Wrestling Tournaments
Lancashire wrestling :
Lancashire wrestling is an historic wrestling style
from Lancashire in England. Many consider it the
foundation of catch wrestling, professional and
amateur wrestling.The style included groundwork
and had the reputation of being an extremely fierce
and violent sport. Sources show that there were
some rules trying to safeguard the wrestlers from
serious injury. For instance, there was a ban on
breaking an opponent's bones.In the counties to
the north, Cumberland and Westmorland wrestling
developed with rules designed to minimise injury
to the participants.
World Championship Wrestling :
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) was an American
professional wrestling promotion which, in its proper
form, existed from 1988 to 2001. Although the name
"World Championship Wrestling" had been
used as a brand and television show name by various
National Wrestling Alliance (NWA)-affiliated promotions
(most notably the Charlotte, North Carolina-based
Jim Crockett Promotions) since 1983, it was not
until five years later that an actual NWA-affiliated
promotion called World Championship Wrestling appeared
on the national scene, under the ownership of Atlanta,
Georgia-based media mogul Ted Turner.
Although World Championship Wrestling was a brand
name used by promoter Jim Barnett for his Australian
promotion, the first promotion in the United States
to use the World Championship Wrestling brand name
(though it was never referred to as "WCW")
on a wide scale was Georgia Championship Wrestling
(although Vincent James McMahon's Capitol Wrestling
Corporation did in fact use the name in some house
show promotion).
This promotion, owned primarily by Jack Brisco and
Gerald Brisco and booked by Ole Anderson, was the
first NWA territory to gain cable TV access. In
1983, Georgia Championship Wrestling changed the
name of its television show (and thus its public
face) to World Championship Wrestling since it was
already starting to run shows in "neutral"
territories such as Ohio and Michigan. Although
many in the business felt that Anderson was mismanaging
the company, Georgia Championship Wrestling had
managed to compete against the other major territory
trying to go national (Vince McMahon's WWF).



