The Undertaker Reportedly Signed To A 15 Year WWE Contract

The Undertaker is reportedly signed to a 15 year WWE contract.

It was noted in August 2019 that Taker was essentially a WWE lifer due to the "big-money deal" he signed with WWE in the early part of last year. The Wrestling Observer Newsletter now reports that WWE Chairman Vince McMahon signed The Deadman to the 15 year deal after angrily reacting to the non-WWE dates he was booking.

Advertisement

We reported back in August that Taker put ink to the new contract after Vince made him an offer he couldn't refuse financially. There weren't many details on the contract, but it was revealed that the deal includes an agreement that says Taker could no longer work the non-WWE signing dates that he had started to book. This is what led to Taker being pulled from the Starrcast II convention, which ran in conjunction with AEW's Double Or Nothing pay-per-view, in May 2019 after he had already been announced to appear.

The Observer reported this week that last year when Taker's contract expired, he agreed to do a few appearances, and then broke character to get on social media as Mark Calaway. Vince, after letting Taker go, reportedly got so mad that Taker would actually take non-WWE bookings, that he offered the 15 year deal worth big money.

Advertisement

While not billed as a lifetime contract, the 15 year deal is essentially a lifetime deal as Taker will be almost 70 years old when it expired.

Vince was said to be really upset when Taker's Starrcast appearance was announced last year, but the lucrative contract was offered once things calmed down between the two.

The 15 year deal could be one of the biggest in WWE history, if not the biggest. It was reported in early 2018 that Taker was charging $25,000 per hour for non-WWE signing appearances, and that he would have no trouble getting booked at that price.

Taker hasn't wrestled since the Boneyard Match win over AJ Styles at WrestleMania 36 last month.

Source: Wrestling Observer Newsletter

Subscribe to The Wrestling Observer by clicking here. Each issue has coverage and analysis of all the major news, plus history pieces. New subscribers can also receive free classic issues.

Comments

Recommended