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Pages in category "Professional wrestling shows in Louisiana" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... NWA Hard Times 3; S. Slamboree (1996)
Professional wrestlers from the U.S. state of Louisiana. Pages in category "Professional wrestlers from Louisiana" The following 21 pages are in this category, out of 21 total.
Professional wrestling shows in Louisiana (1 C, 6 P) W. ... Pages in category "Professional wrestling in Louisiana" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of ...
Professional wrestlers in the United States by their state of birth and/or residence. See also the categories American Samoan professional wrestlers , Professional wrestlers from Washington, D.C. , and Puerto Rican professional wrestlers
Location Reign Days 1 Frankie Kovacs and Gino Angelo: April 14, 1959: Tri-State show Baton Rouge, LA 1 21 Defeated Prince Nero and Firpo Zybysko in a tournament final. — Vacated: May 5, 1959: Tri-State show — — — The championship is vacated when Gino Angelo is injured. 2 Pretty Boy Collins and Duke Scarbough: May 6, 1959: Tri-State show ...
All Pro Wrestling: Hayward: Roland Alexander 1991–present [71] Featured in the 1999 documentary Beyond the Mat [3] [72] [73] Empire Wrestling Federation: San Bernardino: Jesse Hernandez Bill Anderson 1996–present [3] [72] [74] Incredibly Strange Wrestling: San Francisco: Johnny Legend August Ragone 1995–2003 Pro Wrestling Guerrilla: Los ...
A professional wrestling fan convention typically features a professional wrestling promotion's talent and alumni autograph signings, interviews, fan activities, memorabilia displays, meet-and-greets, and matches. One of the oldest professional wrestling fan convention is Cauliflower Alley Club established in 1965.
The Trio's lasting legacy, and perhaps their greatest innovation within professional wrestling, was the use of a regular group of wrestlers for a packaged show. [7] Rather than paying traveling wrestlers to perform on certain dates and combining wrestlers in match-ups when they were available, they decided to keep wrestlers for months and years ...