Wwe Wrestlemania 32 Full Show ((hot))
The most defining feature of the WrestleMania 32 broadcast is not any single match, but the cloud of injury that hung over the entire card. By the time the show went live, the WWE was in a state of crisis. World Champion Seth Rollins, fan-favorite Cesaro, and the returning Randy Orton were all sidelined. Most critically, John Cena—the face of the company—was out of action for the first time in over a decade. To compound matters, the original main event plan of a Triple Threat between Roman Reigns, Dean Ambrose, and Brock Lesnar was scrapped due to a Wellness Policy violation for Lesnar. As a result, the show’s structure felt less like a planned destination and more like a desperate patchwork. The Intercontinental Championship ladder match, while athletically impressive, was a chaotic cluster of talent (Kevin Owens, Sami Zayn, The Miz) thrown together to fill time. The build for the main event—Roman Reigns vs. Triple H for the WWE World Heavyweight Championship—was lifeless, a corporate authority-figure feud that fans had rejected years earlier. The full show, therefore, begins with a palpable sense of disappointment, a feeling that the audience was watching the B-team try to perform an A+ show.
Where does this Mania rank for you? 🏟️🤼♂️ Wwe Wrestlemania 32 Full Show
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However, for every bright spot, the full broadcast is weighed down by baffling creative decisions and matches that simply should not have happened. The third incarnation of The Rock vs. Erick Rowan—a 6-second squash match—was a baffling use of the industry’s biggest mainstream star. Following it with a nonsensical "Rock Concert" and a pointless cameo from the Wyatt Family felt like a television sketch rather than a WrestleMania moment. The biggest sin, however, was the booking of the main event. The Dallas crowd was vehemently anti-Roman Reigns, desperate for any alternative. When Triple H, the heel authority figure, entered to the motorhead anthem "The Game," the crowd cheered him lustily. For 27 long, plodding minutes, Reigns and Triple H worked a slow, power-based match that the crowd rejected in real-time. Chants of "Roman sucks!" and "Daniel Bryan!" (the retired fan-favorite) filled the stadium. When Reigns finally speared Triple H for the win, the confetti fell on a silent sea of fans holding up inverted thumbs. The intended coronation of the new "top guy" had failed, and the show ended not with a celebration, but with an exhausted, resentful whimper. Most critically, John Cena—the face of the company—was