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Continental Championship Wrestling

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Professional wrestling promotion, active 1954–1990

Continental Championship Wrestling
Continental Championship Wrestling logo
AcronymCCW
Founded1954
Defunct1989
StyleProfessional wrestling
HeadquartersKnoxville, Tennessee;Dothan, Alabama
Founder(s)Roy Welch and Buddy Fuller
Owner(s)Roy Welch and Buddy Fuller (1954–1959)
Lee Fields (1960–1978)
Ron Fuller Knoxville (1974–1980, 1985–1988)
David Woods (1988–1989)
FormerlyGulf Coast Championship Wrestling
Southeastern Championship Wrestling

Continental Championship Wrestling was a professional wrestling promotion based inKnoxville, Tennessee, andDothan, Alabama, from 1985 until 1989, owned byRon 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 Alabama/Florida territory in 1977. When Fuller sold the promotion to David Woods in 1988, the name was changed toContinental Wrestling Federation.

History

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The Gulf Coast years (1954–1974)

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Nashville promoterRoy Welch had purchased the Mobile-Pensacola end of Leroy McGuirk's Tri-State Wrestling. Unlike McGuirk, who only promoted in the Mobile-Pensacola area on special occasions called spot shows, Welch decided to make promoting in Mobile-Pensacola a frequent attraction in the summer. However, due to his obligations in Nashville, his son Buddy Fuller (Edward Welch) was made booker for Mobile-Pensacola, and Fuller eventually expanded the territory into Mississippi-Louisiana as well.

At this point, the territory didn't even have a name, its own belts, or even its own wrestlers (aside from members of The Welch Family of course). They often relied on wrestlers and champions from Buddy's and their Uncle Lester Welch's territory. He ran in places like Tampa, Florida, and Atlanta, Georgia (which would eventually become Championship Wrestling from Florida and Georgia Championship Wrestling), as well getting help from his father in Nashville, Tennessee, and some occasional help from his Uncles Herb and Jack. These early attempts would start to unravel when Buddy Fuller failed to make payments to the territory from his father Roy Welch. Buddy's cousin Lee Fields (Albert Lee Hatfield) would save the territory and gave it the name "Gulf Coast Championship Wrestling".

Lee Fields would eventually buy the territory from Roy Welch and Buddy Fuller, and run shows in the area for almost two decades with Rocky McGuire booking Dothan-Panama City and Bob Kelly booking Mobile-Pensacola and Mississippi after a falling out with promoters in Louisiana with Mobile-Pensacola only running in the summer months. Kelly turned the promotion around from holding monthly and seasonal shows in a few towns which only drew a few hundred people to holding weekly shows in a different town night after night with local television exposure in each market, which led to each arena drawing thousands. Bob Kelly left the wrestling business in 1976 to enter real estate and spend more time with family, and Lee Fields found it more difficult to operate both his wrestling promotion andMobile International Speedway at the same time.. So he sold it to his cousin Ron Fuller around 1977-1978.

The Southeastern years (1974–1985)

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In 1974, Ron Fuller purchasedSoutheastern Championship Wrestling based in Knoxville, Tennessee from John Cazana, where he focused mainly on the east Tennessee area. In 1977, Ron Fuller took over the territory his grandfather and father had founded when GCCW folded and Fuller expanded the SECW to run in the Southern Alabama, Northern Florida area in addition the Eastern Tennessee territory he already established. This was initially labelled ”the Southern Division” of the SECW treating them as two separate entities despite the original plan to run a talent exchange between the two involving talent spending sixteen months in one end of the territory and then spend eight months in another to regain momentum after losing steam in the previous one.

In June 1979, several members of the talent roster and behind the scenes personnel left SECW over frustrations involving backstage politics with Ron's brotherRobert Fuller who was considered lazy in terms of booking the territory, and spent many nights partying and felt his spot in Southeastern was owed to him since he was a member of The Welch/Fuller family. Led byBob Roop,Ronnie Garvin,Bob Orton Jr. andBoris Malenko,All-Star Championship Wrestling fought a six-month promotional war over the Knoxville territory. Many of these defectors later joined the Kentucky based outlaw promotionInternational Championship Wrestling owned and operated byAngelo Poffo.

After this, the Knoxville end of Southeastern experienced financial losses, and sold to promotions such asJim Crockett Promotions andGeorgia Championship Wrestling for the next five years. Fuller then made Birmingham his main end of the territory with the Dothan end continuing to flourish, giving early exposure to future stars such asThe Fabulous Freebirds, rising stars in the territory along the lines ofAustin Idol, and appearances byRic Flair who would defend theNWA World Heavyweight Title in the area each year.

The Continental years (1985–1989)

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Continental Championship Wrestling (1985–1988)

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Five years later, Fuller decided that it was time to reach beyond the Southern Alabama/Northern Florida area and re-purchased the Knoxville end of the territory, with this expansion came a name change toContinental Championship Wrestling. After a failed negotiation withCBS, he settled on moving the television show out of the small television studio and into the big arenas where they did house shows in order to give the promotion a national look and feel. While the nameSoutheastern restricted the promotion to a more regional feel, the nameContinental gave fans the impression they toured all over the country, except Alaska and Hawaii.

Continental Wrestling Federation (1988–1989)

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In 1988,WCOV-TV owner David Woods bought the controlling interest in the promotion from Ron Fuller, and he renamed itContinental Wrestling Federation in a further attempt to compete with Vince McMahon and appear to resemble a nationwide promotion, even to the point of getting a national TV deal withFinancial News Network.[citation needed] Episodes also aired every Monday at 1:30 a.m.ET on theSunshine Network, a regional sportscable channel that served theSoutheastern United States.[1] Their last TV episode aired on November 25, 1989. The promotion closed after their final show on December 6, 1989.

Legacy

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This sectionpossibly containsoriginal research. Pleaseimprove it byverifying the claims made and addinginline citations. Statements consisting only of original research should be removed.(October 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Despite many huge angles over the years, this territory often has the status as "the lost promotion". Such obscurity was due to the lack of media coverage during the Gulf Coast and Southeastern years since both Lee Fields and Ron Fuller believed that their promotions should not be covered by wrestling magazines and often did not allow reporters in the locker room to interview the wrestlers. This was to prevent the exposure tokayfabe and preserve the illusion of wrestling as a sport in the area. However, Fuller relented with the changeover to Continental in order to get national exposure for the promotion from the magazines. Such exposure was at an all-time high during the Eddie Gilbert period.

Due to the expensive nature of archiving at television stations before thehome video boom of the 1980s, much of the footage from the Gulf Coast era and the Knoxville portion of Southeastern no longer exists, despite a few bits of rare footage turning up here and there. However, almost all of the Dothan portion of Southeastern along with the majority of Continental footage still exists. They are still owned by David Woods and Woods Communications.

Alumni

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Championships

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GCCW (1954–1974)

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SECW and CCW (1974–1988)

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CWF (1988–1989)

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See also

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References

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  1. ^Marvez, Alex (October 15, 1989)."Big Daddy says it's fake; fans don't care".The Miami Herald. Miami, Florida. p. 677. RetrievedOctober 14, 2022.

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