Dennis Rodman’s career has always defied easy categorization. Five NBA championships. A Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame induction in 2011. A brief but memorable stint in professional wrestling. And now, at 64 years old, a second Hall of Fame honor to go with the first.
ESPN’s Shams Charania first reported on Friday that Rodman will be inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame as part of the 2026 class. The ceremony is scheduled for April 17 in Las Vegas during WrestleMania 42 weekend. Rodman joins a class that already includes Stephanie McMahon, AJ Styles, and Demolition (Ax and Smash).
How Rodman became a wrestling figure in the first place
Rodman’s history with professional wrestling is brief by most measures, but it left a lasting impression. He made his WCW debut in early 1997, aligning himself with Hollywood Hulk Hogan and the rest of the nWo stable at a time when the Monday Night Wars between WCW and WWE were at their most intense.
His most memorable in-ring moment came at WCW Bash at the Beach in 1998, when he teamed with Hogan to defeat Diamond Dallas Page and Utah Jazz star Karl Malone. The match landed at an unusual cultural intersection, arriving roughly a month after Rodman’s Chicago Bulls defeated Malone’s Jazz in the NBA Finals for the second consecutive year.
The wrestling appearance was not without controversy. Rodman famously skipped a Chicago Bulls practice during the 1998 NBA Finals to appear on WCW Monday Nitro, where he set up the tag team match. As ESPN’s documentary series ‘The Last Dance’ later detailed, the move created tension within the organization, though the Bulls went on to win the championship regardless.
A celebrity wing built for exactly this kind of legacy
Rodman’s induction places him in the WWE Hall of Fame’s celebrity wing, a category reserved for public figures whose appearances made a genuine mark on the sport’s broader cultural footprint. The wing already includes Muhammad Ali, Pete Rose, Mike Tyson, Bob Uecker, William Perry, Snoop Dogg, and Ozzy Osbourne.
Few of those names made the kind of in-ring investment that Rodman did. He logged four professional wrestling matches in total, with three coming in WCW and two more appearances in All Elite Wrestling in 2023, where he appeared at ringside during an AEW pay-per-view event. His crossover appeal during the late 1990s gave WCW a mainstream visibility boost at a moment when the promotion was actively competing with WWE for dominance.
What the induction actually means
There is a version of this story where Rodman’s wrestling career reads as a footnote, a colorful detour from an already unconventional NBA life. But the WWE Hall of Fame induction makes the case that it was something more than that. Rodman showed up during one of professional wrestling’s most watched and financially successful eras, partnered with its biggest villain, and delivered a match that wrestling fans still reference today.
He was already one of the NBA’s most decorated and eccentric figures before he ever stepped into a wrestling ring. Earning a second Hall of Fame honor for what he did afterward says something about the reach of that particular moment in sports entertainment history.
The ceremony takes place April 17 in Las Vegas, two days before WrestleMania 42.

