Nic Nemeth announces when he will cash in TNA Call Your Shot trophy

Nic Nemeth has announced when he will cash in his Call Your Shot trophy.

TNA published a video on Sunday with Nemeth revealing that he will challenge whoever is TNA World Champion at Slammiversary on June 28 at Agganis Arena in Boston, Massachusetts.

Nemeth said:

“I am going to Slammiversary, and I don’t care who my opponent is. X wrestler versus Y wrestler will be fighting yours truly, the wanted man, Nic Nemeth, as I call my shot. I don’t care if it’s Eric Young, I don’t care if it’s your champ, Santana.”

Nemeth continued:

“As a gentleman, a man of my word, I am saying it right now. I am calling my shot at Slammiversary. That’s where the money is. That’s where your boy is. That’s where everyone’s going to be talking the next night about a brand new champion.”

As for who the champion will be at TNA Slammiversary, Santana will defend the belt against Eric Young on next week’s edition of Impact.

The updated lineup for Slammiversary is below:

TNA Slammiversary lineup for June 28, 2026:

  • TNA X-Division Title Ultimate X Match: Cedric Alexander (c) vs. Leon Slater vs. ??? vs. ??? vs. ??? vs. ???
  • TNA International Title Match: Mustafa Ali (c) vs. ???
  • TNA Knockouts World Tag Team Title Match: The Elegance Brand (Heather By Elegance & M By Elegance) (w/The Personal Concierge) (c) vs. ??? & ???
  • TNA World Tag Team Title Match: The System (Bear Bronson & Brian Myers) vs. ??? & ???
  • TNA Knockouts World Title Match: Lei Ying Lee (c) vs. Xia Brookside
  • TNA World Title Match: Nic Nemeth vs. winner of Mike Santana (c) vs. Eric Young on 6/11 TNA Impact

First competitor for Ultimate X match at TNA Slammiversary announced

Leon Slater is set to be a part of the upcoming Ultimate X match at TNA Slammiversary.

Despite recently losing the X-Division Championship to Cedric Alexander and failing to break a record, Leon Slater is scheduled for another title challenge.

TNA Wrestling announced that Slater will be one of the competitors in the Ultimate X match at TNA Slammiversary. The X-Division title currently held by Alexander will be on the line in his iconic TNA match on June 28, 2026.

Ahead of his Ultimate X match, Slater was also recently a part of the Champions Challenge match on the May 28 episode of TNA Impact.

At TNA Slammiversary 2026 in Boston, all championships are set to be on the line. The match card is also scheduled to include a ladder match on the show.

As of now, no other participants have been announced for the upcoming Ultimate X match except Slater.

TNA Slammiversary updated match card | June 28, 2026

  • Cedric Alexander (c) vs. Leon Slater vs. the rest TBA – Ultimate X match for the X-Division Championship
  • Ladder match
  • Mustafa Ali (c) vs. TBA for the TNA International Championship
  • Lei Ying Lee (c) vs. Xia Brookside for the TNA Knockouts World Championship
  • The Sytem (Bear Bronson & Brian Myers) (c) vs. TBA for the TNA World Tag Team Championships
  • The Elegance Brand (Heather by Elegance and M by Elegance) (c) vs. TBA for the TNA Knockouts World Tag Team Championships
  • Mike Santana (c) vs. Eddie Edwards for the TNA World Championship

Ultimate X match announced for TNA Slammiversary for X-Division Championship

The much-awaited Ultimate X match is set to return to TNA!

After months of waiting, it was announced during the main event of the May 14 episode of TNA Impact that the Ultimate X match would return at TNA Slammiversary 2026.

On Thursday, May 14, during the main event of TNA Impact, Leon Slater defended his X-Division Championship against Cedric Alexander in a Best 2 out of 3 Falls match. It was during this bout that the commentary team made the announcement. The finish of the match saw, Alexander defeat Slater to become the new X-Division champion.

It was announced that on June 28, 2026, at TNA Slammiversary, the promotion will host an Ultimate X Match for the X-Division Championship. TNA Slammiversary 2026 is set to take place at Agganis Arena in Boston, Massachusetts.

As of now, the participants or more details about the match remain a mystery, and nothing has been confirmed yet.

The history of TNA Ultimate X match

The TNA Ultimate X match is contested among three or more wrestlers from TNA’s X Division. Two cables, connected to metal structures rising from the four corners of the ring, cross 15 feet above the middle of the ring, and, similar to a ladder match, a championship, or a large X is suspended above the ring with the cables. The first wrestler to retrieve the object is declared the winner.

The first Ultimate X match took place in 2003, where Michael Shane defeated Chris Sabin and Frankie Kazarian. The most recent Ultimate X took place last year in 2025 at TNA Rebellion, where Moose defended his title against KC Navarro, Leon Slater, Matt Cardona, El Hijo del Vikingo, and Sidney Akeem.

Moose injured at TNA Slammiversary

Add injury to insult for Moose coming out of this past Sunday’s TNA Slammiversary.

Moose lost his X-Division title to Leon Slater on the show, ending a title run that began in October 2024, lasted 267 days, and encompassed 18 successful title defenses.

According to our Bryan Alvarez on Wrestling Observer Radio, Moose got hurt early during the match on a flip dive spot from the apron to the floor. Alvarez noted that he “bounced” off the ringside mat and still got right up, but had to work the rest of the match hurt, forcing them to cut out some spots. The injury appears to be back-related.

The extent of the injury and whether it will keep the 41-year-old out of action is unknown as of now. He was not announced as part of tonight’s live TNA Impact card.

Thursday’s TNA Impact lineup | Kingston, Rhode Island:

  • Joe Hendry vs. Mike Santana
  • Jacy Jayne double championship celebration
  • Leon Slater appearance
  • The Elegance Brand (Ash, Heather & M) vs. The IInspiration (Cassie Lee & Jessie McKay) and a mystery partner
  • Jake Something vs. Mance Warner in a no DQ match

JBL says he was originally set to appear at TNA Slammiversary as part of dropped storyline

Whatever was going on with JBL & TNA, it’s been dropped.

During an appearance on the Something to Wrestle With podcast, the WWE Hall of Famer revealed details about his TNA run that ultimately never came into fruition, revealing he was originally set to play a part in Sunday’s Slammiversary event.

“Last night at the show I was supposed to be there initially and I was originally supposed to have…really a part that people wouldn’t have believed how big it was,” he said. “That did not work out. The reason that got ended in TNA, it wasn’t because of me..it was a decision made by someone that was no longer there.”

JBL revealed further details, saying he was training and getting in shape for the role until getting a phone call saying TNA had changed their minds.

“I was supposed to have a real escalation of what we were doing in TNA. We had the whole thing planned out…all that stuff was going somewhere. I told everybody it was and it was, it was going somewhere and I thought it was. I was very, very excited about it. I was training for it, I got in really good shape for it. I was ready to go and then they called me one day and said hey, we’re changing our mind. And that’s their prerogative…the person that said it is no longer there and what they changed to it never happened…I never got brought back into it after that. There is a reason it all kind of got put on, not on the backburner, taken off the burner completely.”

JBL further elaborated it was not a decision made by Tommy Dreamer or TNA President Carlos Silva.

In 2024, JBL made headlines by appearing in TNA, AAA, and GCW by simply clotheslining people then leaving. He first appeared in TNA at last year’s Emergence, whispering something to Nic Nemeth before departing. At Bound for Glory, he clotheslined Joe Hendry, costing him the TNA World title. At this year’s Genesis event, he appeared once again, this time preventing Kazarian from cashing in on his Call Your Shot title match, allowing Hendry to win the title from Nemeth.

TNA announces North American attendance record for Slammiversary

A record-breaking night in Long island.

TNA issued a press release during Slammiversary announcing a new North American attendance record of 7,623 for Sunday’s show at the UBS Arena. The previous record was TNA Lockdown 2013, where they drew 7,200 at the Alamodome in Texas.

“This company has worked tirelessly since last December when it was announced that Slammiversary would be held at the UBS Arena,” TNA Wrestling President Carlos Silva said in a press release. “To see a record-setting crowd at the UBS Arena was a milestone moment for TNA Wrestling that no one will ever forget.”

The night saw new champions crowned as Jacy Jayne won the TNA Knockouts title from Masha Slamovich, becoming a double champion. Leon Slater defeated Moose to win the X Division title, and The Hardys won a four-way to become TNA Tag Team Champions once more. But in the main event, Trick Williams retained the TNA World title over Joe Hendry and Mike Santana, keeping TNA’s top title out of the company’s hands.

Trick Williams retains World title at TNA Slammiversary

In a bit of a surprise, TNA World Champion and NXT star Trick Williams left TNA Slammiversary with his title reign intact.

Williams defeated Joe Hendry and local favorite Mike Santana in the three-way main event of Sunday’s pay-per-view from Long Island, New York’s UBS Arena, feigning an injury that led into the finish.

Santana and Hendry were dueling it out in the ring as Williams was being tended to by referees and officials after appearing to get injured. After Santana hit two Spin the Block clotheslines on Hendry, Williams (who had remained in the entrance aisle the entire time) ran into the ring, threw Santana out of it, and got the pin on Hendry.

The 31-year-old has held the title for nearly two months after winning it from Hendry at May’s NXT Battleground. Both of TNA’s top singles titles are now held by WWE contracted talent as NXT Women’s Champion Jacy Jayne defeated Masha Slamovich for the Knockouts title earlier in the night.

Santana, whose daughter was at ringside, was looking for his first TNA World title win while Hendry was gunning for his second run.

AJ Styles appears at TNA Slammiversary, addresses new champion

For the first time in more than 11 years, AJ Styles made his return to a TNA ring as part of Sunday’s Slammiversary pay-per-view.

The current WWE star appeared after Leon Slater defeated Moose for the X-Division title, putting over Slater as the youngest X-Division champion in company history.

Coming out to his TNA era music, Styles said there was one point where he was told he may never come back and that the lights are a little bit brighter now, the noise is a little bit louder now, and the talent is better than it’s ever been. He then told Slater that he didn’t deserve the X-Division title. Rather, he earned it.

Styles talked about his past and ran down a list of former X-Division champions, saying they were the foundation but that Slater is the future and made history tonight. Now, he needs to make his legacy.

Styles got a “one last match” chant, but said he would talk about that at a different time. He last wrestled in the company back in December 2013.

Slater’s win gives him his first TNA title of any kind and ends the 267-day reign of Moose that dates back to October 2024. He had 18 successful title defenses in his first run with the gold.

TNA Slammiversary live results: World title three-way, AJ Styles returns

TNA holds its biggest event of the year — Slammiversary — in front of one of its largest crowds ever at the UBS Arena on Long Island, New York.

The PPV headliner is a three-way for the TNA World title as NXT’s Trick Williams defends against Mike Santana and Joe Hendry.

WWE star & former TNA legend AJ Styles will make his return for the first time since December 2013.

Knockouts Champion Masha Slamovich defends against NXT Women’s Champion Jacy Jayne in a title vs. title match.

In a four-way ladder match for the titles, TNA Tag Team Champions The Nemeths defend against The Hardys, The Rascalz, and First Class.

International Champion Steve Maclin teams with Mance Warner & Jake Something against the debuting Real1 (Enzo Amore), Zilla Fatu & Josh Bishop.

In eight-man action, NXT’s Darkstate will battle The System & Matt Cardona.

Knockouts Tag Team Champions The Elegance Brand defend against The IInspiration.

The card is rounded out by Tessa Blanchard vs. Indi Hartwell, Mustafa Ali vs. Cedric Alexander, and X-Division Champion Moose defending against Leon Slater.

**********

Johnny Rodz Honored

The show kicks off inside the UBS Arena with Gia Miller, Tommy Dreamer and Busted Open Radio host David LaGreca. Dreamer brings out Masha Slamovich with Johnny Rodz. He lists all of the wrestlers Rodz trained and says he just wanted to bring him out here in his hometown to give him his flowers.

TNA Knockouts Tag-Team Championships
The Elegance Brand (Ash & Heather By Elegance) (c) vs. The IInspiration (Jess McKay & Cassie Lee)

The pre-show panel send things down to Tom Hannifan and Matthew Rehwoldt at ringside, who set up the tale of the tape for our first match of the evening. The TNA Tag Lines graphic flashes on the screen for the opening contest.

From there, The IInspiration duo of Jess McKay and Cassie Lee make their way out. The duo heads to the ring for their big title opportunity. George Iceman snatches the microphone from Gia Miller at the top of the stage to handle the intro for The Elegance Brand.

With that said, Ash by Elegance and Heather By Elegance make their way out and head to the ring for their scheduled TNA Knockouts Tag-Team Championship defense. They are accompanied by M By Elegance. All three are carrying torches of liberty.

At the bell, we see Heather By Elegance and Jess McKay kick things off for their respective teams. McKay gets Heather in the corner and stomps a mudhole in her. She does not walk it dry, however. She makes the tag to Lee, and the two hit a double-team spot and do a Charlie’s Angels style pose.

The Elegance Brand take over after that, controlling the offensive for a couple of minutes until Cassie Lee gets the hot tag and shifts the momentum into the favor of The IInspiration. Cassie hits a superplex off the ropes on Ash for a two-count that M By Elegance breaks up.

Lee and McKay each take turns connecting with dives from the corner to the pile of Elegance on the floor. In the ring, McKay and Lee look for their Idolizer double-team finisher, only for it to be broken up. A torch to the face from Elegance leads to Rarified Air for the win.

Match Result: The Elegance Brand defeated The IInspiration to retain the TNA Knockouts Tag-Team titles.

Eric Young (w/The Northern Armory) vs. The Hometown Man

As the pre-show panel talk about tonight’s action, the lights in the UBS Arena go out. The theme for Eric Young hits, and out he comes with The Northern Armory. Young gets on the mic and trashes New York, leading to The Hometown Man coming out.

The Hometown Man takes out Judas Icarus and Travis Williams at ringside, and enters the ring and begins mixing it up with Young. The bell sounds to get this impromptu match off-and-running. Young fights back and tears the New York Islanders jersey off The Hometown Man.

From there, The Hometown Man begins fighting back and taking over. He hits the ten punch spot on Young in the corner, as the fans count along. He brings Young to the ropes in the corner, but Young knocks him off and hits a flying elbow for a two-count.

Young loses his cool and snaps, getting close to picking a fight with a fan in the crowd once again. He eventually re-enters the ring, where The Hometown Man has recovered. Young looks for a piledriver, but Hometown Man rolls him up for the three-count and the upset win.

Match Result: The Hometown Man defeated Eric Young

Steve Maclin, Jake Something & Mance Warner (w/Steph Delander) vs. Real1, Zilla Fatu & Josh Bishop

TNA International Champion Steve Maclin makes his way out, followed by Jake Something and then Mance Warner, who comes out accompanied by Steph De Lander. They settle in the ring and then their Fourth Rope opposition comes out.

Real1, formerly known as Enzo Amore, makes his way out accompanied by Zilla Fatu and Josh Bishop. Real1 does all of his old WWE routines, “Badda boom, realest guy in the room,” the things you can’t teach and so on and so forth.

He then lists all of the people Zilla Fatu is related to, as well as how Bishop looks like Sid. He takes turns verbally dressing down Maclin, Something and Warner, and finishes with “How you doin?!” They enter the ring and it’s time to get this one underway.

At the bell, Fatu and Warner kick things off for their respective teams. They begin trading shots. Fatu hits an explosive Samoan Drop and heads to the top-rope. He misses a big splash, and Warner tags in Maclin. Real1 tags in, and Maclin goes to work on him.

Things break down with all six brawling it out inside and outside of the ring. In the chaos, Bishop hits a big chokeslam. Incidental contact with Mance Warner leads to Real1 hitting Eat Defeat for the pinfall victory.

Match Result: Real1, Zilla Fatu & Josh Bishop defeated Steve Maclin, Jake Something & Mance Warner

Mustafa Ali vs. Cedric Alexander

The pre-show wraps up after final hype from the panelists about the long-awaited return of AJ Styles to TNA for the first time in 11 years later tonight. We learn that Mustafa Ali vs. Cedric Alexander will be the first pay-per-view bout of the show.

A live cold open shows a lady singing the National Anthem inside the UBS Arena. From there, the elaborate cold open video package airs to get the pay-per-view portion of the show officially off-and-running.

Back live, Mustafa Ali makes his way out first accompanied by Tasha Steelz and his Secret Service guys. A bunch of heels from The Matrix, basically. They line the aisle as Ali settles in the ring. Cedric Alexander comes out next and fires up the crowd.

The bell sounds to get things started. These two soak up the moment and get after it. The action spills to the floor early, where Ali hits a nasty German suplex. He re-enters the ring and goes for a dive through the ropes, but his Secret Service didn’t catch him. He landed right on his head.

Ali pops up to “Holy sh*t!” chants and slumps against the ring apron on the floor, all the while wearing a massive smirk. Moments later, we see a wild Michinoku Driver onto the Secret Service members on the floor.

Back in the ring. Ali hits a sick tornado DDT. He looks to follow up with a standing moonsault-senton combo, but Alexander rolls out of the way. A front face-lock suplex into the turnbuckles from Alexander gets him a close two-count.

On the floor, the top-half of the steel ring steps are removed. Alexander hits a big back body-drop, Shawn Michaels-level height, on Ali, who lands on the unforgiving steel on the way down. Tasha Steelz distracts the referee, allowing John Skyler to attack out of nowhere.

Ali follows up with a 450-splash off the top-rope onto Alexander. He immediately follows up with the cover, yet Alexander somehow kicks out before the count of three. A loud “TNA! TNA!” chant breaks out. Steelz gets in the ring and pushes the referee. She gets ejected.

Ali measures Alexander for a rolling neckbreaker attempt, but instead dives into a well-timed cutter-counter from Alexander. Skyler tries getting involved, but gets bumped to the floor. Alexander hits Lumbar-Check on Ali into a pin, but Ali somehow kicks out, too.

The action continues, and as Alexander has Ali down, a chair enters the mix. Steelz runs back down and slides into the ring. She crawls to the chair, but by the time she gets to it, Alexander steps on it. Alexander hits Steelz with a Lumbar Check, but Ali quickly hits Alexander with a 450 for the win.

Match Result: Mustafa Ali defeated Cedric Alexander

The System (JDC, Eddie Edwards & Brian Myers) (w/Alisha Edwards) & Matt Cardona vs. Darkstate (Dion Lennox, Osiris Griffin, Saquon Shugars & Cutler James)

After some preamble from Hannifan and Rewholdt, and the international commentary team at ringside, we shift gears and prepare for a big eight-man tag-team bout, with TNA stars taking on WWE NXT stars. Out first comes The System trio of JDC, Eddie Edwards and Brian Myers.

They head to the ring accompanied by Alisha Edwards. The theme for Matt Cardona hits and Long Island’s own “Alwayz Ready” makes his way out to a huge hometown reaction from the crowd. Darkstate foursome Dion Lennox, Osiris Griffin, Saquon Shugars, and Cutler James are out next.

As soon as Darkstate surrounds the ring, The System and Cardona bring the fight to them, with all eight guys brawling in and around the ringside area. Alisha slides JDC a chair and blows a whistle and points to the sky, in an homage to Sabu, before JDC hits a dive to the floor.

Osiris manhandles Myers in the ring after Myers is sent into the steel ring post on the floor. Things settle into an actual match now, with Darkstate taking the early lead. Lennox tags in and picks up where Osiris left off, taking it to Myers.

Shugars hits the ring to knock Myers’ partners off the apron, taking away his option to tag out, which he desparately needs to do at this point. They drag Myers back to their side of the ring and continue utilizing frequent tags to keep a fresh man on him at all times.

Shugars ends up as the legal man in the ring for Darkstate, just as Cardona finally tags in for the other side. The crowd goes wild as Cardona hits the Re-Boot for a close two-count. Cardona hits Radio Silence into a Boston Knee Party from Edwards for the win.

Match Result: The System & Matt Cardona defeated Darkstate

Gia Miller Interviews Tim Malcolm

Tom Hannifan mentions on commentary how all the stars are in the house tonight. He introduces Gia Miller, who is standing by at ringside with Tim Malcolm (yes THE Tim Malcolm) of TLC’s 90 Day Fiancée.

The crowd proceeds to boo the living hell out of him as he tries talking about how big of a TNA fan he is. You’ve got to love pro wrestling fans.

Tessa Blanchard (w/Victoria Crawford) vs. Indi Hartwell

The pre-match video package then airs to set the stage for Knockouts one-on-one action, which is up next. Back live, Tessa Blanchard’s theme hits and out she comes accompanied by Victoria Crawford. Her opponent, Indi Hartwell, comes out next to a big reaction.

The bell sounds and off we go. The two stare at each other for a good few seconds before engaging. Blanchard gets Hartwell to chase her in and around the ring, and catches her coming in with a big shot. Fans chant “She’s a racist!” at Blanchard.

Blanchard forges ahead, ignoring the crowd and continuing to dominate the early portion of the match. After several more minutes of back-and-forth action, Blanchard hits a picture-perfect Magnum off the ropes. She goes for the cover, but Hartwell kicks out.

Blanchard sells it like she saw a ghost, as commentary reminds the viewing audience that no one has kicked out of it since she’s returned. Hartwell hits Hurts Don’t It and a big follow-up into a pin for the victory out of nowhere.

As Gia Miller is interviewing Hartwell at ringside afterwards, Blanchard snaps and attacks Hartwell. Gia tries stopping her, so Blanchard snaps even worse and viciously attacks Miller, slamming her face into the steel steps as Craford holds Hartwell back from attempting to help.

Security eventually breaks things up. Backstage, Santino Marella is filled with rage as he approaches Blanchard and Crawford. Blanchard says they deserved it. She calls Gia a stooge. Santino says there will be repercussions for her actions and has security carry her away.

Match Result: Indi Hartwell defeated Tessa Blanchard

The IInspiration With An Announcement

Backstage, we see George Iceman and The Elegance Brand with their TNA Knockouts Tag-Team Championships. They are confronted by The IInspiration, who are mad about M By Elegance helping them in the match earlier. They tease a friend in high places for a trios match on Impact.

Winner Take All
TNA Knockouts Champion Masha Slamovich vs. NXT Women’s Champion Jacy Jane

The pre-match video package airs for the next match of the evening, which is the “Winner Take All” champion versus champion showdown, as TNA Knockouts Champion Masha Slamovich and NXT Women’s Champion Jacy Jane collide.

The NXT Women’s Champion makes her way to the ring accompanied by Fatal Influence. The TNA Knockouts Champion is out next. The bell sounds and off we go. Slamovich starts off well, but it isn’t long before Jane takes over.

Jane settles into a prolonged run in the offensive lead. She dominates Slamovich, but is unable to finish her off. Every time Slamovich shows signs of life, Jane’s cronies from Fatal Influence get involved. Jane tries a cheap shot with the title, but Slamovich hangs on.

As Fatal Influence gets involved again, Xia Brookside and Lei Ying Lee run out to make the save, beating down Jazmyn Nyx and Fallon Henley in the process. Meanwhile in the ring, we see a Snow Plow from Slamovich for a close two-count of her own.

Slamovich looks for Requiem, but Jane avoids it. Jane with a roll-up out of nowhere, but Slamovich kicks out. Jane hits a Rolling Encore out of the blue and covers her. 1-2-3. Jacy Jane wins. She is now the TNA Knockouts and NXT Women’s Champion.

After the match, TNA President Carlos Silva gets on the apron and watches Jane celebrate with both titles.

Match Result: Jacy Jane defeated Masha Slamovich to become the TNA Knockouts & NXT Women’s Champion

TNA X-Division Championship
Moose (c) vs. Leon Slater

The commentators hype things up for the next match, which once again features a title on-the-line. The TNA Tag Lines graphic flashes on the screen to set the stage for the TNA X-Division Championship. Moose, the reigning title-holder is chasing history as the longest reigning champ.

Leon Slater is looking to become the youngest TNA X-Division Champion ever with a potential win tonight. Slater makes his way to the ring to a good reaction from the crowd inside the packed UBS Arena, with 7,623 fans in attendance, setting a new U.S. record for TNA.

Reigning TNA X-Division Champion Moose is shown on the stage in a throne with a slightly modified theme song. He makes his way to the ring. The ring announcer finishes up the pre-match introductions and the bell sounds to get things started.

Moose manhandles Slater from the word “go.” On the floor, he hoists Slater up in a powerbomb position, with his body draping. He swings him side-to-side, looking to bash him into the ring apron. Instead, Slater flips to his feet and leaps a charging Moose, who spears the ring steps.

Now with Moose’s shoulder weakened, Slater takes over on offense, hitting some big high spots that pops the crowd back inside the ring. Slater knocks Moose out to the floor and does his trademark sprinting leap over the ring post to the floor high spot.

Moose takes over again, as Slater’s mom, sister and girlfriend are shown in the crowd. Slater begins fighting back. He hoists Moose up for a Torture Rack Blue Thunder Bomb, but Moose avoids it. Slater hits a Senton 450 off the ropes but somehow Moose kicks out.

Seconds later, Moose begins catching his second wind. He nails Slater with a spear that sends him out to the floor. Moose goes after him, but runs into a Code Red from a prepared Slater. Slater rolls Moose into the ring and climbs to the top.

Moose rolls far away and flips him off. Slater hits a Swanton like Jeff Hardy way across the ring. He follows that up with a Senton 450 off the top for the pin and the win.

With the victory, Leon Slater becomes the youngest TNA X-Division Champion of all-time. He celebrates with his mom, sister and girlfriend in the crowd in a beautiful moment. Moose puts the title around Slater’s waist in a rare moment of respect from The System member.

Match Result: Leon Slater defeated Moose to become the new TNA X-Division Champion

AJ Styles Makes Long-Awaited TNA Return

The post-match celebration for Leon Slater continues, and then the theme for AJ Styles hits and the record-breaking crowd in Long Island goes bonkers as “The Phenomenal One” makes his way out to the ring.

He asks if the fans missed him. He says it’s good to be back in the place where he made his name. He talks about the company having some of the best young talent in the world, like Slater, who became the youngest X-Division Champion in history tonight.

‘Fans break out in a loud “You deserve it!” chant aimed at Slater. Styles tells Slater not to listen to the fans. He says he doesn’t deserve it. He earned it. The fans cheer. Fans break out in a “Welcome Back!” chant aimed at Styles.

Styles says Slater reminded fans that TNA isn’t about weight limits, it’s about no limits. He mentions some of the names he shared the ring with during his days in the X-Division and then once again congratulates Leon Slater for becoming the youngest X-Division Champion ever.

His music plays again. Slater walks off as Styles claps from the ring looking at him. He then poses to the crowd himself on the ropes. That’s how the AJ Styles appearance wrapped up. For now, anyways.

TNA Tag-Team Championship Ladder Match
The Nemeths (Nic & Ryan Nemeth) (c) vs. The Rascalz (Zachary Wentz & Myron Reed) vs. First Class (AJ Francis & KC Navarro) vs. The Hardys (Matt & Jeff Hardy)

Now it’s time for another championship clash, as the TNA Tag-Team Championships will be on the line. The Nemeths defend against The Rascalz, First Class and The Hardys in a four-way ladder match. The pre-match package wraps up and back live return inside UBS Arena.

The Rascalz duo of Zachary Wentz and Myron Reed, who is filling in for Trey Miguel, make their way out first. First Class duo AJ Francis and KC Navarro, who is dealing with an injury himself, come out to some random rappers. The Hardys come out last and the bell sounds.

All hell breaks loose straight out of the gate. Within all of a minute, we see multiple ladders entered into the mix. The high spot fest begins early. We see The Rascalz hit some crazy spots, followed by The Nemeths.

At one point, we see Ryan Nemeth get in MLB legend Johnny Damon’s face at ringside. Damon shoves him. Nic runs over to hold Ryan back. AJ Francis hits a huge moonsault off the ladder onto the pile of bodies in the ring.

Moments later, as Francis and Navarro are both climbing up the same ladder in the ring, it is shoved over and they go flying onto a pair of ladder bridges near the entrance. Francis’ legs go through the rungs on the long way down. Ouch.

From there, The Hardys come to life again. They lay Navarro out over a ladder bridge near the commentary desk. Jeff Hardy hits a swanton onto it, but it doesn’t bend or break. Hardy’s back snaps bad upon landing.

Apparently he’s fine, however, because seconds later Jeff Hardy calls for something from the entrance area. We see a rope style ladder drop from the ceiling. Ryan starts climbing it, but Matt whacks him with a chair.

Nic tries climbing the rope ladder, but Jeff stops him. Jeff climbs the rope ladder and pulls the belts down. The Hardys are your new tag champs. After the match, Bully Ray comes out and challenges The Hardys to defend their titles against Team 3D in “one last great tag team match” in October at TNA Bound For Glory.

Match Result: The Hardys defeated The Nemeths, The Rascalz & First Class to become new TNA Tag-Team Champions

TNA World Championship
Trick Williams (c) vs. Joe Hendry vs. Mike Santana

It’s main event time!

Once the tag title match and aftermath wraps up, we see TNA Director of Authority Santino Marella come out and announce that Tessa Blanchard is suspended indefinitely following her actions earlier tonight. He then asks the pre-show panel for their main event predictions.

As they are giving them, they are cut off by the entrance tune for Frankie Kazarian. Out comes the self-proclaimed “King of TNA.” He rambles about how good looking he is, and what a dork Dave LeGreca is, before announcing he is going to do special commentary.

Kazarian joins Hannifan and Rehwoldt on the call for our high stakes three-way main event. As he does, Santino directs the crowds attention to the big screen where the pre-match video package airs to explain how we got to this main event title tilt.

Joe Hendry’s theme hits and out he comes as fans sing along with the viral smash hit. He settles on the apron and leads the record-breaking crowd in a giant wave. Mike Santana is shown praying backstage in his gear as someone in the ring draped in Puerto Rican flags begins rapping.

Santana begins his custom Jey Uso, Jon Moxley-style ring entrance through the crowd. The fans in Long Island are very much behind Santana tonight. Live rap, ladies and gentlemen. Does it ever deliver? The guy is now yelling, “When I say San, ya’ll say Tana!”

The entrance had a lot of energy, but felt like an unknown rapper getting a spotlight to do some bad karaoke and crowd interactions. He tries rapping again when he can find out where he is in the song. Ouch. Mercifully, this ‘performance’ appears to be over.

After whatever that was, we shoot to the stage where a choir dressed in all black begin church-style singing, “Whoop that Trick!” They mix in some melody and range. Now this is music! Some girls melodize it while bass-voiced guys say “Boom, boom, boom!” in-tune to the Trick-chants.

This eventually merges into the usual Trick Williams theme, which they continue doing their choir-style singing over. The reigning, defending TNA World Champion emerges in a big, fancy robe. He heads to the ring and poses on the ropes as the choir finishes up.

After the final pre-match introductions from the ring announcer, the main event of the evening finally gets underway. It’s definitely a Mike Santana-pro crowd in “The Empire State” this evening. Hendry and Santana get Williams out of the picture early on.

With Williams on the floor recovering, Hendry and Santana duke it out in the ring. Santana looks for Spin the Block, but doesn’t get it. Trick nails him from behind after re-entering the ring. After some more action, Kazarian gets involved, leading to him being ejected.

Trick gets nailed out to the floor, where Santana hits a big dive. Back in the ring, Hendry and Santana duke it out by themselves. Hendry connects with Standing Ovation and goes for the cover. Santana somehow kicks out. Fans chant “San-tan-a!”

Santana gets up to his knees and waves in Hendry to bring on more punishment. They trade shots back-and-forth as Santana gets back to his feet. Santana levels Hendry with Spin the Block. He hits another one and goes for the cover, but Trick steals the pin and gets the win to retain.

Match Result: Trick Williams defeated Mike Santana and Joe Hendry to retain the TNA World Championship

Thanks for joining us and don’t forget to follow F4WOnline.com’s Matt Boone on Twitter/X.

WOL: TNA Slammiversary preview & WWE relationship, defending Goldberg

Josh Nason returns with a brand-new Wrestling Observer Live Sunday, free for anyone to listen to.

He leads off with a look at TNA and their relationship with WWE. At this point, is there any interest surviving without this relationship or do they simply want to deepen it? Can they survive without it?

He also previews Sunday’s Slammiversary which looks like a pretty good card on PPV paper and one that proved him wrong in terms of ticket sales. What will AJ Styles do tonight anyway?

He looks at the happenings from AEW Collision and a fairly hum-drum week following a great All In last Saturday. Why is that?

He then wraps up with some thoughts on the public disparagement about Goldberg following his comments in his interview with Ariel Helwani and some bad takes on social media in general. He also lauds Pat McAfee for why he took a step back from WWE.

Click here to listen here or on Spotify or Apple Podcasts (no sub needed)

Daily Update: TNA Slammiversary, UFC fallout, CMLL notes

Daily Update

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This Week’s Wrestling Observer Newsletter

This week’s issue is one of the biggest of the year when it comes to major shows and we have one our biggest issues of the year out:

  • Full coverage of All In Texas including why matches ended the way they did, business numbers, lots of injury updates, booking notes on the top matches,  PPV numbers, gate, merch, history of Texas stadium shows, complaints about the length and why, interest level comparisons with WWE this week and the past month, next head-to-head and more
  • Bill Goldberg’s retirement, his comments, a look into the ratings of the show, WWE side of the story, what could have been done differently, Seth Rollins angle looked at, SummerSlam card revealed, how to accurately look at the numbers and more.
  • WWE Evolution, early numbers, booking thoughts.
  • Great American Bash and competition wth All In.
  • ROH Supercard of Honor featuring an incredible main event
  • Dragon Gate has its biggest show of the year
  • The life and times of the Amazing Kung Fu on the death of Eddie Hamill and his influence on how babyfaces in the U.K. work
  • The most detailed look at the ratings for all the wrestling television shows this past week, with demo, comparisons with last year and quarters.
  • A look at the CMLL anniversary show
  • MJF heading to Mexico to challenge for title
  • Arena Mexico has trios match with young wrestlers that was super
  • Alberto turns face in AAA
  • G-1 Climax first week news
  • Celebrity returns to Japanese rings
  • MMA legends do pro wrestling title match
  • Cowboy Bob Ellis and the Hall of Fame
  • Tokyo Joshi Pro in the U.S.
  • Slammiversary is TNA’s  biggest event in years
  • Update on lawsuit against AEW
  • Tony Khan talks a number of subjects after All In
  • The story behind the Dralisico & Dragon Lee win over FTR in Mexico and what happened next
  • Advance ticket sales for WWE & AEW upcoming shows
  • Dana White talks about White House show for next year
  • MMA champion shot five times this past week
  • Randy Couture update
  • Business of Taylor vs. Serrano
  • Lawsuit involving Real American Beer
  • Stratus talks Evolution
  • SummerSlam advances

This Week’s Back Issue

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Sunday Update

CMLL vs AEW ROH Card Bandido
Image Copyright: AEW

— Garrett Gonzales and I did a show last night talking about the news of the past week as well as talking UFC, SmackDown, business strategies, Jon Jones, G-1, an incredible trio, and a ton of other subjects coming out of the weekend. Bryan and I will be talking about weekend news tomorrow night after Raw.

— After the UFC show last night Dana White said, when asked about Jon Jones fighting on the White House show next year, was quite negative. “I just can’t risk putting him in big positions, in a big spot, and have something go wrong, especially on the White House card.” Jones responded saying that he was a little disappointed but was ready to fight on the show.

— Adding AJ Styles to tonight’s Slammiversary show at the UBS Arena in Belmont, NY, has put it over the top. It is at 6,805 tickets out. That’s 2,400 up from when Styles was first announced for the show. The legit TNA U.S. record is 6,700 paid and they did 8,000 in London as the all-time record. While 6,805 is not a paid number, it is going to be either the No. 1 or No. 2 show in company history and largest since 2013. The lineup for tonight:

  • Trick Williams vs. Mike Santana vs. Joe Hendry for the TNA title
  • Masha Slamovich vs. Jacy Jayne for the TNA & NXT women’s titles
  • Nic & Ryan Nemeth defend the tag titles against The Hardys, AJ Francis & KC Navarro and Trey Miguel & Zachary Wentz with  the Hardys saying if they don’t win they will retire
  • Moose vs. Leon Slater for the X title
  • Ash & Heather by Elegance defend the Knockouts tag titles against The Iinspiration (the former Iconics)
  • Indi Hartwell vs. Tessa Blanchared
  • Mustafa Ali vs. Cedric Alexander
  • DarkState vs. Eddie Edwards & Brian Myers & JDC & Matt Cardona

— Looking for reports from these weekend shows:

  • SmackDown on Friday in San Antonio (only dark matches)
  • NXT on Friday in Sebring, FL
  • WWE last night in Corpus Christi, TX
  • NXT last night in Tampa, FL
  • WWE tonight in Edinburg, TX

— We’re looking for results, finishes and highlights to [email protected]

— We’re also doing polls on the first night of G-1 yesterday in Sapporo as well as TNA Slammiversary tonight in Belmont, NY, thumbs up, down or middle, best and worst match from each show to [email protected]

— G-1 is back on Tuesday from Sendai at 5:30 a.m. Eastern time with an A block show with Ryohei Oiwa vs. Callum Newman, Hiroshi Tanahashi vs. Oleg Boltin, Evil vs. Sanada, Taichi vs. David Finlay and Yota Tsuji vs. Yuya Umura.

— Raw tomorrow has CM Punk and Roman Reigns appearing, Becky Lynch has a proposal for Lyra Valkyira, Sheamus vs. Rusev, Jaquin Wilde & Cruz del Oro vs. New Day vs., Creeds and Sami Zayn returns against Karrion Kross.  

— Nina Samuels sustained an injury and is off the 7/27 Progress show so her loser leaves town match with Kanji is off the show and will take place when Samuels can return.

— AEW announced a 9/24 Dynamite date in Pittsburgh at the Petersen Events Center.

— Matches that are among the best of the weekend are:

  • Konosuke Takeshita vs. Gabe Kidd from the first night of G-1
  • Mistico & Bandido & Atlantis Jr. vs. Barboza & Difunto & Zandokan Jr,. from Friday night at Arena Mexico
  • Templario vs. Mascara Dorada from Friday – Rushed however
  • The four-way tag team match on Smackdown
  • Mistico & Bandido vs. Mortos & Volador Jr. from last night at Arena Coliseo and people also have raved about the post-match where Bandido brought his daughter to the ring

— Friday’s Arena Mexico show drew a sellout of 16,000, the third sellout in four weeks. CMLL is now in its hottest business period since 1991. The six-man tag mentioned above was said to us by one regular as the best match they thought of the year. I wouldn’t put it at that level, but the heat was incredible even by Arena Mexico levels and I will say the work from the rudo trio was the best work by a rudo trio in a match I’ve seen there this year. The Fantasma trio are so fast, aggressive, bumping and selling machines and have perfect ring positioning.    

— Mistico & Dorada vs. Mortos & a mystery partner headlines Oaxaca, Mexico tonight.

— KENTA is the new GHC champion, beating Kenoh for the title today at Korakuen Hall in 28:04.  He will next defend against Naomichi Marufuji. Kenoh beat Ozawa for the title on Saturday also at Korakuen Hall.

— Amanda Nunes has officially enrolled in the UFC drug testing program for a potential title fight with Kayla Harrison.

— Neon and Mascara Dorada of the Sky Team face off this coming Friday at Arena Mexico in the finals of the Leyenda de Plata. They did a single elimination tournament where Neon beat Max Star and Titan and Dorada beat Captain Suicida and Templario. Friday’s show goes head-to-head with AAA at Juan de la Barrera Gym with Alberto vs. Mesias and if Alberto loses, he must leave AAA.

— For Google searches, UFC was the No. 1 of the weekend at 1.22 million. Most were for Dustin Poirier. UFC did a great job with the retirement. It blew away the Bill Goldberg retirement from WWE the prior week. Interest level also was on different levels Manny Pacquiao was at 1 million and Oleksandr Usyk was 100,000. Nothing from pro wrestling was close this weekend.

— Regarding the comments by Daniel Cormier in the interview with Demetrious Johnson about him being on the banned list for something real bad, this is not a new story. TKO legal to this point has not cleared Lesnar due to the Janel Grant lawsuit. It’s been the same situation since he was pulled from a planned surprise appearance at the 2024 Royal Rumble.

— ACW from last night at the MJN Convention Center in Poughkeepsie, NY: Real 1 (Enzo Amore) b Zack Clayton to keep the National title, Lena Kross b TRina San Antonio, Sidney Akeem b AJZ, Parker Boudreaux b Danny Doring, Carlito b Lee Sparrow & Brian Myers, Sent2Slaughter b Crowbar & Kerr, Mike Santana b Dante Casanova, Indi Hartwell b Vicki Ventuto, Matt Riddle b Richard Holliday via DQ so Holiday retained the ACW title. Announced for the next show on 10/18 is Holiday defending in a four-way against Riddle, Nic Nemeth and Matt Cardona and Vampiro debuts.

— WWE LFG airs on A&E tonight at 10 p.m.

— TNA announced Mike Santana vs. Joe Hendry for Thursday’s live TV show in Kingston, RI.

WOL: Will John Cena turn babyface at SummerSlam?

It’s Saturday and that means Wrestling Observer Live time with Jim Valley.

He unveils a brand new feature asking your opinions on topics in the wrestling news:”DO YOU FUNK WITH THAT?” He will list a topic and you say whether or not you “FUNK” with it. “Yes, you FUNK with that” or “No, you don’t FUNK with that.”

Plus, Jim talks about AJ Styles’ role at TNA Slammiversary, a recap of night one of the NJPW G1 and a preview of night two, and SmackDown had a lot of newsworthy developments like new matches and stipulations for SummerSlam.

After the contract signing, will SummerSlam be the place for John Cena’s babyface turn?

Check it out.

Click Here to Listen (sub needed)

New eight-man tag added to TNA Slammiversary

A new eight-man tag featuring members of WWE NXT’s DarkState vs. TNA’s The System is set for Sunday’s Slammiversary pay-per-view.

As announced during Thursday’s Impact go-home show, Matt Cardona will team with The System’s Eddie Edwards, Brian Myers, and JDC against DarkState’s Dion Lennox, Cutler James, Saquon Shugars, and Osiris Griffin.

The new match stems from an angle on Impact where DarkState attacked Cardona, but The System came to Cardona’s rescue:

Seven matches are set for the pay-per-view portion of the card on Sunday, with a Knockouts Tag Team title match and a Busted Open panel set for the Countdown to Slammiversary pre-show on TNA’s digital media channels.

An invasion segment featuring Enzo Amore and Zilla Fatu from indie promotion Fourth Rope Wrestling has also been teased for the event, as has an appearance by WWE’s AJ Styles.

The finalized card:

TNA Slammiversary, Sunday, July 20, 7 p.m. Eastern time pre-show, 8 p.m. Eastern time main card —

  • AJ Styles appears
  • TNA World Champion Trick Williams defends against Joe Hendry and Mike Santana in a triple threat
  • Knockouts World Champion Masha Slamovich vs. NXT Women’s Champion Jacy Jayne in a winner takes all match for both titles
  • Ladder match: TNA Tag Team Champions Nic Nemeth & Ryan Nemeth defend against Matt Hardy & Jeff Hardy, Trey Miguel & Zachary Wentz, and AJ Francis & KC Navarro in a four-way
  • X-Division Champion Moose defends against Leon Slater
  • Tessa Blanchard vs. Indi Hartwell
  • Mustafa Ali vs. Cedric Alexander
  • Matt Cardona, Brian Myers, Eddie Edwards & JDC vs. Saquon Shugars, Cutler James, Dion Lennox & Osiris Griffin
  • Pre-show: Knockouts Tag Team Champions Ash by Elegance & Heather by Elegance defend against The IInspiration (Cassie Lee & Jessica McKay)