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Chris Hero Mocks Peter Rosenberg Over ‘No Dives’ Take After IYO SKY Botch

Chris Hero Mocks Peter Rosenberg Over ‘No Dives’ Take After IYO SKY Botch

The fallout from IYO SKY’s scary landing on RAW just took another turn — and this time, Chris Hero jumped in with a response that didn’t hold back.

After the March 30, 2026 episode of WWE RAW, a clip of IYO SKY taking a rough landing during a suicide dive quickly spread online. That led to Peter Rosenberg warning wrestlers against doing high-risk dives — a take that already drew pushback from Brody King.

“This is why I tell whoever I can at evolve and even on the main roster — don’t bother with these dives. They are all risk — no reward. If you successfully hit a suicide dive in 2026 no one cares, But if you mess it up you could truly harm yourself! Don’t do it.”

Now, Hero has entered the conversation — and instead of arguing directly, he chose to mock Rosenberg by repeating his message almost word-for-word. Hero took to Twitter and copied Rosenberg’s warning word for word, but tweaked it just enough to make the jab obvious, shifting the context from WWE to ROH and AEW while keeping the structure nearly identical.

“This is why I tell whoever I can at ROH and even at AEW — don’t bother with these bumps. They are all risk — no reward. If you successfully take a bump in 2026 no one cares, But if you mess it up you could truly harm yourself! Don’t do it”

The tweet immediately stood out because of how closely it mirrored Rosenberg’s original statement — making it clear Hero wasn’t just weighing in, he was poking fun at the take itself. Instead of debating whether dives are too dangerous, Hero’s approach flipped the conversation into satire, making it clear that reducing wrestling risk altogether isn’t a realistic solution.

With multiple voices now jumping into the discussion — from Rosenberg’s warning to Brody King’s blunt response and now Hero’s mockery — the debate has clearly moved beyond one moment in the ring. What started as concern over IYO SKY’s landing has now turned into a wider argument about risk, control, and who gets to decide how wrestling should be performed.

Do you think Chris Hero made a fair point by mocking the take — or was Peter Rosenberg right to warn wrestlers about risky dives? Let us know your thoughts below.

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