WWE’s 2025 Money in the Bank Premium Live Event delivered plenty of chaos, but nothing hit harder than the moment Jacob Fatu turned on Solo Sikoa in front of a stunned crowd at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood, California.

As the Men’s Money in the Bank ladder match reached its chaotic peak—with ladders flying, bodies crashing, and the Fireball-branded rungs getting their moment in the spotlight—Solo Sikoa looked poised to claim the briefcase. With Paul Heyman smirking at ringside, Jacob Fatu appeared to be his backup. But what happened next rocked the Bloodline story to its core.

Fatu stopped Solo dead in his tracks as he climbed the ladder. “I HATE YOU!” Fatu shouted before launching a brutal assault on the man who had once been positioned as the next Tribal Chief.

The crowd erupted as Fatu took out Solo with a series of brutal shots, topped off by a moonsault that had the entire arena on its feet. Then he sent Solo crashing through the ladder bridge at ringside, a moment that instantly set the internet ablaze and possibly split the Bloodline even further apart.

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Before the betrayal, the match had been a war zone. LA Knight, Penta, Andrade, El Grande Americano, and Seth Rollins all battled it out alongside Solo. There were multiple near-grabs for the briefcase and massive ladder spots—including a Mexican Destroyer on a ladder, an ankle lock atop a Fireball ladder, and El Grande Americano using a steel plate hidden in his mask to launch headbutts.

The interference began when Bron Breakker and Bronson Reed stormed the ring, targeting Knight and Andrade. But their beatdown was stopped cold when Fatu and JC Mateo emerged. What looked like a reinforcement play for Solo turned into a personal vendetta as Fatu made it clear his allegiance had changed.

Seth Rollins capitalized on the chaos, climbing the Fireball ladder to win his second Money in the Bank briefcase and closing the night with gold in his grasp—but the real story wasn’t the victory. It was the betrayal.

Jacob Fatu’s turn on Solo Sikoa could be the moment that shatters what’s left of the Bloodline’s foundation.

Do you think Jacob Fatu was right to turn on Solo Sikoa—or is this going to backfire? Drop your take in the comments below.

Steve Carrier is the founder of Ringside News and has been reporting on pro wrestling since 1997. His stories have been featured on TMZ, Forbes, Bleacher Report, and more.

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