New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling

(Redirected from NZWPW)

New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling (NZWPW) is a professional wrestling promotion based in Petone and later Wainuiomata in New Zealand. The promotion entered a hiatus in 2018,[1][2] when former NZWPW wrestler, Jay Marshall left the promotion to start Capital Pro Wrestling.[3] Since 2020, professional wrestling and training in Wainuiomata is now run by former NZWPW wrestler, Hayden Thiele with his Valiant Pro promotion. This promotion has many former wrestlers from NZWPW such as Axl Stirling, "Rufguts" Roddy Gunn, Chad Howard and Jade Priest.[4]

New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling
AcronymNZWPW
Founded2003
Founder(s)Martin Stirling
FormerlyWellington Pro Wrestling
Websitenzwpw.com

History

edit

Formation

edit
 
NZWPW logo used from 2005 to 2013

NZWPW was formed in October 2003 by martial arts trainer, former New Zealand Sumo Wrestling champion and head of Petone's He Toa Sports Association, Martin Stirling. Stirling noticed a new generation of wrestling fans, brought up on WWF action. With a wrestling ring already set up at his He Toa gym, Stirling sent an invitation for prospective Wrestlers. Four men answered the call, X-Rated, Juice, Inferno and D-Hoya, with these four pioneers, NZWPW was born. Wrestlers trained by Stirling first performed at the Armageddon Convention on 20 September 2003, as part of an Impact Pro Wrestling show, and the promotion was launched under the name Wellington Pro Wrestling (WPW). WPW's first show was held on 14 November 2003 in Petone. Throughout 2004, more wrestlers joined and small shows were held at community venues around the Hutt Valley. Soon, Stirling, was inundated with prospective wrestlers and had to hold training weekends to find the best talent.[5]

WPW then got re-branded to New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling in January 2005. This was partly because the domain name for WPW was already used and to reflect the growing interest in touring New Zealand (Christchurch, Masterton, Levin, Gisborne, Hastings and Auckland) as well as the Wellington area. By May 2005, NZWPW had a presence on the internet and thirty five active wrestlers. On 25 March 2005 NZWPW held the Powerplay 2 event at the Lower Hutt Town Hall with over 300 fans in attendance[5]

Expansion

edit

NZWPW performed shows in Christchurch, Palmerston North, Porirua, Ōtaki, Levin, Paraparaumu, Blenheim and many others major centres up and down the country making it the most widely touring New Zealand promotion and the only one to perform regularly in both New Zealand's North Island and South Island. Wrestlers from NZWPW have also wrestled for Australian promotion Impact Pro Wrestling Australia (formerly Major Impact Wrestling).[6] Female wrestler Misty also competed in the all women's Australian promotion PWWA.

In May 2006 a number of NZWPW wrestlers, led by former NZWPW booker The Punisher and WCW/NWA star Rip Morgan, left to set up a rival promotion called Kiwi Pro Wrestling. Since then NZWPW has had an on-again-off-again working relationship with Auckland-based promotion Impact Pro Wrestling. In 2008 NZWPW featured on the television show 'Good Morning' which is a nationally seen show on TV One to promote Powerplay V with all profits being donated to the Te Omanga Hospice. It continued on its charity work in 2009 when it ran a show to raise funds for the Movember foundation. NZWPW also co-promoted a show with the Australasian Wrestling Federation featuring Raven. In 2009 Chris Masters featured at Powerplay VI, making numerous television appearances to promote the event including 'Good Morning' and '20/20'.

Martial arts

edit

Thanks to Martin Stirling's martial arts background, NZWPW made much of its links with New Zealand's martial arts scene. Many of their early shows featured demonstrations of fighting styles such as karate and kickboxing.[7] Shows have also been co-promoted with major Sumo events such as the 2005 Oceania Sumo Championships[8] and the 2006 New Zealand Open Sumo Championships.[9]

Also in 2006, NZWPW co-sponsored sumo wrestlers Sio Sakaria and Mark Tanu to attend the Junior World Championships in Estonia, where they won silver and bronze medals respectively.[10]

In 2009 NZWPW wrestlers Travis Banks and Tykade both won gold medals at the Oceania Sumo championships in Australia.[11][12]

This was backed up in 2010 when numerous NZWPW wrestlers took part in the Oceania Sumo Championships (this time held in Lower Hutt, Wellington, New Zealand). With Tykade once again taking out the open and heavyweight divisions, Rufguts and Ben Mana were also in the medals in the heavyweight and open divisions.

Travis Banks, Tykade and Rufguts went on to compete at the World Combat Games in China in August 2010.

Triangle TV

edit

Invasion

edit

New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling Invasion previously aired on Triangle TV & Stratos.[13] The show debuted on 21 August 2008[14] at 11pm.[15] Invasion includes touring of NZWPW and was officially kicked off on 16 August in Wainuiomata and occasionally, Upper Hutt. The show ended prior to the New Year of 2009.

Championships

edit

Current Champions

edit
Championship Champion(s) Date won Days held Location Event Previous Champion
NZWPW Heavyweight Championship Bryant 14 September 2018 2,267 Epuni Friday Night Live Pro Wrestling Wayne La Perfeccion
NZWPW Tag Team Championship The Wainui Express
(Hayden and Jade Priest)
20 July 2018 2,323 Epuni Friday Night Live Pro Wrestling Vacant
He Toa Cup "The Spartan" Sam Black 15 June 2018 2,358 Epuni Friday Night Live Pro Wrestling Cam Owens The Third

NZWPW Heavyweight Championship

edit

The NZWPW Heavyweight Championship was the top professional wrestling championship title in the New Zealand promotion New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling (NZWPW). It was the original super heavyweight title of Wellington Pro Wrestling and introduced as the WPW Super Heavyweight Championship on 3 December 2004. The inaugural champion was Ruamoko, who defeated Les Barrett in a tournament final in Lower Hutt, New Zealand, on 25 April 1992. The title became vacant when Ruamoko suffered an injury in early-2005 and, after the promotion became New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling, it was replaced by the current heavyweight championship first won by Island Boy Si on 25 March 2005.

NZWPW Tag Team Championship

edit

The NZWPW Tag Team Championship was the top professional wrestling tag team championship title in the New Zealand promotion New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling. The title was first won by The Superlatives (Jean Miracle and Nick Silver), who won a tournament final at Power Play IV in Lower Hutt, New Zealand to win the titles on 14 April 2007. It was the first title of its kind to be established by a major promotion since the NWA Australasian Tag Team Championship during the early 1980s and was the oldest active tag team championship in New Zealand.

He Toa Cup

edit
He Toa Cup
 
The final He Toa Cup holder, "The Spartan" Sam Black
Details
PromotionNew Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling
Date established10 December 2011
Date retired17 November 2018
Statistics
First champion(s)Ben Mana
Final champion(s)"The Spartan" Sam Black
Most reignsChad Howard & Axl (2)
Longest reignAxl (595 days)
Shortest reignDream Catcher (35 days)

The He Toa Cup was the secondary singles professional wrestling championship in the New Zealand promotion New Zealand Wide Pro Wrestling. The cup was first won by Ben Mana on 10 December 2011 in Petone, New Zealand. From 2011 – 2013, the cup was defended at every NZWPW show held in the He Toa Gym in Petone. The final champion was "The Spartan" Sam Black, who was in his first reign.

Title history

edit
Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days
1 Ben Mana 10 December 2011 Final Countdown (2011) Petone 1 120 Ben Mana became the first He Toa Cup champion [16]
2 Jakob Cross 8 April 2012 Bringing Down The House Petone 1 257 [16]
3 JC Star 21 December 2012 Bringing Down The House Petone 1 98 [16]
4 Dream Catcher 29 March 2013 Bringing Down The House Petone 1 35 [16]
5 Chad Howard 3 May 2013 Bringing Down The House Petone 1 168 [16]
Vacated N/A Right 2 Challenge (2013) Ōtaki Chad Howard exchanged the cup for a match against Ben Mana for the NZWPW Championship [17]
6 Mikey 28 February 2014 Bringing Down The House Petone 1 119 [18]
7 Mr Silver 27 June 2014 Beat Down (2014) Petone 1 85 [19]
8 Axl 20 September 2014 Road to Rescue (2014) Waikanae 1 167 Axl defeated Mr Silver in a Loser Wears a Dress match [20]
9 Chad Howard 6 March 2015 Bringing Down The House – End of an Era Petone 2 204 Chad Howard won a He Toa Cup Rumble [21]
10 Jade Priest 26 September 2015 Live Pro Wrestling – Featuring A Cosplay Contest Wainuiomata 1 181 [22]
11 Axl 25 March 2016 NZWPW Returns To Masterton Masterton 2 595 [23]
12 Kartik 10 November 2017 Powerplay 2017 Epuni 1 140 Kartik won a Battle Royale for the He Toa Cup [24]
13 Cam Owens The Third 30 March 2018 Friday Night Live Pro Wrestling Ngaio 1 77 Cam Owens The Third won a Royal Rumble Match for the He Toa Cup [25]
14 "The Spartan" Sam Black 15 June 2018 Friday Night Live Pro Wrestling Epuni 1 155 [26]
List of combined reigns
edit
Rank Champion No. of reigns Combined days
1 Axl 2 762
2 Chad Howard 2 372
3 Jakob Cross 1 257
4 Jade Priest 1 181
5 "The Spartan" Sam Black 1 155
6 Kartik 1 140
7 Ben Mana 1 120
8 Mikey 1 119
9 JC Star 1 98
10 Mr Silver 1 85
11 Cam Owens The Third 1 77
12 Dream Catcher 1 35

Powerplay history

edit

Powerplay was NZWPW's biggest and longest running event. A Powerplay event had been held almost every year of the promotion's existence.

Powerplay (2004)

edit
Powerplay (2004)
PromotionWPW
Date25 June 2004
CityPetone, New Zealand
VenuePetone Central School
Tagline(s)Showtime
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
First
Next →
Powerplay II


No.ResultsStipulations
1Les "The Slammer" Barrett defeated ChromeSingles match
2H-Flame defeated "Silencer" Jean MiracleSingles match
3The Ram defeated Creed by disqualificationSingles match
4Gold & Dal Knox defeated Inferno & Jonnie JuiceTag team match
5X-Rated defeated D-Hoya (c)Singles match for the WPW Catchweight Championship
6Jonnie Juice defeated Les "The Slammer" Barrett, Blade, Chrome, Creed, D-Hoya, AJ Freely, Gold, H-Flame, Inferno, Dal Knox, "Silencer" Jean Miracle & The Ram13-man Crusade match
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Powerplay II

edit
Powerplay II
PromotionNZWPW
Date25 March 2005
CityLower Hutt, New Zealand
VenueLower Hutt Town Hall
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
Powerplay (2004)
Next →
Powerplay III


No.ResultsStipulations
1The Ram defeated "The Hype" Bobby CoolSingles match
2X-Rated defeated Dan "The Man" StirlingSingles match
3Island Boy Si defeated Max "The Axe" DamageNZWPW New Zealand Heavyweight Championship Tournament Semi-Final
4Ivan Dragunov vs. The Rookie ended in a drawSingles match
5The Punisher defeated Harvey DollarsNZWPW New Zealand Heavyweight Championship Tournament Semi-Final
6Inferno & H-Flame defeated Jonnie Juice & "Silencer" Jean MiracleTag team match
7D-Hoya (c) defeated NOSSingles match for the NZWPW Catchweight Championship
8Island Boy Si defeated The PunisherNZWPW New Zealand Heavyweight Championship Tournament Final
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Powerplay III

edit
Powerplay III
PromotionNZWPW
Date14 April 2006
CityLower Hutt, New Zealand
VenueLower Hutt Town Hall
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
Powerplay II
Next →
Powerplay IV


No.ResultsStipulations
1"Shining" Nick Silver vs. Dan Stirling ended in a drawSingles match
2Chrome defeated AnarchySingles match
3Adam Avalanche defeated CD & Jimmy SparxTriple threat match
4The Ram defeated InfernoSingles match to determine the Number 1 Contender to the NZWPW New Zealand Championship
5TNT defeated Angel of DestructionSingles match
6D-Hoya defeated Jonnie Juice (c)Singles match for the NZWPW New Zealand Championship
7"Silencer" Jean Miracle & Max Damage defeated H-Flame & NOSTag team match
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Powerplay 6

edit
Powerplay 6
PromotionNZWPW
Date23 April 2009
CityTaita, New Zealand
VenueWalter Nash Stadium
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
Powerplay V
Next →
Powerplay VII


No.ResultsStipulations
1El Montana defeated AxlSingles match
2The Nerd defeated Travis BanksSingles match
3MacBeth & Misty defeated Carmella Caprice & MatarikiTag team match
4Ben Mana & Tykade defeated The Circus of Tragedy (Osiris & Phil Woodgate) (c)Tag team match for the NZWPW Tag Team Championship
5CD defeated Dan StirlingSingles match
6D-Hoya (c) defeated JC StarSingles match for the NZWPW Heavyweight Championship
7Chris Masters defeated Adam Avalanche and RufgutsTriple threat match
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Powerplay VII

edit
Powerplay VII
PromotionWPW
Date19 June 2010
CityLower Hutt, New Zealand
VenueLower Hutt Town Hall
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
Powerplay 6
Next →
Powerplay VIII


No.ResultsStipulations
1G.I. Jay defeated Fred The GreatSingles match
2Thor defeated Axl, Mikey Rave & The NerdFour way match
3Red Dragon defeated Kid MystiqueSingles match
4"Shining" Nick Silver defeated Travis BanksLance Storm Tournament Final
5Corey Dallas vs. JC Star ended in a drawSingles match
6Jon E. King & "The One" Vinny Dunn defeated Corey Dallas & JC StarTag team match
7Ben Mana defeated Adam AvalancheSingles match
8Chi-Tah defeated Misty, Carmella Caprice & Stella HammerFour way match
9Chad Howard defeated Johnny IdolHair vs. Mask Match
10Tykade defeated Rufguts (c)Singles match for the NZWPW New Zealand Championship
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Powerplay XI

edit
Powerplay XI
PromotionNZWPW
Date15 November 2014
CityLevin, New Zealand
VenueLevin Memorial Hall
Tagline(s)A Battle for the Heart And Soul of NZWPW
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
Powerplay X
Next →
Powerplay 2017


No.ResultsStipulations
1The Wainui Express (c) defeated Rodeo DriveTag team match for the NZWPW Tag Team Championship
2"The Standard Hero" Graham Hughes defeated Kade Morgan 3GSingles match
3Franke Quinn defeated Scarlett (c)Singles match for the KPW Women's Championship
4Charlie Roberts defeated Shane SinclairSingles match. Hughes Academy Champion vs. KPW Champion
5Misty (c) defeated Krystal KayneSingles match for the Hughes Academy Women's Championship
6Team Warriors (Ben Mana, Paul Sayers, Hayden Thiele, Jade Priest & Mr. Silver defeated Team Nobodies Drive (Bryant, Chad Howard, Axl, XXX-Rated & "Dreamcatcher" Phil Woodgate)5 on 5 elimination tag team match
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

5 on 5 Elimination Tag Team match

edit
Elimination Wrestler Eliminated by
1 Bryant Disqualification
2 Ben Mana Countout
2 Axl Countout
3 Mr. Silver Pinfall
4 Jade Priest Pinfall
5 Hayden Thiele Pinfall
6 Chad Howard Pinfall
6 XXX-Rated Pinfall
6 "Dreamcatcher" Phil Woodgate Submission
Survivor(s): Paul Sayers

Powerplay 2017

edit
Powerplay 2017
PromotionNZWPW
Date10 November 2017
CityEpuni, New Zealand
VenueEpuni Community Hall
Powerplay chronology
← Previous
Powerplay XI
Next →
TBA


No.ResultsStipulations
1Cam Owens the Third defeated Sam BlackSingles match
2Shane Sinclair defeated "Rufguts" Roddy Gunn via DisqualificationStirling Rules match
3Wayne la Perfeccion defeated Paul SayersSingles match
4Katrik defeated Bryant, Misty, Umlaut, Jay Marshal, Axl (c), Robbo "The Aussie Dreamboat" Smith, and "The Standard Hero" Graham HughesBattle Royale for the He Toa Cup
5Jade Priest defeated "Thunderbird" Daniel MartinsSingles match
6Charlie Roberts defeated Chad Howard (c)Singles match for the NZWPW Heavyweight Championship
7Axl defeated Charlie Roberts (c)Singles match for the NZWPW Heavyweight Championship
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ NZWPW – Kayfabia. 6 May 2020 [dead link]
  2. ^ Last Show. 6 May 2020
  3. ^ Regional News (13 November 2018). "In the ring for Mitchell". Regional News. Retrieved 1 February 2019.
  4. ^ Wainuiomata News (12 February 2020). "Who will be crowned the first wrestling champion?". Wainuiomata News. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  5. ^ a b Wrestling Revival. 10 May 2005
  6. ^ New Zealand Wrestling Archive: NZWPW Stars in MIW. 13 March 2006
  7. ^ New Zealand Pro Wrestling Informer: Report from first WPW show. 18 November 2003
  8. ^ New Zealand Wrestling Archive: NZWPW – "Powerplay II" Preview. 17 March 2005
  9. ^ Sumo and Professional Wrestling Collide. April 2006
  10. ^ New Zealand Pro Wrestling Informer: NZWPW Sumo Success. 29 August 2006
  11. ^ "Wrestler home to show skills". 23 August 2009.
  12. ^ "Travis Banks: Potential Perfection". February 2010.
  13. ^ "Invasion Times". NZWPW (ARCHIVED). Archived from the original on 14 October 2008. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  14. ^ "NZWPW Invasion on Triangle (ARCHIVED)". NZWPW. Archived from the original on 14 October 2008. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  15. ^ "Local Programmes". Triangle Television (ARCHIVED). Archived from the original on 14 October 2008. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  16. ^ a b c d e "NZWPW Championship History". NZWPW.com. 2018. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  17. ^ "He Toa Cup tournament begins tonight". NZPWI.co.nz. 2013. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  18. ^ "Mana retains, Nobodies retreat at BDTH". NZPWI.co.nz. 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  19. ^ "Rufguts becomes dual-champion at Beat Down". NZPWI.co.nz. 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  20. ^ "Rufguts rejected, Dream Catcher wins NZWPW Championship". NZPWI.co.nz. 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  21. ^ "Bringing Down the House – End of an Era". Kayfabia.com. 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  22. ^ "Live Pro Wrestling Cosplay Contest". Kayfabia.com. 2015. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  23. ^ "Returns To Masterton". Kayfabia.com. 2016. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  24. ^ "Presents: Powerplay: 2017". Kayfabia.com. 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  25. ^ "Friday Nights Live Pro Wrestling At Ngaio". Kayfabia.com. 2018. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  26. ^ "Friday Nights Live Pro Wrestling At Ngaio". Kayfabia.com. 2018. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
edit