Billy Corgan Reflects On His Time With TNA, What His Idea Was To Drop The “TNA” Name

Photo Credit: NWA

NWA President Billy Corgan recently appeared on One-On-One with Jon Alba to discuss all things pro-wrestling, which included Corgan reflected on his legal battles with TNA, and what his idea was to give the company their makeover back in 2016. Highlights from the interview are below.

His idea for changing the TNA name at the time:

“This is reality now. I’m trying to do a hostile takeover at TNA. They got a bunch of my money, and based on the legal documents I have, I’m now running TNA, not only legally, but literally because it’s my money keeping the company alive. Where this thing was going to go, we started talking about, well, what are we going to do because for years they’ve been talking about getting rid of the TNA name. If you look at the workers who were there at that time, Drew Galloway, Bobby Lashley, Matt and Jeff Hardy, Decay, Eli Drake, EC3, it wasn’t like you didn’t have the horses to run. There was momentum coming off the Hardy’s (Broken Universe).”

How the Hardy Boyz were going to be the catalysts for the company name change:

“So what I did is, there was supposed to be this scene where Matt’s in a rowboat, and it’s the morning on the lake, and you would see him rowing out there. Then he would pick up the TNA title and he was going to throw it in the water. The idea was then the company would change names. Through the process of him throwing the TNA title in the lake, he would either bring out the new title, or that would be the setup, and then when we came back running again, you would have a new name for the company, and the Hardys were going to be the vehicle by which there was going be this transformation of the company.”

Says he even wanted Dixie Carter to get involved:

“Then we talked about even better, you can do an invasion angle with people who want to keep it TNA and do a whole intercompany battle. Then maybe even Dixie (Carter) is involved in one side, and I’m involved in the other. My whole argument was, while we’re fighting for control, we might as well turn into a television product because we might as well take all this squabbling behind the scenes and put it in front of the camera and actually do some business. It just never got there.”

(H/T and transcribed by WrestlingNews.Co)

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