NWL Midget Championship

Last updated
NWL Midget Championship
Details
Promotion National Wrestling League
Date established1995
Date retired1999

The NWL Midget Championship was the midget professional wrestling title in the National Wrestling League promotion. It was first won by Hollywood Miles "Vader" Glencoe who defeated Little Salami (with manager Professor Egon Ecton) in 1995. The title was defended primarily in the Mid-Atlantic and East Coast, most often in Hagerstown, Maryland, but also in Pennsylvania and West Virginia until its retirement in 1999. There were 4 recognized known champions with a total of 4 title reigns. [1] [2]

Midget wrestling Professional wrestling genre

Midget wrestling is professional wrestling involving dwarves or people of short stature. Its heyday was in the 1950s and 1960s, when wrestlers such as Little Beaver, Lord Littlebrook, and Fuzzy Cupid toured North America, and Sky Low Low was the first holder of the National Wrestling Alliance's World Midget Championship. In the following couple of decades, more wrestlers became prominent in North America, including foreign wrestlers like Japan's Little Tokyo.

Professional wrestling entertainment form that mimics contact sports

Professional wrestling is a form of performance art and entertainment that combines athletics with theatrical performance. It takes the form of events, held by touring companies, that mimic a title-match combat sport. The unique form of sport portrayed is fundamentally based on classical and "catch" wrestling, with modern additions of striking attacks, strength-based holds and throws and acrobatic maneuvers. Much of these derive from the influence of various international martial arts. An additional aspect of combat with improvised weaponry is sometimes included to varying degrees.

National Wrestling League

The National Wrestling League, headquartered out of Hagerstown, Maryland, was founded by Dick Caricolfe in 1988. The NWL's Superior Pro Wrestling Training Center (SPWTC) in Hagerstown, Maryland is also the home of the HOUSE of PAIN Wrestling Federation, founded by John Rambo in 1997. The HoPWF holds bi-weekly events in Pennsylvania and West Virginia, along with evening events at the SPWTC.

Contents

Title history

No.WrestlerReignDateLocationNotes
1Hollywood Miles "Vader" Glencoe11995Defeated Little Salami to become the first champion. [2]
The title is vacated.
2Joe Kidd1February 7, 1998 Keyser, West Virginia Defeated Bad Boy Buck to win the vacant title. [1] [2]
3Bad Boy Buck1March 14, 1998 McConnellsburg, Pennsylvania [1] [2]
4Short Dawg1November 6, 1999McConnellsburg, Pennsylvania [1] [2]

See also

The Midgets' World Championship was the first original Midget wrestling singles title.

The NWA World Midget's Championship was the National Wrestling Alliance's midget wrestling singles championship. Large parts of the championship history is undocumented due to lack of documentation of Midget wrestling for large periods of time from the 1950s to the 1980s. In that period of time there were two touring groups of midget wrestlers in the United States, both had a "World Champion", leading to some uncertainty as to who was the NWA World Midget's Champion, often based on if the champion was booked as defending the championship in an NWA territory. The first wrestler to lay claim to the Midget's World Championship was Sky Low Low after he won a 30-man tournament in Paris, France. The tournament was either fictitious or not an NWA sanctioned event as it took place in Europe. But at some point after 1949 the NWA recognized Sky Low Low as their champion.

The WCPW Midget Championship was a professional wrestling midget title in Windy City Pro Wrestling (WCPW). Originally, WCPW was known as Windy City Wrestling (WCW), however, a lawsuit brought by World Championship Wrestling forced the smaller promotion to change its name to "Windy City Pro Wrestling" in 1997. The championship remained active until 2001 when it was discontinued.

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Tsakiries, Phil (2004). "NWL Midget Title History". Solie's Title Histories. Solie.org. Retrieved 2010-05-04.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "National Wrestling League Midget Champion History". National Wrestling League . Archived from the original on 2000-11-02. Retrieved 2010-05-04.