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The Performance Center in Orlando temporarily became the home arena for WWE's Raw and SmackDown brands in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, with its television programs Monday Night Raw, Friday Night Smackdown, Evolve, and Main Event, as well as WWE pay-per-view events (including WrestleMania 36) being recorded in a studio at the ...
In 2025 WWE introduced a fourth brand, called Evolve, which features wrestlers who are just beginning their training at the WWE Performance Center under the WWE NIL program, as well as wrestlers in independent promotions that are part of the WWE ID program, with the goal of advancing to NXT. [9]
On February 1, 2025, during the 2025 Royal Rumble, WWE announced the launch of WWE Evolve, a Tubi program based on the defunct independent Evolve promotion ran by WWE ID co-founder Gabe Sapolsky. The program, which is scheduled to premiere on March 5, 2025, will feature both WWE ID prospects and Performance Center trainees.
Wrestlers in NXT train at the WWE Performance Center. While there are hundreds of trainees at the building, only a few get spotlighted on NXT’s live, two-hour weekly television show on Tuesday ...
Amrhein signed with the WWE in 2022 and trained at the WWE Performance Center [2] until her debut in the same year, where she debuted on NXT Level Up under the name Dani Palmer in September 2022. [3] After appearing in live events and several episodes of NXT Level Up Palmer made her WWE NXT debut in a 20-woman battle royal for the NXT Women's ...
On March 17, 2022, Lavalley signed a developmental contract with WWE and was assigned to the WWE Performance Center. [1] Lavalley, going under the ring name Channing "Stacks" Lorenzo , made his debut on April 19 episode of NXT alongside Troy "Two Dimes" Donovan , attacking Santos Escobar during a match. [ 9 ]
The pandemic forced the promotion to move the majority of its shows for Raw and SmackDown to a behind closed doors set at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida, [7] though in late May, WWE began using Performance Center trainees to serve as the live audience. [8]
As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, WWE began presenting the majority of its programming for Raw and SmackDown from a behind closed doors set at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida since mid-March, [3] although in late May, the promotion began using Performance Center trainees to serve as the live audience, [4] which was further expanded to friends and family members of the ...