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All Elite Wrestling: AEW 18 6.5 3 World Wrestling Federation/World Wrestling Entertainment: WWF/WWE 4 5.5 4 All Japan Pro Wrestling: AJPW 3 5.25 5 Ring of Honor ROH 2 5.5 Total Nonstop Action Wrestling/Impact Wrestling: TNA/Impact World Wonder Ring Stardom: Stardom 8 Revolution Pro Wrestling RevPro 1 World Championship Wrestling WCW 10 Pro ...
The May Day Stadium hosted Collision in Korea, a two-day supercard co-promoted by NJPW and WCW, from April 28–29, 1995. The second night, with a crowd of at least 165,000, is the highest attended wrestling event of all-time.
With a combined crowd of 355,000, it is the highest attended wrestling event of all-time. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The list is dominated by WCW's flagship Monday Nitro television program, which aired from various arenas and locations across the world during its 5-year run.
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) was an American professional wrestling promotion founded by Ted Turner in 1988, after Turner Broadcasting System, through a subsidiary named Universal Wrestling Corporation, purchased the assets of National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) territory Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP) (which had aired its programming on TBS).
Gus Sonnenberg (c) vs. Ed "Strangler" Lewis in a Best 2-out-of-3 Falls match for the AWA World Heavyweight Championship [99] 8. Lou Daro Gus Sonnenberg vs. Joe Malcewicz July 24, 1929: Los Angeles, California: Grand Olympic Auditorium: 10,700 Gus Sonnenberg (c) vs. Joe Malcewicz in a Best 2-out-of-3 Falls match for the AWA World Heavyweight ...
The Warrior match, which is considered one of the worst matches of all time, and the Goldberg vs. Diamond Dallas Page match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, which is considered one of the greatest WCW matches of all time. [1] In 2014, all of WCW's Halloween Havoc PPVs became available on WWE's streaming service, the WWE Network. [2]
In 2001, the World Wrestling Federation (now known as WWE) purchased the assets of WCW, including the video libraries of all previous NWA and WCW pay-per-views, and the ownership rights of the names of these events. To date WWE has only promoted one pay-per-view event using the name of a former WCW PPV, The Great American Bash, from 2004 until ...
I'll definitely recommend the show cause it is easy to watch and has some really good wrestling but I won't put it as an all-time great WCW show." [4] In 2020, Thomas Hall of Wrestling Rumors gave the event a rating of B+, stating, "This was one of the best shows WCW has put on in years. Even the main event wasn’t bad!