← Home

Wrestlers

Joaquin Wilde

RAW · Male · 39 years old · 2K Rating: 68 (2K25)

Joaquin Wilde
⚑ Watchlist

Points (all-time)

Total Points
15
R/S Points
8
PLE Points
3
Belt Points
4
PPM
1.8
per match

R/S = Raw & SmackDown · PLE = Premium Live Events · Belt = title points · PPM = points per match · Total = R/S + PLE + Belt

Match record (all-time)

Wrestler match statistics are currently based on 2025 and 2026 televised events. House shows and Main Event are not included.

MW 6Win 1W% 16.7Loss 5L% 83.3NC 0DQW 0DQL 0DQ% 0.0

MW = Matches wrestled · Win/Loss = standard · NC = No contest · DQW/DQL = Win/Loss via DQ · W%/L%/DQ% = percentages of matches

Accomplishments

No accomplishments added yet.

Title Reigns

When this reign overlaps a scored month-end, we list the months that count toward fantasy belt hold points (same rules as the rest of the app), starting from January 2025 through the last completed calendar month.

No title reigns on record for this wrestler.

Match History

Last five are the most recent matches on the full event timeline (completed and live), using the same ordering and W/L/D rules as Pro Wrestling Boxscore — not limited to the fantasy points period above.

Recent form
L
L
L
L
L
RAW July 28, 2025 — Detroit, MI
Tag Team — Singles Match — Raw Tag Team Championship
The Judgment Day
Undercard - Title Match
Final
Pinfall
Champion Retains
Summary
This one had a solid underdog structure, with Wilde and Del Toro pushing the pace early and trying to overwhelm the champions before things could settle. They had a few believable near-falls and moments where it looked like they might actually pull it off, which helped keep the crowd engaged. Of course, once the match started swinging the challengers’ way, interference became a factor. Things got especially ridiculous with multiple “El Grande Americano” appearances getting involved, which felt like overkill but also very on-brand for this kind of match. In the end, Bálor and McDonagh retained after the distraction created just enough of an opening. Fun match, even if the finish leaned a little too hard on nonsense.
RAW July 21, 2025 — Houston, TX
No. 1 Contender Match — Raw Tag Team Championship
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
The Creed Brother
LWO
No. 1 Contender
Summary
This one moved fast and rarely slowed down, which helped cover up the fact that it was more about constant action than structure. The New Day brought the energy, the Creed Brothers brought the power, and LWO played the role of the team that picks their moments instead of forcing them. There were plenty of quick tags, dives, and near-falls, but nobody really stayed in control long enough to take over. In the end, LWO capitalized when things broke down, sneaking in at the right time to secure the win. It was fun in the moment, even if it felt like organized chaos more than anything else.
Saturday Night's Main Event May 24, 2025 — Tampa, FL
Tag Team
American Made
Final
Pinfall
7:37
SmackDown April 18, 2025 — Las Vegas Nevada
Battle Royal
Battle Royal Result
Carmelo Hayes won the Battle Royal [Eliminations: R-Truth eliminated Carlito → The Miz eliminated R-Truth → Rey Fenix eliminated Berto → Austin Theory eliminated Elton Prince → Grayson Waller eliminated Kit Wilson → Ludwig Kaiser eliminated Tyler Bate → Rey Fenix eliminated Santos Escobar → Brutus Creed eliminated Akira Tozawa → Otis eliminated Julius Creed → Otis eliminated Brutus Creed → Andrade eliminated Grayson Waller → Andrade eliminated Austin Theory → Rey Fenix eliminated Chad Gable → Shinsuke Nakamura eliminated Cruz del Toro → Karrion Kross eliminated Joaquin Wilde → Dragon Lee eliminated Karrion Kross → Shinsuke Nakamura eliminated Dragon Lee → Pete Dunne eliminated Ludwig Kaiser → Pete Dunne eliminated The Miz → Carmelo Hayes eliminated Pete Dunne → Andrade eliminated Shinsuke Nakamura → Original El Grande Americano eliminated Rey Fenix → Carmelo Hayes eliminated Andrade]
RAW April 7, 2025 — Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
6-person Tag Team
Undercard
Final
Pinfall
Summary
This six-man tag was built around speed versus power, and both sides stuck to that formula the entire match. The Latino World Order tried to keep things moving with quick tags and aerial offense, especially once Dragon Lee got involved and started flying around the ring. The Creed Brothers countered that approach with pure strength, tossing their opponents around whenever they managed to slow the action down. El Grande Americano added a little chaos to the mix and ultimately helped swing the match his team’s way. After a series of double-team attacks and a late distraction, Americano and the Creeds managed to secure the victory for American Made. It wasn’t the cleanest finish, but it got the job done and left the LWO frustrate