Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Nellya Baughman [1] (August 21, 1935 – May 9, 2008) was an American professional wrestler who was best known by her ring name Judy Grable. She was an active wrestler during the 1950s and 1960s. She was an active wrestler during the 1950s and 1960s.
Judy Grable: February 1961 (NLT) N/A [a] N/A [b] 2 N/A [c] Either remained the champion or won the title on August 3, 1982. Championship history is unrecorded from August 3, 1982 to before September 6, 1963. 6 Cora Combs: September 6, 1963 (NLT) N/A [a] N/A [b] 1 N/A [c] Championship history is unrecorded from September 6, 1963 to before ...
Grable and Richter might have won the championship on May 17 in Regina, SK. [1] [2] [7] — Deactivated April 4, 1984 — — — — The championship was sold to the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) who established the WWF Women's Tag Team Championship, using the same belts and recognizing Velvet McIntyre and Princess Victoria as the inaugural ...
Moolah defeated Judy Grable at the end of a 13-woman battle royal. Moolah was not fully recognized by the National Wrestling Alliance as the new NWA World Women's Champion until 1964 because Billy Wolfe, with whom Moolah had a falling-out earlier in her career, still controlled most of the NWA.
The 1956 to 2010 version of the WWE Women's Championship was a women's professional wrestling world championship in World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE). The company claims a lineage that dates back to September 18, 1956, when The Fabulous Moolah became the third NWA World Women's Champion. WWE did not exist at that time, but they claim 1956 for ...
Judy Martin: November 22, 1980 — Atlanta, GA: 2 813 although Joyce Grable was the reigning champion at the time, Martin was recognized as the champion after defeating then-champion Princess Little Heart. [2] † Velvet McIntyre: February 13, 1983 — San Antonio, TX: 1 [Note 2] Judy Martin was recognized as the champion after defeating Joyce ...
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.
They later began to book their wrestlers, including Judy Grable in Boston, under promoter Paul Bowser. [20] In the late 1950s when the once-dominant promoter of women's wrestling, Billy Wolfe, was out of business, Ellison and Lee began to book their female wrestlers for more and more shows. [49]