WWE: John Cena’s Final RAW Appearance Confirmed for 11/17 WWE RAW Show, Official Poster for NXT Deadline 2025 Released, The Miz on What It Means To Be “Over” In Pro Wrestling

John Cena’s Final RAW Appearance Confirmed for November 17th WWE RAW Show

Netflix confirmed earlier today that John Cena’s final WWE RAW appearance for his retirement tour will be taking place on November 17th at Madison Square Garden in New York, City New York.

“ONE LAST RAW. ONE LAST TIME IN THE WORLD’S MOST FAMOUS ARENA 🐐

It’s official: Watch John Cena’s FINAL #WWERaw on Monday November 17 at MSG.

LIVE only on Netflix at 8 PM ET | 5 PM PT”

Cena currently has just four appearances remaining for his retirement tour, which are the November 10th and 17th WWE RAW shows, the November 29th Survivor Series WarGames 2025 event, and the December 13th WWE Saturday Night’s Main Event show.


Official Poster for NXT Deadline 2025 Released

WWE SVP of NXT and Talent Relations Shawn Michaels released the official poster for this year’s NXT Deadline event, which takes place on December 6th at the Boeing Center at Tech Port in San Antonio, Texas.

This poster features NXT Champion Ricky Saints, NXT Women’s North American Champion Blake Monroe, WWE Speed Women’s Champion Sol Ruca, Trick Williams, and Je’Von Evans.


The Miz Comments on What It Means To Be “Over” In Pro Wrestling

A recent episode of the Vegas Revealed show featured The Miz as the guest. One of the topics discussed included The Miz’s thoughts on his definition of what it means for someone to be “over” in professional wrestling.

“A reaction from the crowd, whether it’s booing or cheering, you get the loudest reaction. So when a person walks out and there’s crickets and you don’t hear anything, that’s not being over. That’s like, uh-oh, we have a problem here. But if you walk out and that crowd erupts, this guy’s over, or this girl’s over. So you can start being like, so whenever someone walks out and you hear a big reaction, you can look over and go, they’re over.”

The Miz also gave his thoughts about his definitions of a babyface and heel in pro wrestling and why winning maters a lot in wrestling.

“I think babyface is, if I learned correctly from last year, the nice, kind, well-dressed. The good guy. He does everything right. He’s the nicest guy. He’s the person that you will hear everyone in these stands cheering for, going, ‘We love you, we love you.’

The nasty, mean, very overly competitive. It doesn’t really do it the nice way. When I come into this stadium people are always booing me. (They are) telling me that I’m egotistical and arrogant and that I cheat to win. I like to think that I do whatever it takes to win. I don’t always go by the rules… but I make sure that I’m victorious. Because that’s what people remember. People remember who wins, they don’t remember who loses.”

Transcript h/t: Fightful.com 1 & 2