
WrestleMania 42 Moves To Vegas, Leaving New Orleans In The Dust
This weekend was firmly scheduled to add another major chapter to the professional wrestling history of Louisiana. April 11th and 12th, 2026 were originally secured for the Superdome in New Orleans to host WrestleMania 42. WWE and state officials reached a comprehensive agreement to bring the worldwide spectacle back to New Orleans, that included a lot of financial advantages for WWE.
The official public reveal took place on a live national television broadcast in February of 2025. The Rock stood in the middle of the ring during an episode of Smackdown to confirm the dates, and the New Orleans venue.
Fans, and local officials, fully expected the city to once again serve as the center of the professional wrestling industry for the weekend. The announcement signaled a massive economic boost to the state economy was on the way.
But then WWE pulled off a textbook heel turn...
WrestleMania Stolen From New Orleans
That initial agreement was eventually discarded when WWE completely pulled the event from Louisiana. The sudden decision was to relocate the weekend shows to Las Vegas for the second consecutive year.
The cancellation was abrupt, and left many local officials dealing with a lost economic impact. The shift in venue was perceived as a highly dishonest business move by regional stakeholders who had already begun preparations.
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The removal of the event was handled with a corporate statement, "promising" a future makeup date for the city. A replacement year has yet to be established by the promotion. It remains entirely uncertain if Louisiana will ever actually host the promised replacement show. The lack of official communication regarding a new timeline leaves the entire situation unresolved.
Current WrestleMania 42 Ticket Sales Struggle
The broken agreement, and change of location, might be directly connected to the ticket sales issues the event is currently facing. Multiple industry reports indicate that consumer interest for the Las Vegas shows remains uncharacteristically low.
This lack of demand is highly unusual for the flagship event of the company. The pricing structure for the relocated venue appears to be creating a barrier for average consumers looking to attend. But there has to be a little thought put into the idea that WWE's business dealings likely play into this situation. Starting with lying to Louisiana, and stealing their event away.
The ongoing situation recently escalated when main event talent addressed the low demand during a live broadcast. CM Punk used his television time on Monday Night Raw to directly instruct corporate leadership to lower ticket prices...a clear sign that internal concern over the box office numbers is growing.
Punk's 'pipe bomb' was broadcast to the viewing audience in an apparent attempt to encourage late attendance. The public acknowledgment of the sales struggle highlights the consequences of abandoning the original New Orleans agreement.
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