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‘Double Vision’: How an NHL goalie inspired Foreigner’s arena-rock megahit

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‘Double Vision’: How an NHL goalie inspired Foreigner’s arena-rock megahit

The lyrics to both verses were finished, and the first line of the chorus — Fill my eyes — was in place. Lou Gramm and Mick Jones, the driving forces behind Foreigner, one of the best-selling rock bands in history, had worked through the melody enough to know they had another hit on their hands.

It was the fall of 1977, and the band was in a New York City studio working through songs for the follow-up album to the self-titled “Foreigner,” which launched them to fame a year earlier. The new record didn’t have a title, and the song they were most excited about had everything, as Gramm put it, “except a hook and a name.”

“It was quite frustrating,” Gramm told The Athletic. “I could not find the words or a phrase that would culminate what I was singing about in the verses. I wasn’t even wrestling with words, really. I was just drawing a blank.”

Artists and athletes have always mingled, and the 1970s and ’80s were particularly wild times in New York City, where Studio 54 became the celebrity haven. Gramm and Jones became friends with several actors and pro athletes, Gramm said, but they got along best with members of the New York Rangers, including goaltender John Davidson.

There’s no way Gramm could have expected his passion for hockey, and his friendship with Davidson, to pay such dividends as he waited for inspiration to strike so he could complete his favorite track. Then, one evening at the Atlantic Recording Studios in New York City, approximately 1 1/2 miles north of Madison Square Garden, it struck in the form of vulcanized rubber.

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“I was inside my vocal booth, this little two-by-three cubby hole,” said Gramm, now 74. “They put you in a soundproof booth so that the music of the band doesn’t leak into your vocal tracks. I had a little eight-inch TV taped to the upper left-hand corner of this little booth, and I would turn it on ever-so-quietly so I could watch the Rangers between my takes.

“John Davidson came out of the net to play a puck and one of the other (opposing) guys conked him. He went down hard. There was a fight, and a couple of the (Rangers) stood around (Davidson) to protect him while he was down. I remember the trainers came out to help him to the bench so he could get checked out.”

In today’s NHL, Davidson would almost certainly have been removed from the game. Back then, it was largely the player’s decision. “I got dinged and stayed in,” Davidson said. “That’s what we did in those days.”

On the Rangers’ TV broadcast, it was announced — likely by then play-by-play voice Jim Gordon or commentator Bill Chadwick — that Davidson had complained of “double vision” on the bench before he re-entered the game.

Gramm, hearing that, immediately reached for his pen and paper.

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“I’ve told John this a number of times,” Gramm said. “When he got hit, as frightening as it was, as terrible as it was, it triggered something in my imagination that set off the chorus.

“I knew we had something with that song already. I just knew it, but this was the final piece. I’m in the vocal booth, where I’m supposed to be singing, but instead I’m writing these lyrics as fast as I can. The words started flowing like water. It came out of me quick, faster than I could write, which is how it’d go sometimes.

“I finished, stepped out of the booth, and said, ‘Guys, guys, guys. I’ve got this. I’ve got the chorus.’ And when we finally put it all together, it was unbelievable.”

Fill my eyes with that double vision,

No disguise for that double vision,

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Ooh, when it gets through to me,

It’s always new to me,

My double vision gets the best of me

The album was released in June 1978, peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard charts, and sold over 7 million copies, making it the band’s best-selling record. The song “Double Vision” was released three months later, in September, and peaked at No. 2 on the charts, then the highest-charting single for Foreigner.

Pretty wild, considering it almost didn’t get finished in time to make the album.

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“It’s a great combination of words,” Jones, now 80, wrote in an email exchange with The Athletic. “It came together pretty quickly. It was such a great song and such a great title that it spurred us on to record the song and name the album after it.

“There are times where the lyrics come first, then the music. Sometimes it’s the music, then the words.”

But this time was different. Call it divine intervention by the hockey gods.


J.D. … a storied career

Davidson has had an almost unrivaled 50-year career in pro hockey as a player (St. Louis Blues and Rangers), a Hall of Fame broadcaster both with the Rangers, “Hockey Night In Canada” and other national outlets, and as an executive who has served as club president for three franchises: the Blues, Rangers and Columbus Blue Jackets.

Last summer, when the Blue Jackets hired president and GM Don Waddell, Davidson stepped down to become senior advisor, and he’s filled in this season when Blue Jackets TV analyst Jody Shelley is on the road broadcasting games for Amazon Prime Video. Davidson’s next game is Monday, when the Jackets play the Islanders in New York.

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It’s no surprise, given his broadcasting chops, that Davidson is a master storyteller. It helps, of course, when you have some incredible stories to tell.

Davidson and the Rangers were still weeks away from training camp when “Double Vision” was released. The song was impossible to miss in the U.S., but also in Canada, where it reached No. 3 on the charts. Davidson, a Canadian, remembered hearing and liking the song when he heard it almost hourly on the radio.

But he had no idea he had a role in it until he arrived back in New York before the season.

“All I knew is that it was a great rock and roll song,” Davidson said. “I had somebody with the Rangers come up to me and say, ‘You have to see this.’ It was a review of the song or the record — somebody had written about it — and it mentioned the whole deal about me getting hit and hurt and how Lou took that and used it.

“Pretty incredible. After that, Lou and I talked about it quite a bit. He was around a lot, and we became pretty friendly. He’d play in some charity games, sing the national anthem before Rangers games. We goofed around a little bit. Really good guy.”

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The season after “Double Vision” came out, Davidson helped carry the Rangers to the Stanley Cup Final, where they lost to the Montreal Canadiens in five games. They became the toast of the town that spring, and Davidson could be called the toastmaster. He loved music, and musicians loved him.

To his knowledge, Davidson joked, “Double Vision” is the only song that he inspired. But the stories are staggering.

“We went out after games all the time to see musicians playing,” Davidson said. “I went with Diana (his wife) to a place called the Lone Star Cafe to see a group called The Byrds. They were great, and the venue was so small it was like they were playing in your living room.

“After they played a bunch of songs, they called out for somebody to join them, and the guy sitting next to us gets up and goes down to join the band. It was Jerry Garcia.”

Davidson became especially close with Glenn Frey of the Eagles, with whom he shared an agent (Irving Azoff). They’d frequently end up back at Azoff’s house, but one night something special happened.

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“Irving has a cassette in his hands — that’s how long ago this was, right, a cassette! — and he wants to play us this song he’d recorded earlier in the day that he thinks is going to be huge,” Davidson said. “He puts it in, presses play, and it was Jimmy Buffett’s ‘Cheeseburger in Paradise.’ Nobody had heard it yet. How wild is that?”

Davidson once got a 6 a.m. wake-up call during a Rangers road trip in Vancouver. It was from Frey, who was partying with Buffett and others in Aspen, Colo., and lost track of time.

Davidson was so close with Frey that in the summer of 1978, when the Eagles were touring to promote “Hotel California,” they allowed Davidson and his crew to sit on the stage one summer night in Calgary, just out of view of the crowd in old McMahon Stadium, which sat roughly 30,000.

“We were 20 feet from the band,” Davidson said. “I’d played in front of crowds before, but that many people so into that band … the wave of energy that comes up to the stage feels like a wind.”

And there was another memorable night that was quite a bit calmer.

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“I got a call from (New York author) Larry ‘Ratso’ Sloman. It was around Christmas,” Davidson said. “He said ‘Come into the city with Diana, we’re going to go over to Joni Mitchell’s condo and we’re going to have dinner at her place.’ So we did.

“She, truly, was one of the nicest ladies we’d ever met. Just wonderful. Just like you’d expect, right? We spent half the night making homemade decorations for her Christmas tree.”

Davidson’s fame extended way beyond the rink. He did Miller Lite ads in Canada just after his career ended. He was the voice of EA Sports’ NHL ’97. He was the announcer in the 1999 movie “Mystery, Alaska,” and even appeared a few years earlier in an episode of the sitcom, “The Nanny.”

Where does “Double Vision” rank? Hard to say, Davidson said. But the song, nearly 50 years after it was released, is still played on classic rock radio stations. It’s been streamed nearly 40 million times on Spotify, which says Foreigner averages 17.9 million monthly listeners. The “Double Vision” video has been watched more than 5 million times on YouTube.

“My relatives — the cousins, nieces and nephews especially — they think it’s pretty cool,” Davidson said. “They probably don’t believe me at first. I tell them I’m famous because I got hit in the head with the puck.”

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Faded memories

It’s been almost 50 years since “Double Vision” was written and recorded. Davidson was part of the story, sure, but he wasn’t present when Gramm got his burst of creativity and finished the song. Gramm remembers the moment he heard the words “double vision,” but the rest of the details are foggy.

Gramm has said repeatedly that the Rangers were playing the Philadelphia Flyers, which makes sense, because that was the heyday of the Broad Street Bullies. Those Flyers, who loved to fight and intimidate, would run an opposing goalie just out of sheer boredom. He’s also been certain that Davidson left the game for the second-string goalie.

But Davidson played only three of the Rangers’ six games against the Flyers during the 1977-78 season: a 3-3 tie on Dec. 7 and a 2-2 tie on March 15, both in the Garden, and a 3-0 loss at The Spectrum on April 6. But Davidson started and finished all three of those games for the Rangers, meaning he couldn’t have left the game with an injury.

The April 6 game in Philadelphia is the type of game that would make sense. At 15:38 of the second period, all hell broke loose between the Flyers and Rangers, resulting in 88 penalty minutes. Davidson and his Flyers counterpart, Bernie Parent, were each penalized for “goalie leaving the crease” and Davidson got an extra two minutes for roughing.

But Davidson never left that game, either. Plus, “Double Vision” — the album and the song — had already been recorded at a studio in Los Angeles, ready for release just two months later.

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Jones has heard Gramm’s account, but he remembers it differently. “I recall that Lou and I were at a Rangers playoff game,” he said. That would jibe with the New York Rangers’ account.

The Rangers played the Buffalo Sabres in a qualifying series, but Davidson played only in Game 2 of that series — the Sabres won in three games — and he never left the ice.

Others have suggested it occurred in a game vs. Montreal. Davidson tells the story that he was struck in the mask by a puck (which matches the Rangers’ account) but Gramm insists it was an elbow or a collision when Davidson came out to play the puck.

The NHL, at the request of The Athletic, found 22 games in which Davidson started a game but didn’t finish. In only one of those, according to Stuart McComish, the league’s senior manager of statistics and research, did Davidson return to finish the game. That occurred on April 3, 1976 — two years earlier — against the New York Islanders.

At this point, the mystery only adds to the story.

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“There were two or three games in my career where I got clunked in the head, when you get rattled a bit,” Davidson said. “It was probably one of those, right?

“To be honest, though, I’m not sure it really matters. It’s a hell of a song and a hell of a story.”

Foreigner, which sold 80 million records worldwide, was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Cleveland last October. Gramm and Kelly Clarkson made a duet out of the band’s biggest hit, “I Want to Know What Love Is,” but Jones was not able to attend because of declining health.

Davidson said he watched the induction ceremony. When a medley of Foreigner’s hits were played, he smiled at one song in particular. That’s how it goes every time he hears “Double Vision” on the radio, in a hockey rink, a shopping mall, etc.

Gramm and Davidson spend their winters in Florida. Gramm is in Sarasota, Davidson is in Naples, approximately 115 miles apart. They’re hoping to meet up for lunch someday.

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“It’d be awesome to see my old friend again, wouldn’t it? Tell him I’ll buy lunch,” Gramm said with a chuckle. “That’s the least I can do.”

(Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; Photos: Manny Millan / Sports Illustrated via Getty Images, Rick Diamond / Getty Images)

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Sky vs Mercury betting preview: Why the over 166.5 looks like the play in this WNBA matchup

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Sky vs Mercury betting preview: Why the over 166.5 looks like the play in this WNBA matchup

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The WNBA season has been in session for about a week, so it is far too early to make assumptions about teams. That doesn’t mean we won’t make them; it’s just too early to really believe it. I lost my first WNBA bet this season, so I’m hoping to avenge that loss here as the Sky take on the Mercury.

The Chicago Sky are one of the most poorly run franchises in basketball. They have had some great names on their team and only one championship to show for it.

Phoenix Mercury forward DeWanna Bonner shoots over Indiana Fever guard Aerial Powers in the first half at PHX Arena. (Rick Scuteri/Imagn Images)

There really isn’t a clear indication of what is wrong with the franchise, but they’ve never been able to retain their talent. Aside from Kamilla Cardoso, I can’t name a player on this team that they’ve actually drafted. They just seem to get good players and then show them the door.

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Even though they’ve had questionable front office decisions, they seem to have put together a solid team for this season – something I didn’t expect before the season started.

They are 2-0, which is too early to really say they are a good team. I also want to reserve judgment until they face a team with a longer history than last year. The Portland Tempo played their first-ever game against the Sky, and Golden State was good last year, but still is in just their second season of existence.

The Phoenix Mercury are actually considered one of the best franchises in the league. I’m sure there are issues that people have reported, but for the most part, they have good facilities, and people want to play for their team. They made it all the way to the WNBA Finals last season before falling to the Las Vegas Aces. This year, they are looking to restart that journey and see if they can win the last game of the year.

Phoenix Mercury guard Kahleah Copper dribbles the ball in the second half at CareFirst Arena in Washington, D.C., on July 27, 2025. (Emily Faith Morgan-Imagn Images)

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It will need to come with some better play than they’ve shown through three games this year. They are just 1-2 for the year with a 0-1 home record. The lone win was a blowout victory over the Aces (a clear revenge game if we’ve ever seen one). Then they lost the next two games against Golden State and Minnesota. Losing to the Lynx wouldn’t be a problem, but they didn’t have Napheesa Collier, who still has an ankle injury.

I expect the Mercury to make some adjustments for this game. They haven’t looked very crisp to begin the year, but they’ve been strong on offense, averaging 87 points per game.

The Sky are going to keep relying on their offense to do just enough and their defense to lock in. The Sky do have an edge on the interior, so they can get buckets fairly easily down low. I like the over 166.5 in this game.

Chicago Sky guard Skylar Diggins chases the ball during the fourth quarter against the Golden State Valkyries at Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on May 13, 2026. (Bob Kupbens/Imagn Images)

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I also think it is worth betting on Kahleah Copper to go over her point total. Copper had two rough games before she broke out in the last game. Now she has the same sight lines and can attack the bigs from the Sky with her athleticism. Since going to Phoenix, she has scored 29, 7, 16, 25 and 28 points in five games against them.

For more sports betting information and plays, follow David on X/Twitter: @futureprez2024 

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Prep talk: Granada Hills coach Tom Harp goes for another boys’ volleyball title

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Prep talk: Granada Hills coach Tom Harp goes for another boys’ volleyball title

Tom Harp has been coaching volleyball at Granada Hills High for so long that few remember he won a City Section championship as a co-head football coach with Darryl Stroh in 1987.

In the 1990s, he turned exclusively to coaching boys’ and girls’ volleyball, winning a combined 15 City titles and making 28 finals appearances. The top-seeded Highlanders will try to deliver a seventh Open Division championship on Saturday when they face West Valley League rival Chatsworth in a 4 p.m. final at Birmingham.

The league rivals split their two West Valley matches, with each going five games. Chatsworth knocked off 17-time champion Palisades in the semifinals. MIT-bound Grant Chang is Chatsworth’s 6-foot-6 powerful outside hitter.

All-City volleyball player RJ Francisco of Granada Hills shows off his hitting skills against Chatsworth.

(Craig Weston)

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Granada Hills has RJ Francisco, who had 19 kills in a win over Chatsworth.

The Southern Section Division 1 final is Friday night, with Mira Costa taking on Loyola in a 7:30 p.m. match at Cerritos College.

Regional and state playoffs begin next week.

This is a daily look at the positive happenings in high school sports. To submit any news, please email eric.sondheimer@latimes.com.

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Cedric Alexander becomes new TNA X Division champion, crushing Leon Slater’s history-making attempt

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Cedric Alexander becomes new TNA X Division champion, crushing Leon Slater’s history-making attempt

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All eyes were on the Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) X Division Championship on Thursday night as Leon Slater looked to retain the title over Cedric Alexander and solidify himself as the longest-reigning X Division champion in the company’s history.

Slater knew a legacy was on the line as he looked to break a record set by Austin Aries. But he needed to pin Alexander twice in one match to retain the title. It was a steep mountain to climb as Alexander had been just as dangerous since he entered the company.

The match started off hot with Slater and Alexander trading blows to begin the match. But a quick-thinking Slater rolled up Alexander quickly for the first fall.

Cedric Alexander in the ring during NXT at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Fla., on Sept. 23, 2025. (Bradlee Rutledge/WWE)

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Alexander was able to go on offense from there. He hit a nasty German suplex on the outside of the ring. He continued to work on Slater’s tweaked neck. He later hit a Lumbar Check to tie the match at 1-1.

Slater went deep into his bag. He hit an avalanche Styles Clash, which could have kept anyone else down. However, Alexander kicked out. Alexander was able to counter Slater’s high-flying abilities just for a moment and knocked him back out of the ring.

Alexander sent Slater into the steel steps, leaving him busted open. Alexander declared that he would be the “greatest” X Division champion. One brainbuster later, Alexander tried to pin Slater, but couldn’t get him down.

Alexander hit a Lumbar Check again, but Slater kicked out. Slater mustered up the last ounce of energy. A tilt-a-whirl slam set Alexander up for a swanton 450. Slater missed and Alexander hit another Lumbar Check, and then again.

Leon Slater enters the arena during NXT at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Fla., on Jan. 6, 2026. (Craig Melvin/WWE)

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Alexander pinned Slater for the win, completely shocking the fans in Sacramento, California. It will be the first reign for Alexander and his first title of any kind in TNA.

Alexander is a reminder, at least for TNA, that “The System always wins.”

ZERO BS. JUST DAKICH. TAKE THE DON’T @ ME PODCAST ON THE ROAD. DOWNLOAD NOW!

Fabian Aichner appears

Fabian Aichner, formerly known as Giovanni Vinci, makes his way to the ring during WWE SmackDown at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, Calif., on Sept. 20, 2024. (WWE/Getty Images)

Moments before TNA went off the air, the lights went out in the Sacramento Memorial Auditorium. Emerging from the darkness was Fabian Aichner.

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Aichner stared down Alexander and appeared to name himself the next challenger for the X Division Championship. Aichner, known as Giovanni Vinci for much of his run in WWE, hadn’t really been seen or heard from in months since his departure from WWE.

Aichner wrestled under his real name for a stint in WWE before he came back as Vinci in June 22. He was with WWE until 2025. He was a two-time NXT tag team champion and an Evolve champion before it became a WWE brand.

Eric Young earns future shot at TNA World Championship

Eric Young outlasted nine other men in an over-the-top battle royal and earned a shot at Mike Santana’s TNA World Championship to start the show.

The match came down to him and Elijah after the latter was able to toss members of The System out of the ring while also avoiding Frankie Kazarian trying to get back into the match following his own elimination.

Young and Elijah came to blows on the apron, knowing that as soon as their feet touch the ground, they would be eliminated. Young grabbed onto Elijah’s hair to try to hang onto the moment. Elijah broke away with Young’s back turned to him. Elijah, however, didn’t account for his wide stance.

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The TNA original kicked Elijah in the groin and pushed him down to the ground. Young won the match and received a shot to win the TNA World Championship in the future.

He also made clear that Santana was next on his list of people to wipe out as he did to Joe Hendry, EC3 and Ricky Sosa in weeks past.

“Mike Santana, you’re gone next,” he declared.

Mike Santana learns his next opponent

Mike Santana stands in the ring during NXT at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Fla., on Sept. 30, 2025. (Kevin Sabitus/WWE)

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Mike Santana came out to address the crowd and praised Young for his efforts to help build TNA from the ground up.

“You better be coming with something different because while you may be someone who helped build this place, when it comes to the new era of TNA on AMC, I’m the guy. I’m the man. I’m the one who holds down the fort week after week as your TNA world champion.”

While Young might have earned a title shot, Daria Rae came out and revealed to the crowd that Steve Maclin was cleared to return to action following an injury at the hands of Santana.

Maclin will get a shot at Santana’s TNA World Championship next week on “Impact.”

Santino Marella also came out during the segment after he was “suspended.” He revealed that Indi Harwell re-signed with TNA.

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Lei Ying Lee, Xia Brookside rivalry heats up

Xia Brookside attends the “Freelance” screening at Regal Waterford Lakes in Orlando, Fla., on Oct. 24, 2023. (Jose Devillegas/Getty Images)

Lei Ying Lee brought the TNA Knockouts Championship back home last week with a win over Arianna Grace. She addressed the crowd before being interrupted by her former best friend, Xia Brookside.

In all black, Brookside claimed she was already in Lei’s head.

“You’re such a fraud. I’ve destroyed you mentally, I’ve destroyed you emotionally, I’ve destroyed you physically, and that title will be around my waist.”

Both competitors tossed expletives at each other before the segment was over. But Brookside made clear that she had her eyes on the title.

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AJ Francis prevails over KC Navarro

A.J. Francis told Fox News Digital before the SacTown Street Fight on “Impact” that he was going to bring the pain to Navarro.

While wearing “Show Stealer” across his back, Francis did just that. Francis took some punishment from Navarro – a few shots from a baseball bat and a drop kick with a trash can.

Francis was able to turn the tide for a few moments, using the baseball bat to his advantage. But Navarro dug deep. He aligned six chairs in the ring, hoping to splash Francis through it. Instead, Francis countered and attempted an avalanche Down Payment. Somehow, Navarro countered with a cutter as both men crashed through the sea of chairs.

It looked like it could’ve been it. Navarro went for the pin, but only got a two count.

Francis turned on the heat from there. He got ahold of Navarro and hit a Down Payment through tables lined up on the outside of the ring.

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He rolled Navarro back into the ring and picked up the pinfall victory.

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“Impact” match results

  • Eric Young wins the 10-man battle royal to earn a shot at the TNA World Championship.
  • A.J. Francis def. KC Navarro in a SacTown Street Fight.
  • Rosemary and Allie def. Veronica Crawford and Mila Moore
  • Cedric Alexander def. Leon Slater to win the X Division Championship.

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