Jeff Jarrett Calls Newly-Signed AEW Star ‘The LeBron James Of Lucha Libre’

Mistico is one of the biggest draws in lucha libre and CMLL, and it was revealed the 28-year in-ring veteran officially became “All Elite” after he won the AEW World Trios Championships alongside “Speedball” Mikey Bailey and Kevin Knight at Revolution. One of the most recognizable names all across Mexico, Mistico had worked in AEW a few times prior to his signing. Fellow AEW star Jeff Jarrett said on an episode of his “My World” podcast that he’d compare the lucha megastar to an iconic NBA star.

“Mistico is of [cultural] significance in multiple ways, but just think of him as the LeBron James of lucha libre,” Jarrett said. “I mean, you go back to Mil Mascaras or El Santo, also want to put our man Konnan there… Mistico, with the athleticism that goes in today’s professional wrestling, he did this 20 years ago and his character is, man. His theme song, his entrance song, is different… It’s a ballad almost, if you will. He’s a unique character, at the tip top.”

Jarrett commended the partnership between AEW and CMLL. In recent months, stars on both sides, such as Persephone, Claudio Castagnoli, Hechicero, and Mascara Dorada, have signed dual contracts. Jarrett said he believes Mistico and AEW’s relationship will be a healthy one.

“CMLL is not really seen out of Mexico, broadly, so to speak, so, he’s getting on a platform at this stage of his career to be seen on ITV,” he said. “To be seen on HBO Max. To be seen all over the world… I’m happy for the guy, personally, on several levels, because at the end of the day, it’s all about feeding your family.”

If you use any quotes from this article, please credit ” My World with Jeff Jarrett” and provide a h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription.

Former WWE & TNA Producer David Sahadi Reflects on Helping Create the Promos that Gave Edge “You Think You Know Me” and Steve Austin’s Breaking Glass

Show: Wrestling Epicenter
Guest: David Sahadi
Date: 03/23/2026
Yor Host: James WalshDavid Sahadi: “Here’s one for you. And, this is not in the book! But, it was some of my best work… Some of my most creative work. Adam Copeland… Edge! When Edge was going to debut, they wanted me to do his vignette. What they wanted was him, with candle lights, reading poetry kind of in a Jim Morrison style. We did it in my apartment in New York City… I didn’t feel it at all. Like, not at all, James. He didn’t have the kind of voice to where he seemed like a wordsmith. He didn’t come off like a Jim Morrison type character, he was almost too good looking. We had the candle light, and I just didn’t feel it. So, I was like, the old expression, lets make chicken salad out of chicken shit kind of thing. So, I was like, “Lets go and film you outside.” It was cold out. So, I gave him my long leather trenchcoat. He was taller than me, though. So, if you see it, it kind of jsut goes down to his knees. (laughs) Anyway, we filmed him, mostly from behind, coming out of the subway and presented it like he was this mysterious guy. And, I was cutting this together and trying to use his poetry voice lines and I said, “F that” and got this female voice artist and I forget the exact line, it was like, “Do you really know me” or something like that. So, you didn’t hear him speak, you had that extra level of mystery. If you had heard him speak, him reading poetry, I don’t think his character would have ever really taken off. It might have been dead on arrival! But, that was one of the best work of my career, of my early career especially. I was using the V roll, had a female voice over and the voice over didn’t say very much… I kept it up to interperetation to keep the mystique. I don’t see that very much anymore as well. It is almost like it is the same “cut and paste” formula for the past 15 years.”
James Walsh (interviewer): “You think you know me!”
David Sahadi: “Yes! That’s it! Man, just as you said it, I saw the video package with the blue and red lights… Mostly blue! Yes!””It was during a World Series game in 1996 and I remember I was mad because I’m a Yankees fan. We lost that game so it didn’t matter. But, Austin came in and myself and Chris shot him doing a promo and it was horrible. I mean, it was horrible, James. After about 15 minutes, we said, “Steve, could you give us a few minutes?” Chris said to me, “We should have written something for him.” I was like, “I know!” So, we started writing stuff for him right there on the spot. So we wrote down, “Bret Hart, pink tights and sparklers.” And, we said, “Stone Cold, say his name 3 times.” “Bret Hart! BRET HART! BRET Hart! Pink tights and sparklers! Pink tights and sparklers! Pink tights and sparklers. What a load of shit!” We recorded him 3 times, 3 takes of each line, and we overlapped them. We didn’t want to do a bunch of different shots but it became a bunch of different shots because we shot the lines 3 times and overlapped and we mixed it in with some footage of some Doverman Pinchers (dogs) that we stole froma video game… It was over 20 years ago so I don’t think we can get sued for it now. But, if we do, I don’t care. They have very good lawyers, they make a lot of money, and they cut up my dad’s legends check. So, forget about them. (laughs) Anyway, it aired and Steve Austin was like, “Oh my God, this is great! I don’t remember the dogs even being there!” We were like, “There weren’t any dogs there. We got that from a video game.” And, if you didn’t finish a case of Cores Light during the shoot you might remember the dogs. (laughs) I didn’t say that… I was thinking it, though! Anyway, those one liners mixed with Jim Johnston’s music and adding the glass breaking which became part of his theme song, I think that promo made Steve Austin a better performer behind the microphone. I really do.””Emotion is the word that Vince always used about the matches but I tried to get emotion into everything I did. One of the commercials I did that I like was the one where Brock Lesnar F5’s the shark, it was a Summerslam commercial. A lot of the commercials now run down the card but they don’t really appeal to the casual fan. But, something like the Brock commercial could appeal to the casual fan who might not know much about the show but be intrigued by the spot.””I knew we could be a very viable alternative to them especially in 2009 because we were doing 1.5, 2 million viewers every week with guys like AJ Styles, Samoa Joe, Kurt Angle, and others every week. I think that was, number wise, when we had the best chance to be a viable number two. In 2010 when we tried to restart the Monday Night Wars and put Impact on Monday against RAW, I knew it wouldn’t work. The reason I knew it wouldn’t work is because if you put the shows side by side, the WWE was still in major NBA basketball arenas and we were in front of 500, 600 people on a sound stage. Even though we had stars, and Hulk Hogan had come in and that carried a lot of weight to it, if you put the shows side by side you could tell that one company had a much larger crowd than the other.””I think creatively, 2012 was our best time period. That doesn’t mean we were doing the best numbers. That doesn’t mean we had the biggest crowds or that we were drawing the most money. But, the whole show in 2012, being live every week, I think that was our best time in TNA.””I still have a lot of friends that work at TNA but I was very disappointed. It looked bad. And, it was not set up right. The show is called Total Nonstop Action and they started with a video, then they had AJ Styles come out and introduce the show which was nice but they kind of let peple know that AJ was going to be there so it wasn’t as big of a surprise… Then, they did another video. There wasn’t enough action for the new audience they could have reached. And, it looked small. I really believe they used a 14 foot ring. I was told it was a 16 foot ring but to me, it looked like it was probably really only a 14 foot ring. It is a shame. As I said, I have a lot of friends that still work there and I spent a lot of years there but the way the debut show looked? I didn’t like it.”

The Bella Twins Fire Back At ‘Toxic Fanbase’ Claim With Strong Response

The Bella Twins Fire Back At ‘Toxic Fanbase’ Claim With Strong Response

The Bella Twins aren’t letting criticism of their fanbase slide.

After a post on X from @TitoSanTanaChez labeled the Bella Army as “the most toxic fan base” in WWE, the official Bella Twins account fired back with a passionate defense of their supporters, flipping the narrative and standing firmly behind their community.

Rather than backing down, the response doubled down on what the Bella Army represents, pushing back against the accusation and calling out negativity in the process.

“lol always the evil ones trying to make the light workers look ‘toxic’ If you truly took a second from your hateful headspace you would realize how beautiful the Bella Army is, how much these people are there for each other, especially against bullies worldwide. Why we are one of the biggest and greatest fandoms…. Ever. Because we spread love, light and truth. Many prayers to you my friend. 🙏🏼✨🤍 PS Leave my Bella Army alone. 💋🫶🏼”

The message made it clear that Nikki and Brie’s fanbase isn’t just loyal, it’s something they’re fiercely protective of, especially when it comes under fire online.

OVW Introduces New Safety Protocols Following Dallas Edwards Incident

OVW is moving fast to address safety concerns following the scary in-ring incident involving referee Dallas Edwards.

After the March 12 OVW Rise match where Edwards suffered a concussion and brain bleed, the company faced backlash over the delayed stoppage. Now, they’ve responded with a sweeping overhaul of safety protocols, announced on March 23, 2026, with a clear message that this is only the beginning.

“THESE IMMEDIATE PROTOCOLS MARK THE START OF OVW’S STRENGTHENED, ONGOING COMMITMENT TO THE HEALTH AND SAFETY OF OUR TALENT AND EVERYONE INVOLVED.”

OVW made it clear this is not a quick fix but an evolving system. A major addition is medical training, including seizure recognition and response, directly tied to situations like the Edwards incident.

“THIS IS A LIVING, EVOLVING EFFORT THAT WILL GROW AS NEW BEST PRACTICES, TRAINING AND INDUSTRY STANDARDS EMERGE. OUR FOCUS IS LONG TERM WELLBEING FOR OUR TALENT, CREW AND FANS.

In partnership with the Epilepsy Foundation of Kentuckiana, OVW will host an April Seizure First Aid Certification Program for talent and staff.”

The company also detailed what that training includes, alongside new concussion and CTE education, a key move given the severity of Edwards’ injury.

“This training covers how to recognize different types of seizures, understand their impact, and respond with safe, appropriate first aid. Participants receive a two year certification. In partnership with Chris Nowinski, PhD, Co Founder and CEO of the Concussion & CTE Foundation, OVW will host an April Concussion Safety & CTE Prevention Training for talent and staff.”

These updates are being built into the system long term, with OVW confirming the training will become part of how new talent is developed. Medical coverage is also being strengthened, with more trained personnel set for larger events.

“This training will be added to the OVW Academy beginner syllabus moving forward. Through our partnership with Norton Healthcare, OVW will deploy additional trained medical staff at larger events on a case by case basis.”

Emergency preparedness is also being addressed, ensuring talent and staff are better equipped to act quickly in critical moments.

“Norton Healthcare will also provide CPR training for talent, staff, and contractors. In addition to referees and ring announcers being equipped with IFB in ear monitoring devices, our ringside timekeeper will now have a headset for fast, direct communication with the Director. This allows for immediate decisions to stop a match and check on the talent.”

The changes come after a key issue was exposed. When the referee went down, the usual communication chain broke, leading to delays in stopping the match. OVW has now reworked that system to avoid a repeat scenario.

Anthony Ogogo Reveals Scrapped Plans For Inner Circle And Blackpool Combat Club

Anthony Ogogo has revealed he nearly landed in two of AEW’s biggest factions before plans changed.

Speaking with ITR Wrestling, the former Olympic boxer said he was originally lined up to join Chris Jericho’s Inner Circle as a bodyguard, with Tony Khan keen for him to learn under Jericho. However, the role ultimately went in a different direction, with Jake Hager taking that spot instead.

“I was supposed to be Jericho’s bodyguard, part of his Inner Circle group. That was supposed to be me,” Ogogo said. “Tony Khan wanted me to work with Jericho and learn from him.”

Despite that not materialising, Ogogo praised Jericho’s mentorship behind the scenes.

“He was the learning tree, especially early on. I’d always ask questions and he’d give feedback, watch my matches and tell me what to do and what not to do. He knows how to get over, so I learned a lot from him.”

Ogogo debuted in AEW in 2021 after training with Cody Rhodes, QT Marshall and Dustin Rhodes, but revealed another major faction opportunity also slipped away.

He said he was being prepared to join what would become the Blackpool Combat Club, working closely with Bryan Danielson and William Regal before the group was officially formed.

“I was being groomed to join the Blackpool Combat Club before it became the Blackpool Combat Club, but it never really materialised,” he explained. “I trained with Danielson and Regal and put in all that work.”

Ogogo credited Regal for teaching him a traditional British wrestling style, while Danielson helped him understand how to truly connect with an audience.

“Regal taught me that old school British, tough big man style. Just because I wrestle strong doesn’t mean I can’t do the intricate stuff, it just hasn’t been needed yet.”

“He taught me so much, not just wrestling but how to get over. When something transcends outside wrestling, you know that person understands it. He’s a tremendous guy.”

Now 37, Ogogo recently returned to action at ROH TV tapings in Jacksonville, marking his first match since November and his first appearance for a Khan-owned promotion since August 2024.