History of the TNA Championship | Part 3 | Dixieland

In 2013, TNA dropped most of its PPVs and started running many of its big shows as special episodes of Impact. Vince Russo was gone, but Hulk Hogan was still rounding out the end of his contract. The big angle dominating the company was the Aces & Eights takeover. The storyline was structured very similarly to the nWo, but if they were all bikers. Bully Ray saved Hogan from the evil stable a couple times, so Hogan named him the number one contender to Jeff Hardy’s title. 

March 10, 2013 – San Antonio, Texas

Bully Ray def. Jeff Hardy {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Cage Match}
From the ninth Lockdown. You’d think that thirteen years after these guys were kicking ass in a tag team feud in WWE that I’d be able to see them as main eventers. You’d be wrong; I just can’t help but see Ray as a midcarder. Maybe it’s the sleeveless t-shirt, or the jean shorts, or the terrible necklace. More likely it’s that he was just never so good that people were clamoring for him to have a singles run. Taz, the Aces & Eights representative on the commentary team, makes sure to find a way to make the match be about him. Gerald Brisco and Eric Bishoff’s sons interfere, but are quickly dispatched by both guys. The match was very run of the mill, and didn’t get interesting until Hardy and Ray stood back to back as the heels started filling the ring. But then Ray joined his buddy Devon in Aces & Eights, hit Hardy with a hammer, and pinned him at 16:55. The crowd was almost completely silent for the entire finish. **¼ 

June 18, 2013 – Louisville, Kentucky

Chris Sabin def. Bully Ray {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact: Destination X, which was the ninth one. Sabin vacated the X-Division Championship for this title shot. Sabin had been out with multiple knee injuries for the better part of two years, and this was the end of his comeback story. They set up a dope bit before the match started, with Ray getting in Sabin’s face and telling him how he was going to beat him by taking out his knees, only for Sabin to get right back in the much bigger champion’s face. But then after a few minutes of that story being a part of the match, they abandoned it and basically had Ray roll over Sabin the entire match. I guess that technically works, but it sure as hell wasn’t enthralling. Aces & Eights and the Main Event Mafia came out to take sides. They eventually started fighting, which was enough of a distraction for Sabin to hit Ray with a hammer to get a cheap win at 14:11 (shown of 18:44). This was irritating, as they found a way to make a Ray match interesting and then just didn’t do that thing. **½ 

August 15, 2013 – Norfolk, Virginia

Bully Ray def. Chris Sabin {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Cage Match}
From the first night of the (sort of) ninth Hardcore Justice on Impact. Imagine you’re Sabin. You’ve worked your whole career and now, after years working hard to recover from terribly timed injuries you’re given a world title… and your reign is entirely encumbered by Bully fucking Ray. What a bummer. This match was trash. They didn’t use the cage at all until the final couple of minutes. Ray screwed up a spot in the corner and then tried to cover it up by making like he hurt his shoulder. Okay, that’s good, but then he immediately stops selling it. Just awful. You could see the ref bump coming like a second sun appearing in the sky. Then one UFC guy turned on another UFC guy (I know who they are, shut up) and then Ray hit Sabin with a powerbomb for the win at 14:30 (shown of 18:30). Isn’t the point of putting a small guy against a big guy in a cage to have the small guy try to do aerial stuff to the big guy? Or to have the small guy try to use his speed to escape to win? Neither of those things happened here. This sucked. Sabin never got a rematch. *¾ 

October 20, 2013 – San Diego, California

AJ Styles def. Bully Ray {TNA World Heavyweight Championship No Disqualification Match}
From Bound for Glory IX. Hogan had just left the company. The story here was more that Styles was feuding with Dixie Carter over a contract renewal. The reason you don’t make real life issues like this into storylines is because two months later when Styles didn’t renew his contract it made the company look very publicly incompetent. It’s pretty much a watered down version of CM Punk vs. John Cena. I like Ray’s smack talk, but I don’t like how he grinds the match to a halt before doing it. You know you can talk and attack at the same time, dude. Anyway, none of this worked. Styles may have been unmotivated at this point, but It’s pretty clear that people had to work down to Ray’s style. The failed interference in this match was executed as well as a BTE comedy sketch (that show sucks too, y’all). Ray’s title matches gave the drug-addicted Hardy’s a run for their money. That’s insane. Styles’s table bump here was insane, but I have a hard time giving points to it because it’s wasted in a crap match like this. Carter, who has no screen presence whatsoever, got involved in this. Maybe everyone in ROH loves Cary Silkin so much because he had the good sense to not force himself into the storylines. The last few minutes after Carter stopped interfering weren’t terrible, I guess. Styles hit the Spiral Tap for the win at 20:23. The following week, Styles was (kayfabe) stripped of the title because of a (kayfabe but also real) contract dispute. He kept wearing it and calling himself the champion, but Dixie Carter held a tournament to crown a new champion anyway. **

December 19, 2013 – Orlando, Florida

Magnus def. Jeff Hardy {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Dixieland Match}
From the tenth Final Resolution on Impact. This is a combined steel cage/ladder match, where you have to escape the cage and get to a ladder on the ramp to get the title. The very definition of a hat on a hat. The door is chained shut, but they manage to find some cool ways to subvert the normal cagematch escape tropes. For example, Hardy tries to squeeze out of one of the holes in the fence that the cameramen use to peek into the ring. This history for why those holes are there in TNA is pretty dark (RIP Chris Candido), but since they’re there you might as well make something of them. In fact, I was really enjoying this entire match until Ethan Carter III interfered on Hardy’s behalf despite Hardy not wanting it. And then Dixie got in Hardy’s way when he went to climb the ladder, but she seemed more like a dead-eyed ghost haunting him than a heel interfering. And then, Rockstar Spud threw Hardy off of the ladder, leaving Magnus to casually climb and retrieve the belt at 14:15 (shown of 17:42). And then Magnus celebrates with the Carters and Spud. What the hell did EC3 attack him for then? Spud could have tossed the ladder over for Hardy without it. It’s nonsensical! It’s so dumb! The match was working, why did they sabotage it?! By the way, the ladder match portion was pointless. They didn’t do anything ladder match-y at all; it was just a way to add another minute after the real match was over. ***

January 9, 2014 – Orlando, Florida 

Magnus def. AJ Styles {TNA World Heavyweight Championship No Disqualification Unification Match}
From Impact. The BroMans, EC3, and Spud all attack Styles right from the opening bell. They attack Sting too, who was at ringside to prevent such a thing from happening. When the two good guys are able to fight off the six bad guys, Bad Influence runs out to make it 8-on-2. But Earl Hebner won’t count for Magnus because of this garbage. He’s really expressing how I feel. Dixie replaces Earl with Brian Hebner. Never has there ever been a less convincing heel persona in all of wrestling. Styles and Sting hold their own against all odds (and sense, this is super dumb) and Earl runs back out to try to count for Styles. But then Bobby Roode runs out to beat the crap out of Styles while cuck Magnus just watches. Everyone’s balls are getting cut off here. Then Dixie brings out a third referee and Magnus pins Styles off of Roode’s attack and gets the win at 8:48 (shown). There is a playbook for good overbooking in matches like this, and the first rule is that the babyface overcomes it to win. Failing that, the second rule is that things happen in an escalating fashion throughout the match to build the drama. Here, everything happened from the very beginning, nothing mattered, and only Bobby Roode came out looking strong. But even he didn’t look that Strong because Styles had already been beaten up by eight other guys before Roode came out there. This was Styles’ final match in the company. I can’t stand Styles (I think he’s good but overrated in the ring and a dumpster fire out of it), but even he deserved a way better send off after 12 years with the company. ½*

Around this time, Jeff Jarrett also left TNA. The split was said to be amicable, but Jarrett decided to start another wrestling company. That will become important in the next part of this series. Bad Intentions, Sabin, Sting, Hernandez, and the Dudleys all left too. 

April 10, 2014 – Orlando, Florida

Eric Young def. Magnus {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. Had Magnus been disqualified or counted out he’d lose the title. If anyone interfered on his behalf, they’d be fired. I guess MVP had taken over as a babyface authority figure. Young won a battle royal earlier in the night to earn this shot. This was an energetic little match. The lack of interference was a breath of fresh air, and the rules made it so that Magnus had to get a little creative to cheat. I stress a little, because he only tried once. It didn’t feel like a main event, but unlike the unification at least it felt like a match. Young won at 9:33 (shown of 13:02) with a piledriver. ***

June 19, 2014 – Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

Lashley def. Eric Young {TNA World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Impact. If you’re Impact and you’re going to put on a nine-minute main event with a title change, don’t you think you should time it so that an ad doesn’t eat up half the match? That’s such a weird way to go. MVP must have turned heel in the last two months because he and Kenny King screwed Young by pulling the referee to the floor during this match. Also, if anyone but them interfered, they’d be fired. Lashley hit the spear for the win at 5:12 (shown of 9:12). There was barely anything here for me to review. ** 

October 29, 2014 – Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

Bobby Roode def. Lashley {TNA World Championship Match}
From Impact. The six-sided ring is back. The wrestlers were said to have been pissed off about the change, which came about thanks to an online poll of the fans and because TNA felt they didn’t have another way of sticking out. Imagine being a wrestler in TNA, probably talented given you’ve been given a spot on TV, booked into oblivion by bad management, and then told that you aren’t sticking out and an inanimate object that you don’t like is going to do the job. Kurt Angle was the guest referee here. He took multiple ref bumps as if he was some chump. Why didn’t logic ever, and I mean ever play into TNA’s television? The timekeeper and a second referee got taken out as well. Angle struggled to get back inside and was able to count the pin for Roode when he blocked a roll up at 12:15 (shown of 17:48). There was absolutely no point in having Angle referee this match. But the match was fine, I guess. They treated these TV main events like TV main events even though they needed to carry the importance of PPV main events. Not great! **¾ 

That sound you hear are the reverberating clanks and bangs of Impact dropping off of Spike TV and having to put clip shows on for the remainder of their 2014 contract. In 2015, they debuted Impact on Destination America, a channel that reached just over half as many homes as Spike TV. But hey, at least they had the six-sided ring back. I’ll see how this descent into obscurity went in the next part.