Yeaaaaaaaaaah, no.
First, raping the TARDIS was his "prize" for beating the Toymaker. That was made abundantly clear in the episode
as he was doing it. Which, now that I think about it, makes it even
more horrific.
Second, the bigeneration was new. The Doctor himself said it was new. That it was merely a myth and had never happened before. We've SEEN his previous regenerations and know it to be true. And Ten wouldn't have been sobbing like a little bitch when his time was running out if even
he knew it was true, which he would if he had done it nine times prior. Nevermind that way more than
thirteen Doctors would have shown up to save Gallifrey if it were true, doubly so if they all had a TARDIS of their own.
The closest we've ever seen was the metacrisis malarkey, and even then he went and threw his clone into another dimension. (Without a TARDIS of his own, you may have noticed.)
The level of not-paying-attention to stories on this forum is astounding.
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This is very accurate.
Also it really doesn't matter where you start. Sure, there's build up and you may not understand the full implication of what's going on in each episode, but that's going to be true no matter where you start unless you go all the way back to the very first episode in the 60s. The show generally does a decent job of catching you up (usually because the Doctor has to explain what's going on to his Companion(s)), and more complex stories are generally self-contained in the series/season in which they take place.
The only reason I'd really recommend starting with Tennant's run is because of River Song. Her story, start to finish, is an absolute
delight. But aside from introducing her character, her story doesn't really get going until 11 (Matt Smith) shows up. Then it's just a roller coaster of fun all the way through 12 (Capaldi's) run.