Dave Simon and Johnny North break down one of SmackDown’s worst finishes ever as Jade Cargill’s botched triple threat match exposed WWE’s ongoing creative problems. Plus Crown Jewel predictions, AEW updates, and harsh criticism of Triple H’s predictable booking.
Dave Simon and Johnny North returned to dissect one of the most controversial SmackDown endings in recent memory, while breaking down the newly announced Crown Jewel 2025 card and questioning WWE’s creative direction under Triple H. The latest episode of Wrestling Uncensored provided unfiltered analysis of WWE’s booking decisions, from botched finishes to questionable champion-versus-champion matches, as well as updates on AEW’s roster moves and Edge’s departure from television.
SmackDown’s “Total Debacle” – The Jade Cargill Disaster
“Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, was that the worst finish in SmackDown history?” Dave opened the show with his immediate reaction to what he called a complete breakdown during the Jade Cargill, Nia Jax, and Tiffany Stratton triple threat match.
The chaos began early when Jade mishandled clearing the announce table. “First of all, goes outside the ring, flips the top of the announce table right on Michael Cole and Booker T. They both seem upset. She hit Michael Cole pretty hard with it. I don’t know. What she was thinking, like, why would you do that? You’re supposed to grab it, pull it down, not just throw it on the announce team.”
Things got worse when Jade took an Irish whip into the steel steps head-first, resulting in a deep gash. “You know, Jade Cargill decides to take it headfirst and bust her whole head open,” Dave explained, noting that such spots are typically taken shoulder-first to avoid injury.
The match’s finish completely fell apart when multiple issues co-occurred. Johnny North analyzed what likely happened: “See, I think the way I look at it, that’s where the air kind of comes into play, where I think it was supposed to be a save. Tiffany was supposed to stop the pin. So that way it looks like she kind of steals the win in a sense.”
Dave elaborated on the confusion: “Nia does not kick, does not lift her shoulder. And the referee is like. Doesn’t count three. The crowd is now talking; they’re conversing with one another. There’s a lot of confusion. You could tell with Nia, Tiffany, and the referee.”
The veteran hosts understood how matches can spiral out of control. “Like you talk about, John, you know, as a wrestler, you understand how these things work, you say one thing goes wrong, and sometimes just like everything starts to pile up, and it just snowballs out of control,” Dave observed, crediting Johnny’s in-ring experience for providing that perspective.
Johnny North highlighted the fundamental problem with the match composition: “And I think the problem, too, is you don’t have three strong workers or veteran workers. Yeah. When Nia is the strong veteran worker, they kind of steer the ship, I think you’re in a lot of trouble there.”
Crown Jewel 2025 Australia: Champion vs Champion Confusion
WWE announced three matches for Crown Jewel 2025 in Perth, Australia, including two champion versus champion bouts that left both hosts scratching their heads.
“They’re doing champion versus champion matches, right? At Crown Jewel 2025. I thought they might kind of continue with their regular scheduled stories. But no, they’re switching it up and doing a spot show basically called Crown Jewel in Australia, where they’re making up a ring that apparently we’re supposed to care about,” Dave explained, referencing Cody Rhodes’ Crown Jewel 2024 ring from the previous year.
The announced matches include Cody Rhodes versus Seth Rollins for the men’s Crown Jewel championship ring, and Rhea Ripley versus Tiffany Stratton for the women’s equivalent. Dave expressed his fundamental problem with these types of matches: “I’m not a fan of that. The champion-versus-champion matches don’t really mean anything. And also, you know, just don’t help anybody. Whoever wins doesn’t really gain much from it. And whoever loses is just you could point at them and be like, you’re the lesser champion.”
The booking particularly frustrated Dave, given Seth’s poor record against Cody. “They brought it up on Raw. It was like, hey, Seth Cody was saying this. Hey, what happened last time? What’s your record against me? And it’s like, oh, yeah, it’s 0 and 3. It’s 0 and 3. And now we’re revisiting this. So Seth really should win.”
The hosts noted the awkward 8 AM Eastern start time for the Australian show, which Dave appreciated for catering to the local audience. “Which I appreciate because that’s eight p.m. Australian time. That makes sense. They’re doing a show in Australia.”
AEW Updates: Edge’s Television Break and Roster Moves
The episode addressed recent AEW developments, including Edge’s departure from television following the All Out event. Dave clarified the situation for fans hoping Edge might be John Cena’s final opponent.
“But the word is he’s not going to be John Cena’s last opponent. He’s just going to film some TV show, and he will be back to AEW because his contract is still going for another year or so,” Dave explained, dispelling rumors about Edge potentially returning to WWE.
The hosts discussed how Edge had teased fans at All Out by using John Cena’s moves. “I think people got excited because he did the whole five knuckles shuffle right at all out and the attitude adjustment and the attitude adjustment. And then fans started chanting Cena, Cena, Cena,” Johnny noted.
However, both hosts agreed the timing didn’t make sense for a WWE return. “It’s not that they win the match. They do an angle to bring in, like Edge’s wife. Yeah. And then he’s just going to leave and go back to the WWE, like. Come on,” Johnny reasoned.
Dave also covered recent AEW programming, noting that “Kris Statlander is the women’s world champion. She beat Mina Shirakawa, and they were teasing Stadlander about joining the Moxley gang. But she decided not to in the end.” This led to Darby Allin’s dramatic entrance with a flamethrower to set up his “I Quit” match with Jon Moxley at WrestleDream.
The hosts were less impressed with Hangman Adam Page’s lengthy match against Lee Moriarty. “That match was too long. Who is Lee Moriarty to go that long with the world champion?” Dave questioned, arguing that AEW often gives too much offense to lower-card wrestlers, which could potentially hurt the credibility of their champions.
Cena’s Farewell Magic
John Cena’s Final Run and Potential Opponents
The hosts discussed the ongoing speculation about John Cena’s final opponent, with multiple potential scenarios still in play.
For Crown Jewel, Cena will face AJ Styles, which Johnny praised as a wise booking decision: “What do you think about who can give Cena a good match? I think AJ Styles, if he’s not at the top of the list, I mean, he’s very close to it, I think so.”
However, Dave expressed reservations about potential future opponents, particularly regarding rumors of The Miz wanting another match with Cena: “There’s been talk of the Miz doing another match with Cena, and I really hope they don’t do that because like, that’s a waste.”
Johnny suggested more compelling options: “It’s really against guys I’ve never seen Cena wrestle against, honestly. Like, I’d like to see him against Braun Breaker, him against Gunther.”
The conversation led to speculation about whether The Rock might still be Cena’s final opponent. “Well, I’ll still hold true to the Rock thing because that’s the whole story, the Rock. So I feel like we need some closure with that,” Johnny argued, though he acknowledged The Rock’s reluctance to wrestle on television.
Commentary Team Chaos and WWE’s Identity Crisis
The episode highlighted ongoing issues with WWE’s announce teams, which seem to rotate weekly due to storyline injuries and corporate reshuffling. “I don’t know who the announced teams are on WWE anymore. Like, I don’t know. It seems to be rotating, and Cole and Booker T, like, at the end of the show, Cole’s like, maybe I’ll see you next week. And Booker’s like, because I think they don’t know from week to week what show they’re doing or if they’re going to be there next week together,” Dave observed.
The hosts, in particular, criticized Joe Tessitore’s performance on Raw commentary. “Wade Barrett is not terrible, but Joe Tessitore is terrible. He’s so bad on Raw. He’s not getting better,” Dave stated bluntly, arguing that play-by-play commentators need genuine wrestling knowledge and passion.
“I feel like he is the commentator for Raw and doesn’t watch SmackDown. You know, like I don’t want to hear a guy like that talk about wrestling on a wrestling show, even if it’s a WWE play-by-play guy. I don’t think that guy has any credibility.”
Dave compared this to other sports: “The play-by-play guy for any professional, like high-level sport.He is usually a student of the game.” He cited UFC’s Jon Anik and Yankees broadcaster Michael Kay as examples of commentators who genuinely love and understand their respective sports.
On the positive side, both hosts praised the Michael Cole and Booker T pairing. “I like Cole and Booker. I think they’re the best announced team in the business right now,” Dave declared, while also giving credit to AEW’s Excalibur despite some reservations about his style.
CM Punk and Triple H pointing at each other after Punk’s return to the WWE
Triple H’s Creative Limitations Exposed
Dave delivered his harshest criticism yet of WWE’s creative direction under Triple H, arguing that the company has become predictable and risk-averse.
“Has Triple H had one of those moments since he’s taken over, where you go, they’re doing what now? What? Like Vince would do that regularly. Sometimes it’d be good. Sometimes it’s like, ‘What are they doing?’ But Triple H doesn’t even like to take the risk. He just kind of does ABC, keeps it simple. Paint by numbers.”
The lack of genuine surprises particularly frustrated Dave: “There’s no like. Feeling of anything can happen in the WWE, pal. There are no curveballs. You can see everything coming a mile away. And their swerves that they try to do. Don’t even work.”
He cited examples of WWE thinking they were being clever when the audience saw their moves coming: “The reality, Triple H, is that everybody knew Seth wasn’t hurt. Your whole audience knew it. And you didn’t swerve anybody.”
Dave concluded with a damning assessment: “When I watch WWE, it looks dumb. Because the creative is very like, oh, aren’t you entertained by this? Aren’t you? This isn’t this crazy. And it’s like, no, man, it’s very regular.”
Johnny acknowledged the slow-burn approach: “He’s got to understand Triple H books very slowly. That’s why like things happen very slowly throughout the year. And he builds to these big shows.”
WrestleMania prices are unbelievable.
WrestleMania Ticket Prices: Pricing Out the Fanbase
The hosts addressed the shocking ticket prices for the upcoming WrestleMania, with Dave expressing disbelief at the costs. “Really, not what WWE ticket prices are going to. And the WrestleMania prices are just like. Unbelievable. I’m really not. It’s like over, I think it’s over a thousand bucks just to get in the building for one ticket.”
Dave argued that WWE is alienating its core audience: “They’re pricing their audience out of the business. I don’t know who’s going to these shows, who’s spending this kind of money on these weak ass wrestling shows.”
His frustration with the value proposition was evident: “If you’re going to WrestleMania. And you’re sitting anywhere where you can see the facial expressions on the wrestlers, you’re a sucker. It’s not worth it. It’s not.”
The hosts discussed how the live event business has shifted from first-come, first-served to a highest-bidder mentality. “Let’s sell the tickets to whoever will pay the most,” Dave explained, arguing this creates short-term gains but long-term damage to fan loyalty.
Beyond the main controversies, the hosts covered several other developments:
Raw Highlights
Seth Rollins and Cody Rhodes delivered what Dave called “one of the best opening promos of Raw we’ve seen all this year.”
“I enjoyed it. I like Cody saying, You know, what do you think of you, Seth? I like Seth asking Cody, you know, what do you think of me?”
The show featured a solid six-man tag with The New Day and Grayson Waller against The Viking Raiders and Penta, highlighted by a spectacular finish that Dave described as “nuts.”
Oscar and Karrion Kross turned on Iyo Sky, which Johnny welcomed: “Thank goodness, because all those promo things they did before it all happened were so bad. Yeah. Like, this is the worst angle in all of wrestling.”
SmackDown Notes
Sami Zayn successfully defended the US Championship against NXT’s Je’Von Evans in what Johnny called “easily the best match we saw tonight.”
“He’s not bad. He’s got some nice moves,” Dave said of the 22-year-old Evans.
The show suffered from ongoing injury concerns, with reports that Piper Niven may be dealing with a career-threatening injury.
LA Knight defeated Jey Uso with interference from Bronson Reed, continuing the ongoing storyline tension.s
The Mist Controversy
Dave expressed frustration with the continued use of the mist gimmick in modern wrestling, particularly questioning its logical consistency.
“I don’t know, the mist in twenty twenty five is not my favorite thing. Like, what is it? If it’s safe enough to put in your mouth, how bad is it when it spits on you?” Dave questioned the basic premise.
He compared it unfavorably to AEW’s more realistic approach: “Meanwhile, in AEW, Darby Allin’s got a literal flamethrower. He’s literally lighting people on fire. So that. That makes sense to me.”
“No mist, no more mist,” Dave concluded, arguing that the gimmick makes wrestling look silly to outsiders.
The episode concluded with both hosts expressing frustration at WWE’s current trajectory, with Dave particularly critical of the company’s creative stagnation and Johnny agreeing that the booking lacks the unpredictability that made wrestling compelling.
Listen to the full episode of Wrestling Uncensored on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe for weekly episodes and unfiltered wrestling commentary from Dave Simon and Johnny North.
Channel the intensity of the ring with our Limited Edition Johnny ‘Genesis’ North 3/4 sleeve T-shirt. Crafted for true wrestling enthusiasts, this shirt embodies the legend’s spirit. Secure yours now and wear the legacy of Johnny ‘Genesis’ North. Stocks limited
AEW Edge, Booker T, Cody Rhodes, Crown Jewel Australia, Darby Allin, Hangman Adam Page, Jade Cargill, Joe Tessitore, John Cena retirement, Jon Moxley, Michael Cole, Nia Jax, Rhea Ripley, Seth Rollins, Tiffany Stratton, Triple H creative, WrestleDream, Wrestling Analysis, wrestling commentary, WWE booking, WWE Smackdown
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WWE’s WORST SmackDown Finish Ever! Triple H’s Creative Crisis & Crown Jewel 2025 Disaster
Dave Simon and Johnny North returned to dissect one of the most controversial SmackDown endings in recent memory, while breaking down the newly announced Crown Jewel 2025 card and questioning WWE’s creative direction under Triple H. The latest episode of Wrestling Uncensored provided unfiltered analysis of WWE’s booking decisions, from botched finishes to questionable champion-versus-champion matches, as well as updates on AEW’s roster moves and Edge’s departure from television.
SmackDown’s “Total Debacle” – The Jade Cargill Disaster
“Ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, ooh, was that the worst finish in SmackDown history?” Dave opened the show with his immediate reaction to what he called a complete breakdown during the Jade Cargill, Nia Jax, and Tiffany Stratton triple threat match.
The chaos began early when Jade mishandled clearing the announce table. “First of all, goes outside the ring, flips the top of the announce table right on Michael Cole and Booker T. They both seem upset. She hit Michael Cole pretty hard with it. I don’t know. What she was thinking, like, why would you do that? You’re supposed to grab it, pull it down, not just throw it on the announce team.”
Things got worse when Jade took an Irish whip into the steel steps head-first, resulting in a deep gash. “You know, Jade Cargill decides to take it headfirst and bust her whole head open,” Dave explained, noting that such spots are typically taken shoulder-first to avoid injury.
The match’s finish completely fell apart when multiple issues co-occurred. Johnny North analyzed what likely happened: “See, I think the way I look at it, that’s where the air kind of comes into play, where I think it was supposed to be a save. Tiffany was supposed to stop the pin. So that way it looks like she kind of steals the win in a sense.”
Dave elaborated on the confusion: “Nia does not kick, does not lift her shoulder. And the referee is like. Doesn’t count three. The crowd is now talking; they’re conversing with one another. There’s a lot of confusion. You could tell with Nia, Tiffany, and the referee.”
The veteran hosts understood how matches can spiral out of control. “Like you talk about, John, you know, as a wrestler, you understand how these things work, you say one thing goes wrong, and sometimes just like everything starts to pile up, and it just snowballs out of control,” Dave observed, crediting Johnny’s in-ring experience for providing that perspective.
Johnny North highlighted the fundamental problem with the match composition: “And I think the problem, too, is you don’t have three strong workers or veteran workers. Yeah. When Nia is the strong veteran worker, they kind of steer the ship, I think you’re in a lot of trouble there.”
Crown Jewel 2025 Australia: Champion vs Champion Confusion
WWE announced three matches for Crown Jewel 2025 in Perth, Australia, including two champion versus champion bouts that left both hosts scratching their heads.
“They’re doing champion versus champion matches, right? At Crown Jewel 2025. I thought they might kind of continue with their regular scheduled stories. But no, they’re switching it up and doing a spot show basically called Crown Jewel in Australia, where they’re making up a ring that apparently we’re supposed to care about,” Dave explained, referencing Cody Rhodes’ Crown Jewel 2024 ring from the previous year.
The announced matches include Cody Rhodes versus Seth Rollins for the men’s Crown Jewel championship ring, and Rhea Ripley versus Tiffany Stratton for the women’s equivalent. Dave expressed his fundamental problem with these types of matches: “I’m not a fan of that. The champion-versus-champion matches don’t really mean anything. And also, you know, just don’t help anybody. Whoever wins doesn’t really gain much from it. And whoever loses is just you could point at them and be like, you’re the lesser champion.”
The booking particularly frustrated Dave, given Seth’s poor record against Cody. “They brought it up on Raw. It was like, hey, Seth Cody was saying this. Hey, what happened last time? What’s your record against me? And it’s like, oh, yeah, it’s 0 and 3. It’s 0 and 3. And now we’re revisiting this. So Seth really should win.”
The hosts noted the awkward 8 AM Eastern start time for the Australian show, which Dave appreciated for catering to the local audience. “Which I appreciate because that’s eight p.m. Australian time. That makes sense. They’re doing a show in Australia.”
AEW Updates: Edge’s Television Break and Roster Moves
The episode addressed recent AEW developments, including Edge’s departure from television following the All Out event. Dave clarified the situation for fans hoping Edge might be John Cena’s final opponent.
“But the word is he’s not going to be John Cena’s last opponent. He’s just going to film some TV show, and he will be back to AEW because his contract is still going for another year or so,” Dave explained, dispelling rumors about Edge potentially returning to WWE.
The hosts discussed how Edge had teased fans at All Out by using John Cena’s moves. “I think people got excited because he did the whole five knuckles shuffle right at all out and the attitude adjustment and the attitude adjustment. And then fans started chanting Cena, Cena, Cena,” Johnny noted.
However, both hosts agreed the timing didn’t make sense for a WWE return. “It’s not that they win the match. They do an angle to bring in, like Edge’s wife. Yeah. And then he’s just going to leave and go back to the WWE, like. Come on,” Johnny reasoned.
Dave also covered recent AEW programming, noting that “Kris Statlander is the women’s world champion. She beat Mina Shirakawa, and they were teasing Stadlander about joining the Moxley gang. But she decided not to in the end.” This led to Darby Allin’s dramatic entrance with a flamethrower to set up his “I Quit” match with Jon Moxley at WrestleDream.
The hosts were less impressed with Hangman Adam Page’s lengthy match against Lee Moriarty. “That match was too long. Who is Lee Moriarty to go that long with the world champion?” Dave questioned, arguing that AEW often gives too much offense to lower-card wrestlers, which could potentially hurt the credibility of their champions.
John Cena’s Final Run and Potential Opponents
The hosts discussed the ongoing speculation about John Cena’s final opponent, with multiple potential scenarios still in play.
For Crown Jewel, Cena will face AJ Styles, which Johnny praised as a wise booking decision: “What do you think about who can give Cena a good match? I think AJ Styles, if he’s not at the top of the list, I mean, he’s very close to it, I think so.”
However, Dave expressed reservations about potential future opponents, particularly regarding rumors of The Miz wanting another match with Cena: “There’s been talk of the Miz doing another match with Cena, and I really hope they don’t do that because like, that’s a waste.”
Johnny suggested more compelling options: “It’s really against guys I’ve never seen Cena wrestle against, honestly. Like, I’d like to see him against Braun Breaker, him against Gunther.”
The conversation led to speculation about whether The Rock might still be Cena’s final opponent. “Well, I’ll still hold true to the Rock thing because that’s the whole story, the Rock. So I feel like we need some closure with that,” Johnny argued, though he acknowledged The Rock’s reluctance to wrestle on television.
Commentary Team Chaos and WWE’s Identity Crisis
The episode highlighted ongoing issues with WWE’s announce teams, which seem to rotate weekly due to storyline injuries and corporate reshuffling. “I don’t know who the announced teams are on WWE anymore. Like, I don’t know. It seems to be rotating, and Cole and Booker T, like, at the end of the show, Cole’s like, maybe I’ll see you next week. And Booker’s like, because I think they don’t know from week to week what show they’re doing or if they’re going to be there next week together,” Dave observed.
The hosts, in particular, criticized Joe Tessitore’s performance on Raw commentary. “Wade Barrett is not terrible, but Joe Tessitore is terrible. He’s so bad on Raw. He’s not getting better,” Dave stated bluntly, arguing that play-by-play commentators need genuine wrestling knowledge and passion.
“I feel like he is the commentator for Raw and doesn’t watch SmackDown. You know, like I don’t want to hear a guy like that talk about wrestling on a wrestling show, even if it’s a WWE play-by-play guy. I don’t think that guy has any credibility.”
Dave compared this to other sports: “The play-by-play guy for any professional, like high-level sport. He is usually a student of the game.” He cited UFC’s Jon Anik and Yankees broadcaster Michael Kay as examples of commentators who genuinely love and understand their respective sports.
On the positive side, both hosts praised the Michael Cole and Booker T pairing. “I like Cole and Booker. I think they’re the best announced team in the business right now,” Dave declared, while also giving credit to AEW’s Excalibur despite some reservations about his style.
Triple H’s Creative Limitations Exposed
Dave delivered his harshest criticism yet of WWE’s creative direction under Triple H, arguing that the company has become predictable and risk-averse.
“Has Triple H had one of those moments since he’s taken over, where you go, they’re doing what now? What? Like Vince would do that regularly. Sometimes it’d be good. Sometimes it’s like, ‘What are they doing?’ But Triple H doesn’t even like to take the risk. He just kind of does ABC, keeps it simple. Paint by numbers.”
The lack of genuine surprises particularly frustrated Dave: “There’s no like. Feeling of anything can happen in the WWE, pal. There are no curveballs. You can see everything coming a mile away. And their swerves that they try to do. Don’t even work.”
He cited examples of WWE thinking they were being clever when the audience saw their moves coming: “The reality, Triple H, is that everybody knew Seth wasn’t hurt. Your whole audience knew it. And you didn’t swerve anybody.”
Dave concluded with a damning assessment: “When I watch WWE, it looks dumb. Because the creative is very like, oh, aren’t you entertained by this? Aren’t you? This isn’t this crazy. And it’s like, no, man, it’s very regular.”
Johnny acknowledged the slow-burn approach: “He’s got to understand Triple H books very slowly. That’s why like things happen very slowly throughout the year. And he builds to these big shows.”
WrestleMania Ticket Prices: Pricing Out the Fanbase
The hosts addressed the shocking ticket prices for the upcoming WrestleMania, with Dave expressing disbelief at the costs. “Really, not what WWE ticket prices are going to. And the WrestleMania prices are just like. Unbelievable. I’m really not. It’s like over, I think it’s over a thousand bucks just to get in the building for one ticket.”
Dave argued that WWE is alienating its core audience: “They’re pricing their audience out of the business. I don’t know who’s going to these shows, who’s spending this kind of money on these weak ass wrestling shows.”
His frustration with the value proposition was evident: “If you’re going to WrestleMania. And you’re sitting anywhere where you can see the facial expressions on the wrestlers, you’re a sucker. It’s not worth it. It’s not.”
The hosts discussed how the live event business has shifted from first-come, first-served to a highest-bidder mentality. “Let’s sell the tickets to whoever will pay the most,” Dave explained, arguing this creates short-term gains but long-term damage to fan loyalty.
Raw and SmackDown Roundup
Beyond the main controversies, the hosts covered several other developments:
Raw Highlights
SmackDown Notes
The Mist Controversy
Dave expressed frustration with the continued use of the mist gimmick in modern wrestling, particularly questioning its logical consistency.
“I don’t know, the mist in twenty twenty five is not my favorite thing. Like, what is it? If it’s safe enough to put in your mouth, how bad is it when it spits on you?” Dave questioned the basic premise.
He compared it unfavorably to AEW’s more realistic approach: “Meanwhile, in AEW, Darby Allin’s got a literal flamethrower. He’s literally lighting people on fire. So that. That makes sense to me.”
“No mist, no more mist,” Dave concluded, arguing that the gimmick makes wrestling look silly to outsiders.
The episode concluded with both hosts expressing frustration at WWE’s current trajectory, with Dave particularly critical of the company’s creative stagnation and Johnny agreeing that the booking lacks the unpredictability that made wrestling compelling.
Listen to the full episode of Wrestling Uncensored on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe for weekly episodes and unfiltered wrestling commentary from Dave Simon and Johnny North.
Johnny ‘Genesis’ North 3/4 sleeve T-Shirt
Channel the intensity of the ring with our Limited Edition Johnny ‘Genesis’ North 3/4 sleeve T-shirt. Crafted for true wrestling enthusiasts, this shirt embodies the legend’s spirit. Secure yours now and wear the legacy of Johnny ‘Genesis’ North. Stocks limited
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