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Jeff Jarrett And The Ressurection Of Impact Wrestling

Jeff Jarrett And The Ressurection Of Impact Wrestling

Posted: Feb 19th 2017 By: Tufayhel Ahmad

“Make Impact great again,” says Jeff Jarrett, sitting across from me in a hotel boardroom overlooking London’s River Thames. Even just 45 days ago, Jarrett never imagined those words would come out of his mouth.

Jarrett, 49, is back in power at Impact Wrestling, the company he created in June 2002 with his father Jerry Jarrett as an alternative to WWE, the global giant in professional wrestling. Jarrett resigned from his company in 2013 following years-long tensions with then-president Dixie Carter and went on to form another company, Global Force Wrestling, in 2014.

In a bizarre turn of events befitting the bombastic nature of professional wrestling storylines, Carter herself is now on the outs, having sold Impact—previously known as TNA Wrestling—to Canadian media organization Anthem Sports & Entertainment, which owns cable’s The Fight Network, Impact’s television home in Canada.

“From the very first meeting I had with them, it was very apparent to me how sound business-wise and structurally [they were] and where they wanted to go with things aligned with my thoughts,” Jarrett tells Newsweek. “It was a pretty quick realization that we should work together.”

Rocky Stewardship

Anthem finalized its acquisition of Impact in January following an embarrassing and tumultuous period for Impact in 2016. Under Carter’s divisive stewardship, the promotion fell into hefty financial difficulties that necessitated intervention from marketing and production firm Aroluxe, Anthem and even Smashing Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan, a lifelong wrestling fan who became president of the company for a brief period last year, to stay afloat.

Corgan made headlines last October when he sued Impact, claiming he made three payments to the cash-strapped firm under the provision that should Impact default on payments due to insolvency, he would gain control. Corgan lost his claim in court and later settled the financial dispute with Impact and Anthem, which, by this point, had begun taking steps to buy its broadcast partner.

Anthem sees its acquisition of Impact Wrestling as a strategic move to ensure it still has content to broadcast on The Fight Network. The company’s flagship show, Impact Wrestling, tapes year-round, providing Anthem 52 weeks of lucrative original programming. “It certainly wasn’t part of our business plan in January 2016, but in January 2017, it’s a cornerstone of our business plan,” Anthem’s executive vice president Ed Nordholm tells Newsweek.

Fans and wrestling industry pundits place Impact’s spiral into near-insolvency square at Carter’s feet. A Nashville music PR professional, she invested heavily in Impact in its early days through her friendship with Jarrett and eventually took over the company as president and CEO. But critics believed she was out of her depth running a professional wrestling organization. Impact had faced issues long before 2016, including reports they had failed to pay talent and production workers on time. Another report was that Carter criticized one-time broadcast partner Destination America in an email sent in error to the network’s programming chief that was intended for someone else.

“It was a black-eye on the industry,” says Jarrett of Impact’s struggles in 2016. “It wasn’t fruitful for anyone—whether you’re a fan of, a wrestler, an employee. It was a really ugly, unfortunate situation. It wasn’t good for the industry.”

Carter is no longer involved with Impact under Anthem, although she retains an advisory role with the parent company. “The buck has to stop someplace,” says Nordholm. “The reality is the company got into a dire position and she was CEO. There was never any question [she wouldn’t be involved in the day-to-day operations], but not out of any particular animosity,” says Nordholm. “If we’re going to invest...we’re owner-operators, we’re not passive investors. If we’re going to own it, we’re going to own it.” Nordholm denies that Carter’s new position is a token role. “It’s consultative. She’s a resource to us—she has useful perspective and relationships, so we’ll try to keep those.”

Talent Key to Growth

Anthem is banking on Jarrett’s long experience with both Impact and the wrestling industry to stabilize its new investment. The Canadian media brand first courted Jarrett late last year to return as a creative consultant. A deal was finalized just after New Year’s Day. “I’ll never forget the look on [wife] Karen’s face when I said, ‘I think we’ve come to terms on a consulting level.’ She said, ‘When do you think you’re going to get started?’ I said, ‘I’m on a plane in two hours.’” In just the last six weeks, that consulting role has transformed into something more permanent, although the two sides are still working on a legal agreement outlining exactly what that will entail. “My hope is that we’ll get to an agreement where he becomes the chief creative officer of the company and we’ll stay on the business side of the company,” says Nordholm.

The first set of tapings under the new Jarrett-led creative regime will take place in Orlando, Florida, in early March. Jarrett says viewers shouldn’t expect a drastic reboot of the way Impact looks or feels or in terms of ongoing storylines—something Impact has attempted numerous times in the past. “Do you know what the definition of insanity is?” he says with a smirk. (The answer: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results, according to Albert Einstein.) “But we are going to, to use a baseball analogy, hit some singles, doubles and swing for the fences. The effort is going to be there.”

Talent is key to that effort. Jarrett says he has a database of non-contracted wrestlers across the world that he hopes to begin hiring from in order to create new homegrown stars. Many of Impact’s past headliners—A.J. Styles and Samoa Joe among them—are now in main event matches for rival WWE. “That energizes me. Let’s go find that new crop,” he says.

Jarrett and Anthem also share a vision to branch out beyond just utilizing talent it has under contract, which includes Matt and Jeff Hardy and reigning world champion Lashley, and work with other companies to use their stars, too. “WWE is the leader of the marketplace. But it’s only in the last three months did they start recognizing other wrestling promotions. For years I’ve been saying that.”

“Just recently we struck up a relationship with [Japan’s] Pro Wrestling Noah,” Jarrett explains. “It’s obvious with [independent tag team] The Young Bucks and [Impact’s] The Hardys, there’s some unique stuff being developed—that’s another extension of promotions working together. Part of the vision is to work within the wrestling community. That’s what fans want—dream match-ups.”

New Broadcast Homes?

Jarrett and Nordholm plan to meet with promotions and scout talent while in the U.K. Another key order of business is finding a new broadcast partner for Impact in Britain after it was dropped by cable network Challenge in late 2016. “Finding a U.K.-based broadcaster is the most important short-term initiative for us,” says Nordholm. Jarrett says talks with U.K. networks has had “positive momentum,” although he refuses to disclose which channels they have been in talks with.

Jarrett hints that there may be something in the works with BT Sport, the premium cabler that rivals Sky Sports, by way of an existing relationship. He and Nordholm have met with British production company Sunset+Vine “which has a huge contract with BT Sport,” says Jarrett. His U.S. producing partner Arthur Smith—the man behind shows such as Hell’s Kitchen and American Ninja Warrior —is on the board of directors for Sunset+Vine’s parent firm, Tinopolis.

Beyond the U.K. deal, Nordholm says Anthem’s two other priorities for Impact Wrestling in 2017 are ensuring “the creative direction and consistency” of the Impact television program and securing U.S. distribution for 2018. “Our American television contract expires at the end of this year so sometime [this year] we hope to sort [that] out with [cable network] Pop TV or, if not them, who is going to be our American partner next year.”

Bringing Impact back from near-death may be the biggest wrestling match of Jarrett’s career. But he’s optimistic. “Let’s make Impact great again,” he reiterates.

Impact Wrestling airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. E.T. on Pop TV in the U.S. and currently streams on the Total Access TNA Wrestling app in the U.K. and Ireland.

 

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  • 1964 Louie Tillet def. Bull Curry for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 1968 Danny Little Bear & Kit Fox became the TSW Louisiana Tag Team Champion
  • 1973 Dennis Stamp & Dewey Robertson def. Rip Tyler & Eddie Sullivan for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 1974 Red Bastien def. The Great Mephisto for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 1978 Bruiser Brody def. Dale Valentine for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 2005 Tommy D def. Angel Williams for the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Champion
  • 2005 Angel Williams became the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Champion
  • 2005 The Forsaken (Faith & Halo) became the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 2016 Kareem Sadat def. Buster Cherry for the EmpCW Independent Hardcore Champion
  • 2019 Elias def. R-Truth for the WWE 24/7 Champion
  • 2019 R-Truth def. Elias for the WWE 24/7 Champion
  • 2022 Tego def. Adrian Vega for the EPW Internet Television Champion
  • 2022 Tyler Watts def. Sweet Cakes for the EPW International Champion
  • 2022 The Psychotic Messengers (Maniac Mike & Malachi) def. The Entitled (Justin Grey & Father Padge) for the EPW Tag Team Champions
  • 2022 Psychotic Messengers (Maniac Mike & Malachi) def. The Change (Drake Gallows & Muerte Silencio) for the AIWF Tag Team Champions
  • 2022 Maddox Jones became the EPW Heavyweight Champion
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Week of Sun 05-26 to Sat: 06-01

  • 05-26 1989 Eric Embry def. Super Zodiac for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-26 2007 Matt Garza def. Mitch W. Carter for the IZW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-26 2018 MVP def. Jack Swagger for the WCR Heavyweight Champion
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  • 05-27 1970 Luke Brown & Danny Hodge def. The Hollywood Blondes (Jerry Brown & Dale Valentine) for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-27 1977 Jimmy Snuka def. El Gran Goliath for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-27 2003 Chris Matthews became the ACW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-27 2017 Dane Griffin def. Jerry Bostic for the IWR Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-28 1964 Louie Tillet def. Bull Curry for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 05-28 1968 Danny Little Bear & Kit Fox became the TSW Louisiana Tag Team Champion
  • 05-28 1973 Dennis Stamp & Dewey Robertson def. Rip Tyler & Eddie Sullivan for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-28 1974 Red Bastien def. The Great Mephisto for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-28 1978 Bruiser Brody def. Dale Valentine for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-28 2005 Tommy D def. Angel Williams for the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-28 2005 Angel Williams became the MSWA Mid-South Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-28 2005 The Forsaken (Faith & Halo) became the MSWA Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 05-28 2016 Kareem Sadat def. Buster Cherry for the EmpCW Independent Hardcore Champion
  • 05-28 2019 Elias def. R-Truth for the WWE 24/7 Champion
  • 05-28 2019 R-Truth def. Elias for the WWE 24/7 Champion
  • 05-28 2022 Tego def. Adrian Vega for the EPW Internet Television Champion
  • 05-28 2022 Tyler Watts def. Sweet Cakes for the EPW International Champion
  • 05-28 2022 The Psychotic Messengers (Maniac Mike & Malachi) def. The Entitled (Justin Grey & Father Padge) for the EPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-28 2022 Psychotic Messengers (Maniac Mike & Malachi) def. The Change (Drake Gallows & Muerte Silencio) for the AIWF Tag Team Champions
  • 05-28 2022 Maddox Jones became the EPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-28 2022 Logan Knight def. Striker for the EPW All-American Champion
  • 05-29 1959 Mike DiBiase def. Angelo Savoldi for the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-29 1970 The Hollywood Blondes (Jerry Brown & & Dale Valentine) def. Luke Brown & Danny Hodge for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-29 1972 Blackjack Mulligan def. Blackjack Lanza for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 05-29 1978 Paul Orndorff def. Ernie Ladd for the TSW North American Champion
  • 05-29 2010 Josh Evans & Buddha def. Born Again Sunday (Kam & Koz) for the ACW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-29 2010 Bobby Starr def. David Kyzer for the BYEW Entertainment Champion
  • 05-29 2010 Shane Sanchez became the BYEW Caution Champion
  • 05-29 2010 Rick Russo def. Shane Sanchez for the BYEW Caution Champion
  • 05-29 2021 The Psychotic Messengers (Maniac Mike & Malachi) def. DNR (Drake Gallows & Revan) for the EPW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-29 2022 Striker def. Maddox Jones for the EPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-30 1955 Ali Bey def. Mike Clancy for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-30 1970 Killer Kowalski def. The Spoiler for the WCCW Texas Brass Knuckles Champion
  • 05-30 1979 Bill Watts & Buck Robley def. The Assassin & Angel [1st] for the TSW Louisiana Tag Team Champion
  • 05-30 1983 The Mongol def. King Parsons for the WCCW Television Champion
  • 05-30 1986 Terry Gordy became the UWF Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-30 2008 Dane Griffin def. Jerry Bostic for the 3DW Violent Division Champion
  • 05-30 2015 Aaron Neil def. Jordan Jacobs for the IZW Impact Division Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Legend Has It (Thrash & Killbane) def. The Jet-Jitsu Dojo (J. J. Hefley & Jimmy Lorenzo) for the BPW Oklahoma Tag Team Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Maddox Jones became the NCWO Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Warren Powers & Karnage def. Giganto for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Karnage def. Warren Powers for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-30 2020 El Greengo Loco def. Karnage for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Elijah Sparks def. El Greengo Loco for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Bobby Joe Bristow def. Elijah Sparks for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Karnage def. Bobby Joe Bristow for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-30 2020 Giganto def. Karnage for the BPW 365 Champion
  • 05-31 1954 Tor Yamato def. Rocco Perez for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 1968 Grizzly Smith def. Spoiler #1 for the WCCW Texas Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 1971 Tom Jones & Billy Red Lyons def. The Spoilers (Spoiler #1 & Spoiler #2) for the TSW United States Tag Team Champion
  • 05-31 1981 The Wild Samoans (Afa & Sika) def. Junkyard Dog & Dick Murdoch for the MSW Mid-South Tag Team Champion
  • 05-31 2003 Anthony Jackson def. Rocco Valentino for the TPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 2008 Slam Shady became the NWA-OK Oklahoma Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 2008 Brent Albright became the NWA-OK Universal Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 2008 Xavior def. Sage for the SWCW Cruiserweight Champion
  • 05-31 2008 3rd Rail def. Damon Windsor for the SWCW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 2008 Lady Venom def. Dominique LaReaux for the SWCW Womens Champion
  • 05-31 2014 Cody Burns def. Sam Stackouse for the SRPW Heavyweight Champion
  • 05-31 2014 Matt Majestic def. MHM, Inc. (Ray Martinez, Alabastair Hunt & K. P. Moore) for the SRPW Champion
  • 05-31 2014 The K. C. Wolves (Graham Bell & Luke Langley) def. The Sexy Camachos (Vinnie Camacho & Roberto Camacho) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 05-31 2014 Team Bull (The Bronze Bull & Bobby Starr) def. The K. C. Wolves (Graham Bell & Luke Langley) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
  • 06-01 1953 Billy Raborn def. Mike Clancy for the TSW Oklahoma Junior Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-01 1968 The Spoiler & Gary Hart became the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 06-01 1979 Jose Lothario & El Halcon def. The Spoiler & Mark Lewin for the WCCW American Tag Team Champion
  • 06-01 1981 Mike George def. Bob Sweetan for the TSW Tri-State Champion
  • 06-01 2003 Jef Tiger became the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 06-01 2003 Tyler Bateman def. Jef Tiger for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 06-01 2003 John O'Malley def. Tyler Bateman for the ACW Hardcore Champion
  • 06-01 2008 Bad Boy became the MSWA Oklahoma Champion
  • 06-01 2012 Tim Rockwell def. Brandon Walker for the ComPro Heavyweight Champion
  • 06-01 2013 What Wrestling Should Be (Jermaine Johnson & Jordan Jacobs) def. The Birds of Prey (Phoenix & Falcon) for the IZW Tag Team Champions
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