Tonight’s WWE SmackDown, airing March 21, 2025, promises a loaded show live from the Unipol Arena in Bologna, Italy. Jade Cargill makes her in-ring return to face Liv Morgan in a heated grudge match. Braun Strowman and Jacob Fatu collide in a decisive third bout, and Zelina Vega battles Piper Niven as she inches closer to a title opportunity.
The show will also feature a major showdown as Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins, and CM Punk are all scheduled to appear. With tensions running high after Reigns’ shocking return on RAW, fans can expect fireworks. The show kicks off at 8 PM ET, streaming on USA Network and 3PM ET Netflix internationally. Ringside News will provide live, match-by-match updates and highlights all night long. Stay tuned to this page, refresh for real-time results, and sound off in the comments section below!
Your announcers are Joe Tessitore and Wade Barrett.
Joe kicks things off. Jade is seen backstage on the phone. Liv and Raquel walk down some steps. The Bloodline arrives, followed by CM Punk. The crowd starts chanting for Punk.
Randy Orton’s music hits, and the crowd erupts as he makes his way out. Fans sing along to his theme song. Randy Orton enters the ring and strikes his signature poses on the turnbuckles. He then grabs a mic as the crowd keeps loudly singing his theme.
Before Orton can say a word, Kevin Owens’ music hits and he makes his way to the ring. Kevin Owens says he has something important to get off his chest. He admits he was wrong—wrong for attacking Orton and hitting him with the piledriver. He says Cody Rhodes deserved everything that happened to him… and so did Sami. Owens says what really set him off was Orton choosing Cody over him.
Owens says he can forgive Orton for siding with Cody—but only he gets to forgive Orton for that piledriver. He says when he stopped Orton from punting Carmelo Hayes, he wasn’t trying to start a fight—he was trying to protect him from himself. That’s not who Orton is anymore. He’s changed. He’s grown. Owens says it’s time to stop looking back and start looking ahead—to WrestleMania. And he can’t think of a better moment than the two of them teaming up and becoming Tag Team Champions on the biggest stage of them all.
Orton says what he should do right now is drag Owens out of the ring and beat his ass all over the arena. But as much as Owens’ offer is… interesting, he can take that apology and shove it up his ass. Orton tells Owens he can tell himself whatever he needs to in order to sleep at night, but that doesn’t change what happened. Orton says Owens used to be “Fight Owens Fight”… but now he’s just “Bitch Owens Bitch.”
He says he’s actually glad Owens dropped him on his head—because it woke something up. The voices are back. And at WrestleMania in Vegas, he’s going to kick Owens’ head clean off his shoulders.
We get a recap of what went down last week between Drew McIntyre and Damian Priest.
Priest heads up the aisle, trading punches with Drew. Priest lands a forearm, but Nakamura joins in to help McIntyre. They double-team Priest until Jimmy Uso flies in with a plancha onto Drew and Nakamura, breaking things up.
Priest tosses Drew into the ring to officially start the match. Jimmy attacks with punches, kicks, an uppercut, and a few chops. He whips Drew into the corner and charges in, but Drew catches him and launches him with an overhead belly-to-belly suplex. Drew chokes Jimmy on the ropes, then slingshots his throat into the middle rope. Jimmy fights back with a jawbreaker and tags in Nakamura. Nakamura trips Jimmy, pulls him to the floor, and drives him into the announce table before landing a thrust kick.
Back in the ring, Nakamura hits a running knee lift, then an elbow to the back of Jimmy’s neck. He places Jimmy on the top turnbuckle and connects with a running knee to the midsection, earning a near fall. Drew tags in. As Nakamura chokes Jimmy, Drew lands a kick and a stiff chop. He stomps on Jimmy’s hand, then locks in an arm bar with a chin bar. Drew yanks Jimmy down by the hair and knocks Priest off the apron before delivering a deadlift suplex. Jimmy blocks a punch and fires back with punches and chops, but Drew cuts him off with a back elbow for another near fall.
Drew applies a double wrist lock, then drives a knee into Jimmy’s midsection before knocking Priest off the apron again. Jimmy counters with a Samoan Drop, leaving both men down. Nakamura tags in, but Priest still isn’t on the apron for Jimmy to make a tag. Jimmy fights back, has a kick blocked, but nails a dragon whip to buy some space. Priest finally tags in and storms the ring, knocking Drew off the apron with a forearm. He follows with a back elbow to Nakamura, an elbow in the corner, and a big shoulder tackle.
Priest grabs a wrist lock, walks the turnbuckles for Old School, and connects with a crossbody. He sets up for a clothesline, but Nakamura blocks it with a boot and lands a roundhouse kick. Priest fires back with a huge clothesline for a near fall. Jimmy kicks Drew off the apron and follows up with a kick through the ropes, sending Drew crashing into the announce table. But as Jimmy tries to recover, Nakamura knocks him off the apron with a running knee. Priest takes advantage and hits South of Heaven on Nakamura for the three count.
Winners: Jimmy Uso and Damian Priest
After the match, Drew snaps and attacks Priest from behind. He slams Priest’s head into the mat and unleashes a flurry of punches, refusing to let up.
Drew blasts Priest with a Claymore against the ropes, and the crowd joins in, counting down in Italian before the kick lands.
Backstage, Braun Strowman is getting ready when LA Knight walks in. Knight tells him he hopes he knocks Jacob Fatu back to his factory settings and reminds him that The Bloodline always fights in numbers—so he’ll be watching closely. Braun says he can’t wait to get his hands on Fatu, especially since Nick Aldis announced the winner will earn a title shot against LA Knight. That’s his path to WrestleMania.
We then get a recap of last week’s confrontation between Charlotte Flair and Tiffany Stratton. We see Tiffany Stratton and Charlotte Flair on a split screen, both getting ready for what’s to come.
Commercial break.
We’re back, and Tiffany and Charlotte are still shown in split screen, ready for their upcoming face-to-face. Tiffany is asked about her mindset, but Charlotte quickly cuts her off, saying she speaks first. She tells Tiffany she showed a lot — but she only chose to face her out of pity.
Charlotte says Tiffany tried to compare herself to her, like so many others do. But Charlotte makes it clear — she’s not special, she’s the standard. Everyone gets compared to her. Tiffany fires back, saying she’s the one holding the title now. Charlotte quickly reminds her she only got it by cashing in, calling her delusional. She says WrestleMania might be the biggest night of Tiffany’s career, but for Charlotte, it’s just another night. She scoffs, “You think you belong here because you can do a backflip?”
Tiffany reminds Charlotte she used to be one of her biggest supporters—until she saw Charlotte for who she really is. She says Charlotte’s threatened because she’s the one coming to take the throne. Charlotte smirks and says, “I said you were a star… in the making. Is that the speech you wanted?” She says she’s here for real competition, not hype.
Tiffany accuses Charlotte of finding the hottest rising star and doing everything she can to dim their shine. Charlotte snaps back that Tiffany isn’t even the hottest thing on SmackDown, let alone the company. “You’ve always been beneath me, gasping to catch up.”
Tiffany says the fans don’t even want Charlotte back. She still has her whole career ahead of her to surpass Charlotte’s accomplishments. Charlotte replies that Tiffany will be lucky to even still be here at her age. Tiffany closes it with confidence: “Things run on Tiffy Time.”
Braun shoves Fatu into the corner and unloads with punches and a headbutt. He charges in for a splash, but Fatu moves and counters with punches and shoulder strikes. Fatu lands a kick followed by a headbutt, but runs right into a big shoulder tackle from Braun.
Fatu answers with a boot, but Braun responds with a huge back body drop. Braun then clotheslines Fatu over the top rope to the floor. Braun heads outside, throws Fatu back into the ring, and hits a stiff boot to the head. He follows up with a hard Irish whip into the corner. Braun hits a splash in the corner, sending Fatu rolling to the outside. Braun follows and sets up for the Wacky Lap, but Fatu moves, sending Braun crashing into the announce table.
Fatu follows up with a clothesline off the apron, slamming Braun against the announce table. He then slams Braun’s head into the table and slides back in to break the referee’s count. Fatu hits a headbutt and drives Braun’s head into the ring steps. Braun fires back with a punch and sends Fatu into the steps. He follows with some elbow strikes, but Fatu counters with a dropkick to the knees and a clothesline. Fatu keeps the pressure on with a kick and targets Braun’s neck.
Braun tries to fight back with punches, but Fatu lands a thrust kick, a Samoan Drop, and a back senton for a near fall. Fatu then charges in with a running hip attack in the corner. Braun pulls himself up, only for Fatu to hit another corner splash. Braun suddenly bursts out with a big clothesline, leaving both men down.
Braun hammers Fatu with forearms, then lands a big forearm to the chest. He rips off his shirt and sets up for another Wacky Lap. Braun charges and delivers a running shoulder tackle, sending Fatu flying over the announce table. Back in the ring, Braun plants Fatu with a spinebuster. Braun grabs Tama Tonga and drags him into the ring, going for a powerslam—but Solo Sikoa interferes, hitting Braun and causing the disqualification.
Winner: Braun Strowman (by disqualification)
After the bell, Tama stomps on Braun while Fatu yells at Solo for costing him the match. Braun gets back up, shoves Solo down, and throws Tama into the corner. Fatu counters with a back elbow. Suddenly, LA Knight’s music hits and he heads to the ring. He stops Tama in the aisle, then throws punches at both Fatu and Solo. Tama hits Knight from behind, but Fatu misses a shoulder charge. Braun takes out Solo and Tama, then levels Fatu with a forearm. LA Knight follows up by clotheslining Fatu over the top rope to the floor.
Cathy Kelley is backstage with Liv Morgan and Raquel Rodriguez. Cathy asks about what happened last week and why they still seem to have an issue with Jade.
Liv says Jade continues to blame them, even though they didn’t do anything. She figures Jade’s just upset because they beat her friend Bianca to win the tag titles. Liv smirks and says she plans to finish the job tonight.
We’re back and see Jacob Fatu tearing up the backstage area in frustration as Solo Sikoa tries to calm him down. Solo starts to explain, saying, “It looked like…” Fatu cuts him off—“What did it look like?” Solo says he was just trying to help. Fatu fires back, demanding to know who he was trying to help. He makes it clear—he doesn’t want their help.
Vega has a few words for Piper, but Piper shoves her away. Vega responds with a slap. Piper charges, sending Vega into the corner, but misses a splash. Vega slips out of a slam attempt and tries an O’Connor Roll, but Piper holds onto the ropes to block it. Piper goes for an elbow drop, but Vega moves just in time. Vega sends Piper into the turnbuckles and lands a quick kick. She tries for the Code Red, but Piper blocks it and counters an Irish whip. Piper hits a strong shoulder tackle, then drags Vega around and hits another one for good measure.
Vega lands a kick, but Piper launches her to the floor. Vega tries to trip her, then jumps on Piper’s back with a rear naked choke. Piper escapes with a snap mare and follows with a boot to the midsection. Piper heads to the turnbuckles, but Vega pulls her off, sending Piper crashing into the corner. Vega lands some forearms and climbs the turnbuckles for mounted punches, but Piper shoves her off to the apron. Vega kicks her and talks some trash to Chelsea Green and Alba Fyre at ringside—but Piper takes advantage and hits a thunderous uranage.
While Piper distracts the referee, Chelsea Green sneaks in a slap to Vega. Piper follows up with a hard Irish whip into the corner. Vega fights back with forearms and goes for a crossbody, but Piper catches her mid-air and slams her down. Piper covers, but Vega kicks out at two.
Vega fires off more forearms, but Piper shuts her down with another big slam. She kicks Vega in the back, then locks in a Cobra Clutch to wear her down. Vega manages to slip out, avoiding a clothesline and rolling Piper up for a near fall. Piper responds with a powerful shoulder tackle, then sends Vega face-first into the turnbuckles multiple times before going for another pin—Vega kicks out again.
Piper goes back to the Cobra Clutch, grinding Vega down before landing a headbutt and another hard Irish whip. She follows with a forearm and lifts Vega for a slam, but Vega fights out with elbows.
Vega lands a kick and climbs the turnbuckles, but Piper cuts her off with a punch. Piper presses Vega overhead, but Vega counters mid-air into a rear naked choke. Piper slams her into the turnbuckles to break free. Vega follows with an octopus hold that transitions into a sunset flip for a near fall. She kicks Piper and gets another close two-count. Vega stays on the attack with an uppercut and a running double knee strike to Piper’s back in the corner. She climbs up and hits a Meteora for yet another near fall.
Piper escapes a Code Red attempt, but Vega trips her with a drop toe hold into the ropes. Vega goes for a Tiger Feint Kick, but Piper gets to her feet. Vega hits a satellite DDT and knocks Chelsea Green off the apron, then lands the Tiger Feint Kick and stops Alba Fyre from interfering. But just as Vega looks to finish things, Piper crashes into her with a massive crossbody and gets the three-count.
Winner: Piper Niven
Commercial break.
We’re back with a recap of John Cena’s return to Raw, highlighting what he had to say. The video also features Cody Rhodes’ appearance and his interaction with Cena.
It’s official—Randy Orton will face Kevin Owens at WrestleMania.
Cathy Kelley asks Jade Cargill about her upcoming match against Liv Morgan. Jade says Cathy already knows how she feels—Liv wants to test her, and she’s going to show her exactly why that’s a mistake. She adds that once she’s done with Liv, all eyes are on Naomi. Tonight is just a preview of what she’s going to do to her next.
We’re back, and a mysterious smoky video plays once again—revealing the number 4.
Jade catches Liv with a big boot as she charges in. Liv rolls to the floor, and Jade follows, backing Raquel off. Liv grabs Jade from behind, but Jade blocks a punch, lands one of her own, and sends Liv into the ringside barrier. Jade poses confidently on the apron.
Back in the ring, Liv hits a kick, but Jade blocks obLIVion. Liv escapes, Jade misses a boot, and blocks a Codebreaker. Jade then delivers a powerful fallaway slam. Liv, clearly frustrated, heads up the aisle, but Jade follows and blasts her with a forearm. They brawl their way back to the ring.
Liv dodges a corner splash and hits a hip attack. Jade blocks a knee in the corner and answers with a powerbomb for a near fall. Raquel gets on the apron, drawing Jade’s attention. Liv takes advantage with a lungblower and sends Jade to the floor. Liv poses in the ropes with the title belt, but Jade rolls her up for a near fall.
Liv responds with a dropkick for another near fall, then traps Jade in the ropes and chokes her before landing a dropkick to the back and a kick to the chest. Jade fights back with a back elbow and a big boot. She misses a clothesline, and Liv nails a Codebreaker for a close near fall. Liv then applies a reverse chin lock, trying to wear Jade down. Jade tries to break free from the chin lock, but Liv hangs on tight. Jade powers her into the turnbuckles to escape, but as she charges, Liv catches her with a boot.
Liv follows up with a suplex, holds on, and delivers a second—then keeps the grip for a third, hitting the full Three Amigas. She connects with an enzuigiri, but when she goes for obLIVion, Jade counters and nails a German suplex. Jade hits Liv with a series of back elbows, then sends her crashing to the mat. She follows up with a sharp kick, then charges in with a splash in the corner—then hits a second splash for good measure. Jade finishes the sequence with a powerful spinebuster. Jade lifts Liv onto her shoulders and hits an F-5, but Liv manages to kick out at two. Jade sets up for Jaded, but before she can hit it…
Naomi’s music hits, and she makes her way to ringside. Jade turns her attention to Naomi, who quickly drops down to the floor to avoid her. Back in the ring, Liv goes for obLIVion, but Jade blocks it and slams her to the mat. With the referee distracted by Raquel, Naomi takes advantage and hits Jade with the title belt. Liv follows up with obLIVion and covers for the three-count.
Winner: Liv Morgan
After the match, Naomi storms the ring and attacks Jade, unloading with punches and a series of kicks. She sends Jade out of the ring and crashes her into the announce table, standing tall.
Cathy stops Drew McIntyre backstage and asks what’s next between him and Damian Priest.Drew says he’s already explained things clearly—so simple even a five-year-old could get it. He mocks Priest, saying he’ll probably brag about winning a tag match tonight. Drew challenges anyone to point out where he’s wrong, daring them to poke holes in his logic. He calls Priest “as tough as he is stupid” and says he’ll be in London next week. As Drew walks off, he crosses paths with Seth Rollins. Seth chuckles, watching him go.
Montez Ford and Angelo Dawkins make their way to the ring, hyped up and ready for action as the crowd cheers them on. Montez Ford grabs the mic and proudly declares that, for the first time in four years, your new Tag Team Champions are The Street Profits. Dawkins follows up, saying, “It’s about damn time.” He reflects on the past four years, where doubt started to creep in and people questioned them—even questioning themselves. But now, holding the gold, he says it was all worth it.
Montez says they’ll celebrate tonight, but takes a moment to get serious—saying no matter what happens, he can always count on his brother.
Legado del Fantasma’s music hits, and they interrupt. Santos Escobar speaks in Italian to win over the crowd, then tells the Profits that this is a beautiful moment—they finally captured gold. But, he adds, it’s going to end very soon. His familia is pissed, just like the fans, and they’re ready to take those titles.
Pretty Deadly then make their way out. Kit Wilson and Elton Prince throw out a loud “YES BOYS!” before Kit calls out Santos, saying he can run his mouth all night, but they’re the actual number one contenders. Elton tells Legado to take a step back.
Santos fires back, saying they’re not stepping aside. He blames the Profits for believing Pretty Deadly’s lies, which led to this mess. Since the Street Profits never apologized, this has now become their problem. Ford tells Santos that Pretty Deadly already have a title shot, but if Santos and his crew are looking for a fight, they can handle that too. “Let’s get loco, chico.”
Dawkins and Garza kick things off. Garza lands a quick kick and locks in a front face lock, following up with stiff forearms and a loud chop. He keeps the pressure on with more kicks and mocks Montez Ford before choking Dawkins in the corner.
Garza delivers another kick to Dawkins, then goes for an Irish whip, but misses a splash in the corner. Dawkins fires back with punches and lands a solid forearm to turn the tide. Garza lands a kick to Dawkins before Montez Ford tags in and quickly rolls Garza up for a near fall. Ford follows with a rolling splash, picking up another two-count. He connects with a stiff punch, but Garza counters by stomping on Ford’s foot and hitting a sharp chop. Humberto tags in and nails Ford with a forearm to the back. Ford answers with a chop, but Humberto dodges a kick and lands a roundhouse. After a quick tag, Garza and Humberto hit a double faceplant, followed by a double thrust kick.
Garza stays on Ford, kicking him and placing him on the top turnbuckle. He delivers several forearms before hanging Ford in the tree of woe. Humberto tags in and both men take turns kicking Ford in the corner. Garza goes for a splash but misses, and Humberto quickly tags back in. Ford manages to land on his feet and makes the hot tag to Dawkins. Dawkins storms in with clotheslines and a twisting splash in the corner, followed by a spinning round kick. But when he hits the ropes, Garza distracts the referee, allowing Santos Escobar to pull the ropes down, sending Dawkins crashing to the floor. Humberto follows up with a suicide dive.
Back in the ring, Humberto covers Dawkins for a near fall. He then applies an arm wringer and drives an elbow into Dawkins’ arm. Humberto adds chops and forearms before kicking Dawkins in the corner. As the ref’s distracted, Garza chokes and punches Dawkins, and Humberto follows up by choking him on the ropes. Santos adds a cheap shot punch from the outside as the referee remains unaware.
Humberto targets Dawkins’ hamstring with a series of kicks, working over the leg. Angel Garza tags in, and Humberto pulls Dawkins onto the apron. Garza charges with a running kick while Humberto adds a shot to Dawkins’ back. Garza then locks in a butterfly hold, but Dawkins fights back with elbows. Garza stops the momentum with kicks and covers for a near fall.
Humberto tags in again, hits a leapfrog splash, and Garza follows with a well-placed kick. Humberto covers but only gets a near fall. He keeps the pressure on with more kicks and hits a body slam. Humberto follows with a smooth back roll into a moonsault. Garza tags back in and lands a kick to Dawkins’ thigh, then cheap shots Ford with a forearm off the apron before continuing the attack on Dawkins. Dawkins fires back with a forearm. Garza blocks a kick and traps Dawkins in a Gory Special. Humberto tags in and hits a slingshot cutter off the hold for a close near fall.
Humberto whips Dawkins into the corner, but Dawkins responds with a big elbow, then follows up with a flapjack. He crawls over and makes the hot tag to Montez Ford. Ford charges in with a kick and a clothesline to Humberto, then knocks Garza off the apron. He nails Humberto with another clothesline. Humberto sends Ford to the apron, but Ford lands a forearm, climbs to the top rope, and leaps over Humberto. He hits a big spinebuster and covers for a near fall. Ford pulls Humberto into position and climbs the turnbuckles, but Garza cuts him off. Humberto follows up with a kick, and together they set up for a double press slam off the ropes—but Ford twists mid-air and lands on his feet.
Humberto and Garza freeze in shock. Ford quickly blasts Humberto with a forearm, while Dawkins nails Garza with a punch. Ford then grabs Humberto and hits a big superplex, nearly scoring the win with a close near fall. Dawkins tags in, as does Garza. Garza hits a quick dropkick, but Dawkins answers with a powerful spinebuster. He then tosses Humberto over the top rope to the floor.
Santos Escobar jumps on the apron, but Dawkins knocks him off with a punch. Dawkins then launches himself over the ropes with a flip dive onto everyone at ringside. As Dawkins crashes to the floor, Ford tags in and heads up top. He connects with a perfect Seven Star Frog Splash on Garza for the three count.
Winners: Montez Ford and Angelo Dawkins
Right after the match, a vehicle pulls up backstage—and out steps Paul Heyman.
Commercial break.
We’re back and see DIY—Johnny Gargano and Tommaso Ciampa—confronting Pretty Deadly in the stairwell. Kit and Elton remind them that their tag title match is happening next week. Ciampa tells them that despite their past differences, it only made DIY stronger. He says they’ll make sure Pretty Deadly walks out with the titles—on one condition: DIY gets first crack at the gold afterward.
Kit responds with a smirk, asking, “So this is a little you scratch our backs, we scratch yours?” But both Kit and Elton quickly shut it down with a firm, “NO BOY.” Suddenly, the Motor City Machine Guns show up and cut off the tension. They welcome Johnny and Tommaso to the back of the line and let them know—they’re looking to kick their asses.
Next week:
– Pretty Deadly vs. The Street Profits for the Tag Team Titles
– Braun Strowman vs. LA Knight for the United States Title
Back in the arena, Roman Reigns makes his entrance, flanked by Paul Heyman, as the crowd rises to its feet. Paul gives Roman the mic. Roman tells Bologna to acknowledge him. Roman says he loves the crowd and wants to speak his mind. At the Royal Rumble, CM Punk screwed him. Last week at the Garden, he returned the favor. Seth Rollins tried to take him out at the Rumble, so he went after Seth last week. Roman says he’s not in a rush—he came a long way and plans to stay out there for at least 15 or 20 minutes. If anyone wants to confront him, now’s the time.
Seth Rollins’ music hits and he heads to the ring. Seth tells Roman he made a big mistake. He doesn’t get how dangerous CM Punk really is—not just to them, but to the future of the entire industry. Roman should’ve let Seth finish him off when he had the chance. Seth says it’s never been about one of them—it’s always been about both. There’s no Roman without Seth, and no Seth without Roman. They can’t exist in the same space for long. Their story isn’t over, and it’s time to write the next chapter. Seth begins unbuttoning his jacket…
CM Punk’s music hits, and he walks down to the ring. Punk says his right hand isn’t taped up to hold a mic—it’s taped to fight. Before things get out of control, he lays down the facts. He calls out Roman and Seth, saying neither of them has ever beaten him one-on-one. Punk reminds Roman that the Royal Rumble is every man for himself—and he wouldn’t have even made it there if Punk hadn’t saved his family at WarGames. He then reminds Paul Heyman about the favor and thanks him for serving up the Tribal Chief on a silver platter.
Roman steps forward, wanting to know what Punk means. Punk cracks Roman with the mic and follows up with punches. Seth jumps in and attacks Punk, but Roman grabs Seth and throws him into the turnbuckles. Roman starts unloading on Punk, then Seth hits Roman with a big splash. He pulls Roman off Punk and swings at him again. Roman fights back with a side headlock and drives his shoulder into Seth in the corner. Punk fires back with punches, and Seth joins in again.
Roman takes down Punk, but Seth hits Roman with punches—then gets in a shot at Punk too. Security, referees, and officials rush the ring to break up the chaos. Punk climbs onto the announce table, yells that he’s the best in the world, and points to the WrestleMania sign.
Meanwhile, Seth and Roman keep brawling in the ring. Seth lands punches, but Punk pulls Roman outside and the two trade blows. Seth dives through the ropes, wiping everyone out on the floor. Seth points to the WrestleMania sign. Punk yanks him off the apron. Roman grabs the steel steps and smashes Punk with them—then does the same to Seth. Not wanting to be left out, Roman looks up… and points to the WrestleMania sign.
Looks like we’ve got ourselves a match. Roman throws another punch at Seth as the credits roll, with Punk trying to get back into the fight.