Home » Show Description » Wrestling Mayhem Show 981: AEW’s First Women’s Blood & Guts + Cena Retirement Plans
Wrestling Mayhem Show 981: AEW’s First Women’s Blood & Guts + Cena Retirement Plans
Hosts Sorg and Dave Podnar tag in with Intern Tony on the couch for a fast, funny, and surprisingly heartfelt tour through a packed wrestling week—WWE title shake-ups, AEW’s looming chaos, indie goodness, and some wholesome community wins.
Quick-hit topics & news (bulleted for easy skim)
- Saturday Night’s Main Event shake-ups
- CM Punk becomes champion—first WWE title run since returning, uniquely holding both the “old” and “new” versions of the top belt; likely heading toward a feud with “the Vision” heading into Survivor Series.
- Jade Cargill dethrones Tiffany Stratton—panel debates whether the squash was the right call; consensus that Jade’s ready for the spot, while Tiffany’s reign suffered from thin SmackDown rotation and repetitive challengers.
- Fan alignment & presentation—Tiffany’s character drift (heel vibes, babyface reactions) vs. current audiences preferring substance and distinct personas (e.g., why Rhea connects).
- Roster curveballs—Naomi’s pregnancy and Bianca Belair’s lingering finger injury change plans; discussion on how those realities reshuffle women’s division momentum.
- Logan Paul’s involvement—tease opposite Punk; chatter about his heat and the brass-knucks/Heyman moment.
- John Cena’s “final match” tournament + who should face him
- Bracket talk (Nakamura vs. Sheamus; Damian Priest vs. “Rusev”), schedule notes, and a venue/date reality check (D.C. show; Saturday Night’s Main Event living on Peacock, not NBC).
- Dream/fit picks if WWE opens doors: names floated included Joe Hendry, Carmelo Hayes, Matt Cardona, Nick Nemeth, AJ Francis—with strong support for using the moment to elevate a next-gen star.
- WarGames fantasy-book—Cena leading a wild “last ride” unit; nostalgia love for chaotic Survivor Series-style mashups.
- AEW: Blood & Guts locked in
- First-ever women’s Blood & Guts—names discussed included Jamie Hayter, Queen Aminata, Willow Nightingale, Harley Cameron, Toni Storm, Kris Statlander (stacked, with proven brawlers and daredevils).
- Men’s side—Orange Cassidy, Kyle O’Reilly, Mark Briscoe, Roderick Strong, Darby Allin vs. Moxley, Claudio, Wheeler Yuta, Daniel Garcia, PAC; expectations: bloody TV mayhem (how far can they push TV-14?).
- TNT/TBS lineage banter (why the belts are named that way) and where/ how fans actually watch Dynamite/Collision now.
- WWE vs AEW creative pulse
- WWE’s stories feel less tight post-Bloodline peak—injuries/absences + occasional stunt-booking to counterprogram AEW; still above-average TV, but more “skip-able” segments creeping in.
- AEW’s Collision praised as a “B-show” delivering strong in-ring matchups and sicko-approved main events.
- Indies, community, & plugs
- Pittsburgh Community Food Bank drive tied to 880 Wrestling: 307 lbs donated opening night; ongoing weekly collections through the holidays (plus Penn Brewery shows, including Thanksgiving Eve). Be the helper.
- IndyWrestling.us network updates: VCW’s Victory Rumble coming up; Neo Pro news soon; Crash (Crash Jackson) joining Top Rope Tabletop; “Fast and the Spookiest” (Fast & Furious-inspired one-shot) now out; Lumberjack Pillow Deathmatch posted—so many feathers.
- Local stop at Droppage Games (Castle Shannon) and Extra Life shoutouts.
- Homework assignments
- Classic WarGames: Sting Squadron vs. Dangerous Alliance (’92 WrestleWar) set as must-watch.
- Survivor Series vintage 4-on-4/5-on-5 chaos + a Trick or Street Fight revisit when Matt returns.
“What We Learned” (listener-friendly segment recap)
- Intern Tony: Christian Robinson (880 Wrestling) is “the future”—blew the room up versus MV Young with springy, precise athleticism and gasp-worthy superkicks; immediate watch-list guy.
- T-POP (chat): Mexico’s passion was on full display with AAA’s Día de Muertos parade flair; also hyped an 880 double-title clash (Fourth Line vs. Psychedelic Dreams).
- Dave Podnar: Wrestlers love Halloween—from couple cosplay (Gomez/Morticia), to CM Punk & AJ’s Destro/Baroness, to Scarlett’s Mystique—the fits went hard.
- Sorg: Production note—why WWE runs a third ringside cam: tried a similar angle at 880 and the extra post-corner camera paid off in reactions and storytelling; now lobbying to make it standard.