John Cena has opened up about the reasoning behind holding his WWE retirement match in December rather than on the grand stage of WrestleMania.
Speaking on the No-Contest Wrestling podcast, Cena detailed the business logic behind the move and why he believed the end of the year was the right call.
“I’ll tell you why I specifically chose December to retire.
There’s not a lot of stuff going on in December in the WWE calendar. Survivor Series is the last big one, and then everyone waits for the Rumble. December is like a month in limbo. They’ve never really been able to crack that code.
And with people on holiday, until the holiday season is over , until like the 26th , tickets are tough to sell because people are spending on holiday presents. So it’s weak for viewership. It’s weak for live attendance. And the fans are like, ‘Wait till January. That’s when the road to WrestleMania starts.’”
Rather than looking at WrestleMania as the automatic farewell stage, Cena saw an opportunity to strengthen what he described as WWE’s softest period of the year.
“When I presented this idea to Nick Khan and Triple H, they were awesome.
Who do you want to work with? What event do you want to retire at?
I simply said, ‘Hunter, who I want to work with is up to you. That’s your department. I’ve never been that guy. I don’t want to take this last year and change who I am.’”
Cena emphasized that his focus was on business rather than personal glory.
“Nick, from a business perspective, the data I’ve gathered over 23 years of doing business says December is soft. WrestleMania is going to sell itself. So retiring at WrestleMania is selfish. It doesn’t do anything for the business.
We retire in December , our weakest month , and we take the middle of December, the dry zone, that desert from the end of Survivor Series to the beginning of the Rumble. We put it right in the middle of December because I know once you do the holiday tour, the houses will come back. You guys will make money. Let’s show a profit in Q4.”
He also made it clear that location was not a factor in his decision.
“You can put it in whatever arena you want. It doesn’t matter. I have no affiliation with any geography. Let’s get ourselves in the best position to have the best December we can, because I feel this is an event people will pay to see.
And sure enough, it worked.
But that was my thought process. Selfishly, do you want to be the last match at WrestleMania? Sure. But the event sells itself, and in doing so, you get the trickle-down economics of, like, okay, now we’ve got a freebie in December.”
According to Cena, while the emotional pull of closing out WrestleMania was strong, the bigger picture mattered more. In the end, the December send-off achieved exactly what he hoped it would, giving WWE a much-needed boost during a historically slower stretch of the calendar.

Posted in
Tags: 