Lash Legend said she wants Megan Thee Stallion to accompany her and Nia Jax to the ring, telling MuscleManMalcolm for TheSportster, “It’s Meg. Megan Thee Stallion, hands down, because we three stallions, Clydesdale horses, whatever you want to call us. But just know, we’re special now. I’m just saying. We’re all tall. Everybody knows Meg is tall, too, and she’s a stallion. I feel like she’s definitely fitting in the vibe that we got going on with being an Irresistible Force. So definitely Meg.”
The remark lands as Lash Legend and Nia Jax prepare to challenge Paige and Brie Bella for the WWE Women’s Tag Team Championships at Saturday Night’s Main Event, a matchup set up before the weekend and discussed in a separate GiveMeSport interview Lash gave ahead of the show.
That tag title challenge is the immediate stake. Lash has been using recent media appearances to underline her momentum: she discussed a dominant Royal Rumble performance, a WrestleMania 42 Demolition‑inspired entrance and even floated that 2026 could be the year she becomes Miss Money in the Bank.
The invitation to Megan Thee Stallion came in the interview with MuscleManMalcolm and was unambiguous; Lash framed the idea around size, presence and a shared image. She repeatedly tied the rapper to the stable’s identity, invoking the stallion motif and the Irresistible Force brand she’s been building.
Outside the women’s division, musicians continue to cross into WWE storylines. A primary report notes Lil Yachty has started working as Trick Williams’ hype man and was very involved in Trick Williams’ rivalry with Sami Zayn heading into WrestleMania 42, underlining a pattern of artists showing up in on‑screen wrestling roles.
The context matters because Lash’s pitch is less a throwaway line and more an offer that fits a larger strategy: media appearances that link her to performers outside wrestling, plus high‑profile matchups, amplify her profile ahead of potential title and Money in the Bank runs. She has raised WrestleMania 42 and Royal Rumble moments in interviews and now explicitly reached into pop culture for a co‑star.
The tension is simple and immediate. Lash Legend framed the Megan Thee Stallion idea as a preference and a fit for her team’s image, but the comment is an ask, not an announcement. There is no on‑record confirmation here from Megan Thee Stallion or from any booking source that the rapper will appear at Saturday Night’s Main Event or any WWE show.
What happens next is the part fans will watch closely: Lash and Nia Jax are on a televised path toward the tag title match at Saturday Night’s Main Event, and Lash has publicly signaled she wants a mainstream music star to join that moment. The consequence is twofold — the match itself carries championship implications, and any celebrity involvement would convert Lash’s media lines into a wider pop‑culture moment.
The most consequential unanswered question remains whether Megan Thee Stallion will accept the invitation and step into the ring’s orbit. If she does, the appearance would turn a promotional line into a spotlight; if she declines, Lash’s interview still serves her goal of positioning for the WWE women’s division and for 2026 ambitions such as Miss Money in the Bank.



