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Published: October 5, 2009
By Jared Silberkleit - After putting on back to back very poor PPVs over the past couple months, TNA actually delivered on PPV with No Surrender. With a major title change and several good quality matches across the card, No Surrender has TNA looking pretty good heading into their biggest PPV of the year next month.
1. Finals of the TNA Knockouts Tag Team Championship Tournament: Taylor Wilde and Sarita vs. The Beautiful People (Velvet Sky and Madison Rayne)
This was actually a pretty decent match to start the PPV. Because Angelina Love was released by TNA, Madison Rayne replaced her as Velvet’s partner (Can you say death of this stable?). Anyway, this match was smartly booked with Sky doing the majority of the work for the Beautiful People. Sarita carried the majority of the match by doing her typical lucha moves on Sky before the heels start working her over. Eventually Sarita is able to get the hot tag to Wilde, who starts to get a ton of offense in on the Beautiful People. Match ends when Sarita hits a missile dropkick on Rayne, who is then hit with a German suplex from Wilde followed by a bridge pin, so Wilde and Sarita are the first ever Knockouts Tag Team Champions. It was a very brief match, lasting just under 5 minutes. Decent opener, my only gripe is that it was very, very short. Match Rating: 4/10
2. Eric Young vs. Hernandez
Wow. TNA decided to book this match as a complete squash and not even bother having these guys wrestle. Young comes out in a suit, saying he won’t fight his “brother”. Hernandez comes out, hits a few power moves, then hits the Border Toss on Young and beats him in less than a minute. We moved on to other things right after the pinfall, so this was just a waste of time and served no purpose. Match Rating: DUD (0/10)
3. TNA X Division Championship: Samoa Joe(c) vs. Daniels
As expected by most people, this ended up being the match of the night. This wasn’t as good as these guys’ matches together from 2005-2006 but it is evident that the chemistry is still there. I think that what kept this match from being “great” was that Joe has gotten heavier and changed his style a bit this year, and also the match should have gotten a bit more time, granted it was about 14-15 minutes. I did like how they were able to combine lots of high-flying action and spots with great technical wrestling. Daniels, as expected did a lot of top rope moves and dives to the outside in the early going, which included a springboard moonsault. Joe worked over Daniels’ legs for a good portion of the match, utilizing a half Boston crab. Late in the match, Daniels goes for a Best Moonsault Ever but Joe gets up and Daniels ends up jumping over him and landing on his feet. Joe then throws Daniels into the corner and hits an enzuigiri before going for a Muscle Buster. Daniels counters and goes for the Angels Wings, but Joe counters that and puts Daniels in a sleeper hold before bringing him down into the Coquina Clutch. Daniels taps out and Joe retains. Very good match. Match Rating: 7/10
4. Falls Count Anywhere: D’Angelo Dinero vs. Suicide
This match was added as a special “bonus”. I groaned at the fact that this meant yet another 9 match PPV (!) from TNA but I liked this match being added to the card as these guys had a solid match on the Impact before No Surrender. This match had an interesting beginning, as Dinero was being interviewed backstage when Suicide attacked him, and the bell rang because the match was Falls Count Anywhere. This started off as a messy but fun brawl between these two as they fought all over the backstage area. They go out in that hangar area where Dinero hits a nice diving elbow off some stacked boxes/dumpsters onto Suicide. We then got some silly stuff like Suicide doing a splash on a cart, Dinero getting back body dropped into a wheelbarrow, and Suicide pantsing Dinero. The match really started to pick up as these guys made their way back to the ring, when they actually began to wrestle. Back outside the ring again, Dinero hits a nice suplex onto the entrance ramp. They brawl up to the stage where Suicide brings out a table. He lays Dinero out on the table before climbing the wall above an entrance tunnel. He jumps off the ledge for a diving leg drop but Dinero moves and Suicide crashes through the table. Dinero then makes the cover for the win. This was a pretty entertaining brawl. Match Rating: 6/10
5. TNA Women’s Knockout Championship (vacant): ODB vs. Cody Deaner
This wasn’t a good intergender match but not nearly as bad as most of us thought it would be. They did some good comedy stuff throughout, but something about man-on woman violence kept me from really getting into this match. Deaner tries for a pin at one point with his feet on the ropes, but the ref sees it and stops the count, leading to a shoving match between the ref and Deaner. ODB was massively over here, like the most over she’s been in many months. They also did a ton of near falls to try and keep the match interesting, but I felt it was a bit excessive and the match started to lag through the final 2 minutes. Eventually, Deaner misses a flying headbutt and ODB picks him up and hits the TKO for the win and the Knockouts title. Hopefully TNA takes ODB seriously as champion because when she’s not doing dumb antics she’s actually a solid worker and she’s very over with the crowd. Match Rating: 3.5/10
6. TNA Legends Championship/$50,000 Bounty Challenge: Kevin Nash(c) vs. Abyss
This represented the low point of the PPV. Most people did not expect much from these guys but the awful ending puts it possibly beneath expectations. Mick Foley was on guest commentary as well. For the first few minutes this was just a typical, slow, big man match like everyone expected, with both guys hitting power moves here and there. They brawled outside the ring also, with Nash trying to use a chair and Abyss not allowing it and just slamming Nash’s head on the steps and the ring apron. Daffney also runs in with the tazer (it’s back!) and tries to attack Abyss but he hits a Black Hole Slam on her. Wow, with all these weapons and interference you would have thought the ref might have wanted to call for the bell. But you know, they’re TNA and it’s OK. Anyway, Abyss chokeslams Nash, then sees Foley and asks him to hand him the barbed wire bat. Foley gets up to go give it to him but the ref holds him back to prevent him from giving the bat to Abyss. While the ref is busy with Foley, Nash comes from behind with the tazer and tazes Abyss in the nuts. And yes, just like at Victory Road, the tazer was SMOKING. Nash gets the pin right after this to retain the belt and claim the bounty. However, Dr. Stevie tries to weasel out of the deal and leave with the money, but Nash hits a horrible powerbomb on him before leaving with his title and the money. Horrible match. Match Rating: 2.5/10
7. Lethal Lockdown: Beer Money Inc. (Robert Roode and James Storm) and Team 3D (Brother Ray and Brother Devon) vs. The Main Event Mafia (Scott Steiner and Booker T) and The British Invasion (Brutus Magnus and Doug Williams)
I didn’t initially like the idea of having the Lethal Lockdown at a PPV separate from Lockdown, but it made sense with both face teams feuding with both of the heel teams throughout the past few months. The match started off with Storm and Williams, who were soon joined by Magnus, who helps Williams bust open Storm by ramming him face first into the cage. Every minute or two a new person came into the match. Steiner surprisingly performed well early on before the weapons were introduced, beating Beer Money pretty badly and hitting a top rope Frankensteiner. Some good back and forth action for the rest of the non-weapons portion of the match until Ray comes in as the last entrant. As he’s coming down the ramp, Rob Terry suddenly assaults him with a chair and takes him down before he can get in the ring. Terry yells for the roof to be lowered with the weapons, and it is. The match really picked up at this point. Both teams traded a ton of shots with trash cans, kendo sticks, and crutches. Storm and Williams make their way onto the roof of the cage, where Storm dangles and nearly falls off. Roode eventually joins his partner and they hit a double suplex to Williams on the roof. Meanwhile, Ray turns the tables on Terry outside the ring and grabs a chair and enters the cage. He delivers a ton of chair shots to all members of the opposing team. Him and D-Von connect with the 3D on Steiner, while Beer Money returns to the ring to hit the DWI to Magnus for the victory. Very entertaining hardcore match, it came close to topping Daniels/Joe as the best match on the card. Match Rating: 7/10
8. Bobby Lashley vs. Rhino
After an exciting Lethal Lockdown match, things slowed down with Bobby Lashley’s TNA PPV debut. His match with Rhino here started off OK with the big man brawl that we expected. Surprisingly, Rhino actually got in a decent amount of offense, but Lashley is able to overpower him and bust him open. Lashley eventually goes for a spear but misses and hits the ref. Rhino then hits a Gore as a second ref enters the ring. Lashley kicks out of a pin attempt, Rhino goes for another Gore, and Lashley hits him with a big Knockout punch for the win. Huh? Way to copy Big Show. Really, a spear would have been just fine. This was a very disappointing match from these two; it was hurt by the lack of time and a weak ending. Match Rating: 3.5/10
9. TNA World Heavyweight Championship: Kurt Angle(c) vs. Matt Morgan vs. AJ Styles vs. Sting vs. Hernandez
Right after they finish up with the introductions, Hernandez comes down to the ring and says he’s cashing in his Feast or Fired case. The match started off pretty good with Hernandez taking down Angle and brawling with him up to the stage where he tries for a Border Toss off the stage. Suddenly, Eric Young comes out and attacks Hernandez, hitting him with a piledriver. Hernandez does not come back for the rest of the match. Anyway, much of the match consisted of Sting and Styles teaming up to take on Morgan, who was occasionally joined by Angle. Sting and Styles get a brief advantage when Styles hits a Pele to Morgan, knocking him off the ring apron, and Sting hits a missile dropkick on Angle. Styles then gets briefly taken out after Morgan hits him with the Hellevator. Sting hits a few Stinger Splashes on Morgan and Angle, but Angle hits him with an Angle slam for a near fall. He then puts an Ankle Lock on Sting, but Morgan hits Angle with a Carbon Footprint. Styles then returns to the ring, helping Sting send Morgan to the outside. With Angle flat on his back in the ring, Sting did a suicide dive onto Morgan on the outside, leaving Styles in the ring alone with the fallen Angle. Styles then hit a springboard 450 splash before pinning Angle to become the new TNA World Heavyweight Champion! This has been a long time coming, and is probably a couple years too late, but this is huge for TNA to have AJ Styles as their World Champion. Tons of fans and wrestlers from the back (including Christopher Daniels) come out to congratulate Styles on his huge title win. It might have been better to have this moment at Bound for Glory but I liked how Styles won it in the Impact Zone and got to celebrate with the fans. Overall a pretty good title match to close out a pretty good show. Match Rating: 6.5/10
Overall PPV Rating: 7.25/10
My name is Jared Silberkleit. I am from Orange, CT and am a huge fan of pro wrestling. I mostly follow WWE and TNA but I also watch the smaller promotions such as ROH and DGUSA. I have been a lifelong WWE fan and have become a TNA fan over the past few years. Aside from wrestling, I also really love baseball and football and follow many other sports such as hockey and MMA. I have written forwww.sportsgrumblings.com for roughly a year now as well.
Tagged with: Angelina, Beautiful People, Bridge Pin, Dud, German Suplex, Gripe, Joe C, Missile, Ppv, Ppvs, Rayne, Samoa Joe, Sarita, Squash, Surrender, Tag Team Champions, Tag Team Championship, Tna Knockouts, Velvet Sky, Waste Of Time