CM Punk Says He Changed His View on The Rock After Past Feud

CM Punk discusses his evolution since 2013, acknowledging The Rock's star power and how his perspective on part-time performers has matured during an Inside The Ropes interview.

CM Punk has developed a more mature outlook on The Rock’s WWE return compared to his feelings a decade ago. Speaking with Alex McCarthy for Inside The Ropes, Punk addressed how The Rock’s current involvement might affect him and others on the roster.

During the February 21 episode of SmackDown, The Rock confronted Cody Rhodes, demanding Rhodes become “his champion.” This situation mirrors 2013 when The Rock returned and defeated Punk for the WWE Championship, a parallel not lost on fans.

I’m sure it will. I’m sure it’s gonna trickle down and affect everybody. I think one of the difficult parts of this being so big and there’s so many moving parts, and you’re seeing it with [John] Cena now. Definitely, I have a different perspective now than I did ten years ago, when I was working with The Rock. It was easy for everybody to say, ‘You’re not here. We’re grinding, we’re doing this.’ The schedule now is so much limited than it was ten years ago. I can’t point a finger at somebody else now and say, ‘Well, you’re not here.’ Plus, a guy like John Cena, to me, he’s a busy dude. He’s earned that right. He’s stated that he’s retiring, this is going to be his final run. So I’m less inclined to say, ‘You should be here doing this, doing that.’ Sometimes, the tickets sell themselves when we’re in these international markets, and you hear ‘John Cena retirement tour,’ that’s gonna put butts in seats. John Cena doesn’t necessarily need to show up every week. He’s busy filming a movie, and I understand that. But there’s a flip side to that coin where there is still a locker room full of pro wrestlers, and they will get a chip on their shoulder, and there will be resentment because there are people that feel, ‘Oh, I’m here every week. I’m doing this, I’m doing this.’ But really at the end of the day, I think everybody just wants to rise to that level, and along the way, yeah, we’re gonna poke, we’re gonna prod. We’re gonna say, ‘Hey, Rock. You showed up here, how come you’re not here? Why aren’t you doing this?’ I think the fans do that too. I think they enjoy it when they see us do it, too. There’s no denying what a giant box office star The Rock is. I think peeling back a little bit and him being ‘Final Boss’ instead of being happy-go-lucky Rock, I think that is a character that can say, ‘Yeah, I’m not here all the time. Yeah, so what? I’ll show up for eight minutes every six months, and it’ll still be the biggest.’ I think there’s freedom and there’s an air to play with that a little bit, and it makes it better and more real and more exciting for everybody. But yeah, piss off for not being here every week, guys. Come on [laughs].

Punk will compete in the Men’s Elimination Chamber at WWE Elimination Chamber, potentially setting up his own WrestleMania direction as the build to WWE’s biggest show intensifies.

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