Bianca Belair has been out with a finger injury that occurred following WrestleMania last year. Now, the EST of WWE will be out a little longer, but it isn’t due to injury.
Bianca Belair made a surprise return at WrestleMania 42 night 1 and announced that we couldn’t have WrestleMania without the EST! But, she didn’t come alone. Bianca Belair took her jacket off and revealed that she’s pregnant! John Cena, who was also in the ring to announce the attendance, embraced her and gave her congratulations.
The co-main event of WrestleMania 42 night 1 saw Stephanie Vaquer defend her WWE Women’s World Championship against Royal Rumble winner, Liv Morgan.
The match got off to a fast start when the champ took the challenger down and started raining punches on her immediately. Stephanie was getting all of her stuff in early, including the Devil’s Kiss, which the crowd loved.
WrestleMania 42 night one saw a last-minute match between Seth Rollins and Gunther. While this match wasn’t literally last minute, it was only made two weeks ago when Gunther attacked Seth Rollins on RAW after Rollins was tormenting Paul Heyman.
Last week, Gunther explained that he’s tired of Seth Rollins thinking he’s the best and knows Seth can’t even lace his boots. Now, we found out.
Gunther wasted little time as he drop kicked Seth into the corner before the match even began. Gunther then started bringing the fight to Rollins on the outside and it turned into an all out brawl between both men. Seth was throwing chairs at Gunther and the referee had to break it up. They got back into the ring, and finally, the bell rang.
These two beat the hell out of each other. From buckle-bombs, to chops and everything in between. But in the end, everything turned into chaos when Rollins hit a pedigree to Gunther on the announcers table. While the referee was checking on Gunther, Bron Breakker ran down and speared Seth!
This allowed Gunther to lock in a a choke and make Seth Rollins pass out. After the match, Bron went up the ramp, only to run back down and spear Seth again.
On night 1 of WrestleMania 42, Lash Legend and Nia Jax defended their Women’s Tag Team Championships against Charlotte & Alexa Bliss, Lyra Valkyria & Bayley and The Bellas.
But, after being injured two weeks ago, Nikki Bella revealed that she is injured and cannot compete. therefore Paige returned to WWE and took her place in the match.
The match didn’t get a lot of time, but the women had nonstop action the entire time the match was going. Lash legend had a fun spot where she power bomb two competitors off the top rope.
But, in the end, Nikki Bella attacked Charlotte and hit her with her crutch, causing a distraction to Alexa Bliss and allowing Paige to pick up the win for her team. Paige and Brie Bella are now the Women’s Tag Team Champions.
WrestleMania 42 is full of surprises and it all started with Paige. The former WWE Divas Champion and NXT Women’s Champion is back with the company after a hiatus with AEW last year.
At WrestleMania 42 Night 1, Lash Legend and Nia Jax defended their WWE Women’s Tag Team Titles against Charlotte and Alexa Bliss, Bayley and Lyra Valkyria, & The Bella’s. But, Nikki Bella, who hurt her foot two weeks ago, was unable to compete. She needed a new partner, and as a surprise, that partner was a returning Paige.
Drew McIntyre and Jacob Fatu finally got to collide in an Unsanctioned Match at Wrestlemania 42 night one. And it took no time to kick the match off.
Fatu dove on McIntyre before he was even able to get into the ring, and from there, the chaos started. Weapons were introduced fast, and things got violent.
A table, a toolbox, a cellphone and even the referee’s belt were introduced into the match, along with a plethora of other weapons. These two kicked out of everything their opponent had to offer.
Logan Paul and Speed are no longer friends after the opening of WrestleMania 42 night one. They went into Saturday’s six-man tag team match as partners, alongside Austin Theory, to battle The Usos and LA Knight, but, they ended as enemies.
LA Knight and The Usos defeated iShowSpeed, Logan Paul and Austin Theory in the opening match and after it was over, Logan blamed Speed for the loss. He then punched him in the face and dropped him in the ring!
Logan Paul then tried to put Speed through the announcers table at ringside, but The Usos and LA Knight made the save. The Usos then encouraged to iShowSpeed to put Logan through the table, and that he did!
WrestleMania 42 night one kicked off with LA Knight, Jimmy Uso and Jey Uso versus The Vision, Logan Paul, Austin Theory and iShowSpeed.
Though Speed is the least experienced in this match, he started against LA Knight. He showed off his physical abilities early until he got clothes-lined, by LA Knight. He then quickly tagged out, of course.
Speed had a solid showing in this match, but it was surprisingly short. In the end, LA Knight pushed Theory into Speed, which knocked him down. Then, LA hit the BFT on Theory for the win.
After the match, Logan Paul was furious with Speed and dropped him with a punch. Logan then tried to put him through the announcers table, but the Uso’s save Speed and then iShowSpeed put Logan through the announcers table with a big splash!
WrestleMania 42 kicks off Saturday night from Allegiant Stadium, continuing WWE’s two-night format in the modern era. Eight championship matches are spread across the weekend, with Night 1 headlined by Cody Rhodes defending the undisputed WWE championship against Randy Orton.
There’s a lot on paper here. Some of it feels big. Some of it feels… a little overthought.
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Seth Rollins vs. Gunther
This is one of those matches that should feel like a can’t-miss clash. Seth Rollins needs momentum badly if WWE still wants fans to buy into The Vision. Injuries have gutted that group, and right now it feels like it’s hanging on by a thread. Meanwhile, Gunther has almost become a victim of his own booking — the “legend killer” role has boxed him in creatively.
Pick: Rollins
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Women’s World Championship — Stephanie Vaquer (c) vs. Liv Morgan
Stephanie Vaquer has been great in the ring, no question. But this feels like it’s been building toward Liv Morgan reclaiming the spotlight ever since her return. Add in potential chaos from Raquel Rodriguez or even Roxanne Perez, and it feels like the title is changing hands.
Pick: Morgan
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Logan Paul, Austin Theory & IShowSpeed vs. The Usos & LA Knight
The celebrity presence is here again, with IShowSpeed stepping into the spotlight. He’ll probably do fine athletically, but this is more about energy than anything. The USO’s and LA Knight feel like the right call to get the crowd going early. On the other side, Logan Paul and Austin Theoy feel stuck in limbo right now.
Pick: The Usos & LA Knight
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Women’s Intercontinental Championship — AJ Lee (c) vs. Becky Lynch
It’s been cool seeing AJ Lee back in the mix, but this run never felt built to last. One defense heading into WrestleMania doesn’t exactly scream “fighting champion.” Becky Lynch brings consistency, and honestly, this title needs that right now.
Pick: Lynch
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Jacob Fatu vs. Drew McIntyre (Unsanctioned Match)
Drew McIntyre is exactly who he’s going to be at this point — a reliable main-event-level heel. That’s not a knock, it’s just reality. Jacob Fatu, though, still has upside to tap into. If WWE is serious about getting him back into a top program, he needs this win.
Pick: Fatu
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Women’s Tag Team Championship — Nia Jax & Lash Legend (c) vs. Charlotte Flair & Alexa Bliss vs. Bayley & Lyra Valkyria vs. ____ & Brie Bella
This is a lot going on in one match. Bayley and Lyra feel like the only team that actually needs this. The champs haven’t clicked, Flair and Bliss already got what they needed, and the Bellas feel like a short-term play, especially with Nikki being unable to compete. Who will Brie’s mystery partner be?
Pick: Bayley & Valkyria
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Undisputed WWE Championship — Cody Rhodes (c) vs. Randy Orton
This should feel bigger than it does. That’s probably the best way to sum it up. Cody Rhodes vs. Randy Orton is a story that writes itself, but it’s gotten lost in the shuffle a bit with all the outside noise and crossover elements.
It almost feels like the result isn’t the endgame — just a setup for whatever comes next, whether that’s tag matches, celebrity involvement, or another twist. Still, giving Orton one more title run has some appeal.
Pick: Orton
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Final Thoughts
There’s a lot to like on this card, but it’s also a mixed bag. Some matches feel meaningful, others feel like placeholders for bigger ideas down the line. That’s kind of where WWE is at right now — big moments, but sometimes at the cost of clean storytelling.
Night 1 should deliver in-ring. The question is whether it actually sticks once it’s over.
Have you ever heard the story of “Right Hand, Left Hand”? The eternal story of good and evil? Keep reading, and I’ll tell you. On each knuckle, a word is tattooed. H-A-T-E, and it was with this left hand that Cain dropped his brother Abel down for the 3-count. L-O-V-E, the right hand, the hand of love. This is the story of life, wrestling fans. Each finger, intertwined in a war within the squared circle. Old Left Hand, it swings, hitting Right Hand against the turnbuckle as it slides and slumps in the corner. Lefty could pull him in for the pinfall here, folks. But no, just a minute; Right is back on its feet, love’s fighting back. It hits, and it hits, and it hits. Right Hand delivers its hook, and Left is down for the count. Yessirree folks, Right Hand has won, love wins in the end. This is the story of Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X.
The saga of Bret and Owen Hart is a storied one. Parts of a dynasty, performers forged in father Stu Hart’s infamous Hart Dungeon. The place where such tortures would only let screams escape. Canada’s Hart family prided itself on the wrestling business. While not all of its lineage made it to great heights, if any, none quite reached the levels of the dark-haired Bret and the blonde Owen.
Bret had been with the company since 1984. He’d enjoyed many largely applauded rivalries, like Mr. Perfect, Razor Ramon, and Ric Flair. In the latter years of his career, his feuds with Shawn Michaels and “Stone Cold” Steve Austin further ensured his place in history that future generations of wrestling fans can revisit.
Owen briefly stayed from 1988 to 1989 before taking trips to Stu’s Stampede Wrestling while performing in New Japan Pro Wrestling and World Championship Wrestling, sometimes under a blue mask. As of 1991, he’d been in Bret’s corner until the 1993 Survivor Series, wherein he’d begin clashing with his brother.
Emerald with envy, he had mounting frustrations. To Owen, Bret was a glory hog. Always in the spotlight, almost effortlessly so. The crowd took to Bret, the cameras took to Bret, and only the shadows welcomed Owen. The sort of malicious kind, but it gave Owen a truth erudite to him.
And there’s a beauty to truth, even the most dreadful of it.
When a wrestler catches audiences’ true mindsets, when their grave heads that fans aren’t always behind them, aren’t really supporting them, their world falls into panic desolation. The cheers have fallen, and all motivation is gone. These cheers do not fall a little—they careen to the floor and shatter into tiny fragments, never to be built up again; shards always reveal the cracks. And the wrestler’s world is never quite whole again. It’s an aching sort of evolving.
This, too, followed his vision of Bret. All the flaws inherent in his brother. Oh, he’s propped up while Owen had to work, work, work, and for little fanfare. Those purple sunglasses, the glistening hair, the black and white gear made up for it. Bret was a superhero, and Owen was the errand boy. Seeing Bret struggle to tag him in at the 1994 Royal Rumble, well, what do they say about final straws?
Owen brutalized his brother in front of the whole world and their judgment. But was he truly his brother’s keeper? The voices denounced him, and he would walk the rest of his years as a heel. That was fine, because he had no pressure to be perfect. All he needed was to be good.
Come time for the opener, Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X, bitter Owen and mournful Bret came to a head. Confident and rageful, Owen steeled his blue eyes at his brother. Ready. Believing himself capable of surpassing the golden child.
Madison Square Garden dings with a bell to signal the start of this family dispute. They grappled to the floor, the stoic Bret coolly transitioned Owen’s Fireman Carry to a leg hold. Owen raced to the ropes to break his brother’s grasp around his waist. Focus dwindled.
Briefly, he steeled himself to gain control of Bret’s hips, yet the technician maneuvered it to hurl him outside. Chopping Bret down with a drop toehold, Owen engaged a headlock. Swinging each other’s arms around, Owen yanked Bret’s flowing mane to drop him on the white canvas. Bret eludes a whip to the corner. Clutching at Bret’s hair again and again, Owen snarls at how unflinching he is, how the crowd calls his name.
Flung outside, Owen teased an escape to the back, only for Bret to reintroduce him to the New York fans. Bret subverted a clothesline, dropping Owen with a falling crucifix pin. There’s a certain caution to his movements, restrained, just so.
Striking a kicking blow that laid brother low, Owen taunted him, posturing him with the same pose fans clamored for.
Maintaining his dominance, Owen crushed Bret with a backbreaker. He wrenched his spine back, clutching Bret’s chin. Following an escape outside, Owen reunited with Bret within the ropes, his advances blocked by Bret and a surprise roll-up pin. Perched on the top rope, Owen soared as the wind blew his blonde locks back; Bret rolled out of his path.
A retaliatory clothesline from Bret gave him hope, but only just. Another backbreaker, followed by an elbow drop. A miscommunication with Referee Earl Hebner permeated irritation with the Hitman. Over the top rope, Bret rocked Owen while tenderizing his own knee in the process.
Smelling blood in the water, Owen stomps on the very leg Bret limped on, tweaking the left leg and unleashing a falling elbow on it. Tethering his brother to the ring post, he tormented the knee, slamming it. Again and again and again. Clipping the wings of everyone’s favorite angel. Locking in a figure-four leglock, Owen arrogantly yet cathartically raised his arms in preemptive celebration.
Bret finally ruins Owen’s momentum with an enzuigiri. All caution has been cast aside. Flattened his brother with a bulldog and a piledriver. Superplexing Owen from the top turnbuckle, Bret lay in agony alongside the brother he shared laughs and sobs and screams with, all those memories as pink and black as a fading memory and deepening pain.
Bret had Owen on the ropes, draining the life with a sleeper hold; a low blow, a mule kick breaks it. Gritting his teeth, Owen stole Bret’s Sharpshooter, sinking as low as he could. As though lost in the quiet of space, Bret’s screams of sweet, dear agony go unheard, but reversed his misfortunes with his patented, true Sharpshooter.
Carrying Bret atop his shoulders, Owen nearly succumbed to a Victory Roll pin attempt, but rolled it over in a snap. One, two, three. Bret’s shoulders on the mat, staring up at the lights.
Exhausted, Owen jubilantly tumbled away, Bret awash in disbelief amid the booming drums of his brother’s theme song. Spit whitened at the edges of Owen’s lips, counting those victorious mat-striking trilogy.
His brother slain before the eyes of New York and cameras broadcasting worldwide, Owen sowed jealousy and reaped vindication. Nothing is left tying him to the Excellence of Execution. The Blackheart, the King of Hearts, now reigns in the solace he’s overcome the prodigal, fortunate one.
This match did not end the night, however. Bret would face the enormous Yokozuna for the WWF Championship in a winning effort. The brothers only opened the show for audiences at home. Yet, it cemented one thing: Owen could stand on his own to succeed. No longer did he have to hold anyone above his shoulders, but he was above theirs.
Poetically enough, Bret ended his night as just that, hoisted on the shoulders of the locker room. He had to let go of Owen, an inhale and exhale because tonight, he didn’t have to be perfect, so he could finally just be good. He didn’t take pride in his hurt; it didn’t make him seem large and tragic. Either way, he’d play on a grand stage with not just himself as the audience.
Hate may have won tonight, but love always wins; a few years later, Bret appealed to Owen against Americans he grew to despise.
Bret Hart and Owen Hart’s WrestleMania X epic is one of my earliest memories of pro wrestling. It’s listed in WWE’s lists of great WrestleMania matches, and it has stamped its place in wrestling history simply by being a great match that told a compelling story with a captivating build. Fans will mirror this sentiment in videos, lists, and casual conversations.
Each time I revisit this bout, I always sense an intensity that feels a little too real to be the silly wrestling we all know. I walk away with the notion that Bret and Owen’s rivalry had elements of reality to it, that it was built on actual conversations and annoyances with love still always at the center of things.
Stories like Bret Hart versus Owen Hart at WrestleMania X, an acclaimed brotherly feud, give us fans the moments with which to remember. Whether it references pop culture, relates to our sensibilities, or echoes biblical epics, pro wrestling resonates with that human element as our heroes and villains tangibly age beside us.