The wandering champion eyes a new home
Nic Nemeth is currently entrenched in TNA, but his recent public commentary on AEW dynamics suggests he is far from satisfied with his current role. According to recent reports, Nemeth is tracking AEW’s booking decisions with professional jealousy. This is not just casual viewing; it is a tactical assessment of where he could fit in a roster currently dominated by the likes of MJF and Swerve Strickland.
Nemeth has been vocal about his dissatisfaction with specific match outcomes in Jacksonville. Publicly critiquing booking is the classic veteran move to signal availability to a different promoter. His career trajectory post-WWE has been defined by a desire to prove he can anchor a brand as a top-tier worker, yet his current positioning in TNA lacks the national heat he craves.
Why this fit makes sense
AEW is in the middle of a massive push heading toward their crossover event, as Forbidden Door looms over the calendar. With the roster currently split between pure technical wrestlers and high-flying specialists, the product lacks a polished, mic-first veteran who can work a traditional main event style. Nemeth fills that gap perfectly.
Adding Nemeth to the AEW roster would diversify their mid-to-upper card. He brings a level of polish that current stars like MJF could bounce off, creating immediate television tension. However, there is a risk: his presence might exacerbate an already bloated roster. AEW currently struggles to give proper time to everyone, as noted in recent PWTorch analyses of the crowded title picture.
Room for skepticism
The transition is not without friction. Nemeth is an expensive talent who demands a significant spot on the bill. If he arrives expecting a world title trajectory, he will run directly into the wall of the current main event scene. The company is already juggling the logistics of complex team-based storylines, and adding another ego to the dressing room could prove detrimental to team harmony.
Furthermore, Nemeth has historically struggled to sustain momentum in high-pressure creative environments outside of his comfort zones. While his in-ring work remains crisp, his ability to pivot into a supporting role for a younger talent while maintaining his own mystique remains unproven. He needs the right program, not just a paycheck.
The probability of a jump
Considering his current contract status and his active solicitation of AEW’s attention, the likelihood of a move is moderate. He is not currently a free agent, but promoters in this industry have a long history of ignoring expiry dates when a trade makes sense for television content. Watch for him to increase his public critiques over the next 30 days.
Expect a potential target window following the summer pay-per-view cycle. If his current program in TNA loses steam, the jump becomes an inevitability. The industry loves a veteran who can cut a promo that actually draws eyes to the screen; Nemeth remains one of the few who can still do exactly that.
Expected Impact
If Nemeth joins the fold, expect an immediate program with a mid-card champion to establish his dominance. A feud with a high-intensity worker like Darby Allin—who recently returned—would be the logical starting point. The -150 odds on him securing a featured spot on the Dynamite premiere after an imaginary signing are conservative, but they reflect the reality that AEW needs reliable hands to anchor the three-hour block.
A successful debut would likely result in an immediate bump in engagement metrics. Should he fail to connect, it will be viewed as yet another expensive acquisition that prioritized star power over logical card balancing. The ball is in his court, and given the current state of industry gossip, he sounds ready to make his move.