In an interview with WWE Hall of Famer Jim Ross on The Ross Report, Ring of Honor World Champion Jay Lethal commented on being the Champion of the company, the potential of him joining the WWE and more.

Highlights of the interview are below:

His thoughts on Roderick Strong: “Roderick Strong, to be honest, the best way I can describe him is one of the most finely-tuned athletes that I’ve ever been in the ring with, it’s almost like he’s unreal, he’s a machine. That guy can go, we’re sad to lose him, but of course we’re happy to see him go on to bigger heights and new adventures.”

On being the ROH World Champion and travelling around the globe: “I love it in the UK, I believe that given the chance, I could definitely live there, the fans were great, they all treated me like royalty, for lack of a better word. I can’t wait to go back. I was just in the UK a few weeks ago, there was a new promotion that started, and I got to wrestle Noam Dar, who is in the WWE Cruiserweight Classic that’s being filmed right now. They’ve got a lot of great talents in the UK, and I can’t wait to go back. The coolest thing about that is for most of those dates, not only do I have the Ring of Honor world title with me, but some of those are real, sanctioned Ring of Honor world title matches.”

His thoughts on Adam Cole: “Our styles really mesh well together. This is going to be one hell of a pay-per-view, because I’m coming for revenge. Adam Cole had the Bullet Club beat me down and shave my head. Now this babyface is out for revenge.”

On Bullet Club and WWE utilizing the idea: “It’s the cool thing right now, it’s the new nWo. When NWO started it was the new cool thing, you could add or subtract a member as you please and nobody would really shake a leg at it because it was so cool and popular at the time. I think each promotion out there right now, all the top ones anyway, have some form of Bullet Club or The Club in them. Ring of Honor, New Japan, WWE.”

On being the top guy in Ring of Honor: “There’s a reason that I’ve made it to this particular spot that I’m in on the card and in the company, I must be doing something right. When I can sit and watch the whole show go by and they’re doing everything under the sun, because everybody wants to have ‘the match’ and everybody is stepping up their game. I’d like to thing that at the end of the day there isn’t too much I have to change, because I’m in that spot for a reason. To me it’s all about staying comfortable and staying calm and relaxing and trusting in my ability, but I’d be lying if I said that wasn’t hard to do. As the main event guy, you don’t want to go out there and have a stinker, it can get to you, that pressure can get to you, I’ve seen it, I’ve seen it in other promotions that I’ve worked for, I’ve seen one guy from the main event yell at some guy that wasn’t in the main event for doing so much, because now it makes their job harder, but if I gotta complain to you about making my job harder, than I don’t think I know how to do my job.”

On potentially joining WWE: “Most of the wrestlers from my generation, our love for professional wrestling started from watching the WWF, so me personally, it would be very cool, even if it was just for a minute, to get to work for the company that started my love for professional wrestling. Yes, I would definitely work for them, given the right time, given the right circumstance.”

The podcast is available in full at this link.