Press Ramblings Retro recaps Wrestling Terms Xtra Q & A PPV Elevator Contact
Home Columns
GET ELITE Feedback
ROH News Book Review
Indy NEWS DVD Review
Your Ad Here


NWA NEWS AND NOTES
by Bill Behrens @ 10:45 AM on 11/2/2009

WWW.NWAANARCHY.NET     NWA ANARCHY SITE

 

 

WWW.NWA-WILDSIDE.COM   NWA WILDSIDE SITE

 

 

WWW.MYSPACE.COM/NWA_ANARCHY   NWA ANARCHY MYSPACE SITE

 

 

WWW.NWAWRESTLING.COM      NWA SITE

 

 

 

I record weekly segments on WHO’s SLAMMING WHO @

http://www.myspace.com/whosslammingwho/     and

 http://www.whosslammingwho.podomatic.com/    (for podcasts)

updated MONDAYS, and then available for at least two weeks 

Also recording are Jim Cornette, Jody Hamilton, Lanny Poffo, and the rest…..even Kenny Bolin.

 

This week on INSIDE THE BEHRENS BUBBLE, Bill discusses TNA booking again, and TNA’s lack of brand identity, how it is building it’s businesses, the “Impact” of Hulk Hogan, how a recent  TNA’s TV show’s quarter hour breakdown helps prove some of what Bill has discussed before, if properly interpreted.

 

A new site is up to showcase the wrestlers I represent for wrestling bookings and personal appearances.  Please visit

www.sbibookings.com

 

Myspace 

http://www.myspace.com/billbehrens

Twitter  https://twitter.com/WilliamBehrens

Facebook   http://www.facebook.com/home.php?ref=home#/profile.php?id=811455526&ref=profile

 

 

 

I’ve posted various wrestling videos on myspace & youtube:

 

 

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.channel&channelid=11840534

 

 

 

http://www.youtube.com/user/nwawildside

 

 

Sabu was NWA World Champion and in December of 2000 he came to NWA Wildside to defend the title over two nights. The first night vs Air Paris was a bad night for Sabu, so the next night we needed to explain the 1st night, see Sabu early (just in case) and hopefully pay it all off in the Main Event, which we did. We started with Sabu attacked by AJ Styles, Onyx, Tank Abbott, Jeff G Bailey & Steve Martin. AJ took the World Title and we shot a vignette, then AJ wrestled Air Paris & eventually Sabu.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlnvP5kA4is  Set up

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SiahEBfpvRQ  vignette

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbt4LiT0om4  match

 

 

 

Seth Delay vs Delirious vs Sal Rinauro vs Matt Sydal (Evan Bourne) vs Ray Gordy (Jesse) vs Altar Boy Luke (Luke Hawx) NWA Wildside 4th Anniversary Show 2003, a sudden death, double elimination match for the NWA Wildside Junior Heavyweight Title  

 

Also featured Daizee Haze, Azrael & referee Mike Posey

 

PT 1  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lex2ZkTf9fM

 

PT 2  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e-Nq4v3LDjE

 

PT 3  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=839d_3caSIs

 

PT 4  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm50BjXTp9o

 

 

 

 

 

The

NWA Anarchy event schedule for October-December 2009 is as follows.
  
November 7 and 21 - TV Tapings
December 5 and 19 - TV Tapings
January 2, 2010 - Season's Beatings

All events will take place at the NWA TV Arena,

4236 Level Grove Road, Cornelia, Ga.

Bell time is 8pm. For tickets call 706-476-2017

 

 

 

NWA ANARCHY FRIGHT NIGHT 2009 REPORT by Larry Goodman (

10-31-09)

 

During its 11 year history, Fright Night in Cornelia has a rich tradition of great gimmick matches filled with excess violence and bloodshed. And while the 2009 version was no exception, the true magic, the match that made it memorable, was the pure wrestling skill displayed by Phil Shatter and Caprice Coleman in the NWA National Heavyweight Title match, no doubt one the best matches I’ve seen this year.

Attendance was 160 compared to 210 last year, thus continuing the trend of all the major shows of 2009 drawing less than they did in 2008. There was a question going in as to whether running on Halloween night would hurt or help the crowd. My sense is it was a minor negative. This year’s show didn’t have the Halloween-themed gimmick match Fright Night is known for. Whether that would have meant a few more tickets sold is anybody’s guess.

More troubling, was the general lack of electricity associated with big show nights in Cornelia. Too many times, good action was received with little or no response, especially during a long and lackluster first half. The show went over 3 and ½ hours, and that’s just too long except for rare occasions. It's like the genie is out of the bottle. Anarchy could benefit from more quality and less quantity.

The top three matches were going to make or break the show, and they all came through in the clutch, each match in its own unique way.

(1) J-Rod & B.J. Hancock won a Tag Team Mega Rumble when J-Rod eliminated Andrew Alexander in 27:37. As the luck of the draw (cough) would have it, partners Posey and Delay started out. They arm wrestled. They had fun with a ringside fan in a Halloween mask that was holding up a sign for them. Destiny came out as a decoy, as the “fan” turned out to be Slim J in disguise. An awesome surprise that got a great pop. J jumped the rail and made quick work of his arch enemies, then dove over the top to eliminate himself. Jamie Lee, Stryknyn, Jay Clinton (with Mercedes Mosley), Jessco Blue and Chris King entered at one minute intervals. Stryknyn got tossed, and the babyface trio took turns teeing off on

Clinton. Lee’s punches suck. Mr. Black was next. He eliminated Lee and Blue and hit a devastating chokebomb on King. Black got rid of Manchild pronto, and ADD was done for the evening. They may be over with a segment of the fanbase, but they’re not
ready for Anarchy. Matthews was next. He potatoed Black with a wicked lariat.
Clinton cowered from Matthews to avoid taking the lariat for the zillionth time. Dany Only entered and shoved Matthews over the top. BJ Hancock and Andrew Alexander were next in. J-Rod entered and got rid of Only. Mike Mosley entered and tossed King. With all of four of their associates still in the match, Entourage became the odds on favorites to win. Steven Walters hit the ring like a house of fire. His superior athleticism was a breath of fresh air. Billy Buck was next. Buck eliminated Clinton with a bionic elbow. Black gave Hancock the chokebomb and Alexander tossed him out. Derrick Driver was last to enter. New Wave sent Black out with a double dropkick. Always the opportunist, Alexander snuck up behind Walters to dump him out. I didn’t see how it happened, but Buck was also history. Driver went out ugly, taking a dangerous upside down bump off the ropes. It was J-Rod
against Entourage (Alexander and Mosley), and J-Rod was taking a beating. A miscue saw Alexander accidentally put the finishing touch on Mosley. After two close calls, J-Rod finally eliminated Alexander to win. I liked the booking. Anarchy Mega Rumbles are always well booked, but with so many guys crammed into the match, there was no way around it going long, and the net effect was dilution of quality.

Talent and Money immediately attacked J-Rod. A swank move. The winners of the rumble earned a tag team title match later in the evening. Bill Behrens explained the champions had decided that later meant now.

(2) Talent & Money (JT Talent & Drew Pendleton III) beat J-Rod & BJ Hancock to retain the NWA Anarchy Tag Team Championship in
3:44. The champions exploited the challengers worn down condition. J-Rod took the heat. J-Rod shows great fire and he’s a top babyface everywhere he goes, but something about his appeal isn’t translating to Cornelia. At least not yet. Talent pinned Hancock after the Rodeo Driver.

(3) Bo Newsome beat Brodie Chase in
9:35. Chase dominated the much smaller and younger (less than half his age) Newsome with high impact offense. Bo made a nice aerial comeback, but Chase cut him off and hit a neckbreaker combo for a near fall. A rude boot to the face knocked Newsome off the apron. Chase pulled the straps down. Bo hit a slingshot sunset flip to score the slip-on-a-banana peel win. An OK match. Coming off that great match with Skirra Corvus two months ago, I thought Newsome was taking his game to another level, but it hasn’t happened.

Postmatch, Chase laid Newsome out with a Doctor Bomb. He was joined by Posey and Delay. Chase whipped Newsome with a belt until J made the save. The intensity wasn’t what it needed to be, so far as garnering huge sympathy for Bo.

(4) Skirra Corvus beat Hayden Young to retain the NWA Anarchy Young Lion’s Title in
12:04. On paper, this looked like a good program, but it never really took off, never really connected with the fans. Young was killing Corvus with all kinds of moves early, but you would have never known going off crowd reaction. Advantage Corvus, he went right for the Curbstomp. Young fought it off, so Corvus used a wheelbarrow facebuster for first of a slew of near falls. A wheelbarrow suplex by Young left both men in a bad way. Young hit a shoulder level Pounce, but Corvus got a foot on the ropes. Young crashed and burned on the Flying Squirrel and Corvus crushed him with the Curbstomp. Nice moves, but too long and way too choreographed.

(5) Mikal Judas pinned Kimo (with Jeff G. Bailey) in a servant match at
21:39. NWA Anarchy owner Jerry Palmer gets Kimo’s services for 35 days. Lots of brawling outside the ring with Judas dismantling Kimo like never before. Really made him suffer. Great facial expessions from Kimo here. Kimo used Sole Food to take over. Part of the storyline is Kimo stealing moves, but I doubt he’s been watching Chuck Taylor tapes. Kimo used a variety of martial arts stuff with a swinging neckbreaker thrown in. Crowd chanted Mikal’s name. It was the first babyface chant all night, and that's just weird for Anarchy. The had been quiet early, but this match had feeling, and the building was starting to cook. Judas made a monster comeback, hitting a back suplex and top rope lariat, each time, Kimo kicked out at one. Judas goozled Kimo for the chokeslam. Bailey jumped up to distract referee Wes Grissom. While Bailey was tussling with Grissom, Shatter ran in and
speared Judas. It took Kimo forever to cover, and Judas kicked out. A suplex into the turnbuckles earned a two count for Judas. Kimo answered with an STO for a near fall. Kimo tried for Judas’ El Crucifijo (Crucifix Powerbomb) finisher. Judas reversed it and border tossed Kimo halfway across the ring. Sheer devastation. Grissom made the count and signaled for the bell. Judas was announced as the winner. Match over. At least it should have been. There was no way to top that spot. What more is there? Plus, it had the poetic justice of Kimo’s thievery of moves backfiring. But that wasn’t the plan. Grissom screwed up. Kimo got a shoulder up a split second before the three. Bailey went nuts and Grissom restarted the match. The match went on for several more minutes. Kimo used the Information Extactor and Judas made the ropes. Judas got the pin with a pumphandle sidewalk slam. They did a good job of getting the crowd back, but there was no way to get
them back to where they were.

NWA Anarchy owner Jerry Palmer appeared on the ramp with the ax handle to block Bailey’s retreat. He told Bailey he was either leaving bloody or without Kimo’s mask. The crowd wanted Bailey’s blood. Bailey opted to cough up the mask, giving Palmer control of Kimo. “You belong to me, big boy.”

Intermission. The annual costume contest was won by an Edward Scissorshand character for the adults and a June bug for kids division.

(6) Shaun Tempers beat Ace Rockwell in a Last Man Standing Match (
23:02). These guys like working each other stiff, and they basically beat the hell out of each other. Rockwell was all over Tempers with the crowd chanting “Ace! Ace! Ace!” Tempers tagged Rockwell with a big right hand and unleashed the clubbing blows he’s so fond of. After a little ground and pound exchange, Rockwell brought an extension cord into play, but it ended up around Rockwell’s neck. Tempers hit a Temperpedic with the cord wrapped around Rockwell’s neck. Rockwell was up at eight. Rockwell busted out the airplane spin. Tempers was up at five the first time. He used it again, and they both stayed down for a nine count. One of the highlights was Tempers taping Rockwell’s arm to the ropes and beating his face in – a role reversal of the finish of the War Games at Hostile Environment. It looked sick. More chants for Ace and he was up at seven. Tempers gave
Rockwell a Tiger Driver on the ramp, but Rockwell struggled to his feet at eight. In the midst of all the mayhem, they managed to stack up a dozen chairs inside the ring. Rockwell bridged a table from the ring apron to the rail. He was ready to put Tempers through the table with a dive off the top, but Tempers got away. There were close calls where each guy barely escaped taking the other guy’s finisher into the chair salad. At this point, the Reverend appeared at ringside in a wheelchair piloted by Corvus. The insane spot was a superplex into the chairs that was total devastation. Neither man was up at 10. The ruling was first man up would win. Rockwell was almost up, when Azrael (wearing a Halloween mask) slithered up to the ring on his belly and took Rockwell’s leg out. Great finish. Brutal match.

(7) Phil Shatter (with Jeff G. Bailey) defeated Caprice Coleman to retain the NWA National Heavyweight Title in
15:30. Match of night. Nothing else was close - the physiques, the in ring storytelling, the technical execution, all major league in every respect. They did a feeling out process leading a clean break, and it was a beautiful thing to see. The action moved outside. Coleman popped the crowd with his baseball slide around the ringpost. Coleman went to the air with a slingshot leg senton, a jumping leg drop and a springboard crossbody. Coleman’s does his flying moves with an unusual degree of precision. He’s added size while losing none of his explosive leaping ability. Shatter wanted it on the ground, and he got it there after a sidewalk slam and a fisherman suplex. Shatter used a cobra camel clutch submission. Shatter hit a back suplex for a near fall. Coleman countered another suplex attempt with an inside cradle. When Shatter kicked
out, Coleman immediately caught him with a shining wizard. Shatter played possum and caught Coleman with a lariat. Coleman came right back with a huracanrana and it was both men down. Coleman used a combo of moves to set up the spin scissors kick for a near fall. Shatter planted Coleman with a spinebuster for a near fall. A series of reversals started with Shatter blocking a top rope huracanrana and ended with breathtaking near fall for Coleman. Coleman blocked the PTSD and hit That’s Life. Ref distraction by Bailey. Visual fall for Coleman. Coleman went for a springboard move, and Shatter caught him midair with a perfectly timed spear for the pin. Live by the sword. Die by the sword. Just a terrific match. My favorite Anarchy match of 2009.

(8) Shadow
Jackson beat Jeremy Vain in a dog collar match in 18:41 to win the NWA Anarchy Heavyweight Championship for the second time. Before the match, Palmer threatened to sick Kimo on Orion Bishop if he refused to leave ringside. Vain stalled and tried to keep his distance from Jackson at all costs. Jackson crotched Vain with the chain and gave him a Biel throw by the dog collar. The action spilled outside the ring, and Jackson came up bleeding heavily. Vain tried to hang Jackson with the chain. Vain whipped Jackson with chain and dug it into his eyeballs. Vain wrapped the chain around his fist and delivered six straight shots to Jackson’s eye (a nod to a previous blinding incident). Jackson’s face and white t-shirt were covered in blood. A “Shadowmania” chant erupted. Vain hit the VKO, but Jackson blocked his DDT finisher. After a shot into the ringsteps, Vain was also bleeding, and it was turning into a bloodbath. Jackson hit the
stunner. Bishop came back out. The fans chanted for Kimo. Bishop got on the apron, grabbed
Jackson and held him for Vain. Time stood still. Vain finally charged. Jackson ducked. Bishop took a bump to the floor. Jackson kicked out of Vain’s DDT. Jackson started no selling Vain’s blows. 1031. 1-2-3.

Vain and Bishop attacked
Jackson. Judas made the save. Palmer made a tag match for next week’s main event.

NOTES: NWA Anarchy returns in one week with a special tribute to the recently retired Iceberg, along with the already announced matches:

 

Judas & Jackson vs. Bishop & Vain

Delay & Posey vs. J & Newsome

YOUNG LIONS ELIMINATION:  Hayden Young, Aden Chambers, J-Rod, BJ Hancock & Azrael

Wild Bunch & New Wave vs The Entourage (Alexander, Mosley, Mr. Black & Clinton)

NWA ANARCHY TAG TEAM TITLE MATCH:  Talent & Money vs Rowdy Friends

Todd Sexton vs Jacob Ashworth

 

And much more

 

Ace Rockwell is booked for Ultimate NWA on November 7.

 

 

 

NWA ANARCHY TV EPS 194 ONLINE NOW!!!

 

 

http://nwaanarchy.net/nwaanarchy194.html

 

 

 

 

SHOW #523-194

 

MATCH #1  EL VETERANO 4 INTRERVIEW

MATCH #2  REV & SKIRRA INTERVIEW

MATCH #3  EL VET 4 VS CLINTON VS SKIRRA CORVUS

MATCH #4  TEAM ANARCHY INTERVIEW

MATCH #5  SETH DELAY  VS  SLIM J

MATCH #6  DELAY, CHASE & POSEY INTERVIEW

MATCH #7  WAR GAMES HIGHLIGHTS

 

 

 

 

 

APW/NWA ANARCHY

ROYSTON, GA 10-30-09 RESULTS & AFTERSHOCK

 

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYNxzvSG5fo

 

Big Nasty defeated John Gresham

 

Casey James defeated Alex Avereno

 

Jae Bryden defeated Aaron Lee

 

Kareem Abdul Jamar & Coby Boykins won by DQ over the Hate Junkies

 

Seth Delay & Jeremy Vain defeated Chris Damien & Zack Daniels

 

The Franchise defeated Ernie Robins & Jacob Ashworth

 

Chris King & Anthony Henry defeated Carnage & Brandon Parker

 

Next Week:

 

ADD, Shadow Jackson, Jacob Ashworth, and the return of Slim J!!!

PLUS Chris King vs Carnage for the Southern States Championship...Contract states that it will be king's FINAL SHOT AT THE TITLE

 

 

 

NWA Main Event

October 24, 2009 at nwame.com
Taped on October 1 and
October 15, 2009 at NWA Studios in Nashville, Tn

In ring opening by the new NWA ME announce team, “The Captain” Tyler Clemmons and “Mouth of the North” Aaron Camaro. Their voices were somewhat buried in the audio mix. The number two camera panned so quickly on the crowd shots that they were a blur.

(1) Matt Boyce retained the NWA Mid-America TV Title over
Chad Hyatt in 8 minutes. Boyce dominated early. Hyatt evidently told Clemmons the guy he looked up to was Will Owens. “You think a guy would maybe say Hulk Hogan or Ric Flair. In this guy’s case maybe John Tenta, but no, Will Owens,” said Camaro. Tenta must have been rolling in his grave. Camaro brought up the rich history of the NWA. “From George Hackenschmidt to Matt Boyce,” said Clemmons. Hyatt took over with knees to the breadbasket. Camaro said something was missing with Hyatt (talent maybe?), but he would be monster when he got it together. Camaro then referenced the “Barney” chant for Hyatt’s purple tights. “At least he’s got wrestling gear, you see a lot of guys these days that don’t even have it, but this is the NWA, NWA Main Event, only the best here tonight.” Hyatt used a corner splash (off camera) and a running leg drop for near falls. Camaro acknowledged the shake ups within NWA ME, but said he was legally barred from discussing them. On the comeback, Boyce hit a spinning leg lariat, then a neckbreaker for a near fall, then the flying body press off the top for the pin.

(2) Blake Roswell beat Taylor Marx in
4:15. The little guy, Marx used his agility and aerial to good effect but not for long. Roswell took over with power moves. They listed him as 6-2 and 250. I’m guessing 2 inches and 25 pounds of exaggeration, but a muscled up guy nevertheless. Roswell cut off one of Marx’s rallies with a Samoan Drop. Roswell kept cutting off the comebacks with high impact moves, eventually spearing Marx bigtime for the pin.

(3) White Tiger beat Razor X in
5:35. Video of a White Tiger. Crowd was going crazy for Tiger and he plays to them non stop. X looked like Glen Gilbertti after too many trips to the Sizzler buffet. X used the Matt Morgan alternating back elbows in the corner. I’ve been waiting for indie guy to rip off that move. X busted his butt on a guillotine leg drop. Nice finishing sequence to set up the Tiger Splash, which was right on the money.

(4) Mike Posey beat Corey Hollis to become the #1 contender for the TV Title.
JIP. Posey was hitting all his signature moves with the announce team putting him over huge for fluid movement and smarts. Hollis missed an enzuigiri but nailed Posey the second time around for a double down. Hollis hit Jimmy Rave’s Dusk Til Dawn (satellite headscissors into a crossface), but Posey made the ropes. Hollis hit a pair of buttefly suplexes. Posey countered number 3 with a draping double underhook facebuster for a near fall. They cut to a replay. Posey sat down on Hollis’ sunset flip and grabbed the ropes for extra leverage. Good match.

Roswell was interviewed by Clemmons with a funky background. “Rozilla here,” he said. A tad of Buff Bagwell in him with a strong southern accent. Said he was going to end Caleb Castle’s career, whoever that may be.

(5) Brully beat Terry Teague 3:55. The number two camera was stationed somewhere near the ceiling - a bit shaky at times but a cool angle that makes a nice change of pace. The badass black dude from
Harlem cut Teague off with a spinebuster. Camaro wondered if his parole officer knew his whereabouts. Teague was fighting off Brully’s powerbomb, so he improvised with a hotshot. Brully gave Teague a wicked kick to the face off the apron. He continued to batter Teague on the outside, but Teague moved and Brully rammed into the post. Comeback time. Brully caught Teague coming off the top and used a devastating inverted Whirlybird for the pin.

Clemmons was with “Five Star Prospect” Jay Popular. Thick southern accent. Popular said he had whipped everybody in
Alabama. Coming next week…

Clemmons interviewed Teague.

Clemmons - “How do you rebound from something like that?”
Teague- “Tonight just wasn’t my night.”

They ran two replays of Teague getting obliterated by Bully’s finisher, while Teague waxed strong about climbing to the top and feeling gold in his future. Priceless.

(6) “Wild Thing” Will Owens “Boogie Woogie Boy” Gary Valiant
13:30. It was all Boogie until Owens hiptossed him over the top at 3 minutes in. Big time Boogie chant. Owens alternated between making pin attempts and mimicking Boogie. Owens posted Post shoulder. Owens did a long arm submission and did it ever look weak. The announce team said Owens was trying to take away Boogie’s punching power and take the crowd out of the match. A collision of heads left both men down. Boogie fired up. It built to a Boogie’s going for a top rope body press that took out the ref when Owens ducked. He hit the Boogie Blaster and made his own three count, then pulled the ref over to count, and Owens kicked out at two. With the unidentified ref still very groggy, Owens countered Boogie’s sunset flip with a chain shot to the head. 1-2-3. Back from the commercial break with a tight shot of Boogie lying lifeless. Camaro said it was the result of repeated stomps to the head from Owens during the break. Security helped Boogie to his feet, and he staggered around unable to gain his equilibrium.

THOUGHTS: New season, hell, this is complete overhaul – new talent, new announcers and a new TV editor. Most of the major players from the previous “New Era”, the one that lasted all of 10 weeks, have disappeared. Shawn Shultz, Travis Sawyer, Tony Lucassio, Steve-O, Bully Douglas, Lani Kialoha, Scott Barry and Jason James are all gone for various reasons. I’m guessing Vic the Bruiser as well. From a roster that was far from strong to begin with, Boyce, Owens, Boogie, Tiger and Posey are the only holdovers. The new wrestlers on this show were imports, mostly from
Alabama best as I could tell. Roswell and Brully would make good additions to the heel side. Roswell is pushable based on his look alone. I see a tad of Buff Bagwell, although nothing approaching the raffish style and striking good looks of Buff in his prime. Brully is a thuggish brute, and that alone makes him unique in NWA ME. They need to keep the help wanted sign out for babyfaces. Marx is really small. Teague has jobber written all over him. For perverse hilarity, Teague’s interview was classic stuff. One of Hyatt’s big problems is the way he stands - flat footed with stiff legs. He simply does not move like a pro wrestler in the ring. No way it should have taken Boyce 8 minutes to beat him. Yo, Tiger, we get it that you're really over. You don't need to play to the crowd every 10 seconds. Clemmons and Camaro jelled better than I thought they would. I really like the way they put Posey over as a serious talent and their effort to make sense out of Owens lame submission in the main. Posey/Hollis hands down provided the best wrestling of the hour. The main event was OK. Boogie did his usual great selling, he’s way over with the fans, but there was dearth of action for such a long match. There was a gaping continuity problem from the previous season. To some extent, that was unavoidable with all the departures, but with all heavyweight title situation being left so up in the air at the end of the previous "season", it was criminal not to address it in some manner. The production had some cool innovations - the ceiling cam, the backdrop for the interviews, the Tiger video. The camera work was really rough in spots. The audio mix was off at times. Nothing experience can’t cure. They had a full house in the studio, and that always helps, but the hard camera was facing the side with most of the crowd. NWA ME TV is clearly a work in progress. Hopefully, it becomes a place for green but promising talent to gain much needed experience in front of the camera.

 

NWA MAIN EVENT TV w/former NWA World Champion, Mike Rapada, Mike Posey, Will Owens, Corey Holiis, White Tiger, Boogy Woogy Boy & much more!!!!!!

 

 

http://nwamaineventtelevis.blip.tv/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Princeton, Ky. - Big night of Professional Wrestling coming to Princeton, Ky. on Saturday November 14, 2009 with a belltime of 7:30 PM. The show is promoted by Joe Gray of West Kentucky Championship Wrestling, KBWA 00-4332 and is sponsored by the Kiwanis Club with Mike Porter, matchmaker.

 

Already signed for the main event:

 

Jeff Jarrett -vs- "Dirty" Dutch Mantell

 

also 5 other big matches!!

 

Referee:  Mike Posey

 



Yes?


Copyright © 2006-10 PWinsider.com All Rights Reserved.