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Location Owner(s) Years active Notes Ohio Valley Wrestling: Louisville: Al Snow: 1998–present Affiliated with the National Wrestling Alliance from 1998 to 2000 and a WWE developmental territory from 2000 to 2008; also has an affiliate promotion, Derby City Wrestling, which it used to train students as its wrestling facility [3] [55] [56]
NWF Kids Pro Wrestling: The Untold Story is a professional wrestling documentary that tells the story of a youth based professional wrestling league that existed in the mid-1980s. [1] It was released in the United States by NWF Films.
HAWLEY — All three local boys teams fared well at the 2023-24 Lackawanna League wrestling tournament. The event was hosted by Wallenpaupack Area on Saturday, attracting AA and AAA squads from ...
Originally published as simply Wrestling All Stars from 1983 to 1985. [1] [5] Wrestling As You Like It: 1946 - 1955: Monthly: Chicago, IL: Dick Axman: N/A: No: Earliest wrestling publication ever published and the only one active during the post-WWII years. Replaced by Wrestling Life in 1955. [4] [12] Wrestling Bad Guys: 1990s: Monthly United ...
Wrestling Observer Newsletter (WON), often considered the first "dirt sheet", created and run by Dave Meltzer [21] [22] Pro Wrestling Torch (PWTorch), created and run by Wade Keller [23] Pro Wrestling Insider (PWInsider), created and run by Dave Scherer [24] [25] Pro Wrestling Sheet, created and run by Ryan Satin. [26] [27] Wrestling News World ...
Fujinami moved to New Japan Pro-Wrestling with the championship. 11 Ryuma Go: October 2, 1979: Bloody Fight Series Osaka, Japan: 1 2 12 Tatsumi Fujinami: October 4, 1979: Bloody Fight Series Tokyo, Japan: 2 789 — Vacated: December 1, 1981 — — — — Tatsumi Fujinami entered the heavyweight division, thus the championship was vacated. 13
The NWL Ladies Championship is the top women's professional wrestling title in the National Wrestling League promotion. It was created when Bambi defeated Heidi Lee Morgan to become first champion in 1990. The title was defended primarily in the Mid-Atlantic and East Coast, most often in Hagerstown, Maryland, but also in Pennsylvania and West ...
A combination of a poor line up, sub-standard venue, lack of talent and holding the show on a Thursday night led to a show on October 3, 1996, drawing the smallest crowd in the history of Memphis wrestling: just 372 fans, paying $1,800, to the Big One Flea Market. The future of the promotion was being questioned, following the previous week's ...