The tidal wave within the The Bloodline has broken — and at the heart of it lies one devastating moment. On June 7 2025, at WWE Money in the Bank (2025), Solo Sikoa was inches away from seizing the briefcase when his cousin Jacob Fatu blindsided him, delivering a moonsault through a ladder and ending Solo’s shot in chilling fashion.
The Origin of the Fallout
The seeds of betrayal weren’t planted overnight. A backstage exchange on the June 6 episode of WWE SmackDown saw Solo dismiss Fatu as “all gas and no brains” — words that traveled just far enough. Fatu overheard them, and the humiliation lit the fuse.
At Money in the Bank, the dramatic culmination: despite Solo ascending the ladder, the attack came out of nowhere — Fatu’s superkick then moonsault shattered loyalties.
Solo’s Message and the Aftermath
Within hours, Solo took to his Instagram Story with a stark black-and-white photo of him and Fatu in the ring — with Fatu’s face crossed out in red. No words needed. The visual screamed betrayal.
But Solo didn’t stop there. His subsequent promos left little doubt: “We’re coming for you.” The damage is done, the line has been drawn, and Solo wants payback — publicly and personally.
What It Means for The Bloodline
What was once a united front now shows fractures deep beneath the surface. Fatu’s attack marked more than just a lost match — it signalled a split in the power structure of The Bloodline. With internal respect shaken, Solo now faces a two-fold challenge: contain the damage and re-establish his dominance.
Why This Matters
In the larger story of WWE, such feuds deliver the heat fans crave: personal, physical and unpredictable. When kin turn on kin, the stakes rise. Solo’s Instagram post? A cryptic war-declaration. Fatu’s betrayal? A bold power grab. And the WWE Universe? They’re all watching.
What’s Next?
The question looms: Will Solo chase vengeance or redemption? Will Fatu stay rogue or return to reclaim status? One thing’s clear — the reverberations from this moment will echo through upcoming pay-per-views and main event segments alike.
In the ring, subtitles drop. The tactics sharpen. And as Solo and Fatu head into the next chapter, “family” takes on a whole new meaning — one of war, not unity.

