Last weekโs WWE SmackDown marked its debut in the three-hour format, airing live from the Footprint Center in Phoenix, AZ. The episode featured several major moments, including Tiffany Stratton cashing in her Money in the Bank contract to defeat Nia Jax and capture the Womenโs Championship. Other highlights included a non-title match between United States Champion Shinsuke Nakamura and Andrade, as well as a six-man tag team match that continued the unfolding Bloodline saga.
However, behind the scenes, the show faced unexpected challenges due to injuries and illness, prompting last-minute changes to the lineup. Speaking on The Press Box, Paul โTriple Hโ Levesque shed light on the adjustments WWE had to make.
โIf the last 30 years of my life have taught me anything, itโs nothing is pinned down. There used to be a saying here all the time, show me the stone itโs written on. All of this stuff, wo doโฆI like to do a lot of creative in whiteboards. So when we get together for long-term creative, there might be ten whiteboards down a row in a long room, and weโre all sitting at a table because, at any point in time, youโre looking. Does that make sense? Itโs like putting together a giant jigsaw puzzle. You have to keep going back to the box to look at the picture youโre trying to put the pieces in. You write something, like I said, you can have it written out, and Bronson Reed breaks his ankle. Iโll give it to you this way. This Friday night, we had the show written up, and it was really good, and it moved a lot of stories forward, and then we get word talent are injured, and itโs, went in for an MRI and itโs worse than we thought, and heโs out. Okay, alright. So we got to rewrite that whole storyline. Then weโre literally finishing the production meeting, and we just said, all right guys, have a great day, and my phone buzzes, and I look down, and itโs medical, and I get the โSo-and-so has flu really bad. Weโre telling them donโt come to the building and sending them home. Cannot work.โ Everybody, donโt go anywhere. Sit back down because we gotta rewrite that aspect of the show. Thatโs constant. So do I have in my mind an idea ofโฆdo we have WrestleMania written out? Yes. Do I think it will change? 100%. Do I have a plan B? Yes. Do I have a plan C? Yes. Do I think those are completely relevant? No. There could be changes where all of that stuff at any given moment. We just do like, all right, erase all the whiteboards, and letโs start over. Itโs just the nature of the beast. Itโs what we do.โ
Triple Hโs comments highlight the unpredictability of live programming and WWEโs ability to adapt on the fly to deliver high-quality entertainment. Despite the setbacks, SmackDown maintained its momentum, leaving fans eager for whatโs next in its new three-hour format.
You can check out the complete interview below:
(h/t to WrestlingNews.co for the transcription)