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It has been a very long time since I have written a column but I thought that it was time to start again. Lockdown last weekend was, in my opinion, such a monumental event for TNA because of all the changes that have and are occuring with the company. It all culminated at Lockdown and it is the start of a new era for them and so I wanted to write about how I think these changes will impact on the company looking forward.
Last night TNA presented Lockdown in front of a record crowd and whilst overall the PPV was a bit of a letdown the ending was something different and was the start of a new era for the company. The show ended with veteran Bully Ray winning the TNA World Heavyweight Championship after turning heel and revealing himself as leader of heel stable Aces & Eights. He turned on Hulk and Brooke Hogan and on the fans and in return the fans showered the ring with bottles and trash in a scene reminiscent of Bash at the Beach 1996 when Hogan turned heel and was revealed as the third member of the NWO. It was a crazy scene and it kicks of a new era for TNA with a bang. TNA has made many changes over the past twelve months and they all culminated with Lockdown which was the start of the new direction. It was the first of the new PPV format, it was outside the Impact Zone and their last Impact was the last at the Impact Zone. This is the start of a new beginning for TNA and to kick it off with a record crowd is a fantastic way to start.
TNA is now on the road fulltime, they no longer have their safe haven in the Impact Zone where they are guaranteed a full crowd thanks to free entry into the show due to its location inside the Universal Studios theme park. TNA now have to go out there and draw a crowd every second week, as they are going live one week and taping another show that day to air the next week. The fact that they are doing two shows at each arena, one live and one taped for the next week is smart as well as it keeps costs down early on and they can see how successful taking Impact on the road is rather than going all out and going live to a new arena every single week. They can always expand at a future date if all is going well but for now it is the right move.
It will be a good new challenge for the company to actually have to work to draw a crowd of paying fans to attend the tapings. It is a good move for TNA as they needed to get out of the Impact Zone as it was hurting their product. The fans in there weren’t “real†fans but quite a few were just people that were inside the theme park that day. They weren’t people that would buy the PPVs or buy merchandise or even watch the show, they were just there for the day and decided to appear. The audience reaction was weak most of the time and in the end very stale. It was always telling when TNA would air a show from another location as the crowd would be such a contrast. They would be paying fans interested in the actual product and therefore would get a lot more involved in the show. The Impact Zone was very good early on for TNA as it was a cheap way to produce a television show and it practically guaranteed them a full crowd. But, Impact has been running for a long time now, close to a decade, and they are ready to take the next step as they had outgrown the space.
This gives TNA a great opportunity to grow their audience as TNA can bring the show to new markets and audiences. With Impact being taped in the same location the vast majority of the time you were stuck with just appealing to fans around the area or tourists visiting. They will get more exposure by running more markets and giving wrestling fans around the country the chance to watch the show in person. As we know attending a wrestling show is the best way to win a fan over and if TNA can produce quality live taping shows they will do just that. From all reports TNA house shows are excellent and a lot of fun to attend so if they can maintain that same quality then they will excel and will be able to draw good crowds. They mustn’t try to go too big too soon though, don’t book 20k seat arenas start with realistic goals and focus on smaller cheaper arenas and try to sell them out. They want to plan this out carefully so that they don’t have to run back to the Impact Zone in a year’s time if it is a failure. Overall it is a positive step and they are showing faith in their roster and creative team to be able to draw sufficient crowds to make this a worthwhile endeavour.
TNA have also reduced their PPV schedule from 12 down to just 4. It is another strong business decision as previously the majority of their PPVs would struggle to break 10k buys and there is no way they could have been making good money from those shows. TNA’s focus has always been its ratings and because of that its build for each PPV was almost non-existent outside of its main PPVs. For TNA the most important show wasn’t the PPV but the next episode of Impact. Now with just the big four PPVs TNA have given themselves three months to build each PPV. It gives them ample time to build up proper rivalries for each match on the card, top to bottom. They no longer have to rush build and don’t need to through together a card on the last Impact before the PPV. They have time to build suspense over those three months so that the feuds peak at these shows and make these must buy PPVs.
TNA needed something and someone big to start of their new era and with what happened in those last ten minutes of Lockdown they have that. Bully Ray is the world champion, the top heel and is heading the biggest stable in the company. They have a heel as champion that can actually draw some huge heel heat. They have a guy that at the age of 41 has got himself in the best shape of his life. They have a guy that can wrestle and is one of the best talkers in the business. They have a guy that has done everything that he could do to get to this level after a couple of decades in the business and he isn’t going to give up this spot easily and is going to prove that he belongs there with top shelf performances. Before this turn, let’s be honest, Aces & Eights were a pretty weak group. They had plenty of members but it had fallen into the standard stable trap of adding a lot of nothing names to the group. TNA needed to remember quality over quantity. Just because the stable has half a dozen guys in it doesn’t mean it is any good, there isn’t power in numbers if the numbers mean nothing. It also really doesn’t help when that stable can’t win a big match and a stable where the biggest names are Devon and Mr Anderson isn’t really going to set the world on fire. They needed a big name revealed as President especially after the underwhelming reveal of D’Lo Brown as Vice President last Impact. Bully Ray is that man, he is the biggest heel in the company and now he brings the World title to the group. Immediately he legitimises the group and makes them much more of a threat.
TNA now have a strong group headed by a strong leader and this is a great storyline heading forward with all the new changes to the company. TNA need to capitalise on it and make Aces & Eights a dominant stable, play on that classic wrestling storyline of having a group look like it is taking over the company. They need to pick up some big wins soon though to really put them over the top and to show that now with Bully Ray on board they can’t be stopped. A top heel stable needs a face, or two, to oppose them and to try to take them down. NWO had Goldberg and TNA need to find that guy to head the charge against the group. They are in an interesting situation with AJ Styles as well as there are hints that he may even join the group. He can’t have a World title shot until Bound For Glory 2013 and after losing a match to Christopher Daniels at Final Resolution on December 9[SUP]th[/SUP] he announced on the Impact after that he was sick of doing the right thing and that he was done. Since then they have laid the platform for Styles making that turn and siding with Aces and Eights. That would be another huge addition to the group if it did happen but they could easily go the other way with it and have him be the one that leads the TNA charge and repels this group.
They have a good mixture of big marquee names and quality wrestling talent and are starting to get the right idea about how to book those big names. Now that they are on the road they need names that can draw and that is where Hogan, Sting, Hardy, Angle etc. will earn their huge paychecks. Those names will get people into the building and will encourage them to spend their hard earned money on TNA. They will get them through the doors but it will be the quality of the wrestling on the show and the quality of the storylines that will need to hook them as fans. They are heading towards having the right balance and if they can find that sweet spot then they will excel. They need to ensure that they don’t put all the focus on Hogan or Sting; they are the icing on the cake rather than the focal points.
TNA has been around for more than a decade and Impact has been running on SpikeTV for over seven years. That is more than enough time to build an audience and if they hadn’t made these changes they would just be stagnating. They can’t expect to grow their US audience anymore using the exact same format that they have been using for years. This is why these changes are required, TNA could have remained in the same position they have been in for years or they can take a slight risk and try to expand. This carries a lot less risk than their previous experiment with rapid expansion on 4[SUP]th[/SUP] Jan 2010 but that was always bound to fail. They went too big too soon and it was a ridiculous notion to go head to head with RAW when TNA just weren’t anywhere near ready and the strategy was completely wrong. Going live at the time was the right idea but it should have been live on their traditional Thursday night rather than competing against the number one wrestling show. That move set TNA back by years and did a lot more harm than good. If instead they had been patient and kept focussing on making Thursdays their own it would have worked out better for them in the long run.
This Thursday will be a massive opportunity for TNA as a lot of eyes will be on them to see how they follow up that ending to Lockdown. They need to go all out of the show and show everyone that tunes in that they are a viable alternative to WWE and that more fans should give them a chance each week. TNA need to put on one of the best Impacts they have ever produced this week to convince casual fans that tune in that they should stick with the company for a bit longer and see where they are going. A lot a fans have given TNA a shot in the past but have been turned away for various reasons; this is the perfect opportunity to try to win over some of these fans.
TNA have all the elements they need to take the next step and grow as a company. They have made some smart business decisions in recent months and it has set them up as best as possible going forward. Now by being on the road full-time, being live every second week, by cutting back to four PPVs and having an exciting storyline heading the company they are much better prepared. TNA do need to remember one thing, there is nothing wrong with being the number two company in the world. It is great to want to expand and grow as a company but they need to ensure that they don’t overextend, like they did in 2010, and send the company into financial difficulty. Take it step by step rather than diving right in and if they do it right this is going to set TNA up for a great next decade. They have been in the business for over a decade so it is the right time to test the waters and see how big they can grow. Whatever happens, it should be a good ride to follow for the next twelve months to see how these changes impact (pun intended) TNA.
Thanks for reading.
Last night TNA presented Lockdown in front of a record crowd and whilst overall the PPV was a bit of a letdown the ending was something different and was the start of a new era for the company. The show ended with veteran Bully Ray winning the TNA World Heavyweight Championship after turning heel and revealing himself as leader of heel stable Aces & Eights. He turned on Hulk and Brooke Hogan and on the fans and in return the fans showered the ring with bottles and trash in a scene reminiscent of Bash at the Beach 1996 when Hogan turned heel and was revealed as the third member of the NWO. It was a crazy scene and it kicks of a new era for TNA with a bang. TNA has made many changes over the past twelve months and they all culminated with Lockdown which was the start of the new direction. It was the first of the new PPV format, it was outside the Impact Zone and their last Impact was the last at the Impact Zone. This is the start of a new beginning for TNA and to kick it off with a record crowd is a fantastic way to start.
TNA is now on the road fulltime, they no longer have their safe haven in the Impact Zone where they are guaranteed a full crowd thanks to free entry into the show due to its location inside the Universal Studios theme park. TNA now have to go out there and draw a crowd every second week, as they are going live one week and taping another show that day to air the next week. The fact that they are doing two shows at each arena, one live and one taped for the next week is smart as well as it keeps costs down early on and they can see how successful taking Impact on the road is rather than going all out and going live to a new arena every single week. They can always expand at a future date if all is going well but for now it is the right move.
It will be a good new challenge for the company to actually have to work to draw a crowd of paying fans to attend the tapings. It is a good move for TNA as they needed to get out of the Impact Zone as it was hurting their product. The fans in there weren’t “real†fans but quite a few were just people that were inside the theme park that day. They weren’t people that would buy the PPVs or buy merchandise or even watch the show, they were just there for the day and decided to appear. The audience reaction was weak most of the time and in the end very stale. It was always telling when TNA would air a show from another location as the crowd would be such a contrast. They would be paying fans interested in the actual product and therefore would get a lot more involved in the show. The Impact Zone was very good early on for TNA as it was a cheap way to produce a television show and it practically guaranteed them a full crowd. But, Impact has been running for a long time now, close to a decade, and they are ready to take the next step as they had outgrown the space.
This gives TNA a great opportunity to grow their audience as TNA can bring the show to new markets and audiences. With Impact being taped in the same location the vast majority of the time you were stuck with just appealing to fans around the area or tourists visiting. They will get more exposure by running more markets and giving wrestling fans around the country the chance to watch the show in person. As we know attending a wrestling show is the best way to win a fan over and if TNA can produce quality live taping shows they will do just that. From all reports TNA house shows are excellent and a lot of fun to attend so if they can maintain that same quality then they will excel and will be able to draw good crowds. They mustn’t try to go too big too soon though, don’t book 20k seat arenas start with realistic goals and focus on smaller cheaper arenas and try to sell them out. They want to plan this out carefully so that they don’t have to run back to the Impact Zone in a year’s time if it is a failure. Overall it is a positive step and they are showing faith in their roster and creative team to be able to draw sufficient crowds to make this a worthwhile endeavour.
TNA have also reduced their PPV schedule from 12 down to just 4. It is another strong business decision as previously the majority of their PPVs would struggle to break 10k buys and there is no way they could have been making good money from those shows. TNA’s focus has always been its ratings and because of that its build for each PPV was almost non-existent outside of its main PPVs. For TNA the most important show wasn’t the PPV but the next episode of Impact. Now with just the big four PPVs TNA have given themselves three months to build each PPV. It gives them ample time to build up proper rivalries for each match on the card, top to bottom. They no longer have to rush build and don’t need to through together a card on the last Impact before the PPV. They have time to build suspense over those three months so that the feuds peak at these shows and make these must buy PPVs.
TNA needed something and someone big to start of their new era and with what happened in those last ten minutes of Lockdown they have that. Bully Ray is the world champion, the top heel and is heading the biggest stable in the company. They have a heel as champion that can actually draw some huge heel heat. They have a guy that at the age of 41 has got himself in the best shape of his life. They have a guy that can wrestle and is one of the best talkers in the business. They have a guy that has done everything that he could do to get to this level after a couple of decades in the business and he isn’t going to give up this spot easily and is going to prove that he belongs there with top shelf performances. Before this turn, let’s be honest, Aces & Eights were a pretty weak group. They had plenty of members but it had fallen into the standard stable trap of adding a lot of nothing names to the group. TNA needed to remember quality over quantity. Just because the stable has half a dozen guys in it doesn’t mean it is any good, there isn’t power in numbers if the numbers mean nothing. It also really doesn’t help when that stable can’t win a big match and a stable where the biggest names are Devon and Mr Anderson isn’t really going to set the world on fire. They needed a big name revealed as President especially after the underwhelming reveal of D’Lo Brown as Vice President last Impact. Bully Ray is that man, he is the biggest heel in the company and now he brings the World title to the group. Immediately he legitimises the group and makes them much more of a threat.
TNA now have a strong group headed by a strong leader and this is a great storyline heading forward with all the new changes to the company. TNA need to capitalise on it and make Aces & Eights a dominant stable, play on that classic wrestling storyline of having a group look like it is taking over the company. They need to pick up some big wins soon though to really put them over the top and to show that now with Bully Ray on board they can’t be stopped. A top heel stable needs a face, or two, to oppose them and to try to take them down. NWO had Goldberg and TNA need to find that guy to head the charge against the group. They are in an interesting situation with AJ Styles as well as there are hints that he may even join the group. He can’t have a World title shot until Bound For Glory 2013 and after losing a match to Christopher Daniels at Final Resolution on December 9[SUP]th[/SUP] he announced on the Impact after that he was sick of doing the right thing and that he was done. Since then they have laid the platform for Styles making that turn and siding with Aces and Eights. That would be another huge addition to the group if it did happen but they could easily go the other way with it and have him be the one that leads the TNA charge and repels this group.
They have a good mixture of big marquee names and quality wrestling talent and are starting to get the right idea about how to book those big names. Now that they are on the road they need names that can draw and that is where Hogan, Sting, Hardy, Angle etc. will earn their huge paychecks. Those names will get people into the building and will encourage them to spend their hard earned money on TNA. They will get them through the doors but it will be the quality of the wrestling on the show and the quality of the storylines that will need to hook them as fans. They are heading towards having the right balance and if they can find that sweet spot then they will excel. They need to ensure that they don’t put all the focus on Hogan or Sting; they are the icing on the cake rather than the focal points.
TNA has been around for more than a decade and Impact has been running on SpikeTV for over seven years. That is more than enough time to build an audience and if they hadn’t made these changes they would just be stagnating. They can’t expect to grow their US audience anymore using the exact same format that they have been using for years. This is why these changes are required, TNA could have remained in the same position they have been in for years or they can take a slight risk and try to expand. This carries a lot less risk than their previous experiment with rapid expansion on 4[SUP]th[/SUP] Jan 2010 but that was always bound to fail. They went too big too soon and it was a ridiculous notion to go head to head with RAW when TNA just weren’t anywhere near ready and the strategy was completely wrong. Going live at the time was the right idea but it should have been live on their traditional Thursday night rather than competing against the number one wrestling show. That move set TNA back by years and did a lot more harm than good. If instead they had been patient and kept focussing on making Thursdays their own it would have worked out better for them in the long run.
This Thursday will be a massive opportunity for TNA as a lot of eyes will be on them to see how they follow up that ending to Lockdown. They need to go all out of the show and show everyone that tunes in that they are a viable alternative to WWE and that more fans should give them a chance each week. TNA need to put on one of the best Impacts they have ever produced this week to convince casual fans that tune in that they should stick with the company for a bit longer and see where they are going. A lot a fans have given TNA a shot in the past but have been turned away for various reasons; this is the perfect opportunity to try to win over some of these fans.
TNA have all the elements they need to take the next step and grow as a company. They have made some smart business decisions in recent months and it has set them up as best as possible going forward. Now by being on the road full-time, being live every second week, by cutting back to four PPVs and having an exciting storyline heading the company they are much better prepared. TNA do need to remember one thing, there is nothing wrong with being the number two company in the world. It is great to want to expand and grow as a company but they need to ensure that they don’t overextend, like they did in 2010, and send the company into financial difficulty. Take it step by step rather than diving right in and if they do it right this is going to set TNA up for a great next decade. They have been in the business for over a decade so it is the right time to test the waters and see how big they can grow. Whatever happens, it should be a good ride to follow for the next twelve months to see how these changes impact (pun intended) TNA.
Thanks for reading.