Santa Fe New Mexican

WWE sticks with Saudi Arabia deal despite backlash

- By Dan Gelston

WWE is set to hold its Crown Jewel event Friday in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

That’s a nondescrip­t way to describe a spectacle — headlined by major stars including The Undertaker and Brock Lesnar — that WWE would usually blitz fans with bombastic hype to promote.

Bigger! Badder! And usually with an event logo connecting the event to its host city, like the New York skyline or the fleur-de-lis for New Orleans incorporat­ed into recent WrestleMan­ia designs.

WWE instead has put Saudi Arabia on mute as backlash spreads against its lucrative long-term deal with a kingdom facing global uproar. The financials are murky, but WWE is expected to make between $20 million and $40 million per event from two Saudi Arabian shows this year under a 10-year deal.

Criticism from fans and politician­s started because women were excluded from competitio­n in an April event, then shifted and spread after writer Jamal Khashoggi was killed in the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.

WWE fans, traditiona­lly as non-PC as the crotch-chopping wrestlers in the ring, have booed each time Crown Jewel is mentioned when a wrestler cuts a promo and the

video feed hyping the event was abruptly shut off to the crowd at its first all-female event Sunday to squash unfavorabl­e reaction. The deal was lampooned in consecutiv­e weeks on HBO’s Last Week Tonight with John Oliver.

WWE has tried to distance itself from the internatio­nal outcry over the killing and downplayed its ties to Riyadh.

“We’re not going to talk a lot about that,” WWE chairman Vince McMahon said on a conference call. “It’s a very sensitive subject these days, naturally.”

The company’s announcers have refused to mention Saudi Arabia on recent live events and WWE’s website, as of Tuesday, only listed the date and time for the card. The page for April’s Greatest Royal Rumble still listed King Abdullah Sports City Stadium in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, under time/location.

“WWE has operated in the Middle East for nearly 20 years and has developed a sizable and dedicated fan base,” WWE said in a statement. “Considerin­g the heinous crime committed at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, the Company faced a very difficult decision as relates to its [Crown Jewel] event. Similar to other U.S.-based companies who plan to continue operations in Saudi Arabia, the Company has decided to uphold its contractua­l obligation­s to the General Sports Authority and stage the event.”

WWE’s stock price has fallen the last month after steadily rising this summer, dropping from $94.22 per share on Oct. 1 to $66.16 on Monday.

The backlash has also had repercussi­ons for Crown Jewel’s marquee clash. John Cena, the 15-year face of the company, was written out on Monday’s “Raw” of his scheduled bouts in the World Cup tournament. Cena, who could not be reached for comment, was widely reported to have misgivings about his participat­ion and how it might affect his blossoming movie career.

“Don’t give up on something you enjoy just because of the pressure from others around you,” Cena tweeted Monday.

WWE certainly hasn’t, even as Cena’s absence and the sudden departure of Roman Reigns as he battles leukemia have shuffled the card.

McMahon spoke of the sensitivit­y while reporting quarterly earnings, boasting revenue of $188.4 million for the third quarter and a record $657.7 million over nine months, ending in September. A massive chunk of that cash is derived from the Saudi Arabia shows — and WWE has used the hefty checks to help lure retired Hall of Fame wrestler Shawn Michaels out of an eight-year retirement and fatten incentives for other talent.

“One of my biggest paydays in my history of working for Vince was making a trip to Saudi Arabia,” WWE announcer Jim Ross said on his podcast. “I got paid very, very well.”

WWE hasn’t wavered in the face of public pressure even while other companies have rethought their business ties to Saudi Arabia. Endeavor, the parent company of the Ultimate Fighting Championsh­ip, pulled out of a deal that would have had Saudi Arabia invest $400 million.

“I haven’t heard from somebody who did not want to go and felt afraid to speak out about it,” said Wade Keller, editor and founder of wrestling news site PWTorch.com. “The people I’ve spoken to have had more of a shoulder shrug that it’s sort of out of their hands and above their pay grade. But I do know there are people who are not comfortabl­e with it and wish it wasn’t happening.”

The WWE has survived — even thrived — in the wake of unseemly PR messes in the past. McMahon faced steroid-related charges levied by the federal government in the early 1990s; a string of wrestlers suffered premature deaths, many drug related, throughout the late 1990s; and most notoriousl­y, grisly murders committed by former champion Chris Benoit, who would also kill himself in 2007, rocked the organizati­on.

Despite previous unrest, fans never went away in droves. Not when there was always the next big card on the horizon, the next witty catchphras­e to market on a T-shirt or a future movie star in the making to keep fans hooked.

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Vince McMahon

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