Below are some top WWE news stories of the day, involving Bronson Reed and Mick Foley.
• “Big” Bronson Reed is scheduled to face Seth Rollins this Saturday at the Crown Jewel premium live event in Saudi Arabia.
To begin this feud, Reed destroyed Rollins on an episode of RAW by hitting him with 6 back-to-back Tsunamis.
During an interview with Sean Ross Sapp, Reed revealed what Triple H said to him after the 6 Tsunamis on Rollins:
“It’s one of those things where in the moment you start to realize, oh, okay, this is more than just a regular segment of TV. I’ve attacked people before on TV, I’ve done similar things, but I could just tell by the way the crowd was reacting, and just the reactions I was getting in the arena, that when I got backstage it was going to be a similar thing.
I remember going through Gorilla and [Triple H] saying, like, ‘That moment is going to live forever’, like, you’re sort of set. I like to sort of liken it to Austin’s 3:16 line, like, hopefully the 6 Tsunamis will be something that now has changed the way I’m perceived and sets me on a bigger trajectory.”
WATCH: Becky Lynch Exposed At Survivor Series 2021 (Part 2):
• The Undertaker recently interviewed Donald Trump on his Six Feet Under podcast, where The Deadman said Trump made politics fun again.
During an interview with CNN, Mick Foley addressed Taker’s comments and said the following:
“I said that The Undertaker was right. Donald Trump did make politics fun for about three weeks (laughs) in 2016, but there’s nothing fun about his rhetoric, there’s nothing fun about the way he demeans citizens of this country, nothing fun about the way he talks down to women, and in my experience, real men respect strong women, they don’t live in fear of them.”
You can watch it below:
Foley: And in my experience, real men respect strong women. They don't live in fear of them. pic.twitter.com/pT4V8Xd4gg
— Acyn (@Acyn) October 29, 2024
Foley also explained maintaining his friendship with Undertaker despite their political differences:
“I can count on one hand the number of friends I’ve lost over politics. The things that draw us together are so much more meaningful than the things that divide us.”