WWE Saturday Night’s Main Event features a diverse and eye-catching card that blends established main-event stars. With emerging talent from across the WWE ecosystem. The night is headlined by a major cross-brand attraction as Undisputed WWE Champion Cody Rhodes faces NXT Champion Oba Femi, a matchup that pits Rhodes’ experience and polish against Femi’s raw power and meteoric rise. It’s a rare champion-versus-champion encounter that highlights WWE’s confidence in its next generation while still anchoring the show around one of its most reliable modern headliners.

Elsewhere on the card, WWE showcases its depth and athletic variety. Bayley vs. Sol Ruca represents a classic veteran-versus-prospect clash, with Bayley’s ring IQ tested against Ruca’s explosive, highlight-reel offense. The tag team bout pairing AJ Styles and Dragon Lee against Je’Von Evans and Leon Slater promises speed, innovation, and international flair, blending Styles’ legendary adaptability with Dragon Lee’s lucha libre dynamism. Together, these matches give the event a sense of balance — star power, future investment, and crowd-pleasing action — all building toward a historic main event.

John Cena

That main event belongs to John Cena. Who steps into the ring for what has been bille. As the final match of his WWE career when he faces Gunther. The matchup itself feels symbolic: Cena, the embodiment of WWE’s previous era. Standing across from one of the most dominant and uncompromising champions of the modern age. Gunther’s relentless, punishing style presents a stark contrast to Cena’s resilience and never-say-die reputation. Creating a bout rooted as much in legacy as it is in physicality.

Cena’s farewell transcends the match itself. For more than two decades, he was the face of WWE. A polarizing hero, a tireless ambassador, and a performer who defined an entire generation of fans. Championships, catchphrases, and rivalries made him iconic, but longevity and consistency made him immortal in WWE history. As he competes one last time on a stage designed to honor tradition. Saturday Night’s Main Event becomes more than a special broadcast. It becomes the closing chapter of one of the most influential careers professional wrestling has ever seen