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On the October 31 episode of Impact!, The System (Eddie Edwards and JDC) defeated Joe Hendry and TNA World Champion Nic Nemeth in a tag team match; miscommunication between the latter team allowing Edwards to pin Nemeth. [8] The following week, TNA officially announced that Edwards would challenge Nemeth for the TNA World Championship at ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 19 December 2024. American professional wrestler (born 1980) Dolph Ziggler Nemeth in 2024 Birth name Nicholas Theodore Nemeth Born (1980-07-27) July 27, 1980 (age 44) Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. Alma mater Kent State University Relatives Ryan Nemeth (brother) Professional wrestling career Ring name(s) Dolph ...
In the main event, Nic Nemeth defeated Josh Alexander 3–2 in an Iron Man match to retain the TNA World Championship. In another prominent match, which was the opening bout, Zachary Wentz defeated defending champion Mike Bailey , NXT superstar Riley Osborne , Jason Hotch, Hammerstone and Laredo Kid in an Ultimate X match to win the TNA X ...
The fans were treated to a night full of wrestling action highlighted by the appearance of TNA’s Nic Nemeth, formerly known as WWE World Heavyweight Champion Dolph Ziggler, in action against ...
Hardy then attacked, but when The System nearly had the upper hand, they were stopped by Ryan Nemeth, Nic Nemeth's younger brother. [14] [15] Two weeks later, Hardy and Ryan defeated Myers and Edwards in a non-title match, and when Moose came out to partake in a post-match assault, Nic Nemeth returned to even the odds. [16]
[11] [12] At Emergence the following month, after The System had competed in an eight-man tag team match, Moose called out Nemeth for his contractual rematch. [13] [14] Later in the night after the show went off air, Nemeth, who defended the title in an iron man match with Josh Alexander, accepted the challenge for Victory Road. [15] [16]
[5] [6] The following week, Steve Maclin and Nic Nemeth qualified by defeating Sami Callihan and Rich Swann, respectively. [7] And the week after, Frankie Kazarian and Joe Hendry defeated Mike Santana and Jake Something, respectively, to earn the final two spots in the match. [8] [9] [10]
Erik Beaston of Bleacher Report graded the show an A, saying that "Nic Nemeth's debut was the exclamation point on a show that was damn good even without the massive moment. The second half of Hard to Kill was one of the best wrestling shows in recent memory, with the X-Division, tag team, Knockouts, and world title matches all delivering in a ...