WrestleMania Results
Ongoing WrestleMania Axxess Match Event Results

WWE Axxess provides a chance for all wrestling fans to absorb the history of WWE. Each session features multiple invitational tournaments, including the Tag Team, Women’s, UK, and North American Invitationals. See the ongoing results here!
April 5: WWE WrestleMania Axxess Day 1
- WWN Champion Keith Lee defeated Kassius Ohno
- NXT Tag Team Invitational: Mustache Mountain defeated Tino Sabbatelli and Riddick Moss.
- NXT Women’s Invitational: Nikki Cross defeated Aliyah
- NXT Tag Team Invitational: Street Profits defeated Cezar Bononi and Adiran Jaoude
- WWE UK Invitational: Drew Gulak defeated Dan Matha
- WWE UK Invitational: Lio Rush defeated Buddy Murphy
- NXT North American Invitational: Akira Tozawa defeated Kona Reeves
- NXT North American Invitational: Fabian Aichner defeated EVOLVE’s Jason Kincaid
April 6: WWE WrestleMania Axxess Day 2
- WWE UK Invitational: Lince Dorado defeated Raul Mendoza
- WWE UK Invitational: Mark Andrews defeated Zack Gibson
- NXT North American Invitational: Chris Dijak defeated Ariya Daivari
- NXT North American Invitationa: Hideo Itami defeated Wolfgang
- NXT Tag Team Invitational: The Forgotten Sons defeated SAnitY
- NXT Tag Team Invitational: TM61 defeated Oney Lorcan & Danny Burch
- NXT Women’s Invitational: Dakota Kai defeated Lacey Evans
- NXT Women’s Invitational: Peyton Royce defeated Candice LeRae
April 7: WWE WrestleMania Axxess Day 3
- NXT Women’s Invitational Semi-Finals: Peyton Royce defeated Kairi Sane
- NXT Women’s Invitational Semi-Finals: Dakota Kai defeated Nikki Cross
- NXT Tag Team Invitational Semi-Finals: TM61 defeated The Forgotten Sons
- NXT Tag Team Invitational Semi-Finals: Mustache Mountain defeated The Street Profits
- NXT North American Invitational Semi-Finals: Akira Tozawa defeated Fabian Aichner
- NXT North American Invitational Semi-Finals: Chris Dijak defeated Hideo Itami
- NXT UK Invitational Semi-Finals: Drew Gulak defeated Mark Andrews
- NXT UK Invitational Semi-Finals: Lio Rush defeated Lince Dorado
- NXT Women’s Invitational Finals: Dakota Kai defeated Peyton Royce
- NXT Tag Team Invitational Finals: Mustache Mountain defeated TM61
- NXT North American Invitational Finals: Akira Tozawa defeated Chris Dijak
- NXT UK Invitational Finals: Lio Rush defeated Drew Gulak
April 8: WWE WrestleMania Axxess Day 4
- NXT North American Champion Adam Cole retained over Akira Tozawa
- WWE United Kingdom Champion Pete Dunne retained over Lio Rush
- NXT Tag Team Champions The Undisputed Era (Strong & O’Reilly) retained over Mustache Mountain
- NXT Women’s Champion Shayna Baszler retained over Dakota Kai
Road To WrestleMania
Chairshot Top 5: WWE WrestleMania Main Events
It takes a special kind of match to close our WWE WrestleMania, and not every one delivers. But these matches? They all delivered in a big way.
It takes a special kind of match to close our WWE WrestleMania, and not every one delivers. But these matches? They all delivered in a big way.
WrestleMania main events aren’t always about being the best match on the card, but being the right match to close the show. That means delivering stakes, emotion, business impact, and a finish that actually feels like WrestleMania
Plenty of matches have been great, and some proved to be unworthy of the main event spot. But when a match closes the show the way they were supposed to? That’s a moment.
Here is our list of the Top 5 WWE WrestleMania Main Event Matches!
5. WrestleMania 3 — WWF World Heavyweight Championship – Andre the Giant vs. Hulk Hogan (c)
Sometimes the job of the main event isn’t to be a great match—it’s to be a great moment. WrestleMania III didn’t need a technical masterpiece; it needed something iconic, and Hogan vs. Andre delivered exactly that. In front of a record-setting crowd, this match helped define what WrestleMania would become: larger than life, culturally relevant, and built around moments that transcend the ring.
4. WrestleMania 37 (Night 1) — WWE SmackDown Women’s Championship – Bianca Belair vs. Sasha Banks (c)
This wasn’t just a main event—it was a statement. Bianca Belair vs. Sasha Banks closed Night 1 of WrestleMania 37 and delivered on every level: emotion, execution, and historical significance. It was the first WrestleMania main event featuring two Black women, and it felt like it mattered from the moment they stepped into the ring. The match didn’t just meet expectations—it justified its placement.
Honorable Mention – WrestleMania 26 — The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels
From an in-ring standpoint, this might be the best match on the list. The Undertaker vs. Shawn Michaels delivered drama, storytelling, and a career-ending stipulation that elevated everything. It didn’t just close the show—it gave it emotional weight that carried beyond the bell. The one caveat is that many consider their match from the year prior to be the better match of the two.
3. WrestleMania 30 — WWE World Heavyweight Championship – Daniel Bryan vs. Batista vs. Randy Orton (c)
This is what WrestleMania is supposed to feel like. Daniel Bryan’s journey culminated in a triple threat main event that had everything—story, crowd investment, and payoff. It wasn’t just about winning a title; it was about WWE aligning with what the audience had been demanding for months. Bryan standing tall at the end wasn’t just a result—it was a moment that defined the entire show.
2. WrestleMania 17 — WWF Championship – Steve Austin vs. The Rock (c)
If WrestleMania is about closing the show with something that feels massive, this is the blueprint. Austin vs. Rock at WrestleMania 17 delivered intensity, stakes, and a finish that people still talk about. The heel turn may have been controversial, but it made the moment unforgettable. This wasn’t just a main event—it was the peak of an era.
Honorable Mention – WrestleMania 31 — WWE World Heavyweight Championship – Brock Lesnar vs. Roman Reigns (vs. Seth Rollins)
The hardest match to leave off of this list. This match redefined unpredictability in a WrestleMania main event. What started as a one-on-one title match turned into a triple threat when Seth Rollins cashed in his Money in the Bank contract mid-match—something that had never been done before. The result was one of the most memorable finishes in WrestleMania history.
1. WrestleMania 40 (Night 2) — WWE Universal Championship – Cody Rhodes vs. Roman Reigns (c)
This is what a modern WrestleMania main event looks like when everything clicks. Cody Rhodes vs. Roman Reigns wasn’t just about a championship—it was about finishing a story that had been building for years. The stakes were clear, the crowd was fully invested, and the payoff delivered exactly what WrestleMania is supposed to deliver: closure, emotion, and a defining moment.
Others receiving serious consideration:
- WrestleMania 12 – 60-Minute Iron Man Match for the WWF Championship – Shawn Michaels vs. Bret Hart (c)
- WrestleMania 19 – WWE Championship – Brock Lesnar vs. Kurt Angle (c)
- WrestleMania 37 (Night 2) – WWE Universal Championship – Edge vs. Daniel Bryan vs. Roman Reigns (c)
- WrestleMania 39 (Night 1) – Undisputed WWE Tag Team Championship – Kevin Owens & Sami Zayn vs. The Usos (c)
WrestleMania main events don’t all age the same. Some look great on paper, some deliver in the moment…and a select few manage to do both.
The ones on this list didn’t just check the boxes, they instead closed the show the way WrestleMania needs to be closed. And that’s the difference between a great match and a great WrestleMania main event.
Top 5
Greg DeMarco’s Top 5: WWE WrestleMania Matches That Should Have Main Evented
Few things are more sacred than the WrestleMania main event. Greg DeMarco looks at the 5 matches that WWE should have put in that position, but chose not to.
Few things are more sacred than the WrestleMania main event. Greg DeMarco looks at the 5 matches that WWE should have put in that position, but chose not to.
There are two ways WWE books WrestleMania. There’s the version they want you to see—the biggest stars, the most marketable match, the one that looks best on a poster.
And then there’s what actually matters. The match with the most heat, the most stakes, and the one people are still talking about when the show ends.
Sadly, those two things don’t always line up.
And when they don’t, you get nights where WrestleMania closes with the “right” choice on paper… but not the right choice in reality. And to me, these are (at least) five times WWE got that wrong.
5. WrestleMania 35 – Kofi Kingston vs. Daniel Bryan (WWE Championship)
WrestleMania 35 made history with Becky Lynch vs. Ronda Rousey vs. Charlotte Flair closing the show, marking the first women’s main event in WrestleMania history. Earlier in the night, Kofi Kingston challenged Daniel Bryan for the WWE Championship in a match fueled by one of the most organic fan-driven stories in years. It was the culmination of a movement that had been building for months, and arguably the emotional peak of the entire event.
I get it…Ronda Rousey had the crossover star power WWE wanted, and her involvement in WrestleMania 34 moved mountains. But that match closing the event was the wrong decision (more on that later in this article). You could have ended this night with Seth Rollins’ win over Brock Lesnar, but that was actually a very well done opener, and it was newsworthy at the time (although that news was largely unverified bullshit). KofiMania was the peak of so much in WWE, including The New Day’s popularity. It was as appropriate of a main event as Daniel Bryan Danielson’s win at WrestleMania 30. Nothing on this event could have surpassed it, and it should have been the main event.
4. WrestleMania 11 – Shawn Michaels vs. Diesel (WWF Championship)
WrestleMania 11 closed with Lawrence Taylor vs. Bam Bam Bigelow, a celebrity-driven main event designed to bring outside attention to the product. Earlier in the show, Shawn Michaels challenged Diesel for the WWF Championship in a match that represented the future of the company. It was a clear signal of where WWE was going—whether the main event reflected it or not.
If you look up WrestleMania 11 on Cagematch, the company logo is the short lived “new generation” version, and that’s what this match was all about. Yes, we were in Hartford, which is an old WWF/WWE territory, but it was still over two hours away from Madison Square Garden, even further from Giants Stadium. LT vs Bam Bam was a great attraction, but so was Big Show s. Floyd Mayweather at WrestleMania 24. And THAT didn’t close the show. Meanwhile, Shawn and Diesel helped define eras, and HBK himself is one of the most influential wrestlers of all time. Clearly, to me, this match should have closed the night at WrestleMania 11.
Honorable Mention – WrestleMania 21 – John Cena vs. JBL (WWE Championship)
WrestleMania 21 closed with Triple H vs. Batista, a match that helped define a new era for WWE. Earlier in the night, John Cena defeated JBL to win his first WWE Championship, marking the arrival of a new face of the company. This was more than just a title change, it was the start of a run that would shape WWE for the next decade and beyond.
3. WrestleMania 18 – The Rock vs. Hulk Hogan
WrestleMania 18 ended with Chris Jericho defending the Undisputed Championship against Triple H, a match that, on paper, checked every box you’d expect from a main event. But earlier in the night, The Rock vs. Hulk Hogan delivered something you can’t manufacture: an organic, once-in-a-generation atmosphere. It wasn’t about a title; it was about two eras colliding, and the crowd told you exactly what mattered most.
Honestly, I laugh whenever anyone tries to recreate what Rock and Hogan had on that night. When two wrestlers stand in the middle of the ring and slowly look to the crowd on either side, it just falls flat to me. It’s likely going to happen at WrestleMania 42, and maybe twice. This was one of those matches that transcends almost everything. But it doesn’t transcend WrestleMania, it helps define it.
2. WrestleMania 8 – Ric Flair vs. Randy Savage (WWF Championship)
The main event of WrestleMania 8 was Hulk Hogan vs. Sid Justice, a match built around spectacle and star power more than championship stakes. Earlier in the night, Ric Flair defended the WWF Championship against Randy Savage in a match that had everything WrestleMania is supposed to deliver—story, emotion, and the most important title in the company on the line. This wasn’t just another match on the card; it was the real centerpiece of the show.
Some of my problem with the main event is probably the finish, as it ended in a disqualification. In fact, it was the second time a Hulk Hogan WrestleMania main event ended in a DQ. It was a vehicle for the return of The Ultimate Warrior, and we all know how that turned out. Giving Randy Savage his moment was the better call here, especially since his moment at WrestleMania 4 was hardly a solo effort, also thanks to Hulk Hogan.
Honorable Mention – WrestleMania 41 – Rhea Ripley vs. Bianca Belair vs. Iyo Sky (Women’s World Championship)
While the full legacy of WrestleMania 41 is still being written, the Women’s World Championship triple threat between Rhea Ripley, Bianca Belair, and Iyo Sky represents the kind of match that defines the current era. Three of the most complete performers in WWE, all positioned at the top of the division, competing in a match that reflects how far the women’s side of WrestleMania has evolved.
Now I know, there was “no way” The Rock wasn’t going to main event one night of WrestleMania in his big return. And I get it. But if you know anything about psychology, you know that one phone call from Triple H to The Rock, pitching the plan that they frame the women competing in the main event of night 1 was The Rock’s idea, and all is well.
1. WrestleMania 34 – Asuka vs. Charlotte Flair (SmackDown Women’s Championship)
WrestleMania 34 closed with Brock Lesnar defending the Universal Championship against Roman Reigns in a match that felt more like an obligation than a payoff. Meanwhile, Charlotte Flair vs. Asuka carried real stakes, most notably featuring Asuka’s undefeated streak (and historic Royal Rumble victory) against one of WWE’s most protected stars. It wasn’t just a title match; it was a moment built over years, with a clear outcome that would define both competitors moving forward.
The finish of the actual main event fell flat, but this is more than that. It’s also about WrestleMania 35, the first ever women’s WrestleMania main event, where Becky Lynch beat Ronda Rousey and Charlotte Flair to leave with both women’s championships. That match didn’t deliver, and it was put under immense pressure.
Charlotte Flair vs. Asuka should have main evented without being announced ahead of time. Let it become apparent during the event itself, and get people talking online. No pressure, and the creation of another WrestleMania moment.
THIS is the match that should have closed WrestleMania 34, and served as the first ever women’s main event of WrestleMania.
Now, the wrong woman won, but that’s not what this article is about.
WrestleMania is supposed to be about moments, and most of the time, WWE gets it right. But every now and then, they chase the wrong thing: star power over momentum, spectacle over substance, or the “safe” choice over the right one.
The funny thing is, you don’t need hindsight to see it…most of these felt off in the moment, and that’s why they stand out.
Because when WrestleMania ends, people don’t just remember what closed the show, they remember what mattered.
And if we’re being honest, there are probably more than five.