Wrestling’s a cruel little business. It chews up your knees, your dreams, and your social life. It takes people with hearts full of Disney and feeds them to crowds screaming for blood. But sometimes—just sometimes—it taps someone on the shoulder who’s crazy enough to smile back.
Enter Myla Grace, Belfast’s bright-eyed bruiser with a background in ballet and an obsession with the Hardy Boyz. A woman fluent in gaeilge and bump-taking, equal parts joy and spite, fresh off the indie highway and now pulling into the wild parking lot that is TNA Wrestling.
She’s not just another signing. She’s the first wrestler from Ireland to ink a deal with TNA. And like a pint of Guinness at a dive bar in Tokyo, she stands out before she even opens her mouth.
From the Dance Floor to the Dropkick
Grace didn’t come from a football family or grow up backyard-wrestling on mattresses soaked in rain. She came from dance, the stage, arenas filled with pirouettes and applause, where her routines once opened for Justin Bieber. You heard that right—Bieber.
But the real stage was always squared. And somewhere between world titles in dance and teaching kids how to twirl, Myla traded ballet slippers for boots. Probably the only woman in the business whose cardio is powered by pop choreography and protein bars.
She didn’t just stumble into wrestling—she leapt. Lived in Japan for eight months, scratched and clawed her way across 17 countries, bumping in smoky halls, under flickering lights, in front of fans who couldn’t pronounce her name but cheered anyway.
Now she lands in TNA, a company built on reinvention. The home of misfits, miracles, and people with something to prove.
First Stop: Brampton
May 23. Xplosion. Her first televised match is against Harley Hudson, another globetrotting grit-huffer in boots. The undercard might say “debut,” but for Myla, this has been coming since she was a kid in Belfast wearing a 2Xtreme Hardy Boyz cap while sitting on Santa’s lap.
And it doesn’t end there. That weekend in Brampton, Ontario, she’ll share a locker room with names like Joe Hendry, Masha Slamovich, Matt Hardy, Moose, Mustafa Ali, and Tessa Blanchard. Big names. Sharp elbows. Hungry eyes.
There’s no easing in. TNA doesn’t do handshakes and easing in. It does gut checks and curtain pulls. And Myla? She says this is a dream come true. A place with legacy, with bite, with a ceiling she wants to smash through in rollercoaster fashion—preferably wearing glitter.
Disney Dreams and Blistered Knees
There’s something absurdly charming about her. She’s a huge Disney fan, adores theme parks, and her favorite food is birthday cake. Not steak. Not kale smoothies. Birthday cake. If that doesn’t make you want to cheer for her, you’ve been watching too much old ECW.
She’s got a dog named Dave, her “favorite thing in the world,” and wants to represent Europe in TNA the way Finn Bálor flew the Irish flag in WWE.
But don’t let the Disney talk fool you. She’s got fire in her ribs. She wants to be the first Irish champion in TNA, full stop. And she dreams of stepping into an Ultimate X match, the most punishing jungle gym in all of wrestling. That’s not a wish. That’s intent. That’s grit in glitter form.
A Past Paved in Potholes
Wrestling doesn’t favor the nice ones. It doesn’t care how many languages you speak or how good you are with kids. It respects pain, hustle, and how well you bleed. Myla Grace has already earned her scars in bingo halls and foreign rings, working matches in countries where the mat felt like wood glued to cement.
She’s danced in front of thousands and wrestled in front of fifty. Slept on couches. Flown on red-eyes. Watched idols from afar while chasing something that felt impossible until it wasn’t.
And now she’s signed. Contract inked. Dreams with deadlines.
Final Word: Fairy Tales in Fingerless Gloves
TNA Wrestling didn’t sign just another hopeful. They signed a fighter wrapped in feathers. A dreamer with bruises on her shins. A girl who still believes in theme parks but walks into locker rooms like she’s seen some sh*t.
Myla Grace is the kind of wrestler who gets underestimated until she plants you face-first in the mat with a suplex you didn’t see coming.
She’s not just here to dance. She’s here to make noise, make history, and maybe even make birthday cake a post-match tradition.
The story starts May 23.
Let the chaos begin.

