TNA Wrestling is officially headed south—in the good way—with a shiny new international TV deal that plants the promotion’s high-flying chaos firmly in living rooms across 17 Latin American countries, including Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina.
Announced today via Sports Video Group, the deal sees Anthem Sports & Entertainment link arms with Claro Sports, a company that apparently looked at wrestling and said, “Yes, this will pair beautifully with futbol and Formula 1.”
The agreement covers everything from TNA IMPACT! to PPVs and streaming specials, and will be available across Claro’s platforms—including its free ad-supported TV, its paid TV network, and of course YouTube, where wrestling fans spend 97% of their screen time rewatching table bumps and entrance pops.
The deal is non-exclusive, meaning both sides can swipe right on other wrestling content if they so choose. TNA is out here doing business like a free agent at a buffet—grab everything, see what sticks, and suplex the competition politely.
This move continues TNA’s improbable-but-inspirational glow-up era. Yes, they’ve had a few behind-the-scenes bombshells (Scott D’Amore and Gail Kim both being let go like beloved baristas during a franchise merger), but they’ve also made quiet, strategic power plays—including a working relationship with WWE that has everyone nervously refreshing Twitter for crossovers.
Earlier this year, TNA hit Canadian airwaves via SportsNet, establishing a stronghold in a country where maple syrup flows and every wrestling match is somehow colder. The U.S. expansion remains a hopeful whisper, but for now, Impact continues to air on AXS TV (owned by Anthem, also known as the world’s most committed stage parent).
With TNA+, their own streaming service, and now this Claro deal, TNA is doing what they’ve always done best: defy the odds, ignore the haters, and throw moonsaults until someone notices.