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Andrew’s WWE Raw and SmackDown Live Ratings & Analysis (5/6 + 5/7)

Does the sky continue to fall? Has Vince found a solution for some of the downward trends? WWE Raw and SmackDown Live: how’d they fair this week?

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Does the sky continue to fall? Has Vince found a solution for some of the downward trends? WWE Raw and SmackDown Live: how’d they fair this week?

Well now, last week was the first time in a few weeks that both shows fell pretty flat. What are we looking at for this week?

Roman Reigns has unfinished business on Raw, Kofi has a bone to pick with KO on SmackDown…seems promising, right?

Raw Ratings:

  • Seth Rollins & AJ Styles vs Bobby Lashley & Baron Corbin: Corbin wins via End of Days – *** ¼
  • Lucha House Party vs 3 Jobbers with no Names: House Party wins via (who cares) – -*
  • Ricochet vs Robert Roode: Ricochet wins via 630 Senton – **
  • Lacey Evan vs Allie Katrina: Lacey wins via Woman’s Right – N/A
  • Viking Raiders vs Hawkins & Ryder: Raiders win via The Viking Experience – * ½
  • Roman Reigns vs Drew McIntyre: Reigns wins via DQ – ***
  • WWE Championship: Daniel Bryan vs Kofi Kingston (c): Kingston retains via Trouble in Paradise – *** ¾

 

Analysis:

McMahon comes out starts blathering on about the Wildcard Rule, pats himself on the back in a way purposely done to be irritating and this is a 27 minute segment of talking, while leading to nothing more than WrestleMania rematches that had no real weight or suspense and would just hopefully be hollow good matches. Fantastic…great way to hook people…

Seth and AJ don’t like each other, so what do we do? Put them together to face two people the fans either don’t care about or detest. This first hour of Raw is IWC nightmare fuel. The match however was fairly good, the AJ hitting Seth thing is something we saw a few months ago before Daniel Bryan’s heel turn I believe. So it’s not clever, or intriguing, just mostly eye roll inducing.

Sami Zayn comes out to continue his shtick with commentary mentioning that someone was going to finally stand up to him. Who do we get? The least plotting, clever, or lying in wait character on the roster, Braun Strowman. This big doofus who ran rampant for competition and wouldn’t know subtle if it was written on the back of his eyelids is someone we’re expected to believe needed to “get fed up”. Then he chases Sami and Sami gets chucked in a dumpster. So we could’ve used Sami’s star power and status of being over to start a real angle with a newer person that could use the exposure…but no, worthless Braun. I hate every aspect of this.

Speaking of things I hate, Lucha House Party smashes nameless jobbers. Why? Just who actually cares about Lucha House Party? It wasn’t impressive, no one cares, go away.

Okay Lacey Evans handing out hand written invitations to her match, with Peach Cobbler scent is great character work. Finally, something that doesn’t make my eyes roll so hard my head falls off my shoulders.

Ricochet and Robert Roode have a modicum of logic with the MiTB spot being up for grabs. But this wasn’t given enough time and neither character is established enough for us to really bite into it…so this was just there.

Joe stalks Dominic and then…has a conversation. A useless conversation, that even though it’s delivered well, just why? Why wouldn’t Joe just put him to sleep as a message? The segment was out of character, and just a general waste of time.

Lacey’s match is a squash against another jobber that nearly didn’t have a name, until it was said as soon as the Woman’s Right put her to sleep. But after the match, Lacey’s comments were great and Becky running in for the scuffle was great and gave us a great tweet as well. No complaints here.

Usos sneak out of the locker room in a cartoony manner. Wonderful, what new stupid thing will happen to The Revival?

Ryder and Hawkins tried kinda, and had a few moments of offense before getting their lunch eaten. This was effectively a squash as well.

FIREFLY FUN HOUSE! Fuck yeah!

So Mercy the Buzzard tore Rambling Rabbit to shreds cause he didn’t approve of his life views, but it’s okay. Bray tells us all that no matter what you do to express yourself, paint a painting or murder, you can be forgiven. And then they have a carpet picnic with a bunch of zoned out depressed looking kids. This…this is tremendous. I want to be on Firefly Fun House.

Seth tries to talk, but I think I slipped into a coma while he was trying to speak English.

Drew and Roman’s match was actually pretty solid. It had a better pace than their ‘Mania match, and I was enjoying it, until we got the non-finish. Shane and Elias interfere, Miz runs off Shane while Drew and Elias keep on the Samoan Sex Machine.  The prospect of Miz & Roman vs Shane/Drew & Elias is actually kind of cool. Miz and Roman…Awesome Samoan A List Sex?  I’ll work on that.

Ucey Hot…why. Who rubs Icy Hot on THAT area before a match anyway? Just nothing about this makes sense, its dumb 10 year old humor, it’s just sad. And yes, the fact that it’s The Revival, the throwback no flips just fists team, they’re the ones rolls around like cartoon idiots. Just…moronic.

Lars kills No Way Jose and the conga line, and no one cares. Ugh.

Kofi and Daniel was a very good tv main event. It didn’t have the same emotional weight as the WrestleMania match, and there were a few more miscues in this one, along with less time. But all in all it was a damn good match, fun and Kofi retaining is great. So at least the show ended on a high note.

 

Overall Score: 2.5/10

So a question may be asked, “ Why the low score when there were 3 good matches?” – it’s simple, pro wrestling, Raw especially is much more than in-ring product. Plus even with good matches, the fact the show was illogical, borderline brain damaged and implemented completely wrong people into stories (Bruan into Sami’s angle) just ruined any level of momentum the show tried to create.

Yes there were high spots, but usually beaten down by garbage. Someone should throw this episode in the same dumpster Sami was launched into.

 

SmackDown Live Ratings:

  • Andrade vs Ali: Ali wins via DQ – N/A
  • SmackDown Tag Team Championship: Daniel Bryan & Rowan vs The Usos: Rowan wins via Claw Hold Slam – *** ¼  – NEW CHAMPS CROWNED!!
  • Carmella & Ember Moon vs Mandy Rose & Sonya Deville: Rose wins via The Bed of Roses – ½*
  • WWE Championship Triple Threat: Kofi Kingston (c) vs Sami Zayn vs AJ Styles: Kofi retains via Trouble in Paradise – *** ½

 

Analysis:

AJ Styles kicks off things since Wild Card Rule and he feels if anyone gets to come back, it’s him. Kofi tries to square up, AJ shoots back well, Sami Zayn comes out. Stuff happens and we end up with a Triple Threat Main Event.  Okay, that could be good.

Kevin Owens has a video, saying it’s his Birthday so plans changed, piss off.

Andrade and Ali was starting to get interesting and Orton interjects himself getting Andrade DQ’d. So I didn’t give this a rating cause Ali and Andrade could put on something great, so out of deference to them, I won’t grade an incomplete assignment. No partial credit here.

Roman Reigns career evolution video with a lot of edited crowd audio. I love the Samoan Sex Machine and have since the beginning, but I’m not naïve.

Shane is about to hand the Tag belts to Daniel Bryan and Rowan, but the Usos show up and say maybe a match would be better. Shane agrees, so we get a match for the vacant tag belts.

As a match, it really wasn’t bad. However, Usos doing their best impression of Young Bucks circa 2014 with 400 Superkicks, is getting old. So I would’ve enjoyed more variety in the moves, but the match was solid.

So the B Team, the quirky beloved goofballs are now definitely aligned with Shane. Not only are B Team not credible, the only reason they were over for a while was because they were sympathetic goofballs that got treated like jokes. So quirky underdogs are now beating up their former MIZtourage leader. Sure…that makes sense.

Bryan and Rowan get eyed up by Heavy Machinery in denim vests. Ugh, I get the blue collar thing, but I don’t need a team that has proven nothing on main roster (or even NXT for that matter) to be positioned to possibly beat Bryan and Rowan. Ughhhh

Women’s tag was just bad. I do like the story element of Sonya sacrificing everything for Mandy because that’s usually always a time bomb. However, Paige running down Sonya and Mandy after sounded like a bitchy heel promo. So…is Paige just jealous that Mandy and Sonya have found their footing without her? Paige comes off Richard Petty.

Matt Hardy backstage interview and R-Truth shows up…to only have Lars Sullivan pop up. This was the most awkward scene in a while. Hardy says “He’s here” and then tries to get into a pose, but doesn’t know what to do with his hands and R-Truth reacts like a turtle in molasses in December.  Just a stupid, awkward and campy segment.

Aleister keeps up with these hollow asinine monologues.

Okay there was a lot in this match, and it’s all pretty solid. To fast forward, I really like Owens getting involved, but Kofi kicking out of 3 Blue Thunder Bombs and then coming to, so he can counter the Helluva Kick and win was just a little too dumbass Superman. I get the reason it was used, just to make Kofi look super resilient or heart of the champion kind of crap, but 3 was overkill. Glad Kofi retained, just wish the finish was more exciting and less ridiculous.

Overall Score: 5/10

Definition of average. We did get 2 good matches, but the show was a roller coaster. Unlike Raw, it didn’t go through bad segments consecutively, so it was easier to tolerate. Yes the 2 hour length helps in that as well, but still nothing special.

So this is 2 weeks in a row where both shows were pretty bad or at least disappointing. Hopefully something changes.

 

 

Chairshot Radio Network

Launched in 2017, the Chairshot Radio Network presents you with the best in sports, entertainment, and sports entertainment. Wrestling and wrestling crossover podcasts + the most interesting content + the most engaging hosts = the most entertaining podcasts you’ll find!

 MONDAY - Bandwagon Nerds (entertainment & popular culture)

TUESDAY - 4 Corners Podcast (sports)

WEDNESDAY - The Greg DeMarco Show (wrestling) 

THURSDAY - Nefarious Means

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SATURDAY - The Mindless Wrestling Podcast

SUNDAY - 30 Mindless Minutes

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Attitude Of Aggression Podcast: The Big Five Project (chronologically exploring WWE's PPV/PLE history) Unidentified History (Ufology) & Game Gone Wrong (Game of Thrones Universe)


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Opinion

Our Chairshot Take – AEW, AJ Styles, Vince McMahon, Indy Wrestling, and Journalism

Welcome to Our Chairshot Take! This week, 5 of your favorite contributors answer questions about AEW, AJ Styles, Vince McMahon, Indy wrestling, and and wrestling journalism!

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Welcome to Our Chairshot Take! This week, 5 of your favorite contributors answer questions about AEW, AJ Styles, Vince McMahon, Indy wrestling, and and wrestling journalism!

 

Welcome to a new weekly wrestling column featuring some of your favorite Chairshot contributors (and some outside of Chairshot as well) – Our Chairshot Take! Every week, we’ll have 5 contributors answer 5 of the most interesting, intriguing, and relevant questions that you want answers too. Please, feel free to tell us why we’re right or wrong, and most importantly, let us know YOUR take!  And don’t forget, #AlwaysUseYourHead!

 

Is AEW crowing a new champion on free TV and advertising all over Las Vegas during WrestleMania week good business or bush league?

 

Greg: It’s so easy to call a move like this from AEW bush league, but that is very short-sighted. You have to remove your biases when answering a question like this. WWE WrestleMania Week likely has far less to do with it than the fact that they were in Seattle. But it also got a ton of attention, which for AEW is good no matter when it happens. So, to me, this is good business.

 

Andrew: Por que no los dos? During the Monday Night Wars, both WCW and WWF switched titles on TV, promoted during each other’s show, and openly tried to undermine one another. It’s business, baby!

 

Dave: It was very good business, and more importantly, very smart business. WrestleMania week is the week of the year when the most eyes are on the product. That was even more true this year with WrestleMania going to ESPN. On top of that, WWE was catching a lot of grief from the fans for ticket prices, attendance issues, and the overall booking of the card(s). Why wouldn’t AEW try to take advantage of that for their own benefit? This is a promotion that has taken it on the chin for a couple of years now. You take advantage of an opportunity when it is given to you. I give AEW damn near full marks for their marketing and related tactics last week.

 

Kyle: It’s honestly both. Counter programming your rival in the petty way that they did it is Bush League nonsense, it’s petty when WWE does it and it’s equally petty when AEW does it. At the same time, WrestleMania week is the pinnacle of the wrestling calendar and a bunch of the Indy feds will plan major shows or angles during that week because they know so many fans will be in town for Mania and focused on professional wrestling. AEW advertising their stuff all over Vegas is really no different, they’re just a bigger promotion.

 

Rey: No, I don’t think it’s bush league, but I do think it’s dirty pool. There’s nothing wrong with a professional wrestling company trying to get advertisement and viewers during the biggest wrestling week of the year. I think it’s dirty pool, however, because Tony Khan has spoken ad nauseum about how much he doesn’t want to “piggy back” off of WrestleMania weekend, and he wants to stand alone on his own merits. So to end up doing that, but not doing it overtly is clever but not the strongest attempt. I think Tony should just bear down and do shows in the city where Mania is like the other companies. At least put ROH’s SuperCard of Honor back that weekend. But giving Darby the World Championship and usurping advertising isn’t wrong. It’s just not a strong attempt.

 

Where did AJ Styles have the better and more iconic career – WWE or TNA?

 

Greg: AJ Styles should forever be considered Mr. TNA. He held five world titles in TNA, 6 X-Division titles – and he was the first – and had 19 total title reigns while in TNA (couldn’t give him one more?). Simply put, you can’t tell the story of TNA without the name AJ Styles. That said? He spent ten years in WWE, and during the early part of his tenure, he was champion more often than he wasn’t. He wrestled in football stadiums, and won the most prestigious title in wrestling history twice. He easily tripled his fandom during his decade in WWE. Bottom line? AJ Styles’ career was iconic in BOTH TNA and WWE. But no one is bigger than WWE, so his time there is most iconic by default.

 

Andrew: TNA was the more iconic career. At the time of his TNA run, his style was still burgeoning. It was fresh and the whole product inspired many young wrestlers. Even toward the end of his WWE run, they were mentioning TNA accolades more since the relationship was in a good spot. While he had more financial success and eyes in WWE, he became Phenomenal in TNA. Without TNA, there’s no New Japan run, and then WWE doesn’t take the shot on him. You gotta be a big deal outside of WWE during the Vince era for Vince to cave in and give you a prominent position right out of the gates.

 

Dave: Longer does not mean better. The answer is WWE. That does not diminish his accomplishments in TNA, NJPW, or wherever. But you also have to be honest. When AJ Styles came out at #3 in the 2016 Rumble, his life changed dramatically. He packed in so much with WWE in just a decade. He was never a “Vince guy,” but he won over one of the hardest men to please in the industry’s history. His WWE resume speaks for itself: 2x WWE Champion, 1x IC Champ, 3X US Champion, 2x Tag Team Champion with two different partners, a Triple Crown and Grand Slam Champion, and a Hall of Famer. As I said before, WWE is the right answer here.

 

Kyle: The answer is TNA and it’s honestly not even close in my opinion. While his WWE career was iconic (SmackDown will always be the House That AJ Styles Built), what he meant to TNA cannot be understated. He was the company’s first real home-grown star. He was the inaugural X-Division Champion (a title he would win six times), the fourth ever World Champion (a title he would win five times), the first TNA triple crown winner (five times), the first TNA Grand Slam Winner (two times), a Bound for Glory series winner, and one third of arguably the best main event in TNA history (the Triple Threat Match vs. Christopher Daniels & Samoa Joe at Unbreakable 2005). From the birth of the Phenomenal One, to joining Christian’s Coalition, to feuding with the likes of Kurt Angle and Christopher Daniels, to becoming the Lone Wolf, AJ Styles was at the center of some of the most important moments in TNA history. Simply put, AJ Styles was one of, if not THE greatest star in TNA has ever had and his legacy in that company may never be matched.

 

Rey: Honestly? WWE. I loved TNA as much as any fan walking the Earth in their early days. AJ Styles is synonymous with TNA. And the things he achieved there are legendary. In fact, it’s the reason why he’s known worldwide now. But we’ve reached a point where he was in WWE just one year less than he was in TNA. And in those 10 years, he’s become one of the best WWE stars of his generation. Despite winning multiple world titles, he’s feuded with the biggest stars WWE has, most notably having an epic feud with John Cena. As great as TNA is, WWE is the biggest game in town. And AJ was able to make an immediate impact, ultimately becoming a Hall of Famer. So, as crazy as it sounds, the answer is WWE.

 

Should the WWE completely move away from any and all Vince McMahon references on television?

 

Greg: This should be an open and shut question with a quick answer – YES. But it’s not quite that easy to me. Vince McMahon isn’t just part of the story of WWE; for much of it, he’s THE story. His fingerprints are all over the company – his daughter is a permanent beloved figurehead regardless of any official title she holds. The current Chief Content Officer – Triple H – and Executive Producer of Creative, Writing, & Television – Bruce Prichard – are essentially disciples of Vince McMahon. Purposefully avoiding any references would be equally obvious and forced. What you do is you don’t purposefully bring him up. If it happens organically, so be it. Don’t do it on purpose, and don’t avoid it on purpose.

 

Andrew: As long as Stephanie still goes by McMahon and not Helmsley or Levesque…kind of an impossibility. I feel like we’ll remain in a world where they don’t refer to him much. But if there’s an Old School episode again, or when he ultimately passes away, they’re not just going to ignore it. For better or for worse, Vince is going to be in people’s vernacular until at least the Millennial generation no longer exists to pine about the Attitude Era.

 

Dave: Absolutely not. We are talking about, inarguably, the most important person in the business’s history. The man who put WrestleMania on the map and brought pro wrestling from a territory-based form of entertainment to a global and mainstream entertainment juggernaut. Is he a sexual deviant and a complete POS? Yes, I think the evidence speaks for itself there, at least in the court of public opinion. But you can say that about a lot of people, including former (and present) US Presidents, as well as people with power in all walks of life. The Epstein Files show just how deep and dark that rabbit hole goes. But Vince is so inextricably intertwined with the history of pro wrestling that never mentioning him at all tells a story of half-truths and cherry-picked information scrubbed clean of critical details. By all means, limit any references to him. But a zero-tolerance approach to Vince McMahon is just not the way to go.

 

Kyle: Vince is a horrible person, but he’s too important to the company’s history to pretend he never existed. Some things we just have to live with, and this is one of them.

 

Rey: I feel conflicted about this question because there’s no good answer here. There is no professional wrestling as we know it without Vince McMahon. Everything we see, we owe to him. Vince is also one of the worst humans walking the Earth in my opinion. We’ve long known that he wasn’t a good person, but it was largely believed to just be from a personality standpoint. Now, we know how terribly he treated people, specifically women. The story of Janel Grant, whether it reaches a fair and respectable resolution in court, will never be forgotten and is the story of an unchecked megalomaniacal billionaire who took advantage of people simply because he could.

 

Here’s my honest take – you can’t separate him. This is not a Chris Benoit situation. As big and successful as Benoit was, you can tell the story of WWE and wrestling as a whole without him. You can’t tell that same story without Vince. So, he has to be referenced. Now, he doesn’t have to be mentioned directly. Recently, WWE has had a lot of mentions of his name on television, most notably with his daughter, Stephanie McMahon, being inducted to the Hall of Fame. So, that was a completely understandable time to reference and mention him. That is not the same as needlessly talking about him on a random Raw. Keep his mentions to the necessary stuff and we’ll be fine.

 

What will it take for one of the major Indy companies – GCW, MLW, DEFY, and HOG – to become mainstream?

 

Greg: This might be the most difficult question to answer. Each one of these companies has distribution across various levels, mostly streaming. They each have a following. They’ve all produced stars you see on weekly television today. Two have major money backing. But mainstream? There’s one HUGE factor that none of these companies can control: space. Where do they fit? We currently have weekly wrestling on TV Monday through Saturday. That includes four WWE brands (with Evolve), two weekly shows for AEW, and TNA now being on a major cable outlet. To me, the mainstream is already overcrowded, and I don’t see space for another company to make that leap.

 

Andrew: They need Jesus. Just like in wrestling, there’s main eventers, mid carders, lower guys, and local enhancement talent. The promotions work the same way. Ain’t no one clamoring for a G-League basketball team to get a new franchise slot, or for the UFL champions to play the Browns or Jets in a relegation match. As long as the bigger Indies are making money and paying talent their rate…not everyone needs to be mainstream. NWA found out the hard way that there aren’t enough TV stations or general demand for “mainstream.”

 

Dave: The only way this happens is if one of the Indy Companies cuts a deal with WWE, similar to what ECW did back in the day and what TNA and AAA have with them now. WWE, and to a much lesser extent, AEW, has the biggest stranglehold in mainstream media, and that is not going to change. The Indy promotions have great talent, but none who would have what it takes to break through on a mainstream level. You can’t beat WWE, so you might as well join them if you want to get some mainstream attention.

 

Kyle: The same thing that it took AEW: a billionaire investor and a major television contract.

 

Rey: Money. The quick answer is money. Tony Khan and his family spent millions of dollars and immediately became a player in the wrestling business. So definitely money.

 

To get a bit more specific, I once wrote a column about this very thing. To spare you time, the main things were having a specific creative vision, hiring a talented and unique booker, having or creating at least 3 needle movers, using the internet to their advantage, and having a television deal. You can’t be a major company if people can’t watch your program easily and with consistent quality.

 

The closest of the 4 companies listed is MLW, because they have some level of television access, they have a unique booker in Court Bauer, they have a history of talent and current wrestlers that are known and/or could be needle movers, and they use the internet well. GCW has a great chance as well, specifically because of their booker (Brett Lauderdale) and their very unique and fan-friendly creative vision, but their reliance on hardcore and violent themes and matches will hurt them.

 

Should wrestling journalists and reporters be able to get access to shows and companies regardless of their reporting?

 

Greg: On the surface, my answer is a quick “yeah, sure,” but it’s deeper than that. It’s relatively easy to get credentials to TNA, MLW, and New Japan (when they’re in the United States) because they NEED the coverage. They practically beg for it. I’ve personally gotten members of The Chairshot credentials to all of the aforementioned companies with relative ease. But that’s not WWE or AEW, and those are the companies more in question right now. If you’re WWE, and even if to a lesser extent, AEW, you aren’t begging for coverage. You’re a magnet for it. You are in the position to pick and choose. You hold the luxury of having riches of reporters and journalists wanting to cover your product, and the benefit of choosing who fits your long-term goals. And if you’re a reporter, what are you complaining about? Not having free tickets? Everything you need to see is available to you via some form of broadcast. You can still do your job. 

 

Andrew: No, not at all. If you want to take a hard stance against a wrestler, angle, or company, and they choose to blackball you? Deal with it, buttercup. I haven’t been able to tolerate AEW since 2020. You think I have the unmitigated gall to assume they’d give me a press pass just because I know someone or work for a place? Stop it. If you claim to be unbiased, you have to give unbiased takes all the time. As soon as you stop being measured in your interactions, you deserve whatever positive or negative attention that comes with it.

 

Dave: No! There is too much inherent bias among many of the journalists who cover pro wrestling now. I use the Wrestling Observer as a template here. The pro-AEW, anti-WWE stance they take does not feel like unbiased journalism. To the contrary, more often than not, it feels like a bought-and-paid-for hit piece. The same could be said about journalists who crap all over AEW, no matter what. So, if I am WWE or AEW, I do not see the need or advantage gained from providing unfettered access to shows and companies to journalists who are clearly shown to be hostile to the company in question.

 

Kyle: Freedom of the Press means freedom to report whatever they want as long as the reporting is true. Gatekeeping access to the company doesn’t get rid of negative reporting, it makes it seem like the company is hiding something, which will only encourage a good journalist to dig even harder for information.

 

Rey: For free? No. Wrestling is not a sport. And with respect to some of the actual reputable wrestling journalists (there’s not many), wrestling journalism is a misnomer. I have no issue if a journalist or influencer who likes to specifically attack, criticize, or speak negatively of a company loses his press access to a wrestling company or a show.

 

They should now, however, be banned from going to the show at all. If they buy a ticket, they should be able to attend. Nobody deserves access for free just because they work in news and media, but everyone deserves access if they pay their hard earned money to buy a ticket.

 

Greg – @GregDeMarco44

Andrew – @IWCWarChief

Dave – www.attitudeofaggression.com

Kyle – @OutsidersEdgeCS

Rey – @itsreycash

Chairshot Radio Network

Launched in 2017, the Chairshot Radio Network presents you with the best in sports, entertainment, and sports entertainment. Wrestling and wrestling crossover podcasts + the most interesting content + the most engaging hosts = the most entertaining podcasts you’ll find!

 MONDAY - Bandwagon Nerds (entertainment & popular culture)

TUESDAY - 4 Corners Podcast (sports)

WEDNESDAY - The Greg DeMarco Show (wrestling) 

THURSDAY - Nefarious Means

FRIDAY - DWI Podcast (Drunk Wrestling Intellect)

SATURDAY - The Mindless Wrestling Podcast

SUNDAY - 30 Mindless Minutes

CHAIRSHOT RADIO NETWORK PODCAST SPECIALS

Attitude Of Aggression Podcast: The Big Five Project (chronologically exploring WWE's PPV/PLE history) Unidentified History (Ufology) & Game Gone Wrong (Game of Thrones Universe)


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Opinion

Chris King: Was Randy Orton Simply Repeating History At WrestleMania 42?

Could the WWE WrestleMania 42 results for Randy Orton lead to repeated history at Backlash?

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Randy Orton Cody Rhodes WWE WrestleMania 42

Could the WWE WrestleMania 42 results for Randy Orton lead to repeated history at Backlash?

WrestleMania 42 Night One is in the rear view, as Cody Rhodes retained his WWE Undisputed Championship. While Pat McAfee tried to involve himself in the title match, Jelly Roll took his ass out. Randy Orton utilized every single move in his arsenal and even the champion’s to win his fifteenth championship. Unfortunately, due to Pat’s shenanigans, Orton was unable to get the job done, and Rhodes secured the victory. 

There have been rumors about Orton and Pat vs. Rhodes and Jelly Roll in a tag team match at this year’s Backlash PLE. It wasn’t until after last night that got me thinking, what if they repeat history when Orton won the championship in 2009? Orton, along with Legacy (Randy Orton, Cody Rhodes, and Ted DiBiase Jr.), made it his life’s goal to destroy HHH and the McMahon family all the way up to WrestleMania 25. Orton punted both Vince and Shane and even hit a DDT on HHH’s wife. Stephanie. The psychological games weren’t enough though, as Orton didn’t win the title then either at Mania. 

The next night on Monday Night Raw, Batista made his long-awaited return to the ring to help HHH against Legacy. In the weeks leading up to the event, Rhodes, Orton, and DiBiase Jr. would get the upper hand, destroying everyone. HHH would put his title on the line in a massive six-man tag team match alongside Shane and Batista versus Legacy. If Orton’s team won the match, then he would win the championship. 

What if this huge stipulation were placed on the rumored tag team match, and Orton found a way to win the WWE Championship at Backlash? The WWE Universe might not be happy about the way Orton wins the title, but as long as Orton gets his fifteenth title, does it really matter? Maybe punting Rhodes was just the start of Orton listening to the voices and doing whatever he has to do to win the championship?

Chairshot Radio Network

Launched in 2017, the Chairshot Radio Network presents you with the best in sports, entertainment, and sports entertainment. Wrestling and wrestling crossover podcasts + the most interesting content + the most engaging hosts = the most entertaining podcasts you’ll find!

 MONDAY - Bandwagon Nerds (entertainment & popular culture)

TUESDAY - 4 Corners Podcast (sports)

WEDNESDAY - The Greg DeMarco Show (wrestling) 

THURSDAY - Nefarious Means

FRIDAY - DWI Podcast (Drunk Wrestling Intellect)

SATURDAY - The Mindless Wrestling Podcast

SUNDAY - 30 Mindless Minutes

CHAIRSHOT RADIO NETWORK PODCAST SPECIALS

Attitude Of Aggression Podcast: The Big Five Project (chronologically exploring WWE's PPV/PLE history) Unidentified History (Ufology) & Game Gone Wrong (Game of Thrones Universe)


Chairshot Radio Network Your home for the hardest hitting podcasts... Sports, Entertainment and Sports Entertainment!

All Shows On Demand


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Sports Entertainment

AEW Results33 minutes ago

Mitchell’s AEW Collision Results & Report! (4/25/26)

We've gone Rip City!

Historical Themes6 hours ago

TLC – The Match That Changed Everything

Kyle Moores-Mandigo breaks down the groundbreaking legacy of the Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match as a Legend of WrestleMania!

Randy Orton The Viper 24 Years in WWE Randy Orton The Viper 24 Years in WWE
Chairshot Classics8 hours ago

24 Years Of The Viper: Randy Orton Hits 24 Years In WWE

Chris King takes a look back at some of the most iconic feuds of Randy Orton and his 24 years...

News11 hours ago

DOUKI Snatches Tiger Mask at NJPW Wrestling Redzone, Fuels Deathmatch Demand

At New Japan Pro-Wrestling’s Wrestling Redzone event on April 25, an undercard eight-man tag matched Tiger Mask IV, Togi Makabe,...

News11 hours ago

Kaisei Takechi Diagnosed with Acute Appendicitis, Withdrawn from 2026 KING OF DDT

DDT Pro-Wrestling announced that Kaisei Takechi has been diagnosed with acute appendicitis after seeking medical attention for abdominal pain, issuing...

News11 hours ago

Ichiban Sweet Boys Become Three-Time IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champions at NJPW Wrestling Redzone

Ichiban Sweet Boys reclaimed the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championships in the semi-main event of NJPW Wrestling Redzone on...

News11 hours ago

Utami Hayashishita Announces Departure From Marigold

Utami Hayashishita announced she is leaving Marigold after her Marigold World Championship match against Miku Aono at the Marigold Spring...

Podcasts12 hours ago

Mindless Wrestling Podcast: A Tale of 2 WrestleManias

Join DJ, Rob and Jason every week as they give their "Mindless" takes on Pro Wrestling and much, much more!

Today In Pro Wrestling History14 hours ago

Today In Pro Wrestling History: April 25th

Now this is the kind of list I enjoy. Some classic Puro, Joshi, ROH, WWE and CMLL. A little something...

News22 hours ago

Trey Miguel Suffers Broken Patella During TNA Rebellion Title Defense

TNA International Champion Trey Miguel reportedly suffered a broken patella (kneecap) during his title defense at TNA Rebellion. The injury...

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