WOL: Are WWE stars suffering from overexposure?

Happy Valley-tine’s Day or Greg Valentine’s Day. Whatever you celebrate, it’s time for Wrestling Observer Live.

TNA No Surrender Friday night was a mix of action, surprises and the usual booking.

As WWE SmackDown builds towards Elimination Chamber, does it feel like some fan favorites are running out of gas? We’ve seen them do so much during their tenure, there’s just not much else to get excited about.

Plus, AEW Grand Slam (no spoilers), WBD and politics, the WON Awards and more. Check it out.

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Jelly Roll attends TNA No Surrender

Country music sensation and award-winning artist Jelly Roll was recently in attendance at TNA No Surrender 2026.

TNA No Surrender took place on February 13th, 2026, from The Pinnacle in Nashville, Tennessee. During the show, as the cameras panned across the venue, they caught up with Grammy-award winning artist, Jelly Roll, who was sitting and enjoying the show from the front row.

Belonging to the city of Nashville, Tennessee, and a known wrestling fan, the 41-year-old attended and watched the show. While he received a huge roaring reaction from his home crowd, Roll also became a target of A.J Francis’ trash talking.

Last year at SummerSlam 2025, Roll tagged up with Randy Orton to face the duo of Drew McIntyre and Logan Paul in a losing cause. The buildup and creative for the match was recently showcased on WWE’s Unreal season 2 on Netflix. He recently also won the best country album award at the 2026 Grammys.

Mickie James makes TNA return at No Surrender, confronts champions

Wrestling veteran Mickie James shocked fans when she made her surprising TNA return at No Surrender in Nashville, Tennessee.

In the fourth match of the night, The Elegance Brand (Heather by Elegance and M by Elegance) defeated Indi Hartwell and Xia Brookside to retain their Knockouts tag titles.

Shortly after the match, fans witnessed TNA Hall of Famer Mickie James make a surprising return before shifting her focus to Ash by Elegance. However, as James attacked her, The Elegance Brand made the save and ganged up on the veteran. However, Hartwell and Brookside soon came to James’ aid.

James, 46, has not wrestled since July, 2025, when she defeated Mila Smidt to win the ABC Women’s title. James is also a five-time TNA/Impact Knockouts World Champion and was even inducted into the TNA Hall of Fame at Bound for Glory 2025. Her last TNA/Impact match dates back to 2023, where she suffered a defeat against Trinity/Naomi.

New Knockouts Champion crowned at TNA No Surrender

WWE NXT Wrestler Arianna Grace has defeated Lei Ying Lee to become the brand-new Knockouts Champion at TNA No Surrender.

On Friday, February 13th, Grace, with Channing ‘Stacks’ Lorenzo by her side, faced off against Lee for the Knockouts World title.

The final moments of the match saw Grace pull out her father, Santino Marella’s signature ‘cobra’, before using it herself on Lee. She followed it up with her own finisher to secure the victory and become the new champion.

The loss tonight marked an end to Lee’s Knockouts title reign, which lasted around 88 days. Lee had won the title from another NXT wrestler, Kelani Jordan, last year in November, 2025.

Tonight’s win marked Grace’s first wrestling championship win across all of the promotions she has been a part of.

Earlier in the night, Jody Threat also won the Knockouts Battle Royal to earn a future title shot for the Knockouts World Championship.

Number one contender for Knockouts title set at TNA No Surrender

In the official first match of the night at TNA No Surrender, Jody Threat won the Knockouts Battle Royal to become the number one contender for the Knockouts title.

11 women competed for a chance at the future Knockouts World title, amongst which Threat last eliminated Tessa Blanchard to earn the shot. The final four of the match were Threat, Blanchard, Elayna Black, and Mara Sade.

The closing moments of the bout saw Sade eliminate Black and Blanchard eliminate Sade, before getting herself eliminated by Threat.

The order of the elimination is Rosemary, Tasha Steelz, Jada Stone, Harley Hudson, Myla Grace, Mila Moore, Victoria Crawford, Black, Sade, and Blanchard.

Threat will now face the TNA Knockouts Champion in a title match later at an unspecified date.

New International Champion crowned at TNA No Surrender

Trey Miguel defeated Channing ‘Stacks’ Lorenzo to crown himself the new TNA International Champion.

Earlier this year, Miguel returned to TNA to compete in the Feast or Fired briefcase match. He won one of the briefcases and earned an International title shot against Lorenzo.

At TNA No Surrender, Miguel defeated Lorenzo while being accompanied by inger/songwriter Teddy Swims.

After the match, TNA President Carlos Silva awarded Miguel with the title and put it around his waist. The final moments of the segment saw Swims celebrate the title win with Miguel.

From a bumpy start in 2026 to winning a title, Miguel has experienced it all. Miguel, as a part of The Rascalz, signed a new contract with AEW. However, things soon took a turn, and he was let go from the promotion. Shortly after, he announced a break from pro-wrestling before making his return to TNA.

TNA No Surrender live results: Mike Santana & Leon Slater vs. Nic Nemeth & Eddie Edwards

TNA Wrestling presents No Surrender 2026 tonight from the Pinnacle in Nashville.

Mike Santana and Leon Slater will face Nic Nemeth and Eddie Edwards in tag team action.

Trey Miguel will challenge Channing “Stacks” Lorenzo for the TNA International Championship after earning the title opportunity by winning a briefcase in the Feast or Fired match.

The Hardys are set to team with The Righteous against Order 4.

Lei Ying Lee will defend the TNA Knockouts Championship against Arianna Grace, who was awarded the title shot by her father, Santino Marella.

The Elegance brand will put the Knockouts World Tag Team Titles on the line against Indi Hartwell and Xia Brookside.

Also scheduled, Eric Young will take on BDE, while Elijah meets Mustafa Ali in a casket match. In addition, a TNA Knockouts Battle Royal will take place, with the winner receiving a future Knockouts World Championship opportunity.

Our live coverage begins at 8 p.m.

Pre Show!

Tom Hannifan & Matthew Rehwoldt were on commentary. 

We are live from the Pinnacle in Nashville with an unadvertised match to open the show.

Brad Attitude & TW3 vs. Sinner and Saint

Judas Icarus delivered a great twisting brainbuster on TW3 for a near fall. A little while later, Icarus hit a frog splash for another near fall. Sinner and Saint won when Icarus hit a kick into a Travis Williams suplex for the pinfall. 

Match Result: Sinner and Saint won when Williams pinned TW3 (6:56)

— Gia Miller interviewed Action Mike Jackson, who said TNA took a backseat to anybody. Apparently other wrestling companies need cheerleaders and applaud signs. Steph DeLander and Mance Warner interrupted and inexplicably this leads to a match between Action Mike Jackson and Mance Warner on the ppv. 

Alan Angels vs. Ryan Nemeth

There’s a 90% chance I reviewed this same match on AEW Dark during the pandemic. 

Before the match can get underway, Frankie Kazarian came out in street clothes. Kazarian called off the match because it was time for an episode of The King’s Speech. Nemeth decided that he’s going to get paid since he got in the ring, so he’s cool with whatever and leaves.

Match Result: No Contest.

Alan Angels hangs out in the ring while Kazarian brags about how he got TNA a new tv deal and he’s signed a new contract. 

The fans chanted “we don’t care!” Kazarian talked about “Option C” some more and turned to Alan Angels, then told him to get out of the ring again. Angels called Kazarian an “@$$hole” which got a chant out of the crowd. This is Angels big return to TNA! Kazarian turned his back on Angels, who punched him in the face and challenged him to a match. 

Alan Angels vs. Frankie Kazarian

Angles cut Kazarian with the Rings of Saturn but Kazarian turned that in a cradle for two. Angels went for a moonsault, but Kazarian sidestepped him and caught him with the chicken wing, and Angels big return to TNA has him tapping in two minutes. 

Match Result: Kazarian taps Angels (2:20). 

— Arianna Grace and Stacks are going to be the new power couple in wrestling when Grace wins the Knockouts Title and Stacks retains the International Title. 

TNA Knockouts Battle Royal for a World Title Shot

Elayna Black, Tessa Blanchard, Mila Moore, Victoria Crawford and Mara Sadé got entrances. Rosemary was clotheslined out of the ring by Jody Threat and eliminated. Rosemary pulled  chair out from other the ring and then chased one of the referees to the back. Jada Stone tossed Tasha Steelz. Stone was then tossed out by Elayna Black. Moore dumped Harley Hudson. Crawford delivered a Northern Lights suplex to Myla Grace because it’s her best move. Crawford then dropkicked Grace to the floor. 

Moore set up Threat for a superplex, but Threat overpowered her. Crawford tried to help Moore, and Blanchard charged into the three of them, but only Moore and Crawford were eliminated. Threat managed to hang on by literally the skin of her boots. 

Sadé and Black fought out onto the apron. Sadé did not hit Black with a superkick, but Black sold it anyway and dropped to the floor. Blanchard then pushed Sadé off the apron to eliminate her. Blanchard celebrated prematurely, and Jody Threat snuck up from behind and tossed Blanchard for the victory. 

Match Result: Jody Threat won the Battle Royal, last eliminating Tessa Blanchard (7:53) 

— Gia Miller interviewed the babyface team in the main event. Leon Slater is not going to cash in on option C anytime soon, and Mike Santana is going to eat his opponents up. 

— Jelly Roll was shown in the crowd.

Stacks (w/ Arianna Grace) vs. Trey Miguel (w/ Teddy Swims) for the TNA International Title

Teddy Swims is “one of the biggest stars in music today” according to Hannifan. Grace raked Miguel in the eyes behind the ref’s back, so I guess that angle from a few weeks ago where Grace didn’t like Miguel’s cheating has been dropped. Stacks took control of the match with a chinlock. Stacks lost his footing trying to climb the turnbuckles and the crowd let him know about it. 

Miguel hit a German suplex to begin to take control, then came off the top with a dropkick. Miguel hit a double stomp for a near fall. Miguel went to the top, but Grace cut him off. Stacks and Miguel tried for a superplex, but Stacks never had his footing and they tumbled into the ropes and to the mat. The move totally botched, Stacks tried to save it with a twist and shout neckbreaker once they got back on their feet. Miguel got out of a fireman’s carry and came off the ropes for a lionsault, which Stacks tried to counter with a dropkick that didn’t hit. Stacks went for a fireman’s carry into a facebuster, but instead it just looked like they fell down and Stacks covered for two. Miguel wedged Stacks head in the turnbuckles for a pair of kicks. Miguel flipped backwards off of the middle ropes and (I think) was supposed to catch Stacks with a Cross Rhodes, but Stacks was out of position there, too. Once Stacks slipped on the ropes, it felt like the whole match fell apart.

Stacks hit a dropkick and tried to sell like he hurt his ankle, which distracted the ref and allowed Grace a cheap shot. But the ref saw the cheap shot and ejected Grace. Miguel hit a DDT on the floor, then dropkicked Stacks in the corner. Miguel hit a shell shock and the Lighting Spiral to finally end things. 

Match Result: Miguel pinned Stacks to win the International Championship (11:03). 

Miguel cried when he Carlos Silva put the title belt around his waist and the commentators sold the moment as an inspirational, emotional comeback story.

The TNA Injury Report:

  • Eddie Edwards is cleared, despite the broken nose he suffered “last night” on Impact. 
  • Mike Santana is also cleared, despite back issues. 
  • Jeff Hardy is cleared despite his nagging injuries. 
  • Jada Stone is in Evaluation after getting attacked by Order 4 tonight (during the battle royal?)

— AJ Francis came out to run down the Nashville fans about Seattle’s Super Bowl victory, threaten Jelly Roll, and join the commentary team for the rest of the night. 

Mance Warner (w/ Steph De Lander) vs. Mike Jackson

Mike Jackson breaks the record for being the oldest wrestler to every step foot in a TNA ring, breaking the record set by… Mike Jackson a few years ago. His first match was against Bobby Eaton in 1977. The crowd was certainly psyched for the old guy, which makes this a great idea for a dark match. Jackson did the old school rope walk across all four sides of the ring. Jackson went for a dive, but Warner hit him with a right hand to cut him off. 

On the floor, Jackson reversed Warner’s suplex on the floor, then hit Warner with a tope through the ropes. 

Back in the ring, Jackson weathered a flurry of offense from Warner, then caught him with a hangman’s neckbreaker for a near fall. Jackson went for a blind crossbody and Warner easily side stepped him. Warner hit a ugly clothesline and followed up with an implant DDT to get the pinfall. 

Match Result: Mance Warner pinned Mike Jackson (5:22).

After the match, Warner helped Jackson to his feet and shook his hand. De Lander shook Jackson’s hand as well. This angered AJ Francis, who got in De Lander’s face about making Warner soft. Francis left commentary after his verbal scuffle with De Lander and Warner.

In the back, Grace told Stacks that he’s ruined everything by losing the International Title. Any more screw ups and they’re gonna break up! He’ll be eating candy alone on Valentine’s Day!

Xia Brookside & Indi Hartwell vs. Heather & M of the Elegance Brand (w/ The Concierge, Ash & Mr. Elegance), for the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship

Brookside was really impressive her outing last week. Hartwell is very good at taunting the Elegance Brand. Hartwell suplexed Heather for a near fall. M used a surfboard to wear down Indi.

Brookside got the tag and hit a Russian Leg Sweep on Heather. Heather wore down Brookside with a chinlock. Brookside tried to fight out of it, but Heather yanked her down by the hair. Brookside caught M with a small package for a near fall.

Brookside came back with a suplex. M caught Brookside with a drive by kick. While M and Heather celebrated on the apron, Hartwell came from behind with a dropkick to send them to the mat. M missed an elbow drop and Brookside got the tag to Hartwell. Hartwell stormed in with clotheslines and boots. Harwell came off the top with an elbow drop for a near fall. M dropped Brookside with an inverted Death Valley Driver, but Hartwell came back and hit her with a spinebuster. 

M sent Hartwell into the turnbuckle post, and the Elegance Brand hit the Nip and Tuck. Hartwell tried to get her foot on the ropes, but Ash pushed it off and the ref counted the pinfall. 

Match Result: The Elegance Brand retained when Heather pinned Hartwell (11:06).

Mickie James ran out to alert the ref of the shenanigans, but Ash cut her off.  Mickie brawled with Ash and eventually James, Brookside and Hartwell ran off the Elegance Brand. 

BDE vs. Eric Young

So the story here is that Young wants to use BDE’s followers on social media to help his “Cleanse” cause. BDE hit a bunch of dives before the bell. He dove into the ring and into a low blow. BDE countered a piledriver into a cradle for two. BDE came off the ropes with a crossbody, but Young caught him and dumped him to the floor. 

Young ran into a boot from BDE. BDE came out of the corner with a blockbuster for a near fall. BDE caught him with a pair of ranas, but when went for the rana a third time, Young countered with a powerbomb. Young came up bleeding from the ear. 

BDE hit a reverse DDT for a near fall. Young came back with a powerslam for a near fall. Young got in the referee’s face over the count. 

Young took over on offense but didn’t do much of note. BDE hit a springboard cutter for a near fall. Young dropped a big elbow off the top for a near fall. Young again got in the ref’s face over the count and chased him out to the floor. Back in the ring, BDE escaped a piledriver with a backdrop. BDE ran into a Death Valley Driver for a near fall. 

BDE hit a Panama Sunrise (called a Canadian Destroyer by Hannifan but it was the springboard variety off the middle rope so I’m right) for a near fall. BDE went to the top, but Young shoved the ref into the ropes and BDE crotched himself. Young drove BDE to the mat with a piledriver and too many old guys are winning tonight. 

Match Result: Young pinned BDE after a piledriver (10:28)

— Jody Threat was celebrating her victory in the battle royal, but Tessa Blanchard interrupted because there’s no way Threat can beat Blanchard one on one. So that will be a match on Impact Thursday. 

Léi Yǐng Lee vs. Arianna Grace (w/ Stacks) for the TNA Knockouts World Championship 

The video package recap made no sense here. In the weeks leading up to this, Grace has been playing up a lack of confidence and being torn between her babyface father and heel fiancé, but tonight she’s back to being conniving and deceitful.  Hannifan then ran down Grace as a loser who’s never won a match in TNA and has like a 7-20 record in NXT. 

Grace tried to bully Lee, so she sent her retreating to the floor with a series of kicks. Lee took Grace down with a legsweep and hit a kick. 

Suddenly, Dani Luna’s music played and she tried to hit the ring, but a gaggle of security geeks tried to kept her from getting to the ring. While that was going on, Grace took control. Grace got a hangwoman’s neckbreaker for a near fall.  

On the floor, Lee blocked a suplex attempt, but Grace still sent Lee into the steel ringpost. Grace followed up with a suplex on the floor. 

Grace wore down Lee with a cravat, but Lee escaped and got a near fall with a cradle. Lee got a near fall with a backslide. Grace caught Lee with a back elbow, then went to a surfboard. 

Lee dodged a dive in a corner and floored Grace with a series of kicks. Lee hit an exploder suplex for a near fall. Grace hit a twist and shout neckbreaker for a near fall.

Lee hit Grace with a German suplex, then set her up in the opposite corner for a superplex. Grace tried to fight her off but Lee got the move. 

Grace hit a pump kick, but Lee countered with a spin kick. Lee went for the Warrior’s Way, but Grace escaped by raking the eyes. Stacks slid the belt into the ring for Grace to use as a weapon, but Lee caught her with a sunset flip. Lee then took out Stacks with a dive on the floor. 

Grace pulled out the Cobra (she stole it from her father last night) and nailed Lee. Grace then hit an inverted GTS and got the pinfall. 

Match Result: Grace pinned Lee to win the TNA Knockouts World Championship 

On the one hand, Hannifan buried her as a loser at the start of the match and now a loser is the TNA Knockouts World  Champion. On the other, she looked less out of place in this match than Stacks did in the International Title match earlier in the show. 

— BDE is sore in the back, but Rich Swann wants to play video games. Swann suggested that it’s time for BDE to be “player 2” for awhile and let Rich be “player 1.” BDE and Swann as a tag team is an idea I dont hate at all. 

The Hardys & The Righteous v. Order 4 (w/ Tasha Steelz)

Breaking news: The Hardys are way over with the crowd. Also Matt and Jeff seem to be wearing gear to match the Righteous.

The Hardys and the Righteous got along in the opening minutes. Mustafa Ali and Vincent had a nice exchange. Agent Zero got the tag and chokeslammed Vincent, then press slammed him. Jason Hotch and Jon Skylar double-teamed Vincent, dumped him on the floor, and double-teamed him there until they were chased off by Dutch and Matt Hardy. 

Back in the ring, Vincent caught Ali with a tornado DDT. Matt Hardy got the tag and took it to the Great Hands. Matt deleted Skylar and Hodge into opposite corners of the ring. Side Effect on Skylar got a near fall. 

Matt went for the Twist of Fate, bot Hodge clipped Matt’s knee, and Skylar took control. Matt took Hodge down by the head and tagged in Jeff. Jeff took out both of the Great Hands with a Whisper in the Wind and what on earth is Jeff doing trying that at his age? 

The match broke down and everyone played my favorite new game: “hit a move, take a move.” Zero took out Jeff with a headbutt, then cleared the top rope when he dove out onto Vincent and Jeff. So then Dutch decided to kill everyone on the other side of the ring with a dive of his own. 

This left Agent Zero and Dutch as the only guys standing, and they had a great standoff before they started brawling in the ring. Zero rocked Dutch with a powerslam. The Hardys and Vincent triple-teamed Zero in the corner. Zero took Poetry in (Slow) Motion from the Hardys, and then Poetry in Motion from the Righteous. 

Matt Hardy and Dutch gave Twists of Fate to Zero and Ali, and then Vincent and Jeff came off with Swanton Bombs. The Great Hands broke up the covers and everyone was laid out on the mat. 

The Great Hands took Jeff onto the entrance ramp and set him up for a suplerplex off the ramp, but Vincent made the save. Vincent took them out with a dive, and Jeff Hardy took Agent Zero out with another dive. 

Tasha Steelz tossed powder into Dutch’s eyes. Blinded, he hit a Black Hole slam on Matt. Ali dumped Dutch, then hit a 450 splash on Matt and got the pinfall. That finish was out of nowhere. 

Match Result: Order 4 beat the Hardys and The Righteous when Ali pinned Matt Hardy (15:33)

After the match, a bunch of Elijah impersonators came out with a guitar case casket. Ali tried to dump one of them in the casket, but of course Elijah was in there and chased off Ali. What happened to the Hardys and the Righteous?

— In the back, Santino Marella pounded on Arianna Grace’s locker room, but Daria Rae answered the door and they argued about being authority figures. 

Impact Thursday: 

  • Jody Threat v. Tessa Blanchard 
  • Elijah v. Mustafa Ali in a Guitar Case Casket Match

TNA World Champion Mike Santana & X Division Champion Leon Slater v. Call Your Shot Guantlet Trophy Holder Nic Nemeth & Feast or Fired World Champion Shot Briefcase Holder Eddie Edwards (w/ The System)

Hannifan has stressed on commentary several times tonight that if any of the three men who can “cash in” a title shot against Santana choose to do so, the tag team match will be thrown out.

Edwards’ nose is bandaged after suffering a broken nose on Impact “last night.” Edwards started out with Santana. 

After a few minutes of back and forth between all four men, Nemeth started eyeing up his trophy. Santana and Slater both cut Nemeth off, but that gave Edwards the chance to take a shot at Santana. Back in the ring, Nemeth distracted the ref so the members of the System could get a cheap shot in on Santana. Santana took out both of his opponents with a moonsault, then got the tag to Leon Slater. 

Slater caught Nemeth with a boot in the corner. Slater went for a handspring, but Edwards kicked him in the back. Edwards chopped Slater down in the corner. Nemeth raked Slater’s face agains the top rope. Slater hit a handspring elbow on both of his opponents. Slater dumped Edwards to the floor and hit him with a tope. The System tried to interfere, so Santana took them out with a dive. 

Slater went for the Swanton 450, but Edwards moved. Slater rolled through and landed on his feet, but Nemeth caught him with a superkick. 

Nemeth dropped a big elbow on Slater for a near fall. Nemeth and Edwards worked over Slater. Slater dove for the hot tag, but Edwards and Nemeth caught him and put him over the top rope on the apron. Slater dropped to the floor, fought through the System to get back in the ring on the other side, then got past Edwards and Nemeth and finally got the tag to Santana. It sounds pretty convoluted but it was awesome.

Santana came in and hit the rolling stunner on Edwards, then a Death Valley Driver on Nemeth for a near fall. A middle rope splash from Slater and standing moonsault from Santana almost got Slater the pin on Nemeth. 

Santana took out Nemeth with a dive on one side of the ring, and then Slater took out Edwards with a dive on the other side of the ring. Suddenly, Steve Maclin came out of nowhere and attacked Santana. Security tried to break them up, but Santana and Maclin fought through the security, brawled into the crowd and fought to the back. 

This left Leon Slater 2-on-1 against Nemeth and Edwards, and that’s not counting the three other members of the System at ringside. 

Nemeth and Edwards toyed with Slater a little bit. They played with their food a little too long though, Slater caught Edwards with a dropkick off the middle rope. Nemeth went for a DDT, but Slater countered with a twisting suplex. Slater took it to Nemeth and Edwards. Slater hit a crossbody off the top on both of his opponents, and got a near fall on Nemeth. 

Slater caught Edwards with a leg lariat. He dropped Nemeth with a blue thunder bomb, but Nemeth’s feet caught the referee. The System jumped Slater with the referee down. Moose’s music hit, and he came out to save Slater. Slater floored Myers and Alexander with a  clothesline and dropkicked Bear Bronson to the mat. Alexander got the uranage/senton combo platter, and then Moose powerbombed Myers onto Bronson, who was on the floor. Moose then brawled with Edwards to the back with the other members of the System following them.

So that left Slater and Nemeth.

Nemeth hit a Famouser for a near fall. Nemeth went for a superkick, but Slater caught him with a heel kick. Slater hit the Swanton 450 and got the pinfall. 

Match Result: Leon Slater was the Sole Survivor… wait. Leon Slater & Mike Santana defeated Nic Nemeth & Eddie Edwards when Slater pinned Nemeth (23:20).

Three matches added to TNA No Surrender lineup

TNA has announced the addition of three brand new matches to their No Surrender lineup hours before the event.

The duo of Indi Hartwell and Xia Brookside recently challenged The Elegance Brand (M by Elegance & Heather by Elegance) for the Knockouts World Tag Team Championship. On Thursday, February 12th edition of TNA Impact, Hartwell and Brookside appeared during a backstage segment, where the duo issued a challenge for the tag titles.

The Elegance Brand is in their second reign as tag champions and had won the titles last month from The IInspiration (Cassie Lee & Jessie McKay).

In addition to the Knockouts tag title match, TNA also added Eric Young vs. BDE to the No Surrender lineup, after the two brawled on the February 12th episode. While Director of Authority Santino Marella suspended Young, Daria Rae overruled the decision and booked him in a match against BDE.

Also, a Knockouts Battle Royal match was added to the card, with the winner receiving a future TNA Knockouts World title shot.

TNA No Surrender lineup | February 13th, 2026

TNA No Surrender is scheduled to take place at The Pinnacle in Nashville, Tennessee, on February 13th, 2026. Here is the updated lineup for the event:

  • Channing ‘Stacks’ Lorenzo (c) vs. Trey Miguel for the TNA International Championship
  • Matt Hardy, Jeff Hardy, The Righteous (Vincent & Dutch0 vs. Order 4 (Mustafa Ali, Jason Hotch, John Skyler & Agent Zero)
  • Lei Ying Lee (c) vs. Arianna Grace for the TNA Knockouts World Championship
  • Elegance Brand (M by Elegance & Heather by Elegance) (c) vs. Indi Hartwell & Xia Brookside for the TNA Knockouts World Tag Team Championship
  • Mike Santana & Leon Slater vs. Nic Nemeth & Eddie Edwards
  • BDE vs. Eric Young
  • TNA Knockouts Battle Royal – Winner to receive future Knockouts World title shot

Former WWE Women’s Champion announces TNA No Surrender appearance

Former WWE Women’s Champion Candice Michelle recently opened up about her upcoming TNA No Surrender appearance as well as how she can “best serve” the company.

Recently present at the East Coast Autograph Auctions, Michelle confirmed her upcoming TNA appearances on February 13th in Nashville, Tennessee, for the No Surrender event (H/T to Fightful).

“I will be there with TNA on the 13th and the 14th. Two really great shows that we’ll be filming there.”

Michelle made a televised appearance during TNA’s AMC debut, where she was introduced by Gia Miller. Shortly after, Michelle would start promoting TNA shows via her social media profiles.

In the same appearance, she further opened up about her efforts in serving her best to TNA Wrestling.

I always think of the story when I signed with WWE and they basically signed me to, they said, ‘Pretty-up the business’ back then, and when I signed the contract, I wanted to be the Women’s Champion, and so, as I have an opportunity with TNA, I look at this as a platform, and how can I best serve the company, how I can best serve everybody,” she said. “The talent that’s there, whether I’m behind the scenes or in front of the scenes, so I’m looking forward to hopefully a little bit of both. But we’ll see what happens.”

Michelle’s exact role with TNA Wrestling is not known yet. Her last in-ring match dates back to 2017, where she earned a victory against Lisa Marie Varon.

Candice Michelle admits to missing wrestling

During the same appearance, Michelle also opened up and admitted to missing wrestling.

“Do I miss wrestling? I do. I do. When I came to TNA, I didn’t know really how I would feel and that first moment standing by the ring, I mean, it wasn’t even a second where I thought, ‘wow, I just really miss it’ and so, yeah, it’s got a deep place in my heart but once you get close to the ring, it seems to have a deeper place than I think I thought. And just perfect timing for me to come back and explore and be a part of the company and see what I can do there, so I’m excited for that opportunity.”

TNA announces dates & locations for No Surrender, Sacrifice, TV tapings

With tonight’s AMC TV debut and this Saturday’s Genesis pay-per-view, TNA Wrestling has continued to build out their first quarter schedule with the reveal of dates and locations for both No Surrender and Sacrifice.

No Surrender will take place on Friday, February 13 at The Pinnacle in Nashville, Tennessee, streaming on TNA+. The following night, they will hold a TV taping in the same venue.

Thursday Night Impact will air live from Atlanta, Georgia’s GICC Arena on Thursday, March 5 followed by a TV taping the next night in the same venue.

Sacrifice will air live from New Orleans, Louisiana’s, Alario Center on Friday, March 27 followed by a TV taping the next night in the same venue.

Pre-sales and general on-sales begin next week.

Following Genesis, TNA will head out on the road for another live Impact on Thursday, January 22 followed by a TV taping the next night — both from Albuquerque, New Mexico’s Tingley Coliseum.

TNA No Surrender notes: New champions, Eric Young earns future title shot

Here are some notes from TNA No Surrender which took place Friday in New Orleans — the first show the company has held since the surprising firing of Scott D’Amore.

MK Ultra regained the TNA Knockouts Tag Team titles at No Surrender, taking the gold from now-former champions Decay.

The end came when Havok hit a spinebuster on Killer Kelly for a near fall, leading to her teammate Rosemary looking for a spear to end it. However, she took a Snow Plow from Masha Slamovich to give MK Ultra the win.

Slamovich and Kelly held the titles for roughly six months from the summer of 2023 through January’s Hard to Kill when they lost the titles to Havok and Rosemary. This was the champions’ first title defense.

**********

In other title matches:

Mustafa Ali won his first singles title in a major promotion as he defeated X-DivChris Sabin in the main event of the show.

In a rematch from January’s Hard to Kill, Moose retained the TNA World title by defeating Alex Shelley under No Surrender rules which means the match could only end after one of the two men’s cornermen threw in the towel. KUSHIDA did the duties for Shelley after the challenger took three spears, including one with a chain wrapped around Moose.

After winning the title at Hard to Kill, Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace successfully retained the title by defeating past title challenger Gisele Shaw. Shaw had earned the shot with her win in an Ultimate X match at Hard to Kill.

ABC (Ace Austin & Chris Bey) successfully defended the TNA Tag Team titles by defeating the Grizzled Young Veterans (James Drake & Zack Gibson) in the third of their best-of-three series. The first two matches took place on TNA Impact.

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Eric Young will once again have the opportunity to be called TNA World Champion for a third time after he defeated recent rival Frankie Kazarian to earn a future title shot.

Young first won the title in the spring of 2014, holding the gold for 70 days before losing it to Bobby Lashley. Six years later, Young held the title for a short two-month run in September/October 2020 before losing it to Rich Swann at that year’s Bound for Glory.

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PWInsider reported that all the top Anthem Sports & Entertainment executives were on hand in New Orleans for the first event after D’Amore’s firing.

The outlet also reported an attendance of 750 for the show and that the company added more seats after initially being set up for 600.

Mustafa Ali wins X-Division title at TNA No Surrender

In his first night in the company, Mustafa Ali is leaving a champion after winning the X-Division title at TNA No Surrender in New Orleans.

Ali defeated Chris Sabin in the night’s main event — the first time an X-Division match has main evented one of their specials since 2005’s Unbreakable.

The end to the competitive match came when Ali avoided an avalanche Cradle Shock attempt, hitting a sunset bomb and a 450 splash to pick up the win.

This is Ali’s first singles title in a major promotion while the loss ends Sabin’s 10th run with the championship that started at last September’s Impact 1000 and saw three successful title defenses.

Ali will be sticking around TNA at least through late-March as part of five additional dates that includes March’s Sacrifice streaming special and several TV tapings.

He will take on Kevin Knight during Saturday’s TV taping in New Orleans,

Since his non-compete ended following his WWE release, the 37-year-old Ali has been busy, competing both domestically and abroad, making appearances for GCW, Defy, RevPro, PROGRESS and others. He will make his NJPW debut in April in a match against Hiroshi Takahashi.

Ali’s win was one of two on the night as MK Ultra regained the Knockouts Tag Team titles from Decay while all the other champions that defended retained.

TNA No Surrender live results: Moose vs. Alex Shelley, Mustafa Ali debut

TNA will hold their first streaming event in the post-Scott D’Amore era with tonight’s No Surrender, live from New Orleans, Louisiana, on TNA+.

The event is headlined by TNA World Champion Moose defending against Alex Shelley in a rematch from January’s Hard to Kill but under No Surrender rules where a cornerman must throw in the towel for the match to end.

Mustafa Ali will make his TNA debut as he challenges X-Division Champion Chris Sabin for the title.

Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace will defend against Gisele Shaw while the TNA Tag Team titles will be decided in the best-of-three finale between champions ABC and the Grizzled Young Veterans.

Josh Alexander will face Simon Gotch, and Eric Young will take on Frankie Kazarian to determine the next World title contender.

Other main card matches will see PCO vs. Kon, and Knockouts Tag Team Champions Decay defending against MK Ultra in a rematch.

The pre-show kicks off at 7:30 PM Eastern with two matches.

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The Rascalz (Trey Miguel & Zachary Wentz) defeated Speedball Mountain (Mike Bailey & Trent Seven)

The heel Rascalz got a hot start with a double suicide dive to the floor before Wentz worked over the knee of Bailey on the ground. A missed Bailey split kick attempt led to him eating a flurry of kicks for 2. Bailey recovered enough to land a second-rope missile dropkick and got a hot tag into Seven, who landed a series of back to back dragon suplexes on the Rascalz for 2.

Bailey hit an orihara moonsault en route to Trent landing a superplex and a shooting star from Beily got 2 on Miguel. Bailey tagged back for a seven star lariat on Miguel for 2. Wentz prevented Ultima Weapon and landed a second rope double stomp on Bailey for 2. Miguel ate a superkick and the ref’s distracted before a Maclin chop block to a Bailey tapout off a kneebar. 

The TNA World Title match is hyped with a recap video covering the different allies involved in the No Surrender match and the stipulation itself. Kazarian said that whoever wins in that match faces him at Sacrifice because he’s not in this for meaningless matches. 

The System (Eddie Edwards & Brian Myers) defeated Jet Setters (KUSHIDA & Kevin Knight

Knight started off strong taking both members of the System down before armdragging Edwards down. KUSHIDA is tagged in after a shoulder pumphandle, but ate a back elbow from Myers before Edwards came in. KUSHIDA landed a hiptoss to Edwards but can’t tag in Knight due to Knight being taken out on the apron. A punt to the right arm of Edwards led to a double-tag.

Knight came in and punched and kicked both guys before taking them down with a dive to put Myers up to land a flat-footed top rope rana from the corner for 2. KUSHIDA put Myers on his shoulders and Knight paid homage to Mark Jindrak with a dropkick to a man in that position for 2. Myers recovered briefly with a desperation impaler DDT. Edwards got a backpack stunner out of the corner before a Myers diving elbow got a fantastic 2.5 count. Knight got a schoolboy for 2 before a combination of the Roster Cut lariat and the Boston Knee Party took out Knight.

Eric Young defeated Frankie Kazarian to earn a future TNA World title match

Kazarian forced Jade Chung to remind the crowd that he is the King of TNA, ensuring that he got heat throughout the match. Kazarian ground away on the mat to start after winning a tie-up and a takedown. Kaz landed a nice back suplex before stomping away. Hannifan talks about how each man got a shot against Josh Alexander in 2022 and came up short.  

Kazarian wanted the blind-dive springboard legdrop, but EY avoided it and landed a wonky Roode Bomb for 2. An EY diving elbow off the top got 2 before Kazarian got the Jerry Lynn-style slingshot apron legdrop for 2. Kazarian couldn’t get the chickenwing, but slung EY in after his apron bump for a cutter for 2. That was one of the most-impressive spots in the new TNA era. Kazarian landed a backstabber and Fade to Black for 2.9! Kazarian argued with the referee and an EY crucifix got the win!

After the match, Kazarian yelled at the ref and sent him down with a clothesline before landing a series of grounded kicks and grounded elbows and punches. Tom Hannifan is such a great babyface announcer being offended by all of this logically. Gia Miller chats with the Grizzled Young Veterans, who say that they are in fact Grizzled Young Veterans and they came to America for the TNA Tag Team Titles. 

ABC (Ace Austin & Chris Bey) defeated Grizzled Young Veterans (James Drake & Zack Gibson) to retain the TNA Tag Team Titles

Gibson and Austin started off with GIbson going for the arm that was hurt in match two before Drake came in and ate a high/low and a Click Click Boom double team splash/legdrop for 2 from Bey. Bey ate a double-team stun gun – giving him a weakness alongside Bey’s left arm. Gibson landed an outside-in suplex for 2 before Drake worked over the throat of Bey more with a chinlock.

Bey landed a desperation missile dropkick and wanted a tag, but Drake sent Austin off the apron to prevent the tag before Drake choked out Bey with a scarf. These two teams have fantastic chemistry and you couldn’t really ask for a better set of teams to be the foundation of a modern-day TNA tag team division. Bey got a desperation neckbreaker and tagged in Ace Austin.

Austin ran wild until being double-teamed and fighting back with a double missile-dropkick! Massive moonsault from Austin gave the faces an edge for a bit before Bey tagged in and landed a frog splash. Bey landed a Yokasuka cutter before an Austin corkscrew senton, but the GYV locked on submissions right after with a rear naked choke on Bey and an armbar on Austin! Bey got 2 off a flip off on the RNC. The GYVs land a doomsday device suicide dive lariat onto Austin on the floor!

Bey stood alone against both members of the GYV and kicked away at both men to give himself a slight advantage until a run-up famouser on Gibson. Gibson trapped him in the corner for a draping lungblower and a Drake coast to coast dropkick got 2.9! 1-2- SWEET ENDS IT and the ABC retain the TNA World Tag Titles in the best of three series.

Backstage, the Rascalz are cocky jerks to Speedball Mountain. Kon came out for his match with PCO looking like the largest grunge bodyguard ever while PCO got a bit stretcher entrance.

PCO defeats Kon by DQ

PCO and Kon started off with clubbering and clotheslines after brawling on the ramp. PCO went for a suicide dive cannonball, but Kon avoided it and PCO went splat on the floor before taking an apron chokeslam. He recovered from that to post Kon and set him up for the draping Deanimator that missed! Kon grabbed a steel chair and he hit him and that’s a DQ. There are DQs in PCO matches!? PCO does the theatrical neck snap while someone rings the bell a thousand times. Do the neck snap on them! Well, he punched them and threw them down – so I’ll count that as close enough. PCO landed the suicide dive cannonball! PCO sent him down with a chairshot before eating a low blow and a chokeslam on the ramp. Kon zip tied PCO to the tunnel and does the neck snapper again…now with a chair to somehow do more damage. This was good before the weird finish. 

Backstage, Shelley talks about how he doesn’t want Sabin out there because he’s in the main event. Sabin demands that the Jet Setters absolutely can’t throw the towel in and Shelley tells them to not throw it in no matter what. 

MK Ultra (Killer Kelly & Masha Slamovich) defeated Decay (Rosemary & Havok to win the TNA Knockouts Tag Team titles

All four women brawled on the floor to start before Havok worked over Slamovich before landing a corner lariat. A Rosemary tag in led to an exploder for 2. Kelly tripped up Rosemary for 2. Slamovich earned her name slamming Kelly on Rosemary twice. A Kelly slap is countered into a Rosemary rainmaker for 2. Rosemary and Kelly went back and forth with creepy pin counters for 2 before Slamovich cane in. Rosemary got an edge-o-matic on Slamovich before a double tag. Havok landed a spinebuster to Kelly for 2. Rosemary wanted a spear but ate a Snow Plow for the win!

MK Ultra got a couple of cheap shots in after the match before Dani Luna and Jody Threat made the same. The System tells Moose that they saved him from the Border City Stretch last night, but they won’t throw in the towel. Rehwoldt talks up how deranged Gotch is and how bitter he became over seeing what kind of success Alexander has had.

Josh Alexander defeated Simon Gotch

Gotch and Alexander started off with strong, intense matwork before Gotch goes for finger manipulation to get an advantage. Gotch and Alexander exchange sick uppercuts and chops respectfully. One fantastic thing about this program for Gotch is that it’s giving him a chance to rewrite that name from being comedy into something more serious – it’s a shame that the Gotch name was used for comedy in that regard. 

Gotch sent Alexander down on the apron before posing next to Rehwoldt and saying that THEY ARE MANLY! Gotch shot the half for 2 before locking on an armbar on the right arm before switching on the surgically-repaired left arm. Alexander landed rolling Germans and stopping at four before Gotch grabbed the rope and landed a back elbow and a kick to the ear of Alexander.

Both men exchange hard slaps to the jaw before Gotch nails him with a head-trapped knee to the face. A Gotch senton missed, but an Alexander splash to the back on the apron didn’t. They go for a fantastic near-countout barely making it in before 10 in a rare non-AEW example of a countout working well in North America. Back and forth forearm exchanges set up a giant Gotch boot before an Alexander one and they go even on lariats too. A running boot gives Alexander the edge and a “this is awesome” chant.

Alexander got 2 on an exploder and wanted a C4 Spike, but Gotch avoided it into a bulldog choke by moving the headgear around. Alexander used the headgear to slip out of the choke and got the ankle lock. Powerbomb backbreaker and the C4 Spike end it for Alexander!

0 AJ Francis meets with Rich Swann and tells him that it must be hard to see a former World Champion like Alexander succeeding while he’s losing on Xplosion. Francis says that just because they’re opponents on Thursday doesn’t mean they’re enemies. AJ Francis is doing the best work of his career in this TNA run.

Moose defeated Alex Shelley to retain the TNA World Title in a No Surrender Match

Shelley started off quickly with punches and diving forearms in the corner before he ground away on the left arm. Moose used the good arm for a snake eyes attempt that Shelley avoided and turned into an opening for a left-arm Fujiawara armbar. A Moose escape opened the door for a big boot on the floor and apron powerbomb before working Shelley over with a ringpost bow and arrow.

Moose wanted a slam through the announce table, but an eye rake prevented that and gave Shelley a chance to take Moose down on the floor. Shelley worked on the left knee on the floor until being kicked into the post. Shelley returned the favor and removed coverings on the turnbuckle to torture the fingers to try and get a win but to no avail.

Moose recovered well enough to use the good hand to slug away for a while before trapping Shelley’s hands in the turnbuckle for a chairshot. Shelley recovered and sent Moose into the ropes for a draping dragon screw to play off all the work on the leg on the floor earlier. Shelley used a kendo stick on the left leg in the corner before doing a golf club-style swing to it and using the kendo stick for the half-crab. Myers breaks that up by getting on the apron and Edwards gets the stick. 

Moose landed a uranage before Myers tossed in a trash can that Moose set upright for a superplex! Shelley avoided that and sent Moose onto his own creation with a powerbomb. Shelley grounded him with a figure four that Moose escaped from using the kendo stick. Moose sent him down with a giant Gunther-esque chop before Moose charged in and was met with another Fujiwara armbar turned into a Border City Stretch!

Moose escaped that but fell to his own spear attempt through a table that sent him crashing through. Shelley grabbed a chain and put it through the mouth of Moose for the Stretch before the System tried to get involved before Knight dove onto them. Moose speared Shelley with KUSHIDA in the ring and KUSHIDA leaves before Moose landed a second spear. A third spear hits using the chain on his shoulder to do even more damage to KUSHIDA’s friend. The usage of the seconds and the towel is very much just TNA putting an official stipulation to the Survivor Series ’94 I Quit stipulation and that third spear was too much as KUSHIDA throws in the towel. I’m pleasantly surprised to see Sabin didn’t turn heel on this one and it set up KUSHIDA vs. Shelley at some point. Ash by Elegance and her personal concierge are out for the VIP treatment for the Knockouts Title match.

Jordynne Grace defeated Gisele Shaw to retain the TNA Knockouts Title

They start off with a cat and mouse game that Grace won briefly by smacking her into the apron, but Shaw sent her off the apron to the floor. Grace calls out Ash by Elegance, who looked on unamused before Shaw gained an edge and landed a tornado kick to the back of the head in the corner. Grace hopped out of the corner and landed a series of slams.

Shaw went for a sunset bomb on Grace on the floor, but had no leverage or power and Grace had her hands locked, so she just stomped her and hit a senton. Grace wanted a Juggernaut Driver to the floor off the apron, but Shaw countered into a Spanish Fly off the apron instead! 

Shaw landed a knee strike for 2.5. This pisses Shaw off and they go back and forth with forearm exchanges before a Cody Cutter attempt by Shaw is met with a crucifix for 2. Backfist and the Juggernaut Driver end it – this was an excellent showing for both women. Shaw has never looked better in TNA and it was a fine showcase for Grace as a blend of speed and power.

Jake Something hypes up Ali vs. Sabin as the main event and says he’s coming for the gold. Sacrifice is hyped as the next premium live event for the company on March 8 before running through their taping schedule. Clips air of the legendary Unbreakable triple threat to set up this as the first X Title main event on PPV in 18 years. Ali has his faux-Secret Service and intense theme giving him a main event-level presentation on a global stage for the first time ever.

Mustafa Ali defeated Chris Sabin to win the TNA X-Division Title

They go back and forth with fast matwork to start before a standoff mid-ring after they each go for a dropkick at the same time. Sabin sent him down with a tackle and grounds him with a seated surfboard. A Sabin bow and arrow was turned into a pin for 2. A Sabin sleeper is turned into an Ali jawbreaker. Ali landed a slick 450 to the draped arm on the rope gives Ali an edge.  

Ali locks on a crossface and uses the damaged arm as his base for the hold. Ali stomped the arm while saying that Sabin isn’t the champion they deserve. Sabin landed a tornado DDT for 2. A Sabin crucifix into a crossface shows a rare side of Sabin’s submission game before a massive “Ali” chant breaks out. Sabin works heel here with the ref while in the story, Ali should be the heel because he’s putting down the company loyalist.

Ali dropkicks Sabin on the floor and a 450 is avoided and Sabin sent him face-first into the buckle with a hard hammer throw. Sabin dives onto the Secret Service goons to save Ali. The Good Hands came down to distract Sabin, allowing Ali to get 2 off a schoolboy. Clothesline from Hell, Michigan hits hard and the Cradle Shock gets 2.5 when Ali just straight-up kicks out!

Sabin goes up for an avalanche Cradle Shock, but Ali avoids it and hits a sunset bomb before the 450 wins it! Mustafa Ali wins the X Title in his TNA Debut! This was a fantastic overall in-ring story with Sabin as the character babyface, but Ali as the more over man in the match. 

Number one contender’s match added to TNA No Surrender

A TNA World title number one contender’s match has been added to the card for Friday’s No Surrender event. 

Frankie Kazarian will face Eric Young at No Surrender with the winner going on to challenge for the TNA World Championship at Sacrifice on March 8. 

Kazarian & Young were scheduled for a face-to-face confrontation on Thursday’s TNA Impact, but instead Kazarian sent Big Damo to the ring to wrestle Young. Authority figure Santino Marella later made the No Surrender number one contender’s match official. 

A new match is also set for the No Surrender pre-show, with Speedball Mountain (Mike Bailey & Trent Seven) facing The Rascalz. Bailey & Seven issued the challenge to Zachary Wentz & Trey Miguel of The Rascalz on Thursday’s Impact. 

No Surrender streams Friday, February 23 on TNA Plus. The Countdown pre-show begins at 7 p.m. Eastern time and the main card kicks off at 8 p.m. Eastern. Here is the updated card: 

  • No Surrender rules: TNA World Champion Moose defends against Alex Shelley
  • TNA Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace defends against Gisele Shaw
  • TNA X-Division Champion Chris Sabin defends against Mustafa Ali
  • Best-of-three series finals for the TNA Tag Team titles: ABC (Ace Austin & Chris Bey) defend against The Grizzled Young Veterans (Zack Gibson & James Drake)
  • TNA Knockouts Tag Team Champions Decay (Havok & Rosemary) defend against MK Ultra (Masha Slamovich & Killer Kelly)
  • TNA World title number one contender’s match, winner gets title shot at Sacrifice: Frankie Kazarian vs. Eric Young
  • Josh Alexander vs. Simon Gotch
  • PCO vs. Kon
  • Countdown to No Surrender: KUSHIDA & Kevin Knight vs. Eddie Edwards & Brian Myers
  • Countdown to No Surrender: Speedball Mountain (Mike Bailey & Trent Seven) vs. The Rascalz (Trey Miguel & Zachary Wentz)

Pre-show match added to TNA No Surrender

A pre-show match has been added to the card for TNA Wrestling’s No Surrender special.

KUSHIDA & Kevin Knight will team up against Eddie Edwards & Brian Myers on Countdown to No Surrender next Friday (February 23). The pre-show starts at 7:30 p.m. Eastern time and will air for free on TNA+ and YouTube.

Edwards and Myers are part of The System in TNA, a new faction that also includes Moose and Alisha Edwards.

Moose is defending his TNA World Championship against Alex Shelley at No Surrender. The match has a “No Surrender” stipulation, which means that it can only end when either Moose or Shelley’s cornermen throw in the towel. Edwards and Myers will be in Moose’s corner. KUSHIDA and Knight will be in Shelley’s corner.

Moose defeated KUSHIDA in the main event of this week’s Impact episode. The show ended with Shelley and Knight saving KUSHIDA from an attack by The System.

No Surrender is a TNA+ special. The show is taking place live from the Alario Center in Louisiana.

TNA No Surrender 2024 (Friday, February 23) —

  • No Surrender rules: TNA World Champion Moose defends against Alex Shelley
  • TNA Knockouts Champion Jordynne Grace defends against Gisele Shaw
  • TNA X-Division Champion Chris Sabin defends against Mustafa Ali
  • Best-of-three series finals for the TNA Tag Team titles: ABC (Ace Austin & Chris Bey) defend against The Grizzled Young Veterans (Zack Gibson & James Drake)
  • TNA Knockouts Tag Team Champions Decay (Havok & Rosemary) defend against MK Ultra (Masha Slamovich & Killer Kelly)
  • Josh Alexander vs. Simon Gotch
  • PCO vs. Kon
  • Countdown to No Surrender: KUSHIDA & Kevin Knight vs. Eddie Edwards & Brian Myers