International professional wrestling school
WWE Performance Center
|
Predecessor
| Florida Championship Wrestling
|
---|
Founded
| July 11, 2013
; 10 years ago
(
2013-07-11
)
|
---|
Headquarters
| United States
:
5055 Forsyth Commerce Road, Suite 100,
Orlando
,
Florida
,
United States
United Kingdom
:
Unit 30/31, Great Cambridge Industrial Estate, Lincoln Road,
Enfield
,
London
,
England
|
---|
Key people
| Paul "Triple H" Levesque
(EVP of Talent Relations, Head of Creative and Chief Content Officer)
Shawn Michaels
(VP of Talent Development Creative)
Matt Bloom
(VP of Talent Development, Head Coach)
Sara Amato
(Assistant Head Coach)
Robbie Brookside
,
Steve Corino
,
Lince Dorado
,
Fit Finlay
, Johnny Moss,
Norman Smiley
,
Terry Taylor
(Coach)
|
---|
Owner
| Endeavor
|
---|
Parent
| WWE
(
TKO Group Holdings
)
|
---|
Website
| recruit.wwe.com
|
---|
The
WWE Performance Center
is the official
professional wrestling school
system of the American organization,
WWE
, a division of
TKO Group Holdings
, a subsidiary of
Endeavor Group Holdings
. The system currently operates two Performance Center locations, which serve as
training
facilities for WWE wrestlers, as well as
sports science
and
medical
facilities. The first branch, located in
Orlando, Florida
, was opened on July 11, 2013. The second branch opened on January 11, 2019, in
Enfield
,
London
.
[1]
During the early stages of the
COVID-19 pandemic
, the main studio of the Performance Center in Orlando became WWE's home arena, with the company moving its weekly television programs and all
pay-per-views
for
Raw
and
SmackDown
(including
WrestleMania 36
)
behind closed doors
at the facility from March 2020 onward. In August 2020, WWE moved Raw and SmackDown's closed productions to an arena setting as the
WWE ThunderDome
?which used a larger-scale production more in line with its touring shows but with a
virtual audience
.
NXT
and
205 Live
subsequently moved to the Performance Center in October 2020, with NXT moving from its former home at
Full Sail University
, and its main arena being reconfigured as the "
Capitol Wrestling Center
" (CWC) to suit the look and feel of NXT programming. Unlike Raw and SmackDown's tenure at the Performance Center, NXT's move was permanent, and most of its remaining COVID-19 restrictions were lifted in June 2021. The CWC naming was dropped in September 2021 as part of a larger relaunch of NXT, which saw a second reconfiguration of the arena.
History
[
edit
]
Training facilities
[
edit
]
The Orlando facility covers 26,000 square feet (2,400 m
2
) and includes seven
training rings
(including a special padded ring for high-flying moves), a strength and conditioning program, edit and production facilities including an ultra-slow camera, and a voice-over room that performers and on-air announcers can use to practice.
[2]
[3]
The facility was opened in 2013 and replaced the training center at WWE's former developmental territory,
Florida Championship Wrestling
(FCW), which was based in
Tampa
and had been serving as WWE's developmental headquarters since 2008.
[3]
[4]
[5]
The Performance Center trains around 65 to 70 wrestlers at any one time. Trainees have a variety of experience levels, from beginners from non-wrestling backgrounds to experienced wrestlers from the
independent circuit
. Wrestlers train to improve their in-ring performance, strength and conditioning, as well as working on their characters and personality. Upcoming referees, ring announcers, commentators, and backstage interviewers also train at the Performance Center. The trainees train full-time, while also performing at weekly NXT
house shows
and appearing on
NXT
television. In addition, established WWE performers often use the facility for training and injury rehab while mentoring new trainees.
The Performance Center uses former wrestlers as trainers. The inaugural head trainer was
Bill DeMott
, who departed the company in 2015 and was replaced by
Matt Bloom
.
[6]
Other trainers include
Sara Amato
,
Robbie Brookside
,
Norman Smiley
,
Adam Pearce
,
Mike Quackenbush
,
Ace Steel
,
Scotty 2 Hotty
[7]
and
Sarah Stock
.
[8]
Dusty Rhodes
was responsible for developing the trainees' microphone skills and wrestling personas until his death in 2015.
[9]
The Performance Center includes some guest trainers, including
Kevin Nash
and
Scott Hall
.
[10]
[11]
[12]
In addition to training contracted performers, the Performance Center is also regularly used for tryouts which operate on an invite-only basis and include athletes from a wide variety of backgrounds, including established domestic and international professional wrestlers,
amateur wrestlers
,
NFL
and
NCAA
American football
players, and individuals from a range of other sporting and non-sporting backgrounds.
[13]
[14]
[15]
A second
Britain
-based Performance Center opened in
Enfield
,
London
on January 11, 2019.
[16]
In April 2019, WWE announced plans to open additional Performance Centers in India and China.
[17]
Use as a home arena
[
edit
]
On March 12, 2020, WWE announced that due to the
COVID-19 pandemic
(which resulted in the suspension of many professional sports leagues), live episodes of
Raw
and
SmackDown
would air from the Performance Center
without an audience
until further notice, beginning with the following day's episode of
SmackDown.
The company had begun filming episodes of
NXT
without an audience at
Full Sail University
the previous day, although the March 11 episode was filmed at the Performance Center and was the last show produced with a live paying audience.
[18]
On March 16, it was announced that
WrestleMania 36
, set to take place on April 5 and previously scheduled for
Raymond James Stadium
in
Tampa, Florida
, would instead be moved to the Performance Center, again without an audience and would expand to two nights taking place on Saturday April 4 and Sunday April 5.
[19]
The Performance Center continued to host episodes of
Raw
,
SmackDown
,
205 Live
, and
Main Event
, as well as the
pay-per-views
Money in the Bank
,
Backlash
, and
The Horror Show at Extreme Rules
, before the shows and pay-per-views moved to the new, larger-scale "
ThunderDome
" staging (under similar restrictions, but with a
virtual audience
on LED screens) at Orlando's
Amway Center
, beginning with the August 21
SmackDown
and that weekend's
SummerSlam
. In December, the ThunderDome relocated to
Tropicana Field
in
St. Petersburg, Florida
before moving to
Yuengling Center
in Tampa in April 2021, and being discontinued entirely in July 2021 with the resumption of touring shows.
[20]
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
NXT moves to the Performance Center
[
edit
]
In October 2020, beginning with
NXT TakeOver 31
,
NXT
and
205 Live
moved to the Performance Center (from Full Sail University and the ThunderDome at Amway Center, respectively, as 205 Live was being subsumed by NXT), using a reconfigured version of the facility's main arena branded as the "
Capitol Wrestling Center
"?an homage to WWE's precursor, the
Capitol Wrestling Corporation
. It was designed to reflect the look and feel of NXT programming, with a virtual audience similar to the ThunderDome on an LED screen in the studio, and areas for limited outside spectators divided by plexiglass walls decorated with
chain-link fencing
.
[25]
[26]
[27]
[28]
For
TakeOver: Stand & Deliver
in April 2021, the plexiglass wall dividers were removed and live audience capacity was increased.
[29]
TakeOver: In Your House
in June lifted almost all COVID-19 protocols, including mask requirements and the virtual audience, and expanded its seating capacity to around 300, Those who had tested positive for COVID-19 within the past 14 days were asked not to attend.
[30]
While Raw and SmackDown resumed a live touring schedule in mid-July,
[24]
NXT's move to the Performance Center was permanent. On September 14, 2021, the arena received a new stage design with the relaunch of NXT as
NXT 2.0
; the Capitol Wrestling Center name was dropped at this time.
[31]
Events hosted
[
edit
]
The following are the events that have been held at the Performance Center while being used as a home arena:
Weekly television shows
|
Show
|
Dates
|
SmackDown
|
March 13, 2020 ? August 14, 2020
|
205 Live
|
March 13, 2020 ? August 14, 2020;
October 9, 2020 ? February 11, 2022
|
Raw
|
March 16, 2020 ? August 17, 2020
|
Main Event
|
March 16, 2020 ? August 17, 2020
(
aired
March 19, 2020 ? August 20, 2020)
|
NXT
(
NXT 2.0
from September 2021 to September 2022)
|
October 7, 2020 ? present
|
NXT Level Up
|
February 18, 2022 ? present
|
Television specials
|
Show
|
Date
|
NXT
: Halloween Havoc
|
October 28, 2020
|
NXT
: A Very Gargano Christmas Special
|
December 23, 2020
|
2020
NXT
Year-End Awards
|
December 30, 2020
|
NXT
: New Year's Evil
|
January 6, 2021
|
NXT
'
s move to Tuesday
|
April 13, 2021
|
NXT
: The Great American Bash
|
July 6, 2021
|
NXT 2.0
: Halloween Havoc
|
October 26, 2021
|
NXT 2.0
: New Year's Evil
|
January 4, 2022
|
NXT 2.0
: Vengeance Day
|
February 15, 2022
|
NXT 2.0
: Roadblock
|
March 8, 2022
|
NXT 2.0
: Spring Breakin'
|
May 3, 2022
|
NXT 2.0
: The Great American Bash
|
July 5, 2022
|
NXT 2.0
: Heatwave
|
August 16, 2022
|
NXT
: New Year's Evil
|
January 10, 2023
|
NXT
: Roadblock
|
March 7, 2023
|
NXT
: Spring Breakin'
|
April 25, 2023
|
NXT
: Gold Rush
|
June 20 and 27, 2023
|
Pay-per-view
and
WWE Network
events
|
Event
|
Dates
|
WrestleMania 36
|
March 25?26, 2020
(
aired
April 4?5, 2020)
|
Money in the Bank
|
May 10, 2020
|
Backlash
|
June 14, 2020
|
The Horror Show at Extreme Rules
|
July 19, 2020
|
NXT TakeOver 31
|
October 4, 2020
|
NXT TakeOver: WarGames
|
December 6, 2020
|
NXT TakeOver: Vengeance Day
|
February 14, 2021
|
NXT TakeOver: Stand & Deliver
|
April 7?8, 2021
|
NXT TakeOver: In Your House
|
June 13, 2021
|
NXT TakeOver 36
|
August 22, 2021
|
NXT WarGames
|
December 5, 2021
|
NXT In Your House
|
June 4, 2022
|
Worlds Collide
|
September 4, 2022
|
NXT Halloween Havoc
|
October 22, 2022
|
NXT Deadline
|
December 10, 2022
|
Locations
[
edit
]
United States
[
edit
]
The first WWE Performance Center facility was opened on July 11, 2013. The Performance Center replaced the training center at WWE's former developmental territory,
Florida Championship Wrestling
(FCW), which was based in
Tampa
and had been serving as WWE's developmental headquarters since 2008.
[4]
Wrestlers trained
[
edit
]
2013
[
edit
]
Names
|
Notes
|
Adam Scherr
|
Currently competes as
Braun Strowman
on the
Raw
brand.
|
Alexis Kaufman
|
Currently competes as
Alexa Bliss
on the
Raw
brand.
|
Ashley Sebera
|
Competed as
Dana Brooke
on
Raw
,
SmackDown
and
NXT
. Released from WWE in 2023.
|
CJ Perry
|
Competed as
Lana
on
Raw
,
SmackDown
, and
NXT
. Released from WWE in 2021.
|
Charles Betts
|
Currently competes as
Chad Gable
on the
Raw
brand.
|
David Harwood
|
Competed as
Scott Dawson
on
Raw
,
SmackDown
and
NXT
brands. Released from WWE in 2020.
|
Dean Muhtadi
|
Competed as
Mojo Rawley
on
Raw
,
SmackDown
and
NXT
brands. Released from WWE in 2021.
|
Eric Arndt
|
Competed as
Enzo Amore
on
Raw
and
NXT
brands. Released from WWE in 2018.
|
Gary Gordon
|
Currently competes as
Angelo Dawkins
on the
SmackDown
brand.
|
James Smith
|
Competed as
Bull Dempsey
on the
NXT
. Released from WWE in 2016.
|
Joseann Offerman
|
Competed as
Jojo
on the
NXT
before becoming a ring announcer for
Raw
and
SmackDown
. Left WWE in 2021.
|
Leah Van Dale
|
Currently competes as
Carmella
on the
Raw
brand.
|
Levi Cooper
|
Competed as
Tucker
and
Tucker Knight
on
Raw
,
SmackDown
, and
NXT
brands. Released from WWE in 2021.
|
Mikael Vierge
|
Competed as
Marcus Louis
on the
NXT
brand. Released from WWE in 2016.
|
Matthew Adams
|
Competed as
Buddy Murphy
and
Murphy
on
Raw
,
SmackDown
, and
NXT
brands. Released from WWE in 2021.
|
Natalie Coyle
|
Competed as
Eva Marie
on the
Raw
,
SmackDown
, and
NXT
brands. Released from WWE in 2017 and again in 2021.
|
Pamela Martinez
|
Currently competes as
Bayley
on the
SmackDown
brand.
|
Stuart Tomlinson
|
Competed as
Hugo Knox
on the
NXT
brand. Released from WWE in 2016.
|
Thomas Pestock
|
Currently competes as
Baron Corbin
on the
SmackDown
brand.
|
2014
[
edit
]
2015
[
edit
]
2016
[
edit
]
2017
[
edit
]
2018
[
edit
]
2019
[
edit
]
2020
[
edit
]
2021
[
edit
]
2022
[
edit
]
2023
[
edit
]
Names
|
Notes
|
Anna Keefer
|
Currently competes as
Adriana Rizzo
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Caleb Balgaard
|
Currently training as
Kale Dixon
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Chukwusom Enekwechi
|
Currently competes as
Tyriek Igwe
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Issac Odugbesan
|
Currently competes as
Oba Femi
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Jade Cargill
|
Currently competes on the
SmackDown
brand.
|
Karl Fredericks
|
Currently competes as
Eddy Thorpe
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Lea Mitchell
|
Currently competes as
Kelani Jordan
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Rickssen Opont
|
Currently competes as
Tyson DuPont
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Roman Macek
|
Currently competes as
Luca Crusifino
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Tiller Bucktrot
|
Competed as
Trey Bearhill
on the
NXT
. Released from WWE in 2024.
|
Valerie Loureda
|
Currently competes as
Lola Vice
on the
NXT
brand.
|
2024
[
edit
]
Names
|
Notes
|
Ajiea Lee Hargrave
|
Future NXT rookie that has yet to receive a developmental contract.
|
Andrezj Hughes-Murray
|
Currently training as
Dion Lennox
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Anthony Luke
|
Currently training for the
NXT
brand.
|
Beau Morris
|
Currently training as
Drake Morreaux
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Breanna Covington
|
Currently training as
Layla Diggs
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Brogan Finlay
|
Currently training as
Uriah Connors
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Copeland Barbee
|
Future NXT rookie that has yet to receive a developmental contract
|
Coy Wanner
|
Future NXT rookie that has yet to receive a developmental contract
|
Derrian Gobourne
|
Currently training for the
NXT
brand.
|
Destinee Brown
|
Future NXT rookie that has yet to receive a developmental contract.
|
Emma Maria Diaz
|
Released from WWE in 2024.
|
Ezekiel Balogun
|
Released from WWE in 2024.
|
Harleigh White
|
Trained as
Kiyah Saint
for the
NXT
. Released from WWE in 2024.
|
Hayden Pittman
|
Future NXT rookie that has yet to receive a developmental contract
|
Hunter Smallback
|
Future NXT rookie that has yet to receive a developmental contract
|
Jade Gentile
|
Currently competes as
Jazmyn Nyx
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Jonah Niesenbaum
|
Currently training as
Cutler James
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Josh Black
|
Currently training for the
NXT
brand.
|
Kennedy Cummins
|
Currently competes as
Carlee Bright
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Kevin Robertson
|
Currently training as
Keanu Carver
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Lucky Ali
|
Currently training as
Saquon Shugars
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Malachi Jeffers
|
Currently competes as
Je'Von Evans
on the
NXT
brand.
|
Olena Sadovska
|
Currently training as
Zena Sterling
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Peyton Prussin
|
Currently training as
Kendal Grey
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Tamyra Mensah-Stock
|
Currently training for the
NXT
brand.
|
Thunder Keck
|
Recently attended a tryout and got selected to report to the performance center.
[
citation needed
]
[32]
|
Tylynn Register
|
Currently training as
Lainey Reid
for the
NXT
brand.
|
Vincent Winey
|
Recently attended a tryout and got selected to report to the performance center.
[
citation needed
]
[33]
|
Vlad Pavlenko
|
Released from WWE in 2024.
|
United Kingdom
[
edit
]
The British branch was located at the Great Cambridge Industrial Estate in
Enfield
,
London
[34]
and was opened on January 11, 2019.
[16]
The center was 17,000 square feet and included 2 rings.
[35]
[36]
Wrestlers trained
[
edit
]
2019
[
edit
]
2020
[
edit
]
2021
[
edit
]
2015 shooting incident
[
edit
]
In August 2015,
Orange County Sheriff's Office
deputies shot 29-year-old Armando Montalvo outside the Performance Center after he threatened them and ignored commands. Montalvo was "obsessed" with female wrestler
AJ Lee
and made numerous attempts to trespass through the facility, despite an injunction against him by WWE.
[37]
[38]
Days after the shooting, Montalvo claimed he was
bipolar
when he was questioned by detectives. He faced trial in February 2016 on charges of aggravated assault, resisting an officer with violence, and trespassing. A public defender representing Montalvo has entered a written plea of not guilty on his behalf.
[39]
On April 19, 2018, WWE filed an emergency restraining order against Montalvo after he returned to the Performance Center the previous month and harassed the employees. In addition, Montalvo posted a threatening message to WWE wrestlers and staff on his
Instagram
account.
[40]
On May 7, 2018, Montalvo was arrested for missing his court date with WWE.
[41]
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
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.
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.
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.
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.
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External links
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