When we last left off, Dan Severn had just become NWA Champion for the second time by screwing over Shinya Hashimoto in Japan. The world at large wasn’t really aware that he was champion. He didn’t seem to be all that aware of it himself, as he was more interested in his MMA career than his wrestling one. The Jarretts and the NWA teamed to form NWA-TNA, a new wrestling company that would air weekly PPVs for $10 each. In 2002, it was an idea that wasn’t immediately shrugged off because $10/month wrestling streaming services wouldn’t exist for another 12 years. But on the night of the inaugural PPV, Severn was committed to a King of the Cage MMA fight and chose to do that instead of defend the NWA Championship. As such, there was once again the need to find a champion to hold the vacant title.
June 19, 2002 – Huntsville, Alabama
Ken Shamrock def. Malice, Brian Christopher, Bruce, Buff Bagwell, Chris Harris, Del Rios, Devon Storm, Apolo, Jeff Jarrett, Justice, K-Krush, Konnan, Lash LeRoux, Norman Smiley, Rick Steiner, Scott Hall, Slash, Steve Corino, and The Vampire Warrior {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Gauntlet for the Gold Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #1. It’s a Royal Rumble with fewer guys, though the last two guys fight to a pinfall finish. Jarrett was the first competitor in the match, interrupting a Toby Keith concert. Keith eventually interfered and helped Hall eliminate Jarrett from the match. That’s how country this company wanted to appear, and I’m not sure how they expected to compete with WWE putting themselves into such a niche right off the bat. Also the presentation looked exactly the same as WCW, which had just a year earlier gone out of business, from the set to how it was lit and filmed to the fact that the first four guys to enter the match (and half the guys in the match overall) were WCW guys. This was focused and entertaining to follow until the eighth guy came in and it turned into a bunch of guys punching and kicking and not noticing one another. Ever curious what Abyss would look like if he were just a generic wrestler? See Justice here. Steiner and Malice cleaned house at the top of the second half, but my mind had already drifted. After the Keith interference, the wrestlers just start coming out when they feel like it, presumably because the show was running short on time. Anyway, nobody got to show off any kind of personality here, rather everyone just punched their way through the match. It came down to Malice and Shamrock in the end, so Ricky Steamboat came in as the referee. After a perfectly decent and thankfully short final bout, Shamrock hit the Belly to Belly Suplex for the win at 36:43. **¼
August 7, 2002 – Nashville, Tennessee
Ron Killings def. Ken Shamrock {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #8. The Nashville venue is a lot more run down looking than the Huntsville venue. Killings becomes the first black NWA champion… in 2002. This started out alright, but completely fell apart near the end. They almost killed Killings on a botched hurricanrana. Shamrock basically squashed Killings until the very end, when a bunch of guys ran out to brawl with each other, Apolo missed a superkick on Shamrock, Shamrock pretended it hit, Steamboat rolled Shamrock into the ring, and Killings hit an Ace Crusher for the win at 9:18. What a mess. Smells like Vince Russo. *
November 20, 2002 – Nashville, Tennessee
Jeff Jarrett def. Ron Killings {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #22. Well this was inevitable, wasn’t it? Jarrett’s career-long attempts to get himself over as a company ace despite never seeing any evidence that it was a viable route has always confused me. I was surprised to find that I enjoyed this match quite a bit, then the match turned into a weak brawl around the building with unearned blood and a 10-foot dive through the table. How did that factor into the rest of the match? It didn’t as the bloody Jarrett just no-sold the spot and immediately took control. Killings could lose the title by count out, but the referee apparently counted to 100 because they were out of the ring forever. Also he got bumped. Then a guy dressed like Mr. Wrestling hit Killings with a guitar, giving Jarrett the win at 17:37. To the shock of no one, Russo was under the mask. Leave it to him to take a perfectly fine match and just ruin it with nonsense to get himself over. **¼
June 11, 2003 – Nashville, Tennessee
AJ Styles def. Jeff Jarrett and Raven {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #49. This was really frustrating, because the match was really great and then the last minute was total trash. Raven, Jarrett, and Styles put together a very creative match that was all action and all pretty much made sense. Then things started taking a turn when Shane Douglas ran down to brawl with Raven and take him out of the match. Styles and Jarrett kept things going well enough, but then there was a pointless ref bump (there were no missed near-falls, and all the weapons and interference were legal in a triple threat) and then Russo hit Jarrett with a guitar to give Styles the win with the Styles Clash at 14:00. Russo ruins everything he touches. ***½
October 22, 2003 – Nashville, Tennessee
Jeff Jarrett def. AJ Styles {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #67. This was alright I guess. They never got out of second gear, though that isn’t to say there wasn’t hard work in this match. There was plenty of gaga both before and after the match, with Eric Watts and Don Callis causing trouble. Sonny Siaki came out, only to be stopped by Watts and Dusty Rhodes. But then Jarrett brought a chair and the title belt into the ring and got the win with a belt shot at 12:12. I know a decent amount of time passes between these title changes, but Jarret and Styles flip flopping their heel/face personas was probably part of the reason nobody ever cared about TNA. ***
April 21, 2004 – Nashville, Tennessee
AJ Styles def. Jeff Jarrett {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Steel Cage Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #91. This was meant to be Chris Harris getting a title shot, but he got injured so Styles replaced him. This had the intensity that the last big match between these two was missing. Jarrett caught Styles going for his backflip DDT nonsense and then threw him all over the ring and into the cage with enough ferocity that I was kind of disappointed that Styles didn’t bleed. Then Jarrett screwed up by going for the Sharpshooter instead of the Figure 4 Leglock and Styles was able to reverse the hold because Jarrett wasn’t as experienced with it. Styles started getting ahead of his own skis during his comeback, so Jarrett sent him into the cage and threw powder into his eyes. Styles started to come back but the powder kept him from sustaining momentum, as did Jarrett’s continued cheating (well, not cheating because there were no disqualifications, but his use of foreign objects). Again, Jarrett got cocky and went for the Styles Clash, and that bit him because Styles countered to one of his own. Jarrett kicked out and then used the referee to stop Styles from diving off of the cage. The bump Styles took to the floor was gnarly. The finish saw the referee let Jarrett out of the ring to bring Styles back in, but he grabbed his guitar as well. Vince Russo tried to get in the cage, which was enough of a delay for Jarrett’s guitar shot that Styles was able to kick it out of his hands and get a crucifix pin for the win at 13:34. So yeah, this match was terrific. I can’t imagine there’s another match that physically has Russo associated with it that’s any better. ****¼
May 19, 2004 – Nashville, Tennessee
Ron Killings def. AJ Styles, Chris Harris, and Raven {NWA World Heavyweight Championship Deadly Draw Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #95. This is a complicated four way. It starts with two wrestlers fighting for five minutes. If you can eliminate your opponent in five minutes then you get a break until the time limit expires (and if you were the challenger you become the champion) and the next guy comes in. But if there are no eliminations then it becomes a three way and then a four way. It sounds more complicated than it is, though it is more complicated than it needs to be. Harris was a total stiff in the first five minutes against Styles. They screwed up a pin spot at the end of the first segment because they didn’t seem to know if the match actually paused or not. It didn’t hurt the match too much, no more than the commentators having to explain the convoluted elimination rules over and over again. They don’t even matter because we get to the four way portion without any pins. In fact, they didn’t do anything interesting with the stipulation. Even Killings coming in last gave him no advantage at all, as he was laid out almost immediately. Jarrett interfered and attacked Styles, and the other three fought over who would pick up the win over him until Killings caught him with a diving ax kick at 19:43. TNA apparently didn’t think the stipulation was worthwhile either, as they apparently dropped it and the words Deadly Draw weren’t used together again until AEW grabbed it in 2020 for their women’s tag team tournament Battlebowl ripoff. As for this match, it was inoffensive but completely forgettable. **¾
June 2, 2004 – Nashville, Tennessee
Jeff Jarrett def. AJ Styles, Chris Harris, Raven, and Ron Killings {NWA World Heavyweight Championship King of the Mountain Match}
From NWA-TNA PPV #97. This is the first KOTM match. The rules are very complicated and I don’t feel like explaining them so if you’re like me and you’ve never seen one before, just google it. There was certainly stuff to latch onto here, like Harris and Raven being more focused on fighting each other than they were on getting the title. They made decent use of the rules, certainly more than they did during the Deadly Draw. Styles took a few bumps that were enough to singe this into my memory. It definitely started feeling repetitive near the end, which made the table spots leading into the finish rather welcome. Jarrett bopped Killings with the guitar and hung the belt at 20:19. People destroyed this match at the time because the hook you had to hang the belt on fell off and Jarrett had to MacGyver it back on so he could win the thing. Honestly, I think he handled it rather calmly given the circumstances and clearly TNA thought so too because they brought this match back a dozen times. ***¾
Later that week, Impact debuted. A few months later, the weekly PPVs were ditched entirely in favor of a more traditional TV and monthly PPV schedule. I’ll say this for the weekly PPV setup, though the matches for the title were often bad, the title was defended consistently by its champions. I have a lot of respect for that kind of continuity. I think it did a lot to get people to care about the belt after a decade of depreciation. After a rough start, TNA put on some real bangers in the main event during the weekly PPVs. In the next part, I’ll see if they keep it up from the time they switch to monthly PPVs to the time that NWA and TNA part ways.