Southwest Championship Wrestling: Difference between revisions
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Starting on December 5, 1982, ''Southwest Championship Wrestling'' became the first weekly wrestling program on the [[USA Network|USA Cable Network]], airing Sundays at 11:00 a.m. [[Eastern Time Zone (North America)|Eastern Time]]. As a result of the new national exposure, SWCW staged a one-night tournament in [[Houston, Texas]], to determine an "Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion." [[Adrian Adonis]] was the winner of this tournament, and as a result he was presented with the oldest existing championship belt by [[Lou Thesz]] as well as a brand new belt. The 75-year old belt is now on display at the [[George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame]] in [[Waterloo, Iowa]] |
Starting on December 5, 1982, ''Southwest Championship Wrestling'' became the first weekly wrestling program on the [[USA Network|USA Cable Network]], airing Sundays at 11:00 a.m. [[Eastern Time Zone (North America)|Eastern Time]]. As a result of the new national exposure, SWCW staged a one-night tournament in [[Houston, Texas]], to determine an "Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion." [[Adrian Adonis]] was the winner of this tournament, and as a result he was presented with the oldest existing championship belt by [[Lou Thesz]] as well as a brand new belt. The 75-year old belt is now on display at the [[George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame]] in [[Waterloo, Iowa]] |
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However, because of a particularly bloody match between [[Tully Blanchard]] and "Bruiser" [[Bob Sweetan]] (which USA refused to air), the inability of the promotion to keep paying USA the [[United States dollar|$]]7,000 per week to keep the time slot, and a monetary offer made to the cable channel by [[World Wrestling Entertainment|WWF]] owner [[Vince McMahon]] to replace ''Southwest Championship Wrestling'' with his own programming,<ref>[http://www.infinitecore.ca/superstar/index.php?threadid=44371 KM : Reading Topic : swc on usa<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In addition, [[Barry Diller]], who as head of [[Paramount Pictures]] was also at the time the main shareholder in the USA Network, |
However, because of a particularly bloody match between [[Tully Blanchard]] and "Bruiser" [[Bob Sweetan]] (which USA refused to air), the inability of the promotion to keep paying USA the [[United States dollar|$]]7,000 per week to keep the time slot, and a monetary offer made to the cable channel by [[World Wrestling Entertainment|WWF]] owner [[Vince McMahon]] to replace ''Southwest Championship Wrestling'' with his own programming,<ref>[http://www.infinitecore.ca/superstar/index.php?threadid=44371 KM : Reading Topic : swc on usa<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In addition, [[Barry Diller]], who as head of [[Paramount Pictures]] was also at the time the main shareholder in the USA Network, had by August 1983 secured a deal to make the USA Network a source for [[Madison Square Garden Network]] programming and focus more on having the network being tied to sporting organizations which could air events in New York City's [[Madison Square Garden]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1983/08/28/business/barry-diller-s-latest-starring-role.html|title=Barry Diller's Latest Starring Role|publisher=New York Times|date=August 28, 1983|accessdate=March 29, 2025}}</ref> USA canceled the program (in spite of the high [[Nielsen ratings|ratings]] the show was garnering for the network) and turned the time slot over to ''[[WWF All American Wrestling]]''. Adonis' "undisputed championship" simply faded from SCW storylines within a few months and was abandoned in September 1983, and in April 1985, the promotion was sold to Texas All-Star Wrestling. |
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===Working alliance=== |
===Working alliance=== |
Revision as of 03:20, 30 March 2025
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Acronym | SWCW |
---|---|
Founded | 1978 |
Style | American Wrestling |
Headquarters | San Antonio, Texas |
Founder(s) | Joe Blanchard |
Owner(s) | Joe Blanchard |
Southwest Championship Wrestling (SCW) was a professional wrestling promotion that was owned by Joe Blanchard and based[1] in San Antonio, Texas, from 1978 to 1985, when it was purchased by Texas All-Star Wrestling and absorbed into that company.
History
Venues
Its television matches were usually taped at The Junction, a small boxing venue in San Antonio, although occasional matches from cards at San Antonio's HemisFair Arena were also seen.
Television
Starting on December 5, 1982, Southwest Championship Wrestling became the first weekly wrestling program on the USA Cable Network, airing Sundays at 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time. As a result of the new national exposure, SWCW staged a one-night tournament in Houston, Texas, to determine an "Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion." Adrian Adonis was the winner of this tournament, and as a result he was presented with the oldest existing championship belt by Lou Thesz as well as a brand new belt. The 75-year old belt is now on display at the George Tragos/Lou Thesz Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame in Waterloo, Iowa
However, because of a particularly bloody match between Tully Blanchard and "Bruiser" Bob Sweetan (which USA refused to air), the inability of the promotion to keep paying USA the $7,000 per week to keep the time slot, and a monetary offer made to the cable channel by WWF owner Vince McMahon to replace Southwest Championship Wrestling with his own programming,[2] In addition, Barry Diller, who as head of Paramount Pictures was also at the time the main shareholder in the USA Network, had by August 1983 secured a deal to make the USA Network a source for Madison Square Garden Network programming and focus more on having the network being tied to sporting organizations which could air events in New York City's Madison Square Garden.[3] USA canceled the program (in spite of the high ratings the show was garnering for the network) and turned the time slot over to WWF All American Wrestling. Adonis' "undisputed championship" simply faded from SCW storylines within a few months and was abandoned in September 1983, and in April 1985, the promotion was sold to Texas All-Star Wrestling.
Working alliance
Southwest Championship Wrestling had many working alliances with other wrestling promotions such as the American Wrestling Association when its world champion Nick Bockwinkel defended his title at SWC cards. Southwest Championship Wrestling also had talent exchange deals with World Class Championship Wrestling in Dallas and the World Wrestling Council in Puerto Rico.
Rights of Footage
In 2010, JADAT Sports Inc. bought all the footage of SCW and Texas All Star from Ronnie Martinez. They have released a DVD "Best of the 80s Volume I", which contains mostly SCW footage.[4] The Southwest Championship Wrestling tape library is one of the few classic wrestling tape libraries not owned by World Wrestling Entertainment. in 2021 JADAT Sports Inc. appointed Stream Go Media LLC as the exclusive distribution agents for both SCW and Texas All-Star Wrestling. Footage from both SCW and Texas All-Star Wrestling both appear on the streaming service "Wrestling Legends Network" built and operated by Stream Go Media, LLC launched on May 25, 2021, on the Roku platform and on www.WrestlingLegendsNetwork.tv.
Championships
For most of the promotion's existence, the World Heavyweight Champion of the American Wrestling Association was recognized as SCW's top champion as well.
Title | Final champion(s) |
SCW Southwest Brass Knuckles Championship | Tony Atlas (abandoned in 1983) |
SCW Southwest Heavyweight Championship | Kevin Sullivan |
SCW Southwest Junior Heavyweight Championship | Ron Sexton |
SCW Southwest Tag Team Championship | The Maoris (title renamed & continued in Texas All-Star) |
SCW World Heavyweight Championship | Scott Casey (abandoned in 1983) |
SCW World Tag Team Championship | The Sheepherders (abandoned in 1984) |
Alumni
- Chris Adams
- Adrian Adonis
- Austin Idol
- Bobby Fulton
- Buddy Moreno
- Ricky Morton
- Cocoa Samoa
- Gino Hernandez
- Ken Lucas
- Tony Falk
- Tully Blanchard
- Ted DiBiase
- Dory Funk Jr.
- Terry Funk
- "Bruiser" Bob Sweetan
- Scott Casey
- Terry Allen
- Bob Orton Jr.
- Chavo Guerrero Sr.
- Mando Guerrero
- Brett Sawyer
- Buzz Sawyer
- Eric Embry
- Tim Brooks
- Dan Greer
- The Ninja Warrior
- CT Night The Boss
- Ivan Putski
- Tony Atlas
- Skip Young
- Buddy Landel
- Bobby Jaggers
- Kareem Muhammad
- Blackjack Mulligan
- Dick Murdoch
- Iceman Parsons
- Al Perez
- Larry Lane
- Manny Fernandez
- Tom Prichard
- Chicky Starr
- Kelly Kiniski
- Adrian Street
- Bushwhacker Luke
- Bushwhacker Butch
- Jonathan Boyd
- Mil Máscaras
- Rick Rude
- Eddie Mansfield
- Dick Slater
- Nick Bockwinkel
- Jim Duggan
- Wahoo McDaniel
- Abdullah the Butcher
- Kevin Sullivan
- Bruiser Brody
- Jerry Lawler
- Eddie Gilbert
- Tito Santana
- The Sheik
- Baron von Raschke
- Ron Sexton
- Snake Brown
- Tank Patton
- Tiger Conway Jr.
- Rudy Boy Gonzalez
- The Grappler
- Tony Anthony
- The Hood
- The Mummy
- Manny Villalobos
Commentators
- Gene Kelly
- Gene Goodsen
- Steve Stack
- Rapido Rodriguez
References
- ^ "WrestlingTerritories.png". Freakin' Awesome Network Forums :: Freakin' Awesome Wrestling Forum :: (w)Rest of Wrestling. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
- ^ KM : Reading Topic : swc on usa
- ^ "Barry Diller's Latest Starring Role". New York Times. August 28, 1983. Retrieved March 29, 2025.
- ^ "MVD- Southwest Championship Wrestling Volume 1". MVD Entertainment.com. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
External links
- Southwest Championship Wrestling
- Independent professional wrestling promotions based in the Southwestern United States
- Entertainment companies established in 1978
- 1985 disestablishments in Texas
- Sports in San Antonio
- Professional wrestling in Texas
- USA Network original programming
- 1982 American television series debuts
- 1983 American television series endings
- 1978 establishments in Texas
- Companies disestablished in 1985
- Defunct professional wrestling promotions