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WHY LOGAN PAUL CLAIMS WWE IS "HARDER" THAN FIGHTING LEGEND FLOYD MAYWEATHER

From Ohio D1 wrestling to the WWE ring, Logan Paul is back! Read why he thinks pro wrestling is tougher than boxing Mayweather.

Why Logan Paul claims WWE is "harder" than fighting legend Floyd Mayweather
Logan Paul confirmed for Monday Night Raw

Logan Paul isn’t shy about jumping into new sports when he thinks it’ll push his career forward—and honestly, it’s worked out better than anyone expected. By 2026, the guy’s racked up over 23 million subscribers on YouTube. And that’s before he ever set foot in a WWE ring. His first big wrestling moment? Teaming up with The Miz at WrestleMania 38 to take on Dominik and Rey Mysterio. Not a bad way to start.

But WWE isn’t the only place Logan’s tried to make a name for himself. Remember when he boxed KSI back in 2018? That was one of the first influencer boxing matches to really blow up. Then, a few years later, he got in the ring with Floyd Mayweather Jr.—and yeah, the hype was massive.

His boxing record? It’s a bit all over the place: one win, one loss, and two draws across both official and exhibition fights. That single win came when Dillon Danis got disqualified.

Before all this, Logan was already a standout wrestler at Ohio University. He made it to the D1 Wrestling Individual Championships in 2013—a pretty big deal, since a lot of WWE stars got their start in college wrestling just like that.

Still, even after going toe-to-toe with a guy like Mayweather, Logan swears nothing compares to the grind of WWE. He’s said it himself: “Floyd Mayweather is very good, but wrestling involves a 360-degree skill set where you have to work every part of your mind and body that I just have not experienced before in a craft.”

Now, with Paul Heyman guiding him in The Vision, Logan’s about to put all those skills to the test again. In just a few days—January 5th, to be exact—he’s back on Monday Night Raw. And this time, his stablemate Bron Breakker is going after CM Punk for the World Heavyweight Championship. Things are about to get interesting.

FINAL CALL: THE SHOCKING TRUTH BEHIND CODY RHODES’ BATTLE FOR THE RHODES NAME

Why was Cody Rhodes banned from his own name? Explore the "awful" Stardust era and the legal war that led him back to WWE glory.

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Cody Rhodes spent years banned from using his own legendary last name

If you’ve followed Cody Rhodes for a while, you know he’s switched names more than once. The guy started as Cody Runnels, but eventually, he fought to get back the “Rhodes” name his dad—Dusty Rhodes—made famous. That road wasn’t exactly smooth.

Cody broke into WWE pretty young. In his early 20s, he joined their developmental system, and just days after turning 22, he wrestled his first match on “WWE Raw.” He wasn’t an instant headliner, but he showed up on TV a lot in those first years. Then, in 2014, things took a weird turn. Vince McMahon decided Cody should drop the Rhodes name and take up a new persona—Stardust. Suddenly, he’s in a sparkly getup, kind of echoing his stepbrother Dustin, who fans know as Goldust. Cody played along, but he’s called the whole Stardust thing “awful.” The storylines got more ridiculous, and finally, Cody had enough. He asked WWE to let him go in 2016, and they agreed. Only problem? He couldn’t use the Cody Rhodes name anymore—at least, not right away.

So, Cody hit the indie circuit. WWE owned “Cody Rhodes,” so he just went by Cody. Luckily, his team found a clever loophole.

Cody’s wife, Brandi, also left WWE around then. She’d worked as a ring announcer but never performed as “Brandi Rhodes,” so she was able to trademark the name herself. Just like that, Cody and Brandi Rhodes became a duo on the wrestling scene.

For a while, nobody really knew if Cody would ever get his last name back. WWE seemed unlikely to hand over the trademark, especially after Cody went and helped launch AEW. But in 2020, WWE gave it up. Cody finally snagged the rights to his name and could call himself Cody Rhodes again in AEW.

Maybe WWE was feeling generous, or maybe they just realised it was time, but it all worked out. Cody eventually left AEW and came back to WWE in 2022. Now, he’s one of their biggest stars—and the first Rhodes ever to win a world title in WWE. Pretty wild journey, honestly.

BULLY RAY AND BARON CORBIN CRITIQUE AUSTIN THEORY’S "VISION" FACTION DEBUT

Bully Ray doesn't hold back! Discover why the WWE legend thinks Austin Theory’s new "The Vision" persona feels forced and fake.

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Austin Theory’s new gimmick is failing to look natural.

Bully Ray didn’t hold back when he talked about Austin Theory’s new attitude on WWE TV. He thinks Theory’s tough-guy act just isn’t clicking—it feels forced.

On "Busted Open," Baron Corbin (who used to go by Bishop Dyer in WWE) actually had some good things to say about Theory. He likes Theory’s look and his athletic ability, but the whole “angry face” thing? He’s not buying it. Corbin pointed out that ever since Theory was unmasked as the mystery man and joined "The Vision" on the December 29 episode of "Raw," he’s been trying a little too hard with that scowl. Bully Ray agreed completely.

Ray broke it down: “Honestly, this is a huge opportunity for Austin Theory. It’s a great faction for him. But when I watched him in the ring last night with Heyman and the crew, I couldn’t stop staring at his hands. One was clenched in a fist; the other was kind of halfway there. His face had that forced tough look—like he was trying to play the part but not really feeling it. The body language said it all: ‘I’m not comfortable; I’m just trying to look tough.’ And when you’re trying too hard in wrestling, it never looks natural.”

Ray also said that maybe he and Corbin pick up on this stuff more than most. They know what it’s like to be legit tough, so they can spot when someone’s faking it—like Theory, who looks nervous and under pressure. People used to say Theory was Vince McMahon’s next big thing, but since Triple H took over, he hasn’t really taken off. Still, with this new run alongside The Vision and Paul Heyman guiding him, things could turn around. Heyman has helped plenty of wrestlers find their groove. Theory just has to relax and stop forcing it.

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