Former New England Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski will appear March 20 on the WWE's "Friday Night SmackDown", the promotion said on Twitter.
Gronkowski, 30, has worked with WWE before. He took part in the Andre the Giant Battle Royal at WrestleMania 33 in 2017, jumping the barricade to help wrestler Mojo Rawley (a friend of Gronkowski's) win the match.
BREAKING: @RobGronkowski will be on #SmackDown NEXT WEEK! pic.twitter.com/1OMCQr1nUr
— WWE (@WWE) March 14, 2020
FS1's "WWE Backstage" program reported earlier in the week Gronkowski and the WWE were finalizing a contract for him to join the organization.
In August, Gronkowski said at a sponsor's news conference that he'd be interested in doing one big WWE match in "maybe five years" but could not see himself as a full-time wrestler.
"With wrestling, I don't feel like I would be a full-time wrestler, but there is one thing I'm down for," Gronkowski said. "And that's to do one crazy match. Practice it for a little bit, go out there -- like in a Royal Rumble -- go out there, I got my friend in WWE [Rawley], practice it and do a full-on WWE match. I'm not saying when, maybe five years. I got the rest of my life to do that. I've always dreamed about doing that, just one time, going in there and going full-out. That may be a possibility, one time, down the road."
Rawley told ESPN in October that the idea of Gronkowski being in WWE this year was not far-fetched.
"Hey, man, we've got SummerSlam in Boston [this coming August]," Rawley said. "Maybe we'll do a tag match. I've been doing my own thing, but for him, maybe I'll do a tag match."
WWE executives Paul "Triple H" Levesque and Stephanie McMahon, as well as Rawley, were at Gronkowski's Super Bowl beach party in February, at which time Levesque referenced SummerSlam in Boston in a Twitter post.
Thanks for the invite to the Beach Party @RobGronkowski ... maybe you should come to our party in Boston ... heard it's the biggest of the summer. @StephMcMahon pic.twitter.com/eRQ8z0UmQI
— Triple H (@TripleH) February 1, 2020
Gronkowski, who won three Super Bowls with the Patriots, retired from the NFL in March 2019 after nine seasons, saying the pain and injuries he suffered throughout his career had worn on him mentally.
He was selected to five Pro Bowls, was a four-time All-Pro first-team selection and was named to the NFL's 100th Anniversary All-Time Team.