Rob Van Dam Recalls Sid Eudy’s ECW Run: ‘He Gave Us A Lot Of Credibility’

Earlier this week, Paul “Triple H” Levesque announced that Sid Eudy (AKA Sycho Sid and Sid Justice) will be inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame this year as part of the Legacy wing. Coincidentally, before that announcement took place, Rob Van Dam was asked to comment on Eudy’s ECW participation during a YouTube livestream.

“I was just happy that Sid was in our company,” Van Dam said. “I thought that it gave us a lot of credibility. I thought he was a great monster heel. He looked great. I was a fan and I thought he was really good for ECW.”

Eudy wrestled just a handful of matches in ECW, all during the first half of 1999. After that, Eudy returned to WCW, where he remained until the company’s closure two years later. Although Van Dam did not work any matches with Eudy during his ECW tenure, the WWE Hall of Famer does believe the two of them once smoked marijuana together.

Rob Van Dam vs. Sid Eudy falls through

Van Dam also recalled a scheduled independent match between himself and Eudy in the United Kingdom years later. Sadly, the match fell through, and the two never wound up sharing the ring before Eudy hung up his boots.

“I was thinking I could have a great match with him,” Van Dam continued. “I was really looking forward to it, but he wasn’t. And I was trying to talk him into looking forward to it, and he was saying on the bus, ‘I don’t know, man. I don’t know if I’m in shape to go with you.’ He was intimidated to actually wrestle me, or thought that wrestling me, I was gonna have to have tables, ladders, and chairs, … which is ridiculous.”

Eudy passed away in 2024 at 63 years old after a battle with cancer. As a member of the WWE Hall of Fame’s 2026 class, Eudy will be joined by Stephanie McMahon, AJ Styles, and the tag team Demolition.

If you use any of the quotes in this article, please credit Rob Van Dam and provide a h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription.

ESPN Motions To Compel Arbitration In WWE PLE Suit

ESPN, the home of WWE’s premium live events (PLEs) since September of 2025, is now entering the court ring. According to Brandon Thurston, who first reported this on his X account [formerly known as Twitter] on Friday, said the sports network filed a memorandum, asking the court to let them intervene in this class-action lawsuit that was first filed in January.

To summarize, in January, two consumers accused WWE of deceptive marketing, as it was advertised that ESPN subscribers would receive access to the PLEs without additional fees. When filed by the plaintiffs, WWE was named as the defendant, but not ESPN, which Thurston noted in his post: “Plaintiffs did not name ESPN as a defendant, apparently to get around the arbitration clause in the subscriber agreement.” That said, ESPN is asking the court to move the lawsuit to arbitration.

When WWE’s Wrestlepalooza premiered on ESPN last fall, ESPN stated back then that it expected to sign deals with all cable and streaming providers (with a working partnership) to obtain ESPN Unlimited at no additional cost eventually. But, as many have witnessed up until now, that is not the case, as consumers without a television or streaming platform provider linked to ESPN Unlimited must pay $30 a month for the subscription.

As of this writing, there is still an open window for representation, as the plaintiffs in this matter are willing to help other customers affected by this misleading marketing. The caveat is that you must have been an existing ESPN subscriber between August 6 and prior to Wrestlepalooza on September 20, and or those who paid for the service during that timeframe. Those who do not apply to this lawsuit are those who are or were subscribed to Hulu + Live, Spectrum, Verizon FIOS, DirectTV, and Fubo TV, as customers with these subscriptions were able to access the service for free during that time.

AEW’s Josh Alexander Reveals He Has To Undergo Surgery Following Injury

“The Walking Weapon” Josh Alexander is the latest AEW star to be struck down by the injury bug. Alexander was taken out of the March 22 episode of “AEW Collision” where he, El Clon, and Konosuke Takeshita challenged Mistico and JetSpeed for the AEW World Trios Championships, which resulted in The Don Callis Family walking out without the titles around their waist. Not much has been said about Alexander’s injury as far as severity is concerned, but the man himself has taken to his X (formerly known as Twitter) account to frustratingly announce that the knee injury is worse than first feared, and that he will be undergoing surgery in the coming days.

“Last week on AEW Collision, I suffered an injury, and when you suffer injuries you don’t know how severe they are. I just found out minutes ago how serious this was. I know I’ve been limping and been in pain for a week but yeah, my surgeon told me that I’m going to need surgery this coming Wednesday, my injury is pretty severe. So I will not be cleared to compete and there’s no timetable set for when I will be back…”

Alexander went on to say that a lot of things went through his head such as his wrestling career, his AEW career, and especially his Canadian Heavyweight Championship he currently holds in Maple Leaf Pro Wrestling. Alexander confirmed that he will not be able to defend the title anytime soon, which has since been addressed by MLP as the promotion has confirmed that an Interim MLP Canadian Heavyweight Champion will be crowned at the upcoming “Uprising” event on March 28, a show Alexander was supposed to be a part of.

The former TNA World Champion isn’t the only Don Callis Family member currently on the sidelines as Jake Doyle tore his biceps on an episode of “AEW Dynamite” back in January, while Brian Cage has missed more than a year of action after undergoing several knee surgeries.

Complete WNS Feedback Form For Chance To Win WrestleMania 42 Side Plates!

Posted By: Ben Kerin on Mar 28, 2026 Complete WNS Feedback Form For Chance To Win WrestleMania 42 Side Plates!

As WrestlingNewsSource.com (WNS) moves closer to its 20th anniversary online in August 2026, the past year has quietly marked one of the most significant periods of change in the site’s history.

WIN WIN WIN!As part of this evolution, WNS also wants to hear directly from you. Is everything working to your satisfaction, and are there new features you would like to see introduced. Your feedback is vital in shaping what comes next. If you have ideas, suggestions, or notice something that is not working as expected, let us know and we will make it right. By entering and completing the feedback form, you will also be in with a chance to win WrestleMania side plates from WWE Shop, with the winner to be contacted over WrestleMania weekend on 18/19th April 2026!

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AJ Styles Looks Back On WWE’s ThunderDome: ‘It Was Absolutely Terrible’

It’s now been nearly six years since the COVID-19 pandemic put the world on lockdown for over a year, with the notable exception of pro wrestling. Throughout the pandemic, both AEW and WWE continued to run shows in the United States, with AEW basing themselves out of Daily’s Place in Jacksonville, Florida while WWE rotated between their Performance Center and three separate locations used for the WWE ThunderDome.

While AEW eventually let in limited numbers of fans socially distanced from each other, WWE elected to go with virtual attendance for the ThunderDome shows, appearing onscreen via videoconferencing methods, creating one of the more unique viewing experiences in WWE history. Alas, it was an experience that remains polarizing for many who lived it, with some like Bryan Danielson and Sami Zayn loving it, and some hating it, including soon to be WWE Hall of Famer AJ Styles.

On “Phenomenally Retro,” Styles was discussing the importance of wrestlers feeding off the fans to produce a great match when his co-host Tony Giles pondered what would happen if you removed fans entirely. This led to Styles pointing out that was exactly the case during the ThunderDome/COVID era of WWE, and Styles didn’t mince words when describing how unsatisfying that era was for him.

“It was absolutely terrible,” Styles said. “I’ll say this. Fans of pro wrestling, you have no idea how much it hurts when you’re not there, because the energy and the excitement that we get from you is everything. If we don’t have you, it’s just not good to us either. It hurts. I can’t explain why it hurts more than it does when you guys aren’t there. But it does. It’s tough. The COVID era was one of the hardest things, I think, that we had to go through.”

If you use any quotes in this article, please credit “The Phenomenally Retro Podcast” with a h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription