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Cody Rhodes To Face Randy Orton At WWE Night Of Champions After Win Over Jey Uso

Cody Rhodes To Face Randy Orton At WWE Night Of Champions After Win Over Jey Uso

Sometimes a wrestling match is more than a competition; it is a conversation between two souls who have walked similar, difficult roads. In the main event of “WWE Raw,” the King of the Ring semifinal between Cody Rhodes and Jey Uso was precisely that—a 25-minute epic where the “so much at stake” wasn’t just a crown, but the very validation both men have spent years fighting for.

The contest began not with a flurry of fists, but with a palpable hesitation. As the two men, once allies in a war against The Bloodline, grappled for position, there was a sense of shared history holding them back. Early attempts at finishers were dodged with a knowing familiarity, a physical dialogue that spoke of a deep, underlying respect that had to be overcome before the real fight could begin.

It was Jey Uso who first broke that stalemate, seizing control with a raw intensity that felt like a declaration. This was no longer just a friendly competition; this was Jey’s chance to prove, against the very standard-bearer of the company, that he is a main event force on his own terms. Every Samoan Drop, every right hand that rocked “The American Nightmare,” was another sentence in his argument for independence.

But as the battle wore on, it morphed into a desperate mirror match. In a stunning display of familiarity, Uso hit Rhodes with his own Cody Cutter. Rhodes answered with superplexes and cutters of his own. This was no longer about strategy; it was about survival. The final act was a testament to pure adrenaline, with both men running on fumes, trading signature Spears and near-falls that pushed the audience to the edge of their belief.

The end came via a particularly visceral Cross Rhodes from Cody, a move that felt less like an exclamation point and more like a final, respectful statement in a grueling classic. Rhodes punched his ticket to Saudi Arabia for a final against his old friend Randy Orton, but Jey Uso lost nothing in defeat. For nearly half an hour, he stood as an equal to the champion, solidifying his own story. It was a war born of respect, fought with ambition, and in the end, it elevated both men long after the final bell had rung.

Following the match, Rhodes and Uso embraced, and Uso raised his friend’s hand to end the show.