John Cena is hanging up the Attitude Adjustment in his WWE locker. The pro-wrestler/actor has a new finishing maneuver, one he learned from Jackie Chan, who co-stars with Cena in the upcoming action movie “Project X.”
Cena debuted the new move, which translates from Mandarin to English as “Lightning Fist,” at Sunday’s pay-per-view event “WWE Super Showdown.” Cena, paired with Bobby Lashley in Australia, used the special punch to put down the team of Kevin Owens and Elias.
And OK, he still set the “W” up with a classic A.A.
“I’m known for five moves of doom,” Cena told Fallon on Tuesday’s “Tonight Show.” “And I figured it was time to evolve, me having been in WWE 16 years now. So it was time for a sixth move of doom, a.k.a. the doomiest.”
He then told Fallon to stand up.
“We’re friends, so I’m gonna say this right now: Don’t move. Stay right there, don’t move at all,” Cena warned. “No, seriously. Because I have tremendous accuracy with this deadly maneuver, but if you move, I will knock you out.”
He then tried to outsource the bump to Tariq of The Roots. No such luck.
Watch the video above. Yes, the guys also talk about Cena’s new hair.
Every WWE Champion Ever, Ranked by Number of Reigns (Photos)
Pro-wrestling title belts change hands (or waists) like grapplers change trunks these days, though it wasn't always that way. With "Survivor Series" just around the corner featuring a card of Champion vs. Champion matches, TheWrap decided to grace the Internet with a little history lesson. Scroll through our gallery to see every WWE Champion ever, ranked by their numbers of title reigns.
Remember: this is a list of those who won the WWWF Championship, the WWF Championship or the WWE Championship. So don't come after us, Universal Champions, et al.
Rank: 29 (tie) Wrestler: John "Bradshaw" Layfield # of Reigns: 1
JBL has taken his heel persona from the ring to the announce table. Never without a cowboy hat, Layfield thankfully leaves his lariat clothesline at home.
Rank: 29 (tie) Wrestler: Pedro Morales # of Reigns: 1
History lesson: Back in the WWWF days, Morales became the first guy in wrestling history to win all three of the major men's titles -- the WWF Championship, the Intercontinental Championship and the WWF Tag Team Championship -- in the company.
From Buddy Rogers to A.J. Styles, here are all the guys from the old WWWF and WWF days — and beyond
Pro-wrestling title belts change hands (or waists) like grapplers change trunks these days, though it wasn't always that way. With "Survivor Series" just around the corner featuring a card of Champion vs. Champion matches, TheWrap decided to grace the Internet with a little history lesson. Scroll through our gallery to see every WWE Champion ever, ranked by their numbers of title reigns.
Remember: this is a list of those who won the WWWF Championship, the WWF Championship or the WWE Championship. So don't come after us, Universal Champions, et al.
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