEW from securing MSG dates.

  • Danhausen Signs With Adventure Media for Management in All Areas

    Danhausen Signs With Adventure Media for Management in All Areas

    WWE breakout star Danhausen has signed with Adventure Media for management in all areas of his career, according to Deadline.

    Danhausen — real name Donovan Andrew Danhausen — made his WWE debut in February at the Elimination Chamber PLE and has since established himself as one of the company’s most compelling breakout acts. He made his WrestleMania debut on April 19 in a segment alongside legends John Cena and The Miz, drawing widespread praise from fans and media alike.

    Since arriving in WWE, Danhausen has become a top merchandise seller for the company. His unconventional character — blending horror aesthetics, absurdist humor, heavy social media engagement, and a signature habit of “cursing” his opponents — has carved out a unique niche that few wrestlers have managed to replicate.

    His crossover appeal has been on full display in recent weeks. Danhausen made a viral appearance on ESPN’s SportsCenter, storming the set and hijacking the “Top Plays” segment. This week, he appeared on NBA Today to curse the Cleveland Cavaliers — and it seemingly worked, as Cleveland blew a 22-point fourth-quarter lead and fell to the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. He has also made the rounds on comedy and pop culture podcasts.

    Adventure Media will work to expand Danhausen’s IP across film, television, digital, publishing, and other business ventures. The agency is well known for its literary roster of award-winning filmmakers, showrunners, and creators, and has been growing its sports media footprint by signing athletes, wrestling personalities, and broadcast talent.

  • WWE Has Three Secret Signings Waiting To Be Announced

    WWE Has Three Secret Signings Waiting To Be Announced

    Recent reports suggest that WWE signed Nikki Blackheart along with two other unannounced talents.

    Bryan Alvarez reported to subscribers on X that Nikki Blackheart is a former Florida Panthers NHL cheerleader who trained under Gangrel and came onto WWE’s radar after WrestleMania 41 in 2025. The report also claimed Bayley strongly endorsed her before a tryout.

    Additionally, WWE’s Performance Center recruit announcements have not listed any signee matching that description or background.

    Blackheart recently made her WWE debut in a dark match taped at the WWE Performance Center on Tuesday. Her signing had been building over the past several months.

    Per Bryan Alvarez’s update on X:

    “Update on Nikki Blackheart and WWE: She is no longer an indie wrestler. She is a former cheerleader for the NHL Florida Panthers who trained under Gangrel. Right after Mania 2025 she ended up HEAVILY on WWE’s radar, said to be top five.

    She was heavily praised by Bayley, so her tryout was basically a guarantee. That was this past February. She very recently moved to Orlando and is one of the few that have still yet to be officially announced by WWE, but all are officially in Orlando and under the typical starting PC/NXT contracts which are usually about three years.”

    Alvarez further reported that Blackheart is not the only recent signing WWE has yet to announce publicly.

    “There are also three other names besides Nikki that have been signed but haven’t been announced by WWE yet.”

  • Backstage Plans To Rebuild Tag-Team Division After WWE Releases

    Backstage Plans To Rebuild Tag-Team Division After WWE Releases

    Reports have emerged that WWE is making moves to strengthen its tag team scene following a wave of roster departures after WrestleMania 42.

    The company is focusing on rebuilding the division through internal development and potential outside acquisitions.

    WWE released multiple tag teams and talents as part of its post-Mania roster cuts, leaving noticeable gaps across the division. Among those let go were the Wyatt Sicks, Motor City Machine Guns members Alex Shelley and Chris Sabin, as well as Tonga Loa and Jeff Cobb from The MFTs.

    In another major blow to the tag ranks, Xavier Woods and Kofi Kingston of The New Day also exited WWE after reportedly being asked to accept pay reductions. That represents a significant amount of experience and established chemistry gone in a short period of time.

    WWE’s Rebuilding Strategy

    As per False Finish HQ sources, WWE is now actively working to rebuild the division internally by developing teams already on the roster.

    The company is also believed to be exploring the possibility of bringing in established tag teams from outside promotions in the near future.

    The latest reports suggest there is renewed plan on rebuilding depth and credibility across the division moving ahead.

  • WWE Confirms Saudi Arabia Events Moving Forward Amid Tensions

    WWE Confirms Saudi Arabia Events Moving Forward Amid Tensions

    WWE recently confirmed its scheduled Saudi Arabia premium live events will move forward as planned despite ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. The decision was communicated during internal meetings with talent and staff this week.

    During a Town Hall meeting, Triple H and Nick Khan addressed several business topics, including the company’s international schedule. WWE leadership informed attendees that upcoming trips to Saudi Arabia remain on track with no current concerns about traveling to the region.

    TKO President and COO Mark Shapiro previously addressed the situation during a Q1 2024 earnings call. Shapiro stated that all scheduled WWE and UFC events in Saudi Arabia would proceed despite what he described as a challenging geopolitical and macroeconomic environment in the Middle East.

    As per a new report from PWInsider, one of the big announcements from the Town Hall was that WWE will still be heading to Saudi Arabia in June. Initially, there was concern about going over to the Middle East with the ongoing war between the United States and Iran. It appears now, though, that the company will still be heading to Riyadh:

    “Regarding Saudi Arabia, we are told they said the June event is still on (as are other events down the line) and that they are not concerned about going there. – PWInsider”

    Partnership Remains Strong

    Shapiro noted that TKO’s long-term partnership with Saudi Arabia’s General Entertainment Authority remains strong. As per the executive, there has been no indication from Saudi partners of any desire to scale back events or spending moving forward into 2026 and beyond.

    The comments come after speculation about whether WWE and UFC events connected to Saudi Arabia could be impacted by regional conflicts. TKO executives have credited both the company and its international partners for maintaining their commitment to scheduled shows.

  • WWE Reportedly Discussing AEW’s TV Future After 2027

    WWE Reportedly Discussing AEW’s TV Future After 2027

    WWE is reportedly discussing internally the possibility of AEW facing challenges securing another major media rights deal once its current agreement with Warner Bros. Discovery expires.

    Dave Meltzer in the latest Wrestling Observer Newsletter reported that multiple sources within WWE have been talking about uncertainty surrounding AEW’s future once the Paramount/Skydance merger situation fully plays out.

    One WWE source of the outlet admitted nobody actually knows yet who will ultimately make decisions regarding AEW programming once the merger is finalized.

    However, another WWE source noted that internal word has been spreading throughout the company and it suggests AEW might not remain part of future Paramount/Skydance plans.

    “But another person in WWE noted to us this week that they have definitely spread word in the company among some if not many that AEW won’t be on Paramount/Skydance and question if they can get a viable deal elsewhere,” Meltzer wrote.

    WWE Sources Expressing Doubt

    The report stated that some people at high levels inside WWE are speaking as if AEW potentially not getting another major deal is already becoming an expectation internally.

    “One person there noted that people at the highest levels are talking like AEW won’t get another deal,” according to the Observer.

    Meltzer also highlighted that similar rumors were heavily pushed during AEW’s last media rights negotiations before the company secured a massive increase on its previous deal.

    WWE sources also believe there is still massive uncertainty around the entire situation as nobody truly knows how Paramount/Skydance will consider AEW long-term once the merger becomes official.

    AEW’s Current Position

    Meltzer further noted that AEW still brings strong ratings value to TBS, performs well in important demographics, generates pay-per-view revenue, and remains significantly cheaper than UFC from a media rights standpoint.

  • TKO Group to Host Seven Events in Arizona Over Three Years

    TKO Group to Host Seven Events in Arizona Over Three Years

    TKO Group Holdings has announced a three-year agreement with the Arizona Sports & Events Alliance to stage seven events in Arizona featuring WWE, UFC, PBR, and Zuffa Boxing.

    The deal will bring a series of live sports and entertainment events to the state across multiple TKO properties, though the company has not yet disclosed specific event dates, venues, or ticketing details — those announcements are expected at a later date.

    What Was Said

    Peter Dropick, Executive Vice President of Event Development and Operations for TKO, expressed enthusiasm for the partnership:

    “We’re excited to build this long-term partnership with the Arizona Sports & Events Alliance to bring some of our biggest events to the state.”

    Jay Parry, President & CEO of the Arizona Sports & Events Alliance, said the agreement reflects Arizona’s capacity to host major sports and entertainment events.

    Part of a Broader Strategy

    TKO described the Arizona deal as part of a wider series of partnerships the company has formed with government and private entities across various locations to bring its live events to new markets.

    TKO Group Holdings owns WWE, UFC, PBR, and holds a stake in Zuffa Boxing. The company also operates IMG, a global sports marketing agency, and On Location, an experiential hospitality company.

    TKO’s Recent Business Momentum

    The announcement comes on the heels of a strong Q1 2026 for TKO, which reported a 26% year-over-year revenue increase to $1.597 billion. While the company fell slightly short of its earnings per share forecast — posting $1.12 against an expected $1.19 — investor sentiment remained broadly positive.

    Bernstein SocGen Group reiterated its Outperform rating on TKO stock with a $240.00 price target, citing strong monetization prospects across its sports properties.

    WWE fans in Arizona will want to stay tuned for future announcements as specific event details are confirmed in the coming months.

  • WWE Announces 16 New Raw & SmackDown Live Dates This Summer

    WWE Announces 16 New Raw & SmackDown Live Dates This Summer

    WWE has officially announced 16 new live event dates for Raw and SmackDown this summer, spanning cities across the United States from late June through Labor Day weekend.

    Tickets for all events go on sale Friday, May 15 at 10am local time in each market. Fans can get early access through an exclusive presale starting Thursday, May 14 at 10am local. Full event information and tickets are available at WWE.com/Events.

    Full Schedule of Dates

    • Monday, June 29 – Atlantic City, NJ | RAW/SmackDown | Jim Whelan Boardwalk Hall
    • Monday, July 6 – Chicago, IL | RAW | Allstate Arena
    • Friday, July 10 – Oklahoma City, OK | SmackDown | Paycom Center
    • Monday, July 13 – Dallas, TX | RAW | American Airlines Center
    • Friday, July 17 – Albany, NY | SmackDown | MVP Arena
    • Monday, July 20 – Detroit, MI | RAW | Little Caesars Arena
    • Friday, July 24 – Oakland, CA | SmackDown | Oakland Arena
    • Monday, July 27 – Inglewood, CA | RAW | Intuit Dome
    • Friday, July 31 – Green Bay, WI | SmackDown | Resch Center
    • Monday, August 3 – Des Moines, IA | RAW | Casey’s Center
    • Monday, August 10 – Norfolk, VA | RAW | Scope Arena
    • Monday, August 17 – Buffalo, NY | RAW | KeyBank Center
    • Friday, August 28 – Cleveland, OH | SmackDown | Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse
    • Monday, August 31 – Charlotte, NC | RAW | Spectrum Center
    • Friday, September 4 – Cincinnati, OH | SmackDown | Heritage Bank Center
    • Monday, September 7 – Birmingham, AL | RAW | Legacy Center at BJCC

    The run kicks off with a rare combined Raw/SmackDown event in Atlantic City on June 29 before splitting into separate brand tours through the summer. Notable stops include Inglewood’s Intuit Dome (July 27), the Allstate Arena in Chicago (July 6), and a Labor Day weekend doubleheader in Charlotte and Cincinnati.

    Stay tuned to SEScoops for the latest WWE news and updates.

  • Aleister Black in Active AEW Negotiations,  Despite Reports

    Aleister Black in Active AEW Negotiations, Despite Reports

    Recently released WWE Superstar Aleister Black, known outside the ring Tom Budgen, is in active negotiations with All Elite Wrestling, SEScoops has learned. The development directly contradicts a wave of reporting over the past two weeks that suggested AEW had no interest in welcoming the former House of Black leader back to the company.

    According to a source with direct knowledge of the discussions, those conversations are happening regardless of the public framing. Terms have not been finalized, and no agreement is in place.

    What Public Reporting Had Said

    Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter reported that some inside AEW were unhappy with Black’s previous booking arrangement, pointing to his low loss column and the fact that his desire to leave for WWE had become obvious once Triple H assumed creative control. Meltzer added that AEW’s locker room morale is the strongest it has been in years, and that some talents are uneasy about welcoming back a star whose heart was clearly elsewhere.

    Sean Ross Sapp of Fightful Select softened that picture but stopped well short of confirming talks. Sapp told subscribers “the bridge is not considered burned there,” while AEW sources he spoke to did not expect a near-term return.

    AEW talent coordinator Shawn Dean publicly answered “No” on social media when a fan floated reuniting the House of Black with Zelina Vega added to the mix. Jim Ross, speaking on his Grilling JR podcast, did not say bridges were burned but cautioned that Black’s “chances are running out,” questioning his reliability outside the ring.

    From WWE to AEW, Then Back, Then Back Again

    Black was among roughly 25 talents released by WWE on April 24 in a sweeping post-WrestleMania 42 roster reduction. The cuts also took out his wife Zelina Vega, the entire Wyatt Sicks faction, Kairi Sane, the Motor City Machine Guns, and Apollo Crews.

    His exit followed speculation, reported by PWInsider’s Mike Johnson, that a power player inside TKO Group Holdings was uncomfortable with horror-inflected character work. That theory has been disputed by other reporting placing the April cuts at the feet of Triple H and Nick Khan for budget reasons.

    If a deal closes, it would mark Black’s third direct jump between WWE and AEW since 2021, putting him in rare company among talent who have moved between the two promotions multiple times. He left WWE for AEW in 2021, returned to WWE on the SmackDown after WrestleMania 41 in April 2025, and would now head back to AEW barely a year later.

    Black led the House of Black during his prior AEW run, holding the AEW World Trios Championship with Brody King and Buddy Matthews. Whether Tony Khan ultimately green-lights the reunion is another question. Resistance from within AEW remains real per the public reporting, and any agreement will require his sign-off. As of this writing, talks are active.

  • 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.

  • 40 Years Later: Why WrestleMania 2 Remains WWE’s Most Ambitious And Worst ‘Mania Ever

    40 Years Later: Why WrestleMania 2 Remains WWE’s Most Ambitious And Worst ‘Mania Ever

    There’s little question WrestleMania is the most important annual event to WWE history. It’s their annual showcase that has become a regular stadium filler. That’s before more modest years when ‘Mania still marked the culmination of major storylines, coronation of new franchise-level stars, and a stage to elevate the company’s business time and again.

    The original WrestleMania was a game changer. While narratives vary about just how essential this event was to WWE’s financial prospects, it undeniably marked a major milestone in WWE’s establishment as the number one brand in professional wrestling. Hulk Hogan got a showcase moment as the top star in the business alongside an unequivocally successful celebrity outing as Mr. T tagged up with him. Other big matches like Andre the Giant’s triumph over Big John Studd and other celebrity appearances from the likes of names ranging from Cyndi Lauper to Muhammad Ali made some real magic.

    WrestleMania 2 has a very different legacy, however. While WrestleMania 3 would become an iconic stadium event and WrestleManias 4 and 5 would bookend a tremendous year-long story, the second edition was defined by WWE taking some huge swings and striking out at the plate.

    WrestleMania 2 Emanated From Three Arenas

    Credit: WWE

    A year before WWE aimed to (and succeeded at) drawing a legitimate stadium crowd, the company set its sights on filling three separate arenas in New York, Illinois, and California. It was an ambitious concept and allowed WWE to, with reasonable credibility, claim a combined attendance of over 40,000.

    The idea was imperfect. It made some logical sense to have three shows, each with one hour of live wrestling in the arena, two hours aired on big screens. The live viewing experience suffered, though, for having such a short snippet of live action and suboptimal conditions to watch the show on screens.

    It also made some sense for WWE to be able to tout a triple main event for each venue getting its own high-profile closer. However, it’s hard to argue a worked boxing match that ended in a DQ (more on that to follow) or a battle royal were as legitimate main events as a world championship steel cage match featuring the top star in the business.

    It’s unlikely WWE will ever return to a multi-city WrestleMania again, even though the two-night format launched in 2020 solves some of the problems this proposition poses. It’s technologically impressive WWE pulled it off at all in 1986, but the company seemed to learn its lesson that this idea just didn’t work.

    Mr. T Vs. Roddy Piper Was A Disaster

    Credit: WWE

    On paper, Mr. T vs. Roddy Piper made some sense as a WrestleMania main event. That’s given the degree of T’s celebrity star power, Piper’s status as arguably the top heel in the business, and the success of the main event tag team match the two were a part of at the original ‘Mania. In practice, though, this match had no business happening, let alone at a WrestleMania, let alone in closing the east coast portion of the event.

    While three professional wrestlers working around Mr. T when he had to tag in and tag out of the match worked at WrestleMania 1, a year later, he was exposed in singles action. By all accounts, Hot Rod wasn’t eager to collaborate or make the actor look good either. The boxing match stipulation sort of covered T’s limitations in the ring, but also confronted WWE with time-tested truth: worked boxing matches are not good.

    The result was an utterly lackluster affair. It may not have been the worst WrestleMania match of all time (thanks Jerry Lawler vs. Michael Cole!) but it has to be considered the worst match WWE attached a WrestleMania main event label to and in the bottom ten matches at the show all time—the worst match on quite arguably the worst WrestleMania card ever.

    The NFL Vs. WWE Battle Royal Should Have Been A Bigger Deal

    Credit: WWE

    Like the idea of hosting a single event from three venues was ambitious, the idea of integrating NFL personalities into a star-studded battle royal was a big idea. Though the experiment wasn’t a complete failure, it also wasn’t exactly iconic.

    In the mid-1990s, WCW featured NFL players Kevin Greene and Steve McMichael as main event level attractions. That’s not to mention WWE itself putting its complete faith in the drawing power and work ethic of Lawrence Taylor to headline WrestleMania XI (not to mention faith in Bam Bam Bigelow selling for him and Pat Patterson directing traffic as referee).

    The takeaway: NFL players in a wrestling ring were a draw. They uniquely combined celebrity, big bodies, and real-world athletic credentials to immediately translate to a pro wrestling audience.

    There are a number of reasons why the WrestleMania 2 battle royal featuring six NFL players or alumni didn’t work at a high level. The NFL wasn’t quite the juggernaut it would become as its popularity grew year over year to the point that this volume of stars from the league entering a WWE ring would become unthinkable. What was more under WWE’s control, though, was the booking.

    Despite working around the limitations of non-wrestlers working a high-profile match, it still feels as though WWE should’ve been able to get more out of the football stars. Only William “The Refrigerator” Perry gave a memorable performance and even he didn’t make it to the final five. Andre the Giant military pressing Bret Hart out of the ring onto Jim Neidhart became the most memorable spot from the match, and that had nothing to do with NFL participation.

    Hulk Hogan’s Match With Andre The Giant Erased The Legacy Of His Bout With King Kong Bundy

    Credit: WWE

    Hulk Hogan vs. King Kong Bundy has a case for being called the best match of WrestleMania 2, but that’s not saying a lot when the closest contenders were a good battle royal and good tag title match during the Midwest portion of the show. Hogan and Bundy at least had some heat, world title implications, and the spectacle of a cage.

    That said, the biggest story of Hogan vs. Bundy was that of the superhero Hulkster vanquishing a super heavyweight heel. It was a formula that worked throughout the 1980s, but there’s little denying that this run-of-the-mill match on that formula was completely overshadowed by what happened one year later.

    Andre the Giant turning heel made him the biggest, most famous, and most credible monster heel of his age. It was the premise of this ultimate behemoth clashing with Hogan that filled the Pontiac Silverdome. Though the match itself was no technical classic—arguably, in a vacuum, not even better than Hogan vs. Bundy—it has stood the test of time as perhaps the greatest attraction in pro wrestling history. In the process, that clash of the titans effectively erased what effect the Bundy match had had on wrestling history and culture, rendering it only memorable for the historical footnote of having headlined a WrestleMania.

  • ESPN Files to Intervene in WWE Class-Action Lawsuit

    ESPN Files to Intervene in WWE Class-Action Lawsuit

    ESPN recently filed a memorandum on Friday seeking to intervene in a class-action lawsuit against WWE over Premium Live Event access claims. The motion, filed March 27th, asks the court to allow ESPN to join the case and move it into arbitration.

    The original lawsuit was filed in January by two consumers in U.S. District Court in Connecticut. The plaintiffs accused WWE of deceptive marketing, alleging the company misled customers about PLE access for ESPN subscribers.

    Arbitration Clause at Center of ESPN Motion

    According to Brandon Thurston, the plaintiffs did not initially name ESPN as a defendant, apparently to avoid the arbitration clause in Disney’s and ESPN’s subscriber agreement. ESPN’s motion now seeks to enforce that arbitration provision.

    The lawsuit seeks over $5 million and represents ESPN subscribers who paid extra for ESPN Unlimited between August 6, 2025, and before Wrestlepalooza on September 20, 2025. ESPN Unlimited costs $30 per month for customers whose providers do not include it.

    Case Timeline and Next Steps

    The case excludes customers of Hulu + Live TV, Spectrum, Verizon FIOS, DirecTV, or Fubo TV. WWE has until April 13, 2026 to respond to ESPN’s motion to intervene.

    WWE’s deal with ESPN is worth an average of $325 million per year, up from Peacock’s $200 million. The case remains ongoing as the court considers ESPN’s request to join and move the lawsuit into arbitration.

  • Danhausen WWE Debut: Can He Succeed After Chamber Reveal?

    WWE Elimination Chamber centered on setting the stage for WrestleMania 42 with two Chamber matches to determine world title challengers and two title fights that will presumably set the stage for the \’Mania card. A subplot to all this was a mysterious crate, passed back and forth between Raw General Manager Adam Pearce and SmackDown GM Nick Aldis.

    Some fans anticipated a huge disruption stemming from the crate, up to and including speculation Chris Jericho might return and even find a way into the men\’s Elimination Chamber at the last minute. Others had much more modest expectations along the lines of a WWE 2K26 or merchandise announcement.

    For better or worse, WWE did truly surprise fans with something very different, very nice, and very evil. While low-key rumors that Danhausen was headed to WWE had circulated, the story didn\’t have a ton of momentum or buzz, making the AEW alum\’s debut genuinely catch most onlookers off guard. A question remains, though: what a WWE run will look like for this unconventional talent.

    Danhausen\’s Winding Road To WWE

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2024/12/\"Danhausen

    Danhausen looks like anything but a prototypical WWE Superstar, with not only his horror-themed aesthetic presentation, but his unimposing stature (by pro wrestling standards) at under six feet tall, less than two hundred pounds, and not exactly a superhuman physique.

    Danhausen\’s a veteran, though, first working the indies in 2013 en route to his breakout run with ROH where his oddball promos, propensity for casting curses, and social media game got him a lot of attention.

    It appeared Danhausen had peaked when he signed with AEW, where an audience tapped into the indies and more willing to think outside the box than the stereotypical WWE enthusiast embraced him. The character had his moments, highlighted by a run partnering with Hook, but never seemed to quite find his place. It seemed like AEW missed out in leaving him off TV while he was injured, given the character\’s appeal was always based less on what he did in the ring than his character work.

    Indeed, Danhausen\’s limited success in AEW seemed to signal that whatever combination of the gimmick and the worker had an indie ceiling and just couldn\’t slot into a more mainstream product.

    Danhausen\’s WWE Debut

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2026/02/\"Danhausenhttps://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2026/02/\"

    Despite rumors that Danhausen might be WWE bound, few expected it, much less predicted it for Elimination Chamber. Indeed, if he were to surface on the WWE landscape, it seemed more likely he\’d show up in NXT, perhaps getting something like the Joe Hendry treatment that could lean into his cult following, gradually familiarize WWE fans with the persona, and see if he might ultimately slot into a main roster brand.

    Danhausen exploded onto the scene, though, complete with backup dancers. WWE did set him up for success in some ways, with the mystery box gimmick, not to mention the reveal happening in Chicago, about as sure a market as the company has to find hardcore fans who\’d be most likely to recognize him.

    Unfortunately, Danhausen\’s reception was, at best, lukewarm, as fans seemed unsure of what to do with him. It\’s always difficult to know what fans in an arena are thinking, but those who\’ve since suggested they didn\’t know who the AEW and ROH alum was were probably at least partially right. This wasn\’t a returning face to WWE, someone from a famous wrestling family, or a guy who had main evented in enough other venues that casual fans would likely be quite familiar with him.

    On top of that, there was a randomness to Danhausen working the ramp and the fanfare of the backup dancers. He didn\’t draw a huge pop. Worse, some fans have claimed that he was actively booed once the music stopped.

    Danhausen Might Fill A Specific Niche Role

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2025/01/\"https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2025/01/\"

    The failings of Danhausen\’s debut can be attributed to not enough fan familiarity, which WWE can quickly correct course on. They can also be associated with the randomness of the moment, as the crate gimmick itself hearkened back to the Gobbledy Gooker\’s egg, and it\’s not as though he emerged to confront another performer or get involved in a match, but rather just walk to the ring in theatrical fashion.

    What\’s next for Danhausen? The performer\’s activities on X may tell part of the tale, as the day after his debut, his first posts were \”When does Danhausen get his all access pass to rock \’the Dwayne\’ Johnson\’s gym?\” and \”Is Cold Steve Austin still the Monday Night Raw general manager?\”

    Indeed, Danhausen has maintained the voice longer-term fans associate with him, with an extra touch of confused humor that feels an awful lot like a nod to R-Truth. While some confusion still lingers about the nature of Truth\’s contract situation from 2025, he\’s nonetheless in his mid-fifties and all indicators are he doesn\’t have much time left with the company. Few, if any performers have compared with his comedic upside in recent years. Carlito probably came closest, but WWE let him go last year for an inflated contract relative to his supporting and comedic role.

    An old bit of wrestling wisdom is that talents who can get over, even on small stages, have the capacity to thrive on much bigger ones because it\’s the sheer process of connecting with fans and developing a groundswell of organic support that\’s hardest to teach or contrive. Bryan Danielson spoke of this dynamic regarding his own unexpectedly explosive success in WWE. While no one should hold their breath on Danhausen main eventing WrestleMania, there may well be a spot for him to thrive as an offbeat comedic character at wrestling\’s highest levels.

    Can Danhausen ultimately succeed in WWE, which has a pretty poor record of late with supernatural characters (see the handling of The Wyatt Sicks), and a checkered past with comedy acts and indie-bred talents? Given a long leash and some faith from management, Danhausen may well surprise everyone, arriving as an attraction uniquely his own and perhaps one of the business\’s comedic greats.

  • My Experience at WWE 2K26 Creator Fest Event

    This month one thing that I never thought would happen happened. I got to actually go to WWE Headquarters and get more of a look at how the machine runs. As someone who has been a fan and covered pro wrestling for so long, it was hard not to take in such a surreal experience pulling up to the building with the big WWE logo.

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2026/02/\"Scott

    Now, this wasn\’t the original Titan Towers that the company housed much of its operations for the longest time up until 2023. However, it didn\’t make things less impressive. 

    No, I wasn\’t there for a job interview (although I\’d love for WWE to bring back its WWE Magazine; call me). It was to participate in the WWE 2K26 \”Creator Fest\” where I joined close to 200 members of the media, influencers, and content creators.

    Over the years, 2K and WWE pull out all the stops to make the biggest splash for video game releases. Most of the time these gatherings happen tied to a Royal Rumble weekend for example. However, with the big event taking place in Saudi Arabia this year, organizers got the green light to host the festivities at the mother ship. 

    Now I\’ve had the opportunity to be backstage for a Raw and numerous times at the WWE Performance Center including when the state-of-the-art facility opened in 2013.

    This was a different experience all its own. Most of the game playing and red carpet was hosted in the unique lobby of the facility. Right when you walk through the doors, you\’re immersed with all things WWE.

    I\’m talking entrance music, screens and a massive Andre the Giant tribute mural that is truly awe-inspiring within the 13-story facility. One fully transformed from its roots as UBS trading floor and headquarters. 

    Amid all the activity, WWE opened its doors like perhaps never before by offering tours of the facility. Members of the team took guests around the hallways that consisted of WWE art, themed decor, repurposed pay-per-view pieces, bronze WWE legendary statues, and even SnackDown food spaces.

    We were given an idea of how production was run with its show must-go-on mentality. It\’s hard not to walk away with newfound appreciation for how these hard-working and often unsung heroes get shows to screens each week. 

    I also walked away with some great interviews that were starting to get rolled out. My recent overall event coverage featuring comments from Tiffany Stratton, Chelsea Green, Trish Stratus, Blake Monroe, Joe Hendry, Tyler Breeze, and Ethan Page.

    It was cool to see a cross-generational team-up when Trish and Blake posed for photos. Many who attended took the opportunity to take in WWE Headquarters themselves. \”All Ego\” even gathered some content.

    Getting to interview Iyo Sky for the first time was a thrill. The way she exudes pure joy is infectious.

    Paul Heyman was the perfect hype man as he started the proceedings, not missing a beat even after his mic had stopped working.

    As CM Punk posed in front of the backdrop of his WWE 2K26 cover, you could see the moment was not lost on him. Even after all he has accomplished in his storied career, Punk remains humble and grateful for these opportunities.

    Maybe even ones the \”Best in the World\” maybe didn\’t know would happen. As they say, never say never.

  • WWE Files Trademarks for CJ Valor, Santi Rivera, Romeo Moreno

    WWE recently filed trademarks for the names CJ Valor, Santi Rivera, and Romeo Moreno on February 19th, 2026, with the US Patent and Trademark Office. It seems that these might be used as names of future WWE Superstars.

    WWE files new trademarks

    The trademarks include the standard description for professional wrestling entertainment services. The filings are part of the promotion’s ongoing effort to secure intellectual property. No individuals have been confirmed to be associated with these ring names.

    This possibly indicates WWE\’s intention to introduce a new character, persona, or talent under these names in the future. The company usually files trademarks for new ring names ahead of talent debuts or repackaging existing wrestlers. There is a huge possibility that wrestlers with names CJ Valor, Santi Rivera, and Romeo Moreno might soon appear in either NXT, Raw, or SmackDown.

    On Friday, February 20th, WWE also registered the trademark for Kai Kavari. This name comes after a series of other recent trademark filings, which included Tristan Angels and Dorian Van Dux.

  • Killer Kross: Standing Atop MLW Mountain\’ After Title Win

    Killer Kross put his endurance to the test in Battle Riot VIII where he won the MLW Heavyweight Championship. He stood as the sole survivor in the 40-man match during the event taped in Kissimmee, Florida on January 29. The 40-year-old prepared for the night by restricting calories and increasing water and electrolytes, as well as focusing on cardio by hiking, climbing, and running. He spent the first two weeks of January in Africa, traveling through Ethiopia. The time in the mountains made all the difference. 

    His latest achievement meant even more knowing his mom, who overcame cancer, was in attendance. Adding to the special evening was the fact that mom didn\’t know the main event result. 

    \”She knew nothing,\” Kross recalled. \”This was the first time she saw me perform live since she finished her treatments. For people who don\’t know when you\’re going through cancer treatments your immune system is compromised, so you can\’t be around a lot of big groups of people. You kind of have to hunker down and protect yourself. She really didn\’t know what was going to be happening. She just knew the aspects of the match and what the performance was going to be about and all the stakes involved. But she knew nothing.\”  

    The former WWE superstar has been in demand, given his strong connection to fans. He sat down with MLW before coming back about how things would potentially go. Those conversations went well.

    \”I thought they were sensible,\” Kross said. \”I thought they were fair. I thought they were a challenge. I enjoy challenging performances. I\’m not looking for an easy road. I\’m not looking to roll in and rest on my laurels and reap the benefits. I\’m not saying there is anything wrong with that at all. Dues are dues, but I really miss challenging performances. I want to be challenged out there because that resonates with the audience. If everything is a breeze, there are benefits to that. You probably physically feel better. Things being easy and clearing good money is a dream scenario for most people in life, but I\’m just different. 

    \”I like being challenged. I feel like when you accomplish those challenges, the reward is that much sweeter and more real when there is skin in the game and something on a line, I think that\’s the component that makes a wrestling show really special for people to watch because they know and are smartened up and know there is real shit going on here. Despite whatever their preconceived notions are about pro wrestling, they can feel when someone has to show up and you\’re not able to roll in on cruise control. There will be some shit involved here. That night is what it felt like for me. That\’s what it was all about.\” 

    Kross has always enjoyed the MLW locker room, but he felt even more so now with numerous veterans. He sees this as elevating the product. 

    \”People who know who they are in the ring. People who understand different market audiences. People who understand what the business should be beyond what is just on the paper given to them, for the betterment of the audience. In my opinion, we\’re lucky to have who we have. This is a solid roster,\” Kross concluded. 

    Among those new names that have entered the mix is Kross\’ wife Scarlett Bordeaux. A veteran in her own right, the \”Smoke Show\” has been getting more time to shine.

    \”When she went to WWE there was a long period people were just being introduced to her for the first time,\” Kross said. \”They had no access to Telemundo or were familiar with the Latin American countries airing or promoting AAA. A lot of people didn\’t even know she was a wrestler. She wasn\’t presented as a wrestler, only occasionally. The moments she was given on TV were very small, so nobody could see her go. 

    \”Now in MLW she is being given matches where people can actually see what she can do. Her original fan base that has followed her everywhere for almost 15 years are like finally. Everyone wins. I think MLW giving her the ability and time to perform not only is good for her because she is having fun and scratching that itch, but I feel the fans are being rewarded and feel that people who haven\’t seen her perform are getting something new, fresh and special.\” 

    Kross can see a bright future for MLW. One where the promotion has the potential to find itself with a new TV platform. 

    \”MLW has the type of roster and internal team that in my opinion can produce something episodically every week,\” he said. \”I absolutely believe that. I know there is such a thing as wrestling fatigue. If there are too many options, people aren\’t going to watch this, that, and the other thing. But in respect to that, MLW is a very strong alternative to what a lot of people are able to see on television. So if they are watching something and feel it\’s the same thing over and over again, MLW will give you something different. 

    \”They are aiming to give you something different. They are not looking to do a copy paste of things they\’ve previously done. They are looking to refresh things and make things exciting and perhaps do the things other places are not able to do. I think in terms of television distribution and things, respectively, I\’m not in those conversations. At one point, if we do cross that bridge I\’d love to be in those meetings and be able to talk to them. I feel like the time I\’ve been able to have independently and the elbows I\’ve been able to rub up against being a free agent independent, I\’ve learned a lot of the mechanics of all that. I think I can be a value in those conversations…\”

  • WrestleMania Half-Time Show: WWE\’s Super Bowl Answer?

    The sixtieth edition of the Super Bowl is now in the books and, as is often the case, the game\’s halftime show has similar buzz to the game itself. While Bad Bunny\’s performance was received differently by different viewers, there\’s little question it was a newsworthy spectacle and the conversation was compounded by a prominent rival halftime broadcast.

    Wrestling fans have long perceived WrestleMania as WWE\’s closest equivalent to the Super Bowl and that leads to the question of whether WWE ought to consider its own halftime show as part of the annual extravaganza. If so, what might such a show look like?

    A Halftime Show Could Offer Organic Celebrity Involvement

    WWE has a long history of courting celebrity involvement, and that\’s especially so throughout WrestleMania history where big names like Mr. T, Cyndi Lauper, Mike Tyson, Floyd Mayweather, Maria Menounos, Bad Bunny, and Donald Trump have played prominent roles, up to and including getting into the squared circle for matches.

    Celebrities like Aretha Franklin, John Legend, and Joan Jett have appeared to sing \”America the Beautiful\” or play a WWE star down to the ring. A halftime show would offer an even more natural way for a major musical act to perform a full set in front of the stadium crowd.

    Moreover, this kind of halftime exhibition need not be limited to musical acts alone but might, for example, integrate a promo segment akin to the Piper\’s Pits that occurred at WrestleMania 5 and 21, or perhaps a guest appearance by a standup comedian.

    Halftime Could Break Up Long Shows

    A signature element of WWE\’s presentation under Triple H has been scaling back the length of major shows which were growing unwieldy in the latter days of Vince McMahon\’s leadership, with WrestleMania 35 as a classic example of a show that got away from the company, stretching past midnight into the next day.

    Even with greater restraint—often limiting PLEs to four or five matches—WrestleMania has tended to be the exception, with main card run times that still consistently clear three hours and that\’s not counting pre-show broadcasts.

    Halftime offers a chance for fans to catch their breath and rally, visit concession stands and use the restroom. All in all, it\’s a chance for the audience to regroup, overcome wrestling fatigue that might otherwise set in, and ensure those live in the stadium and watching from home alike can bring the energy to the back half of the event.

    Halftime Performances Might Attract Different Viewers

    Not everyone is a football fan, but part of the tradition of Super Bowl halftime shows is their ability to hook casual or non-fans with a totally different form of entertainment.

    WrestleMania has crossed a threshold such that there are casual fans who don\’t watch Raw week in and week out who will nonetheless seek out the biggest show of the year. A halftime show can offer them something else to consume besides providing WWE with opportunities for a totally different kind of social media engagement.

    What Would Be The Right Halftime Attractions For WWE WrestleMania?

    If one were to accept the premise of a WWE WrestleMania halftime show, the question quickly becomes which acts would fit this opportunity. Bad Bunny is a natural choice given his unique pairing of Super Bowl halftime credentials and having actually wrestled more than once for WWE and taken it quite seriously, giving performances that were well-received by the fans. Things get a little murkier after that.

    While Bad Bunny himself drew polarized responses, particularly from an audience skewing toward the politically conservative who were unenthused about what he brought to the table, there are far more controversial choices out there. Despite lasting ties to WWE, acts like Kid Rock and Limp Bizkit have only aged well to a segment of the audience and bring their own baggage.

    Other WWE loyalists like Snoop Dogg or Jelly Roll might strike a better balance. There\’s also the matter of drawing in major acts without meaningful ties to wrestling. While it may not be realistic at this point, if WWE could, for example, secure an act the caliber of Sabrina Carpenter or The Weeknd, they really might break down some walls in drawing an audience that wouldn\’t traditionally tune in for wrestling. (All that\’s not to mention that a celebrity with a real love for wrestling as a fan could make such an arrangement more attainable.)

    For now, the idea of WrestleMania halftime shows is probably just a pipe dream. Nonetheless, when one considers how big this event has grown, pro wrestling\’s love of bringing in celebrities, and the potential to attract untapped viewer demographics there\’s a lot working in favor of the idea.

  • Liv Morgan: WWE\’s Next Breakout Star After Rumble Success

    Back in 2022, Liv Morgan transitioned from her perennial role as a face in the crowd for the WWE women\’s division to one of its stars. She won Money in the Bank and, in the same night, converted the briefcase into her first world championship. The reign itself was lukewarm but signaled that WWE saw something in her, and she wouldn\’t be on the chopping block when a wave of releases came.

    Fast forward to 2024 and Morgan finishing first runner-up in the Royal Rumble for the second year in a row, then the first runner-up at Elimination Chamber too. The writing was on the wall that, in a new heel persona, she was moving up in the world. Her feud with Rhea Ripley was a huge success in generating heat and cementing Morgan\’s place as a top player.

    After missing a substantial part of 2025 due to injury, Morgan is back and just won the Royal Rumble. With preceding Internet buzz that she was due for a big push, the question becomes: might WWE go from treating Morgan as a major star to the new face of the company?

    Liv Morgan May Be Getting Her Biggest Push Yet

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    Liv Morgan has been a world champion, a Crown Jewel Champion, and Ms. Money in the Bank. Winning the Royal Rumble quite arguably elevates her to a new echelon of stardom, though. Indeed, while Morgan has existed in the upper card ecosystem for much of the last three and a half years, there\’s a reasonably well-defined list of women who\’ve remained a half-step ahead of her, with names like Asuka, Becky Lynch, Charlotte Flair, Ronda Rousey, Rhea Ripley, and Bayley. In other words: the women who\’ve won Royal Rumbles.

    So it is that Morgan has added a career milestone and punched her ticket for a featured title match at WrestleMania. Morgan has hitherto spent her WrestleMania career locked in battle royal and tag match scenarios—her biggest moment to shine a straightforward two-on-two bout last year. That all changes this year as Morgan may challenge Stephanie Vaquer or Jade Cargill in first-time lowkey dream matches, or else face off with someone else who captures the title in the interim. (A Triple Threat scenario with Raquel Rodriguez also looms as a possibility given recent tensions.) Regardless, between her credentials and the Rumble victory, there\’s reason to call Morgan the favorite to emerge from the biggest show of the year as world champion.

    Liv Morgan Is A Young Veteran

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2025/07/\"Raquel

    When one thinks about the face of WWE in the last two decades, the conversation has turned to Cody Rhodes, Roman Reigns, and John Cena. While Reigns took up the mantle as a reasonably young man, there\’s no hiding that all of these men are north of 40 now. With Cena retired and Reigns working a selective schedule, not to mention other tip-top stars like CM Punk also finding themselves in the twilight of their careers, WWE has to be looking to the future.

    At 31 years of age, Liv Morgan lands in a sweet spot. She\’s experienced enough that WWE knows what it has in her and she has buy-in from the fans. On the flip side, if she stays healthy and chooses to stay in the business, there\’s every reason to think she could have another decade at or around the top of her game. That\’s a solid space to build from in centering the company on what she brings to the table.

    Liv Morgan Can Appeal To Fans On Multiple Levels

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2025/11/\"https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2025/11/\"

    Liv Morgan is solid in the ring and solid on the mic. While it may not be the most politically correct consideration, she also has sex appeal that she\’s willing to lean into, recapturing some of the spirit of what made women like Sunny or Sable so over with wrestling fans back in the 1990s.

    All these factors make Morgan a draw and an entertainer. WWE has also positioned her to have a wealth of creative possibilities around her. Her history of feuding with Rhea Ripley will always be there to return to. She also has fresh or at least under-exposed feuds awaiting her with the likes of established stars like Bianca Belair, Tiffany Stratton, or Charlotte Flair, besides helping elevate up-and-comers like Lyra Valkyria or Sol Ruca.

    In addition to the possibilities outlined, there\’s the matter of The Judgment Day faction. One of the greatest successes of this group is the degree to which it has organically spun out in new creative directions across years and different membership rosters. Whoever may turn heel or babyface, leave the group or stay, there\’s reason to envision Raquel Rodriguez and Roxanne Perez as eventual rivals who\’d not only pose interesting in-ring rivals to Morgan but have rich stories to tell for the faction\’s history.

    Might Liv Morgan Main Event WrestleMania?

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    One way of evaluating just how seriously WWE is taking Liv Morgan is whether she main events WrestleMania. It\’s a leap to imagine her closing out Sunday which, for better or worse, WWE has held out on making the truest, biggest main event since the show transitioned to its two-night format. But can she close out night one?

    There is precedent, with Becky Lynch vs. Charlotte Flair vs. Ronda Rousey main eventing WrestleMania 35 and Sasha Banks vs. Bianca Belair closing Night One of WrestleMania 37. It\’s an uphill battle for women to secure such a spot, though, as CM Punk vs. Roman Reigns will presumably main event Sunday, and Morgan\’s title match would then have to beat out the other men\’s world title bout and other special attractions among top stars like Brock Lesnar and Gunther that will always be a threat to main event.

    Morgan main eventing would make a statement, nonetheless, that WWE does seek to reaffirm women\’s wrestling as a top draw and Morgan in particular as a company leader moving forward.

    Liv Morgan may well still feel like a dark horse to stand atop WWE. There\’s a catch-22 at play that longtime fans remember her as a lower and mid-card performer so it\’s hard to envision her as the main eventer, while that story of rising through the ranks is also what has created so much fan investment in her. Time will tell. Morgan has a lot of the tools to graduate to a new echelon of stardom in 2026.

  • Ava Raine Selling WWE Gear Following Controversial Exit

    Ava Raine (Simone Johnson) has announced she will be selling her NXT wrestling gear following her recent WWE departure, following up on her highly-controversial anti-Trump/ICE tweet on Sunday.

    In an Instagram story, Raine stated, \”i will be selling the majority of the outfits i\’ve worn on nxt tv. please dm me if interested. serious inquiries only.\”

    https://media.sescoops.com/uploads/2026/02/\"Ava
    Instagram (@avawwe_)

    Her WWE profile has been moved to the alumni section, a formality in her exit from the company.

    Fans and collectors interested in wrestling memorabilia may find this an unique opportunity to own a piece of her WWE tenure.

  • Ava Blasts Trump and ICE in First Post-WWE Statement

    Ava, real name Simone Johnson, took to Twitter with a pointed message the day after announcing her departure from WWE. The daughter of Dwayne \”The Rock\” Johnson served as NXT general manager since January 2024. She chose not to renew her contract, which expired on January 30, 2026.

    This marks her first public statement since leaving WWE, where she apparently held back such comments while under contract.

    Ava posted on X, \”and now that i can say this with my full chest, [middle finger emoji] ice and that entire administration.\”

    The tweet has since been deleted.

    Johnson made her WWE in-ring debut in 2020 and transitioned to the NXT front office role nearly two years ago.

  • Royal Rumble Attendance, Commentary Team, More Notes

    WWE Royal Rumble 2026 is set to take place in just a matter of hours at the King Abdullah Financial District in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Here are some late news and notes leading into the event:

    Streaming and Viewing Options

    U.S. fans can stream the event on the ESPN app, while international viewers will watch on Netflix.

    This Royal Rumble promises massive stakes with career implications and title defenses as WWE continues its Saudi Arabia showcases.

  • Ava Announces WWE Exit: \”Thank You\”

    NXT General Manager Ava announced on Instagram that she is not renewing her WWE contract and has exited the company. This past Tuesday was her final appearance. In her Instagram post, Ava expressed gratitude to her supporters.

    \”This past Tuesday was my last appearance on NXT & subsequently WWE. Thank you to all who have cheered, watched, and supported me through my journey. While my decision to not renew my contract was very difficult, it’s also new turning point in my life. It has been an honor & a privilege to be Ava.\”

    https://www.instagram.com/p/DUJjZSmkii0/

    Ava joined WWE\’s Performance Center six years ago and debuted on NXT television in October 2022 as Ava Raine.

    During her time in NXT, she was a member of The Schism faction and made her in-ring debut at Stand & Deliver in April 2023. Ava wrestled only six matches total, with her last bout in August 2023, before transitioning to an authority role as NXT General Manager in January 2024.

    As the daughter of Dwayne \”The Rock\” Johnson, Ava carried high expectations into WWE. Her departure leaves questions about her future in wrestling or entertainment.