Report: Giulia to sign with WWE, fulfill remaining dates

Giulia has reportedly agreed to sign with WWE.

NXT regularly introduces new signings to packed crowds at premium live events, providing fans the chance to greet them in what’s essentially their debut. It sparks buzz and anticipation for when they eventually become full-time players in WWE’s developmental brand,

At Saturday’s NXT Stand and Deliver, the camera panned to former STARDOM talent Giulia, seated next to William Regal and former STARDOM official Rossy Ogawa, as commentary introduced her to the home audience. While not mentioned as a new member of the roster, she had long been speculated as WWE’s next potential big-name addition.

It comes with little surprise that just days later, Fightful Select (subscription required) reports that Giulia has agreed to sign with WWE. Before transitioning, she’ll fulfill remaining dates, including a stint with Ogawa’s upcoming promotion. One of those final matches will happen on Thursday, April 12 at Korakuen Hall, where she’ll tag with Syuri against Hanan and Mayu Iwatani.

Interestingly, the report reveals WWE offered Giulia more money than AEW, while also not using an agent in negotiations. Regal and Ogawa were also pivotal in the process.

Regarding Giulia’s potential start date with NXT, Fightful Select adds she could begin at any time as she currently remains in the U.S.

WWE signing Giulia marks its first significant acquisition from outside the company in 2024, after not landing Kazuchika Okada, Will Ospreay and Mercedes Moné. While prioritizing and succeeding with internal talent development the last few years, bringing in the Italian-Japanese star could signal a shift in strategy. She’s a credible, decorated title holder — arguably too proven for NXT. But the same applied to Kevin Owens, Finn Balor and other talents who established themselves outside of WWE before signing.

Now, it’s a waiting game to see when Giulia makes her next appearance and the level of promotion NXT gives her off the bat. Whenever it happens, particularly as top stars transition to the main roster, she’ll be a welcomed presence for the weekly show and the occasional premium live event.

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Trick Williams on main event with Carmelo Hayes: ‘This is what Melo and I set out to do a long time ago’

“It sucks that this is how we had to get here.” Trick Williams didn’t know he’d end up facing Carmelo Williams but isn’t surprised either.

Philadelphia, Pa. — Success stories don’t always happen instantly. For some, it takes longer to achieve the dream they are seeking to make a reality. That couldn’t ring more true for those looking to make it to the top of the mountain in WWE. Not everyone is a natural like Kurt Angle.

You could put Trick Williams into the category of the thousands who had to grind and put in the hard work as he headlines WWE NXT’s marquee event, NXT Stand & Deliver, on Saturday against former best friend and running mate Carmelo Hayes.

The 29-year-old Williams debuted in NXT in September 2021 alongside Hayes as part of Trick Melo Gang, though Hayes was a more developed and more relatable character than his counterpart. It felt like Williams was the Diesel to Hayes’ Shawn Michaels.

But then, little by little, one could see Williams improving in the ring and his promos getting better, and the crowd took notice. Williams took off quicker than a firecracker and is undoubtedly the biggest star on the NXT brand, to the point where his popular “Whoop That Trick” catchphrase was said loudly during a recent promo by The Rock.

“I think just consistency, hard work, opportunity,” Williams told Wrestling Junkie in explaining this newfound phenomenon. “Shoutout to Shawn Michaels. When hard work meets preparation and opportunity, explosive things can happen. I think that’s what happened to me, and having great opponents like IIja Dragunov, Dijak, Josh Briggs and Bron Breakker put me on a platform and let the people see I can do this at a very high level.

“My first match with IIja Dragunov at Heatwave (August 2023) is where it all started clicking for me. I remember just being in a fight for 15 minutes. It was just literally a fight. I wasn’t thinking too much out there, not worrying about anything. The people could feel it and got behind. Even in a loss, they knew this is who I am, and this is who I can be.”

Typically at WWE main roster and NXT premium live events, the main event is a title match. Not at Stand & Deliver, where the Williams vs. Hayes grudge match takes the headlining position after the latter turned on the former at NXT Vengeance Day in February.

Now, the two biggest stars on the black and gold brand will duke it out for the ultimate supremacy. Being in this spot is something Williams always envisioned with Hayes, but not under this circumstance of having to stand across the ring from him.

“Honestly, this was the goal,” Williams admitted. “This is what Melo and I set out to do a long time ago. We said, ‘We are main eventers.’

“[Now], I’m a main eventer. I guess we knew at the time either one of us was lying, or it was going to come down to this. So it’s good to see we are both getting what we want out of this. It sucks that this is how we had to get here.”

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How to watch NXT Stand and Deliver: Live stream US, international

A look at how to watch NXT Stand and Deliver this Saturday, April 6.

Two nights of WrestleMania 40 may dominate the spotlight, but there’s another marquee WWE premium live event taking place over the weekend. NXT is set to present Stand & Deliver on Saturday, April 6, at the Wells Fargo Arena. Located just outside of Lincoln Financial Field, where the Grandest Stage of Them All will unfold, this event promises to deliver its own action and excitement.

Stand and Deliver features no shortage of rising stars, headlined by Carmelo Hayes and Trick Williams. These two were once allies, climbing the ranks together. However, months of tensions finally reached a boiling point when Hayes revealed himself as Williams’ backstage attacker, setting up their clash.

This will serve as their grudge match, potentially before one or both of these superstars move to the main roster. Hayes had a taste of the main roster on SmackDown, and Stand & Deliver might be his last stepping stone before going full-time.

Ilja Dragunov is set to defend the NXT Championship against Tony D’Angelo, presenting a golden opportunity for the latter to seize glory at this premium live event. It’s a chance for D’Angelo to prove himself on a grand stage and potentially etch his name in NXT history by upsetting the black and gold brand’s dominant titleholder.

Lyra Valkyria also puts her NXT Women’s Championship on the line against Roxanne Perez, whose change in attitude has her on the cusp of another title run.

These matches will grace Stand & Deliver, which has a special start time. Here’s everything you need to know to watch the action this weekend.

How to watch NXT Stand and Deliver

  • Date: Saturday, April 6, 2024
  • Location: Wells Fargo Arena, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Start time: 12:00 p.m. ET/9:00 a.m. PT
  • How to watch: On Peacock in the U.S., and on WWE Network in the rest of the world

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2023 women’s wrestling stats: Examining how WWE, AEW and more booked women in 2023

An examination of how WWE, AEW and other promotions booked women in 2023 found no one offender but no shining star, either.

Women in sports, and more specifically women in wrestling, face a long path to equality and equity when compared to their counterparts. Progress depends greatly on willing promoters. Promoters need the willingness, fans need patience.

Slow progress is still progress, but in a time when other women’s sports are seeing an increase in attendance and viewership, the positioning of women’s wrestling stays relatively fixed and constant.

Diario AS shared that 4.85 million people watched the 2022 women’s NCAA final game; an 18% increase from the previous year. When considering “traditional” sports, 49% of fans are women.

The numbers for WWE’s audience don’t stray too far, according to PlayToday; 40% of WWE’s audience in 2020 were women.

Surely wrestling companies with weekly programming would want to tap into this audience and follow this trend, right? If more fans are watching women’s sports, it would be safe to assume promotions would respond by featuring their women’s divisions more.

Over the last few years, numbers tell another story.

Before diving into the meat of the analysis, it must be addressed that not everyone is a fan of women’s wrestling. While it’s certainly behind the times to completely avoid women’s sports, it’s not unheard of. Fans are entitled to like what they like and watch what they want to watch.

For women’s wrestling fans, the issue arises when promoters and bookers relay trust and faith in their women’s divisions but fail to deliver results. Women’s wrestling fans, too, are allowed to clamor for the type of wrestling they want. Both advocates and fans want to see a systematic change in how women athletes are presented in media, how much of them we see in the ring and an increase in opportunities that properly represent the talent that exists.

With all of this in mind, in an attempt to see where wrestling waivers, women’s wrestling stats were collected on promotions with weekly or consistent programming that is viewable on television, online subscriptions, streaming platforms or on pay-per-view. To get a proper look at women’s progress in comparison to their male counterparts, the wrestling promotions must have both a women’s division and a men’s division.

  • Areas where data was collected spells out where, when and how many women were used: wrestling shows, PPVs, rosters, titles and main events.
  • Show measurements: what percentage of total matches and match time had women, show cards that had zero women’s matches and show cards that had more than two women’s matches.
  • PPV measurements: what percentage of total PPV matches and PPV match time had women. PPV time and match stats include pre-shows.

Other percentages include how many titles a women can hold in a promotion and how many women were on their roster. The number of main events featuring women for both PPVs and shows were tallied as well. Rosters were pulled from official websites, and a title was added to the women’s percentage if at least one woman has competed for it.

Data was pulled from cagematch.net and profightdb.com, along with rewatches for any data not found.

Let’s start the breakdown with a side-by-side comparison between 2022 and 2023 for shows that ran both years. Below are graphs representing yearly changes in percentage of matches and match time that had women present.

From year-to-year, brands stay consistently low. If the goal is 50%, the percentages don’t come close. There’s not much change in either category for any brand. Sure, a year is a short amount of time when creating huge shifts in booking, but stagnant numbers are not promising for the future.

Even more interesting is looking at the two graphs together. NWA increased how many women’s matches it had but the time they got was the same. In 2022 and 2023, the AEW women’s division had, on average, more matches than it had time from bell-to-bell on Dynamite.

Now, what you’re undoubtedly waiting for: a brand-to-brand comparison. The quick comparison graphic below lists stats not shown in the above graphs.

There’s a lot to unpack here. It’s clear from the get-go that no one brand or show is the top dog in women’s wrestling. NXT has a roster to brag about, TNA lets women compete for most of its titles, and ROH has featured at least two women’s matches on every single show card. ROH and Rampage both have a high number of women’s main events on weekly shows. PPV stats are bleaker.

AEW brands all share the same PPV stats because there is no clear brand split. They give women 16.8% of PPV matches and only 9.8% of PPV match time. They’re painful numbers, but they aren’t the only ones. TNA has a women’s roster that makes up 25.4% of its total roster, but are only giving them 16% of total PPV matches.

SmackDown had four shows in 2023 that had zero women’s matches. For a brand that has preached a women’s revolution, the expectation is that it would have women on every show.

MLW says it’s working on building a women’s featherweight division, but besides a few titleholders, has failed to create an actual division — or give the women time on their shows. Twenty-five shows out of 47 had zero women’s matches. MLW would do well to tap into the talent it does have, like current champ Janai Kai, and focus on outreach.

AEW has a well-known issue of failing to book more than one women’s match on a show, and it’s nearly the same for their PPVs. Out of its eight PPVs, five had only one women’s match. For a company with two women’s titles, it’s hard to believe those titles can’t be defended more.

For the most part, the numbers from brand-to-brand are not so different that it would reveal an incredibly problematic company, or a shining example of what a promotion should do with their women.

The real issue stands out like a sore thumb: Women’s wrestling is treated nowhere near equal. Treading around the 25-33% mark, or worse, is not advancing women in sports.

Promotions will argue that the stories outside of the ring matter, too. That’s true — to a point. Many fans want to care about the wrestlers in the ring; they need story and a reason to cheer or boo. As a kayfabe sport, that makes sense. But without women in the ring, we can’t really argue that a company is advancing a women’s sport. At the heart of every fan is a person who wants to see competition: blood, sweat, and a story finished.

The issue carries over year-to-year. How long can we hear promotions boast about their women’s division, their greatness, their talent, and then not give them time? Creating a 50/50 environment for men and women is not easy, especially when a promoter has booked themselves into a brick wall.

How does WWE create opportunities for a healthy 15 women if they can’t book 35 men? How can AEW create room on a card for their women’s division that only makes up 21.8% of their total roster? How does MLW move forward with eight women to their 39 men? It’s not an overnight change, but the changes need to be made if women are to be treated equal.

Why is creating equality in wrestling important? Besides the desire for fairness, sports have a long-reaching influence.

If you’ve ever watched a wrestling show and the camera scans over to a young person smiling bright and big, you’ve seen the reach wrestling has. Young girls have openly told Bianca Belair she’s a role model and they’re happy someone on TV looks like them.

Representation, equality and equity in women’s wrestling starts in the ring. It’s up to the promoters to make that a priority and book with those goals in mind. Sometimes, that means teaching your audience. If they only present what they’ve always presented, the numbers will never increase.

When women are treated as the sideshow, like women in wrestling were for so many years, it communicates that women are not strong and not worthy. Gone are the years of panties and bras matches, but there’s still work to do. Safety, pay, energy, time and faith are the ingredients needed to grow an industry for women in all areas of wrestling. Ingredients we can all share.

It takes patience to see real growth and positive progress. Mindsets and systematic issues don’t improve overnight. Women’s wrestling fans have patience, but are growing restless. It’s time for the revolution to really knock on the door.

The fans will wait, if the promoters are willing.

WWE broadcast picture in 2025 and beyond: Where to watch Raw, SmackDown, NXT

Here’s a helpful summary of where you’ll be watching WWE Raw, SmackDown and NXT once they all move.

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The last domino in the WWE media rights chain has fallen. With the announcement this week that Raw is headed to Netflix in 2025, each of the weekly shows has a home once next January arrives — and some even sooner than that.

They’re all new homes as well, as Raw, SmackDown and NXT will all be carried by a different channel or service than the ones that currently carry them. WWE’s broadcast partners for the foreseeable future also encompass network TV, cable and streaming, though not matched up in the ways one might have expected prior to the deals being made.

Confused? We’re here to help sort it all out.

Raw

Where to watch it now: USA

Where you’ll watch it in the future: Netflix

When it’s moving: January 2025

How long it will be on Netflix: 5, 10 or 20 years (see below)

The biggest move WWE made in its next round of media rights deals was packaging Raw along with the international rights to all of its programming (weekly TV and premium live events) to Netflix. Even though it was rumored the company might partner with a streaming service, it’s still a seismic move for the pro wrestling landscape, and early rumors got the potential partner wrong, thinking it might be Amazon.

While the initial deal is for 10 years, which would take it through the end of 2034, Netflix has both an opt-out clause after five years if it wishes and the ability to extend the deal for another decade. That means it’s possible WWE could be looking for a new partner for Raw again in 2029, or might not have to worry about it until Triple H is at retirement age.

SmackDown

Where to watch it now: FOX

Where you’ll watch it in the future: USA

When it’s moving: October 2024

How long it will be on USA: 5 years

Though it’s losing Raw, USA remains very much in the WWE game by acquiring the rights to SmackDown. The five-year deal also includes four prime time specials a year that will be shown on NBC, keeping things comfy with NBCUniversal and potentially increasing the likelihood that premium live events will remain on Peacock in the U.S.

The SmackDown deal was signed before the one for Raw, but WWE has to feel pretty pleased that it worked out this way as fans who are resistant to ponying up for a Netflix subscription will still be able to watch one of its big shows each week on cable — and on a channel where they’ve grown accustomed to watching for years.

NXT

Where to watch it now: USA

Where you’ll watch it in the future: The CW

When it’s moving: October 2024

How long it will be on The CW: 5 years

As part of The CW’s increasing investment in live sports and related content, it grabbed the rights to NXT in a deal announced last November. The move coincides with the arrival of SmackDown, so USA won’t go without WWE programming at all during these transitions (curiously, the temporary home of Raw between October 2024 and January 2025 is still up in the air).

The CW is still considered network TV for whatever that’s worth in this era, so it will be the first time WWE has had NXT (or any series, really) on a broadcast network.

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Best photos: Mandy Rose through the years

Check out some of the best photos of Mandy Rose from throughout her time in WWE and NXT.

From her debut on Tough Enough to her stellar run as NXT Women’s Champion, Mandy Rose left quite the impression during her time in WWE.

While the wrestling world waits to see when and where she might surface next, check out some of the best photos from throughout her WWE tenure.

NXT will air on The CW beginning in fall 2024

With SmackDown and NXT announcing new broadcast homes, Raw is the only WWE show yet to find a media rights deal.

The next pro wrestling media rights domino has fallen, and it will send WWE’s increasingly popular NXT brand to a network who has been an aggressive player in seeking out sports-related programming as of late.

The CW Network confirmed today that it will become the official broadcast home of NXT beginning in October 2024. The deal is for five years, which would keep it on the network through fall of 2029.

PWInsider first broke the news earlier today, ahead of the official announcement.

Once known for its young audience-skewing dramas, The CW has undergone a dramatic change in strategy since being acquired by Nexstar Media Group last fall. At the heart of it has been a move into live sports, including LIV Golf and ACC college football and basketball.

It will also be the home for NASCAR Xfinity Series races beginning in 2025.

“The CW has made impressive moves over the past year with its live sports programming schedule,” WWE president Nick Khan said in a press release announcing the deal. “It’s a truly exciting opportunity to expand NXT’s audience by bringing the show to broadcast television for the first time in NXT’s history.”

With SmackDown heading to USA next fall, there’s a chance that all three weekly WWE programs could air somewhere different than their current homes by the end of 2024. No new broadcast deal has been reached yet for Raw, which is expected to leave USA with SmackDown on its way in.

And a few intriguing pieces of the puzzle regarding NXT still remain to be completed. Today’s announcement didn’t reveal which night the show will be aired on The CW, which could be dependent on both the network’s existing sports obligations and which nights end up homes to Raw and SmackDown.

There’s also the question of whether The CW is still going to air NWA programming or if NXT is “instead of” and not “in addition to” that promotion’s shows. Owner Billy Corgan said he had signed two deals with a “top 20 network,” which Haus of Wrestling reported on Oct. 18 were with The CW.

However, that same outlet suggested the agreement, which has yet to be officially announced, could be in jeopardy after a controversial segment during the NWA Samhain pay-per-view. Until the network makes a statement one way or the other, it’s dealings with the NWA will continue to be a subject of speculation.

WWE vs. AEW Tuesday night battle should be a lot of fun

Tonight’s the night: WWE and AEW are pulling out all the stops for their rare Tuesday head-to-head battle.

Wake up, wrestling fans. It’s Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2023. You know what that means?

It’s time for Tuesday Night Wrestling Promotion Fights!

In one corner, you have AEW, which was forced to move Dynamite to Tuesday due to the MLB postseason. AEW gave fans some incentive to tune in Tuesday night by having Adam Copeland make his in-ring debut for the promotion.

In the other corner, we have the show that typically resides on Tuesdays, NXT, which decided to counter AEW with John Cena, Paul Heyman, Asuka, Cody Rhodes, and based off a not-so-subtle gong at the end of the promo for the show, possibly even The Undertaker.

Then NXT announced before Raw that the first 30 minutes of Tuesday’s show would be commercial free.

Just when it looked like AEW was already down on the mat, the promotion answered back via some fiery Tony Khan posts on X. First, he announced that the first 30 minutes of Dynamite will also be commercial-free.

He then made sure to note that this was indeed a response to WWE stacking NXT with major names that normally DO NOT appear on that program.

Then Khan raised the stakes by announcing a dream match between Eddie Kingston and Minoru Suzuki. Just casually. Not to mention that this will be happening on the pre-show…for an episode of Dynamite.

Good god. 

Neither promotion is even hiding it at this point. This is going to be an all out wrestling promotion fight. You thought we had Tribal Combat at SummerSlam? Well, buckle up, fam. You’re about to see the REAL tribal combat tonight.

Social media will be ablaze with hot takes, I’m sure. Wrestling fans should feel too blessed to be stressed at this point, but telling them to relax is an exercise in futility. So instead of trying to stamp out the flames, I’m going to stoke them. 

That is right, I am here to instigate the madness for once. Call me messy if you want to. I don’t care. I am here for the sneak disses both sides may throw on television. I will also be here for the discourse that will take place during and especially after the shows are off the air. 

Don’t worry, I’ll be sure to tune out before it gets too toxic. I still have my limits.

But until it gets to that point, I will enjoy this day. That is because days like this are unique. Days like this are wild. Days like this are fun.

I am here to embrace the chaos that will be this day. And this time, I am advocating for wrestling fans to do so as well.

WWE seems to be teasing The Undertaker for NXT, which is bonkers

An already loaded NXT card may also be getting an appearance from the Dead Man next Tuesday.

The temporary “Tuesday Night War” coming next week, Oct. 10, may have just reached absurd levels of hype.

With AEW Dynamite forced to move up a day by the MLB Playoffs, WWE hasn’t just been sitting back accepting that NXT might have less eyeballs on it than usual. No, it has loaded up the show, with Asuka, Becky Lynch, John Cena and Cody Rhodes all involved.

But that apparently wasn’t enough. Several ads for NXT ran during Raw on Monday night, and if you watched all the way until the end, you heard an unmistakable sound: the gong that signals the arrival of The Undertaker.

So is the Dead Man really going to show up for an episode of NXT? Normally we’d say no way, but since WWE is pulling out absolutely all the stops for next week, we wouldn’t be surprised at all at this point.

The Undertaker seems to be pretty firmly retired, so don’t expect him to be wrestling. But literally anyone on the NXT roster would benefit from getting his seal of approval or even standing toe to toe with the Hall of Famer (even if they end up getting chokeslammed afterward), so Shawn Michaels and company can have some fun thinking of ways to use him.

It’s another reason to tune in, but let’s be real: If you’re reading this, you probably already were planning on it.

With SmackDown headed to USA, where might Raw, NXT end up?

WWE has a new home for SmackDown, but where will Raw (and NXT) be broadcast in late 2024 and beyond?

For a brief moment Thursday, there was hope that perhaps WWE’s flagship shows, Raw and SmackDown would end up in one place after WWE announced a five-year deal with NBCUniversal to bring SmackDown to USA Network beginning in October 2024.

The problem, though, is that Raw very well might not stay put. In its coverage of today’s SmackDown announcement, The Hollywood Reporter framed USA getting the Friday night show as “instead of ” and not “in addition to” Raw.

While the new deal will bring WWE to NBC primetime and SmackDown to USA on Friday nights, it will also mean the end of Raw and NXT on USA.

THR cited a source saying that “traditional linear networks, streaming services and “unexpected players” all interested.” So who might be in the market for Raw (and NXT)? What’s intriguing is that a number of parties were said to be sniffing around the SmackDown rights and could very well be in the running for Raw as well.

Here’s a quick look at a few of them.

Disney

Though Disney has made noises about getting out of the TV business, it’s also consistently been named as an entity likely to be interested in one of WWE’s weekly shows. If not SmackDown, why not Raw?

ESPN execs have already shot down the idea of a WWE series on that channel since it has too many sports to show to dedicate a night every week. So speculation has centered on one of Disney’s cable channels, FX. Raw would be the most viewed show on FX if it were to end up there, so it makes a lot of sense.

Amazon

Like Disney, Amazon has been discussed almost every time there is chatter about WWE media right bidders. It made a big move into live event streaming by locking up exclusive rights to NFL Thursday Night Football broadcasts starting last year, so it’s already got the infrastructure in place to show Raw.

The question would be if WWE, which has always considered Raw its ‘A’ show, would be comfortable having it on streaming even in an era where linear TV’s luster is fading by the year. The guess here is that if the money is right, that wouldn’t be an issue.

It’s worth noting that other streaming players, including Apple and maybe even Netflix, could make bids as well.

The CW

Even though it (barely) counts as a TV network, this could qualify as one of THR’s “unexpected players.” Since being acquired by Nexstar last year, The CW has been undergoing a dramatic transformation, bidding adieu to most of the young adult-leaning dramas that were once its calling card and attempting to rebrand itself around other things — including live sports.

The CW already has the rights to college football and NASCAR’s Xfinity Series, but those are almost exclusively weekend events. Making a move for Raw would fit its current strategy and give it a marquee weeknight property.

The wild card: Would Raw’s new broadcast partner move it off Monday nights?

Unlike SmackDown, which has switched between nights of the week a number of times, Raw is virtually synonymous with Monday nights. That’s certainly been the case when it’s been on USA.

But would a new network or streamer be as wedded to Mondays? Not necessarily. Raw faces the stiffest possible competition during football season from Monday Night Football, a fact that was emphasized over the past two weeks when it drew historically low viewership.

The NFL season only lasts around four months, but why bother fighting the behemoth at all when it’s not needed? Don’t be shocked if Raw’s new home, wherever it is, decides that Tuesdays look a lot better for staking out a weeknight for pro wrestling.