Category: Other Wrestling

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  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 16): Dusty Rhodes vs. Ernie Ladd, Reed vs. JYD, Bash in Huntington Beach

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1933 – In Waterloo, Iowa; Homer (Bearcat) Wright beat Sid Nabors

    1937 – In Kansas City; Lou Thesz drew George Zaharias and Jim Henry beat Gene Bowman.

    1964 – In Kansas City, Kansas; The Lawman defeated Bulldog Plechas, Bob Geigel defeated Rocky Hamilton and Pat O’Connor defeated Otto Von Krupp in three falls

    1966 – In Milwaukee, Wisconsin; AWA Champion Mad Dog Vachon beat Dick The Bruiser dq, The Crusher beat The Alaskan, Wilbur Snyder & Doug Gilbert beat Moose Cholak & Chris Markoff and Ernie Ladd beat Johnny Kace

    1975 – In Davenport, Iowa at John O’Donnell Stadium; AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Nick Bockwinkel, Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell & Billy Robinson beat Mitsu Arakawa & Kim Duk & Buddy Wolff, Baron Von Raschke beat Larry Hennig dq and Bull Bullinski beat Paul Perschmann

    1976 – In Denver, Colorado; In a Lumberjack match, Mad Dog Vachon & Baron Von Raschke beat Larry Hennig & Jos Leduc, Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell beat Blackjack Lanza & Bobby Duncum, Peter Maivia beat Frank Hill and in a Judo Jacket Match, Peter Maivia beat Kim Duk.

    1977 – Ernie Ladd beat Dusty Rhodes to win the Florida heavyweight title in Tallahassee, Florida. 

    1978 – In Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Superstar Billy Graham beat WWWF Champion Bob Backlund by countout, AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Angelo Mosca, AWA Tag Team Champions Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell beat Pat Patterson & Ray Stevens by countout and Super Destroyer & Lord Alfred Hayes drew Billy Red Lyons & Dewey Robertson. 

    1981 – In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel went to a 60 minute draw with Jim Brunzell, Jerry Blackwell & Adrian Adonis & Jesse Ventura beat the Crusher & Mad Dog Vachon & Baron Von Raschke, Sheik Adnan beat Tito Santana by countout, Greg Gagne beat Puppy Dog Peloquin and Brad Rheingans beat Laurent Soucie. Attendance was 5,292

    1982 – In Calgary, Alberta, Canada; In a Non-title match, David Shults beat AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel, In a Non-Title match, Great Gama beat Mid Heavyweight Champion Davey Boy Smith, Danny Davis & Ken Wayne beat Bruce Hart & Keith Hart by dq and Bad News Allen beat Duke Kono

    1983 – Butch Reed defeated Junkyard Dog for the Mid South North American Heavyweight Title in New Orleans, Louisiana; in San Francisco, CA; AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Wahoo McDaniel by dq, Mad Dog Vachon beat Jerry Blackwell by dq and Jim Brunzell & Greg Gagne & Rick Martel beat Ken Patera & Bobby Heenan & Jerry Blackwell

    1994 – Sid Vicious defeated Jerry Lawler by forfeit for the USWA Unified Heavyweight Title in Memphis, Tennessee

    1995 – At the Bash at the Beach PPV in Huntington Beach, California; WCW World Heavyweight Champion Hulk Hogan defeated Big Van Vader in a steel cage match, WCW World Tag Team Champions Harlem Heat defeated The Nasty Boys and Bobby Eaton & Steven Regal in a Triangle match, Randy Savage defeated Ric Flair in a Lifeguard Lumberjack match and United States Champion Sting defeated Meng.

  • Ask The Observer: Weekly Pro Wrestling show at Tokyo Dome, World Wrestling Peace Festival

    By David Parker, Wrestling Observer

    Here is the latest edition of the Wrestling Observer Radio mailbag where we post some of the questions asked during weekly Observer audio shows. Want to know if something’s been asked? These will be a good place to start. If you want to hear more questions and insight from Observer audio several times a week, subscribe now!

    Questions are asked by Bryan Alvarez or Mike Sempervive and are in bold, and primarily answered by Dave Meltzer unless otherwise noted.

    (Do you know) who owns the tape to the Crockett-Heyman WWN taping in New York?

    DM: Probably Crockett.

    MS: Has that ever seen the..

    DM: I never saw it. It would be either Crockett or a guy named Jim Hudson from Austin, Texas who was..it was Crockett and Jim Hudson who were the two guys behind it, so one or the other or both would have those tapes. Never saw it.

    Regarding the April 2, 1995 Weekly Pro Wrestling show at the Tokyo Dome, is there any reason behind New Japan sending Hashimoto vs. Chono as the main event while the other promotions sent tag matches featuring many of their best wrestlers? Any background on why this match didn’t live up to the quality of everything else on the show?

    DM: The deal on that show was that it was (a) 13 promotion show. Weekly Pro Wrestling was the premier wrestling magazine; (they) decided that they were going to book a show at the Tokyo Dome, and it was first going to be like seven or eight promotions, and then all of a sudden, every promotion wanted to get involved, except for All Japan and WAR, and WAR didn’t want nothing to do with it, and All Japan at the-not the last minute, but I think they had to pay All Japan, I don’t know if it was $150,000-but the whole thing was that everybody wanted to do it. New Japan was gonna get the main event because they were the biggest promotion, and I think that part of it was (for) some of the small promotions, it was good to be on the card because it showcased your promotion in front of a big audience, but a lot of bigger promotions, I don’t know if they wanted to, but Weekly Pro Wrestling was so powerful in the market, nobody wanted to piss them off. It was like if you turned them down, you would get bad coverage, or you might get bad coverage.

    Nobody wanted to be on their bad side, so everybody that was asked, with the exception of WAR, because WAR was very tight with Gong, which was the rival magazine. I went to this show. It was the same day as WrestleMania in 1995, which would be the Lawrence Taylor WrestleMania, so that’s the only WrestleMania I didn’t see live, I believe. Yeah, it would be the only one, because I was in Japan, and that show was a million times bigger than WrestleMania that year, so it sold out the Tokyo Dome, 50,000 people. They said 60,000 in those days, but it was really 50,000. So, this show, it’s 50,000, sold out in advance, and Gong Magazine, number two wrestling magazine, pretends it doesn’t even exist. Not even not covering it. It’s like it doesn’t exist. There (are) two or three newspapers that cover all pro wrestling, Tokyo Sports being one of them, because it was a Weekly Pro show, I remember getting Tokyo Sports.

    Think about it; they cover wrestling every day. The day of the show, not a word. The day after the show, not a word. I’m going like, “How is this possible?” It really taught me about Japanese media. They did not..it was like because Weekly Pro was doing it, all (of) the media would not pretend that the show never existed, yet it was like one of the biggest shows in the history of wrestling.

    The promotions all got to pick what they wanted. Most of the matches were tags because everybody wanted to steal the show, and All Japan and, if I recall, JWP, had a killer match, and All Japan Women had a killer match..

    MS: Oh, the JWP was the one that opened the show, which is, I mean, then again, I was always a Cutie Suzuki fan, but that was the Kansai and Candy Okutsu and that eight women tag against Masami and Ozaki and Suzuki. Yeah, that was awesome.

    DM: That whole show was really, really good. I wouldn’t say it was the best show I ever saw, but it’s right up there. But Hashimoto and Chono going last, and man, it’s just like, talk about not being able to follow, because they put All Japan, and it was a six-man tag, and I’m thinking it’s Misawa..

    MS: Kobashi and Hansen.

    DM: Is it Misawa, Kobashi, and Hansen against Kawada, Taue, and Johnny Ace?

    MS: Yep.

    DM: Okay, so they have a freaking thirty-minute draw. Oh my god. That match is like..I may have given it four and three-quarter stars, I think, I don’t think I gave it five, but what a freaking awesome match [Note: Dave is correct.], and they came out and before the match even started, you could really see that like Misawa was so..they’re chanting Misawa’s name before they’re even out there, and then when the minute Misawa’s music plays, oh my god, it was just huge, and then Hashimoto and Chono had to follow, and it just like they couldn’t follow. And it wasn’t a good match, and it was like the IWGP champion and the top contender, and (it) just didn’t work. But no, every promotion picked their match, and they wanted to pick their..they put their big two stars. I guess Mutoh would be..they were all three kinda positioned pretty equally, so Mutoh was the odd man out, but they wanted their big championship match, and they followed All Japan, and on that night, it was just like, man, did All Japan kick New Japan’s ass. And the women, that was a real big deal because those women showed up-I don’t want to say they showed up the men, but the All Japan Women and the JWP women, those matches were better than anything but..the All Japan match was the show-stealer, but I think they were number two and number three.

    MS: Aja Kong and Kyoko Inoue beat Manami Toyota and Blizzard Yuki..

    DM: Sakie Hasegawa

    MS: ..the match after that was the Go Gundan match between..

    DM: that match, the Ryuma Go match, had tremendous crowd reaction. It was terrible.

    MS: It was the Go Gundan Interplanetary Title in an Alien Death Match.

    DM: Yeah, they brought in these guys dressed up as aliens, and Ryuma Go was defending the United States against the alien invasion on this serious show with all these things, and they had all these aliens that were..and yeah, for the Interplanetary Championship, or whatever it was called, and they put it on the show, and the people loved it. The Go match got over more than the Onita match. They did an Onita explosion match I think, it was probably with Pogo.

    MS: Pogo, yes, it was.

    DM: Okay, so they set up a ring. They had the one ring, and then they set up the one ring in the corner, which was set up for all of the explosions, and Onita was drawing really big, and Onita wasn’t really that over on that show. Now Maeda fought..did Maeta fought Chris Dolman?

    MS: Chris Dolman.

    DM: Okay, so that match wasn’t that good, but Maeda was really, really over, I do remember that, and it was Chris Dolman’s retirement match, and the match itself was very anticlimactic, but the before and after match were very strong. The Takada, who was drawing huge, the UWFI match was good, but Takada wasn’t as over as I thought he would be. Suzuki did a shoot with Christopher DeWeaver. That was a real shoot match on that show.

    MS: I was gonna say, because was that and was the Shinobu Kandori..

    DM: The Shinobu Kandori match was a shoot too. Yes.

    MS: Okay, that’s what I thought, because for those who didn’t…Suzuki and DeWeaver went 1:50, and Kandori beat Harley Saito in 1:12.

    DM: Yeah. Kandori just beat the hell out of her. Kandori was a real shooter. She was I think second or third in the world in judo. The rest of the girls were workers. They trained the girls in shooting, but Kandori was at a different level. She was the toughest. I’m relatively sure of all the women wrestlers in history that they can say what they want about Mildred Burke or Mae Young that Kandori would’ve killed any of them.

    MS: Another lady by the way who became a politician in Japan based off of her popularity and success. 

    DM: That’s right, but Suzuki was really over on that show. When he came out, it was like…I remember Suzuki, great facials and all that. It’s funny now. It’s like we’re almost (at the) 20 year anniversary of that show, and Suzuki is still around.

    MS: And you look at Shiryu, who people don’t know is Kaz Hayashi, and Taka Mickinoku was on that show, and I’m not saying that all (of) these people are still there because..

    DM: You know what? They had a great match too. The Michinoku match was really good. That was one of the better matches on the show too. Well, Kaz was really young then, probably 20, 21, something like that. They had Naniwa who was on that show, right, and he passed away, and I think he was only a teenager. He was maybe 18 or something.

    MS: Wow. It’s amazing. Was that show, did it call out to spirit for that one in 1978, because that was a Tokyo Sports. They had that all-star dream card, so was there supposed to be kind of a linear tie-in with..

    DM: Yes. This was the second one, but the one in 1978 everybody covered, whereas the one in 1995, the politics had gotten so weird, it just blew me away. That’s when I was like, “God, your journalism sucks.” I would tell people that. It’s like, how the hell…there’s 50,000 people sold out in advance, and wrestling people wouldn’t even cover it, and they wouldn’t even go to it if they were with the rival publications. It was like it didn’t exist in the biggest newspaper, Tokyo Sports, the biggest sports newspaper, they pretended it didn’t..I couldn’t believe it. I’m looking the next day, and it’s like they may have had the results in small agate, or they may not have at all, I think they may have had the results in small agate, and they had all (of) these big photos because there was a show head-to-head.

    This is Tokyo Dome, and Gong, which was the rival magazine to Weekly Pro, promoted a show with Tenryu with WAR and whatever other promotions, but it was mainly WAR at Korakuen Hall next door at the same time, and so Tokyo Sports would (have had) these big photos of the Tenryu show at 2,000 people were at, if that, and nothing on the other one. It was amazing, but just the whole politics of…that to me, that far as an all-time legendary show…did you see that, because they never released a commercial tape because of all (of) the politics involved..

    MS: No, just the individual match. I’ve never seen the whole thing all the way through.

    DM: I have, believe it or not, it’s in my collection. I have a copy of the tape because…I mean, I have it. That’s all I remember that I have it. The other one was the World Wrestling Peace festival. There’s a story. The World Wrestling Peace festival that never came out, but was supposed to be on television. They had a TV deal, but there (were) all kinds of problems with the rights with WCW. That was (a) WCW, AAA, CMLL, and New Japan combined show at the Sports Arena in L.A., and Mike Tenay and I were supposed to do the TV announcing for that, but we were supposed to do voiceovers later, and then with all (of) the politics, we never got it done. So I actually have a copy of that too that we were going to voiceover. And that show wasn’t as good, but there was a Jushin Liger-Great Sasuke match. That was a really good match. The other ones, was it Lex against Masa Saito?

    MS: It was…Giant, Sting, and Konnan and Jericho and Bigelow in a triangle..

    DM: Right. That match was okay. That match wasn’t too bad.

    MS: It was Craig Pittman against KGB..

    DM: Yeah, that was Tom Howard. That wasn’t any good.

    MS: Jim Neidhart and Bobby Bradley.

    DM: That wasn’t good.

    MS: Akira Hokuto and Lady Apache defeating Bull Nakano and Neftali.

    DM: That was good. It wasn’t great, but that was good. Well, you now, Kira Hokuto and Bull Nakano, they were all-time greats.

    MS: Benoit and Alex Wright.

    DM: It was good. Actually, that was real good. By the way, Jericho got his job off of that match. Bischoff was there, this was great too. So Bischoff’s there..actually this is how Jericho got his job in WCW: I had sent a tape to Zane Bresloff of the Super J Cup the year that Benoit wrestled Jericho in it, which by the way that’s another one. (If) you ever get a tape of that Super J Cup, the first one is on New Japan World, and I actually have not even seen that whole show from start to finish because I only saw a one-hour edited version of it, so we should actually someday watch that show and then do a review afterwards because at the time in 1994, that was considered the greatest show of all time by the people who were there live. It was like, “Oh my god!” And then when I watched it on TV, it was the last two matches.

    Sasuke beat Liger, and then Benoit beat Sasuke, and Benoit won it, and I just remember the last two matches were…it was like (Wrestle Kingdom) where one is 4.75 stars and one is 5 stars, or something of that equivalent, and there was a Sasuke-El Samurai match that was unbelieveable and all that, but if you go to New Japan World, you should probably watch that one, but the other one, the second J Cup, which was a phenomenal show also, there was a match with Jericho and Benoit on the show, but anyway, I sent that tape to Zane Bresloff with this idea of (you’ve) got all of this freaking Nitro every week to fill; why don’t you do a Super J Cup, because they had all (of) that talent that was working in WCW at this point. Here’s what they did in Japan with this; why don’t you do this, because if I gave it to Zane, Zane would pitch it like it’s his idea to Eric, and Eric, if it was a good idea, would do it. So Zane pitches it to Eric and sends the tape to Eric, and Eric never does it of course (laughs), but he’s watching the tape…

    MS: No surprise there.

    DM: It would’ve gotten the wrong guys over. If you know the stories about booking ideas that were pitched for the wrong guys, and it would’ve been the same in WWF. In WCW, I knew guys who would call me up and pitch ideas, and these were great ideas, and they were always nixed because unless the idea involved Hogan, Hogan made sure…you know what’s funny about stuff is people think they don’t know or they know, but they don’t. So anyway, Eric saw the tape and he just saw the Benoit-Jericho match and saw Jericho, and it’s funny because of how Eric ended up using Jericho and everything, but just, “Oh my god! Who’s this guy? He’s great!” so he goes to Benoit and he goes, “This guy Chris Jericho, I saw this match with you and Chris Jericho. Should I hire him?” And Benoit goes, “Absolutely.” So this is like probably a week before this L.A. card, and Eric is in L.A., and he’s going, not knowing that I actually sent the tape, but he’s talking to me, and he’s like, “I saw this tape of Chris Benoit and Chris Jericho, and I asked Chris Benoit, ‘Should we hire the guy?’ and he said, ‘Yes.’” So he goes, “That’s the only match I’ve seen, and I’m hiring him right now.” So he hired Jericho that day.

    So this is the best part of the story. This is also the day that Eric first met Rey Mysterio, and I remember coming right after…Rey Mysterio had a match: Psicosis and Heavy Metal against Rey and Ultimo Dragon. That match was great, and Eric comes back, and he’s just like, “Now I get Rey Mysterio,” because he had heard the name, it’s just like everybody had that blocked, because he was so small, and he just goes, “The smallness works for him,” because how would he know? This isn’t making fun of him. How would he know? He had never seen him, but he saw him, and he got him right away. A lot of people didn’t get him right away. Eric got him right away. He just goes, “Now I get Rey Mysterio. Now I get it,” and they hired Rey and they put him against Dean Malenko right away. Eric got it right away. If it was Vince, Vince would’ve never got it. So anyway, Eric hires Jericho, and he didn’t watch that match with Jericho, Konnan, and Bam Bam because he left the building. I’m thinking, “If I hired the guy, I would at least want to watch his match.”

    MS: Really? Where did he go?

    DM: I know where he went, but he left the building. But I will say this, the crowd harassed Eric so bad. I think it was the Benoit-Alex Wright match. Eric was at ringside, and Benoit and Alex Wright are having a really good match, like a solid three plus (star match), and really solid, good wrestling, and the Americans in the crowd-the audience was one-third Japanese, one-third Mexican-American, and one-third WCW fans. About 2,500 of each, which was a really interesting mix. So the Japanese fans are all silent and enjoying it, and they’re reacting to the Fujinami and people like that. The Mexican fans were awesome; the Mexican matches were the most fun because (of) the crowd, and the American did not have a good night. I was one of them, but they did not have a good night.

    And Eric’s out there, and they’re just booing Eric and they’re doing these negative chants on Eric. “We want good wrestling!” and I’m thinking, “This is what was bad.” Benoit and Alex Wright are out there having a really good match, and these crowds were “We want wrestling!” It was like, “Oh god.” It was kind of embarrassing that night. That was a really good show too, but the Tokyo Dome show was…there have been very few shows in history of wrestling, and maybe there’s never been a show in the history of wrestling with that much talent in one sitting. You look at that Tokyo Dome lineup…look at all of the legends and Hall of Famers on that card. From Hashimono Chono, Onita, Maeda, Takada, look at the freaking talent all in one night. I don’t know if there’s ever been a show with that much talent on it.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 15): Brock Lesnar stripped of IWGP title, CZW vs. ROH

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1932 – At the International Arena in Kansas City, Missouri; Jack London beat John Mosier to win the Missouri Valley heavyweight title. 

    1942 – Gene Bowman defeated Earl Wampler for the Iowa Heavyweight Title in Des Moines, Iowa in 2 out of 3 falls. Also on the card, Babe Zaharias defeated Cowboy Luttrall in 2 of 3 falls and Jack Kennedy and Tom Zaharias went to a draw. 

    1946 – Danny Dusek defeated Joe Savoldi to win the Rocky Mountain Heavyweight Title in Denver, Colorado.

    1949 – Tom Mahoney defeated Al Massey in a tournament final for the vacant Georgia Southern Heavyweight Title in Atlanta, Georgia.

    1954 – Eddie Gossett (Eddie Graham) defeated Frankie Talaber to win the Midwest Wrestling Association World Junior Heavyweight Title in Columbus, Ohio

    1955 – At Kiel Auditorium in St. Louis, Missouri for promoter Sam Muchnick; NWA World Heavyweight Champion Lou Thesz vs. Leo Nomellini, Bill Longson, Bobby Managoff and Pat O’Connor vs. Ike Eakins, Hard Boiled Haggerty and Don Leo Jonathan, Bobo Brazil vs. Jim “Black Panther” Mitchell, Bobby Bruns vs. Ray Villmer and “Silent” George Hubert vs. Joe Millich

    1959 – The Mighty Yankee (Ray Villmer) defeated Papa Pasquale for the NWA Gulf Coast Heavyweight Title in Mobile, Alabama.

    1960 – Tony Borne and Danny McShain defeated El Gladiador and Torbellino Blanco in Houston, Texas. to win the vacant NWA Texas Tag Team Title; Billy Joyce defeated Dennis Mitchell for the British Heavyweight Title in Bradford, England

    1963 – Bobo Brazil defeated Johnny Barend to win the WWWF United States Heavyweight Champion in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Dick the Bruiser defeated Curtis Iaukea to win the Hawaii NWA United States Heavyweight Title

    1965 – Giant Baba and Toyonobori defeated The Destroyer and Billy Red Lyons for the JWA All-Asia Tag Team Title in Shizuoka, Japan; In Kansas City, Kansas; Bob Geigel and Killer Kox beat Bobo Brazil and Dick the Bruiser 2 falls to 1; Mongolian Stomper beat Missouri Mauler, Pat O’Connor drew Sonny Myers and Ronnie Etchison beat Jerry Miller. 

    1966 – Brute Bernard and Skull Murphy defeated Mark Lewin and Dominic DeNucci to win the International Wrestling Alliance World Tag Team Title in Sydney, Australia.

    1967 – Nebraska Heavyweight Champion Bob Orton, Sr. defeated Doug Gilbert in Omaha, Nebraska to become the first AWA Midwest Heavyweight Champion. The title was unified with the Nebraska title; Dick the Bruiser and The Crusher defeated The Devil’s Duo (Chris Markoff and Angelo Poffo) for the World Wrestling Association World Tag Team Title in Indianapolis, Indiana

    1970 – Pantera Negra and Tony Rocco defeated The Great Kojika and John Tolos to win the NWA Americas Tag Team Title in Los Angeles, California

    1971 – Dan Miller defeated The Missouri Mauler for the NWA Eastern States Heavyweight Title in Greensboro, North Carolina.

    1972 – Don and Ron Wright defeated Tommy Gilbert and Sputnik Monroe to win the NWA Tennessee Tag Team Title in Chattanooga, Tennessee; Frank Rodriguez defeated Bobby Pics to win the West Virginia Heavyweight Title.

    1975 – Al Madril defeated John Toloes for the NWA Texas Heavyweight Title in Dallas, Texas

    1976 – In Kansas City; Omar Atlas defeated Hubert Gallant, Bob Geigel defeated Tank Patton, Black Gordman & Great Goliath defeated Pat O’Connor & Harley Race and The Super Intern defeated Bob Brown; Bob Kelly won the NWA Mississippi Heavyweight Title by defeating Sweet Daddy Banks in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

    1977 – Ernie Ladd defeated Dusty Rhodes to win the NWA Florida Heavyweight Title in Tallahassee, Florida; In Minneapolis, MN; Billy Robinson & Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell beat Nick Bockwinkel & Blackjack Lanza & Bobby Heenan, Angelo Mosca beat Larry Hennig by dq, Pedro Morales beat Roger Kirby and Super Destroyer beat Jan Nelson; Tiger Jeet Singh and Umanosuke Ueda defeated Strong Kobayashi and Seiji Sakaguchi for the NJPW Asia Tag Team Title in Sapporo, Japan; Johnny Eagles defeated The Blue Yankee to win the NWA Alabama Heavyweight Title in Dothan, Alabama.

    1978 – Otto Wanz defeated Don Leo Jonathan in Graz, Austria to become the first two-time Catch Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Champion; Armand Hussein defeated Invader I for the WWC Caribbean Heavyweight Title in Caguas, Puerto Rico. At the same show, Kendo Kimura defeated Carlos Colón to win the WWC Puerto Rico Heavyweight Title

    1979 – In Minneapolis, MN; Greg Gagne beat AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel by dq, in a Taped Fist Match, Ray Stevens beat Mad Dog Vachon dq, in a Dead Lift Contest, Paul Ellering beat Jesse Ventura, Stan Hansen & Bobby Duncum beat Billy Robinson & Doug Gilbert and Super Destroyer Mark II beat Doug Gilbert

    1980 – Animal Hamaguchi and Mighty Inoue defeated Haruka Eigen and Strong Kobayashi to win the International Pro Wrestling World Tag Team Title in Fuji, Japan

    1982 – Rocky Johnson defeated Rip Oliver for the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Title.

    1983 – Ric Flair defeated David Von Erich to win the vacant NWA Missouri Heavyweight Title in the finals of a 20 man tournament in St. Louis, Missouri, In Denver, Colorado; Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell beat Tully Blanchard & Bobby Jaggers, in a Lumberjack Match Wahoo McDaniel beat Bobby Heenan, Rick Martel beat David Shults and Mr. Saito beat Buck Zumhofe

    1984 – In the St. Paul Civic Center; AWA Champion Rick Martel beat Nick Bockwinkel, Jim Brunzell beat King Kong Brody by dq, The Crusher beat Abdullah The Butcher by dq, Fabulous Ones beat Mr. Saito & Larry Zbyszko, Road Warriors beat Steve O & Curt Hennig, Tony Atlas beat Steve Regal and Billy Robinson beat Chris Markoff. Attendance was 8,500

    1985 – Terry Taylor defeated Phil Hickerson to win the CWA/AWA International Heavyweight Title in Memphis, Tennessee and Jerry Lawler defeated Rick Link to win the NWA Mid-America Heavyweight Title; Iceman Parsons defeated Killer Tim Brooks for the World Class Television Title in Fort Worth, Texas; Bill Ash defeated Scott Armstrong for the Southeast NWA United States Junior Heavyweight Title in Birmingham, Alabama; In Verdun, Quebec, Canada; Jimmy Garvin & Ronnie Garvin beat Raymond Rougeau & Jacques Rougeau Jr, Tonga Kid & Tony Parisi beat AWA Tag Team Champions Road Warriors and King Tonga beat Butch Reed.

    1986 – Ron Bass defeated Kendall Windham to win the NWA Florida Heavyweight Title in Tampa, Florida.

    1989 – Ivan Koloff defeated Invader I for the WWC Puerto Rico Heavyweight Title in Caguas, Puerto Rico

    1990 – Astro de Oro defeated Dr. Wagner, Jr. to win the UWA World Junior Heavyweight Title in Mexico City, Mexico

    1991 – Robert Fuller and Jeff Jarrett won the USWA Tag Team Title, defeating The Barroom Brawlers (Bonecrusher and Crowbar) in Memphis, Tennessee.

    1992 – Sakie Hasegawa defeated Mariko Yoshida to win the AJW Singles Title in Tokyo, Japan.

    1994 – Eddie Golden and Alex Shane defeated The Tennessee Equalizer and Chic White for the Southern States Wrestling Tag Team Title in Fall Branch, Tennessee

    1996 – Brickhouse Brown and Reggie B. Fine defeated Flex Kavana (The Rock) and Bart Sawyer for the USWA Tag Team Title in Memphis, Tennessee

    1998 – Shiro Koshinaka and Genichiro Tenryu defeated Masahiro Chono and Hiroyoshi Tenzan in Tokyo, Japan for the IWGP Tag Team Title

    2005 –  Christopher Daniels defeated Natural Heavyweight Champion A.J. Styles in a best-of-three falls match to win the title in Buffalo, New York. 

    2006 – Brock Lesnar is stripped of the IWGP Heavyweight Title by New Japan Pro Wrestling. Lesnar and New Japan management had a disagreement regarding a defense against Hiroshi Tanahashi, scheduled to take place on July 17, resulting in Lesnar quitting the promotion; In Philadelphia, PA; ROH World Champion Bryan Danielson defeated Sonjay Dutt to retain the title and Team ROH (ROH World Champion Bryan Danielson, Homicide, Adam Pearce, Samoa Joe, Ace Steel and B.J. Whitmer (with J.J. Dillon)) defeated Team CZW (Claudio Castagnoli, CZW World Heavyweight Champion Chris Hero, CZW World Tag Team Champion Eddie Kingston, Necro Butcher and Nate Webb) in a Cage of Death match.

    2007 – In Orlando, Florida; TNA World Heavyweight Champion Kurt Angle and TNA X Division Champion Samoa Joe defeated TNA World Tag Team Champions Team 3D (Brother Ray and Brother Devon). The rules stated that whoever got a pin won that person’s title, so Samoa Joe won the TNA World Tag Team Title.

  • Observer Exclusive: Nick “Magnus” Aldis on why he left TNA for GFW

    Photo: TNAWrestling.com

    By Brian Rzeppa for WrestlingObserver.com

    At 28 years old, Nick Aldis has more experience than many of the ring-hardened veterans that you will see on your TV screen every week. Before signing with TNA in 2008, Aldis had already been on the independent circuit in the United Kingdom for over five years.

    While he experienced great success with TNA, he set his sights on a new opportunity once his contract with the company came to a close earlier this year. He is now one of the major building blocks of Jeff Jarrett’s new promotion Global Force Wrestling and he looks to help GFW become one of the go-to companies for professional wrestling.

    He has taken a bit of an uncommon route to get to this point in his career and it all started with some wrestling action figures.

    In an interview with Wrestling Observer, Aldis stated that his wrestling fandom didn’t begin with any work actually in the ring, “My first memories of wrestling were not watching it, but just being exposed to the WWF through their toys and merchandise. I grew up in England and we didn’t have satellite TV or SkySports, so the only time I saw it was when I was at my friends’ house. I was still completely familiar with everyone though, which is a credit to WWF’s marketing. Eventually I ended up getting VHS tapes and just became completely immersed with it.”

    As he got older, he began to watch the product more frequently and was naturally attracted to some of the bigger names that the wrestling business has ever seen.

    “Without a doubt I idolized Bret Hart more than anyone in the early days, then as a rebellious teen I was into Kevin Nash, Steve Austin and Shawn Michaels; along with those guys, I always awestruck by The Undertaker. I never really got into Hulk Hogan when he was at his peak because I didn’t really understand him, but I eventually started watching things like ‘The Best of Hulkamania’ and became a big fan later on.”

    Aside from his interest in wrestling, he was a standout athlete throughout high school in multiple sports. While he could have pursued those interests further, there was one person that convinced him that wrestling was the business that he ultimately wanted to be a part of.

    “Growing up I played all kinds of sports and was pretty good at them. I was invited to compete nationally in swimming and tennis and I held a couple of records in track. I always craved individual attention rather than team stuff, so there was a part of me that wanted to be an entertainer and that’s how wrestling kind of came to be for me. Wrestling came around and was peaking at the right time and I saw The Rock and he embodied all of things that I wanted to be as far as an entertainer and his success kind of just motivated me to follow that lead.”

    Once he realized that wrestling was going to be the career path he wanted to go down, he began training with the Knight family in England, who are better known as WWE Diva Paige’s parents.

    “My first actual appearance was in a battle royal, which is usually the right way to break rookies in. On the night of my first battle royal, Jake the Snake was on the card and I couldn’t believe how big he was. Back then he wasn’t portrayed as a big guy, but when I met him I just thought that he was a giant and I wondered how I would become a wrestler. I’m 6’4 and I saw him and thought that he was a monster.”

    After a few battle royals and multi-man tag matches, Aldis finally had his chance to go it alone in the ring and have his first singles match. As he reflects on that first match around a decade later, he realized how lucky he was to start off with the opponent that he did.

    “Throughout my first singles bout I was nervous, but I had a bit of comfort given that I had done some work prior to that. My first match was with Doug Williams, who had done training at our school. He came up to our instructor and said there’s this one kid who’s 18-years old and a good athlete and you should take a look at him, so the instructor told him that he wanted Doug to work with me. During the match, he basically held my hand through four or five rounds and it was a big help for me in getting booked on the UK scene.”

    After a few years of getting independent bookings scattered throughout a few different promotions, Aldis wanted to take the next step in his career. After multiple people had told him to reach out to All-Star Wrestling promoter Brian Dixon, he finally gave him a call.

    “I realized I had to figure out that the way that you progress quickly is that you have to work for Brian Dixon. I gave him a call and I started working six days a week for him doing pretty much everything; wrestling, putting up the ring and taking it down, traveling and everything like that. It was pretty much my life for two years, along with some independent bookings that I took when I could.”

    He had completely given himself to wrestling, but with his impressive physique he was given opportunities outside of the ring. He had appeared on a few TV shows, when a director of one of them informed him that Gladiators would be returning to TV and he would be a perfect fit.

    “I auditioned for Gladiators and made it and that was really the big break for me. On the show, they mentioned in my bio that I was a wrestler and I became really popular because I would give all of these wrestling-style promos, which caught the attention of TNA.”

    Playing a character by the name of Oblivion, he had caught the eye of TNA management, as well as one of the wrestlers with potentially the most pull in the company.

    “The story goes that after a show that he worked, Kurt Angle watched the TV in his room and saw me cut a promo and said that I had to be a wrestler. He called Dixie and said she had to watch this British kid, that I talked too well not to be a wrestler. She responded, ‘is it Oblivion? We just talked to him and we’re going to sign him.”

    One month after his signing, TNA began airing vignettes for his debut. He had become a popular character on Gladiators because of his personality, but he quickly realized that he wasn’t going to have the chance to display that off the bat with TNA.

    “It was my understanding that Dixie [Carter] made the decision to hire me, and Terry Taylor handled the details. Vince Russo got this brief synopsis of me, but had never seen Gladiators the show and thought it was different than the American one because he must have been under the impression that I had played a Roman gladiator. They didn’t realize that I had gotten over on Gladiators because I had been acting like a wrestler.”

    Aldis continued, “I showed up to TNA and I read over the stuff and it sounded very stoic and serious and I suggested that they check out the tapes so the UK viewers would be familiar with me, but they didn’t end up doing that so I showed up and was very boring. I was 22 though and wasn’t in any position to tell them to change anything.”

    After a few months of being “Brutus Magnus”, Aldis had a character shift that did wonders for career.

    “Obviously the Brutus Magnus character didn’t work at all and I was so green that I couldn’t make it work. Thankfully Jeff Jarrett, who teamed me up with Doug Williams and Rob Terry, saved me. That’s when I was able to bring my personality out.”

    After five years with the company, Magnus was finally given the chance to be the top dog, defeating Jeff Hardy to become the TNA World Heavyweight Champion. It was a long road to get to that point and one that at times seemed like it wasn’t ever going to have a good ending for him.

    “Winning the title was a great feeling because I had been there through loads of ups and downs and various regime changes. I felt like whenever I was getting anywhere, someone would be replaced and I would have to start all over again. All of the boys were saying that I was finally starting to get somewhere and even the insiders were, but every time a new boss came in it was like they’d never seen the show and I had to start all over again.”

    Given Aldis’ background as an actor, many of the new leaders that came in had figured that was his primary interest, not wrestling.

     “I had been a real student of the game and it seemed like they had just thought I was a guy who had come from a TV show. I eat, sleep and breathe this business and I told them that they were hiring guys who were older than me and were billing them as a new up and comer and was acting like I was old news. I had wrestled more in my first year than they had in their lives.”

    The opportunity to become champion was a great one, but it is one that Aldis feels could have been magnified had it been put off for just a few more weeks.

    “To finally get the title and to know that everyone was on the same page was a good feeling, unfortunately the way it panned out after that was out of my control and I certainly think there were some missed opportunities. I never understood why I won the title in December when I could’ve waited a month and won it England. They made such a big deal of me being the first British champion and it could have been the biggest moment in their history if I had just won it when we were over there.”

    He may not have been happy with the way that TNA handled some things creatively, but the chance to work with so many talented wrestlers is something that Aldis cherishes immensely.
    “Everything I got to do with Samoa Joe as a tag team partner and as an opponent was so great. It was so much fun and so easy because we had so much great ammunition offensively. We had such great momentum everywhere that we went; everyone just seemed to love us everywhere that we went. Anytime I got to work with Jeff Hardy was fantastic, too, he was probably my favorite opponent because our styles mix so well. I like being a ground-based wrestler and Jeff could fly around and we could always just tell such a great story.”

    Aldis proceeded, “We had a match in North Carolina not long after I had lost the title and I thought I was going to show them why it should have been a title match; it was probably the best match I’ve ever had. I have to also mention Sting; the way that he went out endorsing me both internally and at Bound For Glory is not something to take lightly and it’s probably the greatest thing that anyone has ever done for me in my wrestling career.”

    After losing to James Storm at Slammiversary on June 28th, it was announced on June 29th that Aldis would be joining the upstart Global Force Wrestling promotion. He considers it a great opportunity to grow as a wrestler and as a person, which is something that TNA didn’t offer.

    “It wasn’t really about the decision to sign with GFW as much as it was to leave TNA. I had to just go with my gut instinct and it’s my gut instinct that things aren’t going right there anymore. As a talent I had done everything that I could do and there was nothing left to do that would be satisfying. In this business, it’s either about cash or creative and I had stayed once before for the money and I made a promise to myself that even though they paid me very well I would get out of my comfort zone and make a difference elsewhere. I sent them a notice before my deal was up and told them I didn’t want to discuss another contract.”

    With Jeff Jarrett’s recent appearances on Destination America for TNA, it has led many to speculate that there will be a working relationship between the two companies. Aldis, however, doesn’t believe that will be the case.

    “I think it’s just Jeff getting some closure and getting the credit for his business. TNA, with the exception of what I think have been a disastrous last couple of years, is Jeff’s company. The TNA that will be remembered as being the breeding ground for talent like AJ Styles, Samoa Joe and the X Division, as well as the second go-around for guys like Kevin Nash and Kurt Angle; that was Jeff Jarrett. He never really got the chance to be acknowledged for that as the guy who was founder. He’s more than happy to let GFW be on it’s own.”

    At 28, he was a free agent for the first time since he had become a major fixture in the American wrestling scene. Given that he signed with GFW so shortly after his contract with TNA had come to a close, it was clear that the offer with them was one he couldn’t pass up.

    “I think that people don’t realize this, but Jeff Jarrett was a big advocate for me in TNA. When new management came in, they didn’t know about me because I wasn’t in WWE and they hadn’t watched our product even though they were going to be running it. Jeff would step up and tell them that I was going to be a great talent, and then they understood I was a long-term investment and that’s why I stayed loyal.”

    He had seen Jarrett’s work first-hand in the past and that’s what convinced him that GFW was the right promotion for him.

    “I saw Jeff Jarrett when he assembled a team in Ring Ka King and I realized he knew talent in the ring and behind the scenes. Ring Ka King was such a huge success when it had just had no business being one. Somehow Jeff was able to put it together and make it a really good TV product. Through that, I realized that he’s a boss, a leader, someone who gets the business and someone I could get behind. I’ve always had that in the back of my mind and I remembered it when my contract was up. In TNA, it always seemed like they were choosing the wrong guys for the wrong reasons and I know that won’t happen with Jeff, he’s going to pick the right guys for the right reasons.”

    Beyond wrestling, Aldis hopes to play an active role in helping develop the GFW brand.
    “I want to deliver as a talent but I also want to contribute on a deeper level. My abilities go beyond wrestling and Jeff is affording me a lot of opportunities to show that. He’s letting me expand my own entrepreneurial endeavors and helping me broaden my horizons outside of wrestling. I always wanted to do it things like that in TNA, but it kept getting put off. Overall, I think it’s going to be a very cool opportunity because Jeff realizes I have a lot to offer and I’m doing everything I can to help Global Force Wrestling grow.”

    Along with his work for Global Force Wrestling, Aldis also has a book being released. Check it out at superstarbodybook.com or on Amazon.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 14): Bruiser & Crusher vs. Stevens & Bockwinkel, Gagne vs. Superstar, Lex Luger wins WCW title, Snuka wins ECW title, Sting wins TNA belt

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1966 – The Viking & Jack Donovan defeated Bob Ellis & The Stomper in Kansas City, Kansas to win the NWA North American Tag Team Title.

    1972 – In Rockford, Illinois; Billy Robinson beat Ivan Koloff dq, Wahoo McDaniel beat Don Muraco, Larry Hennig beat Ramon Torres and Hans Herrmann beat Bull Bullinski

    1973 – In Chicago, Illinois; In a Non Title Human Cage match; Dick the Bruiser & the Crusher beat AWA Tag Team Champions Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens (it was scheduled as a cage match, but the cage did not arrive so they came up with a human cage match or lumberjack match). Also, Bob Ellis no contest Ivan Koloff, Ken Patera beat Vic Rossitani, Pepper Gomez beat Rene Goulet, Bob Bruggers beat George Gadaski and Greg Gagne beat Bill Crouch; In Milwaukee, Wisconsin; AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Superstar Billy Graham by dq, Wahoo McDaniel & Billy Robinson beat Blackjack Lanza & Blackjack Mulligan in 2 out of 3 falls, Larry Heiniemi beat Bill Watts by dq, Geoff Portz beat Joe Scarpello and Reggie Parks beat Billy Red Cloud. Attendance was 6,093.

    1978 – Dick The Bruiser defeated Dick Murdoch in St. Louis, Missouri to win back the NWA Missouri Heavyweight Title; In Minneapolis, Minnesota; Pat Patterson & Ray Stevens beat AWA Tag team Champions Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell by dq, Bob Orton Jr beat Mighty Igor Vodik by countout, Lord Alfred Hayes & Super Destroyer Mark II beat Evan Johnson & Dr. X and Steve Olsonoski beat Frank Hill

    1983 – In Winnipeg; in a Non Title match, Mad Dog Vachon & Verne Gagne beat AWA Tag Team Champions Ken Patera & Jerry Blackwell, Wahoo McDaniel & Baron Von Raschke beat Blackjack Lanza & Bobby Heenan, Greg Gagne beat Sheik Adnan and David Schultz defeated Brad Rheingans.

    1984 – Ted DiBiase defeated The Spoiler in Macon, Georgia to win the NWA National Heavyweight Title; In Indianapolis, Indiana; Jim Brunzell beat King Kong Brody by dq, Road Warriors beat Steve O & Curt Hennig, AWA Champion Rick Martel beat Nick Bockwinkel, Fabulous Ones beat Steve Regal & Larry Zbyszko and Tony Atlas beat Chris Markoff

    1985 – In St. Paul, Minnesota; Sgt. Slaughter & Greg Gagne beat Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens by dq, AWA Champion Rick Martel beat Michael Hayes by dq, AWA Tag Team Champions Road Warriors beat Bill Irwin & Scott Irwin (The Long Riders), Bob Backlund beat Larry Zbyszko and Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts beat Steve O & Buck Zumhofe. Attendance was 2,500; In Asheville, NC; NWA U.S. Champion Magnum TA defeated Nikita Koloff, NWA TV Champion Dusty Rhodes defeated Buddy Landell.

    1986 –  Harley Race defeated Pedro Morales to win the King Of The Ring tournament in Foxboro, Mass.

    1990 – In St. Louis, Missouri; Sid Vicious defeated Tom Zenk, NWA U..S Tag Team Champions The Midnight Express, Bobby Eaton & Stan Lane defeated The Southern Boys, Tracy Smothers & Steve Armstrong and Sting & Lex Luger defeated Harley Race (substituting for an injured Ric Flair) & Barry Windham via disqualification.

    1991 –  Lex Luger defeated Barry Windham in a steel cage to win the vacant WCW World Title in Baltimore, Maryland. Also, Nikita Koloff defeated Sting in a Russian chain match.

    1992 – Jimmy Snuka pinned ECW Champion Johnny Hot Body to win the title in Philadelphia, PA.

    1997 – Steve Austin & Dude Love (Mick Foley) defeated Owen Hart & Davey Boy Smith in a tournament final for the WWF World Tag Team Title in San Antonio, Texas.

    1998 – D’Lo Brown defeated Hunter Hearst Helmsley for the WWF European Heavyweight title in Binghamton, New York,

    2011 – Sting captured the TNA championship from Ken Anderson.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 12): Gagne, Bruiser & Crusher, Ladd wins Americas title, 1992 Bash with Sting vs. Vader

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1933 – Thor Jenson defeated Harold Heibert for the Pacific Coast Middleweight Title in Eugene, Oregon.

    1946 – Tex Riley won a tournament in Nashville, Tennessee to win the vacant Tennessee World Junior Heavyweight Title; Joe Savoldi defeated Everett Marshall for the Rocky Mountain Heavyweight Title in Colorado Springs, Colorado

    1951 – Eduardo Perez and Red Roberts defeated Ray Piret and Herb Welch to win the Mid-America NWA Southern Tag Team Title in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

    1957 – Herb Freeman defeated Bill Savage to win the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Title.

    1962 – In Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; In a Non title Cage match; Verne Gagne beat AWA Champion Mr. M who was unmasked as Bill Miller, Ilio DiPaolo drew Bob Geigel, Doug Gilbert beat Jack Daniels, Joe Scarpello beat Bill Wright and Jackie Nichols drew Thor Hagen. Attendance was 5,500.

    1963 – Johnny Valentine defeated Moose Cholak to win the International Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Title in Chicago, Illinois.

    1966 – Louie Tillet won the NWA Texas Brass Knuckles Title in Dallas, Texas; Don Carson defeated Bobby Fields for the NWA Louisiana Heavyweight Title in Baton Rouge, Louisiana

    1967 – The Beast and Bob Sweetan defeated Bobby and Jerry Christy to win the Stampede International Tag Team Title in Calgary, Alberta.

    1968 – In Milwaukee; Dick the Bruiser won a 9 man battle royal, Dr X no contest Wilbur Snyder, Bill Watts beat Harley Race, Dick the Bruiser beat Big K and Man Mountain Mike beat Blackjack Daniels. Attendance was 4,480.

    1969 – Bob Ellis and Stan Pulaski defeated Bob Geigel and The Viking for the AWA Midwest Tag Team Title; In Milwaukee, Wisconsin; AWA Tag Team Champions Dick the Bruiser & the Crusher beat Mad Dog Vachon & Butcher Vachon, Bill Watts beat Lars Anderson, Blackjack Lanza beat Pampero Firpo and Wilbur Snyder beat Big K. Attendance was 9,512

    1972 – Bob Kelly defeated Gorgeous George, Jr. in Mobile, Alabama to win the NWA Gulf Coast Heavyweight Title.

    1973 – At Memorial Hall in Kansas City; Jim Brunzell defeated Percy Pringle, Lord Alfred Hayes & Roger Kirby defeated Steve Bolus & Mike George, Jack Brisco defeated Jim Dalton, Bobo Brazil & Rufus R. Jones defeated Togo the Great & Tokyo Joe in three falls and Bob Brown defeated Danny Little Bear in three falls.

    1974 – Ernie Ladd defeated Porkchop Cash to win the NWA Americas Heavyweight Title in Los Angeles, California; In Denver; Ivan Putski beat Billy Graham via dq, The Crusher beat Ray Stevens dq, Billy Robinson beat Baron Von Raschke dq and Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell beat Larry Hennig & Paul Perschmann in 2 out of 3 falls; Carlos Colón and José Miguel Pérez defeated Jim Dalton and Bruce Swayze for the WWC North American Tag Team Title in Ponce, Puerto Rico

    1976 – John Tolos defeated Kinji Shibuya for the Vancouver NWA Pacific Coast Heavyweight Title in Vancouver, British Columbia.

    1978 – Whipper Watson, Jr. defeated Dutch Mantel to win the NWA Mid-America Heavyweight Title in Nashville, Tennessee

    1979 – Central States Wrestling held an eight-team tournament for the vacant NWA Central States Tag Team Title in Kansas City, Kansas. Jerry Brown and The Turk defeated Bob Brown and Gama Singh to win the vacant NWA Central States Tag Team Title.

    1981 – Mr. Fuji defeated Angelo Mosca to win the Toronto NWA Canadian Heavyweight Title in Toronto, Ontario

    1982 – In Hobbema, Alberta, Canada; AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Keith Hart, Duke Myers beat Jim Neidhart, Bruce Hart & Davey Boy Smith beat Danny Davis & Ken Wayne and Bad News Allen beat Duke Kono; Bobby Eaton defeated NWA Mid-America Heavyweight Champion Dutch Mantel to win the title in Memphis, Tennessee.

    1983 – In Las Vegas, Nevada in a Death Match; Mad Dog Vachon beat Jerry Blackwell, Jim Brunzell beat Mr. Saito dq, Rick Martel & Wahoo McDaniel beat Bobby Heenan & Blackjack Lanza, Greg Gagne beat David Shults and Bobby Heenan beat Buck Zumhofe

    1986 – The Fabulous Ones (Steve Keirn and Stan Lane) defeated The Sheepherders (Butch Miller and Luke Williams) in a fictitious tournament final in Portland, Oregon for the vacant Florida NWA United States Tag Team Title; In Milwaukee; Midnight Rockers beat AWA Tag Team Champions Buddy Rose & Doug Somers on a reverse decision, Jimmy Snuka (sub Greg Gagne) beat Larry Zbyszko dq, In a Non Title match; Nord the Barbarian beat AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel, Jimmy Snuka beat Colonel DeBeers by countout, Jerry Blackwell beat Ali Khan, Sherri Martel beat Joyce Grable (sub Princess Jasmine) and Curt Hennig drew Boris Zhukov (sub Earthquake Ferris).

    1989 – Riki Choshu defeated Salman Hashimikov for the IWGP Heavyweight Title in Osaka, Japan.

    1992 – At the Great American Bash PPV in Albany, Georgia; Big Van Vader (with Harley Race) pinned WCW World Heavyweight Champion Sting to win the title. Also, WCW World Tag Team Champions Terry Gordy and Steve Williams defeated Dustin Rhodes and Barry Windham to win the NWA World Tag Team Title.

    1994 – Dan Kroffat defeated Masanobu Fuchi for the AJPW World Junior Heavyweight Title in Kagoshima, Japan.

    1997 – Spellbinder defeated Billy Travis for the USWA Heavyweight Title in Memphis, Tennessee.

    1999 –  In Jacksonville, Florida; Hollywood Hulk Hogan defeated WCW World Heavyweight Champion Randy Savage to win the title.

    2002 – Chris Hero defeated Colt Cabana to win the IWA Mid-South Heavyweight Title in Clarksville, Indiana.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 11): Ric Flair vs. Jimmy Garvin steel cage match involving Precious, Gene Kiniski wins AWA world title

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1933 – In Marshalltown, Iowa; Joe Stecher beat Bruce Noland 

    1935 – At St. Louis Arena in St. Louis, Missouri: Danno O’Mahoney beat Ray Steele, Joe Dusek and George Zaharias went to a draw,  Orville Brown defeated Charley Strack, Pat McGill beat George Tragos and Carl Hansen defeated Pat Murphy. Promoter was Tom Packs and attendance was 7,443. 

    1940 – In Kansas City; Orville Brown beat Juan Humberto 2 falls to 0, Steve Brody defeated Al Lovelock in 2 out of 3 falls and Jack Hader beat Cal Rees.

    1958 – Angelo Savoldi defeated Dory Funk Sr. in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma to win the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Title

    1961 – Gene Kiniski defeated Verne Gagne in Minneapolis, Minnesota to win the AWA World Heavyweight Title. Also on the card, AWA Tag Team Champions Leo Nomeilini & Wilbur Snyder beat Stan Kowalski & Bob Geigel in 2 of 3 falls, Hard Boiled Haggerty beat Roy McClarty and Tony Baillargeon beat Aldo Bogni. Attendance was 6,057.

    1963 – In Kansas City; Pat O’Connor beat Rock Hunter to retain the Central States Title, for the US Title, Sonny Myers beat Bob Geigel, Harley Race (sub for Tiny Mills) beat Pedro Godoy by dq and Bob Orton beat Roy Collins.

    1967 – In Duluth, MN; The Crusher beat Harley Race, Rene Goulet beat Chris Markoff (sub Johnny Valentine), Johnny Powers beat Reggie Parks and Larry Hennig beat Doug Gilbert. Attendance was 3,850.

    1968 – In Kansas City, Kansas; The Spoiler fought The Viking to a draw, Kay Noble defeated Jean Antone, Bob Ellis defeated Roger Kirby and Sonny Myers & Ronnie Etchison defeated Bob Brown & Bob Geigel via DQ in three falls. 

    1972 – In Davenport, Iowa John O’Donnell Stadium; with Special Referee Jersey Joe Walcott, AWA Tag Team Champions Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat Billy Robinson & Wahoo McDaniel. Also, Ivan Koloff beat Ramon Torres, Larry Hennig drew Don Muraco and Bull Bullinski beat Angelo Poffo

    1974 – In Kansas City; The Viking & Bobby Bold Eagle defeated Bob Orton & Bobby Garcia, Omar Atlas defeated Roger Kirby, Jim Brunzell defeated Don Fargo via DQ, The Interns defeated Bob Geigel & Pat O’Connor and Harley Race defeated Bob Brown

    1975 – In Tonganoxie, Kansas; Central States Heavyweight Champion Ed Wiskoski defeated Ted Oates.

    1985 – In Salt Lake City, Utah; Sgt. Slaughter & Greg Gagne drew Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens, Fabulous Freebirds Terry Gordy & Buddy Roberts beat Larry Hennig & Curt Hennig, Bob Backlund beat Larry Zbyszko, Brad Rheingans beat Buddy Roberts and Boris Zhukov beat Baron Von Raschke. Attendance was 1,400. 

    1987 – At the Greensboro Coliseum in North Carolina, Lex Luger defeated Nikita Koloff for the United States Title.  In the main event of that show, NWA World Champion Ric Flair defeated Jimmy Garvin in a steel cage match when Garvin passed out while trapped in the figure four leglock. As a result, Flair won a date with Garvin’s valet, Precious. When the date occurred, Ronnie Garvin went instead (dressed as a woman), and beat up Flair; At a show in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Steve Williams defeated Big Bubba Rogers to win the UWF Heavyweight Title.

    1989 – Stan Hansen & Genichiro Tenryu defeated Jumbo Tsuruta & Yoshiaki Yatsu in Hokkaido, Japan to win the All Japan Pro Wrestling World Tag Team Title.

    2010 – At Victory Road PPV in Orlando, Florida, The Motor City Machine Guns defeated Beer Money to win the TNA World Tag Team Title. Also, Angelina Love won the Knockouts Title over Madison Rayne.

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 10): Ric Flair vs. Lex Luger blood stoppage match, Jeff Hardy vs. Mike Awesome

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1941 – In Kansas City, Kansas; Dorv Roche beat Jack Kennedy in two straight falls to become #1 contender to the MWA World Title. Also, Benny Rosen beat Rudy Strongberg, Steve Brody defeated Earl Wampler and Jack Hader beat Dobie Osborne. Promoter was George Simpson

    1947 – At Memorial Hall in Kansas City; Orville Brown beat Wally Dusek to retain the MWA Title, Tug Carlson drew Sockeye Jack McDonald, Sailor Fred Blassie beat Rudy Strongberg and Marshall Esteppe drew Jack Hader.

    1962 – In Minneapolis, MN before 3,280 fans; AWA Champion Mr. M beat Joe Scarpello by countout, Verne Gagne beat Bob Geigel, Ilio Dipaolo beat Blackjack Daniels and Doug Gilbert beat Thor Hagan.

    1964 – In Denver, Colorado; Mad Dog Vachon & Fritz von Erich beat Verne Gagne & Art Thomas, Mitsu Arakawa beat Wilbur Snyder by dq and Jack Lanza beat Larry Hennig

    1965 – In Minneapolis before 5,710 fans; AWA Champion Mad Dog Vachon beat The Crusher dq, AWA Tag Team Champions Larry Hennig & Harley Race beat Rene Goulet & Eddie Sharkey, Tex McKenzie beat Pampero Firpo and Chris Markoff beat Bill Green

    1967 – Lou Albano & Tony Altimore defeated Arnold Skaaland & Chuck Richards (subbing for Spiros Arion) for the United States Tag Team Title in Atlantic City, New Jersey.

    1968 – In Duluth, Minnesota; Dr. X beat Wilbur Snyder, Bill Watts beat Harley Race, The Crusher beat Mad Dog Vachon and Man Mountain Mike beat Blackjack Daniels. Attendance was 3,300.

    1970 – In Denver; AWA Tag Team Champions Mad Dog Vachon & Butcher Vachon beat The Crusher & Verne Gagne in 2 out of 3 falls, Paul Diamond beat Double X in 2 out of 3 falls and Red Bastien beat Blackjack Lanza by dq.

    1971 – AWA ran a double shot with AWA Tag Team Champions Red Bastien & Hercules Cortez beat Larry Hennig & Lars Anderson to retain the titles in St. Paul, Minnesota. Also on the card, Billy Robinson beat Big K, Vivian Vachon beat Mars Monroe and Don Muraco beat Aldo Bogni; in Milwaukee, Wisconsin before a sellout of 6,112 fans; AWA Champion Verne Gagne beat Edouard Carpentier, Nick Bockwinkel beat Dick The Bruiser by countout, Wilbur Snyder and Baron Von Raschke went to a double countout, Bull Bullinski beat Joe Turco and Angelo Poffo drew Bill Howard

    1974 – At John O’Donnell Stadium in Davenport, Iowa; AWA Tag Team Champions Nick Bockwinkel & Ray Stevens beat Billy Robinson & Geoff Portz, Ivan Putski beat Baron Von Raschke, Chris Taylor beat Larry Heiniemi and Larry Hennig beat Bull Bullinski

    1975 – Greg Gagne beat Nick Bockwinkel in Duluth, Minnesota.

    1978 – In Wichita, Kansas; Gene Stevens (Frank Dalton) vs. Pat O’Conner, Tank Patton vs. Gary Young, The Blue Yankee (former Inferno Curtis Smith) & Bob Sweetan vs. Ron Starr & Tom Andrews and in a Texas Death Match; Bulldog Bob Brown vs. Col. Buck Robley

    1982 – In Sheboygan, Wisconsin; Hulk Hogan beat Ken Patera, Greg Gagne no contest Sheik Adnan, Rick Martel beat Bobby Heenan and Buck Zumhofe beat Sgt. Goulet

    1985 – In Las Vegas, Nevada at the Showboat Sports Pavilion; Sgt. Slaughter won battle royal, Sgt. Slaughter beat Larry Zbyszko dq, Fabulous Freebirds beat Curt Hennig & Greg Gagne, Nick Bockwinkel beat Baron Von Raschke, Billy Robinson beat Bob Backlund and Brad Rheingans drew Ray Stevens. Attendance was 1,500.

    1988 – In Baltimore, Maryland at the Great American Bash PPV, The Midnight Express (Stan Lane & Bobby Eaton) defeated The Fantastics (Bobby Fulton & Tommy Rogers) to win the NWA United States Tag Team Title. Also on the card, NWA United States Champion Barry Windham defeated Dusty Rhodes and NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair defeated Lex Luger when the match was stopped by the Maryland State Athletic Commission due to Luger bleeding.

    1992 – In Whitesville, Virginia; SMW Heavyweight Champion Brian Lee pinned the Dirty White Boy and SMW Tag Team Champions The Heavenly Bodies, Stan Lane & Tom Prichard defeated The Fantastics, Bobby & Jackie Fulton via disqualification.

    1998 – In Inglewood, California; WCW World Champion Bill Goldberg pinned Curt Hennig and Sting defeated Hulk Hogan in a steel cage match via submission.

    2001 – Jeff Hardy defeated Mike Awesome for the WWF Hardcore Title in Birmingham, Alabama.

    2011 – At Destination X PPV; Brian Kendrick defeated Abyss to win the X Division Championship.

    2014 – Austin Aries defeated Sanada to win the TNA X Division Title.

  • Wednesday Night Wars: TNA, ROH viewership numbers

    By Dave Meltzer, WrestlingObserver.com

    Both TNA and ROH on Destination America were up significantly from last week, returning to their usual levels. The TNA combined audience was their best (by 2,000 viewers) since moving to Wednesday, while ROH did better for its show that aired after TNA than for the original airing.

    – 8 p.m. ROH 128,000 viewers

    – 9 p.m. TNA 353,000 viewers

    – 11 p.m. ROH 134,000 viewers

    – Midnight TNA 100,000 viewers

    Combined:

    TNA: 453,000 viewers
    ROH: 262,000 viewers 

  • On this day in pro wrestling history (July 9): Booker T wins WCW title, Fabulous Moolah regains WWF gold, ’82 Calgary Stampede

    By Brian Hoops, WrestlingObserver.com

    1933 – In Davenport, Iowa; Bronko Nagurski beat Wee Willie Davis

    1963 – The Crusher defeated Verne Gagne for the AWA World Heavyweight Title in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Also on the card, AWA Tag Team Champions Ivan Kalmikoff & Karol Kalmikoff beat Tiny Mills & Stan Kowalski, Dick the Bruiser beat Doug Gilbert, Don McClarty beat Maurice Mad Dog Vachon and Eddie Sharkey beat Joe Tomasso. Attendance was 8,063.

    1964 – At Memorial Hall in Kansas City; Dick the Bruiser beat Moose Evans 2 falls to 1, The Rat beat Wahoo McDaniel 2 falls to 1, Harley Race drew Rocky Hamilton (The Missouri Mauler) and The Lawman and Sonny Myers drew Bob Geigel and Bulldog Plechas

    1965 – Billy Hines & Bad Boy Hines over the Corsicans (Corsica Jean & Corsica Joe) to win the Southern Tag Team Title

    1966 – In Minneapolis; AWA Champion Mad Dog Vachon beat The Crusher, The Alaskan & Big K beat Billy Red Cloud & Doug Gilbert, Chris Markoff beat Steve Druk and Eddie Sharkey beat Guy Taylor

    1968 – In Davenport, Iowa at Municipal Stadium; The Crusher won a 9 man battle royal by eliminating Dr. X, Bill Watts beat Harley Race, Dr X beat Frankie Laine, Man Mountain Mike beat Tiny Mills and Dutch Savage beat Luke Brown

    1970 – In Kansas City, Kansas; Danny Little Bear wrestled Scandor Akbar, Rufus R. Jones & Pat O’Connor wrestled Baron Von Raschke & Oki Shikina and Harley Race took on Bob Geigel

    1977 – In Omaha, Nebraska; AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Jim Brunzell, Billy Robinson beat Bobby Duncum, Larry Hennig beat Roger Kirby and Chris Markoff beat Billy Francis

    1978 – In Green Bay, Wisconsin; Pat Patterson & Ray Stevens beat AWA Tag Team Champions Greg Gagne & Jim Brunzell by dq, Mighty Igor Vodik beat Buddy Wolff, Wahoo McDaniel & Frank Hill beat Blackjack Lanza & Bob Orton Jr and Super Destroyer Mark II beat Evan Johnson

    1982 – In Calgary, Alberta, Canada during the annual Calgary Stampede; AWA Champion Nick Bockwinkel beat Bret Hart by countout, Davey Boy Smith beat Dynamite Kid to win the World Mid-Heavyweight title, David Shultz beat Duke Myers, Bad News Allen beat Gerry Morrow and Mr. Hito & Bruce Hart & Keith Hart beat Danny Davis & Ken Wayne & Great Gama

    1985 – Ricky Morton & Robert Gibson defeated Ivan Koloff & Krusher Krushchev for the NWA World Tag Team Title in Shelby, North Carolina

    1986 – Fabulous Moolah defeated Velvet McIntyre for the WWF Women’s Title in Sydney, Australia

    2000 – Booker T defeated Jeff Jarrett to capture the WCW World Title in Daytona Beach, Florida.

    2001 – The APA defeated The Dudley Boyz for the WWF World Tag Team Title in Atlanta, Georgia

    2009 – Tara defeated Angelina Love and Velvet Sky for the TNA Knockouts Title.