Summary

Kevin Nash believes WWE ticket prices should come down if talent really are being asked to take major pay cuts.

Speaking on *Kliq This*, Nash addressed the recent reports about WWE stars being asked to restructure their deals. He tied that discussion to New Day's reported exit from the company, saying the economics should work both ways if wrestlers are earning less.

The comments continue a run of sharp criticism from Nash, who recently argued New Day were right to leave WWE after reported contract changes.

Quote from Kevin Nash

"If you’re looking at television production, I have no idea what the cost is, but back in the day we could shoot Nitro for half a million. The building isn’t going to go up. If you’re paying the talent less, you have a 50% saving there. I could only think, at that point, the ticket prices should go down. If they can’t work it out financially, maybe some of the higher-ups can kick some of their golden parachute back and help out the working man a little bit. It’s always about Main Street, not Wall Street. It would only make sense. 50% pay cut to the guys, tickets are 50% off,"

How Nash framed WWE's business debate

Nash's point was less about one roster move and more about the broader balance between talent costs and what fans pay to attend shows. By linking reported contract restructuring to ticket pricing, he shifted the conversation from a locker room issue to a fan-facing one.

That also gives his recent WWE commentary a consistent theme. Along with ripping TKO over WWE creative, Nash is openly questioning whether the company's corporate decisions are helping the people who actually make the shows work, both in the ring and in the crowd.

What this could mean for WWE

If more current or former names keep framing contract cuts this way, WWE could face more public pushback whenever pricing and roster spending come up together. Nash also tied his argument directly to Kofi Kingston and Xavier Woods, which keeps attention on how New Day's departure is being interpreted beyond just one contract story.

Sources

Kevin Nash on the Kliq This Podcast