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Ron Fuller finally withdrew from Knoxville at the end of the year and sold the NWA Knoxville office to Georgia Championship Wrestling promoter Jim Barnett. Fuller replaced Knoxville with Birmingham as the main end of SECW's territory and continued promoting in Alabama for a number of years. Fuller attempted a return to Knoxville several times ...
May 24, 1979: House show: Knoxville, Tennessee 1 [a] — June 1979 — — Vacated for undocumented reasons 31 Ron and Buddy Fuller June 22, 1979: House show: Knoxville, Tennessee 1 7 Won tournament 32 Toru Tanaka and Mr. Fuji: June 29, 1979: House show: Knoxville, Tennessee 1 30 33 Ron (2) and Robert Fuller (4) July 29, 1979: House show ...
All Star Championship Wrestling Knoxville, Tennessee: Bill Needham 1990–1992 [4] Continental Wrestling Federation: Knoxville, Tennessee: Ron Fuller: 1988–1989 [4] Eastern Championship Wrestling Knoxville, Tennessee 1981 Short-lived group that attempted to run Knoxville following the ASW/SCW promotional war. [7] Independent Wrestlers Union
Continental Championship Wrestling was a professional wrestling promotion based in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Dothan, Alabama, from 1985 until 1989, owned by Ron Fuller.The promotion evolved out of the NWA-affiliated Southeastern Championship Wrestling and Gulf Coast Championship Wrestling territories owned by Fuller, who purchased the Knoxville territory from John Cazana in 1974 and the ...
January 1979: SCW Show N/A 4 N/A 38 Alexis Smirnoff: May 18, 1979: SCW Show Knoxville, TN 1 14 39 Ron Garvin: June 1, 1979: SCW Show Knoxville, TN 5 N/A [3] 40 Dick Slater: July 1979: SCW Show N/A 1 N/A 41 Mongolian Stomper: August 3, 1979: SCW Show Knoxville, TN 9 21 42 Dick Slater: August 24, 1979: SCW Show Knoxville, TN 2 N/A 43 Toru Tanaka ...
The Von Erich family was wrestling royalty in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s until tragedy struck. By the time Fritz Von Erich died in 1997, five of his six sons preceded him in death.
Throughout the 1990s, he helped bring World Championship Wrestling (WCW) shows to the old territory, but never worked full-time for the promotion. Following that he ran a series of shows in Knoxville at the Homer Hamilton Theater that ended up being a short-lived developmental area for WWE.
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