John Cena has said he can barely recall a single instance of saying no to a WWE creative decision across his entire career, describing his philosophy as one of total commitment regardless of personal preference.
Speaking on the Bill Simmons Podcast, Cena reflected on his approach to the business throughout his run.
“Very rarely — I honestly don’t think I’ve said no to any sort of creative decision in WWE. Because my approach has always been: I can make it work. And the times I haven’t been able to make it work, it’s been on me, not the idea. There are things I’ve liked more than others. The heel turn — I didn’t love the direction, but I threw everything into it. That’s all you can do.”
He said the philosophy extends to the Nexus burial in 2010, one of the most discussed booking decisions of his career, in which he famously defeated the entire group single-handedly.
“People still bring up Nexus. And I get it. But I was told what was happening, and I went out and did it as well as I could. Was it the best decision? I don’t know — that’s not my job. My job was to make it work in the moment.”
Cena retired from in-ring competition at Saturday Night’s Main Event on December 13, 2025, losing to Gunther. He was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame Class of 2026 during WrestleMania weekend.
