C4 Wrestling, North Shore, SAW TV, TIWF

C4 Wrestling sent this in.

-LIVE PRO WRESTLING!-
Saturday, March 9th, 2013
C*4: Capital City Championship Combat
Presents
“LEVEL UP 2013”
@
Knights of Columbus Hall
260 McArthur Road,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

VIP Tickets $20 – Doors at 7PM
(Includes First Choice Seating and a bonus match!)
Advance Tickets available at the venue Feb. 13th!

General Admission Tickets $15 – Doors at 7:30pm
Show starts at 8:00pm
Event is all ages – Alcohol sales with valid ID.

Stay up to date with all of C*4’s recent news, and event info by visiting www.c4wrestling.com

Main Event
“Ronin’s Rules”
C*4 Champion
“Ronin” Josh Alexander
Vs.
“Hacker” Scotty O’Shea

Semi-Main Event
Six Man Tag Team Match
ROH World Champion
“Mr. Wrestling” Kevin Steen
&
The Super Smash Brothers
(Player Uno & Stu Gryason)
Vs.
C*4 Tag Team Champions
T.d.T
(Mathieu St. Jacques & Thomas Dubois)
&
Shawn Spears

PLUS MUCH MORE!

—–

Devin Cutting sent this in.

North Shore Pro Wrestling

Friday, March 15th, 2013 – 8 PM
Centre Horizon in Québec City, Québec, Canada

Davey Richards vs. Marko Estrada vs. Michael Style

LuFisto, Buxx & Franky The Mobster vs. Black Resistance

Also Appearing: Kevin Steen

More Info @ http://nspw-wrestling.com
Upcoming Shows Info @ http://prowrestlingevents.webs.com/canada.htm

—–

Larry Goodman sent this report in.

NWA Southern All Star Wrestling presented their 6th Anniversary show in Millersville, TN Friday night,
featuring four title matches including appearances by NWA World Heavyweight Champion Kahagas and
NWA World Junior Champion Chase Owens.

The show marked the 6th anniversary of TJ Weatherby promoting wrestling at the SAW Mill.

There story surrounding the SAW name is so convoluted that you can’t tell the players without a scorecard.
The Showtime All Star Wrestling version of SAW, a collaboration between owner Reno Riggins and
booker Paul Adams, basically faded away during 2012. Riggins decided to take the TV show back to its
roots by renewing his collaboration with producer/editor Tim Thomason and Weatherby’s Southern All Star
Wrestling, which had continued to run at the SAW Mill after Showtime departed. Before Reno contacted
him, Thomason was making preparations to tape TV at the SAW Mill for cable access. He had joined the
NWA and was getting help from NWA Top Rope promoter Mike Sircy. With Reno on board, the TV show
inherited the time slot formerly occupied by Showtime on CW58 in Nashville (Sundays at 10pm).

What captivates me about the TV show is how it captures the sound and feeling of a bygone era of TV
studio wrestling, and does so on a barebones budget. The way the building is set up and the way it is shot
disguises how tiny the venue actually is. But I digress…the plan is that the anniversary show will not air on
TV.

The title matches ranged from good to outstanding. Overbooked? Sure. Entertaining? Absolutely. The
shocking finish of NWA World Heavyweight Title match did an awesome job of heating up situation
surrounding the SAW Title (currently held by Wolfie D). In the best match of the night, Chris Michaels
defeated Vordell Walker to win the SAW International Championship in controversial fashion when
Riggins lost his mind and turned heel. The Untouchables became the new tag champs unseating Team IOU
in a heated three way match via nefarious means. Chase Owens retained the NWA Junior Title with a solid
win over Kevin Weatherby. There’s not much good to say about the first half of the show. We were treated
to the redundancy of three consecutive cage matches, only one of which had any storyline significance for
TV.

The SAW Mill was jam packed with a standing room only crowd of over 200. Michael Graham (subbing
for Jason James) and Nitros had to stand up to do the commentary. There’s no room for a desk.

Announcer Nick Nitros opened the show by whipping the crowd into a frenzy — “SAW MILL,
I…CAN’T…HEAR…YOU! MAKE SOME NOISE!” Nitros is so over the top it’s ridiculous, but there’s
no arguing with the results. The building was on fire all night long. The band Notion played one song. I
usually hate band at wrestling shows, but this was kick ass.

(1) Chris Bomb won a cage match battle royal at 4:12. The other participants were Bryan Casanova, Justin
Grandberry, Johnny Moore, Sheik Sa’Luk & Lightning Bolt Kid. This was a changed to a battle royal
because Bomb’s scheduled opponent Damien Payne canceled. Bomb was far and away the fan favorite.
Casanova had no business being in there with the curtain jerkers. He’s involved in one of the top angles,
and if had to be there at all, he should have gone over strong. Good thing this won’t be on TV. The rules
were never explained. Moore (Johnny Bandana in Showtime) went for the door, so evidently it was escape
rules. When LBK tried to escape, Bomb tossed him back in by the seat of his pant and walked out.

(2) Jocephus Brody defeated Hammer Jack in steel cage match #2 at 6:15. They’ve been having impromptu
brawls and the like. Beyond that, the cage match pretty much came out of nowhere. This match was ugly.
Jocephus covered Hammer, so pinfalls must count as well. After taking repeated shots into the cage and a
big clothesline, Jocephus was down. Hammer was crawling for the door when Abriella ran out and sprayed
something in his eyes. Jocephus then chokeslammed Hammer for the win.

(3) Jason Nation defeated Hot Rod Biggs in steel cage match number three at 5:23. Biggs did mic work
before the match. A group of fans came to the show specifically to see these guys wrestle, so Nation was
way, way over. He’s big, strong and unrefined in his wrestling skills. Nation wrestled wearing a t-shirt
and lime green parachute pants. They battled standing on the top rope. Nation slammed Biggs’ head into

the cage and he gigged like a real pro. It was instant crimson mask. Nation pinned Biggs with a flying
bodypress. The blood should have been saved for the main event where it meant something.

Postmatch, Biggs intimidated the bejeezus out of referee Chris Garrett.

Intermission – The deconstructed the cage (supplied by NWA Top Rope promoter Mike Sircy) in less than
five minutes. Notion blasted out more tune. There was a meet and greet with Team IOU, Kevin Weatherby,
Hammer and Nation. The grand prize was a replica Stone Cold championship belt fashioned into a clock.
There was a true party atmosphere, the likes of which I rarely seen at a wrestling show.

Nitros sent out happy birthday wishes to photographer Sarah Bush. Nitros said that she had shot over 10K
photos at the SAW Mill, and hasn’t missed a show in over a year.

Commissioner Brewster presented TJ Weatherby with a promoter of the year plaque. It was an emotional
moment for TJ. Brewster then presented an award to “Krull” (producer/booker/editor Tim Thomason) put
SAW on TV, decorated the place, brought in talent, kept the old talent, and yet his name never showed up
on anything. Thomason said he the coach, and said SAW was a team and a family. Brewster said he wanted
to give a fan of the year award, but couldn’t because “you are all fan of the year.”

(4) In an elimination match, The Untouchables (Drew Haskins & Jeremiah Plunkett with Jimmy Street)
defeated Washington Bullets (Jon & Trey Williams) and the defending champions Team IOU (Nick Iggy
& Kerry Awful) to become the new NWA Southern Tag Team Champions in 16:19. Haskins has gotten
himself in better shape and has the look of a real professional wrestler. No two ways about it, The SAW
Mill loves Team IOU. They had Untouchables’ number until Haskins slid out of danger by tagging to the
Bullets. Plunkett made a blind tag and clipped Iggy’s knee. Untouchables destroyed Iggy’s leg for a good
long while and got a ton of heat. IOU was eliminated when Awful tried to suplex Haskins back into the
ring. Street grabbed Awful’s leg and held on while Haskins fell on top for the three count. The Bullet hadn’t
been a factor until this point in the match, but the crowd got into their high energy attack on Untouchables.
Street interfered again and Untouchables isolated Trey. The match broke down after the hot tag. Referee
Garrett lost complete control of the match. Garrett was a late substituition, bu the refereeing at SAW is
subpar in general. All four were in forever. Bullets thwarted Untouchables’ double team finisher and hit one
of their own. Street got up on the apron to distract and got clocked by Jon. In the ensuing chaos, Plunkett
clocked Jon with Street’s shoe and pinned him.

(5) Chase Owens defeated Kevin Weatherby to retain the NWA Junior World Heavyweight Championship
in 11:07. Owens isn’t blessed with a physically imposing presence or an overabundance of athletic talent,
but he’s clearly working hard to master his craft. He gets the nuances and the details and carries himself
like a champion. Owens was all business, displaying confidence bordering on arrogance. Weatherby
looked nervous at first, but he settled down and it wasn’t a bad match at all. The storytelling was clear.
Weatherby showed fire on a nice offensive flurry, and was able to evade Owens’ vaunted discus elbow.
Owens dissected Weatherby’s knee to rob him of his mobility. Weatherby ducked the discus elbow, hit a
DDT. Both men down. Weatherby was a bit shaky on how to sell the knee during the comeback. The finish
saw Weatherby block a superplex, but his knee gave out when he vaulted off the ropes, and Owens KOed
him with the discus elbow.

Owens said he was all about competition and he founds some in Weatherby, and would be happy to return
to the SAW Mill for Owens/Weatherby 2. Weatherby wouldn’t make for a compelling challenger outside
the SAW Mill, but he did well enough to make a rematch work on his home turf.

Arrick Andrews told Sircy he didn’t care who won the match between Kahagas and Wolfie D because he
had the winner Saturday night in Lebanon (for NWA Top Rope) and was walking out of the Wilson County
Fairgrounds as the new NWA World Heavyweight Champion.

(6) Chris Michaels (with Victor Van Glorious & Tasha Simone) defeated Vordell Walker to become the
new SAW International Champion in 18:20. Sircy was the special trouble shooting referee. Walker drew
on that deep reservoir of intensity and brought his A game. Michaels knew he was overmatched. It was

going to take massive distraction and interference by Simone and Van Glorious to save him. At one point,
Simone choked Michaels with her leg (while wearing a very short skirt and very high heels) While Simone
distracted Sircy, VVG distracted Walker. Michaels kneed Walker in the back and VVG blasted Walker
with his briefcase. Special trouble shooting referee #2 Brewster Fetter (one of three authority figure types
along with Sircy and Riggins that habitually argue amongst themselves) tossed Simone and VVG. Riggins
came down to ringside to ensure that law and order would be maintained. Michaels said he could handle
it himself. I should hope so because Walker was still in bad shape from the briefcase shot. Michaels gave
Walker a beating at ringside followed by a spinebuster onto the ring frame. Ouch. Michaels took a flying
leap, landing crotch first on the middle turnbuckle. Walker hit his somersault cravate or whatever the
hell that is. It’s quite a move in any case. Michaels blocked the uranage slam and hit the Double Shot but
Walker kicked out. Michaels called for the superkick. Walker countered and hit a Michinoku Driver for
two. Michaels connected with the superkick and Walker kicked out. Walker planted Michaels with the
uranage slam. Sircy counted three but Michaels had his foot on the bottom rope.

Reno argued that Michaels’ foot was on ropes. Sircy said he didn’t see it. Reno got so vehement that Sircy
tossed him out. Tried to anyway. Reno clubbed Sircy in the back of the head and kicked the crap out of
him. Reno then DDTed Walker and put Michaels on top of him. Turns out Reno was wearing a ref shirt
under his street clothes and made the three count.

Riggins launched into a passionate tirade, claiming that he was the man that brought all this to the SAW
Mill and busted his ass. He said the fans were nothing but nimrods. But the best was yet to come. Riggins
was the proud owner of Sircy’s false teeth up, holding them up for the irate fans to see. This was a classic
moment. As Reno headed up the ramp, the infamous Chicken Hat Charles went after him and had to be
wrestled down to the floor by security. A crazy scene ensued with Michaels, VVG, Tasha celebrating at
ringside while at their feet, Charles was having a full blow meltdown.

Adrian Longoria raffled off furniture from Madison Furniture Depot — just mention you’re a SAW MIll fan
for some great deals…living room suites start at $495.

(7) Kahagas (with Lacy) defeated Wolfie D to retain the NWA World Heavyweight Championship in
11:53. One of the things I admired about the many of the wrestlers back in the day was their ability to
reinvent themselves. Wolfie has done so again, and the new gimmick works. Kahagas is a good brawler.
Beyond that, I don’t see where he has a lot to offer as the NWA World Champion, and the incident in
Florida with Bruce Santee hasn’t exactly enhanced his reputation. It was wolf cries and USA chants early
as Wolfie took it to the champion. Ref Doug Markham got bumped, allowing Kahagas to crack Wolfie
over the head with his kendo stick. Wolfie bled heavily. Wolfie with a neckbreaker and it was both men
down. Wolfie fired back with Memphis style punches. Wolfie used a DVD to set up a top rope elbow drop.
Lacy, dressed in all black, her facial expression a perpetual scowl, jumped on the apron to distract the
ref. Casanova ran down and nailed Wolfie with a sick chairshot to the head. Hammer Jack ran down and
forced Casanova to retreat. Kahagas pulled a stick out his tight and jabbed it in Wolfie’s throat. Kahagas
brought a table in and propped it up in the corner. The ref got bumped again. Wolfie hit a rack drop on
Kahagas. Lacy jumped in and Wolfie gave her the rack drop, and did that ever look great. A Wolfman
looking guy in a trenchcoat came out of the crowd, clubbed Wolfie, and put him through the table with a
piledriver. Match over.

The mysterious figure removed the wig and fake beard, revealing Wolfie’s arch nemesis “King” Shane
Williams.

NOTES: Sircy’s NWA Top Rope promotion is in action at the Wilson County Fairgrounds tonight
(January 9) with Kahagas defending against Andrews and Owens vs. Dyron Flynn…There is likely to
be a DVD release of the show. Clips of the major angles will appear on SAW television. SAW typically
tapes one hour of television at the SAW Mill every Friday night. The current show is uploaded to
southernallstar.com every Sunday night.,.Walker and the Bullets will return on March 1.

—–

James Morgan sent this in.

Tennessee Independent Wrestling Federation results
for Saturday 2-9-13 at the TIWF Showplex Arena

Wildside def. T.Payne(c) in a non-title match

Anarchy (Bradd Badd/Koko Anderson) def. PYT’s (T.Currie/Pretty Boy Kellz)

Funhouse & Black Widow def. Doomsday(Skeletor/High Priest Brian Michaels)

Bromance(C)(Steven Rampage & Jared Ethan) def. The Posse by reverse decision

Matt Storm def. Tommy Angel

Destiny def. Million $$ Baby(C) in a non-title match

Anarchy( Tim Edwards/J. White) def. J-Rage & Skyler Devins and J.D. Wolfe & Mark Southern in a three way match

• Notes:
* Announcers: “Hotrod” Rodney Howard, Caleb Oomp Jones& Dr. Ronald Camp
*TIWF every Saturday night in Trenton, Tn.
@ Showplex Arena 405 W.1st St.
* TIWF every Friday night in Maury City, Tn.
@ Complex 356 College St. (Beginning March 8th)
http://www.tiwf.org

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