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SmackDown
WWE SmackDown Results — March 13, 2026
Full WWE SmackDown results for March 13, 2026 in Phoenix, AZ. Match card, winners, methods, and championship updates.
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March 13, 2026 — Phoenix, AZEvent Time: Sat, Mar 14, 12:00 AM UTC
Event Recap
The March 13 episode of WWE SmackDown had a pretty packed lineup from Phoenix and mostly delivered a solid mix of matches and chaos, even if a few finishes felt a little messy. Jade Cargill continued to look like a bulldozer, flattening Michin with Jaded in a non-title match that never really felt in doubt. The women’s tag title match saw Nia Jax and Lash Legend retain against Charlotte Flair and Alexa Bliss after outside chaos led to a disqualification, and the post-match beatdown didn’t exactly make anyone look good. Elsewhere, Damian Priest and R-Truth picked up a straightforward win over Los Garzas, while Tiffany Stratton escaped with a victory over Kiana James after a chaotic ringside distraction. Jacob Fatu dominated much of his match with Trick Williams before interference handed Williams the upset, one of those finishes that feels like it exists purely to keep everyone protected. Uncle Howdy and Erick Rowan also scored a non-title win over Solo Sikoa and Tama Tonga, pinning a champion to shake up the tag picture a bit. The show closed with the big contract signing between Cody Rhodes and Randy Orton for WrestleMania, and Orton predictably turned it ugly, smashing Rhodes through the table and finishing the night with a vicious Con-Chair-To that left the champion bloodied in the ring. It was one of those SmackDowns that had plenty happening, even if not every segment stuck the landing.
Match Results
🎤
PROMO SEGMENT
In-Ring Promo
Segment recap
Drew interrupts the beginning of the show and calls out Nick Aldis, claiming he was screwed out of the title last week and demanding that the GM make it right. Nick Aldis makes his way to the ring, defending his decisions and deflecting the accusations of Cody being the “corporate” champion. As the two argue back and forth, Jacob Fatu’s music hits and he joins them. Fatu says Drew needs to get it straight. Fatu says he is the one that screwed Drew out of the title, and dares Drew to do something about it.
An exasperated Drew McIntyre throws his hands up and offers a shocking response: To hell with all of you…I quit.
And he storms off through the crowd, leaving Fatu and Aldis talking it over in the ring.
Summary
This one had a weird, chaotic vibe from the start, which honestly is exactly what you’d expect when the Wyatt Sicks show up. Solo Sikoa and Tama Tonga tried to slow things down early with power offense, isolating Erick Rowan and throwing plenty of heavy shots. Rowan eventually muscled his way free and made the hot tag to Uncle Howdy, who came in throwing strikes and turning the pace around quickly. The closing stretch was messy but effective. Tonga got knocked out of the equation, leaving Sikoa vulnerable in the ring. Howdy capitalized and planted him with Sister Abigail, scoring the pinfall over the Tag Team Champion in a non-title match. Beating a champion on TV always raises eyebrows, even if it’s the kind of booking that sometimes feels like WWE hitting shuffle on the tag division.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Michin came into this one looking to prove she could hang with the most physically dominant woman on SmackDown, and to her credit she didn’t back down at all. She opened with quick strikes and tried to keep Jade Cargill moving, landing a few solid kicks and a running attack in the corner. The problem, as usual with Cargill, is that one mistake can flip the entire match. Michin went for another burst of offense, but Jade caught her mid-motion and turned the tide instantly with raw power. From there it was mostly Cargill asserting control, tossing Michin around and shrugging off attempts to rally. The finish came when Jade hoisted her up and delivered Jaded, planting Michin hard in the middle of the ring for the three-count. It wasn’t a long match, but it reinforced the same thing we’ve seen for months: if you don’t put Jade away quickly, she eventually runs you over.
The Irresistible Forces
Final
DQ
Allies of Convenience
Champion Retains
Summary
This match had a lot going on, maybe too much for its own good. Charlotte Flair and Alexa Bliss worked well together early, using quick tags and speed to avoid the brute force of Lash Legend and Nia Jax. Bliss in particular tried to keep the champions off balance with fast offense, while Charlotte mixed in her usual chops and suplexes. Eventually the champions slowed things down, with Jax throwing her weight around and Legend using her power to keep control of the ring. The match took a turn when The Bella Twins showed up and got involved at ringside. The distraction spiraled into chaos and the referee eventually called for the bell, ruling the match a disqualification. The champions retained, but the aftermath was uglier than the finish, with Jax and Legend laying out both challengers and the returning Bellas once the match was already over.
Summary
This was the most straightforward match of the night and honestly one of the more fun ones. Los Garzas tried to rely on their usual slick tag offense, cutting the ring in half and keeping R-Truth trapped for a stretch. Truth did his usual mix of comedy and surprisingly solid counters before finally tagging in Damian Priest, who came in like a wrecking ball. Priest dropped both Garzas with big strikes and a spinning kick that changed the energy of the match immediately. Angel attempted to rally with a quick attack off the ropes, but Priest shut that down fast. The finish came when Priest hoisted Angel up and delivered South of Heaven, driving him into the mat for the pin. It was a clean, decisive win and the kind of tag match that doesn’t try to reinvent anything — just solid action and a strong finish.
🎤
PROMO SEGMENT
In-Ring Promo
Segment recap
The Miz offers to be Jelly Roll’s mentor, but Jelly is quick to decline. Jelly accuses Miz of turning on his mentees too fast, too often. An offended Miz unloads his thoughts on Jelly, saying it was the Miz that helped Jelly up when he couldn’t get up from the mat on his own during his first WWE appearance. He claims it was because of him that Jelly decided to turn his life around and lose the wreight.
Jelly balks at the idea of The Miz being responsible for the hard work and consistency that led to his 250 pound weight loss.
Miz tells Jelly he liked him better when he was fat.
That brings out Kit Wilson, who is quick to verbally attack Jelly Roll, accusing him of being toxic and (ironically) fat-phobic. Things escalate to pushing and Jelly swings at Kit, who ducks, and Jelly clocks Miz in the face.
Later, backstage, Kit Wilson tells Miz that he’s going to ask Nick Aldis for a match against Jelly Roll.
+3
Winning match: +2
On match card: +1
+1
On match card: +1
Summary
Tiffany Stratton and Kiana James had a competitive back-and-forth match that leaned more physical than flashy. Stratton came out fast, trying to catch James off guard with quick offense, but James slowed things down and started using her strength advantage to take control. She punished Stratton around ringside, slamming her into the apron and barricade before bringing the fight back into the ring and keeping pressure on with strikes and a Falcon Arrow that nearly finished things. Stratton eventually rallied with a burst of offense, landing a handspring back elbow and a cutter to shift the momentum. The match got a little chaotic late when ringside distractions created confusion and James accidentally knocked her own ally off the apron. Stratton capitalized immediately, climbing to the top rope and hitting the Prettiest Moonsault Ever to score the pinfall victory in a match where James controlled much of the action but couldn’t recover from one costly mistake.
Main Event
+3
Main eventing: +3
+7
Winning main event: +4
Main eventing: +3
Summary
Jacob Fatu came into this match throwing his usual mix of power and chaos, immediately backing Trick Williams into the corner with heavy right hands and headbutts. Fatu controlled most of the early stretch, flattening Williams with a senton and a handspring moonsault before sending him crashing to the floor with a clothesline. Even after the commercial break, Fatu kept the pressure on with a hard corner whip, a Samoan drop, and a diving senton that nearly ended things. Williams refused to stay down though, firing back with a Cyclone Kill and a jumping neckbreaker that finally shifted momentum. Just as the match started to turn competitive, everything went sideways when Drew McIntyre suddenly appeared and blindsided Fatu outside the ring while the referee was distracted. McIntyre tossed him back inside, leaving Fatu vulnerable long enough for Williams to connect with the Trick Shot for the pinfall. It’s technically a huge win for Williams, but it definitely came with an asterisk thanks to McIntyre’s interference, which pretty much wrecked Fatu’s night before he even realized what hit him.
Segment recap
The show closed with Cody Rhodes and Randy Orton meeting in the ring for their contract signing, and for a minute it actually felt respectful. Both guys talked about their long history and the paths that brought them to this moment, with Rhodes emphasizing the responsibility he feels carrying the championship and Orton reminding everyone he’s been doing this at the highest level for two decades. Once the contracts were signed, the tone flipped instantly. Orton attacked Rhodes out of nowhere, smashing him through the table and battering him with the steel steps. The beating ended with a brutal Con-Chair-To, leaving Rhodes laid out and bleeding while Orton calmly stood over him to close the show.

























