Welp, WWE did it again. And by that I mean two things. The first "it" is, they presented one of the best WrestleMania shows of all time on Night 1, a lean seven-match lineup capped off by two stellar title bouts. The second "it" is, they snatched a stupid and unnecessary defeat from the jaws of total victory by porking the ending of Night 2. And then at the post-show press conference they tried to rationalize it with a bunch of word salad.
It's really a shame WWE can't be counted on to just deliver a layup, like ever. They were handed an all-time great main event story that by all rights should've culminated in a triumphant title win for the returning hero. Ya know, like they did in 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2014, and 2019? There's a reason this story gets told a lot - it works. Basically every single time. Wrestling has always been about telling logical and usually predictable stories that build to a satisfying payoff. Know what doesn't work? Having the hero come up short and look like a cuckhold on the biggest stage of them all. Who wants to cheer for a guy who can't deliver in the clutch? Cody Rhodes had a chance to become the next John Cena and instead he left SoFi Stadium looking like the next Lex Luger.
And yes, I know they dragged Cody's "story" out another full year and it finally paid off at 'Mania 40, which drew record numbers, yadda yadda yadda. But considering how uninspired Cody's first title run was after that and how few credible challengers they had lined up for him, I'm standing by my original assessment - Cody should've won here. He'd have gone on to have a marquee WWE Title feud with Brock Lesnar, the company wouldn't have had to create a secondary World Title to make up for the fact that Roman was absent for months at a time, and the Bloodline saga could've reached its logical conclusion in 2023, with Roman losing his marbles after dropping the title. You're just not going to convince me the story we ended up with was better.
Triple H proceeded to twist himself into logic pretzels at the media scrum, saying stuff like "This is just a chapter, there's more to the story." Where? What more? Since when is WrestleMania "just a chapter," WrestleMania is supposed to be the climax. "RAW the next night continues the story." You don't expect us to believe you consider having Cody show up on RAW cutting a tearful, mopey "I failed" promo more compelling than his showing up with the belts on his shoulders, giving an impassioned victory speech before a new challenger emerges. This was just another case of them punting the ball until they came up with something else. WWE had a golden opportunity to have a new made man, and they once again ignored it, in the most unimaginative way possible.











































