John Cena WWE SmackDown
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John Cena Listens To Nothing In The Car, Drove Around Florida For ‘Sh*ts And Giggles’

John Cena is known for being a big-time fan of cars, so much so that when he does find the time to go for a drive, he listens to absolutely nothing but the road.

During a recent appearance on Shannon Sharpe’s Club Shay Shay podcast, Cena was asked what music he listens to while driving, to which Cena surprised Sharpe by saying he listens to nothing. He then recounted a story about how, on one particular day off, Cena drove around the entire state of Florida just meditating.

“I listen to nothing,” said Cena. “I am a huge car guy, so when I get to drive, it’s kind of my chance to meditate. I always try to drive something manual with a stick shift, and I always listen to the car, man. Yeah, and that could be like, one day off, and you had mentioned those are rare, I think we work in the same dimension…I drove around the state of Florida, just for s—s and giggles. I did 880 miles. I left my house in Tampa, went to Orlando, went around the thumb, went back up, went back down. And as soon as I pulled in my garage, I’m like ‘whoa, 880 miles. Not too bad.'”

Who is the GOAT?

During the same show, Cena was asked who the greatest of all time is in professional wrestling. Cena said it was none other than Roman Reigns, an amazing feat considering Reigns is still competing today.

“It’s amazing I’m saying a still active talent with years in front of him is the greatest of all time. But he’s been in it since 2012, I had to work my way up,” John Cena said. “I started on the bench and then got onto the Saturday program, and then just lost every match. He came in with The Shield in a really high-level spot and never wavered.

“Even when the fans didn’t like him, he was still in a main event spot. He’s been in a main event lens for over a decade now. And he’s brought through his clock, and you could say whatever forces helped it, but in 2012 we were the stock was trading at 11 bucks, WWE or TKO stocks now at 117, that’s on his shoulders.

“There isn’t a better indication of, and I know it’s a team effort and nobody does it alone, but that, to me, that’s some serious shit. And for me, I got to give respect where respect is due. And Joe is smart, passionate about the business, a multi-generational athlete has respect for his family has respect for the locker room has respect for the business. He’s just a very, very smart performer and somebody I respect. He would be my greatest of all time.”

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