Posts Tagged ‘NWA’

Billy Corgan’s NWA Files New Trademark

Since October, Billy Corgan’s National Wrestling Alliance has been developing their own characters and storylines. Much of what the company has been doing in 2018 has centered around new NWA World Heavyweight Champion, Nick Aldis, and his crusade to defend the title 20x in a 60 day period.

The events surrounding the NWA are documented weekly through the promotion’s “10 Pounds of Gold” YouTube series.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qt250SjxGb4

New NWA Trademarks Filed

According to a report from PWInsider, Billy Corgan’s production company, Lightning One, has applied for a new trademark. The trademarked name is “the Dumont Network”, sometimes referred to as “the Forgotten Network”.

From 1946-1956, the Dumont Network was the 3rd network on the air along with NBC and CBS. It was also the first network to air professional wrestling. The filing of this particular trademark fits with Corgan’s interest in returning to the glory years of the NWA.

Nick Aldis To Defend NWA Championship Against 20 Opponents In 60 Days

The National Wrestling Alliance has announced a unique venture for reigning NWA World Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis. Starting on Sunday, February 11th, Aldis will travel the globe and defend his championship against 20 opponents in a 2-month timeframe.

“The Aldis Crusade” will be documented by the NWA through it’s critically acclaimed series, 10 Pounds of Gold.

THE NATIONAL WRESTLING ALLIANCE and IDOLMANIA SPORTS MANAGEMENT PRESENTS THE ALDIS CRUSADE WITH TEN POUNDS OF GOLD

In an announcement made today via video, the current, reigning and defending NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis is embarking on a unique challenge with the famed Ten Pounds of Gold. Starting on Sunday, February 11th at Championship Wrestling From Hollywood, Nick Aldis is setting out to reestablish the idea of the traveling Worlds Heavyweight Champion. The gauntlet Aldis plans to run entitled the Aldis Crusade with Ten Pound of Gold will see the champion defend the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship over sixty days against twenty plus different opponents across different continents from North America, Europe and Asia.

Represented by the legendary Universal Heartthrob Austin Idol, Nick Aldis won the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship on December 9th, 2017 joining the list of legends and Hall of Famers like Lou Thesz, Jack Brisco, Dory Funk Jr, Terry Funk, Harley Race, Ric Flair, Sting, Ricky Steamboat, AJ Styles, Ken Shamrock, Blue Demon Jr, Adam Pearce, Colt Cabana, Tim Storm and more to hold the Ten Pounds of Gold.

This entire crusade will be documented by the NWA through it’s critically acclaimed series TEN POUNDS OF GOLD at YouTube.com/NWA bringing you the matches, stories, and personalities of this Aldis Crusade. Details of the promotions, opponents and public appearances will be shared via Aldis and the NWA’s social media. The goal is to make this crusade an interactive journey using all platforms to connect fans with the most historic Worlds Championship in existence.

https://youtu.be/-iO6BvHC38Y

NWA Title Match Announced For This Weekend

Billy Corgan’s National Wrestling Alliance held their first NWA World Heavyweight championship match last weekend.

52-year-old champion, Tim Storm, barely defeated Nick Aldis to retain the title at an event from Championship Wrestling from Hollywood. He’ll be defending his championship again this weekend from Clarksville, TN.

NWA Open Call

Earlier this week, the NWA put out an open challenge for independent talent to challenge for Tim Storm’s championship. Several wrestlers, such as Michael Elgin and Joey Janella, threw their names in the hat.

Here is the video submitted

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vb5ZswbA9QM&feature=youtu.be

The challenger’s name is Jocephus Brody. He’s a nearly 300lbs man who once competed for Impact under the name Beauregard.

Tim Storm vs. Nick Aldis NWA Championship Match (Video)

Billy Corgan took over ownership of the National Wrestling Alliance on October 1st, 2017. Yesterday, the first NWA World Championship match under his ownership took place during a taping of Championship Wrestling from Hollywood.

Billy Corgan’s NWA

Billy Corgan is working with former Impact Wrestling and WWE writer, Dave Lagana, on the project. The promotion has released several mini-documentaries through their YouTube channel as of late to build towards this match.

Tim Storm (c), the 52-year-old journeyman wrestler who also works as a history teacher, defended the title against Nick Aldis. A former GFW and TNA World Champion, Aldis threw his hat in the ring for an NWA title shot earlier this month.

The NWA streamed the match live on Facebook. The title match starts around the 7:30 mark below:

Billy Corgan Talks About The Future Of The NWA Brand

Earlier this week, Billy Corgan joined the Busted Open Sirius XM radio show to discuss the National Wrestling Alliance and his future plans for the brand. Here are the highlights:

– The NWA will start running shows in the Spring of 2018 and they will be streamed online for free. The plan is to be “totally independent” of other promotions. Corgan spoke with the existing NWA affiliate organizations and decided those agreements will not be renewed in an effort to move forward as standalone company.

– Corgan intends to sign talent to contracts and understands he’ll need to invest considerable money if he wants established stars, but he also sees talent development as a longterm initiative.

– Having learned from his time in TNA, he plans to execute his own vision for what pro wrestling should be in 2018 without ‘seven different layers of politics.’ Everybody on the roster needs direction or they will grow unhappy and go elsewhere.

– He recognizes the wrestling fanbase is aging (40’s and 50’s) and believes the key to longterm growth targeting a younger demographic.

– Corgan feels pro wrestling is not very respected in mainstream pop culture but his name recognition will help that effort.

– He describes himself as a “Paul Heyman Guy” and put over Heyman as one of the best talent scouts in pro wrestling history. He said Dave Lagana has a great eye for talent with his experience in Hollywood, WWE and TNA.

Busted Open with hosts Dave Lagreca, Bully Ray & Larry Dallas can be heard weekdays from 2p-4p Eastern Time only on SiriusXM Rush Channel 93 and is available any time on demand on the SiriusXM App.

You can listen to the full interview here:

https://youtu.be/mV9Sfu5uocU

NWA President Confirms Sale To Billy Corgan

NWA President Bruce Tharpe has released a statement on his Facebook page regarding Billy Corgan’s purchase of the promotion. You can read the full statement here.

“As everyone knows by now – Billy Corgan and I have agreed on principle regarding his acquisition of the NWA brand. This decision comes after many weeks of negotiation and deep consideration.”

Current State of the National Wrestling Alliance

The NWA has earned revenue in recent years through their on-demand streaming service NWA Ringside. The service offers on-demand viewing of many classic NWA matches.

There are still several small promoters who belong to the Alliance, although none that were part of the group during their glory days. Tharpe had previously developed a relationship with New Japan Pro Wrestling, which saw the NWA title defended in Japan in 2013.

If Billy Corgan is buying in, he’ll have some type of plan. Corgan hasn’t posted to social media in over a month.

“With the capital and business acumen that Billy Corgan brings to the table – I am confident that he has the ability to take the NWA to the next level. And I have promised to do all I can to help him succeed. I ask you to join me in supporting the new NWA regime in the future,” Tharpe said.

WWE Survivor Series — Where Legends Are Born & Moments Are Made

In 1987, WWE presented their first ever “Survivor Series” event, the first non-WrestleMania pay-per-view event, originally designed to steal viewers away from their main competition at the time, NWA’s “Starrcade,” which was the south’s version of “WrestleMania” (even though Starrcade came first) and was WWE’s attempt to throw down the gauntlet to the pay-per-view industry.

Basically put, if you were a pay-per-view provider and you decided to carry Starrcade, you would not be able to carry WrestleMania, a proven success in the pay-per-view industry.

That was the beginning.

From there, throughout the years, a number of historical events would take place at a Survivor Series event.

In no particular order, you can point to single Superstar debuts such as The Undertaker in 1990, which was also the debut of the infamous Gobbeldy Gooker. Which was the more famous of the two, well, I’ll let you decide.

1996 saw the debut of “Rocky Maivia,” to this day arguably the biggest cross-over name to ever emanate from the world of sports entertainment. At the time, while he was touted as being the first-ever third generation performer, and as “Good Ole’ JR” would say, “that’s gonna be the man, right there! That’s blue-chipper, right there!” with all of the enthusiasm the only Jim Ross could muster, oh how true those words would come to be as time went on.

One year later, the most infamous moment perhaps in all of WWE would take place. A moment that certainly began the shift in the WWE vs. WCW “Monday Night Wars” would take place, as not only did Bret Hart get “screwed” in what would become known as “The Montreal Screwjob,” but in many ways, that became the birth of the “Mr. McMahon” character, one that without he, the “Stone Cold” Steve Austin character may have never reached the heights that he would go on to achieve throughout his illustrious career.

In 1999, WWE’s first ever Olympic gold medalist, Kurt Angle, made his official in-ring pay-per-view debut, defeating Shawn Stasiak in the second match on the card.

In 2002, the Survivor Series featured another “first,” as this would be the first time that we were treated to a new gimmick match known as the “Elimination Chamber.” A man notorious among the wrestlers within the profession, just a few months ago the match concept was thrown out, large in part — according to various rumors — because of how unforgiving the structure was for those who had to actually compete inside it.

Most recently, the big “debut” of a match, concept or character took place at the November 18, 2012 edition of the WWE Survivor Series pay-per-view, which took place in Indianapolis, Indiana, as three men who would become known as “The Shield” made their official WWE main roster debut. Those three men would become known as Roman Reigns, Seth Rollins and Dean Ambrose.

Just to show how important those three men are, one is involved (as a Team Captain, no less) in the main event of this year’s Survivor Series, which takes place tonight from the Scottrade Center in St. Louis, Missouri.

That man is Seth Rollins.

Another one of the former Shield members, Dean Ambrose, is in what is being billed as arguably the legitimate co-main event of the evening, as he collides with another rising up-and-comer, Bray Wyatt.

And that leaves Roman Reigns.

Well, while he’s not officially booked on the actual card for tonight’s show, let’s just say there are a lot of rumors going around that claim we just may see him involved on the show tonight in some form or fashion after all.

Finally, that leaves two other names.

First up, the hometown boy. St. Louis’ own “The Viper” Randy Orton is rumored to make his return to WWE, after taking a brief hiatus to film a WWE Studios project, “The Condemned 2.”

Last, and absolutely not least, is “The Icon.”

While yours truly is not holding his breath and is going to take a “wait and see” approach before getting overly excited, rumors on the internet over the past few days insist that a certain Crow-painted style performer will make his very, very highly-anticipated WWE pay-per-view debut tonight at the Scottrade Center.

That’s right, folks. “The man they call Sting” is rumored to make his WWE debut, after all these years, at the same show that has produced so many memorable debuts, characters, matches and moments. If, in fact, “The Stinger” does make his WWE debut on tonight’s show, this writer has his new favorite Survivor Series moment of all-time.

We’re just hours away! Make sure to keep it locked right here at SEScoops.com for the most extensive, in-depth, live results coverage of tonight’s WWE Survivor Series 2014 pay-per-view!

Until then, leave your feedback in the “Comments” section below, and don’t forget to add me as a friend on Facebook at Facebook.com/MattBooneWZR and/or follow me on Twitter @MBoone420.

Enjoy the show, everybody!

Dory Funk Jr. Speaks On Terry Funk’s Reputation, Run As World Champion & More

The following are highlights of a new In Your Head Wrestling Radio interview with WWE Hall Of Famer Dory Funk Jr.:

Was it intentional that your brother Terry Funk was the more hardcore wrestler and you were the more technical wrestler, or was that just your personalities?: “I guess it probably reflects our real personalities. You wouldn’t believe it, but we both had the same teacher, who was my father, Dory Funk, Sr. He had a side of him that was a great wrestler, he was an amateur wrestler from Indiana University and had a terrific wrestling career, but he also was the king of the Texas Death Matches. Some of the bloodiest battles I’d ever seen in my life took place when I was a kid in Amarillo, Texas, watching my father. So, I guess my brother picked up one side of what my father taught, and I picked up the other side.”

What was it like to have a four-year run as NWA World Champion?: “There is nothing like being in the ring performing for the wrestling fans…It’s what you do all the hard work in wrestling for; it’s for the performance. That’s the most pleasure in wrestling. It’s not like it was a grind; it was a pleasure. At that time, with the leadership of the National Wrestling Alliance and Sam Muchnick, every place I went was a first-class trip. It was the best hotels; it was fabulous money and a fabulous way of life. It gave me the opportunity to provide my family will all that they needed at that time. I enjoyed every minute of it, especially the time in the ring. There is another part of it that you mention, and that is the part of being away from home, and that’s a sacrifice that you have to make, but I think it was good for everybody. I think it was good for family, I think it was good for me, and I certainly enjoyed it and had a wonderful time doing it.”

You can check out the complete interview above.

  • HUGE BACKSTAGE NEWS: WWE To Make HULK HOGAN The NEW RAW GM?! [Full Story >>]
  • Harley Race Speaks On Confronting Hulk Hogan, His Last Conversation With Owen Hart

    The following are highlights of a new WGD Weekly interview with WWE Hall Of Famer Harley Race:

    The incident at Starrcade ’83, where it was in question as to whether he would show up for his match with Ric Flair: “The thing on me not being there, it was all just a big rib to start with. I just wanted everyone there to think that I wasn’t going to be there, because at that point in time, there was a board of directors, and the board had thought it was time to make a rotation with the title, and I just wanted everyone there to believe that maybe I wasn’t going to be there…truthfully, I don’t know if I told Ric or not, you can ask him. I’m sure have at some point in time, I couldn’t let that little lie rest still after all these years.”

    Confronting Hulk Hogan backstage at an event as the WWF made the move “across territory lines” in the mid 1980’s: “In confronting the Hulkster, he was the type of guy, that he was being paid to do what he did, and that is how he looked at it. He didn’t look at it as though he was running roughshod over everyone else out there. I confronted him about all that garbage. There was no push come to shove or anything. We never got into anything that far into it. Talent wise, he was as good as there was out there in that era…I was a wrestling style champion, and the Hulkster was a talking style. That was the two sides of it.”

    Going to work for Vince McMahon and the WWF and how the “King” gimmick came about: “When it first came up, I thought the easiest way out of this was just for me to come up with an idea that was so far out in one direction or the other that Vince and his group wouldn’t go along with it. So, I said, I want to be the King, I want to come in and win a big tournament, and I want the crown, and then that’s how it turned, with that, how could you not go on with it.”

    Owen Hart’s passing, and a conversation he had with him while he was working backstage at that event: “Who the god knew it would be my last conversation with Owen. With him it was always about talking about his father and what they did up there in the Winnipeg area and me coming in and out of there. The Hart Family is as good of a family as there ever was on the face of the earth and they’ve got a lot of kids that were involved in the wrestling part of it. It is just a horrible, horrible thing when stuff like that happens… He didn’t mention (being uncomfortable), that was the amazing part of it. It could’ve been me, it could’ve been anyone else. No one knows when the man up above wants to call your name.”

    Becoming a manager in WCW: “I had been as high or higher than almost anyone I think, even still today. It sounds like I’m blowing smoke, you know where, but I had done everything feasibly possible to do in wrestling and to be able to take another guy like Vader or Luger or whoever and be able to help move them up to that top position, it just continued the Harley race version of wrestling. It kept it alive, it kept me alive.”

    Check out the complete interview above.

    In-Studio Interview With The Shield, Latest “The #ScrapYard” Podcast, More

    – The Onnit podcast recently conducted an in-studio interview with The Shield.

    – The following matches are being advertised for the WWE live event on January 18th in Cincinnati, Ohio:

    Randy Orton (c) vs. John Cena (WWE World Heavyweight Championship)
    Goldust & Cody Rhodes (c) vs. The Real Americans
    Kane vs. Big Show

    – Former NWA Champion Adam Pearce has added episode three of his new “The #ScrapYard” podcast to his official YouTube channel. Anyone interested in checking that out can do so below:

    http://youtu.be/12cU-WyJSP8

    Former NWA Champion Launches “The ScrapYard” YouTube Series (Debut Edition)

    Former NWA Heavyweight Champion “Scrap Iron” Adam Pearce has launched a new YouTube Series that he is calling “The ScrapYard.”

    In the debut edition of “The ScrapYard,” which you can watch below, Pearce answers questions that he describes as “the good, the bad and the stupid.”

    http://youtu.be/ygDUyb58etQ

  • Leaked WWE Memo Reveals Stuff That Is NOT Allowed To Be Done On TV
  • Former NWA Champion Headed To WWE Performance Center Next Week

    According to various reports, former NWA Champion Adam Pearce is scheduled to appear at the WWE Performance Center in Orlando, Florida this coming week to serve as a special guest trainer.

    Pearce spoke about the gig in a recent message posted on his official Twitter account. Pearce tweeted:

  • Wrestler Talks About How Triple H Was Before He Was Famous
  • NFL Legend Criticizes WWE After Watching RAW, Morgan/Hero Note, Mick Foley

    – Former TNA star Matt Morgan and recently released WWE NXT star Chris Hero (aka Kassius Ohno) are scheduled to headline the next NWA-Florida Underground event in Tampa, Florida this Friday, November 29th. For more information, visit FUWrestling.com.

    – WWE Hall Of Famer Mick Foley is scheduled to make an appearance at the Kalamazoo Wings hockey game on Friday, January 24th. For more information, visit MLive.com.

    – Retired NFL quarterback Joe Thiesmann criticized the current WWE product in a new tweet he posted while watching WWE RAW this past Monday night. “Raw needs more wrestling and less gum flapping,” wrote the NFL legend, which ended up being covered by The Washington Post. For more on that story, visit WashingtonPost.com.

  • Triple H Flips The Hell Out Backstage At RAW – Find Out What Happened!
  • Dusty Rhodes Claims He Inspired The Rock, WWE Looking To Fill New Position

    – WWE Hall Of Famer “The American Dream” Dusty Rhodes posted an interesting tweet on his official Twitter account on Tuesday afternoon. Rhodes wrote the following, “If the dots were all that matter[ed], then I wasted 44 years. Where would The Rock be, any many others? Statement made!”

    Rhodes is referring to the infamous polka dots he wore during his WWE run in the early 1990s. The ring attire was considered a “rib,” or an inside joke by Vince McMahon to Rhodes, as Rhodes competed against WWE for so long in the original NWA. Rhodes saying, “where would The Rock be?” was apparently a statement regarding the influence his infamous “bionic elbow” had on The Rock, who later popularized his own “People’s Elbow” as a finishing move in many of his WWE matches. Evidence of this can be seen in the conversation following the tweet, as a fan replied by saying, “The ‘People’s Elbow’ [was] inspired by ‘The American Dream’ brotha!” to which Rhodes replied, “so true.”

    You can view Rhodes’ initial tweet below:

    – WWE is looking to hire a Vice President of Digital Video Strategy, according to a new tweet posted on the official WWE Twitter account on Tuesday afternoon. WWE tweeted the following:

  • Update On If The Rock Will Return To WWE For A Match At WrestleMania XXX
  • Adam Pearce Speaks On Seven Levels Of Hate Documentary, Politics In Wrestling & More

    The following are highlights from a recent interview with Adam Pearce:

    On when he got the idea that he wanted to do a documentary on the Seven Levels Of Hate matches with Colt Cabana: I would say about halfway through. We knew going through the matches themselves that Cabana and I were doing something that was special in terms of the wrestling itself. Just by the feedback and the buzz we had wrapped around the thing. and then once the dramatics, if you will, began to kick in behind the scenes and things were happening that I knew were going to impact what we were doing, I thought it was a good idea to sit down and make sure we were able to document this. People were asking questions and wanting to have answers to things that we weren’t in position to tell at that point. Here we are know, almost a year removed from it, and I wanted to make sure I could tell it as completely as I could.

    On the politics that got involved during the series: Things happened and it took away from it for all the wrong reasons. Again, I get it and having been in the bubble for so long you’re right there on top of it. People have become emotional attached to whatever issue they’re dealing with and I understand all of that. At the end of the day, it comes down to business. Bottom line is professional wrestling is a business. It is designed and made available to us to make money. And I understand all of the other things that people are attracted to the business about and for and the notoriety and the spotlight but at the end of the day, you want to do the best thing to put money in the coffers. And I certainly think we were on the right track — and when I say me I mean me and Colt Cabana — and obviously there was an opposition to that and it’s pretty well documented in the movie.

    On how mentally tough the wrestling business can be: You don’t think about that when you get into it. And then here I am coming up quickly on 18 1/2 years and it would be comical if it wasn’t so sad. In a lot of ways it’s pathetic because on the independent level we’re not talking about millions of dollars. We’re talking about, the lucky ones, the ones who are able to make a living on the independents and I consider myself lucky enough to be part of that group, we’re still not talking about seven figures annually. We’re talking about relatively modest amounts of money. No one is getting rich off of what we’re doing and a lot of it seems foolish off as a result of that. And I can see if we’re talking big money deals and there’s a lot riding on things and some cases there are but for the most part we’re talking about ego. Ego. Ego ego ego. It’s terrible.

    On his current relationship with the NWA: I don’t have one. And I think on a number of different levels that’s sad. Of course, there’s a number of people still involved with the brand that I know. I’m a big fan of their champion now Rob Conway. I think he’s a hell of a person first and foremost, a great wrestling and a great choice to be champion. I wish he was being allowed to do more with that belt. I think the way he travels and gets around he could be doing similar things with it that I did. I don’t get the sense that they’re interested in any type of business with me and frankly, you know, I think we spelled it out pretty clearly in the DVD how we all feel.

    Check out the complete interview online at BetweenTheRopes.com.

    New Matches Announced For Upcoming WWE Battleground PPV — Click Here!