WWE WrestleMania 37 2021 predictions, 

Everything you would like to understand before the two-night event on Saturday and Sunday from Tampa

WrestleMania has always served because of the pinnacle event in WWE each and each spring. the newest edition of the most important show of the year is simply on the horizon as WrestleMania 37 will take center stage this weekend. the most important stars within the company perform under the brightest of lights, and people lights will be the brightest they have been during a while as WrestleMania 37 are going to be allowing fans at a limited capacity into the stadium for the primary time in over one year. once more, even as last year's WrestleMania 36 which was forced to require place inside the empty WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida, the most important spectacle of the year will go down for not one but two nights. 


The show will feature seven title matches, including all four of the promotion's top championships being placed on the road. On the men's side, universal champion Roman Reigns will defend his title against Edge and Daniel Bryan with Bobby Lashley defending the WWE title against former champion Drew McIntyre. Also, Raw women's champion Asuka will defend against Rhea Ripley and SmackDown women's champion Sasha Banks will defend her belt against 2021 women's Royal Rumble winner Bianca Belair.

WrestleMania 37 goes down Saturday, April 10, and Sunday, April 11 from Raymond James Stadium in Tampa. The event, streaming survive Peacock, will begin at 8 p.m. ET on both nights with kickoff shows leading in the beginning at 7 p.m. 

Let's take a glance at how our experts believe the action will play out. 

WrestleMania 37 predictions -- Night 1

Natalya & Tamina vs. Naomi & Lana vs. Mandy Rose & Dana Brooke vs. Riott Squad (Tag Team Turmoil; winners receive the title shot on Night 2)

The women's tag team division has been handled with little look after any long-term storytelling beyond the champions. These teams have all mashed together in a method or another in recent weeks and months, but the sole team that seems to possess any actual momentum in being treated like anything aside from an afterthought is Naomi and Lana. Pick: Naomi & Lana win -- Brent Brookhouse (also Adam Silverstein)

Raw Tag Team Championship: The New Day (c) vs. AJ Styles & Olmos

This was a weird direction to travel for the Raw tag titles at the event, but it might be even weirder to place the belts on Styles and Olmos. the overall sense with Amos is that he is not much of a worker, so having him be in additional of a bodyguard role has been the simplest thanks to using his incredible size. This seems like it's fixing more of a split between Styles and Omos than some kind of title run. For that reason alone, expect a replacement Day victory. -- Pick: The New Day retain the titles -- Brookhouse (also Silverstein)

Seth Rollins vs. Cesaro

For years, fans have wanted Cesaro to tend more shine on WWE programming. WWE has been doing that through most of 2021 and it is a good thing that they need because he's great as a fired-up babyface, which are some things that SmackDown needs more of. Rollins is made for a task like this, where he's ready to put over credible opponents until the time involves be shifted up the cardboard and back to the most event. Logic suggests this is often a spot where you elevate Cesaro while knowing Rollins isn't hurt within the process. -- Pick: Cesaro wins -- Brookhouse (also Silverstein)

Shane McMahon vs. Braun Strowman (Steel Cage)

Scenarios exist where McMahon wins this and therefore the rivalry gets extended, but the storyline has been so eye roll-inducing already to the present point that it just has got to end at 'Mania. To be fair, Strowman has done an incredible job on the mic when given free rein on Raw Talk -- and he's sold the feud better than a person segment on Raw -- but what's been on TV has been pitiful. This match will probably exceed expectations because McMahon may be a psychopath and can take an enormous bump or two. within the end, Braun will look strong, and hopefully, this is often a surprise hit. -- Pick: Braun Strowman wins -- Silverstein (also Brookhouse)

Bad Bunny & Damian Priest vs. The Miz & John Morrison

There are occasions where celebrities can appear on a show and not re-evaluate, but I'm unsure fans realize how committed Bad Bunny is to creating this work. Not only did he reportedly relocate part-time to Orlando so he could actively train within the WWE Performance Center over the previous couple of months, but he has also shown abreast of most editions of Raw since the Royal Rumble. WWE is usually criticized for having an audience that skews older, so credit to them for going out and finding a young non-wrestling superstar to assist grow the business. Bad Bunny may have an incredible celebrity debut, which only helps Priest, who is getting a WrestleMania match after just a couple of months on the roster. it'll probably be Morrison -- not two-time WWE champion The Miz -- taking the autumn, but within the end, Bad Bunny goes over. -- Pick: Bad Bunny & Damian Priest win -- Silverstein (also Brookhouse)
It is sensible to possess McIntyre to win to offer him the long-discussed "moment ahead of a live crowd." But looking up and down Night 1, it seems like there are just too many babyfaces winning. Yes, WrestleMania is an occasion where wins tilt heavily in favor of faces, but they're even have to be some downs throughout the event. Also, it's maybe an illusion that WWE allows Lashley to continue his run. There's nothing sort of a dominant heel champion on top and Lashley is performing some of the simplest work of his life within the role he's in immediately. There are not tons to urge excited about with another McIntyre title run. -- Pick: Bobby Lashley retains the title -- Brookhouse
WrestleMania 37 predictions -- Night 2
United States Championship: Riddle (c) vs. Sheamus

It's a shame that Sheamus probably isn't winning here because his work has been outstanding in recent months. Riddle remains fresh into his title run, though, and this hasn't been built the sort of a situation where he drops the belt. Instead, they've given him flashy new presentation enhancements, just like the weird CGI birds when he kicks off his slides. I do not know what meaning, but it doesn't appear to be something you are doing right before you've got Riddle to lose the belt during a match that had just a couple of weeks of minor build. -- Pick: Riddle retains the title -- Brookhouse (also Silverstein)
Women's Tag Team Championship: Nia Jax & Shayna Baszler (c) vs. Naomi & Lana

This is, of course, assuming Lana and Naomi win Tag Team Turmoil on Night 1. Jax and Baszler are competent champions of a division that has not been treated with any real weight. this is often the spot to pay off the long entanglement between Lana and Jax by finally putting a title on Lana, whether that's an honest thing or not. WrestleMania is about feel-good moments, and this might be viewed together. -- Pick: Lana & Naomi win the titles -- Brookhouse (also Silverstein)

Kevin Owens vs. Sami Zayn (w/Logan Paul)

Whether Paul joining Zayn was a piece from Zayn's first mention of the YouTube star or something that happened organically, it's added a second big-name celebrity that appeals to a younger generation to WrestleMania. This was a hot-shot booking, but the top result's us getting Owens and Zayn, long-time best friends and on-screen rivals during a damn 'Mania match. This bout will rule. Owens is fresh off getting handed a visit of losses to Roman Reigns, while Zayn's entire gimmick is based on the forces at WWE working against him. the apparent booking is for Owens to win and Zayn to complain. Rhyme not intended. -- Pick: Kevin Owens wins -- Silverstein (also Brookhouse)

Intercontinental Championship: Big E (c) vs. Apollo Crews (Nigerian Drum)

This is one of the foremost difficult matches to predict on the cardboard. On one hand, Big E has done an excellent job with the title and has been elevated significantly as a singles wrestler with this run. On the opposite, Crews has new life together with his Nigerian royalty gimmick, and he seems like 1,000,000 bucks. He's also already lost to Big E on three separate occasions and was ready to choose his gimmick for this match (basically no holds barred). So while Crews should theoretically win, this is often the primary time the newly single Big E is ahead of a crowd. Everyone would rush behind him getting a main event run, and he does get to lose the Intercontinental title for that to happen, but I cannot see them beating a replacement Day member at 'Mania. -- Pick: Big E retains the title -- Silverstein
Crews got an injection of life together with his new character and his heel turn has involved some moments of real brutality toward Big E. quite anything, it's hard to imagine why you'd undergo those changes just to possess Crews not win the title in his seventh shot at the belt since November. If you are going to place the belt on Crews, you've got to try to do it now or he's dead as any kind of threat. -- Pick: Apollo Crews wins the title -- Brookhouse

"The Fiend" Bray Wyatt vs. Randy Orton

The strangest thing about this match is that it's one among WWE's longest-running stories, yet there's no special stipulation here one year after the Firefly FunHouse cinematic match drew such rave reviews. Casual viewers, stick with me here ... Considering Orton burned "The Fiend" alive a few months ago and has been expecting his comeuppance since I cannot see a scenario during which he wins this. it might crush the whole Fiend character, which has been rejuvenated with a replacement look and Alexa Bliss by his side. -- Pick: "The Fiend" Bray Wyatt wins -- Silverstein (also Brookhouse)

Raw Women's Championship: Asuka (c) vs. Rhea Ripley

Picking Ripley to win is as simple as not cutting her legs out from under her in her first real match as a member of the Raw roster. She's an excellent talent and would give the Raw women's division a way needed shot of energy after WWE has struggled to find any compelling angle to Asuka's reign. A Ripley win also sets up some intriguing future programs with women like Charlotte Flair. -- Pick: Rhea Ripley wins the title -- Brookhouse (also Silverstein)
Universal Championship: Roman Reigns (c) vs. Edge vs. Daniel Bryan

Initially, I assumed picking Bryan for this match would be out of the left field as most expected Edge to win, so I'm glad to ascertain that Brent agrees with me. This match always should are Reigns vs. Bryan with Bryan winning the Royal Rumble and calling back to their history at the event. When Edge won, I still thought that was possible as he could simply challenge McIntyre, then the WWE champion. When Edge was put within the match with Reigns, it appeared like a wonderfully fine WrestleMania main event -- certainly one with a few big names -- but not necessarily something that might be a must-see. Bryan completely changes that.

Bryan previously invaded the WrestleMania 30 main event when fans clamored for him after WWE omitted Bryan (the hottest wrestler within the company) for Batista. an equivalent fervor isn't felt here, but Bryan's journey to the present match has been similar. Reigns have been a fantastic universal champion, and his run as a heel is that the best work of his entire career to the present point. It's great to ascertain Edge back, but he doesn't move the needle the way John Cena or The Rock or other veterans do. Now that he's turned heel, Bryan has been established because of the true babyface of the match. there's an opportunity that the Bryan-Edge mini-feud results in them taking one another out (setting off an actual feud) and Reigns leaving WrestleMania triumphant after likely pinning Bryan.

However, given this is often the primary live event for WWE featuring fans since the beginning of the pandemic, it's my opinion that they need to send fans home as happy as possible. That's not getting to happen from a heel Edge winning, and while Reigns retaining would be white-hot heat, that's not the sensation WWE wants fans to recollect. In what might be his last WrestleMania as a full-time performer, it's Bryan who should and certainly will begin on top. -- Pick: Daniel Bryan wins the title -- Silverstein (also Brookhouse)