Some more stuff from the Jon Bravo steroid documentary stuff:
- There's very little evidence whatsoever implicating Roman Reigns, but it's claimed that Roman Reigns used an alias to make purchases through a middle man but there is no way to prove it and cross reference it without seeing communication Rodriguez (the distributor) had with him via text messages, although I'd doubt anything comes of it.
- Rick Bassman, who trained John Cena, Sting and Ultimate Warrior, was one of the key players with a WWE connection.
- Rodriguez claims that through Chris and Mark Bell, Reigns, Lesnar and Steve Austin became advocates and clients of his. There is NO evidence of Rodriguez communicating with any of the three though. There IS a text message where Chris Bell had texted Rodriguez asking him if he had gotten in touch with The Rock and John Cena in 2016, though.
- In regards to actual evidence, there's evidence of communication with Daniel Puder, Rick Bassman, and Chris Cavallini, who trains Jinder Mahal and Sheamus. Rodriguez speculates that Jinder and Sheamus were using but that is yet to be confirmed.
- Bravo notes that there IS evidence on Reigns, but without key texts available to him to match orders he will not disclose it. This should still be taken with a grain of salt as this is the same guy -- who, although is just making the documentary -- claimed Reigns only to reveal LUTHER Reigns on his Instagram story.
At this rate, in my personal opinion, Bravo needs to shut the hell up about Roman Reigns without any proof before he's hit with a slander lawsuit.
**
Some other news:
- The original plan for Wrestlemania was surprisingly Dolph Ziggler vs. Shane McMahon, with the idea being that it would be Ziggler's first ever singles match at Wrestlemania. WWE even made graphics for the match, but that's not the plan anymore clearly as they haven't had any on-screen interaction and Shane is still tied with Owens and Zayn.
- John Cena opened up the possibility of facing The Rock for a third time at Wrestlemania 35. John Cena said he was "too stupid" to realize that The Rock's Hollywood career was good for WWE at the time because it brought more eyeballs to the product.
- Jey Uso said a big reason for their successful run as heels was because of how long their face run went.