Ranking Every TNA Wrestler's Success In WWE
11. Gail Kim
One of the leading lights of TNA's "Knockout" division for several years, Gail Kim returned for her second stint in WWE in 2008, a move that was hailed by many as a sign the latter was at last looking to cultivate a women's division of genuine worth.
These celebrations, however, were perhaps premature. Despite her growing reputation in the industry, Kim found opportunities hard to come by after rejoining a company that had remained largely unchanged from her first stint in the early 2000s.
Three years later she exited WWE by deliberately eliminating herself from a Monday Night Raw battle royal, in the process irreparably burning her bridges with the backstage higher-ups (or so you would presume).
Nothing about this spell screams success, but that is more to do with timing than it is any fault on the part of the wrestler herself. If she had joined WWE in, say, 2013 or 2014, she might have played a key role in Stephanie McMahon's "Women's Revolution" instead.