The brain trust of Vince Russo, Ed Ferrera, Hulk Hogan, and Eric Bischoff are entrenched in the TNA creative team. The Main Event Mafia angle is over, but a significant group of more former WWE wrestlers is hired to be at the top of the card. After a seventh-month reign as champion, AJ Styles faces one of them for the title on Impact.
April 19, 2010 – Orlando, Florida
Rob Van Dam def. AJ Styles {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. At the time that I’m writing this, Impact Plus doesn’t have full episodes of Impact from 2009 – 2014 up, and finding individual matches like this one on the app is a real chore. They’ve reverted back to a four-sided ring. RVD beat Jeff Hardy earlier in the night to get this title shot. Nothing like taking guys eight years past their prime and shooting them up to the top of your card. RVD is still bleeding from earlier. Styles is wearing a Ric Flair-style robe, but it’s cheap and falling apart. I don’t think it’s meant to be satirical as much as it’s just cheap. RVD actually looked alright here, at least as good as he looked for most of his career (ie, not as his 2001 peak but not bad either). The match never got out of second gear and the finish felt like it came out of nowhere, but RVD winning with the Five Star Frog Splash at 7:23 (shown) was kind of the point. **¾
RVD linked up with a bunch of other former ECW wrestlers on the roster to form a stable. They’d already ripped off WCW and WWF/E a bunch, why not ECW? RVD held the title for a few months, even defending at an ECW-themed PPV called Hardcore Justice (sounds familiar). Then, because he was running out of dates on his contract he was pulled from TV in an injury angle and stripped of the title. That’s some high-level incompetence on TNA’s part right there. The title remained vacant for two full months.
October 10, 2010 – Daytona Beach, Florida
Jeff Hardy def. Kurt Angle and Mr. Anderson {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
From Bound for Glory VI. RVD was already back in action on this show. Go figure. This was the finals of a tournament for the vacant title. Hardy and Angle had fought to a draw in their semifinal match, leading to this triple threat. Angle had promised to leave TNA if he didn’t win the tournament. Here’s yet another example of a really good match that was totally forgotten because its finish was so epically bad. Everyone was really motivated here and they put together a lot of cool three way spots. But then Angle and especially Anderson had to lay on the mat for multiple eternities while Bischoff and Hogan performed a high school stage play that ended with Hardy and Hogan both turning heel. But they didn’t do anything that was illegal in a triple threat match, so aside from Hardy joining up with the bad guys I’m not sure what was meant to be nefarious here. Hardy hit the Twist of Fate on Anderson for the win at 18:37. The Angle retirement lasted a couple months, sort of. He was on TV pretty much the whole time. ***¼
January 9, 2011 – Orlando, Florida
Mr. Anderson def. Jeff Hardy {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the sixth Genesis. This was the culmination of a feud that also involved Matt Morgan. Kennedy beat Morgan right before this to earn the title shot. Taz seemed surprised on commentary that the title match was happening immediately, but PPV time was almost over, so when else would it happen? Hardy was dressed like an emo version of a noir detective, cigarette smoking and all. He’s basically the bad guy from Brick. That’s the coolest I’ve ever seen him look and I don’t understand why it wasn’t permanently his main event look. Hardy was predictably dominating here, but Morgan interfered and evened the odds. Mick Foley and Ric Flair got involved too, but none of this made the match any better. Matt Hardy and RVD come down too. All of this interference might have been exciting if the match had any drama to begin with, but it didn’t. In the end, Anderson hit Bischoff with the Mic Check and then hit it on Hardy for the win at 9:09. *¼
February 13, 2011 – Orlando, Florida
Jeff Hardy def. Mr. Anderson {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Ladder Match}
From the seventh Against All Odds. Anderson didn’t already wrestle and it’s got the benefit of being a ladder match, so let’s see what these two make of it. Oops, they made nothing of it. Hardy was neon again, so I’ve lost interest in his look. There was nothing connecting the ladder spots together, so the crowd totally tuned out for most of the match. They built some tension to a suplex onto an upside down ladder, and then they couldn’t deliver the spot without screwing it up. I’d go so far as to say that this match was a bit of a disaster. It reminded me a lot of Sting’s match against Mick Foley in that it totally didn’t deliver on the gimmick and moved slow as hell. Hardy grabbed the belt at 18:15. It is interesting that they were fighting over Hardy’s custom belt, and not the standard TNA belt. *
March 3, 2011 – Fayetteville, North Carolina
Sting def. Jeff Hardy {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. This was the precursor to their infamous Victory Road match. Sting was a mystery opponent here. Aside from a short Hardy chinlock, this was a squash. Sting controlled the whole match, beat Hardy up around ringside, and then hit two Scorpion Death Drops for the win at 5:54. Ten days later, they had a match on PPV where Hardy showed up too drugged up or drunk (or both) to wrestle and had to be pinned in very short order live on the air. It was an embarrassment. This wasn’t an embarrassment, but it really wasn’t anything at all. *½
June 12, 2011 – Orlando, Florida
Mr. Anderson def. Sting {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Slammiversary IX. Never let it be said that Anderson wasn’t given a real chance to be a star in wrestling. This had two things going for it right out of the gate. First was that Anderson had dressed up like early ‘90s Sting in the build to this match, and second was that Sting snuck up on Anderson during his entrance and finished his announcing gimmick before attacking him. But then they squandered the heat by brawling around the ring forever and not doing anything all that cool. After that they had to rely on Anderson’s star power, which was non-existent. Nobody cared about the possibility of him beating Sting for the belt. At times, it was creepy how quiet the crowd was. Bischoff came to ringside and botched an interference spot, killing what little momentum the match seemed to be building toward a finish. Oh, nevermind, it wasn’t a botched interference spot. It was a crooked referee deal that was not clear at all until Anderson hit a blatant low blow. Then he hit the Mic Check for the win at 15:52. Or maybe it was an interference spot, as they replay the moment over and over trying to explain how the complicated interference made sense. If it’s that complicated, don’t do it. The match wasn’t awful (until the finish) but it wasn’t what I’d want a title match to look like if I were running a wrestling company. **
July 14, 2011 – Orlando, Florida
Sting def. Mr. Anderson {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. Sting’s facepaint is now Dark Knight Joker-themed… three years after that movie came out. This had all the heat that the last match was missing. I guess skipping the useless brawling and having Sting being the one chasing the title helped a lot. They had a really energetic, short match, and that’s more or less a best case scenario when it comes to Anderson. Bully Ray interfered, but a guy in a clown mask attacked him and distracted Anderson. That led to Sting hitting the Scorpion Death Drop for the win at 8:55. ***
August 7, 2011 – Orlando, Florida
Kurt Angle def. Sting {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the seventh Harcore Justice. Well, sort of the second, as they changed the name from Hard Justice. Also oh my fucking god the title changed hands eight times in 2011 and it was already starting to feel like too much at change number since come August. Angle’s TNA gear looked so cheap compared to his WWE gear. You know this product was in bad shape overall because they ran the same building every week and hadn’t gotten any of their main eventers over. The crowds are so quiet for every single title match. By virtue of familiarity alone they should be more hot for this match. The ref bump here was beyond predictable. Hulk Hogan came down to set up Angle’s heel turn, which went down pretty much exactly the same way as Hardy’s heel turn. Then Angle hit the Olympic Slam at 15:22 to almost no ovation whatsoever. And for some reason Hogan is mad, even though Angle hit Sting with a chair which is exactly what Hogan was going to do. **¾
October 20, 2011 – Orlando, Florida
James Storm def. Kurt Angle {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. Angle had defeated Bobby Roode just days earlier at the PPV, but that PPV also saw Sting win control of TNA so he booked this match for Roode’s partner. Angle beat Storm up for a minute, and then Storm hit a flukey superkick for the win at 1:19. This was a match in name only, but as a change of pace it was very welcomed. Vince Russo had stepped down from the creative team, and it was starting to show. N/A
November 3, 2011 – Macon, Georgia
Bobby Roode def. James Storm {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. I’m not mad at all about a straight up match between two dudes with nobody else involved after a sea of weird Hogan and Bischoff interference finishes. That said, this did have a requisite heel turn, as Roode won at 13:21 (shown) by smashing a beer bottle over Storm’s head when the referee was nursing an injury on the floor. That made Storm the shortest reigning champ (for combined reigns) in the history of TNA, a record he’d hold for seven years. TNA referees are the worst referees of all the referees. The match was pretty solid, even figuring the beer bottle silliness. And then, after what can only be described as a rough 2011, Roode gave the title some stability in 2012 and showed that TNA could shift away from former WWE wrestlers and build their own top guys. ***½
July 8, 2012 – Orlando, Florida
Austin Aries def. Bobby Roode {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the eighth Destination X. Aries voluntarily vacated the X Division Championship in exchange for this match. Jeremy Borash has replaced Don West on commentary and the combo of him and Mike Tenay is like listening to the inside of someone’s sinuses. They’re basically the same guy and it’s bad. This was refreshing. As much as I find Aries grating on almost every level, he and Roode were 100% on the same page here and put on a very good main event. The way they anticipated each other’s moves was fun, as was Roode’s attacking the referee costing him his advantage. Aries hit the brainbuster at 22:42 for the win. I don’t think it’s a coincidence at all that Russo’s departure and new guys being pushed resulted in the crowds getting invested loudly in the matches again. ****
October 14, 2012 – Phoenix, Arizona
Jeff Hardy def. Austin Aries {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Bound for Glory VIII. Hardy won the BFG Series to earn this match. This worked well. Hardy was clearly motivated and probably at least mostly sober. Aries was a heel, which suits his personality way better. When he got busted open and went wide-eyed, it hooked me in. The match was totally different from the Roode match, as Aries didn’t have answers to any of Hardy’s offense but rather went at him with intensity and speed. Hardy kept cool, suffered through Aries’ gnarly attacks, and got the win with the Twist of Fate and the Swanton Bomb at 23:03. One of the best Jeff Hardy singles matches I’ve ever seen. ***¾
Beginning in 2013, TNA started pulling way back on PPVs, going from 12 a year to four, and then down to two. The cost-cutting extended to the talent, as all of the big names they hung their hat on wound up leaving for various reasons and the company was finally forced (kicking and screaming) to start investing in more homegrown (or grown with the help of the indies) talent. All of that and more in the next part.