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Independent circuit
Grouping of small professional wrestling promotions

In professional wrestling, the independent circuit (often shortened to the indie circuit or the indies) is the collective name of independently owned promotions which are deemed to be smaller and more regionalized than major national promotions.

Independent promotions are essentially viewed as a minor league or farm system for the larger national promotions, as wrestlers in "indie" companies (especially young wrestlers just starting their careers) are usually honing their craft with the goal of being noticed and signed by a major national promotion such as WWE, All Elite Wrestling (AEW) (which also owns Ring of Honor (ROH)), or Total Nonstop Action Wrestling in the United States, Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide or Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre in Mexico, or New Japan Pro-Wrestling, Dragongate, All Japan Pro Wrestling, World Wonder Ring Stardom or the CyberFight promotions in Japan. It is also not uncommon for veteran wrestlers who have had past tenures with major promotions to appear on independent shows, either as special attractions or as a way to prolong their careers. There are also plenty of wrestlers who also wish to not sign with any of the major promotions and therefore primarily depend on the independent circuit for work.

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Origins

The "indie" scene in the United States dates back to the days of regional territories. When a promoter ran opposition in even one town controlled by a National Wrestling Alliance sanctioned territory, they were often called an "outlaw" territory.2 This is considered by some to be a forerunner to indies since some stars of the past got their start in these low quality local rivals to the big regional territories.

The modern definition of the independent circuit came about in the middle to late 1980s and fully formed and flourished after 1990. These promotions initially sought to revive the feel of old school territorial wrestling after former territories either went national, such as WWF, went out of business, or eventually did both, such as WCW. Several indies did in fact manage to tour different towns within a region and maintain a consistent schedule.

After Vince McMahon, seeking regulatory relief, gave in 1989 testimony in front of the New Jersey State Athletic Commission3 where he publicly admitted pro wrestling was in fact a sports-based entertainment, rather than a true athletic competition, many state athletic commissions stopped regulating wrestling. This obviated the need for complying with many expensive requirements, such as the need for an on-site ambulance and trained emergency medical personnel at each bout. After the business was thus exposed and deregulated, just about anyone could be a promoter or a wrestler since no licensing beyond a business license was then required. Many thought they could save money by holding shows in lesser towns and smaller arenas with little to no televised exposure, leading to many shows being held only once a week or once a month in local towns.

By country

United States

See also: List of independent wrestling promotions in the United States

Independent promotions are usually local in focus and, lacking national TV contracts, are much more dependent on revenue from house show attendance. Due to their lower budgets, most independent promotions offer low salaries (it is not unusual for a wrestler to work for free due to the fact most promoters can only afford to pay well-known talent). Most cannot afford to regularly rent large venues, and would not be able to attract a large enough crowd to fill such a venue were they able to do so. Instead, they make use of any almost open space (such as fields, ballrooms, or gymnasiums) to put on their performances. Some independent promotions are attached to professional wrestling schools, serving as a venue for students to gain experience in front of an audience. As independent matches are seldom televised, indie wrestlers who have not already gained recognition in other promotions tend to remain in obscurity. However, scouts from major promotions attend indie shows, and an indie wrestler who makes a good impression may be offered a developmental or even a full-professional contract.

The advent of the Internet has allowed independent wrestlers and promotions to reach a wider audience, and it is possible for wrestlers regularly working the indie circuit to gain some measure of fame among wrestling fans online. Additionally, some of the more successful indies have video distribution deals, giving them an additional source of income and allowing them to reach a larger audience outside of their local areas.

Top 10 most-attended shows
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
NWA-NEWRKO's Taste of the Boss September 25, 1999Boston, MassachusettsBoston City Hall Plaza35,0005-0 (Trooper Gilmore and Corporal Johnson) vs. Victor Rivera and Jay Kobain
IWRWarped Tour 2002 August 3, 2003Pontiac, MichiganPontiac Silverdome19,000Deranged vs. Tommy Starr in a UV Light Tube Death match4
BELIEVEBELIEVE 156 April 21, 2018Orlando, FloridaCentral Florida Fairgrounds15,000Aaron Epic (c) vs. Andrew Merlin for the SCW Florida Heavyweight Championship
AWFCement Belt Fair June 21, 1990Cementon, PennsylvaniaCementon Fairgrounds12,500Heidi Lee Morgan vs. Baby Face Nellie
WPWOC Fair: Flower Power (Day 2) July 23, 2006Costa Mesa, CaliforniaWashington Mutual Arena12,000El Hijo del Santo, Lil Cholo and Silver Tyger vs. Infernal, Super Kendo 2 and Super Parka
1.All In September 1, 2018Hoffman Estates, IllinoisSears Centre Arena11,263The Golden Elite (Kota Ibushi, Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson) vs. Bandido, Rey Fénix and Rey Mysterio in a six-man tag team match
WPWOC Fair: Flower Power (Day 1) July 22, 2006Costa Mesa, CaliforniaWashington Mutual Arena10,000El Hijo del Santo, Lil Cholo and Silver Tyger vs. Infernal, Super Kendo 2 and Super Parka
HWABaseBrawl July 19, 2003Columbus, OhioCooper Stadium8,7575Rory Fox (c) vs. Shark Boy for the HWA Cruiserweight Championship6
2.USWAMemphis Memories March 7, 1994Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum8,377Jerry Lawler vs. Austin Idol vs. Brian Christopher vs. Doug Gilbert vs. Eddie Gilbert vs. Jimmy Valiant vs. Koko B. Ware vs. Moondog Spot vs. Terry Funk vs. Tommy Rich in a 10-man elimination match7
WXWSportsfest July 12, 1998Allentown, PennsylvaniaCedar Beach Park8,000The Love Connection (Jay Love and Georgie Love) vs. D'Lo Brown and Owen Hart
3.USWA / WWFUSWA vs. WWF February 17, 1996Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum7,500Bret Hart (c) vs. Jerry Lawler in a Steel Cage match for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship8
4.FMLLLuchaMania USA Tour January 26, 2013Los Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena7,000Blue Demon Jr., Cien Caras Jr. and Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. El Hijo del Santo, L.A. Par-K and Rayo de Jalisco Jr. in a six-man tag team match
5.JCPRic Flair's Last Match July 31, 2022Nashville, TennesseeNashville Municipal Auditorium6,800Ric Flair and Andrade El Idolo vs. Jay Lethal and Jeff Jarrett
6.FMW / WWAFMW vs. WWA May 16, 1992Los Angeles, CaliforniaCal State-Los Angeles Gym6,250Atsushi Onita, Tarzan Goto and El Hijo del Santo vs. Negro Casas, Horace Boulder and Tim Patterson in a Best 2-out-of-3 Falls Street Fight match9
IWCBig Butler Fair June 28, 2003Prospect, PennsylvaniaBig Butler Fairgrounds6,000Dusty Rhodes vs. Jerry Lawler
7.MultipleWorld Wrestling Peace Festival June 1, 1996Los Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Sports Arena5,964Antonio Inoki and Dan Severn vs. Yoshiaki Fujiwara and Oleg Taktarov10
8.ECWNovember to Remember November 1, 1998New Orleans, LouisianaLakefront Arena5,800The Triple Threat (Shane Douglas, Bam Bam Bigelow and Chris Candido) vs. New Triple Threat (Sabu, Rob Van Dam and Taz)11
JCWBloodymania August 11, 2007Cave-In-Rock, IllinoisHatchet LandingsSabu and The Insane Clown Posse (Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent J) vs. Trent Acid and The Young Altar Boys (Young Altar Boy #1 and Young Altar Boy #4)
9.FCWPride September 24, 2005Inglewood, CaliforniaGreat Western Forum5,500Blue Demon Jr., El Hijo del Santo, Mil Mascaras and Tinieblas vs. Dr. Wagner Jr., Scorpio Jr. and Los Guerreros del Infierno (Rey Bucanero and Ultimo Guerrero)
10.Funk Free for All October 28, 1993Amarillo, TexasAmarillo Civic Center5,500Terry Funk vs. Eddie Gilbert in a Texas Death match12

Canada

See also: List of independent wrestling promotions in Canada

Top 10 most-attended shows
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
Lutte 2000Alouettes Mania I August 25, 2002Montreal, QuebecStade Percival-Molson20,000Jacques Rougeau vs. King Kong Bundy
LFAlouettes Mania III July 15, 2004Montreal, QuebecStade Percival-Molson20,00013Jacques Rougeau vs. Kamala
LFAlouettes Mania IV July 8, 2005Montreal, QuebecStade Percival-Molson20,00014Jim Duggan vs. Kurrgan with special referee Jacques Rougeau
1.Lutte 2000Pierre Carl Ouellet vs. Kurrgan December 30, 2001Montreal, QuebecCentre Bell5,500+15Pierre Carl Ouellet vs. Kurrgan with special referee Sid Vicious
2.Stu Hart 50th Anniversary Show December 15, 1995Calgary, AlbertaStampede Corral4,600Bret Hart (c) vs. The British Bulldog for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship
3.LFJacques Rougeau's Super Wrestling Family Gala December 27, 2008Verdun, QuebecVerdun Auditorium4,300Jacques Rougeau Jr. and J.J. Rougeau (c) vs. Eric Mastrocola and Taloche the Clown for the Johnny Rougeau Tag Team Championship
4.Lutte 2000Pierre Carl Ouellet vs. King Kong Bundy December 29, 2000Verdun, QuebecVerdun Auditorium4,000Pierre Carl Ouellet vs. King Kong Bundy1617
5.CWIBrawl at the Bush II May 14, 2011Brantford, OntarioBrantford Civic Centre3,600Haven, Lanny Poffo, Brutus Beefcake and Bushwhacker Luke vs. Big Daddy Hammer, Virgil and The Nasty Boys (Brian Knobbs and Jerry Sags) in a Survivor Series elimination match
6.JRPRichard Charland vs. Abdullah the Butcher July 15, 1995Montreal, QuebecVerdun Auditorium3,500Richard Charland vs. Abdullah the Butcher18
LFJacques Rougeau's Super Wrestling Family Gala December 27, 2009Montreal, QuebecVerdun AuditoriumJacques Rougeau and Giant Martin vs. Kurrgan and Eric Mastrocola19
7.Gatineau Pro wrestling (GPW)Guerre civil 4Gatineau, QuebecCentre Slush Puppie3,242Thunder VS Darko (heavy weight championship)
8.NOTPNight of Thunder February 12, 2000Winnipeg, ManitobaWinnipeg Convention Centre3,000Chi Chi Cruz vs. Scott D'Amore
LFJacques Rougeau Jr. Retirement Tour (Day 1) December 28, 2010Montréal, QuebecVerdun AuditoriumJacques Rougeau Jr. and J.J. Rougeau vs. Eric Mastrocola and Sylver
9.Lutte 2000L'Union Fait La Force IV December 29, 1999Montreal, QuebecCentre Pierre Charbonneau2,600The Fabulous Rougeaus (Jacques Rougeau and Raymond Rougeau) vs. The Garvin Brothers (Ron Garvin and Jimmy Garvin) for the Johnny Rougeau Memorial Tag Team Championship2021
10.BSEWelcome to Mexico! (Day 1) July 18, 2009Toronto, OntarioHarbourfront Centre2,500James Champagne, La Sombra and The KGB vs. Incógnito, Xtremo and Blue Demon Jr.
11.Lutte 2000L'Union Fait la Force February 14, 1999Montreal, QuebecPierre-Charbonneau Arena2,20014-man Battle Royal2223
BCWRumble on the River July 15, 2000Windsor, OntarioRiverfront Festival PlazaSabu (c) vs. Geza Kalman for the BCW Can-Am Heavyweight Championship24

Australia

See also: List of professional wrestling organisations in Australia

Unlike the North American or Japanese products which have large, globally renowned organisations such as WWE and New Japan Pro-Wrestling with several hundred smaller promotions, Australia only has approximately 30 smaller independent circuit promotions which exist in all but one of the states and territories, that being the Northern Territory. Tours from the North American product are regularly sold out in capital cities such as Melbourne, Sydney, Perth and Brisbane.

Top 10 most-attended shows
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
1.AWFWrestleriot February 26, 1993Melbourne, VictoriaFestival Hall4,000Jake Roberts vs. Jim Neidhart25
2.AWFWrestleriot 2 June 18, 1993Sydney, New South Wales3,500Road Warrior Hawk vs. Demolition Smash26
AWFWrestleriot 2 June 24, 1993Melbourne, VictoriaNailz vs. Big Boss Man27
HRCWHigh Risk Championship Wrestling TV July 17, 1999Festival HallNailz vs. Primo Carnera III28
3.WSWInternational Incident (Day 1) October 5, 2005Melbourne, Victoria2,500+29Jeff Jarrett vs. Rhino for the inaugural WSW Heavyweight Championship
4.AWFWrestleriot February 25, 1993Brisbane, Queensland2,200Jake Roberts vs. Jim Neidhart30
5.WSWInternational Assault Tour (Day 2) October 7, 2005Sydney, New South Wales2,100Rhino (c) vs. Jeff Jarrett for the WSW Heavyweight Championship
6.AWFWrestleriot 2 June 26, 1993Adelaide, South Australia1,450Big Bossman vs. Nailz31
7.WSWInternational Assault Tour (Day 3) October 8, 2005Newcastle, New South Wales1,200+32Rhino (c) vs. Jeff Jarrett for the WSW Heavyweight Championship
8.AAP / HOHHoH 28 June 17, 2017Sydney, New South WalesSydney Showground1,200Tommy Dreamer and Billy Gunn vs. The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson)
MCWMCW 100 August 18, 2018Albert Park, VictoriaMelbourne Sports and Aquatic CentreSlex (c) vs. Will Ospreay for the MCW Intercommonwealth Championship
9.OCW / HOHHOH 15 June 24, 2016East Burwood, VictoriaWhitehorse Club1,100Andy Phoenix vs. KrackerJak vs. Carlito vs. Tommy Dreamer in a Number 1 contenders Fatal 4-Way match for the OCW Heavyweight Championship
AAP / HOHHOH 30 June 23, 2017MVP vs. Jack Swagger vs. Tommy Dreamer in a Three-Way Dance
10.AWFWrestleriot March 2, 1993Adelaide, South Australia1,000Jake Roberts vs. Jim Neidhart33
HRCWNailz vs. High Risk Warrior July 23, 1999Adelaide, South AustraliaNailz vs. High Risk Warrior34
AWFPsycho Slam Tour (Day 4) August 30, 1999Melbourne, VictoriaCamberwell Civic CentreSabu vs. Chris Candido
AWFSupanova Sidney (Day 1) June 27, 2009Sydney, New South WalesAcer ArenaSpaceboy Dacey vs. Zander Bathory

Mexico

See also: List of professional wrestling promotions in Mexico

Lucha libre has many more independent wrestlers in proportion to the rest of North America, because of the weight classes prevalent in the Mexican league system as well as its emphasis on multiple person tag matches; just about anyone with ability can emerge from an independent promotion into either AAA or Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre and be a champion there. Independent Mexican wrestlers may use a lot of gimmicks, including some that may be based on copyrighted characters from American television shows, such as Thundercats and X-Men. (These gimmicks are often changed if the wrestler playing them makes it into AAA or CMLL; the most prominent example of non-compliance with this method is midget wrestler Chucky from AAA, whose gimmick is based on the Child's Play movies.)

Top 10 most-attended shows
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
1.Toryumon MexicoDragonMania III May 11, 2008Mexico City, MexicoArena Mexico17,000Ultimo Dragon, Mistico and Tatsumi Fujinami vs. Ultimo Guerrero, Atlantis and Rene Dupree
2.Toryumon MexicoDragonMania II May 13, 2007Mexico City, MexicoArena Mexico16,800Último Dragón, Mil Máscaras, Marco Corleone, and Kazuchika Okada vs. Yoshihiro Takayama, Minoru Suzuki, Último Guerrero and SUWA
3.LLEALL Elite February 8, 2015Mexico City, MexicoArena Mexico15,000Dr. Wagner Jr. and La Sombra vs. L.A. Par-K and Volador Jr.35
4.TXTTorneo Todo X El Todo December 8, 2007Naucalpan, MexicoEl Toreo de Cuatro Caminos12,00016-man Torneo Todo X El Todo tournament
Toryumon MexicoDragonMania VIII June 15, 2013Mexico City, MexicoArena MexicoÚltimo Dragón, Atlantis and Rayo de Jalisco Jr. vs. Último Guerrero, Hajime Ohara and Mike Knox
LLE December 20, 2015Mexico City, MexicoArena MexicoRayo de Jalisco Jr., Octagón and Atlantis vs. Los Hermanos Dinamita (Universo Dos Mil, Cien Caras, Máscara Año Dos Mil)
5.Lucha de Leyendas June 23, 2013Mérida, MexicoEl Poliforo Zamná11,500El Hijo del Santo vs. Blue Demon Jr.
6.LL-VIP July 5, 2008Monterrey, Nuevo LeonLa Arena Monterrey10,500+36Atlantis vs. Blue Panther vs. Místico vs. Último Guerrero vs. Villano V vs. Tigre Universitario in a 6-way Mask vs. Mask match37
7.Toryumon MexicoDragonMania V May 29, 2010Mexico City, MexicoArena Mexico10,000+38Mil Máscaras, Tatsumi Fujinami, Último Dragón and Brazo de Plata vs. Rey Bucanero, Chuck Palumbo, Atlantis and Arkángel de la Muerte39
8.Toryumon MexicoDragonMania XI May 28, 2016Mexico City, MexicoArena Mexico10,00040Ultimo Dragon, Octagon and Caristico vs. Fuerza Guerrera, Tiger Ali and Mephisto41
9.Toryumon MexicoDragonManía May 14, 2005Mexico City, MexicoArena Mexico9,914Último Dragón, Rayo de Jalisco Jr. and Tigre Enmascarado vs. Los Guerreros del Infierno (Rey Bucanero, Tarzan Boy and Último Guerrero)
10.The CrashThe Crash in San Luis Potosí August 10, 2017San Luis Potosí City, San Luis PotosíEl Domo de San Luis9,000Rey Misterio Jr., Blue Demon Jr. and Rey Fénix vs. La Máscara, M-ximo and Rey Escorpión42

Japan

See also: List of professional wrestling promotions in Japan

Until 1984, no independent puroresu promotion per se existed in Japan; potential talent went directly into the training dojos of either New Japan Pro-Wrestling or All Japan Pro Wrestling. (International Wrestling Enterprise also was a third-party promotion until 1981.) The advent of the Japanese Universal Wrestling Federation offered a long-sought third alternative.

From 1986 to 1988 the Japanese system went back to the two-promotion system, but then the UWF was reformed and another promotion, Pioneer Senshi, was started. Because of Japanese societal mores which implied that a wrestler was a lifelong employee of a company and thus identified with it wherever he went, neither AJPW nor NJPW made an effort to acquire wrestlers trained in other promotions; wrestlers from the major promotions who left, such as Genichiro Tenryu, Gran Hamada, Yoshiaki Fujiwara, Akira Maeda, Atsushi Onita, and Nobuhiko Takada had to start their own independent promotions in order to keep themselves in the limelight (Wrestling Association "R", Universal Lucha Libre, Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Gumi, Fighting Network Rings, Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, and Hustle respectively) .

As the 1990s ended, though, things began to change. Independent promotions began gaining more prominence as they were featured in major specialized media such as Shukan Puroresu and Shukan Gong magazines. With the death of Giant Baba and retirement of Antonio Inoki, which effectively broke their control over the promotions they founded, the major promotions began looking to the smaller promotions for talent.

In 2000, the first major signing from an independent, Minoru Tanaka by NJPW from BattlARTS, took place; soon after NJPW stocked the junior heavyweight division with independent talent such as Masayuki Naruse, Tiger Mask, Gedo, and Jado. On the same year, following the Pro Wrestling Noah split, AJPW was forced to fill its ranks with independent talent; Nobutaka Araya, Shigeo Okumura and Mitsuya Nagai signed up (Araya is the only one who remains, but other signings since then have been Kaz Hayashi, Tomoaki Honma, Hideki Hosaka, and Ryuji Hijikata.)

Noah admitted one wrestler from the independents, Daisuke Ikeda, to its ranks as well (Ikeda has since left, but other wrestlers from the independents that were signed included Akitoshi Saito, Takahiro Suwa, and Taiji Ishimori). Although AJPW, NJPW, and Noah remain committed to their dojos, the reliance on independents is growing as obscure talent is recognized for its ability.

Top 10 most-attended shows
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
TPWTokyo Pro Wrestling in Atami July 23, 1996Atami, ShizuokaSun Beach65,000Abdullah the Butcher and Daikokubo Benkei vs. Kishin Kawabata and Takashi Ishikawa43
1.FMWFMW 6th Anniversary Show May 5, 1995Kawasaki, KanagawaKawasaki Stadium58,250Atsushi Onita (c) vs. Hayabusa in a No Rope Exploding Barbed Wire Deathmatch for the FMW Brass Knuckles Heavyweight Championship44
2.FMWFMW 5th Anniversary Show May 5, 199452,000Atsushi Onita vs. Genichiro Tenryu in a No Rope Exploding Barbed Wire Deathmatch45
3.FMWBarbed Wire Deathmatch Tournament August 17, 1991Tokyo, JapanTorisu Stadium48,221Atsushi Onita vs. Sambo Asako in a no rope barbed wire death match tournament final46
4.UWFiUWFi Pro Wrestling World Championship: Takada vs. Vader December 5, 1993Meiji Jingu Stadium46,168Nobuhiko Takada (c) vs. Super Vader for the UWFI World Heavyweight Championship47
5.AJWSuper Woman Great War: Big Egg Wrestling Universe November 20, 1994Tokyo Dome42,500Akira Hokuto vs. Aja Kong in the V*TOP Woman Tournament final48
6.FMWFMW 4th Anniversary Show May 5, 1993Kawasaki, KanagawaKawasaki Stadium41,000Atsushi Onita vs. Terry Funk in a No Ropes Exploding Barbed Wire Timebomb Death match49
7.PWFGTokyo Dome Show October 4, 1992Tokyo, JapanTokyo Dome40,800Masakatsu Funaki vs. Maurice Smith50
8.SWS / WWFSuperWrestle December 12, 199140,000Genichiro Tenryu vs. Hulk Hogan51
MPWSendai Television Broadcasting Festival: Happy!! Juni*Land (Day 2) November 5, 2006Sendai, MiyagiSendai West Park Open SpaceJinsei Shinzaki and Shinjitsu Nohashi vs. Yoshitsune and Rasse52
9.MPWSendai Television Broadcasting Festival: Happy!! Juni*Land (Day 1) November 4, 200637,500Jinsei Shinzaki and Shinjitsu Nohashi vs. The Great Sasuke and Yoshitsune
10.FMWSummer Spectacular August 22, 1993Nishinomiya, HyogoHankyu Nishinomiya Stadium36,223Atsushi Onita vs. Mr. Pogo in a No Ropes Barbed Wire Exploding Cage Deathmatch for the FMW Brass Knuckles Heavyweight Championship

United Kingdom

See also: Professional wrestling promotions in the United Kingdom

For most of the years of ITV's coverage of British Wrestling, the dominant promoter in the United Kingdom was the Joint Promotions cartel, which was originally modelled on the NWA and later amalgamated into a single company. Nonetheless, throughout this period, untelevised alternative promotions flourished with at least one significant competitor to Joint for live shows.

Initially the main rival was the former dominant promotion in the territory, Atholl Oakley's BWA. By the time of its demise, wrestler/promoter Paul Lincoln had established himself as a major promoter with shows featuring himself as headline heel. In 1958, when Bert Assirati was stripped of the British Heavyweight Championship, Lincoln formed the BWF alliance of promoters to support Assirati's claim, later recognising Shirley Crabtree as champion. Lincoln's BWF was eventually bought out into Joint in 1970.

Welsh promoter Orig Williams also used the BWF name, promoting from the late 1960s up until the early 2000s and then sporadically until his death in 2009. From 1982 to 1995, Williams had a Welsh language TV wrestling show "Reslo" on S4C. Brian Dixon, a referee for Williams, set up his own company Wrestling Enterprises of Birkenhead later renamed All Star Wrestling c. 1984. An alliance with promoter and former top star Jackie Pallo failed to prevent Joint gaining a five-year extension on its TV wrestling monopoly from January 1982 to December 1986.

However, by the mid-1980s Dixon had won over many wrestlers and fans from Joint who were tired of the Big Daddy-orientated direction of Joint. Eventually this culminated in All Star gaining a TV show on satellite channel Screensport and later, a slice of ITV's coverage from 1987 until the end of ITV wrestling in 1988. By the end of this period, All Star had effectively replaced Joint (by now owned by Max Crabtree, brother of Shirley) as the dominant promotion in the UK.

Joint, renamed Ring Wrestling Stars in 1991, dwindled down before closing with Crabtree's retirement in 1995, All Star has continued to be the dominant non-import live promotion in the UK up to the present day. Its principal competitors since that time have been Scott Conway's TWA, John Freemantle's Premier Promotions, RBW and LDN Wrestling. Since the 1990s there have also been numerous American-style "New School" promotions.

Top 10 most-attended shows
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
1.ICWFear & Loathing IX November 20, 2016Glasgow, ScotlandThe SSE Hydro6,193Joe Coffey vs. Kurt Angle53
2.PROGRESSPROGRESS Chapter 76: Hello Wembley! September 30, 2018London, EnglandSSE Wembley Arena4,750WALTER (c) vs. Tyler Bate for the PROGRESS World Championship54
3.ICWFear & Loathing X November 19, 2017Glasgow, ScotlandThe SSE Hydro4,500Joe Coffey (c-WHC) vs. BT Gunn (c-ZGC) in a Champion vs. Champion match for the ICW World Heavyweight Championship and ICW Zero G Championship
4.RevProRevPro 11th Anniversary Show August 26, 2023London, EnglandCopper Box Arena4,072Will Ospreay vs. Shingo Takagi
5.PCWTribute to the Troops June 28, 2014Preston, EnglandHarris Flights4,000Joey Hayes (c) vs. Carlito for the PCW Heavyweight Championship55
ICWFear & Loathing VIII November 15, 2015Glasgow, ScotlandScottish Exhibition and Conference CentreDrew Galloway (c) vs. Grado for the ICW World Heavyweight Championship56
6.TWC / FWAInternational Showdown March 19, 2005Coventry, EnglandCoventry Skydome3,400Christopher Daniels (c) vs. AJ Styles for the TNA X-Division Championship
7.RevPro / NJPWStrong Style Evolved UK (Day 2) July 1, 2008Manchester, EnglandSilver Blades Altrincham3,000Tomohiro Ishii (c) vs. Minoru Suzuki for the RevPro Undisputed British Heavyweight Championship
8.RevPro / NJPWStrong Style Evolved UK (Day 1) June 30, 2018Milton Keynes, EnglandPlanet Ice Milton Keynes2,546Suzuki-gun (Minoru Suzuki and Zack Sabre Jr.) (c) vs. CHAOS (Kazuchika Okada and Tomohiro Ishii) for the RevPro Undisputed British Tag Team Championship57
9.WCPWTrue Legacy October 8, 2016Manchester, EnglandSilver Blades Altrincham2,500+58Kurt Angle vs. Cody Rhodes59
10.PROGRESSPROGRESS Chapter 36: We're Gonna Need A Bigger Room... Again September 25, 2016London, EnglandO2 Academy Brixton2,400Marty Scurll (c) vs. Mark Haskins vs. Tommy End in a Three-Way Dance for the PROGRESS World Championship60

Attendance records

This section is about attendance records for professional wrestling on the independent circuit by decade. For a year-by-year listing, see List of professional wrestling attendance records on the independent circuit. For attendance records from National Wrestling Alliance-affiliates, see List of National Wrestling Alliance attendance records. For all-time records, see List of professional wrestling attendance records.

Note: Minimum attendance of 5,000.

  • Light Grey indicates event was a free show and/or held at a major public gathering.
PromotionEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
NWA-NEWRKO's Taste of the Boss September 25, 1999Boston, MassachusettsBoston City Hall Plaza35,0005-0 (Trooper Gilmore and Corporal Johnson) vs. Victor Rivera and Jay Kobain
Lutte 2000Alouettes Mania I August 25, 2002Montreal, QuebecStade Percival-Molson20,000Jacques Rougeau vs. King Kong Bundy
LFAlouettes Mania III July 15, 2004Montreal, QuebecStade Percival-Molson20,00061Jacques Rougeau vs. Kamala
LFAlouettes Mania IV July 8, 2005Montreal, QuebecStade Percival-Molson20,00062Jim Duggan vs. Kurrgan with special referee Jacques Rougeau
IWRWarped Tour 2002 August 3, 2003Pontiac, MichiganPontiac Silverdome19,000Deranged vs. Tommy Starr in a UV Light Tube Death match63
BELIEVEBELIEVE 156 April 21, 2018Orlando, FloridaCentral Florida Fairgrounds15,000Aaron Epic (c) vs. Andrew Merlin for the SCW Florida Heavyweight Championship
AWFCement Belt Fair June 21, 1990Cementon, PennsylvaniaCementon Fairgrounds12,500Heidi Lee Morgan vs. Baby Face Nellie
WPWOC Fair: Flower Power (Day 2) July 23, 2006Costa Mesa, CaliforniaWashington Mutual Arena12,000El Hijo del Santo, Lil Cholo and Silver Tyger vs. Infernal, Super Kendo 2 and Super Parka
All In September 1, 2018Hoffman Estates, IllinoisSears Centre Arena11,263The Golden Elite (Kota Ibushi, Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson) vs. Bandido, Rey Fénix and Rey Mysterio in a six-man tag team match
BBWFCaribbean Wrestling Bash: The Legends Tour September 9, 2012San Nicolas, ArubaJoe Laveist Ballpark11,000Scott Steiner vs. Billy Gunn for the Aruba Wrestling Bash Championship
WWNWWNLive in China (Day 4) November 16, 2014Beijing, ChinaCadillac Arena10,500Ricochet (c) vs. Johnny Gargano for the Open the Freedom Gate Championship
WPWOC Fair: Flower Power (Day 1) July 22, 2006Costa Mesa, CaliforniaWashington Mutual Arena10,000El Hijo del Santo, Lil Cholo and Silver Tyger vs. Infernal, Super Kendo 2 and Super Parka
BBWFCaribbean Wrestling Bash: The Legends Tour September 8, 2012San Nicolas, ArubaJoe Laveist Ballpark9,000Scott Steiner vs. Kevin Nash
HWABaseBrawl July 19, 2003Columbus, OhioCooper Stadium8,75764Rory Fox (c) vs. Shark Boy for the HWA Cruiserweight Championship65
USWAMemphis Memories March 7, 1994Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum8,377Jerry Lawler vs. Austin Idol vs. Brian Christopher vs. Doug Gilbert vs. Eddie Gilbert vs. Jimmy Valiant vs. Koko B. Ware vs. Moondog Spot vs. Terry Funk vs. Tommy Rich in a 10-man elimination match66
WXWSportsfest July 12, 1998Allentown, PennsylvaniaCedar Beach Park8,000The Love Connection (Jay Love and Georgie Love) vs. D'Lo Brown and Owen Hart
USWA / WWFUSWA vs. WWF February 17, 1996Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum7,500Bret Hart (c) vs. Jerry Lawler in a Steel Cage match for the WWF World Heavyweight Championship67
FMLLLuchaMania USA Tour January 26, 2013Los Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena7,000Blue Demon Jr., Cien Caras Jr. and Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. El Hijo del Santo, L.A. Par-K and Rayo de Jalisco Jr. in a six-man tag team match
JCPRic Flair's Last Match July 31, 2022Nashville, TennesseeNashville Municipal Auditorium6,800Ric Flair and Andrade El Idolo vs. Jay Lethal and Jeff Jarrett
FMW / WWAFMW vs. WWA May 16, 1992Los Angeles, CaliforniaCal State-Los Angeles Gym6,250Atsushi Onita, Tarzan Goto and El Hijo del Santo vs. Negro Casas, Horace Boulder and Tim Patterson in a Best 2-out-of-3 Falls Street Fight match68
IWCBig Butler Fair June 28, 2003Prospect, PennsylvaniaBig Butler Fairgrounds6,000Dusty Rhodes vs. Jerry Lawler
MultipleWorld Wrestling Peace Festival June 1, 1996Los Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Sports Arena5,964Antonio Inoki and Dan Severn vs. Yoshiaki Fujiwara and Oleg Taktarov69
ECWNovember to Remember November 1, 1998New Orleans, LouisianaLakefront Arena5,800The Triple Threat (Shane Douglas, Bam Bam Bigelow and Chris Candido) vs. New Triple Threat (Sabu, Rob Van Dam and Taz)70
JCWBloodymania August 11, 2007Cave-In-Rock, IllinoisHatchet Landings5,800Sabu and The Insane Clown Posse (Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent J) vs. Trent Acid and The Young Altar Boys (Young Altar Boy #1 and Young Altar Boy #4)
Lutte 2000Pierre Carl Ouellet vs. Kurrgan December 30, 2001Montreal, QuebecCentre Bell5,500+71Pierre Carl Ouellet vs. Kurrgan with special referee Sid Vicious
FCWPride September 24, 2005Inglewood, CaliforniaGreat Western Forum5,500Blue Demon Jr., El Hijo del Santo, Mil Mascaras and Tinieblas vs. Dr. Wagner Jr., Scorpio Jr. and Los Guerreros del Infierno (Rey Bucanero and Ultimo Guerrero)
Funk Free for All October 28, 1993Amarillo, TexasAmarillo Civic Center5,500Terry Funk vs. Eddie Gilbert in a Texas Death match72
WWWoWCleveland County Fair October 1, 1992Shelby, North CarolinaCleveland County Fairgrounds5,2009-man battle royal73
NWA-OVWChristmas Chaos January 31, 2001Louisville, KentuckyLouisville Gardens5,010Leviathan vs. Kane74
USWAChallenge for the Championship October 8, 1990Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum5,00020-man tournament for the vacant USWA World Heavyweight Championship75
SMWNight of Legends August 5, 1994Knoxville, TennesseeKnoxville Civic Coliseum5,000Bob Armstrong, Tracy Smothers and Road Warrior Hawk vs. Bruiser Bedlam and The Funk Brothers (Dory Funk Jr. and Terry Funk)7677
SMWSuperbowl of Wrestling August 4, 1995Knoxville, TennesseeKnoxville Civic Coliseum5,000Shawn Michaels vs. Buddy Landel for the WWF Intercontinental Championship7879
NEPWLake County Fair August 24, 2002Painesville, OhioLake County Fairgrounds5,000Julio Dinero vs. Dick Trimmins
WXWSportsfest July 9, 2004Allentown, PennsylvaniaCedar Beach Park5,000Rapid Fire Maldonado (c) vs. Mana the Polynesian Warrior for the WXW Heavyweight Championship
MWThrowback Night II August 28, 2004Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum5,000Terry Funk and Corey Maclin vs. Jerry Lawler and Jimmy Hart with special referee Jimmy Valiant
ASWDukesFest 2007 June 12, 2007Nashville, TennesseeMusic City Motorplex5,000Iron Cross, Bobby Houston and Jerry Lawler vs. Stan Lee, Eddie Golden and K.C. Thunder

Historical

Top 10 most-attended shows in the 1990s
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
1.WXWSportsfest July 12, 1998Allentown, PennsylvaniaCedar Beach Park8,000The Love Connection (Jay Love and Georgie Love) vs. D'Lo Brown and Owen Hart
2.FMW / WWAFMW vs. WWA May 16, 1992Los Angeles, CaliforniaCalifornia State University6,250Atsushi Onita, Tarzan Goto and El Hijo del Santo vs. Negro Casas, Horace Boulder and Tim Patterson in a Best 2-out-of-3 Falls Street Fight match80
3.ECWAnarchy Rulz September 19, 1999Villa Park, IllinoisOdeum Expo Center6,000Rob Van Dam (c) vs. Balls Mahoney for the ECW World Television Championship8182
4.MultipleWorld Wrestling Peace Festival June 1, 1996Los Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Sports Arena5,964Antonio Inoki and Dan Severn vs. Yoshiaki Fujiwara and Oleg Taktarov83
5.ECWNovember to Remember November 1, 1998New Orleans, LouisianaLakefront Arena5,800The Triple Threat (Shane Douglas, Bam Bam Bigelow and Chris Candido) vs. New Triple Threat (Sabu, Rob Van Dam and Taz)84
6.Funk Free for All October 28, 1993Amarillo, TexasAmarillo Civic Center5,500Terry Funk vs. Eddie Gilbert in a Texas Death match85
7.WWWoW October 1, 1992Shelby, North Carolina9-Man Battle Royal5,2009-man battle royal86
8.SMWNight of Legends August 5, 1994Knoxville, TennesseeKnoxville Civic Coliseum5,000Bob Armstrong, Tracy Smothers and Road Warrior Hawk vs. Bruiser Bedlam and The Funk Brothers (Dory Funk Jr. and Terry Funk)87
SMWSuperbowl of Wrestling August 4, 1995Knoxville, TennesseeKnoxville Civic ColiseumShawn Michaels vs. Buddy Landel for the WWF Intercontinental Championship88
9.ECWNovember to Remember November 30, 1997Monaca, PennsylvaniaGolden Dome4,634Bam Bam Bigelow (c) vs. Shane Douglas for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship8990
10.PWFPro Wrestlemania II December 10, 1993Charlotte, North CarolinaCharlotte Coliseum4,500George South and Italian Stallion vs. Austin Steele and Black Scorpion
Top 10 most-attended shows in the 2000s
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
1.PMGClash of the Legends April 27, 2004Memphis, TennesseeFedEx Forum6,000?Hulk Hogan vs. Paul Wight
2.ECWHeat Wave July 16, 2000Los Angeles, CaliforniaGrand Olympic Auditorium5,700Justin Credible (c) vs. Tommy Dreamer in a Stairway to Hell match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship
3.NWANWA New Jersey vs. NWA Pro June 27, 2009Newark, New JerseyJFK Recreation Center5,500Apollo (c) vs. Dimitrios Papadon for the NWA North American Heavyweight Championship
4.NEPWNEPW at the Lake County Fairgrounds August 24, 2002Painesville, OhioLake County Fairgrounds5,000Julio Dinero vs. Dick Trimmins
WXWSportsfest July 9, 2004Allentown, PennsylvaniaCedar Beach ParkRapid Fire Maldonado (c) vs. Mana the Polynesian Warrior for the WXW Heavyweight Championship
MWThrowback Night II August 28, 2004Memphis, TennesseeMid-South ColiseumTerry Funk and Corey Maclin vs. Jerry Lawler and Jimmy Hart with Jimmy Valiant as special referee91
ASWDukes of Hazzard Festival June 12, 2007Nashville, TennesseeMusic City MotorplexIron Cross, Bobby Houston and Jerry Lawler vs. Stan Lee, Eddie Golden and K.C. Thunder
5.ECWGuilty as Charged January 9, 2000Birmingham, AlabamaBoutwell Memorial Auditorium4,700Mike Awesome vs. Spike Dudley for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship
Clash of the Legends June 15, 2001Memphis, TennesseeMid-South ColiseumJerry Lawler vs. Lord Humongous with Lance Russell as special referee
6.ECWAnarchy Rulz October 1, 2000Saint Paul, MinnesotaRoy Wilkins Auditorium4,600Justin Credible (c) vs. Jerry Lynn for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship
ECWNovember to Remember November 5, 2000Villa Park, IllinoisOdeum Expo CenterJerry Lynn (c) vs. Steve Corino vs. Justin Credible vs. The Sandman and in a Double Jeopardy match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship
7.MWThrowback Night July 10, 2004Memphis, TennesseeMid-South Coliseum3,758Jerry Lawler and Jimmy Hart vs. Corey Maclin and Kamala92
8.ECWECW on TNN April 8, 2000Buffalo, New YorkFlickinger Center3,700Super Crazy (c) vs. Yoshihiro Tajiri and Little Guido in a 3-Way Dance match for the ECW World Television Championship93
9.ECWECW on TNN June 24, 2000Villa Park, IllinoisOdeum Sports & Expo Center3,500Justin Credible (c) vs. The Sandman for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship94
MWThrowback Night III: A Nightmare in Memphis October 30, 2004Memphis, TennesseeMid-South ColiseumJerry Lawler and The Rock 'n' Roll Express (Ricky Morton and Robert Gibson) vs. Corey Maclin, Stan Lane and Jackie Fargo95
10.ECWHardcore Heaven May 14, 2000Milwaukee, WisconsinThe Rave3,400Justin Credible (c) vs. Lance Storm and Tommy Dreamer in a 3-Way Dance match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship96
Top 10 most-attended shows in the 2010s
No.PromoterEventLocationVenueAttendanceMain Event(s)
1.All In September 1, 2018Hoffman Estates, IllinoisSears Centre Arena11,263The Golden Elite (Kota Ibushi, Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson) vs. Bandido, Rey Fénix and Rey Mysterio in a six-man tag team match
2.FMLLLuchamania USA January 26, 2013Los Angeles, CaliforniaLos Angeles Memorial Sports Arena7,000Blue Demon Jr., Cien Caras Jr. and Dr. Wagner Jr. vs. El Hijo del Santo, L.A. Par-K and Rayo de Jalisco Jr. in a six-man tag team match
3.JCWTake Me Home Charity Show February 21, 2015Detroit, MichiganDetroit Masonic Temple4,5002 Tuff Tony (c) vs. The Weedman for the JCW Heavyweight Championship
4.JCWHatchet Attacks March 26, 2011Southgate, MichiganThe Modern Exchange4,311Corporal Robinson (c) vs. Ian Rotten in a Barbed Wire, Tables, Ladders & Glass match for the JCW Heavyweight Championship97
5.WCEWrestleCade 5: The Final 3 Count November 26, 2016Winston-Salem, North CarolinaBenton Convention Center4,000Matt Hardy (c) vs. Ryback for the WrestleCade Championship98
6.NEWSix Flags Slam Fest June 15, 2019Jackson, New JerseySix Flags Great Adventure Theme Park3,700Jon Moxley vs. Caz XL99
7.CWIBrawl at the Bush II May 14, 2011Brantford, OntarioBrantford Civic Center3,600Haven, Lanny Poffo, Brutus Beefcake and Bushwhacker Luke vs. Big Daddy Hammer, Virgil and The Nasty Boys (Brian Knobbs and Jerry Sags) in a Survivor Series elimination match
8. February 17, 2013Chicago, IllinoisCongress Theatre3,500Blue Demon Jr., Imágen Nocturna and Piloto Suicida vs. L.A. Par-K, El Hijo del Santo and Rayo de Jalisco Jr.100
LUAustin Warfare March 15, 2016Austin, TexasAustin Music HallCage, Prince Puma and Rey Mysterio Jr. vs. Jack Evans, Johnny Mundo and PJ Black
ROHSupercard of Honor XI April 1, 2017Lakeland, FloridaLakeland CenterChristopher Daniels (c) vs. Dalton Castle for the ROH World Championship
9.NEWWrestling under the Stars (Day 1) August 1, 2015Wappingers Falls, New YorkDutchess Stadium3,341Rey Mysterio Jr. and Alberto El Patrón vs. The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson)
10.NEWWrestlefest March 3, 2017Waterbury, ConnecticutCrosby High School3,300Kurt Angle vs. Cody Rhodes in a Steel Cage match

Footnotes

See also

General

Specific

Further reading

  • Drasin, Ric; Collins, Bruce Dwight (2003). So, You Want to be a Wrestling Promoter?. Imprint Books. ISBN 1591099498.
  • Snyder, Ronald (2017). Wrestling's New Golden Age: How Independent Promotions Have Revolutionized One of America's Favorite Sports. Sports Publishing. ISBN 978-1683580201.
  • Greenberg, Keith Elliot (2020). Too Sweet: Inside the Indie Wrestling Revolution. ECW Press. ISBN 978-1773055763.

References

  1. Castle, Michael. "Entertainment, Value and WRESTLING: Why Independent Wrestling Promotions Matter". Bleacher Report. Retrieved July 15, 2011. https://bleacherreport.com/articles/768430-entertainment-value-and-wrestling-why-independent-wrestling-promotions-matter

  2. Farmer, Matt (December 23, 2015). "The History of Independent Wrestling". TheIndyCorner.com. Archived from the original on June 12, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210612212653/http://www.theindycorner.com/columns/the-history-of-independent-wrestling/

  3. "Vince McMahon has transformed pro wrestling from a - 03.25.91 - SI Vault". Archived from the original on 2014-04-07. Retrieved 2013-08-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20140407093053/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1119010/3/index.htm

  4. Meltzer, Dave (August 4, 2003). "First Monday update: Notes on Raw and Smackdown re. Rock & HHH, entrance videos, two new PPVs, GHC jr. title defended in SF, Daniels in UK, Dusty, Juvi and more". LiveAudioWrestling.com. Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Archived from the original on August 21, 2003. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  5. This was part of a post-game show for an MLB game between the Columbus Clippers vs. Louisville Bats. /wiki/Post-game_show

  6. Meltzer, Dave (July 28, 2003). "Big week in Japanese wrestling, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The HWA ran its annual show on 7/19 in conjunction with the Columbus Clippers minor league baseball team. The show drew 8,757, which is more than double the Clippers average (4,500) or the crowd drawn last year with several WWE wrestlers on the show (4,400). /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  7. "MAR. 7 IN HISTORY: Lawler headlines "Memphis Memories" card 20 years ago also featuring Funk, Idol, Koko, more". PWTorch.com. Pro Wrestling Torch. March 7, 2014. https://www.pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Torch_Today_2/article_76751.shtml

  8. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1996". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/96.htm

  9. Meltzer, Dave (July 20, 1992). "Vader makes title history, title belt lawsuit, Bash 92, real names". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Anyway, what this means is we've been underestimating the crowds of the Lucha Libre shows and that the original 5/16 show really did draw 6,250 (tickets were $20, $15 and $10 for that show and more freebies so the house was probably well under six figures but probably still in excess of $70,000). /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  10. Alvarez, Bryan (June 17, 1996). "Brian Pillman future after Humvee accident, Ilio DiPaolo bio, WCW and WWF big gates over the weekend, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Actual attendance at the World Wrestling Peace Festival was 5,964. I incorrectly misinterpreted the number of comps as being about 1,500 less than it actually was, although in no way did it look like there were anywhere close to 6,000 in the building but that is a legit figure. /wiki/Bryan_Alvarez

  11. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1998". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw98.htm

  12. Meltzer, Dave (November 8, 1993). "Oro dies in the ring, Sid Vicious vs. Arn Anderson stabbing incident". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 7,200 tickets were given away, enough to fill the Civic Center. About 5,500 showed up, a surprising amount of whom were certainly old enough to remember the weekly Thursday night cards from the 60s and 70s, and many of whom were kids who came largely to see the Big Bossman of WWF television fame. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  13. This was part of a halftime show for a CFL game between the Montreal Alouettes vs. Calgary Stampeders. /wiki/Halftime_show

  14. This was part of a halftime show for a CFL game between the Montreal Alouettes vs. Edmonton Eskimos. /wiki/Halftime_show

  15. There are different reports on the attendance of the event with numbers ranging from 5,500 to as high as 10,000 and 12,000.

  16. Benner, Eric (December 30, 2000). "Rougeau mega-show covers the bases". Canadian Online Explorer. SLAM! Wrestling. Archived from the original on April 14, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160414034952/http://slam.canoe.com/SlamWrestlingTheTruth/dec30_rou-can.html

  17. Oliver, Greg (January 5, 2001). "Ouelett & Rougeau: Stronger together". Canadian Online Explorer. SLAM! Wrestling. Archived from the original on April 8, 2001. https://web.archive.org/web/20010408201637/http://www.canoe.com/SlamWrestlingBiosO/ouelett_05jan01.html

  18. Meltzer, Dave (July 24, 1995). "Bash 1995 and AAA at the LA Sports Arena, Shamrock vs. Severn pro-wrestler shoot fight results, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Jacques Rougeau Jr. ran his first show on 7/15 in Verdun, QUE drawing what was reported in the newspapers as 3,500 fans but there is no way of knowing a real figure. The highlight of the show was Abdullah the Butcher's main event win over Richard Charland. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  19. Leroux, Yves (January 1, 2010). "Giants battle on Rougeau Christmas shows". SlamWrestling.net. https://slamwrestling.net/index.php/2010/01/01/giants-battle-on-rougeau-christmas-shows/

  20. Oliver, Greg (December 30, 1999). "Garvins topple Rougeaus for belts". Canadian Online Explorer. SLAM! Wrestling. Archived from the original on November 17, 2002. https://web.archive.org/web/20021117012724/http://www.canoe.com/SlamWrestlingArchive/dec30_garvins.html

  21. Meltzer, Dave (January 10, 2000). "NJPW Tokyo Dome reviewed, 1999 in revenue for promotions, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Jacques Rougeau's 12/29 show in Montreal drew about 2,600 fans in the 3,000-seat Pierre Charboneau Center, his biggest crowd to date. In the main event, Ron & Jimmy Garvin won the Johnny Rougeau tag team titles from Jacques & Raymond Rougeau. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  22. Benner, Eric (February 15, 1999). "Indie show thrills Quebec crowd". Canadian Online Explorer. SLAM! Wrestling. Archived from the original on February 10, 2005. https://web.archive.org/web/20050210193356/http://www.canoe.com/SlamWrestlingArchive/feb15_benner.html

  23. Benner, Eric (February 19, 1999). "Rougeau puts heart into promoting". Canadian Online Explorer. SLAM! Wrestling. Archived from the original on January 31, 2005. https://web.archive.org/web/20050131015220/http://www.canoe.com/SlamWrestlingTheTruth/99feb19.html

  24. Pearson, Craig (July 12, 2001). "Wrestlefest 2001; Border City Club's Bout Will Leave Someone Singing The Blues". Windsor Star. p. 45. We'll find out when the BCW finale explodes on the Civic Terrace from 2 to 4:15 p.m., once again part of the annual Bluesfest in the biggest local wrestling show of the year. Two years ago, the BCW's riverfront spectacle drew 1,600 people, while last year it attracted 2,200 - one of the biggest draws for independent pro wrestling in Canada. /wiki/Windsor_Star

  25. Meltzer, Dave (March 8, 1993). "Superbrawl, Ross done with WCW, two major lawsuits, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Junkyard Dog, Don Muraco, Jushin Liger, Joe & Dean Malenko, Chris Benoit, Jake Roberts and Jim Neidhart are in the midst of headlining an Australian tour. First night in Brisbane on 2/25 drew 2,200 and 2/26 in Melbourne drew about 4,000. Must be interesting because they are using Liger vs. Benoit, who have no name identity in Australia, as the semifinal, and Neidhart vs. Roberts on top. Can you imagine Roberts and Neidhart having to follow those two? /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  26. Meltzer, Dave (June 28, 1993). "Trying to fix WCW, Hogan about to leave WWF after King of the Ring". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 6/18 Sydney, Australia (AWF - 3,500): [...] Road Warrior Hawk b Demolition Smash /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  27. Meltzer, Dave (July 5, 1993). "More WCW idiocy, Hogan leaves WWF, Roddy Piper returns, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 6/24 Melbourne, Australia (AWF - 3,500): [...] Big Bossman b Nailz /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  28. Meltzer, Dave (August 2, 1999). "Vince McMahon comments on Bret Hart, WWF Fully Loaded review, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 7/17 Melbourne, Australia (High Risk Championship Wrestling - 3,500): [...] Nailz DDQ Primo Carnera III /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  29. There are different reports on the attendance of the event with numbers ranging from 2,500 to 3,000.

  30. Meltzer, Dave (March 8, 1993). "Superbrawl, Ross done with WCW, two major lawsuits, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Junkyard Dog, Don Muraco, Jushin Liger, Joe & Dean Malenko, Chris Benoit, Jake Roberts and Jim Neidhart are in the midst of headlining an Australian tour. First night in Brisbane on 2/25 drew 2,200 and 2/26 in Melbourne drew about 4,000. Must be interesting because they are using Liger vs. Benoit, who have no name identity in Australia, as the semifinal, and Neidhart vs. Roberts on top. Can you imagine Roberts and Neidhart having to follow those two? /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  31. Meltzer, Dave (June 28, 1993). "Trying to fix WCW, Hogan about to leave WWF after King of the Ring". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 6/26 Adelaide, Australia (AWF - 1,450): [...] Big Bossman b Nailz **1/2 /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  32. There are different reports on the attendance of the event with numbers ranging from 1,200 to 2,000.

  33. Meltzer, Dave (March 15, 1993). "Japan Super Show, Hogan, Flair and Brutus return, ratings, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 3/2 Adelaide, Australia (AWF - 1,000): [...] Jake Roberts b Jim Neidhart * /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  34. Meltzer, Dave (August 2, 1999). "Vince McMahon comments on Bret Hart, WWF Fully Loaded review, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 7/23 Adelaide, Australia (High Risk Championship Wrestling - 1,000): [...] High Risk Warrior b Nailz, Pit Bulls b DOA-DQ /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  35. Meltzer, Dave (February 16, 2015). "Possible WrestleMania main event changes, Genichiro Tenryu retires, more UFC drug testing woes, future of NXT, CMLL at a crossroads, and more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. After the return of L.A. Park, Dr. Wagner Jr. and Fuerza Guerrera to Arena Mexico on 2/8 drew more than 15,000, more than five times the normal Sunday crowd [...] An outside promotion, All Elite, booked Arena Mexico using those three stars, and drew the biggest crowd in the arena since the Anniversary show. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  36. There are different reports on the attendance of the event with numbers ranging from 10,500 to 11,000.

  37. Meltzer, Dave (July 14, 2008). "Forrest beats Quinton, rule changes UFC ignores, Ring of Hell". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. On 7/5 at Arena Monterrey, they drew 10,500 fans for an elimination match where the loser would get unmasked with Mistico, Ultimo Guerrero, Villano V, Atlantis, Blue Panther and Tigre Universitario /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  38. There are different reports on the attendance of the event with numbers ranging from 10,000 to 13,000.

  39. Meltzer, Dave (June 7, 2010). "UFC 114 in-depth, major change could affect TV, WWE injuries, NXT bios". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Ultimo Dragon's annual DragonMania show took place on 5/29 at Arena Mexico, a TV taping for Japan. The show drew more than 10,000 fans, although tickets were cheap and a lot of people got in free. [...] The main event was the babyface legendary quartet of Mil Mascaras (who turns 71 in July) & Tatsumi Fujinami (56) & Ultimo Dragon (43) & Brazo de Plata (47) beating Chuck Palumbo (in Mexico for one match) & Rey Bucanero & Atlantis & Arkangel de la Muerte. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  40. Event is described as "heavily papered". /wiki/Glossary_of_professional_wrestling_terms#P

  41. Meltzer, Dave (June 6, 2016). "More details on WWE brand split, Jimmy Snuka found incompetent, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. This was his annual DragonMania show taped for later broadcast on Japanese television. They heavily papered the show and had more than 10,000 fans attending with All Japan's Jun Akiyama and Yohei Nakajima being the major guests. [...] The main event was scheduled as Dragon & Octagon & Caristico over Fuerza Guerrera & Tiger Ali & Ultimo Guerrero via DQ for interference of Bucanero, and then Corleone made the save. They restarted as Dragon & Octagon & Caristico & Corleone beating Guerrera & Mephisto & Bucanero & Ali after U.K. wrestlers Saime Sahin and Jason LaRusso also interfered. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  42. Meltzer, Dave (August 21, 2017). "Ric Flair in critical condition in the hospital, G1 Climax finals, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The Crash ran its most successful event to date on 8/10 at the 11,000-seat Domo in San Luis Potosi, drawing 9,000 fans, the biggest crowd in company history, notable because it was a Thursday night show with no local television. They used Rey Mysterio Jr. & Blue Demon Jr. & Rey Fenix over La Mascara & M-ximo & Rey Escorpion in the main event /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  43. Meltzer, Dave; Alvarez, Bryan (August 5, 1996). "Major changes to WWF syndication, Herb Abrams dies, Kobashi wins Triple Crown for the first time, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Several of the groups this past week have run free shows as part of fireworks festivals or country fair type of events. The biggest was Tokyo Pro's show on 7/23 at Atami Sun Beach which was reported as being viewed by more than 65,000 fans. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  44. Meltzer, Dave (May 15, 1995). "WCW taping policy update, real-life pro-wrestling shoot fight booked for UFC, an early "too many shows" story, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Onita's much-ballyhooed final match on 5/5 at Kawasaki Baseball Stadium drew a sellout of approximately 50,000 fans (announced at 58,250) which would be a gate in the $2.5 million range and tons more in merchandise /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  45. Woodward, Buck (May 5, 2007). "THIS DAY IN HISTORY: THE FINAL WWF SHOW, FMW ANNIVERSARY, A WWE STAR DEBUTS THAT WE STILL HAVEN'T SEEN WRESTLE ON TV AND MORE". PWInsider.com. https://www.pwinsider.com/article/24244/this-day-in-history-the-final-wwf-show-fmw-anniversary-a-wwe-star-debuts-that-we-still-havent-seen-wrestle-on-tv-and-more.html?p=1

  46. Bixenspan, David (August 3, 2017). "Japanese Wrestling's Bomb-Loving Cult Hero Is Coming To New Jersey". Deadspin.com. https://deadspin.com/japanese-wrestlings-bomb-loving-cult-hero-is-coming-to-1797498762

  47. Rohan, Jim (October 5, 2018). "The Final Fall of the UW". CagesideSeats.com. https://www.cagesideseats.com/2018/10/5/17940754/the-final-fall-of-the-uwf

  48. Meltzer, Dave (November 28, 1994). "Akira Hokuto and Big Egg Wrestling Universe, first Clash post-Flair retirement, ECW vs. NWA war, tons more!". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The figures were more than just record-breaking, they were astounding. It was more than just the 42,500 fans, which more than doubled the all-time record for a woman's wrestling show that held up for 53 years (19,000 fans for a match between Mildred Burke and Elvira Snodgrass in 1941 in Louisville). /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  49. Woodward, Buck (May 5, 2007). "THIS DAY IN HISTORY: THE FINAL WWF SHOW, FMW ANNIVERSARY, A WWE STAR DEBUTS THAT WE STILL HAVEN'T SEEN WRESTLE ON TV AND MORE". PWInsider.com. https://www.pwinsider.com/article/24244/this-day-in-history-the-final-wwf-show-fmw-anniversary-a-wwe-star-debuts-that-we-still-havent-seen-wrestle-on-tv-and-more.html?p=1

  50. Wall, Jeremy (2005). UFC's Ultimate Warriors: The Top 10. Toronto: ECW Press. p. 46. ISBN 1550226916. 1550226916

  51. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1991". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/91.htm

  52. "Michinoku Pro-Wrestling Results: 2006". Purolove.com. http://www.purolove.com/misc/mpro/results/results06.php

  53. Meltzer, Dave (November 28, 2016). "WWE Survivor Series review, Goldbergagrees to more matches, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Insane Championship Wrestling of Glasgow, Scotland ran the biggest show in its history, a card they had promoted for one year on 11/20 at the SSE Hydro in Glasgow. They drew 6,193 fans paid, a number probably hurt because WWE ran two television tapings in the same building, a Raw that sold out with 11,000 and a Smackdown that did 10,800, just two weeks earlier. It was the largest crowd for a U.K. based promotion since the Big Daddy vs. Giant Haystacks match at Wembley Arena in 1981. It was larger than any TNA crowd in the U.K. since 2012 (when they drew 7,000 at Wembley) and TNA has had weekly television in the market since 2007 while ICW has no television in the U.K. Last year they ran at the smaller SECC Arena and sold it out with just under 4,000. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  54. Meltzer, Dave (October 8, 2018). "Massive UFC 229 expectations, plus tons of news". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Progress Wrestling ran its biggest show in its history, "Hello Wembley," on 9/30 at Wembley Arena, drawing 4,750 fans, the largest crowd for a U.K.-based promotion in England since the 1981 Big Daddy vs. Giant Haystacks match that drew 7,000 fans. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  55. Meltzer, Dave (July 6, 2014). "SummerSlam card, fall WWE direction, Jericho's return notes, What will take for Rock to return next year, PEDs in MMA, wrestling, reality of drug testing, TNA in New York and explaining TNA/Japan deal". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Preston City Wrestling in England ran an outdoor show on 6/28 as part of Armed Forces day as a Tribute to the Troops show. It was a free show that drew just under 4,000 fans. Both the Mayor of Preston and his wife attended and were in the front row. Carlito and Chris Masters were the Americans brought in as guest stars. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  56. Meltzer, Dave (November 23, 2015). "Holm defeats Rousey, Nick Bockwinkel passes away, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The Insane Championship Wrestling show on 11/15 at the SECC in Glasgow, Scotland, drew a sellout of 4,000 fans, which as noted, was the biggest crowd for a U.K. based promotion since 1982. ICW has been packing 1,500 seat buildings regularly, particularly after a BBC piece made a cult hero out of Grado. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  57. Meltzer, Dave (July 9, 2018). "Death of Matt Cappotelli". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The first show of the U.K. bouts with Revolution Pro was 6/30 in Milton Keynes, before a sellout of 2,546 fans. [...] Main event saw Minoru Suzuki & Zack Sabre Jr. beat Kazuchika Okada & Tomohiro Ishii to retain the British tag team titles. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  58. There are different reports on the attendance of True Legacy with numbers ranging from 2,500 to 2,600.

  59. Meltzer, Dave (October 17, 2016). "Goldberg returning to face Brock Lesnar, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The WCPW show on 10/8 in Manchester, on the same night as the UFC show (although this ended long before UFC started) drew 2,500 for a show headlined by Kurt Angle vs. Cody Rhodes. The crowd was very hot for the short main event that ended with Angle winning via ankle lock. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  60. Meltzer, Dave (October 3, 2016). "TNA at a crossroads, WWE Clash of Champions review, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Progress Wrestling ran its biggest event to date on 9/25, drawing 2,400 fans to the Brixton Academy in London. We're told this was the biggest crowd for a U.K. promotion in England since 1981. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  61. This was part of a halftime show for a CFL game between the Montreal Alouettes vs. Calgary Stampeders. /wiki/Halftime_show

  62. This was part of a halftime show for a CFL game between the Montreal Alouettes vs. Edmonton Eskimos. /wiki/Halftime_show

  63. Meltzer, Dave (August 4, 2003). "First Monday update: Notes on Raw and Smackdown re. Rock & HHH, entrance videos, two new PPVs, GHC jr. title defended in SF, Daniels in UK, Dusty, Juvi and more". LiveAudioWrestling.com. Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Archived from the original on August 21, 2003. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  64. This was part of a post-game show for an MLB game between the Columbus Clippers vs. Louisville Bats. /wiki/Post-game_show

  65. Meltzer, Dave (July 28, 2003). "Big week in Japanese wrestling, more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The HWA ran its annual show on 7/19 in conjunction with the Columbus Clippers minor league baseball team. The show drew 8,757, which is more than double the Clippers average (4,500) or the crowd drawn last year with several WWE wrestlers on the show (4,400). /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  66. "MAR. 7 IN HISTORY: Lawler headlines "Memphis Memories" card 20 years ago also featuring Funk, Idol, Koko, more". PWTorch.com. Pro Wrestling Torch. March 7, 2014. https://www.pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Torch_Today_2/article_76751.shtml

  67. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1996". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/96.htm

  68. Meltzer, Dave (July 20, 1992). "Vader makes title history, title belt lawsuit, Bash 92, real names". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Anyway, what this means is we've been underestimating the crowds of the Lucha Libre shows and that the original 5/16 show really did draw 6,250 (tickets were $20, $15 and $10 for that show and more freebies so the house was probably well under six figures but probably still in excess of $70,000). /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  69. Alvarez, Bryan (June 17, 1996). "Brian Pillman future after Humvee accident, Ilio DiPaolo bio, WCW and WWF big gates over the weekend, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Actual attendance at the World Wrestling Peace Festival was 5,964. I incorrectly misinterpreted the number of comps as being about 1,500 less than it actually was, although in no way did it look like there were anywhere close to 6,000 in the building but that is a legit figure. /wiki/Bryan_Alvarez

  70. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1998". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw98.htm

  71. There are different reports on the attendance of the event with numbers ranging from 5,500 to as high as 10,000 and 12,000.

  72. Meltzer, Dave (November 8, 1993). "Oro dies in the ring, Sid Vicious vs. Arn Anderson stabbing incident". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 7,200 tickets were given away, enough to fill the Civic Center. About 5,500 showed up, a surprising amount of whom were certainly old enough to remember the weekly Thursday night cards from the 60s and 70s, and many of whom were kids who came largely to see the Big Bossman of WWF television fame. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  73. Meltzer, Dave (October 12, 1992). "Hugely successful WWE tour, terrible ratings, Von Erich sentencing". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 10/1 Shelby, NC (WWWOW - 5,200 fair grandstand show): [...] Van Dam won Battle Royal /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  74. Campbell, Jason. "Christmas Chaos". ProWrestlingHistory.com. http://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/supercards/usa/wwf/ovw/ovwgardens.html#0101

  75. "October 8, 1990 in Memphis, TN". The History of Wrestling at the Mid-South Coliseum. ProWrestlingHistory. http://prowrestlinghistory.com/memphis/jarrett/1990.html#100890

  76. Meltzer, Dave (August 14, 1994). "New goofy WCW gimmicks, SMW all-time record, AAA return to LA disappoints, Mr. August wins G-1 again, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Wrestling set its all-time attendance and gate record on 8/5 in Knoxville for the "Night of the Legends," drawing 5,000 fans and $40,000. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  77. "Night of Legends". The Complete History of Smoky Mountain Wrestling. Retrieved January 25, 2020. http://prowrestlinghistory.com/smw/results/1994c.html#080594

  78. Meltzer, Dave (August 14, 1995). "Future of ECW and the Sunshine Network, controversial angle, revamped SummerSlam card, Collision in Korea, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The live attendance for Jim Cornette's show was 4,600 paid and slightly in excess of 5,000 in the building, both of which would be new company records. The old record for the "Night of Legends" last August in the same building was 5,000 fans, but 4,400 paid. The gate was $37,500, just a tad shy of the $40,000 record set last year. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  79. Alvarez, Bryan (January 22, 1996). "Results of the 1995 Observer Newsletter Awards, 1995 Record Book, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. /wiki/Bryan_Alvarez

  80. Meltzer, Dave (July 20, 1992). "Vader makes title history, title belt lawsuit, Bash 92, real names". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Anyway, what this means is we've been underestimating the crowds of the Lucha Libre shows and that the original 5/16 show really did draw 6,250 (tickets were $20, $15 and $10 for that show and more freebies so the house was probably well under six figures but probably still in excess of $70,000). /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  81. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1999". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw99.htm

  82. Mac, Eddie (September 19, 2016). "This Day in Wrestling History (Sept. 19): Happy Birthday Renee Young!". CagesideSeats.com. https://www.cagesideseats.com/2016/9/19/12903910/this-day-in-wrestling-history-sept-19-happy-birthday-renee-young

  83. Alvarez, Bryan (June 17, 1996). "Brian Pillman future after Humvee accident, Ilio DiPaolo bio, WCW and WWF big gates over the weekend, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Actual attendance at the World Wrestling Peace Festival was 5,964. I incorrectly misinterpreted the number of comps as being about 1,500 less than it actually was, although in no way did it look like there were anywhere close to 6,000 in the building but that is a legit figure. /wiki/Bryan_Alvarez

  84. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1998". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw98.htm

  85. Meltzer, Dave (November 8, 1993). "Oro dies in the ring, Sid Vicious vs. Arn Anderson stabbing incident". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 7,200 tickets were given away, enough to fill the Civic Center. About 5,500 showed up, a surprising amount of whom were certainly old enough to remember the weekly Thursday night cards from the 60s and 70s, and many of whom were kids who came largely to see the Big Bossman of WWF television fame. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  86. Meltzer, Dave (October 12, 1992). "Hugely successful WWE tour, terrible ratings, Von Erich sentencing". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. 10/1 Shelby, NC (WWWOW - 5,200 fair grandstand show): [...] Van Dam won Battle Royal /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  87. Meltzer, Dave (August 14, 1994). "New goofy WCW gimmicks, SMW all-time record, AAA return to LA disappoints, Mr. August wins G-1 again, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. Wrestling set its all-time attendance and gate record on 8/5 in Knoxville for the "Night of the Legends," drawing 5,000 fans and $40,000. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  88. Meltzer, Dave (August 14, 1995). "Future of ECW and the Sunshine Network, controversial angle, revamped SummerSlam card, Collision in Korea, tons more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The live attendance for Jim Cornette's show was 4,600 paid and slightly in excess of 5,000 in the building, both of which would be new company records. The old record for the "Night of Legends" last August in the same building was 5,000 fans, but 4,400 paid. The gate was $37,500, just a tad shy of the $40,000 record set last year. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  89. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 1997". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw97.htm

  90. Meltzer, Dave (December 8, 1997). "nWo Nitro plans that never panned out, ECW November to Remember coverage, Big Daddy passes away, Frank Shamrock to UFC, and more". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Campbell, California. The November to Remember PPV, billed ahead of time as ECW's showcase event of the year, fell far short of the mark in that regard. As a promotion, it was the most successful by far in company history. For a group that has only drawn 2,000 fans on two occasions in its nearly five year history, it destroyed all existing company records with a sellout crowd of 4,634 (4,218 paying about $103,900, plus another $43,930 in merchandise which are phenomenal figures for a company of that size) at the Golden Dome in Monaca, PA on 11/30. /wiki/Dave_Meltzer

  91. Campbell, Jason. "Throwback Night II". ProWrestlingHistory.com. https://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/memphis/others/mw.html#082804

  92. Campbell, Jason. "Throwback Night". ProWrestlingHistory.com. https://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/memphis/others/mw.html#071004

  93. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 2000". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw00-01.htm

  94. Cawthon, Graham. "Yearly Results: 2000". TheHistoryOfWWE.com. http://www.thehistoryofwwe.com/ecw00-01.htm

  95. Campbell, Jason. "Throwback Night III". ProWrestlingHistory.com. https://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/memphis/others/mw.html#082804

  96. Pantoja, Kevin (February 15, 2016). "Random Network Reviews: Hardcore Heaven 2000". 411mania.com. https://411mania.com/wrestling/random-network-reviews-hardcore-heaven-2000/

  97. Nemer, Paul (March 27, 2011). "3/26 JCW iPPV Results (Raven, Eugene, Conway)". Wrestleview.com. Retrieved April 1, 2022. https://www.wrestleview.com/indy-news/22282-3-26-jcw-ippv-results-raven-eugene-conway/

  98. Lea, Chris (November 26, 2016). "WrestleCade 2016 in Winston-Salem". WXII-TV. https://www.wxii12.com/article/wrestlecade-2016-in-winston-salem/8368455

  99. Crowther IV, Rob (June 17, 2019). "Jon Moxley, Mick Foley Rock Northeast Wrestling's Packed Six Flags Slam". ThePopBreak.com. https://thepopbreak.com/2019/06/17/jon-moxley-mick-foley-booker-t-rock-northeast-wrestlings-jam-packed-six-flags-slam/

  100. "Llego su Majestad LA Park a Chicago" [His Majesty LA Park has arrived in Chicago]. TheGladiatores.com (in Spanish). February 21, 2013. Retrieved April 2, 2022. En Chicago el nombre de LA Park es garantía de poder y el pasado 17 de Febrero volvió a llenar el Teatro Congress el inmueble resulto insuficiente para un público que materialmente se volcó en la arena rompiendo el record de asistencia ya que cerca de 3500 personas se dieron cita para ver a su ídolo. [In Chicago the name of LA Park is a guarantee of power and last February 17 he once again filled the Congress Theater, the building was insufficient for an audience that materially poured into the arena, breaking the attendance record as about 3500 people gathered to see their idol.] https://www.thegladiatores.com/?p=9554