International Championship Wrestling
Acronym | ICW |
---|---|
Founded | 1978 |
Style | American Wrestling |
Headquarters | Lexington, Kentucky |
Founder(s) | Angelo Poffo |
Owner(s) | Angelo Poffo (1978–1984) |
International Championship Wrestling was an independent professional wrestling promotion based in Lexington, Kentucky that operated from 1978 until 1984. It was run by WCW Hall of Famer Angelo Poffo, the father of Randy Savage and "The Genius" Lanny Poffo.[1] Throughout its history, ICW was considered an "outlaw" promotion, in which International Championship Wrestling was not a member of the National Wrestling Alliance and promoted shows in direct competition against NWA regional territories.[2]
History
The promotion was founded in 1978 as a rival to Ron Fuller's Southeastern Championship Wrestling and Nick Gulas NWA Mid-American territory, extending into Verne Gagne's American Wrestling Association and Dick Afflis' World Wrestling Association territories by 1981. Later on they'd come in direct competition with Jerry Lawler and Jerry Jarrett's Continental Wrestling Association[1] as well, operating in their territories and even managed to get several wrestlers to leave Southeastern and the CWA to join ICW.[3] This, among other issues, would result in a series of lawsuits between Poffo and other NWA-affiliated organizations during the late 1970s and early 80s.[4]
The main stars of ICW were Poffo's sons Randy (better known as "Macho Man" Randy Savage) and Lanny (better known as "Leaping" Lanny Poffo) who frequently traded the promotion's heavyweight title between each other;[5] in fact only two other men (Ronnie Garvin and Paul Christy) held the ICW World Heavyweight Championship in the 6 years the title existed. While Randy and Lanny were the focus of the federation, it did feature many other stars such as Ronnie Garvin, Crusher Broomfield (later known as One Man Gang and Akeem), Bob Orton, Jr., Bob Roop, Rip Rogers, "Pistol" Pez Whatley, Ox Baker, George Weingeroff, and the Devil's Duo (Jeff Sword and Doug Vines) with their manager Izzy Slapawitz.
Elizabeth Hulette, who would later gain fame in the WWF and WCW as Miss Elizabeth, got her start in professional wrestling as an on-camera host (using the name "Liz Hulette", as she was known to her friends while growing up) of ICW's weekly TV show where she also started her romance with Randy Savage.
In 1984 the promotion closed down due to dwindling attendance and its assets were bought by Jerry Jarrett and Jerry Lawler. Due to the fans' knowledge of the extremely bitter rivalry between ICW and CWA, Randy Savage was able to migrate to the CWA and begin a memorable feud with Jerry Lawler that established Randy Savage as a world-class superstar.[1]
Same name different promotions
Paul Christy, the wrestler who had ended Randy Savage's final reign as ICW World Champion, started a new ICW when Poffo's promotion folded. He ran the promotion for a few years with little publicity or success before closing it down in the late 1980s.
Another promotion called International Championship Wrestling operated out of Boston in the late 1980s, promoted by Angelo and Mario Savoldi, and Mario's son Joe Savoldi. After forming a working agreement with World Class Championship Wrestling, the Boston-based ICW was renamed International World Class Championship Wrestling (IWCCW). It included such stars as: The Russian Brute, Tom Brandi, Mike Kahula, Tony Rumble, and Nikolai Volkoff.
International Championship Wrestling (ICW) is also a lesser known promotion based in Cloverdale, BC. Past wrestlers include Buddy Wayne, and Chico Alvarez.[6][7]
Championships
Championship: | Last Champion(s): | Active From: | Active Till: | Notes: |
---|---|---|---|---|
ICW World Heavyweight Championship | Lanny Poffo | May 10, 1978 | 1984 | [8] |
ICW United States Tag Team Championship | Bart Batten and Johnny Wilhoit | June 14, 1978 | 1984 | [8] |
ICW United States Heavyweight Championship | Paul Christy | 1981 | 1984 | [8] |
ICW Television Championship | The Great Tio | September 9, 1980 | 1983 | [8] |
ICW Southeastern Heavyweight Championship | Lanny Poffo | May 26, 1979 | 1984 | [8] |
ICW Southeastern Tag Team Championship | Bob Roop and Big Boy Williams | July 1979 | August 1980 | [8] |
Alumni
Wrestlers
- Barry O
- Bob Orton, Jr.
- Bob Roop (Also worked as "The Best")
- Boris Malenko
- Buddy Landel
- Chief Tapu
- Crusher Broomfield
- Doug Vines
- Ernie Ladd
- Gary Royal
- George Weingeroff
- The Great Kabuki
- The Great Tio
- Izzy Slapawitz
- Jeff Sword
- Lanny Poffo
- MAX THUNDER
- Mike Doggendorf
- Mr. Wrestling I
- The Miser
- Ox Baker
- Paul Christy
- Pez Whatley
- Randy Savage
- Ratamyus
- "Hustler" Rip Rogers
- Ron "The One Man Gang" Garvin
- Ron Wright
- Super Duper Mario
- The Sheik
- Tojo Yamamoto
- Tony Falk
- Tony Peters
- Willie Monroe
- Jeff Turner Dr. X
- Sam Diamond (Spiderman)
- Bill Martin (1981 rookie of the year)
- Pamela Watson
- Julia "BlackWidow" Hoskins
Tag teams
- The Batten Twins – (Brad Batten and Bart Batten)
- The Convertible Blondes - (Pez Whatley, Rip Rogers and Gary Royal)
- Devil's Duo – (Doug Vines and Jeff Sword)
- The Samoans - (The Great Tio and Chief Tapu)
Announcers
- Tim Tyler[9]
- Edgar Wallace[10]
- Liz Hulette
- Robert Phillips Jr. (timekeeper)
Referees
- Sam Diamond aka Jack Barnett
- Jim Davis
- Emmitt Couch
- George Hill
References
- 1 2 3 Kristian Pope & Ray Whebbe (2003). The Encyclopedia of Professional Wrestling: 100 Years of History, Headlines & Hitmakers (2nd ed.). Krause Publications. p. 219. ISBN 978-0873496254.
- ↑ Meltzer, Dave, Tributes II: Remembering the World's Greatest Wrestlers. Champaigne, Illinois: Sports Publishing LLC, 2004. (pg. 213) ISBN 1-58261-817-8
- ↑ Hornbaker, Tim (2007). National Wrestling Alliance: The Untold Story of the Monopoly that Strangled Pro Wrestling. ECW Press. ISBN 978-1550227413.
- ↑ Johnson, Weldon T. and Jim Wilson. Chokehold: Pro Wrestling's Real Mayhem Outside the Ring. Philadelphia: Xlibris Corporation, 2003. (pg. 513) ISBN 1-4010-7217-8
- ↑ Nagasaki, Kendo. The Grapple Manual: Heroes and Villains from the Golden Age of World Wrestling. London: Wiedenfeld & Nicolson, 2005. (pg. 55) ISBN 0-297-84419-9
- ↑ ICW Results of matches - 1997
- ↑ ICW Results of matches - 2000
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imvHncm8N_U&list=PL737sy3f9oYYBW92QrW0owgxHRbB2yENg&index=38
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imvHncm8N_U&list=PL737sy3f9oYYBW92QrW0owgxHRbB2yENg&index=38