Former WWE star and a former three times WWE Tag Team Champion Dax Harwood who is also a former two times WWE NXT Tag Team Champion recently talked about his ending podcast and shared explanations on why he made this decision. His “FTR with Dax Harwood” podcast is no more.
Dax Harwood started his professional wrestling career on the independent circuit in 2004 and he was active on the independent circuit for 8 years. In 2012 he got to sign for WWE and started working on the performance centre. He was a renamed as Scott Dawson in WWE and for the most time period he had been treated as a tag team wrestler.

Dax Harwood Explains Why He Ends His Podcast
In 2014 he teamed up with Dash Wilder for the first time who is currently going by the name of Cash Wheeler and together they were famously known as The Revival. They became one of the hottest tag teams of the NXT as they went on to win the NXT Tag Team Championship two times in total. They also featured in some of the best Tag Team matches in the history of the NXT.
In 2017, The Revival made their main roster debut on the RAW after WrestleMania 33 episode. They managed their main event status on the main roster of WWE as well as the went on to win the WWE Tag Team championships three times in total. In 2020 they were released from WWE and they joined AEW after their WWE release. They were renamed in the AEW and their team name also changed to FTR.

Dax Harwood who is also a former two times WWE NXT Tag Team Champion recently spoke on FTR with Dax Harwood where he talked about his ending podcast and shared explanations on why he made this decision. He said;
“I think we both feel we were causing more harm than good even though we were trying to do good. It just didn’t come across that way or portray it that way. We were more of a detriment to professional wrestling than we thought and never wanted to do that.

“I never wanted you to hate me so much that you would say some of the things you said to me. I thought I was way more mentally tough than I am, but I admit that I am not. I don’t think I can handle some of the things that are said, and I don’t want my daughter to read things ten years from now that are said about me.”
“We really just don’t feel good about fact that that what we are doing is hurting wrestling or hurting AEW,” Koon said, noting that they “flew too close to the sun” and “made life difficult for some people.”
H/T and transcribed by WrestlingHeadlines.com