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This is a list of former employees of the professional wrestling promotion Wrestling Society X. [1] Wrestling Society X was founded in 2007. All wrestlers listed competed in the original incarnation of WSX.
Wrestling Society X (WSX) was an American professional wrestling promotion owned by Big Vision Entertainment. Wrestling Society X ( WSX ) also refers to the promotion's short-lived television series produced in 2007 by Big Vision Entertainment and MTV Series Entertainment .
This category is for the American Wrestling Society X professional wrestling promotion. Pages in category "Wrestling Society X" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
He also wrestled for the short-lived Wrestling Society X. Beginning in 2005, he wrestled for Dragon Gate in Japan, and won the Open the Brave Gate Championship in early 2007. Korklan is known for his dynamic technical cruiserweight hybrid style of lucha libre and puroresu styles of wrestling and was named the Wrestling Observer Newsletter ' s ...
“In 2006, I was on Kevin Klinerock’s Wrestling Society X,” Hawx said of the professional wrestling show that was on MTV. “I got approached to do a movie in Mexico.
Wrestling Society X, a short-lived professional wrestling television series that was broadcast on MTV in 2007; Westsound/WSX Seaplane Base, a seaplane base with IATA code WSX; FS-A1WSX, a home computer; Interleukin-27 receptor, a cell receptor
Mark Sallot previously served as head coach of the Harbor Creek wrestling team from 2002-08. He’s back for 2023-24, and will lead a large yet inexperienced Huskies roster.
Lacey was part of the short-lived MTV series Wrestling Society X. She was both a backstage correspondent and co-hosted WSX's Internet show called WSXtra alongside Fabian Kaelen. Lacey made appearances in Women's Extreme Wrestling. On April 6, 2006, Lacey lost to Jazz.