Professional Wrestling
RESOURCE PAGE




 

 

 


Professional Wrestling
Former Wrestling Superstars Visit Zanesville 

Whiz News Southeastern Ohio - Dec 31 2:07 PM
The National Championship is on everyone’s mind, including a famous former World Wrestling Entertainment superstar. WWE’s The Animal traveled to Cardboard Heroes at the Colony Square Mall in Zanesvi...

Professional Sports
Evans Motor Sports has a new location 
Lahontan Valley News - Jan 02 12:20 AM
Jeremy Evans, owner of Evans Motor Sports and Repair, is enjoying the additional space and more professional look of his new building located at 300 E. Williams Ave.

Professional Photography
The secret of happy snaps 
Daily Telegraph - Jan 02 5:06 AM
Fiona Duncan signs up for a weekend photography course, while professional photographer Chris Caldicott selects the best cameras under £250.

Professional Development
NewGen Strengthens Team with Appointment of James Peeples as Senior Vice President, Business Development & Government ... 
[Press Release] Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance - 29 minutes ago
CHARLOTTE, N.C.----NewGen Technologies, Inc. today announced that it has appointed James Peeples to the position of Senior Vice President, Business Development & Government Relations, further adding depth and international experience to the team.

Professional Mistress
Crown's 'Don't Dress' is a breezy farce 
The Wichita Eagle - 1 hour, 23 minutes ago
Nobody does a French farce better than the witty Brits and "Don't Dress for Dinner" at Crown Uptown is a sophisticated but laugh-out-loud romp.

Professional Photographer
Documentary spotlights life of famed photographer 
Nashville City Paper - 50 minutes ago
Photographer Annie Leibovitz's intimate and often compelling portraits have graced the covers of Rolling Stone and Vanity Fair magazines since the ’60s, depicting musicians and celebrities in numerous remarkable and frequently incredible poses and situations.

Professional Cookware
A New Kitchen Gadgets Website Makes its Debut 
[Press Release] PR Web via Yahoo! News - Jan 02 4:00 AM
(PRWeb) January 2, 2007 -- Bakeware, cookware, small appliances, and numerous other helpful products.

Professional Organizer
Life Messy? She'll Toss Out Ideas 
Hartford Courant - 6 minutes ago
Professional Organizer Says She Grew Up In A Cluttered Home Remember when your mom yelled at you to clean up your room? Some of us, fearing our telephone privilege would be taken away, snapped to it. Others malingered a bit, and a few are still digging themselves out.

Professional Seo
SEO for Writers: The Written Path to Online Visibility 
ISEDB - Jan 02 5:31 PM
If you're a decent writer, you have a powerful search engine optimization tool right at your fingertips ... literally. It's the ability to create quality content, and used properly it can dramatically increase your website's visibility.

Professional Nanny
Wed, Jan 03 2007 
The Norman Transcript - Jan 02 9:23 PM
Photo by Patrick RiegerOklahoma's two floats, an all-star high school band, an Oklahoma City University dan...

Professional Services
Code4pc.com Offers Services that Fully Encompass a Business' Technological Needs 
[Press Release] PR Web via Yahoo! News - Jan 02 4:00 AM
(PRWeb) January 2, 2007 -- How many companies can boast professional Web site design services provided by the same tech gurus who built their computers?

Professional Matchmakers
Ricardo Lois' Best of Boxing 2006: Don't Expect Manny, Do Not Expect Much – Didn't Ya' Hear, Boxing is Dead 
East Side Boxing - Dec 26 1:30 PM
26.12.06 - Ricardo Lois, BoxingConfidential.com: Los Angeles -- I am not really sure what drives the need for human beings to develop and read year end awards and lists.

Professional Sound
Sound familiar? 
The Morning Call - 7 minutes ago
Predictions for the stock market in coming year are a lot like last year's. Many professional investors' stock market forecasts for 2007 are following a time-honored strategy: Restrain your expectations and you're less likely to be disappointed.

Professional Athlete
Breathing room for Oregon rape victims 
The Oregonian - 5 minutes ago
R ape rarely makes the news in Oregon, unless a celebrity or professional athlete is involved. It remains the nation's most underreported violent crime, hidden from view because of the high cost to victims of seeking help.

Professional Products
U.S. Demand for Cosmeceutical Products to Exceed $8 Billion in 2010 
[Press Release] Market Wire via Yahoo! Finance - Jan 02 12:39 PM
Demand for cosmeceutical products is expected to increase 8.5 percent per year to over $8 billion in 2010, propelled by a stream of new and technologically advanced product introductions offering age-defying and other appearance-enhancing benefits for an aging population. Limiting opportunities will be competition from alternative treatments, such as laser resurfacing and cosmetic surgery, which ...

Professional Translation
YOUR VIEWS: Of women and card playing 
La Crosse Tribune - Jan 01 10:13 PM
A gardener in Greenland last summer unearthed an unusually flat stone. He examined the stone further and spotted what appeared to be a carved message. Researchers concluded the garden was part of a centuries-old Viking settlement, and the stone was sent to Norway for professional assessment.

Professional Dress
Crown's 'Don't Dress' is a breezy farce 
The Wichita Eagle - 1 hour, 23 minutes ago
Nobody does a French farce better than the witty Brits and "Don't Dress for Dinner" at Crown Uptown is a sophisticated but laugh-out-loud romp.

Professional Football
The most valuable college football teams 
MSNBC - Jan 02 1:11 PM
Ohio State and Florida may be playing for the national championship of college football on Jan. 8 in the Tostitos BCS championship game, but the real winner by our calculations is Notre Dame.

Professional Resume
Suspension Recommended for Attorney for Allegedly Inflating Resume 
Law.com via Yahoo! Finance - 38 minutes ago
The D.C. Bar's Board on Professional Responsibility has recommended a 30-day suspension for attorney Gregory Hawn for allegedly padding his resume. In April, Legal Times reported that the D.C.

Professional Organizers
Life Messy? She'll Toss Out Ideas 
Hartford Courant - 7 minutes ago
Professional Organizer Says She Grew Up In A Cluttered Home Remember when your mom yelled at you to clean up your room? Some of us, fearing our telephone privilege would be taken away, snapped to it. Others malingered a bit, and a few are still digging themselves out.

Professional Skateboarders
The Weekend Warrior's "Terrible 25" of '06 
Coming Soon - Jan 01 11:42 PM
The Weekend Warrior tears apart 25(ish) of 2006's worst movies, including some you've never seen and some you should pray you'll never have to see.

Professional Wrestlers
"WRESTLERS ARE LIKE SEAGULLS" 
Kirkus Reviews - Jan 02 8:06 AM
Review Date: NOVEMBER 09, 2005 Publisher: Crowbar Press (360 pp.) Price (hardback): $24.95 Publication Date: 2005 ISBN (hardback): 0-9745545-2-9 Category: AUTHORS Classification: NONFICTION

All Categories

Profesional
Proffessional


 

Professional Wrestling

- Proffessional Wrestling

Here is an article on Professional Wrestling.

Professional Wrestling

Professional wrestling is a form of performance art in which the performers act out a scripted wrestling match. Modern professional wrestling usually features striking and other techniques, which are modelled after diverse sets of global wrestling and pugilistic styles.

Contents

  • 1 Rules
    • 1.1 Pinfall
    • 1.2 Submission
    • 1.3 Countout
    • 1.4 Disqualification
  • 2 Performers
    • 2.1 Mens' wrestling
    • 2.2 Womens' wrestling
    • 2.3 Midget wrestling
  • 3 Promotions
  • 4 See also
    • 4.1 Terminology
    • 4.2 Professional wrestling worldwide
    • 4.3 Lists of wrestlers
    • 4.4 Types of professional wrestling
    • 4.5 Fantasy professional wrestling
    • 4.6 Radio programs
  • 5 External links

Modern professional wrestling is commonly associated within a company (often referred to as a fed), where the participants create an entertaining show simulating a dueling match. The level of realism can vary from sports entertainment (the American World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) promotion) to stiff style (the Japanese strong style as exemplified by Antonio Inoki) to spotfests. In Mexico the dominant style is the stylized, theatrical Lucha libre.

The question of whether professional wrestling is a sport comparable to its freestyle, Greco-Roman, and collegiate counterparts can seem irrelevant, maybe even impossible, to compare as the key difference between both concepts is that professional wrestling's main focus is maintaining its audience and profiting as a business rather than as a form of athletic competition.

As opposed to a common sporting event, a professional wrestler's athletic prowess and skills are done more to prevent injury than to inflict it. In many cases, the victim of an attack in a professional wrestling environment is required to do more athletically than the one performing an attack on him. If the wrestler absorbing the attack is less skilled or less athletic, he/she may injure his/her partner or even himself.

Rules

The simulated nature of professional wrestling is only one of the many differences it has with traditional wrestling. Other differences can vary from company to company.

The assigned referee is often the one who controls the outcome of the match barring certain matches with special rules or for storyline reasons. A common storyline angle of this is a promotion owner or other high official modifying the stipulations of a match to invalidate a referee's decision, such as declaring it a no-disqualification match after a wrestler wins by disqualification. A "motto" in the pro-wrestling world used to describe the interpretation of the rules (actually more like loose guidelines) is: "You can't call what you don't see", implying that anything is justified as long as the referee doesn't see. This is often used as a plot twist to drastically change the momentum in a match. One of the better-known occurrences has a referee getting "accidentally" knocked senseless or thrown outside of the ring (often referred to as a "ref bump"). While he's stunned, one wrestler, usually a face, will suddenly have the match won, only to then have it robbed from them via outside interference, a foreign object, or some other unfair means. The referee, unaware of what happened, will recover just in time to notice a pin that reflects the new situation, and make an arduous three-count. A variation on this finish, the "Dusty finish" (after Dusty Rhodes, who frequently used such finishes as a booker), has the substitute referee making the three-count in favor of the face, only to have it overturned by the original referee. In addition to pinfall, a match can be won by submission, count-out, disqualification, or failure to answer a ten count.

Punching is permitted as long as the wrestler's fist is open. This is probably the most ignored rule in WWE, as referees almost never disqualify a wrestler for throwing closed-fist punches. Instead, the referee simply admonishes the wrestler to stop, which is rarely successful. In addition, wrestlers may only kick with the flat part of the foot, and "low blow" only refers to actually striking the crotch. If either wrestler is in contact with the ropes or if any part of the wrestler is underneath the ropes, all contact between the wrestlers must be broken before the count of five. This strategy is often used in order to escape from a submission hold, and also, more seldom, a wrestler can place his foot on (or under) the ropes to avoid losing by pinfall. Participants may try to abuse these rules, and it will often result in verbal or physical sparring with the ref.

Pinfall

In order to win by pinfall, a wrestler must pin both his opponent's shoulders against the mat while the referee slaps the mat three times. This is the most common form of defeat. Illegal pinning methods include using the ropes for leverage and hooking the opponent's tights, therefore they are popular cheating methods for heels. Such pins as these are rarely, if ever, seen by the referee and are subsequently often used by heels and on occasion by cheating faces to win matches.

Submission

Kurt Angle applies an ankle lock on Chris Benoit.

To win by submission, the wrestler must make his opponent give up, usually, but not necessarily, by putting him in a submission hold (i.e., leg-lock, arm-lock, etc.).

Passing out in a submission hold constitutes a loss by knockout. To determine if a wrestler has passed out in WWE, the referee usually picks up and drops his hand. If it drops three consecutive times without the wrestler having the strength to stop it from falling, the wrestler is considered to have passed out. At one point this was largely ignored, however the rule is now much more commonly observed. Often the third time, the WWE wrestler in the hold will fight their way out.

Also, a wrestler can indicate a submission by "tapping out," that is, tapping a free hand against the mat or against an opponent. The tapout was once common-place in professional wrestling, especially in the days prior to it becoming a predominately pre-arranged contest. However, following the decline of the submission-oriented catch-as-catch-can style from mainstream professional wrestling, the tap out largely faded, regaining prominence as a means of victory mostly in the face of the popularity of the Ultimate Fighting Championship in the early 90's.

Much like traditional finisher manuvers, a wrestler with a finisher submission is shown as better at applying the move, making it more painful or harder to get out of, despite some obvious similarity.

Countout

A countout (alternatively "count-out" or "count out") happens when a wrestler is out of the ring long enough for the referee to count to 10 or 20. The count is broken and re-started when a wrestler inside the ring leaves the ring.

If both wrestlers are outside the ring, the count will refer to both. If one of the wrestlers re-enters the ring, while the other remains outside, the count will continue for the one left outside. A common tactic, to buy more time outside the ring, is for a wrestler to re-enter the ring to restart the count, and then continue to fight outside the ring. If both wrestlers remain outside at the count of ten, both will be counted out. This is known as a double countout, or to a lesser extent, an "impossible draw".

If both of the wrestlers are lying on the mat and not moving, the referee may issue a ten count. One wrestler reaching his knees will break the count. If neither wrestler reaches their knees or feet, it is considered a draw, also known as a double knockout, or incorrectly, an "in ring count-out."

The countout rule indicates that a wrestler cannot win a match while any part of his opponent's body is not in the ring. This allows escape from pinfalls and submission holds, by grabbing hold of one of the ring ropes, thus forcing the referee to break the hold or stop the count. This is also why the referee will start a count once a wrestler has reached the top rope; he is out of the ring area.

The referee, in certain promotions, does not instrigate a count despite wrestler being out of the ring. This is usually after a large bump, where both wrestlers are taken down. This is, in kayfabe, to allow the contest to continue as neither wreslter would benefit from the count due to both wreslters being incapacitated temporarly. In reality, it is used to build supense in the audience and to allow the wrestlers to recover somewhat.

Common slang for walking out of the ring and leaving your opponent standing there, only to get purposely counted out yourself, is known as pulling a "Broadway".

Disqualification

Sabu attacks Rhino with a steel chair.

Offenses punishable by disqualification (or "DQ") include:

  • Performing any illegal holds or maneuvers, such as refusing to break a hold when an opponent is in the ropes, choking or biting an opponent, staying on the top turnbuckle, and repeatedly punching with a closed fist. These violations are usually subject to a referee-administered five count and will result in disqualification if not released before.
  • Any outside interference involving a person not involved in the match striking or holding a wrestler. If a heel attempts to interfere but is ejected from the ring by a wrestler or referee before this occurs, there is usually no disqualification.
  • Striking an opponent with a foreign object (unless the rules of the match specifically allow this).
  • A direct low-blow to the groin. (unless the rules of the match/company specifically allow this)
  • Laying hands on the referee or to an extreme case, often in special referee matches, laying any body parts on the referee.
  • Messing with an opponent's eye, such as raking it, poking it, punching it out or other several attacks to the eye.

In practice, the "rules" of the fight are often violated without disqualification due to the referee being "distracted" and not seeing the offense, or the referee seeing the offense but allowing the match to continue. In the WWE, a referee must see the violation with his own eyes to rule that the match end in a disqualification and the referee's ruling is almost always final. Indeed, it is not uncommon for the referees themselves to get "knocked out" during a match. While the referee remains "unconscious," rules are often violated at will. In some cases, a referee might disqualify a person under the presumption that it was that wrestler who knocked him out; most ref-KOs are arranged to allow a wrestler, usually a heel, to gain an advantage. For example, a wrestler may get whipped into a referee at a slower speed, knocking the ref down for a minute or so; during that interim period, the wrestler may pin his opponent for a three-count and would have won the match but for the referee being down. Also, the referee rarely disqualitfies the wrestler who knocked him down when the ref recovers.

If both participants (or teams) in a match continue to breach the referee's instructions, the match may end in a double disqualification, where both wrestlers or teams (in a tag team match) have been disqualified. The match is essentially nullified, and called a draw or, in certain storylines, a restart or extended wrestling period is made possible by an authority figure.

Performers

Mens' wrestling

The vast majority of professional wrestlers are men, and especially in the North American WWE, where they are usually large in size, often to extremes (see Big Show). Competitions or divisions are sometimes set up for men of similar wrestling styles. (eoj) Styles include that of technical, brawling, high flying, and luchador. However, matches involving different divisions are created, and are never refered to as unusual or against any rules, despite large differences in height or strength.

Womens' wrestling

Women have long participated in professional wrestling, first in woman-versus-woman matches that were low on the bill compared to mens' matches, and then later as managers or valets accompanying male wrestlers.

Womens' matches are now very common, at least in North America, with some woman-on-woman matches being at the top of the card, for example - the Women's Championship match was the main event of a WWE RAW broadcast at the end of 2004. However, in North American wrestling, men's competition is still much more highly valued and respected than women's wrestling.

Women sometimes tag-team with men in intergender matches, which are a common sight in North America. Due to the physical nature of the competition, intergender matches are rare.

There are few women tag-teams, however sometimes a few women create a stable, for example - PMS and Vince's Devils.

Midget wrestling

Midget wrestling has been a unique aspect of professional wrestling, and can be traced to professional wrestling's carnival and vaudeville origins. In recent years, however, the popularity and prevalence of midgets in wrestling has greatly decreased mostly due to major wrestling companies depriving midget divisions of any form of wrestling storyline or feud, although the WWE broadcast of SmackDown did feature a "Junior's division", in which midgets wrestled against each other, from 2005-2006. The "Junior's division" is no longer a part of Smackdown or the WWE. But it's still a popular form of entertainment in Mexican wrestling, mostly as a sideshow, so to speak. Some wrestlers may have their specific "mini me's", like Mascarada Sagrada and his midget counterpart Mascarita Sagrada, Alebrije has Quije, etc. Or there are cases in which midgets can become valets for a wrestler, and even get physical into a match from time to time, like Alushe, who often accompanies one of the greatest Mexican wrestlers, Tinieblas, or Kemonito, who is portrayed as CMLL's (Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre) mascot, and is also a valet for a popular wrestler on the rise called Mistico.

Promotions

See: Professional wrestling promotion

The organizations that schedule and produce professional wrestling performances are known as wrestling promotions. Currently, the only major wrestling organizations left in North America are the United States promotions of WWE and TNA Wrestling (TNA) and the Mexican lucha libre promotions Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) and Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA). Of these, WWE is by far the largest and most influential throughout the world. While these organizations are the most prominent and popular, there are many other smaller, regional promotions known as "indies", many of which are official territories of the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA). Other major independent promotions include Ring of Honor (ROH), Pro Wrestling Guerrilla (PWG), and Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW).

Wrestlers from Canada are generally of comparable quality as those of the United States. Canada's promotions include Stampede Wrestling, Border City Wrestling, Pure Wrestling Association, International Wrestling Syndicate, UWA, and Blood, Sweat and Ears.

Outside North America, there are other federations throughout Europe and also in Japan, Australia, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and the rest of the Caribbean.

The traditional Japanese style differs from the American style in that it is portrayed more as a combat sport than as pure entertainment. The term strong style was coined by New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) promoter Antonio Inoki. Inoki incorporated more martial arts and real fighting techniques to his arsenal, and performed the moves and strikes with more muscle stiffness than in traditional American style, in an effort to make his pro wrestling look more like a real fight. A style known as King's Road was created by Giant Baba which is similar but slightly different. This style is the dominant style used by All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) descendants.

See also

  • History of professional wrestling

Terminology

  • Foreign objects (e.g. folding chair)
  • Professional wrestling aerial techniques (e.g. Shooting star press, Moonsault)
  • Professional wrestling attacks (e.g. Leg drop, Superkick)
  • Professional wrestling double-team maneuvers
  • Professional wrestling finishers
  • Professional wrestling holds (e.g. Boston crab, Pinfall)
  • Professional wrestling match types
  • Professional wrestling tag team match types
  • Professional wrestling schools
  • Professional wrestling slang
  • Professional wrestling throws (e.g. Backbreaker, Brainbuster, Chokeslam, Cutter, DDT, Facebuster, Neckbreaker, Piledriver, Powerbomb, Powerslam, Stunner, Suplex)

Professional wrestling worldwide

  • Professional wrestling in Australia
  • Professional wrestling in Canada
  • Professional wrestling in Japan
  • Professional wrestling in Mexico
  • Professional wrestling in United Kingdom
  • Professional wrestling in the United States

Lists of wrestlers

  • List of professional wrestlers
  • List of professional wrestling stables
  • List of real names of professional wrestlers

Types of professional wrestling

  • List of professional wrestling styles
  • Real Pro Wrestling
  • Backyard wrestling

Fantasy professional wrestling

  • E-wrestling

Radio programs

  • Wrestling Observer Live
  • talkSPORT

External links

  • WrestlingGoneWrong.com - The Reality of Professional Wrestling
  • website of documentary Catch - the hold not taken on the history of pro wrestling
  • Pro Wrestling Discussion Forums - Wrestling news and talk.
  • DMOZ
  • ProWrestlingHistory.com
  • Pro Wrestling Title Histories
  • Obsessed with wrestling - biographies, results, title histories, etc
  • CBC Digital Archives – Cross Country Smackdown: Pro Wrestling in Canada
  • Extreme Insider TNA, RoH, WWE, and Indy wrestling news
Search Term: "Professional_wrestling"

 

Former Wrestling Superstars Visit Zanesville 

Whiz News Southeastern Ohio - Dec 31 2:07 PM
The National Championship is on everyone’s mind, including a famous former World Wrestling Entertainment superstar. WWE’s The Animal traveled to Cardboard Heroes at the Colony Square Mall in Zanesvi...
Happy New Year From Our Entire Staff 
Wrestling News - Jan 01 12:42 PM
On behalf of everyone associated with this site, I would like to take this opportunity to wish all of our readers a very happy and healthy New Year. Here's to hoping 2007 will be a great year in professional wrestling!

Sport by sport recap 
The Daily World - Jan 02 11:16 AM
Twin Harbors athletes enjoyed banner years in wrestling, softball, track and soccer, among other sports, in 2006. Mat Classic in the Tacoma Dome was truly a classic for Twin Harborites, with no fewer than seven area wrestlers advancing to the state title round.

Tec Labs product fights ‘super-bug’ 
Albany Democrat-Herald - Jan 02 11:19 AM
An Albany company has developed an over-the-counter wound care treatment it believes will greatly reduce the incidence of methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureas, a “superbug” that is spreading rapidly across the country, especially among amateur and professional sports teams.