Rise of the ‘Beast’ (8th king of the 7 who came before): Royal Rumble (Beast fighting other beasts): Saudi crown prince ‘held WWE wrestlers hostage’ after $500 (5) million pay dispute. Beast was reportedly furious at Vince McMahon. 200 (4×5) people forced to wait six (6) hours on tarmac.
Date of publication: 6 November, 2019 The New Arab
WWE wrestlers
and staff were held “hostage” in Saudi Arabia following the recent
“Crown Jewel” event in Riyadh, according to a new report.
The crew of more than 200 people were ordered to wait on the tarmac in Riyadh
for six (6) hours on the orders of Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed
bin Salman, who was furious that WWE owner Vince McMahon had cut off
the Crown Jewel live-feed over a pay dispute, according to US media reports.
The sports entertainment mogul was reportedly
owed as much as $500 million by the Saudis for previous shows held in the
kingdom.
As rumours of a dispute leaked from the WWE camp, the wrestling company claimed
that a mechanical fault had prevented their staff from returning back to the US
on time.
A former WWE staff member, Hugo Savinovich, later took to Facebook to say that the real reason behind the delay was due to
the kingdom’s effective ruler’s anger at the live feed being pulled.
According to Wrestlingnews, the video said that Crown Prince Mohammed “was so upset by the feed being cut off
that he ordered to have the wrestlers be taken off Atlas Air just before the
plane was about to take off”.
Due to the
delay, many WWE stars who were due to perform on Smackdown the following day
did not make it on time.
The Saudi-WWE dispute was reportedly resolved when the two sides reached a
quick agreement that brought the show on air 40-minutes behind schedule.
‘Renewed vows’
On Monday, WWE announced that they had
“expanded
their live event partnership” with Riyadh’s General Entertainment
Authority (GEA) “through 2027
to include a second annual large-scale event”.
Due to the fact that WWE already holds two live events in Saudi Arabia, the
announcement was seen by observers as the sports entertainment firm’s way of
publicly reaffirming its relationship with the Saudis following a series of
turbulent events rocking Riyadh.
Saudi Arabia’s latest line of international sports and entertainments events
has been dogged by controversy following the murder of journalist Jamal
Khashoggi, which prompted business leaders and heads of state and business to
boycott a major investment conference in Riyadh last year.
After last year’s ‘Crown Jewel’ event, some fans accused the sports entertainment firm of accepting “Saudi blood money”.
Categories: Uncategorized
