X Division

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The X Division is a high-flying, high-risk style of professional wrestling seen in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. Its high flying style had been one of the key reasons viewers tuned into the former WCW and ECW promotion's cruiserweight divisions.

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Chris Sabin, one of the early pioneers of the X Division, sporting the controversial X Division t-shirt

Style

Rather than emphasizing the fact that most wrestlers who perform this style are under 220 lb (100 kg) by calling it a cruiserweight division, TNA Wrestling decided to emphasize the high risk nature of the moves these wrestlers perform (there is no upper weight limit on the X Division title, though in practice most of the champions have been cruiserweights). Recently, the emphasis of "it's not about weight limits, it's about no limits!" was brought to light when Samoa Joe, who weighs nearly 290 pounds, won the X-Division title.

To further emphasize this point, the slogan "It's not about weight limits, it's about no limits" (coined by TNA commentator Mike Tenay during the company's first broadcast) is used to describe the division. Although it was de-emphasized throughout 2004, the X Division is generally regarded as one of the key attractions of TNA, and was replicated in several independent promotions.

In November 2005, it was revealed that the X Division wrestlers consider that the division wrestlers are governed by an unwritten "code". This was after A.J. Styles confronted Samoa Joe after he had, according to Styles, breached the code by violently attacking his tag team partner Christopher Daniels, following their victory at TNA Genesis.

It is showcased yearly in TNA's DVD series The Best of The X Division.

Criticism

The X Division has received some complaints for occasionally being "spotfests"- matches consisting of mainly high risk (i.e. aerial) moves, with little flow or logical transitions between them.

The stunts Chris Sabin, Sonjay Dutt & Jay Lethal used in 2006 in a cross-promotion for the Jackass 2 movie caused a lot of criticism, saying it interfered with matches and made the X Division look cheap.[citation needed]

In September 2006, TNA released an X-Division t-shirt that caused tension between World Wrestling Entertainment and TNA. The t-shirt parodied the WWE group DX, parodying both designs and phrases from the group. WWE informed TNA that they should remove the shirt or the WWE would pursue legal action.

Ultimate X

Main article: Ultimate X

The X-Division's special attraction match is Ultimate-X. Similar to a ladder match (usually triple threat or fatal four way), the Ultimate X has the belt (or sometimes a giant red plastic letter X in #1 Contender Matches) hanging in the centre of the ring via cables suspended from metal poles.

X Division titles

As the X Division was developed during a time when TNA was a part of the National Wrestling Alliance, many other NWA promotions adopted their own X Division title.

Notable TNA X Division wrestlers

Over the course of TNA history, several wrestlers have established themselves as prolific performers within TNA's X Division. Amongst those wrestlers are:

See also