0 A Look Into The History Of Professional Wrestling

By Minnie Whitley


Proficient grappling is both a sport and a performing art that is a very widespread form of entertainment in Latin America, North America, Japan and Europe. Its scripted nature has often made critics see it as a dishonest sport compared to boxing, amateur brawling and mixed martial arts. However, no major wrestler or promoter has denied that current pro fighting has match outcomes that are predetermined. Below is the history of professional wrestling.

Tussling grew as a result of the on journey carnival strongman who would in most cases challenge anybody to fight him inside the ring or just last ten minutes. Time later the carnies found out that they could be able to make money by charging entry fee to the crowd that watched the matches rather than rely on the entry fee of the fighters. The fighters identified themselves with fake names and encouraged betting by playing the dislike of crowd.

As the nineteenth century neared its end, organizers put events in arenas just like boxing. For some decades, numerous occasions on grappling got held by dissimilar individual promoters. There was presence of championship belts which held no real authority. The National Wrestling Association was formed in 1901 by promoters and it gave a sole belt for championship.

After the end of world war two, the partition of brawling by the National Wrestling Association resulted into regional leagues. An informal agreement was met on not to tap talent from other undesignated region or enlarge their showground into each other region. The federation in the Northeast called the World Wide Wrestling Federation became a bit defiant; they shortened their identity to World Wrestling Federation and broke the gentleman agreement almost immediately.

The last standing NWA in the 1980s only operated in Southeast. In fact the league was known as NWA and later changed to World Championship Wrestling after it was purchased. It outdid the WWF successfully and rose to higher levels where it was able to woo top talents from competitors and their rating shot up.

Various factors that included storylines that were poorly conceived and a steroid distribution scandal by the federal investigation brought WWF to its lowest point. It was however able to recover with ingenious angles and wrestlers that were young and talented. In 2001, it bought WCW and took control of wrestlers, video library and trademarks wiping it out of existence.

Extreme Championship Wrestling was another league that had a chief impact on pro fighting. It was a minor league that was based in Philadelphia, it gathered following of fans through broadcasts at late night on local sports networks. It promoted a hardcore style with daring and dangerous moves that appeared completely insane. It lasted for about five years and it went bankrupt and their popular hardcore styles were incorporated into the WWF.

A lawsuit by the World Wildlife Fund filled a successful lawsuit that saw the WWF change its name to World Wrestling Entertainment due to their ambiguous acronyms. As a result of the fall of ECW a grittier style of brawling has moved into the mainstream making the blood chilling fights have a bigger fan following throughout the world.




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