Jon Moxley on WrestleMania frustrations with Brock Lesnar

Dean Ambrose celebrates victory over the Wiz during the WWE show at Zenith Arena on may 09, 2017 in Lille, north France. / AFP PHOTO / PHILIPPE HUGUEN (Photo credit should read PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images)
Dean Ambrose celebrates victory over the Wiz during the WWE show at Zenith Arena on may 09, 2017 in Lille, north France. / AFP PHOTO / PHILIPPE HUGUEN (Photo credit should read PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images) /
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In a recent interview with PWTorch’s Wade Keller, Jon Moxley elaborated on points made in his interview with Chris Jericho and beyond.

During part two of the interview, Jon Moxley made the clear claim that Brock Lesnar “did not give a shit” about their match at WrestleMania.

“We start talking about the match in earnest for the first time while like the second match is going on,” Moxley would explain. “I think it was the ladder match and we’re fourth and we don’t have a finish.”

The match in question, WrestleMania 32’s Street Fight against Lesnar, has long been considered a disappointment. While not necessarily a bad match, it does not hold a particularly strong place in the memories of many. In an expletive laden conversation, Moxley believes this was due to a lack of preparation and the attitude of those involved.

“He doesn’t want me to kick out of like multiple F5s and like at WrestleMania everybody kicks out of 5 F5s ’cause he only does German and F5.”

“By the end I’m just throwing out every f*cking stupid idea, you know.”

“So, we had, like, we put together a little f*cking sequence of dumb f*ck, like we put together a finish.”

dark. Next. What’s the point of Stephanie McMahon condemning Brock Lesnar?

Moxley, now a member of the rosters for All Elite Wrestling and New Japan Pro Wrestling, has gone into great detail on his reasoning for leaving WWE since his contract officially expired in April. With many members of the WWE roster said to be considering their future, it’s possible that Jon Moxley is not the only one to have had experiences like those that he has detailed.

“I was like banging my head against the wall like screaming at everybody for weeks it felt like and I felt like I was invisible and the main reason is I wasn’t the most important match on the show. I was like the sixth most important. I was basically not important at all. As long as Brock’s on the show, Brock’s good, like other matches were more important.”

The first part of Wade Keller’s interview is available for free here.