Category: Featured

Featured stories and must-read content from BodySlam.net.

  • Lash Legend Reflects On Main Roster Growth, Credits Preparation And Triple H’s Belief In Her

    Lash Legend Reflects On Main Roster Growth, Credits Preparation And Triple H’s Belief In Her

    Since officially arriving on WWE’s main roster late last year, Lash Legend has continued to build momentum as one of the company’s fastest-rising Superstars.

    During a recent appearance on Bodyslam.net’s Wrestleholics podcast, Legend opened up about her growth over the past several months, discussing the transition from NXT to WWE’s main roster and the confidence that has come with the opportunity.

    Legend explained that despite the spotlight and increased pressure that comes with performing on RAW and SmackDown, she never viewed the opportunity as something she wasn’t prepared for.

    “Yeah, I mean, it’s definitely just been a blessing. I think every opportunity that I’ve gotten. I’ve just made sure to, you know, take heed to it and run with it — run with whatever is thrown my way because I feel like the thing is, it doesn’t really feel like it’s thrown my way because I prepare.”

    The former NXT standout went on to reflect on the amount of time and work she invested while developing in WWE’s developmental system before finally making the leap to the main roster.

    “I’ve been at NXT. I was at NXT for five and a half years. So I’ve been craving these opportunities, opportunities craving these moments and now that it is happening, I’m just super grateful.”

    Legend also gave credit to WWE Chief Content Officer Paul “Triple H” Levesque for believing in her abilities and trusting that she was ready for a larger role on WWE programming.

    “You know, shout out to Hunter for believing in me and not feeling like, ‘Oh no, maybe not.’ He’s like, ‘No, let’s do it. This is who you are and this is what you’re ready for. You have this talent.’ And I’m just grateful that he sees that and it’s been fun. It’s been a good fun ride.”

    Since arriving on the main roster in November of 2025, Legend has quickly become a featured part of WWE programming, continuing to showcase the athleticism and charisma that made her stand out during her time in NXT.

    Looking ahead, Legend made it clear that her focus is firmly set on championship gold once again.

    “I’ve officially been on the main roster since November and now it’s May. So yeah, a lot has happened. A lot has happened since then. I’m going after my tag team gold again, trying to be two-time and it’s going to happen right there at Saturday Night’s Main Event in Fort Wayne, Indiana.”

    With her confidence continuing to grow and WWE firmly behind her push, Lash Legend appears determined to make the most of her breakout year on the main roster.

    (Please credit Bodyslam.net and the Wrestleholics when using the quotes and news above.)

    You can check out the entire interview with WWE Superstar Lash Legend below.

  • Not a Retirement: FTR vs Cope & Cage at Double or Nothing

    Not a Retirement: FTR vs Cope & Cage at Double or Nothing

    I have been a fan of FTR since they were The Revival, and the people who read me know it, so I am not going to pretend to be neutral about Sunday night. I once spent a long time alone in a car park in Texas after a tag team match they wrestled, and I have not been the same kind of fan since. That is the kind of FTR fan I am. What I want to write here is not a love letter, though, because the match at Double or Nothing is more interesting than fandom can adequately describe. It is interesting on the level of the four men in the ring, on the level of the two teams, on the level of the audience watching, and on the level of a division, a company, an industry, and a form. The stipulation underneath it is doing something professional wrestling almost never does, which is ask a question with a real answer.

    Dax Harwood and Cash Wheeler have spent a decade making the same argument, and on Sunday night in Queens they will make it again, against the longest-running tag team story in mainstream professional wrestling.

    The argument is this: that the tag team, as a unit of professional wrestling, is a serious thing. That it deserves to be treated with the gravity once afforded to it by Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard, by the Midnight Express, by the Brain Busters and the Rock ‘n’ Roll Express. That two men who tag in and tag out, who cut the ring, who refuse to flip and refuse to break character and refuse to wrestle as anything other than a team, can carry a pay-per-view. FTR have made this argument from every promotion that would have them. They have made it in WWE as The Revival and they have made it in ROH and they have made it in New Japan and they have made it across six years now in AEW, and they have made it well enough and consistently enough that the argument is no longer really an argument. It is the most decorated tag team body of work of the modern era. On Sunday night, they defend it.

    Across the ring stand Adam Copeland and Christian Cage, who have been a tag team for longer than some of the wrestlers on the card have been alive. They formed in the late nineties as a pair of Toronto kids who had grown up together. They became one of the defining acts of the Attitude Era. They held the WWF tag titles seven times. They main-evented pay-per-views. They fell out, reconciled, retired, returned, retired again, returned again, and now, in the year 2026, with both men deep into the back half of their careers, they find themselves standing across the ring from a tag team that wants to end them. The story of Cope and Cage is, in the genuine sense of the word, historic. It is the longest continuous tag team narrative in mainstream professional wrestling. It is also, by stipulation, set to end on Sunday night if FTR can make it end.

    Wrestling almost never lets a story finish. Feuds blur into other feuds, teams drift apart through the quiet attrition of forgotten bookings, careers end with a whimper or no ending at all. The trilogy at 1-1 is a structure professional wrestling reaches for and almost never executes cleanly, because executing it cleanly requires the discipline to actually let one team lose. Sunday is the stipulated third act. The retirement clause is the cost of getting it. AEW has, in effect, paid the price required to give this story a real ending, and the price was Cope and Cage agreeing in advance to disappear as a unit if Dax and Cash could do to them on Sunday what they have already done to them once before.

    The stage is Louis Armstrong Stadium. It is the first Double or Nothing held inside the five boroughs of New York City. It is the biggest stage the company has ever built for this pay-per-view. And the match they have chosen to place at the centre of it, the one carrying the weight of finality and history and craft and stakes, is the one in which FTR have been asked, again, to make their argument.

    The argument, like the partnership across the ring from it, has four people inside it.

    Dax Harwood is the most outspoken wrestler of his generation about what tag team wrestling is for. He writes about it. He talks about it on his podcast at length and with the unembarrassed seriousness of a man who has decided this is his life’s work. He cites Arn Anderson the way a young novelist cites Cheever. He has, more than once, articulated a theory of tag wrestling, that the team is the unit of meaning, that the psychology lives in the cut-off and the hot tag rather than in the dive, that a good tag match is closer to a long con than a highlight reel, and he has spent his entire career trying to prove the theory by wrestling it. I have spent years arguing alongside that theory in print, because I think it is right, and because Dax is one of the very few active wrestlers who has built a body of work that proves it on tape. Sunday is, in some sense, the largest single test of that theory he has ever been handed. He is across the ring from the team that, more than any other in the modern era, can claim to have proven a different theory: that two charismatic singles wrestlers can also be one of the greatest tag teams of all time. Dax has been waiting a long time to argue with that.

    Cash Wheeler does his arguing in the ring. He is the quieter half of FTR by some distance, the one less inclined to give the long interview or write the column, and he is also the half of FTR whose in-ring work has, over the last three years, quietly become some of the best tag wrestling on the planet. He is the engine. He is the man who eats the heat, who sells the leg for eight minutes, who makes the hot tag mean something by spending the time before it being broken. In an I Quit match, with no count-outs and no disqualifications and a stipulation that ends only when one man breaks, Cash is the kind of wrestler the format was designed for. He does not break easily. He is not going to be the one who says it.

    Christian Cage is doing the most interesting character work of his career at the age of fifty-two. The version of Christian who has wrestled in AEW since 2021 is not the affable face of the Attitude Era and is not really the heel version anyone remembered from before. It is something newer and stranger, a sneering, articulate, openly contemptuous heel who treats every promo like a closing argument and has, across five years, become genuinely one of the best talkers in the company. He is the brain of Cope and Cage. He is also the half of the partnership most likely, in the existing storyline logic of the feud, to find a way to win that does not require him to actually quit. Whether he will let his partner quit on his behalf is the more interesting question, and it is a question that goes to the heart of what a partnership is and what one half of a partnership owes the other.

    Adam Copeland is the reason the match has the stipulation it has. He made the challenge himself, on the April 25th Dynamite, and he made it in the form of an offer FTR could not credibly refuse: a rematch on the condition that he and Christian would, if they lost, end as a team. It was a strange and significant thing for a wrestler to do. Copeland has a Hall of Fame ring. He has nothing left to prove individually. What he has chosen to put at risk on Sunday is not his career and not his legacy as a singles wrestler but the thirty-year partnership with the friend he started wrestling with as a teenager. That is the offer he made. Sunday is the night it is paid out.

    What gives the offer its weight is the fact that the two teams it brings into collision are not making the same argument about what a tag team is.

    FTR are the most credible argument professional wrestling has produced this century for the proposition that the tag team is a serious art form. That is a large claim and it can be defended. The body of work is on tape. The Briscoes trilogy in 2022. The match against the Young Bucks at All In 2023, in front of eighty-one thousand people at Wembley, in which they out-wrestled the company’s founding tag team on the company’s biggest night. Their work with the Bang Bang Gang, Lucha Brothers, with the Bucks again at multiple intervals, with the Gunns, with the various permutations of the AEW tag division across six years. They have done it in WWE as The Revival, where they became the first team in company history to hold the NXT, Raw, and SmackDown tag titles. They have done it in ROH, where the Garland match against the Briscoes is widely cited as one of the great tag team matches of the modern era. They have done it in New Japan. They have done it in front of empty arenas during the pandemic and in front of stadium crowds afterwards. The argument is not that they are flashy. The argument is that they are right. The team is the unit. The cut-off is the moment. The hot tag is the payoff. The finish comes in the middle of the ring, after the structure has been built. They wrestle like men who have read the textbook and believe it.

    Cope and Cage are an argument of a different kind. Their case for greatness is not built on the patient craft of tag wrestling as a discipline. It is built on the fact that two of the most accomplished singles wrestlers of their generation grew up together and chose, repeatedly, across thirty years, to come back to one another. The partnership is the through-line of two Hall of Fame careers. They are not great as a tag team because they have spent their careers studying the form. They are great as a tag team because they are great wrestlers who happen, also, to be a tag team, and the chemistry between them is the kind of thing that cannot be drilled into existence in a training school. It is the residue of three decades of shared work and shared life. When they reunited in AEW it was treated, correctly, as a homecoming. The reunion was the story. The wrestling was the proof.

    These are not the same argument. They are not even arguments about the same thing. FTR’s case is for the tag team as a craft to be mastered. Cope and Cage’s case is for the tag team as a bond to be honoured. Both cases are true. Both cases have produced great tag team wrestling. What Sunday night does is force them into the same ring with the title and the partnership on the line, which means it forces them, in effect, to argue with each other. The match will be decided in the ring. But the result will read, after the fact, as a verdict on which argument the wrestling business is currently in a position to reward.

    It is also, for the audience watching, a verdict that comes at a cost.

    FTR have, over the last six years, accumulated a fanbase that behaves less like an audience and more like a movement. I know this because I am part of it. It is a particular kind of wrestling fan, the fan who can tell you what a cut-off is and why it matters, who reads Dax’s column and listens to the podcast and treats Arn Anderson the way film students treat Scorsese, who shows up at independent shows two countries away because FTR are on the card. Frequently it is the fan who has been told for most of their wrestling-watching life that the kind of wrestling they love is dead, or unfashionable, or beneath the moment and who has been, through FTR, given a six-year run of evidence that the kind of wrestling they love is in fact alive and being done at the highest level on the biggest stages. To be an FTR fan is to be a person who has had their taste vindicated, repeatedly, by men in the ring. On Sunday night, that fanbase, my fanbase, is being asked to watch FTR end the partnership of two of the most beloved wrestlers of the last thirty years. It is a strange thing to ask, and I am not entirely sure I am ready for it.

    The fanbase across the ring is older, longer-standing, and bound to its wrestlers by a different kind of investment. The Peeps and the Rated-R loyalists have been with Christian and Adam respectively for the better part of three decades. They watched these two men come up together. They watched them feud with each other and reconcile. They watched the retirements and the returns. They watched the partnership become the thing that survived everything else, the injuries, the company changes, the long stretches apart, the entire arc of late-career wrestling reinvention. For that fanbase, Sunday night is not a tag match. It is the stipulated ending of a relationship they have followed since they were teenagers.

    Both fanbases get the same match. Neither gets what they want without the other losing something they care about. The FTR fan who wants the third match to confirm what the first two suggested has to want, in the same breath, for the partnership to end. The Cope and Cage fan who wants the partnership to survive has to want, in the same breath, for FTR to lose the titles and the argument they have been making for a decade. There is no clean cheer in this match. Whichever way it goes, the building will contain, in roughly equal measure, people who have just been given a story they will remember for the rest of their lives, and people who have just been asked to grieve.

    That this match is being treated as the kind of thing two fanbases can grieve over is itself the result of a longer story.

    For most of the last twenty years, the tag team championship has been a thing that happened on the pre-show. That is not a complaint and it is not nostalgia. It is a description of how the major North American promotions chose to use their tag divisions across the 2000s and into the 2010s, as a place to develop young talent, to give veterans something to do on the way down, to fill the middle of the card on television, but rarely as a place to stage the matches a company built its biggest nights around. The tag titles were carried by good teams who were rarely allowed to feel important. The case for tag team wrestling as a main-event form, the case that the Road Warriors and the Anderson brothers and the Midnights had been allowed to make in the seventies and eighties, had largely been retired by the time most of Sunday’s audience started watching wrestling.

    AEW did not single-handedly reverse that trend, but AEW, more than any other promotion of the modern era, has acted as if the trend was reversible. The Bucks and FTR were main-event acts from the company’s first months. The Lucha Brothers were treated as legitimate threats. The tag division was given television time and storyline weight and, crucially, given matches that were allowed to run as long as the wrestling required. The result has been a slow rebuilding of the case that a tag team championship can carry the weight of a pay-per-view’s biggest match. That case is being tested again on Sunday, and it is being tested at scale, with the additional weight of a partnership on the line, which is to say, with the unit of meaning itself placed at the centre of the wager.

    The willingness to make that wager says something about the company making it.

    A wrestling company is, in the end, the sum of the stories it chooses to finish. Promotions get judged on a lot of things — ratings, gates, talent acquisition, production values, but the thing that determines whether the wrestling itself is good or not is whether the company has the discipline to start stories with a clear ending in mind and then, when the moment comes, actually deliver the ending. This is harder than it sounds. It requires telling a wrestler they are going to lose. It requires telling a popular team they are going to break up. It requires resisting the temptation, when a story is going well, to extend it past its natural shape because the extension will draw money in the short term. AEW has been criticised, often fairly, for not always making those calls cleanly. The booking of the last six years has contained genuine triumphs and genuine drift. The criticism that the company sometimes starts stories it does not know how to end is a criticism that has, at various points, been earned.

    The FTR versus Cope and Cage trilogy is the answer to that criticism, or at least an answer. It is a story the company started with a clear shape. It put the first match on television and let FTR win in a bloody, definitive bout. It put the second match on a major show and let Cope and Cage even the score. It then did the harder thing: it scheduled the third match, with a stipulation that requires one team to be decisively, narratively finished. The retirement clause is not a marketing device. It is a commitment. It is the company telling its audience that on Sunday night, this story ends, and one of these two partnerships will not be a partnership on Monday morning. That is the kind of booking discipline wrestling does not always reward and does not always produce. AEW is producing it here, on the first Double or Nothing held inside the five boroughs of New York City, at the centre of a card it could have built around any number of things and has chosen, in part, to build around this.

    Which raises the question of what the industry beyond AEW is supposed to do with it.

    Professional wrestling, for all that it traffics in endings, almost never produces a real one. The form is built on continuation. Wrestlers retire and come back. Teams break up and reunite. Feuds get revived a decade after they were supposedly settled. Storylines get quietly abandoned and then quietly resumed when the writers remember them. This is not a criticism of the form. It is a feature of it. Wrestling is closer to a long-running serial than to a film, and serials work by extending rather than concluding. The price of that extension, however, is that the moments of actual narrative finality become genuinely rare, and the ones that hold up, Flair’s retirement match against Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XXIV, Edge’s first retirement speech, the Undertaker’s final walk, become, by their rarity, the things the industry’s memory organises itself around.

    A stipulated tag team ending belongs in a different and smaller category. There is no obvious canonical example in the modern era of a major tag team being booked out of existence at the height of their relevance, with both members continuing on as singles wrestlers, by their own pre-agreed terms. Teams have broken up after losing loser-leaves-town matches at lower stakes. Teams have drifted apart through storyline dissolution. Teams have been ended by injury or by departure. What has not really happened is what is happening on Sunday: two of the most decorated wrestlers in the business, in the middle of a creative late-career run, walking into a building having agreed in advance that if they lose, the partnership they have spent thirty years building is over by stipulation. That is a new shape. Or if not new, then so rarely attempted at this scale that it might as well be.

    What that shape suggests, if it works on Sunday, is something the industry has not really been asked to consider before: that a tag team partnership can be treated as a thing with a beginning, a middle, and a chosen end, in the same way a singles career can. That the partnership itself is the unit of meaning, not just the wrestlers who comprise it. That when a team ends, something has actually ended, and the ending deserves to be staged with the same seriousness an industry stages the retirement of a singles wrestler. This is the proposition FTR have been making in different language for ten years, and it is the proposition Cope and Cage have, by agreeing to the stipulation, conceded the seriousness of. Whichever team wins on Sunday, the match itself is the argument’s most thorough demonstration. A partnership is a thing that can end. The ending can be chosen. The choice can be honoured by the staging.

    Two men will wrestle to keep being a tag team on Sunday night in Queens. If they lose, they will not retire. They will simply, by their own prior agreement, stop being the thing they have been to each other and to the audience for three decades. The match will end when one man says the words. And then there will be a moment after the words, before the music plays and the referee raises the winners’ hands, when the losing corner of the ring contains two men who are no longer a tag team. Both still wrestlers. Both still standing. Both, by their own choosing, alone. That is the moment the stipulation is for. That is the thing this match has been built to stage. I will be watching for it, and whichever way it falls, what I expect to see is the rarest thing wrestling produces: a partnership that exists, in real time, and then does not.

  • Hangman Adam Page vs Jon Moxley: Through the Rugged Sky

    Hangman Adam Page vs Jon Moxley: Through the Rugged Sky

    This is a remix of a previous article by Corey Michaels, recalling the story of Hangman Adam Page vs Jon Moxley at AEW Revolution 2023, originally published in March 2023.

    “And I saw when the Lamb opened one of the seals, and I heard, as it were the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts saying,
    Come and see.
    And I saw, and behold a white horse…
    And the name that sat on him was Death, and Hell followed with him.”
    – Revelation 6:1-17

    Evergreen in storytelling and the arts is that there are multiple mediums to bring something beautiful, something memorable. Professional wrestling is one such facet of the paradigm. Hope, discomfort, what-have-you. It is the means of translating and communicating the trials and tribulations of heroes and villains, conveying the human condition. Sometimes, not every time, does it need words. The action does the storytelling.

    On March 5, 2023, two men had a bloody affair to test just that.

    The story is easy to follow if one truly pays attention, as the pages are scribed with betrayals, learning from failure, and the existential mortality of man. It involves a freak accident involving Jon Moxley that concussed Hangman Adam Page to the point he couldn’t remember his own child’s name for an uncomfortable amount of time. The words shared in true vitriol among them are reminiscent of literature. An Old West tale written by a scribe dedicated to badass dialogue. 

    This wrestling storyline is a testament that not every rivalry needs a championship to be special – all you need is a damn good reason to fight. On that fateful San Francisco night, the terror of human capability would be tested.

    Adam Page entered this match to The Outlaws’ cover of “(Ghost) Riders in the Sky”, as though an ominous warning that he’d let nothing stop him, no surcease in what he had to do for retribution.

    As his blonde hair flowed, washed in crimson shadow as he strutted to the ring, the arena was bathed in darkness and in red – a harbinger of what was to come; a hell that was to be brought about, and all the layers that come with it. One guitar bounces its chords, a tumbleweed in the wind, before the galloping of the melody that is the Southern rock cover of the country classic played. As a barbed-wire table sits neatly against the ring, Page awaited he whom the bell tolled for.

     

    Moxley sauntered through the crowd to his usual tune of X’s “Wild Thing”, nothing special. To him, this is but another night of combat, and shows he still, still does not take Page that seriously – that he will simply run through his doe-eyed opponent. 

    Before the bell could even ring, Moxley was assaulted immediately by his foe, as he was wailed on. The crowd ate it up like a well-cooked dinner served by a five-star chef. Fitting, for the fork spot later on.

    Eventually, in the ring, the most important weapons start the in-ring competition – elbow strikes and chest slaps. The human body colliding with another human body in primal rage, which satisfies the crowds like in the Roman Colosseum in the days of the gladiator. But this ain’t no Russel Crowe flick.

    Lacing his fist and later his cowboy boot with barbed wire, Hangman bore no relent, unforgiving towards Moxley, who soon fires back, going so far as to bite the Virginian Outlaw. 

    Moxley was born in this fight, baptized in gore, but Hangman, at this point, was blessed by the gods of Texas Deathmatches. Only he without sin and without blood is without honor here.

    The aforementioned fork pierces through Page’s cranium, leaking sanguine droplets — the blood of both men has been spilt.

    Much like a duel outside a shady saloon, the two attempt to shoot each other into a chair, also crowned in barbed wire, but Moxley’s gun leaves the smoke from his pistol as Page collides with it. Moxley does not cease in this; the inanimate chair is thirsty for blood.

    The Blackpool Combat Club member grew too greedy, mauling Page on a turnbuckle, but his own blade pierces him once he’s dropped onto a pair of chairs with the protruding barbs. Tenacious and without quit, the Cowboy wrapped that same wire around himself and flung his own body toward the Ohio native. 

    The once-bloodthirsty San Francisco crowd, who clamored for and loved every bit of carnage shown previously, covered their mouths in collective gasp, yet they couldn’t look away, and they couldn’t refuse to make a noise. Who these guys embody and who these guys are, it seemed so real and raw, yet it must happen. It has to happen.

    You sick fuck!” the crowd chanted as Moxley, wrapped in a chain, stomped on a brick sandwich – Page’s hand as the meat.

    Moxley hogtied Page with the chain, feeding him more agony — and Hangman is the type to bite the hand that feeds. 

    These gladiators collided like gasoline and water, liquids that refuse to mix, yet clashing in the substance they are. Each time a fatal blow is dealt, they get right back up. These are creatures whose hearts endlessly pump blood, coursing through them with the power of warriors.

    Moxley’s hand, he dealt himself, stabbed him in the back once more, leaving him impaled on a chair adorned with barbed wire, shocking him, and revealing a weakness not often shown in him. This match is getting to him, but his pride won’t let him go down that easily.

    Hangman Adam Page dropping Jon Moxley on a barbed-wire chair at AEW Revolution 2023
    Credit AEW

    Jon went far enough as to claw at Adam’s back, who met it in kind, actually drawing blood. Not happy with this, The Death Rider rakes barbed wire across the flesh of Page’s back. As the Romans of old did with Jesus of Nazareth, as he did with Adam Cole the year prior on an episode of Rampage, Hangman propped Moxley with a crown of barbed wire. Reeling, yet pissed off enough, Moxley tosses Page onto another barbed-wire table, flirting with a countout. 

    Lariat upon lariat, blood for blood, their textbook was written in violence. Moxley unleashed a Death Rider onto Page and curb-stomped him before almost choking Hangman out. Moxley again lay in wait, telling Page to stay down as he wrapped the chain around his wrist. Page, prepared, grabs hold of it and reels Moxley in like an expert fisherman to clothesline him.

    The noose, nearly ready, signalled the time of the hanging. Mockingly, Moxley wrapped it around his neck before he was met with a brick to the face.

    High noon arrived. Hangman’s lariat propelled Moxley over the top rope. He grasped the end of the chain, hanging Moxley over it.

    AEW Revolution 2023: Hangman Adam Page hanging Jon Moxley with a steel chain.
    Credit: u/rockthemullet

    The horns, the trumpets blast from a cosmic abyss, a self-apocalypse. Panic set in Moxley. Worry danced across his face. Sensing in a few moments his body would writhe and his legs would shake as life itself would abandon him, Moxley, on instinct as a father, husband, and hungry wrestler, taps frantically, lest he become a wraith, a reminder of his own folly. These fathers have bled tonight.

    The Hangman got his man, and a blood debt was paid in full; he rode away on his pale horse.

    Matches like this in wrestling came not too often on mainstream platforms, but on March 5, this match told a wonderful, brutal, beautiful story of the indomitable human spirit. Matches of this caliber, since on AEW and even sporadically in WWE, highlight the gruesome nature of visceral storytelling. 

    I understand that bouts such as this Texas Deathmatch aren’t for everyone, but I know we’re all smart enough to move on to what is for us. As for this? I loved it. Then and now, I admire the grit and temerity it takes to pull off stunts like this.

    This story 100% called for blood and brutality between two men with different approaches to this match, but they clashed wonderfully.

    Matches like these are not for the squeamish or the faint of heart. Even so, it’s tame in comparison to what else is out there. For special occasions in the mainstream, it’s what makes pro wrestling special. Just how impactful gratuitous violence is in wrestling can lie in the story and its telling. At AEW Revolution 2023, Hangman Adam Page and Jon Moxley created a red-and-gritty, carnage-filled tale and performance that became a staple of the genre.

  • Exclusive: WWE ID Talents Must Use Their WWE Names Going Forward

    Exclusive: WWE ID Talents Must Use Their WWE Names Going Forward

    No more indie names for WWE ID talents.

    Sources have revealed to Bodyslam.net that Independent Wrestlers who have been signed by WWE for a WWE ID contract will no longer be able to use their indie names. Going forward they will have to use their WWE ID names for all upcoming appearances.

    Current WWE ID talent and their indie names:

    Aricia Demia going by Anya Rune

    Notorious Mimi going by Sloane Jacobs

    Starboy Charlie going by Chazz Starboy Hall

    Jariel Rivera going by Santi Rivera

    Jimmy House going by CJ Valor

    Mike Cunningham is now going by Max Abrams

    (Please credit Bodyslam.net when using this news.)

  • Top 10 Greatest Rivalries and Feuds in Wrestling History

    Top 10 Greatest Rivalries and Feuds in Wrestling History

    There’s a reason people who “don’t even watch wrestling” know who Stone Cold Steve Austin is. Or why a match from 1987 still gets referenced in think pieces today. The best feuds in pro wrestling aren’t just about two guys fighting — they’re about conflict, identity, and the kind of storytelling that gets under your skin whether you want it to or not.

    These are the ten rivalries that did exactly that.


    10. Randy Savage vs. Ricky Steamboat

    WWF, 1986-1987

    Before anyone had figured out what a truly great wrestling match could look like, Randy Savage and Ricky Steamboat sat down and essentially invented it. The setup was simple and vicious: Savage drove Steamboat’s throat into the guardrail, then dropped a ring bell onto his larynx from the top rope, putting him out of action. From that moment on, the crowd wanted revenge in the worst way.

    What they got at WrestleMania III — in front of 93,173 fans packed into the Pontiac Silverdome in Michigan — was 14 minutes and 35 seconds of pure, breathless wrestling, complete with 22 pin attempts and almost no wasted movement. Steamboat won the Intercontinental title and stole the show from a card headlined by Hogan and Andre the Giant. Savage himself later said that everywhere he went, fans brought up this match above all others. Thirty-plus years later, they still do.

    9. Sami Zayn vs. Kevin Owens

    Independent Circuit / NXT / WWE, 2002–Present

    Most feuds have a beginning and an end. This one just keeps finding new chapters.

    Sami Zayn and Kevin Owens first fought each other in 2002 in IWS, a small Canadian indie promotion, and went on to tear apart PWG, Ring of Honor, NXT, and WWE across the next two decades. What makes it work is that it’s never just about the belt or the spot on the card — it’s about two people who genuinely know each other too well. The betrayals hit harder because the friendship was real. The reunions feel earned because you’ve watched them earn it.

    By the time they stumbled into an unlikely tag team championship run together — partly as a result of Zayn’s absurd infiltration of The Bloodline — the whole thing had taken on a dimension no writer could have planned. No modern feud has more history or more heart.

    8. Edge vs. John Cena

    WWE, 2006–2009

    Edge and Cena didn’t like each other, and it showed. Edge was the guy who would cash in a Money in the Bank briefcase at 2 in the morning on a wounded champion — which he literally did — while Cena was the company’s straight-laced golden boy who couldn’t be bought or bent. The contrast was perfect.

    What elevated this beyond a standard good-vs.-evil feud was that Edge was genuinely compelling as the villain, not just cartoonishly evil. He was smart, petty, and opportunistic in ways that felt real. Their TLC matches were some of the most brutal and athletic spectacles of the era, and the feud had enough twists and title changes to sustain multiple years without feeling tired. It’s a rivalry that holds up much better than people give it credit for.

    7. Ric Flair vs. Dusty Rhodes

    EVERYWHERE – NEVER ENDED REALLY

    Before WWE dominated everything, American wrestling was a patchwork of regional territories — and the NWA produced some of the most sustained, genuinely emotional feuds the business has ever seen. The crown jewel of that era was Ric Flair against Dusty Rhodes.

    The contrast couldn’t have been sharper. Flair was all private jets, designer robes, and championship gold — a man born to make you despise him. Dusty was the “American Dream,” a heavyset guy from the Carolinas who talked and fought for everyday working people. It was class warfare turned into pro wrestling, and arenas sold out for it night after night for over a decade. This feud is the reason the NWA still means something to people who weren’t even alive to see it.

    6. John Cena vs. CM Punk

    WWE, 2011–2013

    On June 27, 2011, CM Punk sat cross-legged at the top of the entrance ramp and delivered what became known as “the Pipe Bomb” — a promo that blurred the line between scripted television and genuine grievance so completely that even some media outlets weren’t sure what they’d just watched. Nothing in the promo was scripted by WWE writers. Punk was saying what he actually thought, with permission to say it on live TV, and it showed.

    Their match at Money in the Bank 2011 in Chicago — Punk’s hometown — was a five-star classic according to Dave Meltzer, the first WWE match to receive that rating since 1997. The atmosphere was unlike anything seen in years: 15,000 fans treating Cena like the villain and Punk like a returning hero. Punk won the title, walked out of the arena, and posed for photos on the street with his friends. For a moment, it felt like anything could happen in WWE. That feeling is rarer than it should be.

    5. Kane vs. The Undertaker

    WWF/WWE, 1997–2010

    This one hits home. I was at the age where I still thought wrestling was real. No feud in WWE history has a better origin story. For months in 1997, Paul Bearer — Undertaker’s long-time manager — hinted at a dark secret: that Undertaker had started a fire as a child that killed his parents and his younger brother Kane. Then, during the very first Hell in a Cell match at Badd Blood: In Your House in October 1997, the lights went out, the arena turned red, and out walked a 7-foot masked monster in red and black. Kane ripped the cell door clean off its hinges, stood face-to-face with his brother, and Tombstoned him — costing Undertaker the match.

    What followed was one of the most gothic, emotionally rich storylines WWE has ever produced. Undertaker initially refused to fight his own brother no matter what Kane did to provoke him — and Kane did plenty, including burning a casket with Undertaker inside it at the 1998 Royal Rumble. When they finally met at WrestleMania XIV, it took Undertaker three Tombstone Piledrivers to put Kane away. Their first Inferno match followed shortly after. Then a brief, uneasy alliance. Then betrayal again.

    The feud never truly ended — it just kept finding new reasons to restart, spanning more than a decade of feuds, tag title runs, Buried Alive matches, and Hell in a Cell rematches. The in-ring quality was inconsistent, but as a piece of long-form storytelling driven by two iconic characters and one of wrestling’s greatest managers in Paul Bearer, it has no equal. Kane’s debut alone is considered by many the greatest character introduction in wrestling history.

    4. Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart

    WWF, 1992–1997

    The real heat between these two made everything better and everything more volatile. Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels genuinely could not stand each other — their professional jealousy, their clashing personalities, their competing visions of what wrestling should be — and all of it ended up on screen whether it was meant to or not.

    What they produced together was extraordinary. Their 61 minute Iron Man Match at WrestleMania XII is still talked about today. And then came Montreal in November 1997, where Vince McMahon had the referee ring the bell while Bret was still locked in the Sharpshooter, costing him the title on his last night in WWE. It wasn’t a storyline. It actually happened. Bret didn’t know it was coming. The look on his face when he realized it was real is one of the most haunting images in wrestling history. No rivalry has ever ended quite so messily, or been quite so impossible to look away from

    3. The Rock vs. Steve Austin

    WWF, 1997–2003

    They headlined WrestleMania together three times — at XV, XVII, and XIX — and each match felt like the biggest possible version of itself. The Rock and Steve Austin had the kind of chemistry that makes everything look effortless: the timing, the crowd manipulation, the ability to take a moment and stretch it until the whole building was vibrating.

    Austin was the blue-collar brawler from Texas. The Rock was the arrogant, preening Hollywood star who happened to be one of the greatest talkers the business has ever produced. Together they carried the Attitude Era to its highest peaks and gave WWF the ammunition it needed to finally pull ahead of WCW in the ratings. Austin’s last match for 19 years was against The Rock at WrestleMania XIX in 2003. They could have phoned it in. They didn’t.

    2. Kenny Omega vs. Kazuchika Okada

    NJPW / AEW, 2017–Present

    This feud didn’t just produce great matches — it changed the wrestling business.

    Kenny Omega had just become the first foreigner to win New Japan’s prestigious G1 Climax tournament when he challenged Okada for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship at Wrestle Kingdom 11 in January 2017. What followed earned a record-breaking six-star rating from Wrestling Observer’s Dave Meltzer, who called it one of the greatest matches in the history of professional wrestling. Across four bouts in NJPW — accumulating more than 200 minutes of combined match time — the two men established a standard for in-ring work that genuinely had not existed before. New Japan’s subscriber numbers spiked after Wrestle Kingdom 11 alone. The buzz from this rivalry drew new audiences to wrestling worldwide and helped lay the creative groundwork for AEW’s founding. Their rematch at Dominion 6.9 in 2018 received seven stars from Meltzer — a number that felt impossible until it wasn’t.

    In terms of pure in-ring achievement, nothing in the 21st century comes close.

    1. Steve Austin vs. Vince McMahon

    WWF, 1997–2003

    It started on September 22, 1997, when Austin hit McMahon with a Stunner on Raw — a moment described as “previously unthinkable” because McMahon had simply been the voice of the company until that point. Nobody expected the owner to become a character. Nobody expected the character to work this well.

    The genius of Austin vs. McMahon is that it didn’t require any suspension of disbelief. Every working person in America already knew what it felt like to have a boss who made their life a misery for no good reason. McMahon was that boss — pompous, vindictive, and desperate to control something he couldn’t quite break. Austin was the guy who refused to be broken, who showed up every week and did exactly what McMahon told him not to, and drank a beer over his boss’s limp body while the crowd lost its mind.

    This feud helped WWE survive the Monday Night Wars. It made Austin arguably the most popular professional wrestler who ever lived. It produced television so compelling that even people who’d never watched wrestling were tuning in to see what happened next. Some feuds are great wrestling. Some feuds are great entertainment. Every once in a while, you get one that’s genuinely great storytelling — and this is the best example the business has ever produced.


     

    The best wrestling feuds work because they tap into something universal — jealousy, betrayal, the need to prove yourself, the desire to see the underdog finally win. These ten rivalries did all of that and then some.

     

    ALL OPINIONS ARE THOSE OF THE AUTHOR

  • The Toxic Spider Has the Gold — And She Was Always Going To

    The Toxic Spider Has the Gold — And She Was Always Going To

    She stumbled into professional wrestling at a punk-rock show in Vienna when she was 19 years old. Now, at 33, Thekla is the AEW Women’s World Champion.

    There is a version of this story where Thekla Kaischauri never makes it. Where the girl from Vienna with the punk band and the fine arts degree stays on that side of the world, making paintings and playing guitar, and professional wrestling remains just a strange thing she once stumbled into at a show.

    That version does not exist. It never really had a chance.

    An Unlikely Beginning

    Born April 30, 1993, in Vienna, Austria, Thekla holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Applied Arts Vienna. She describes herself as a creative kid who tried everything — comics, guitar, painting — before finding her true calling in the most unexpected of venues.

    She stumbled into her first taste of wrestling at a local punk-rock show at age 19 and swiftly became obsessed with the bizarre nature of what she witnessed. That obsession would reshape the rest of her life.

    She began her wrestling journey in 2017 in Vienna’s underground scene — a world of pub basements, no ropes and loosely enforced rules that bore little resemblance to mainstream professional wrestling. Her first match in a traditional ring did not come until April 2018, when she competed for Independent Pro Wrestling Germany in Lübeck. Her unconventional entry into the business turned out to be an asset. Having not grown up immersed in wrestling history, she developed a style and character drawn from a far wider range of influences — art, music, punk culture — giving her a creative freedom that more traditionally trained wrestlers rarely possess.

    Japan: A Wrestler is Born

    If Vienna gave Thekla a foundation, Japan built the house.

    She considers herself Japan-bred, having worked within the wrestling-obsessed country as early as late 2017. Being the only foreigner in promotions stacked with elite talent forced rapid development. She did not speak the language at first, and the culture surrounding professional wrestling was unlike anything she had encountered in Europe. The crucible made her.

    In late 2021, Thekla made the leap to World Wonder Ring Stardom, where she worked alongside bigger names such as Giulia and Mina Shirakawa. She competed there through 2025, becoming one of the few high-profile gaijin — foreign wrestlers — to establish herself meaningfully in Japanese women’s wrestling.

    Her time in Japan was not limited to the ring. During her years in Tokyo, Thekla exhibited her artwork in three solo exhibitions, including one at the Austrian Embassy in Tokyo — a reminder that the artist and the athlete were never far apart.

    The Move to AEW

    Thekla officially completed her contractual obligations with Stardom following the promotion’s All-Star Grand Queendom event on April 27, 2025. Her departure was marked by a storyline firing angle after her match, providing a definitive end to her successful run there.

    The American wrestling market came calling quickly. Reports indicated that WWE had its eye on her and that All Elite Wrestling had developed significant interest toward the end of 2024. She chose AEW, making her on-screen debut May 28, 2025, on Dynamite.

    The Toxic Spider

    What separates Thekla from the rest of the AEW women’s roster is not just her background — it is how all of that background manifests the moment she steps through the curtain.

    She carries herself with the effortless menace of someone who has nothing left to prove and everything left to take. Her in-ring style is chaotic and precise in equal measure — limb-targeting submissions wound around spider-like movement, sudden bursts of violence punctuated by a cold, unhurried composure that makes her more unsettling than any screaming heel on the roster. She does not chase the crowd’s reaction. She makes the crowd chase her.

    The nickname fits. The Toxic Spider does not brawl. She traps.

    Champion

    The payoff came on Feb. 11, 2026, when Thekla defeated Kris Statlander in a strap match on Dynamite to capture the AEW Women’s World Championship. She is now the reigning champion and a member of the Triangle of Madness stable alongside Julia Hart and Skye Blue.

    The stable also represented AEW in the CMLL Grand Prix de Amazonas at Arena Mexico in October 2025, marking Thekla’s lucha libre debut and underscoring the global footprint she has built across three continents.


     

    For fans who are only now discovering her, the career arc speaks for itself — from a punk show in Vienna, to the dojos of Tokyo, to the top of one of America’s premier wrestling promotions. She did not take the expected road. She did not take any road at all. She carved through the wilderness on her own terms, and now she stands at the summit holding a championship that looks like it was made for her. Maybe it was.

     

  • Top 10 Greatest Mic Workers in Pro Wrestling History

    Top 10 Greatest Mic Workers in Pro Wrestling History

    A finishing move can end a match. A great promo can end a career — or launch one into the stratosphere. These 10 wrestlers understood something most never fully grasp: in professional wrestling, the microphone is the most dangerous weapon in the building.


    10. MJF

    AEW • 2019–PRESENT

    Maxwell Jacob Friedman is the best heel talker of his generation and the strongest argument that elite mic work is not a relic of a previous era. MJF is clearly a student of the game. His promos are technically constructed with the precision of a trained writer — knowing exactly when to go personal, when to break kayfabe and when to let the crowd’s hatred fuel the next sentence. Just recent turning 30, MJF has already produced promo work that belongs in the same conversation as the legends above him on this list. You can see bits and pieces from the rest of the field in his work  

    9. Steve Austin

    WCW / WWE • 1989–2003

    Stone Cold Steve Austin’s mic work was deceptively simple — short sentences, blue collar attitude and a consistent philosophical code about beer, stubbornness and not taking orders. That simplicity was pure genius, because every word Austin said felt like something a real person in the audience would actually think or want to say themselves. His promos didn’t just over deliver on crowd reaction; they created a cultural identity that resonated far beyond wrestling fans. Add in the raspy Texas accent and 99% of the time you could feel his words.

    8. John Cena

    WWE • 2000–2025

    John Cena’s mic work is one of the most underrated in wrestling history, largely because his babyface run drew so much heat that fans overlooked how technically accomplished he was at promos. His rap-influenced early character gave him a comedic edge and quick wittedness that few main event stars of his era could match. When Cena went serious — particularly in feuds with CM Punk and The Rock — he consistently delivered the kind of composed, layered promo work that belongs in any legitimate conversation about the best talkers of his generation.

    7. Paul Heyman

    ECW / WCW / WWE • 1987–PRESENT

    Paul Heyman is the closest thing to a pure orator professional wrestling has ever produced — a man who could take the most absurd premise and present it with the conviction of a closing argument before a jury. As both a performer and an advocate for Brock Lesnar, he demonstrated that great mic work is fundamentally about persuasion, not volume. His promos don’t just sell matches; they reframe the entire narrative around his client as inevitable and undeniable. 

    6.  Roddy Piper

    NWA / WCW / WWE • 1975–2011

    Roddy Piper was the original unpredictable — a man who could shift from hilarious to genuinely unnerving in a single sentence, and frequently did. His Piper’s Pit segments set the template for the wrestling talk show format precisely because he could not be scripted into a corner; he found the live wire in every exchange and grabbed it with both hands. Piper’s gift was making everyone around him seem like they were improvising just to keep up.

    5. Jake “The Snake” Roberts

    WWE / WCW / INDIES • 1974–2018

    Where most wrestlers screamed to get their point across, Jake Roberts whispered — and arenas went dead silent. His mic work was psychological rather than theatrical, built on menace, metaphor and the unsettling calm of a man who had already decided what he was going to do to you. Roberts proved that restraint could be more terrifying than anything a louder wrestler could offer.

    4. The Rock

    WWE • 1996–PRESENT

    The Rock turned catchphrases into cultural currency and crowd work into an art form, operating on a comedic timing and rhythm that most stand-up comedians would envy. His genius was making the audience feel like participants rather than spectators — his call-and-response style gave arenas of 20,000 people the illusion they were having a private conversation with him. No wrestler before or since has crossed over into mainstream entertainment on the strength of mic work alone quite like Dwayne Johnson did.

    3.  CM Punk

    ROH / WWE / AEW • 2002–PRESENT

    CM Punk’s 2011 “pipe bomb” promo remains the most electrifying unscripted moment in modern wrestling, but it was no accident — it was the product of a career built on sharp, specific and brutally honest mic work. Punk spoke with the controlled rage of someone who actually meant every single word, which made him uniquely credible in an era of polished corporate promos. Even his detractors concede that when the microphone was in his hand, you could not change the channel.

    2.  Dusty Rhodes

    NWA / WCW / WWE • 1974–2010

    The American Dream spoke directly to working-class audiences in a way no other wrestler in history has managed to replicate. His promos were loose, rambling and deeply emotional — yet somehow always landed exactly where they needed to. Dusty turned vulnerability into a superpower, and crowds didn’t just cheer for him; they believed him.

    1.  Ric Flair

    NWA / WCW / WWE • 1972–2011

    No one in wrestling history combined volume, charisma and pure spectacle the way Ric Flair did every time he grabbed a microphone. His promos were operatic performances — part carnival barker, part Shakespearean villain — delivered with a conviction that made every word feel like gospel. Whether he was bragging about limousine rides and jet plane flights or begging for mercy on his knees, Flair was incapable of giving a dull moment. I’m sure if you asked all men ranked behind him, they would agree he would be #1.

     

    ALL OPINIONS ARE THOSE OF THE AUTHOR

     

     

     

     

  • Of Dawns and Twilights: New Day’s Impact in WWE | Column

    Of Dawns and Twilights: New Day’s Impact in WWE | Column

    “Don’t forget to smile in any situation. As long as you are alive, there will be better things later, and there will be many.” — Eiichiro Oda 

     

    Often in stories, I appreciate the funny moments. Bright, whimsical, wholesome, and full of light amid times of darkness and harsh realities. It makes those serious moments hit harder and reinforces that they do not last. Not so long as love and joy are to be found. That’s why the shock of New Day’s departure from WWE in 2026 struck wrestling fans so hard. Their impact is undeniable. Unforgettable. And now it reaches its dawn; night came without most knowing the moon circling its eternal orbit. On May 2, 2025, BodySlam’s own Cory Hayes and Fightful’s Sean Ross Sapp reported that New Day would mutually part ways with WWE.

    https://x.com/Cory_Hays407/status/2050592868863987915?s=20

    For over a decade, the trio of Kofi Kingston, Xavier Woods, and Big E entertained fans. Sure, it took them a moment to find their identity, but when they did, something magical happened. There was a chemistry, a fire in three men who forged a brotherhood that brought laughs, tears, and memories even in the darkest of times.

     

    All three men were long-tenured. Their history is well-documented. Starting in 2014 with a gospel gimmick, New Day transitioned to a trio of goofballs who nerded out about anime, video games, and big meaty men slapping meat. Yet, they achieved greatness outside of the jokes.

     

    Fans eventually responded to this. They chanted “New Day sucks!”, which eventually transitioned to “New Day Rocks!” Over the years, New Day became a fixture in the company, where fans formed a strong connection. Woods would take advantage of this with a trombone to add an instrument to the crowd’s lyrics. Laughter would echo with every innuendo, pun, and joke. Audiences would join in with their catchphrases.

     

    From 2015 to 2016, the group held the WWE Tag Team Champions. Dethroning Tyson Kidd and Cesaro on the April 26 edition of the 2015 Extreme Rules became a huge moment for the stable. There, they would hold a record-breaking reign of 483 days thanks to Cesaro and Sheamus at 2016’s Roadblock: End of the Line on December 18. The Usos would surpass this reign on the November 11, 2022, episode of SmackDown. The Samoan brothers held the title for a 622-day reign.

     

    They’d continue onward to have an exciting run as the SmackDown Tag Team Champions, with wars against The Bludgeon Brothers, The Dudley Boyz, The Bar, Gallows and Anderson, and most notably, The Usos. The future Bloodline members had an intense rivalry with E, Woods, and Kingston, with their 2017 Hell in a Cell Match at the similarly named event being a standout. When asked about memorable Hell in a Cell bouts, many fans will likely point you to this one, outside of the Attitude Era and Ruthless Aggression Eras.

    The New Day vs. The Usos - Hell in a Cell Match SmackDown Tag Team Championship Match - Credit WWE
    Credit: WWE

    Considering the high unpopularity of the 2018-2022 era WWE, it’s remarkable that New Day had incredible moments that shone through the murk of bad booking and lazy creative. These years left many with a feeling that WWE was anti-fan. Though this sentiment hasn’t changed, especially in the company’s current climate, WWE allowed fans this one hope.

     

    KofiMania.

     

    After a heated Gauntlet Match on February 12, 2019, the veteran Kofi Kingston took part in a six-man Gauntlet Match. Due to an injury that derailed the originally planned contender, Mustafa Ali, Kingston was slotted into what was going to be a simple Elimination Chamber Match a week later.  Eliminating WWE Champion Daniel Bryan in an upset, Kingston’s hope diminished against the monstrous Samoa Joe. Squeaking by with a narrow elimination, Kingston suffered at the hands of the sore loser when AJ Styles came to his rescue.

     

    Then, something beautiful happened.

     

    Styles pleaded with Kingston that there would be no shame in forfeiting his spot in the gauntlet. He’d still make it to Elimination Chamber, he’d still be in the match. Kofi pushed back. Eleven years. He’d waited for this moment for eleven years. His voice quaked with something dissimilar to rage or pain; spirit coursed his very veins until the Phenomenal One acquiesced. They battled until Styles submitted him with a Calf Crusher. Ultimately, Kingston tapped in, as Big E and Xavier Woods helped him to the back.

    Kingston, despite the setback, had insane, insane momentum behind him as fans roared for his achievements and booed his setbacks. To me, this was the moment KofiMania hooked me. Right there, from the get-go. The Elimination Chamber Match, the subsequent gauntlet matches, and social media promos from Big E and Xavier Woods, and the win over WWE Champion Daniel Bryan at WrestleMania 35, all from this moment.

     

    That emotional win at Mania will stick with fans forever, especially those watching in the moment. Tears flowing from Xavier Woods, Big E beaming, Kofi overwhelmed with both emotion and sweat. Even his children joined him in the ring.

     

    The less said about how his reign was handled, let alone ended, the better. 

     

    Big E’s eventual title ascension proved to be just as hopeful and inspirational when he dashed Seth Rollins’s Money in the Bank aspirations with a Big Ending. He’d then grab the briefcase and fight to contain his emotions as he celebrated. He’d later cash it in on Bobby Lashley for the WWE Championship on the September 13, 2021, episode of Raw to great success.

     

    The less said about how his reign was handled, let alone ended, like Kingston’s, the better.

     

    Tragedy would strike on WrestleMania 38, when he suffered a botched overhead belly-to-belly suplex from Ridge Holland. This resulted in a broken neck, with fractures to his vertebrae. To date, he’s gone on to say that he’s effectively retired from pro wrestling action.

     

    Alone again, Kingston and Woods marched on. They’d cause a stir of controversy on the heels of 2022’s NXT Deadline. Unseating Pretty Deadly as NXT Tag Team Champions, New Day thus became WWE Tag Team Triple Crown Champions.

     

    Over the subsequent years, Kings and Woods grew progressively at odds with each other. From Karrion Kross and The Final Testament to Oddysey Jones and the LWO, it was clear they weren’t as communicative. Week after week, they’d bicker, and things weren’t as funny or lighthearted. Woods and Kingston brought out unbridled vitriol, soon to bubble over.

     

    The pair agreed in December to hold a 10th anniversary celebration of the team’s formation. There, they mourned Big E’s absence and stated that they’ve grown apart. Big E, who’d been mostly seen on pre-shows and interviews, joined them. The former WWE Champion begged them to stay together, that he’d join them as manager until he’s ever cleared. For Kingston and Woods, it was far, far too late. He could have come back at any moment, but he chose to leave it behind until they were about to leave it behind. No, they wouldn’t allow it. Effectively turning heel, Kingston and Woods evicted Big E from the group. Albeit this excommunication, E had small solace, knowing his brothers would remain together.

    The New Day, sans Big E, won their last WWE title together at WrestleMania 41, Night One, from War Raiders. Woods and Kingston held the World Tag Team Championships for 72 days before losing them to Finn Balor and JD McDonagh of the Judgement Day on the June 30, 2025, episode of Raw.

     

    Taking Grayson Waller under their tutelage, Kingston and Woods simply existed for a time, mostly in backstage segments, before finally departing from WWE mutually on May 2, 2026.

     

    So ends the New Day.

     

    It’s been bittersweet writing this up. All of the bright moments, the levity and joy these three men brought, I’ve enjoyed reliving. The New Day’s Dragon Ball Z-inspired gear at WrestleMania 32 was forever made iconic with their giant box of Booty-O’s. Their reaction to Xavier Woods falling prey to a Stone Cold Stunner by “Stone Cold” Steve Austin at the same event. Their hilarious back-and-forth promo with The Rock. The wins, the losses, and the everything in between.

     

    They were guaranteed smiles from crowds and viewers at home. That connection isn’t easy for most to establish, but they made it seem so effortless. Moreover, they were outspoken on their stances on current events, such as Hulk Hogan’s return to WWE or the Black Lives Matter movement. Additionally, their feuds in 2017-18 injected life into WWE’s tag team division, particularly their rivalry with The Usos.

     

    Considering these accolades and achievements and reputation, the fact that fans wanted so much more than the company had been willing to give to New Day is a testament to the stable’s unwavering power. I attribute this to the human story of this, told through comedy, tragedy, heartbreak, and glory. In a world where things are made corporate for the sake of content, there was art, there was feeling, and damn it all to hell, there was soul.

     

    Wherever Kofi and Xavier go, I hope they find great fun and success in it. Personally and selfishly, I’d love to see dream matches in AEW against The Young Bucks, The Rascalz, RPG Vice, and more. They are quite well-suited to the company’s PWG-esque tags and multi-man matches. Away from the lens of WWE, I’m curious to see how they’d fare. Of course, if they run the independent route, they have the means to comfortably do so. Either way, I support what they and Big E do from here on out, together or separate.

    The New Day in Dragon Ball Z gear in front of a giant Booty-O's Box at WrestleMania 32
    Credit: WWE

    In any day’s cycle, there’s a dawn and a dusk. New Day just so happened to eclipse its twilight.

     

    But it’s not the end, never the end. When night comes and goes, and the moon dips beneath the sea, the morning will come.

     

    And there will come a new day, yes, it will.

  • Why Wrestling Companies Must Improve Security for Talent

    Why Wrestling Companies Must Improve Security for Talent

    The opinions shared in this article belong to its author and do not reflect the consensus of the BodySlam staff.

     

    Try these shoes on: You’re a performer, with a huge stage to apply your craft. People cheer for you. They wear clothes designed in your image. There are signs they hold up and merchandise of you that they carry. You feel good, flattered, if you’re not used to it. Alternatively, you’re almost numb to it by now, but you’re still appreciative, because these people are the reason you get to live this life. And then it happens. They cross a boundary. Swarming their golden gods, they shove photos, merchandise, and toys, demanding talents sign them. Phones are pulled out for selfies and candid photos. For professional wrestling talents, this is an encounter they face all too often across their travels.

     

    Recently, during WrestleMania 42 weekend, that was the case. In Las Vegas, fans overwhelmed the talents. Booker T had fans follow him into the bathroom, according to his Reality of Wrestling podcast. Bayley and AJ Lee tried to share a quiet, emotional moment, likely before parting ways; Lee had an emotional title loss at the Showcase of the Immortals. CM Punk had to step in, confronting the fan and slapping the phone out of his hands.

     

    https://x.com/TMZ/status/2046219652762567025?s=20

     

    It’s a tale as old as time. Wrestlers post about it all the time, asking fans not to cross boundaries so they can simply go about their day. The show is over; there’s no meet-and-greet or convention. All there is is moving from one place to another or ordering something for the road. Sure, they’re happy to see viewers admire their work. A lot goes into it. For every botch, there’s a move that was executed to surgical precision. Promos are delivered in the hopes that their charisma will funnel into the fans’ subconscious, as wrestling psychologically does.

     

    In that is a catharsis. But that line between performer and spectator is sacred, unless otherwise invited in.

     

    Nobody wants to be made anxious about such a predicament. Going outside shouldn’t necessitate a horde of people frothing at the mouth for an interaction. Sadly, it doesn’t work that way. Having a life outside of home and the squared circle is mostly a risk, one that talents might not be fully equipped to handle.

     

    This follows everyone. Most often, though, it happens to women.

     

    I don’t think I need to explain how women are often overcrowded, regardless of their following. Even if they’re not trying to present themselves as someone to gaze at, it still happens, regardless of the gender assigned to the fans that follow them, mostly male. Provided the societal treatment of women since the dawn of time, this doesn’t stop at signing things or taking selfies.

     

    Women wrestlers are often the prime targets. No matter what percentage of skin is showing, they have a line that fans should not cross. It happens anyway. They could dress modestly, outside of their gear, in ways that heavily mute the features that are subject to such ogling. It still happens anyway. Not having the autonomy to dress however one wants without worrying about the intrusive hands of unwanted hands, it’s a scary existence.

     

    CM Punk shouldn’t have had to step in for AJ Lee and Bayley. The man who invaded the house of Daria Rae (formerly WWE’s Sonya DeVille) in Summer 2020 shouldn’t have happened. Rhea Ripley shouldn’t need to take to X and ask fans to breach her orbit to sign their stuff, or for people not to send things to her personal home address. Asuka has also reported that she’s afraid of being around fans because of the same treatment and those trying to romantically engage with her.

     

    I recognize that many of these wrestlers are incredibly successful, and that there is a litany of other bad things happening in the world. Poverty, evil billionaires, bigotry, and global warming. That said, entertainers should not have to beg for people to recognize them as people, not idols to be worshipped.

     

    Women in general should not have to live their lives with their heads on a swivel. Why else do would they hope to have a partner or friend in their life, so that they can turn their brain off in public? What other reason are they afraid to go out alone at night? Only then will they not need to answer “man or bear” with the latter.

     

    And now I move onto the recent topic of Elayna Black (formerly Cora Jade of WWE), that same WrestleMania 42 weekend at WrestleCon. A man groped her without consent and attempted to walk off. She took out her phone, recorded a video of his face as she confronted him. Largely, she received support for standing up for herself.

     

    https://x.com/KCwrestles/status/2045573510039568598?s=20

     

    Yet others were jumping to defend her harasser. Chief among these responses were people decrying her OnlyFans career, as though that justified his actions. She, as a wrestler, is free to handle her own branding just as her male peers are.

     

    Under no circumstances, and I mean in no uncertain terms, is it okay to touch anyone or make any comment that would make them uncomfortable. That includes performers and people in our daily lives. But it also extends to NSFW content creators, adult film stars, and dancers at strip clubs. Everyone should be free from inappropriate handling. Everyone. Yes, even you. Without enthusiastic consent, this is disgusting behavior. People, decent people, should never act like this.

     

    In terms of sex workers or anything adjacent, once they stop performing for the screen or on a stage, that’s where it ends. The nature of their profession is not an invitation to treat them however anyone pleases. What consenting adults do with partners or people they share intimacy or desires with is their business. It’s no different from anyone who doesn’t have that career. I might add that if it weren’t for men lusting after and treating women as sexual objects in the first place, this career might not exist in the first place. Supply and demand. 

     

    If it bothers a fan so much, my advice is this: stay away from it. Turn that phone off. Block it from personal social media. But do not condone this. Otherwise, it’s all men until women can feel safe and secure around men. 

     

    This also applies to male victims and victims outside of the gender binary. No one should be made to fear their surroundings.

     

    But I expect people to continue vehemently defending harassing and assaulting people. These are the types of people who women will cross the street just to avoid.

     

    Returning to the message at hand, there’s a parasocial nature to interactions that creates, nurtures, and perpetuates the interactions that leave wrestlers exhausted, or worse, afraid.

     

    WWE's Asuka 'feeling in danger', warn fans about 'romantic' advances
    Credit: @WWEAsuka, X

     

    All of those stories about wrestlers, actors, and musicians acting grumpily, at times angrily, at fans can be attributed to the lack of space and respect. Nobody should have to see John Cena calmly, yet visibly irritatedly ask fans to respect his privacy and boundaries. Chappel Roan’s enforcement of her line between her time away from music to be mired with constant interactions with strangers should not warrant controversy.

     

    Existing abroad in the public eye is not permission. If any celebrity, be they online, in wrestling, or in pop culture, welcomes an interaction, leave it at what they are willing to allow. Then leave it at that. If they don’t offer it, leave them alone. The interaction between performer and fan starts and stops at that moment, unless both parties agree to continue it. 

     

    In a perfect world, educating people on etiquette, on treating others respectfully, would alleviate so much of this. Unfortunately, we don’t live in such a world. Empathy is but a foreign concept for people who don’t step out of their own shoes.

     

    Circling back to WrestleMania 42 and the flood of fans that left wrestlers with a negative experience, the last and most crucial aspect to consider is security.

     

    Throughout that weekend, it was noted that the local security at Las Vegas’s MGM Grand wasn’t equipped for the influx of fans. When Fightful Select released their report on WWE and hotel security, they painted a dismal picture that highlights the unsafe environment of simply staying at a place to unwind and rest.

     

    Factoring in that Vegas hotel security already has far more to deal with, it would make sense that a multi-billion-dollar corporation like TKO, and by extension WWE, would heighten security for the people who make their product work in the first place.

     

    There’s a lot to weigh in on how fans treat talent. Many are socially unaware (either by lack of education, social conditioning, or lacking socially cognitive skills), while others are predatory. From the lustful fans to the ones who would exploit their own children to get something signed, it’s disturbing that these people operate in such a way. Additionally, some of these fans are trying to take shortcuts to meet and get things signed due to WWE’s current business model already overprices almost everything from merch to tickets to meet-and-greets.

     

    But the company should be held responsible for the fans’ handling of talents in public. Surely, with WrestleManias and Royal Rumbles being held in Saudi Arabia from the pocket of royalty, WWE could afford this. Surely, with the high costs of being a fan, WWE could afford this. Surely, from cutting talent, WWE could feasibly afford to ensure the safety of its most essential contributors.

     

    With the wealth the company touts, it begs the question: at what length would the company go to ensure the proper satisfaction of fans and talent alike?

     

    Considering how they value their bottom dollar, I think I know the answer.

  • Berwyn Eagles Club: What It All Meant in the End

    Berwyn Eagles Club: What It All Meant in the End

    This is a piece paying tribute to the place of the Berwyn Eagles Club venue in pro wrestling and what it meant to so many. Since the Club is set to lose a main source of income, here is a GoFundMe campaign to help venue owner Chuck Marose Sr in the aftermath.

     

    Across the street from a Mexican restaurant and an ice cream parlor, next door to a car wash, sits a simple place. Nothing crazy about it that screams for more attention than most. A small one with a pronounced sign outside. Much of it is hugged by verdant greenery en route to a dark wooden door; the rectangular pavement in front of it is cracked. Once glance at the blue sign, “Berwyn Eagles” with the titular bird breaching containment atop it. Yep, you’re there at Chicago’s local independent wrestling haven, Berwyn Eagles Club.

     

    Immediately, the clammy stench of history envelopes you. The arena is compact; the Club’s breadth is intimate—the type of place where people are packed like sardines, within intimate proximity to each other. Hardwood flooring and walls house chandeliers, embodying an atmosphere of Reagan-era structure, a time capsule of the 1980s. As you walk through the halls, 8×10 posters invite you further, making it clear that you’re going to be in the midst of an art unrestrained by the global and corporately controlled capitalism outside. These posters continue into the side and main bar. The world is on fire, but inside, there’s the comfort of great vibes and storytelling in the guise of sport. 

    An AAW show in Berwyn Eagle Club's interior
    Credit: AAW Wrestling

    This main bar, that’s the entrance where fiction struts through the reality that cheers and jeers it. It has two doors, but only one is used for the performer’s entrances. Fans can be seen dipping in and out of the bar or visiting their ATM, hopefully having enough in their account to withdraw.

     

    Wrestlers hang out backstage, sharing drinks and laughs at the bar. Every so often, if your eye strays enough from the bombastic theater unfurling before you, it might catch sight of wrestlers high and low on the card watching from the entrance and backstage.

     

     The smell of alcohol and paraphernalia permeates the air. A scent of perspiration soon wafts its foul air. One does not go to independent wrestling shows to be in the presence of aesthetics and sweet aromas. No, this was a place where you forget your troubles and get in the pit of sweat and rage and the masquerade of sport. Where heartache, comedy, hopes, and dreams come to a modest square.

     

    The Berwyn Eagles Club has hosted this wrestling for over 20 years. In the American Midwest, it was the place to be. A place where, if wrestlers were positioned to be a big player in the independent wrestling scene, they went here. Seth Rollins, Kevin Owens, Bryan Danielson, Beth Phoenix, Sami Zayn, Claudio Castagnoli, Becky Lynch, Nattie Neidhart, Athena, and Asuka are just a few.

    https://x.com/OGHank312/status/2042683209004048500?s=20

    For the nostalgic CM Punk fans, this is where he made his first wrestling appearance since winning the WWE Championship from John Cena at Money in the Bank in 2011. Yes, where he praised the courage of Gregory Iron, a wrestler living with Cerebral Palsy. It was there, in Berwyn, at AAW’s “Scars and Stripes.”

     

    During Cody Rhodes, Drew McIntyre, and Matt Cardona’s indie reinvention runs, they too circled through its wooden palace. From residential lucha promotions to Wrestle League and Squared Circle Superstars, attendees could expect all the charm of indie wrestling. Yet, chief among these were AAW and the all-female SHIMMER wrestling promotion.

     

    That’s the impact of the Berwyn Eagles Club. It doesn’t have a history solely in independent wrestling, but in the overall industry as a whole. Whether it was the loyal talents or the ones who compete under blinding lights, wrestling came through here. Just as Reseda was to PWG, Korakuen Hall is to Japan, Arena Mexico to Mexico, and Madison Square Garden is to WWE, Berwyn is to Chicago. 

     

    Unfortunately, its place in wrestling history is set to dissipate. On March 28, an incident took place in which a fan allegedly stabbed wrestler Krule at a Ruthless Pro Wrestling event in Berwyn, Illinois.

     

    Videos of the event showed no signs of weaponry for Krule to be stabbed with, only a brawl at a nearby merchandise table. According to an incident report researched by John Pollock of POST Wrestling, the local Berwyn Police Department stated that no stabbings took place at the venue.

     

    I’m not going to get into the specifics of who said what or what I believe happened. There’s plenty of that to go around. What I want to do is to capture its place in wrestling the best way I can: conveying vibes.

     

    Why? 

     

    Because, as the world of wrestling changes drastically with every passing month, it’s important to remember. And I want people to do just that—remember. No one who holds wrestling fondly in their hearts should forget Reseda. They should also keep Berwyn in their hearts for the same reason. What may seem to some to be a small, rinky-dink place was, to others, a livelihood and a way to step into superstardom. It was home, and it was a dream. 

     

    I’m only a wrestling fan, though. A microcosm of a wider field, a raindrop in a river. To me, a Missouri boy, my state has its own relevance to pro wrestling with Kansas City and St. Louis. Yet in Chicago, Berwyn will remain one of the most essential veins running to the heart of Midwest pro wrestling. 

     

    As AAW’s event, Crush & Destroy, approaches its April 24 date, you can expect to see people talking about what this venue means to them. This is where indie wrestling in the Midwest came to its local hotspot. Fans will talk about where they were at distinct moments within their quickly moving lives. Maybe which wrestler they saw at certain points in their career. Wrestlers will wax nostalgic about their glory days, exciting matches they had, and appreciate the moments that made them. 

     

    You may also come across posts from wrestlers on social media whose lives are intrinsically tied to the place. People like Shane Hollister, Nicole Matthews, Trent Zuberi, and Shazza McKenzie may be among those names. Talents from AAW and SHIMMER, alongside talents that have passed through its doors and gone on to other places.

    https://x.com/AAWPro/status/2042377633250377917?s=20

    If you’re in the Chicago area, consider giving it a visit; purchase a ticket and show up on Friday evening, and witness a moment in wrestling history. If you can’t be there, you can watch from Highspots.TV, YouTube, or TrillerTV.

     

    Crush & Destroy’s card will feature talents like Rich Swann, Robert Anthony, Joe Alonso, Trevor Lee, Maggie Lee, Heather Reckless, and many more to keep your eye on.

     

    Pro wrestling is at a stage where it constantly changes. Everything’s in flux. For every evolution, there’s a dissolution. In their wake, they leave memories. These last moments of grappling action? Those memories will be filled with blood, sweat, and undoubtedly, tears.

     

    So here’s to the final memories of wrestling fans’ third place, a place to gather away from home. Here’s to the finale of the Berwyn Eagles Club in pro wrestling.