Tag: Wrestling

  • The 5 Greatest Crossover Athletes Who Competed in Both Pro Wrestling and Combat Sports

    The 5 Greatest Crossover Athletes Who Competed in Both Pro Wrestling and Combat Sports

    Some athletes pick a lane and stay in it. These five ignored the lane entirely. Each stepped into the scripted chaos of pro wrestling and the genuine danger of a combat sports cage, and performed at the top of both. Here’s who made it work.

    Brock Lesnar: The Blueprint for Crossover Dominance

    No one pulled off the wrestling-to-MMA switch with the same velocity as Brock Lesnar. He won the UFC Heavyweight Championship in just his fourth professional fight, 277 days after his UFC debut. For context, that’s less time than some fighters spend ranked in the top 15 without sniffing a title shot. Before that: NCAA Division I wrestling champion in 2000 with a 33–0 season, then WWE Champion at 25, the youngest ever at that point.

    The crossover is rare enough that analysts still track it — and fans following nepali casino app-style betting markets know dual-sport athletes generate outsized public interest well beyond pure MMA circles. Lesnar defended the UFC title twice: a TKO revenge win over Frank Mir at UFC 100 and a submission of Shane Carwin at UFC 116. His record finished 5–3, though his 2016 win over Mark Hunt was overturned to a no-contest after a failed drug test.

    His peak MMA run:

    • 2008: UFC debut loss to Frank Mir via kneebar
    • 2008: Defeated Randy Couture at UFC 91 to win the UFC Heavyweight Championship
    • 2009: Submitted Mir in rematch at UFC 100
    • 2010: Survived Carwin’s first-round barrage, won by submission

    Ken Shamrock: The Man Who Was Actually Dangerous

    Before Lesnar made the jump look cool, Ken Shamrock made it look credible. He moved between wrestling and MMA before anyone had a framework for what that meant. ABC News called him “The World’s Most Dangerous Man” in the mid-1990s — either brilliant marketing or a genuine warning label, depending on the night.

    Shamrock became the first UFC Superfight Champion by defeating Dan Severn at UFC 6, founded the Lion’s Den camp, and won the King of Pancrase title in Japan, where results were real. His WWE Attitude Era run included the Intercontinental Championship and feuds with The Rock and The Undertaker. He’s an inaugural UFC Hall of Fame inductee, which is the sport’s way of saying he was there before there was even a sport. Fans who use Mel Bet for combat sports wagering will recognize Shamrock as one of MMA’s original marquee names.

    Ronda Rousey: The One Who Restructured Both Industries

    Rousey didn’t just cross over; she reshaped each side in sequence. She won judo bronze at the 2008 Olympics, the first American woman to medal in the sport at that level. She became Strikeforce Women’s Bantamweight Champion before the UFC even had a women’s division. When it created one, Rousey was its first champion.

    Six title defenses followed. Five were first-round finishes. Three came in under a minute. She retired from MMA at 12–2, then joined WWE in 2018:

    • Raw Women’s Championship at SummerSlam 2018
    • Headlined Evolution, WWE’s first all-women’s pay-per-view
    • SmackDown Women’s Championship twice after returning in 2022
    • Only woman to hold a championship in both the UFC and WWE

    She’s also the only woman to headline a pay-per-view in both companies. Nobody else can say that.

    Bobby Lashley: The Least-Discussed Crossover Success

    Lashley doesn’t get the attention Lesnar does, partly because he competed in smaller promotions. That undersells his record. A three-time NAIA Wrestling Champion, he went 15–2 in MMA, primarily in Bellator. His debut lasted 41 seconds. He built his fight career on the same amateur wrestling base as Lesnar — just without the UFC platform behind it.

    His WWE résumé stands on its own: ECW Champion, multiple WWE Championship reigns, top-of-card status through the 2020s. Maintaining credibility in both worlds, without the spotlight, is harder than it looks.

    Dan Severn: The Original

    Severn did something in 1995 nobody had done before: held an MMA championship and a pro wrestling championship simultaneously. He won UFC 5 in April 1995 while holding the NWA World Heavyweight Championship — two belts, two different sports, one weekend. He later took the UFC Superfight Championship from Ken Shamrock.

    Career MMA record: 101 wins, 19 losses, 7 draws. That volume is unusual even for fighters who did nothing else. Severn competed when UFC rules were barely formed and weight classes didn’t exist. His cage performances proved something the combat sports world hadn’t accepted yet — elite amateur wrestlers were genuinely dangerous, not just athletic curiosities.

    Most fighters master one world. These five treated the second one as a reasonable next project.

  • Dark Side Of The Ring Season 7 Episodes Revealed

    Dark Side Of The Ring Season 7 Episodes Revealed

    Dark Side Of The Ring is coming back for their seventh season on Vice TV. The new season will kick off July 7 at 9 p.m. ET with two back-to-back episodes, followed by episodes airing weekly thereafter.

    Variety first reported the themes of each episode, with the season starting with a three-part deep dive into Total Nonstop Action (TNA) Wrestling and co-founder and performer Jeff Jarrett.

    Other episodes will include deep dives on Paul Orndorff, Ray “The Big Boss Man” Traylor, Missy Hyatt,  Necro Butcher vs. Samoa Joe, Zach Gowen, and Rick Wilson, an exotic dancer who had a brief run as Ultimate Warrior knockoff “The Renegade”.

    Dark Side Of The Ring continues to be one of Vice TV’s biggest hits.

  • AEW Dynamite Results – May 6, 2026

    AEW Dynamite Results – May 6, 2026

    On May 6th, 2026 AEW aired the 344rd episode of Dynamite live in North Charleston South Carolina inside North Charleston Coliseum & can watch it on TBS & HBO MAX (United States), TSN (Canada) & MyAEW (International).

    -Kicking off this week’s Dynamite with Tony Schiavone is standing in the ring to kick off the show with a tribute to TBS founder Ted Turner following the news of his death earlier today.

    -He expresses how much Turner loved professional wrestling and emphasizes what he did for the professional wrestling business then introduces Sting and he makes his way to the ring.

    -Sting then expresses his fondness for Turner and thanks him for his contributions for the professional wrestling business before Schiavone points out that fans should pay attention to the Turner Techwood Mansion sideplates on the TNT & TBS Titles tonight.

    Non Title Match
    Continental Champion Jon Moxley defeated Juice Robinson via Bulldog Choke (14:42)

    -We then head over to a video of Will Ospreay training with Death Riders backstage where Wheeler Yuta uses Ospreay as a decline bench to do sit ups as Marina Shafir fires off kicks on Continental Champion Jon Moxley’s midsection.

    -After they finish their respective activities Moxley says Ospreay is different from others in AEW and says that he’s got 1% to go on the mountain but it’ll be the hardest part of the journey yet and it’s the only good option Ospreay has left.

    Champion vs. Champion Double Jeopardy Match
    Trios Champion Orange Cassidy defeated AEW World Tag Team Champion Dax Harwood via Roll Up (12:09) (Since Cassidy won The Conglomeration gets a AEW World Tag Team Titles Match)

    -Backstage Renee Paquette ask Chris Jericho how he was feeling & said he was pissed off then mentioned that he’s done talking It’s time to fight.

    -Jericho took Paquette’s microphone and went to the ring with it.

    -He said that he’s done with the 3 on 1 beatdowns and blindside attacks.

    -He calls for Ricochet to come to the ring and talk to him.

    -Ricochet came out but wasn’t by himself like Jericho asked. Ricochet said he thinks Jericho might have a humiliation kink because of how he wants to repeatedly get beaten up by The Demand.

    -Ricochet didn’t see much in it for him to keep fighting Jericho… Until he got an idea: He wants to beat Jericho in his own match, a Stadium Stampede at Double Or Nothing. The only issue, Ricochet noted is that Jericho has no friends to form a team.

    Jericho accepts the match then said I’ll find 4 partners because I’m sure somebody here likes me but if I can’t find 4 partners, I’ll take on all y’all by myself.

    Jericho calls Ricochet bald then punches him then he sends Gates Of Agony out of the ring then drops Ricochet with a Judas Effect.

    -Jericho teased hitting Ricochet with the Lionsault but was stopped by Toa Liona as he knocked him off the ropes with a forearm.

    -The Hurt Syndicate hits the ring to make the save for Jericho and made The Demand retreat.

    International Title Match
    Kazuchika Okada (c) defeated Bryan Keith via Rainmaker (10:17) (STILL CHAMPION!!!!).

    Tag Team Match
    Kris Statlander & Hikaru Shida defeated Harley Cameron & Mina Shirakawa via Falcon Arrow on Cameron (11:09).

    AEW World Title Match
    Darby Allin (c) defeated TNT Champion Kevin Knight via Coffin Drop (STILL CHAMPION!!!!).

  • NJPW New Japan Road Results – May 6, 2026

    NJPW New Japan Road Results – May 6, 2026

    On May 6th, 2026 NJPW aired New Japan Road live in Saga, Japan inside Karatsu City Cultural Gymnasium in front of 757 fans & is available to  watch on NJPW World.

    • Tag Team Match
      House Of Torture (Yoshinobu Kanemaru & Sho) defeated Ryusuke Taguchi & Taisei Nakahara via Boston Crab on Nakahara (8:47).
    • 6 Man Tag Team Match
      Chaos (Toru Yano & Yoh) & Master Wato defeated Goto Revolutionary Army (Tatsuya Matsumoto, Hirooki Goto & Yoshi Hashi) via Springboard Uppercut on Matsumoto (7:15).
    • Tag Team Match
      Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion El Desperado & Taichi defeated Tomoaki Honma & Shota Umino via Pole Star Pin on Honma (11:26).
    • Tag Team Match
      TMDK (Ryohei Oiwa & Kosei Fujita) defeated Masatora Yasuda & Yuya Uemura via Nemos Special on Yasuda (10:34).
    • 6 Man Tag Team Match
      Strong Openweight Champion Boltin Oleg, Tiger Mask IV & Aaron Wolf defeated House Of Torture (NEVER Openweight Champion Ren Narita, Yujiro Takahashi & Dick Togo) via Head & Arm Triangle on Dick Togo (8:40).
    • 10 Man Tag Team Match
      United Empire (NEVER Openweight 6 Man Tag Team Champions Great O Khan & Henare, Francesco Akira, Jakob Austin Young & Zane Jay) defeated Unbound Company (IWGP Tag Team Champions Yuto Ice & Oskar, Taiji Ishimori, Daiki Nagai & Gedo) via Bites The Dust on Gedo (13:56).
    • Tag Team Match
      Unbound Company (Shingo Takagi & Yota Tsuji) defeated United Empire (IWGP Heavyweight Champion Callum Newman & Jake Lee) via Gene Blaster on Newman (18:56) (Since Tsuji got the pinned he gets a IWGP Heavyweight Title Match at Dominion).
  • Should WWE Wrestlers Unionize? | Column

    Should WWE Wrestlers Unionize? | Column

    As WWE continues to grow into a global powerhouse, the conversation around how its talent is classified and treated is becoming harder to ignore. Record gates, but then talent asked to take larger than life pay cuts—really? The company is thriving financially, driven by media rights deals, premium live events and international expansion. Yet the structure surrounding its performers has remained largely unchanged for decades.

    WWE talent are labeled as independent contractors, but their day-to-day reality tells a different story. Wrestlers operate on company schedules, follow creative direction and often face restrictions on outside opportunities. WWE is in control. That level of control more closely resembles traditional employment, but without the same protections. It is a contradiction that has lingered over the industry for years, and one that feels increasingly outdated in a modern corporate landscape.

    Under TKO Group Holdings, WWE has become even more aligned with big business practices. The company is now part of a larger publicly traded entity with clear financial expectations. That shift has brought stability and growth, but it has also highlighted the imbalance between ownership and talent. In most major industries, that kind of imbalance is addressed through collective bargaining. In wrestling, it still is not.

    The physical demands of the profession make the issue much more urgent. Professional wrestlers combine athletic performance with live entertainment, often working through injuries while maintaining a relentless travel schedule. The work load has lessened up, sure, but the risk is still there. Unlike athletes in the NFL or NBA, WWE performers do not have a union to negotiate standardized healthcare, pensions or long-term support. Each contract is handled individually, which limits leverage and creates inconsistency across the roster.

    Unionization would provide a framework for addressing those concerns. It could establish baseline protections such as injury protocols, legitimate minimum contract standards and clearer guidelines around scheduling.  It would also give talent a collective voice when it comes to working conditions and compensation. For an industry built on individual stardom, that kind of unity has always been difficult to achieve, but it may now be necessary.

    Past attempts to organize have not succeeded. The most well-known effort came from Jesse Ventura in the 1980s, when he pushed for a union among WWE talent. The idea never gained enough traction, reportedly due to internal resistance and fear of retaliation. Thanks, Hulkster! That moment has become part of wrestling lore, often cited as a missed opportunity for long-term change. Each year that passes feels like the chance of unionization is impossible.

    The environment today is different. Wrestlers are more aware of their value, both as performers and as brands. Social media has given them direct access to fans and a platform to speak openly about their experiences. There is also more competition in the industry, with promotions like All Elite Wrestling offering alternative paths for top talent. That competition may not be enough to shift the balance of power on its own, but it does create leverage that did not exist in previous eras. Leverage is key.

    Critics of unionization often point to the unique nature of professional wrestling. They argue that adding structure could limit creative flexibility or slow down decision-making. Wrestling thrives on spontaneity, and the ability to adjust storylines quickly is part of its appeal. Those concerns are valid, but they are not unique to wrestling. Other major sports leagues operate under union agreements while still producing compelling, unpredictable content.

    The larger issue is sustainability. As WWE continues to expand, the expectations placed on its performers are only increasing. Without a system that provides consistent protections, the gap between the company’s success and the talent’s security will continue to grow. Unionization would not eliminate every challenge, but it would create a foundation for addressing them in a more balanced way. You can’t have futuristic and record breaking numbers, but the treatment of workers is similar to those from the 80’s. It’s outdated.

    For now, the idea remains more discussion than reality. Organizing a roster of independent-minded performers is no small task, and the risks are real. Most talent are afraid to speak out, due to fear of being blackballed. Those are real things.  But as the industry evolves, so does the conversation. WWE has never been bigger. The question is whether its talent will remain on the outside of that growth, or finally come together to claim a voice within it.

    Support Independent Contractors

  • Logan Paul Reveals His Workout Routine Following WWE RAW Appearance

    Logan Paul Reveals His Workout Routine Following WWE RAW Appearance

    You can say a lot of bad things about Logan Paul, but you cannot deny the fact that he is in tip-top shape. Currently one half of the WWE Tag Team Champions, Logan Paul made an appearance on WWE RAW this past Monday, and fan took notice of something.

    Logan Paul is jacked. Having Austin Theory and Bron Breakker by his side sure doesn’t hurt, as they’d be the perfect motivation for an insane physique. But, one fan took notice and posted in X, saying they needed to know Logan’s workout routine.

    Logan responded with a simple, but apparently effective way to look like him, and it all includes just body weight. Logan Paul sited 100 push-ups, 100 sit-ups and of course, a PRIME protein shake.

    https://x.com/loganpaul/status/2052055000352747822?s=46

    While of course Logan is plugging his own brand, protein, push-ups, sit-ups. That’s the way to go!

  • Three Matches Announced For Tonight’s WWE NXT Episode

    Three Matches Announced For Tonight’s WWE NXT Episode

    WWE NXT kicks off tonight at 8/7c on the CW. WWE NXT is in an interesting period, with a huge shift happening. Stars like Sol Ruca, Ethan Page, Ricky Saints, Joe Hendry and Fatal Influence have all moved up to the main roster.

    But, last week, NXT saw the debuts of Will Kroos, EVIL and several call-ups from Evolve. Now, WWE NXT is looking to be in a ‘new era’ and it all starts tonight. As of now, three matches and one segment have been announced for the show.

    A Mixed-Tag Team Match was announced as AAA Mixed Tag Team Champions Lola Vice and Mr. Iguana take on the Cullings Izzi Dame and Niko Vance. Plus, Jasper Troy will go one-on-one with Vanity Project’s Jackson Drake. Also, Jaida Parker and Kali Armstrong will throw down.

    After tossing Sol Ruca through a table, giving her staples in the back of her head, and ridding her of NXT, Zaria will speak and let her intentions known.

    https://x.com/mrstonewwe/status/2051671505646264323?s=46

    All that and more on tonight’s show. Plus, you never know who may show up.

  • New WWE Trademarked Name For EVIL Revealed

    New WWE Trademarked Name For EVIL Revealed

    Former New Japan Pro Wrestling star and former IWGP World Heavyweight Champion, EVIL, is officially apart of WWE. He made his debut last week on WWE NXT when he interrupted WWE NXT Champion, Tony D’Angelo.

    Interestingly enough, there was no mention of his name, and that was intentional. WWE did the same thing with Ricky Starks, not mentioning his name until it was revealed to be Ricky Saints. Now, EVIL is in a similar boat. Today, Fightful Select has reported that a recently trademarked name is indeed for EVIL.

    ”On the April 28th episode of NXT on The CW, former IWGP Heavyweight Champion EVIL made his WWE debut and confronted the NXT Champion Tony D’Angelo. Commentator Vic Joseph did not call EVIL by his name directly, but used the word ‘evil’ as a play on words.

    Fightful Select learned that EVIL is on WWE’s internal roster under his real name, Takaaki Watanabe. There was a trademark filed on April 28th for ‘Nox Raijin,’ and that is for EVIL in WWE. EVIL spent 14 years of his career as a member of New Japan Pro-Wrestling. He wrapped up with the company in January 2026.”

    Tune into WWE NXT tonight on the CW.

    H/T Fightful Select

  • Man Like DeReiss Speaks On His New Friendship With Four Elders

    Man Like DeReiss Speaks On His New Friendship With Four Elders

    Man Like DeReiss Found a couple new friends during WrestleMania week while on his way to Las Vegas, Nevada.

    Over WrestleMania week, Man Like DeReiss and a few elderly women went viral after the pro-wrestler and the three unknowing women sparked a friendship on a plane ride to the U.S. after helping one of the women get their seat to move forward.

    It was there, when the women sparked up a conversation with DeReiss and the rest is history. The four women named Lynn Crawford, 71, Susie Matthews, 73, Rose Sulley, 74, and Christine Goodwin, 80 who have all been friends for 40 years, were actually traveling to Vegas to scatter the ashes of Rose’s late husband, Pete.

    Man Like DeReiss ends up inviting them to come watch him wrestle in Vegas and of course, they attended the event. After getting home from Vegas, DeReiss used social media to find the four women and regain contact with them, now inviting them to come to another wrestling show in London. Today, they were all interviewed together on BBC Breakfast.

    https://x.com/bbcbreakfast/status/2051574135990411292?s=46

    DeReiss says he hopes to inspire others to spark up a conversation with strangers, because it could lead to a great friendship.

  • Four Matches Official For Special Three Hour AEW Dynamite-Collision

    Four Matches Official For Special Three Hour AEW Dynamite-Collision

    AEW Dynamite on Wednesday will also see a one hour AEW Collision following the show, making this Wednesday a three hour special on TBS & HBO Max. For the event, four big matches have been revealed, including an AEW World Championship Match that was at up last week.

    As we know, Kevin Knight stepped up and challenged Darby Allin for the AEW World Championship and after Kevin successfully defeated MJF to retain his TNT Championship last week, Darby has granted Knight the opportunity for Wednesday.

    Plus, after Juice Robinson defeated The Death Riders in tag action on Collision, he will get a shot at Jon Moxley in a championship eliminator match. But, that’s not the only championship stakes on the show.

    Orange Cassidy and Dax Harwood will battle in a double Jeopardy match. If Cassidy wins, he will get a shot at the AEW Tag Team Championships. But, if Dax wins, he will get a shot at the AEW Trios Championships.

    Plus, in tag team action, these four ladies will finally, hopefully, settle their differences as Mina Shirakawa and Harley Cameron take on the new team of Kris Statlander and Hikaru Shida.

    https://x.com/aew/status/2051655654780383263?s=46

    Tune in Wednesday night at 8/7c on TBS for AEW Dynamite & AEW Collision in a special 3-hour block.