The EST Of WWE Was Missing, and the Silence Was Deafening
There is a specific kind of anxiety that settles in during the WWE Royal Rumble. It happens right around the No. 25 spot. Youโre watching the clock tick down, youโre doing the mental math on who is left in the locker room, and youโre waiting for that one specific needle drop.
This year, for thousands of us packed into the arena and millions more screaming at our TVs, we were waiting for the whip of a hair braid. We were waiting for Bianca Belair. And thenโฆ nothing.
The 2026 Womenโs Royal Rumble is in the history books. Liv Morgan pulled off a hell of a performance, outlasting 29 other superstars to punch her ticket to WrestleMania 42. We even got a massive nostalgia pop with the return of Brie Bella. But as the pyro smoke cleared and we all started filing out, there was a collective murmur rippling through the fanbase. It wasn’t about who was there; it was about the glaring absence of the former champion, who has been on the shelf for way too long.
Why WWE Fans Are Hitting the Panic Button
Wrestling fans aren’t exactly known for their patience. In our world, a month off TV feels like a year, and a year off TV feels like retirement. So, when the buzzer for No. 30 hit and it wasnโt the EST of WWE, the social media machine went into immediate meltdown mode.
“Whatโs going on with Bianca Belair? Iโm concerned for real,” one fan posted on X (formerly Twitter), echoing the sentiment of pretty much everyone in my timeline. Another user pointed out the timeline, noting, “A broken finger has kept Bianca Belair out of action for like a year, bro.”
On paper, that sounds wild. We watch people get thrown off cages and come back in a few months. So, hearing that a hand injury from WrestleMania 41 is keeping a top-tier athlete sidelined for nearly a calendar year creates a vacuum where conspiracy theories love to breed. Was she backstage? Was it a contract dispute? Did she just miss the flight? The reality, as it turns out, is a lot less dramatic but a lot more painful.
The Truth Behind the Injury
Here is the thing about “hand injuries” in combat sports: the terminology does them a disservice. When we hear “broken finger,” we think of a jammed digit from playing basketball in the driveway. We tape it up and get on with it.
But the update coming out of her camp paints a much grittier picture. It wasn’t just a simple break; reports indicate the damage to her knuckle was significantly more serious than anyone initially let on. When you think about Belair’s moves, the powerbombs, the press slams, the K.O.D., every single one of those requires immense grip strength. You can’t safely hoist a human being over your head if your hand is held together by hope and athletic tape.
Since WrestleMania 41, she has been a ghost on WWE programming, aside from a brief cameo as a special guest referee at Evolution last year. She hasn’t worked a match. She hasn’t taken a bump. And frankly, the division feels a little lighter without her carrying the load.
Positive Signs For a 2026 Return
However, before we all start writing eulogies for her career, letโs take a breath. While she wasn’t ready to rumble, the latest intel suggests we are finally turning a corner. Belair has been fairly quiet, but recent social media posts show genuine progress. The massive swelling that plagued her hand for months has finally subsided. The bruising is fading. And in a detail that feels oddly humanizing for a superhero-like figure, she recently revealed she can finally wear a ring.
It sounds like a small win, but anyone who has rehabbed a serious joint injury knows that being able to wear jewelry is a massive milestone. It means the inflammation is gone. It means the bone structure is settling.
Managing Expectations
So, where does that leave us? Right now, Belair is still on the inactive list. WWE medical staff is watching her like a hawk, and there is a “cautious optimism” bubbling backstage that she could be cleared sometime in early 2026.
But here is my advice to the fans: Let her heal. We saw what happened when stars rushed back to WWE in the past. It usually ends in a re-injury that costs them another year. Belair is staying visible, sheโs training, and sheโs living her life, but she isnโt forcing a return just to pop a rating.
It was disappointing not to see the “EST” point to the WrestleMania sign this weekend. But if waiting another month or two means getting the version of Belair who can actually tear the house down for the next five years in WWE? Iโll take that trade every day of the week.
