Southern Championship Wrestling (Georgia)

Southern Championship Wrestling (SCW) was a professional wrestling promotion that was founded in Marietta, Georgia by Jerry Blackwell and operated from 1988 to 1990, and was continued by his successor, Joe Pedicino, who ran the promotion as Georgia All-Star Wrestling for another year.

Southern Championship Wrestling
AcronymSCW
Founded1988
Defunct1990
StyleRasslin'
HeadquartersMarietta, Georgia
Founder(s)Jerry Blackwell
Owner(s)Jerry Blackwell (1988–1990)
Joe Pedicino (1990–1991)
ParentAmerican Wrestling Association (1988–1990)
FormerlyAWA Georgia

Though short-lived, the group showcased some of the top talent from the American Wrestling Association and National Wrestling Alliance as well as notable on-air talent including Pedicino, Rick Stewart, Rhubarb Jones, Paul Heyman, and booker Buck Robley. It was one of the top independent organizations in Georgia during the late-1980s, rivaling Jody Hamilton's Deep South Wrestling, and the state's last territory-era promotion prior to the collapse of the NWA territory system.

History

Southern Championship Wrestling was established in Georgia by Jerry Blackwell in early 1988. Blackwell, then a star in American Wrestling Association, had run shows under the "AWA Georgia" banner the previous year using talent from the AWA. One of its biggest shows was held at the Cobb Civic Center in Marietta and was headlined by Blackwell, Wahoo McDaniel, Sgt. Slaughter, The Iron Sheik, Curt Hennig, Jerry "The King" Lawler, and The Original Midnight Express (Dennis Condrey and Randy Rose). Condrey and Rose were scheduled to appear in SCW as the AWA World Tag Team Champions, however, the angle was dropped when Condrey was unable to appear. His place was taken by Comrade Busich and introduced by their manager, Paul E. Dangerously, as "Ravishing Randy and Comrade Busich, the substitute Original Midnight Express."[1]

Blackwell eventually began promoting on a full-time basis with involvement from Joe Pedicino and others. The first events and TV tapings were held in January 1988;[2] the second TV taping (January 24) was headlined by Bruiser Brody and drew 630 fans.[1] Matches from these shows were first shown on a weekly syndicated TV program, Southern Championship Wrestling from Georgia, which aired live on certain TV stations. Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer called these first tapings "a pretty lively and fun to watch indy show, and has better caliber wrestling than most indies".[3] The first Southern Heavyweight Champion, "Gentleman" Chris Adams, won the championship[4] by defeating Buck Robley in a tournament final on June 25, 1988, in Columbus, Georgia. The first Southern Tag Team Champions were crowned in a tournament final that same year in Macon, when "Wildfire" Tommy Rich and Ted Oates defeated Bob Orton, Jr. and "Dirty" Dick Slater.[5] The show was taped mostly at Miss Kitty's in Marietta as well as occasional shows at The Memorial Gym in Rome, Georgia.

Territorial reach

Given the constraints of the NWA territory system, with the Southeast controlled by Jim Crockett Promotions, and the national expansion of World Wrestling Federation now in full swing, there was little opportunity for SCW to develop a larger territory of its own. The promotion was mostly limited to the southern Georgia area with regular shows in cities such as Alpharetta, Atlanta, Columbus, Georgia, Griffin, Macon and Marietta, Georgia;[5] most of its television tapings took place at Gordon Clements' Alpharetta Auction Barn and Miss Kitty's Saloon in Marietta. Within its first three months, SCW was running between five and seven shows every two weeks and sold out shows in Marietta on at least two occasions.[3][6]

Notable talent

The Bullet (left) and Mr. Wrestling II (right), seen here with Scott Armstrong (center), were among the stars who competed for Southern Championship Wrestling.

With Blackwell's connections to the AWA and, to a certain extent, various NWA members, the promotion sported one of the top rosters in the Georgia independents. Austin Idol, Akio Sato, Bob Orton, Jr., David Sammartino, "Pretty Boy" Doug Somers, "Raging Bull" Manny Fernandez, and Boris Zhukov & Soldat Ustinov were among the AWA veterans who appeared for the promotion in addition to wrestlers from the Central States and Mid-South territories. Other stars included "Outlaw" Joel Deaton, Nick Busick, Ranger Ross, Joey Maggs,[7][8] and Thunder and Lightning (Steve Lawler and Dino Minelli). SCW held the distinction of airing some of Bruiser Brody's final televised matches before his 1988 murder in Puerto Rico; SCW television footage was used on PWTW's "Bruiser Brody Tribute Show" that fall.[9] Terry Funk and the Von Erich family also made appearances on early TV tapings.[2] Promoter Rex Luther later provided undercard talent as well.[10]

SCW also had important backstage and on-air personnel. Bill Dromo was introduced as the figurehead president. Randy "Pee Wee" Anderson was one of its referees.[11] Rhubarb Jones, a popular morning radio DJ in Atlanta, and Joe Pedicino served as announcers, and were later joined by Rick Stewart from Central States Wrestling. A 22-year-old Paul Heyman, who was also working for Windy City Wrestling in Chicago,[12] appeared as "Paul E. Dangerously" alongside The Original Midnight Express (Dennis Condrey and Randy Rose)[13] before moving on to World Championship Wrestling to feud with the Jim Cornette and The "New" Midnight Express (Bobby Eaton and Stan Lane). Most importantly, Buck Robley returned to pro wrestling after a four-year absence to become the promotion's booker. SCW also marked the final appearance of longtime NWA star Mr. Wrestling II who feuded with Robley before retiring in 1989.[14] Their feud began with Robley's surprise debut in the promotion by having himself sealed in a wooden crate and "delivered" to the ring while Mr. Wrestling II was being interview with Joe Pedicino. When the masked wrestler investigated the box, he was attacked by Robley.[15] As booker, Robley introduced other creative ideas such as a "$10,000 Slam Battle Royal" held at the Marietta Civic Center.[16]

Rivalry with Deep South Wrestling

SCW's talent pool and popular television program, in addition to limited national exposure via Joe Pedicino's Pro Wrestling This Week,[9][16] saw the promotion quickly rise to the top of the Georgia independent circuit. The number one "outlaw" promotion at the time was Jody Hamilton's Deep South Wrestling out of Marietta. Hamilton and his training facility had a working relationship with Jim Crockett Promotions and enjoyed the use its stars. On the independent scene, both promotions competed for talent and shared many of the same wrestlers. Mr. Wrestling II, for example, jumped back and forth between SCW and DSW during this period.[17]

Within two months of SCW's debut, Dave Meltzer's Wrestling Observer was reporting "a major war" between the two organizations. Deep South Wrestling ran on Channel 69 which was a competitor against the station that aired Pedicino's "Pro Wrestling This Week". The rival station had created its own Saturday night wrestling bloc to compete directly with Pedecino's show, but failed to challenge him in the ratings. For this and other reasons, such as Pedicino airing SCW programming, he and his co-host Boni Blackstone were drawn into the Blackwell-Hamilton war. In February 1988, DSW parodied Pedicino and Blackstone on its television program with the following skit;

On a recent Deep South Wrestling show, they made fun of Joe Pedicino and Bonnie Blackstone. They did a skit with a guy in an easy chair pretending to be Pedicino, but getting stuck in his chair and needing help to get out. Blackstone was parodied as a total bimbo. Southern countered by showing a clip of The Invader vs The Assassin, with Pedicino saying, "This is the Puerto Rican Assassin because there is nobody named The Assassin in the United States that can wrestle," a dig at Jody Hamilton, the group's headliner.[3]

SCW also poked fun at Crockett's promotion on occasion. In an appearance by Michael Hayes of The Fabulous Freebirds, he joked with an SCW crowd "[The NWA] may be the major league, but their checks are minor league."[1] The year-long rivalry between SCW and DSW ended when, following an in-ring injury, Hamilton sold off the promotion in 1988.[5]

Demise

Blackwell continued to operate SCW throughout the steady decline of the National Wrestling Alliance. By end of the decade, however, the NWA's decades-old territory system had ended while the WWF came to dominate the U.S. wrestling industry. Losing interest in the promotion, Blackwell decided to close down SCW in early 1990. It was the last-ever territory-era promotion to run in the state of Georgia.[5]

Georgia All-Star Wrestling

Shortly after Jerry Blackwell pulled out of SCW, Joe Pedicino decided to continue on by himself. In May 1990, the promotion was relaunched as "Georgia All-Star Wrestling". Though no longer having access to AWA talent, Pedicino was able to bring in former wrestlers from Jim Crockett Promotions as an announcer for the promotion. Future WCW star Marcus Bagwell made his debut in the promotion under the name Fabian.[18] He was also able to retain many of SCW's former Georgia-area stars. These were mostly independent wrestlers such as Jimmy Holiday, Tony Zane, Billy Starr, John Michaels.[19] Joel Deaton, Nick Busich, and Steve "The Brawler" Lawler.

In early 1990, Pedicino hired Scott Hudson and Steve Prazak as announcers for the promotion. According to Hudson in a later interview, both men had been fans of "Pro Wrestling This Week" and impressed Pedicino when they volunteered to replace the regular announcer following a poor performance at an GASW show in Carrollton, Georgia. Initially working without pay, they were eventually hired full-time. With their experience in radio and television, they became valuable members of the promotion. Pedicino continued running GASW until 1991 when he and former USWA commissioner Max Andrews decided to start a new promotion, the Global Wrestling Federation, in Dallas, Texas.[20]

Alumni

Male wrestlers

Birth name Ring name(s) Tenure Ref
Christopher Adams Chris Adams 1988
Ted Allen The Nightmare 1989 [5]
Marcus Bagwell Fabian 1990–1991 [5]
Jerry Blackwell Crusher Blackwell 1988–1990
Larry Booker Moondog Spot 1988
Phil Buckley Buck Robley 1988 [5]
Nicholas Busick Nick Busick
Comrade Busich
1988–1991
Ray Canty Kareem Muhammad 1988
William Cruickshanks Bill Dundee [21]
Edward Denton The Grappler 1988
Emanuel Fernandez Manny Fernandez 1988
Thomas Gilbert Jr. Eddie Gilbert 1988
Frank Goodish Bruiser Brody 1988 [3]
Darryl Gower Steve "The Brawler" Lawler 1988–1991 [5]
Joseph James The Bullet 1988
Joseph James Jr. Scott Armstrong 1988
Joel Jones Joel Deaton 1988–1991 [5]
Richard Link MEB / Man Eating Beast 1988
Charles Kelley Chick Donovan 1988
Joseph Magliano Joey Maggs 1988 [5][7]
James Manley Jim Powers 1988
Richard Morton Ricky Morton 1988 [3][13]
Robert Orton Jr. Bob Orton 1988 [5]
Steve Prichard Steve Prichard 1988 [5]
John Richardson Johnny Rich 1988
Thomas Richardson Tommy Rich 1988 [5]
Robert Ross Jr. Ranger Ross 1988–1990 [5][7]
David Sammartino David Sammartino 1989
Akio Sato Akio Sato 1988
Michael Seitz Michael Hayes 1988
Lawrence Shreve Abdullah the Butcher 1988 [3]
Douglas Somerson Doug Somers 1988
Ken Timbs Ken Timbs 1988
Curtis Thompson Curtis Thompson 1990–1991
Richard Van Slater Dick Slater 1988 [5]
John Walker Mr. Wrestling II 1988 [5]
Tony Zane Mr. Atlanta 1988–1990 [5]
Unknown Barry Turner 1988
Unknown Billy Black
Fatback Festus
1990–1991 [5]
Unknown Chris Walker 1990–1991 [5]
Unknown Chuck McCall 1988
Unknown Eddie Sweat 1988
Unknown Firewalker 1988
Unknown Gerald Finley 1988
Unknown Grizzly Boone
Cousin Grizzly
1990–1991 [5]
Unknown Jamie Kyle 1988
Unknown Jim Boss 1988
Unknown Jim Bryant 1988
Unknown Jimmy Powell 1989 [5]
Unknown Jon Michaels 1988
Unknown Mike Golden 1989 [5]
Unknown The Red Shadow
Unknown Rhama Brown 1988
Unknown Steve Bennett 1988
Unknown Ted Oates 1988 [5]
Unknown Terry Leland 1990–1991
Unknown Tim Ashley 1988
Unknown Wild Bill Smith 1988

Stables and tag teams

Tag team/Stable(s) Members Tenure(s)
The Batten Twins Bart Batten and Brad Batten 1988
Blazers Ray Lloyd and R.D. Swain[5] 1990–1991
Brute Force Slammer and Jammer[5] 1990–1991
Dixie Mafia Mike Golden and Big Daddy[5] 1990–1991
Georgia Power Nightmare Ted Allen and Jimmy Powell[5] 1989
The Hillbillies Fatback Festus and Cousin Grizzly[5] 1990–1991
The MOD Squad Basher and Spike 1988–1990
Thunder & Lightning Steve Lawler and Dino Minelli[5] 1988–1990
The Substitute Midnight Express Comrade Busich and Randy Rose[13] 1988
PYTs Fred Avery and James Bryant[5] 1990–1991
Zebra Warriors[5] Zebra Warrior #1 and Zebra Warrior #2 1988

Managers and valets

Birth name Ring name(s) Tenure Ref
Phil Buckley Buck Robley 1988
Paul Heyman Paul E. Dangerously 1988

Commentators and interviewers

Birth name Ring name(s) Tenure Ref
Scott Hudson Scott Hudson 1990–1991
Warren Jones Rhubarb Jones 1988
Rick Stewart Rick Stewart 1988
Joe Pedicino Joe Pedicino 1988–1991 Ring announcer
Steve Prazak Steve Prazak 1990–1991

Referees

Birth name Ring name(s) Tenure Ref
Randy Anderson Randy "Pee Wee" Anderson 1988


Other personnel

Birth name Ring name(s) Tenure Notes
Jerry Blackwell Jerry Blackwell 1988–1990 Promoter[22]
Phil Buckley Buck Robley 1988 Booker
William Dromo Bill Dromo President
Joe Pedicino Joe Pedicino 1988–1991 Promoter
Company name to Year
Company name: Years:
Southern Championship Wrestling 1988–1990
Georgia All-Star Wrestling 1990–1991
Notes
^ Indicates they are deceased.
^ Indicates they died while they were employed with Southern Championship Wrestling.
AWA ^ Indicates they were part of a talent exchange with American Wrestling Association.
NWA ^ Indicates they were part of a talent exchange with National Wrestling Alliance.

Championships and programming

Championships

ChampionshipNotes
SCW Heavyweight Championship The heavyweight title of SCW. It was established in 1988 continued to be defended within the promotion until 1990.[5]
SCW Southern Tag Team Championship The tag team title of SCW. It was established in 1988 continued to be defended within the promotion until 1990.[5]

Programming

ProgrammingNotes
Southern Championship Wrestling from Georgia (1988–1990) Syndicated, also occasionally broadcast live on certain Georgia stations
gollark: … that would do it, why did I never think of that... but you still need room for the ship component stuff.
gollark: Happily, you can construct more tanks on site from resources there, but I ran into issues of the docking port orientations getting messed up, and wobbliness.
gollark: The annoying thing with using Simple Construction to build ships is that you need tanks big enough to hold all the fuel and components of the ship you build at once.
gollark: There are mods for resource sharing between local ground bases, I think.
gollark: Just harvest 5 times its mass to use in mass drivers.

References

  1. Meltzer, Dave, ed. (February 1, 1988). "Southern Championship Wrestling". Wrestling Observer.
  2. Meltzer, Dave, ed. (January 11, 1988). "Other". Wrestling Observer.
  3. Meltzer, Dave, ed. (February 15, 1988). "Southern Championship Wrestling". Wrestling Observer.
  4. "Chris Adams Wrestling Biography". GentlemanChrisAdams.com. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  5. Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  6. Meltzer, Dave, ed. (March 14, 1988). "Southern Championship Wrestling". Wrestling Observer.
  7. Oliver, Greg (October 16, 2006). "SLAM! Wrestling: Joey Maggs dead at age 39". SLAM! Sports. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  8. ""A life that other people dream of ...." - The Joey Maggs Interview". TomZenk.net. March 2000. Archived from the original on October 28, 2009.
  9. "Pro Wrestling This Week! (PWTW)". Territories (Pre-1990). PWChronicles.com. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  10. Luther, Rex. "I Lived My Dream". Guest Columnists. 1WrestlingLegends.com. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  11. Meltzer, Dave, ed. (January 25, 1988). "Other". Wrestling Observer.
  12. Loverro, Thom. The Rise & Fall of ECW: Extreme Championship Wrestling. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006. (pg. 17-18) ISBN 1-4165-1058-3
  13. Meltzer, Dave, ed. (February 29, 1988). "Other". Wrestling Observer.
  14. Mooneyham, Mike (July 24, 2011). "Mr. Wrestling II Was No. 1 In The Hearts Of The Fans". News. OklaFan.com. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  15. Andrews, Michael (August 6, 2011). "SLAM! Wrestling: NWA Fanfest full of old-school enthusiasm". SLAM! Sports. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  16. Muldoon, Ryan. "Pro Wrestling This Week - 5/26/1988". Death Valley Driver Video Review #150. Death Valley Driver Video Review. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  17. Kociaba, Bill (2007). "The Assassin - Interview". Kayfabe-Wrestling.com. Archived from the original on 2007-10-10.
  18. Symkus, Ed and Vinnie Carolan. Wrestle Radio U.S.A.: Grapplers Speak. Toronto: ECW Press, 2004. (pg. 35, 81, 134, 148, 201, 204) ISBN 1-55022-646-0
  19. Da Costa, Norman. "Pssst! Keep it quiet but Mr. Perfect won." The Toronto Star. 3 May 1990: C5
  20. Wojcik, Alan (2008). "Extensive Scott Hudson Interview". AlanWojcik.com. Archived from the original on 2008-09-26.
  21. "An exclusive interview with indy wrestler Sir Robert Dundee!". DDTdigest.com. Retrieved November 27, 2011.
  22. Lentz III, Harris M. (2003). Biographical Dictionary of Professional Wrestling (2 ed.). McFarland. p. 40. ISBN 0786417544.

Further reading

  • Hamilton, Joe and Scott Teal. Assassin: The Man Behind The Mask. Hendersonville, TN: Crowbar Press, 2006. ISBN 0-9745545-3-7.
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