Acronym | SCW |
---|---|
Founded | November 5, 1994 |
Defunct | November 20, 2004 |
Style | Rasslin' |
Headquarters | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Founder(s) | Count Grog |
Owner(s) | Count Grog (1994-2004) |
Website | Official website |
Southern Championship Wrestling (SCW[1]) was a professional wrestling promotion that held events in the Southeastern United States, especially in eastern and central North Carolina,[2] from November 1994 to November 2004, when it was run by Greg Mosorjak.[3][4] The promotion was based in Raleigh, North Carolina, with offices in Fuquay Varina and Lenoir, North Carolina.
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Greg Mosorjak formed Southern Championship Wrestling in November 1994[5] upon leaving the Carolina Championship Wrestling Alliance. He was refereeing for the promotion at the time, after a near 10-year absence from the sport, and was interested in getting back into managing. Mosorjak "turned heel" while in the promotion, and was involved in a brief feud with CCWA television announcer Henry Dean, before becoming the manager for The Invader. There were few opportunities as a manager, however, and seeing a number of talent not being utilized by management Mosorjak decided to start his own promotion. "Wiseguy" Jimmy Cicero and Chris Stephenson were among the CCWA roster who joined Mosorjak.[6]
SCW held its first show at the Bethesda Athletic Association Gym in Durham, North Carolina on November 5, 1994. The promotion crowned its first Southern Tag Team Champions on November 17, when The Rat Pack (Jimmy Cicero and Brian Perry) defeated Pat and C.W. Anderson in the finals of a one-night tournament in Raleigh, North Carolina. The first Southern Heavyweight Champion, Boris Dragoff, won the championship in a tournament held in Creedmoor on January 7, 1995, when he defeated Ricky Lee.[7]
Southern Championship Wrestling was not the first independent in North Carolina but it was one of the earliest and longest-lasting groups, despite competition from the numerous promotions in the Carolinas. For most of its 10-year run, its traditional "home turf" was primarily in eastern and central North Carolina.[5] SCW initially promoted events in the Raleigh-Durham area during its first two years in operation, however, Mosorjak gradually worked to expand the promotion's territory. In 1997, he began holding monthly shows in downtown Raleigh, establishing a home arena at the Kings Barcade[5] (and later at the historic Dorton Arena), and was eventually promoting events throughout the Carolinas by the end of the decade. SCW event tours also included, fire halls, high school gyms and fairs in cities such as Butner, NC, Creedmoor, NC, Durham, NC, Henderson, NC, Louisburg, NC, Southern Pines, NC, Valdese, NC, Wendell, NC; and in Clover, SC and Greer, SC.[7][2]
Part of SCW's success lay with its long relationship with many charitable organizations. Mosorjak and SCW participated in countless fundraisers and benefit shows local Jaycee groups, fire departments, and the Optimist Club. It also raised money for individuals in need of financial aid due to natural disaster or sickness. One of these shows involved an independent wrestler, Josh "Tears" Duke, who wrestled for the promotion until a car accident left him paralyzed. The benefit show was held at a local elementary school in Louisburg, North Carolina, and all proceeds went to help Duke's medical expenses.[8]
SCW also had a weekly 30-minute television show, produced by Eno River Media, which aired Tuesdays on Channel 6 in Durham, Chapel Hill, and Carrboro, and Saturday mornings on Channel 10 in Raleigh.[5] It later expanded to include Greensboro and as far away as Manhattan, New York. The television commentary was originally performed by Mosorjak, with the addition of Walt Rabon later on,[9] and most of SCW's live events would later be taped for television broadcast.
Even in its earliest years, SCW was able to feature some of the top independent wrestlers in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern United States from Jimmy Cicero,[10] Chris Stephenson, and Tom Brandi in the early 1990s, with later mainstays including C.W. Anderson, Caprice Coleman, Cham Pain, Dewey Cheatum, Lazz, Lexie Fyfe,[11] Mickie James, Matt Stryker, Rob McBride,[12] Shawn Alexander, Seymour Snott, The Stro, Trailer Park Heat, Venom, The Dupps (Bo and Jack Dupp), Death & Destruction (Frank Parker and Roger Anderson), Dangerous Minds (Toad and Lodi), and New Skool (Joey Matthews and Christian York); Matthews, still in high school, had his debut match on an SCW show.[6] Future WWE superstars Shane Helms, Shannon Moore, Edge and Christian, Lita and The Hardy Boyz (Matt and Jeff Hardy) also spent their early careers in SCW.[5][6][8][13][14][15]
The promotion presented a unique mix of traditional Southern-style 'Rasslin[8] and modern hardcore wrestling, what it described as "old time hardcore", attracting Extreme Championship Wrestling's Chilly Willy, Steve Corino, Julio Dinero,[16] New Jack as well as older NWA Mid-Atlantic legends Buddy Landell, Ivan Koloff, Manny Fernandez, Ricky Morton, The Barbarian, Greg "The Hammer" Valentine, Jimmy Valiant, Wahoo McDaniel.[5] Mosorjak was present with many of these stars at the Mid-Atlantic Wrestling Legends Convention and Fanfest in Charlotte, North Carolina years later.[4]
SCW had a longterm association with Anderson Academy, a wrestling school run by C.W. Anderson,[8] as well as Cueball Carmichael's KYDA Pro Wrestling facility. Its students were invited to several shows before SCW's close.[17] Bill Camp of KayfabeMemories.com wrote an article on the promotion for WormwoodChronicles.com, under the alias "Lawrence Alegdrop",[8] and later made a guest appearance for the promotion as the "manager, cousin, and chess partner" of Seymore Snott, Ulysses S. Snott.[18]
Mosorjak continued managing in SCW under his "Count Grog" persona forming a "heel" stable, "The Brotherhood", which dominated SCW throughout its 10-year history. Initially consisting of Major DeBeers and Boris Dragoff, it would come to include many of the region's top "rulebreakers" such as "Beastmaster" Rick Link,[14] "Ragin' Bull" Manny Fernandez, K.C. Thunder and Frank "The Tank" Parker.
Dragoff, under the management of Count Grog, won a one-night championship tournament in January 1995 to become the inaugural SCW Heavyweight Champion.[19] The next two years saw Mosorjak manage Brotherhood members Gorgeous George III to the SCW Heavyweight title (November 1996) and K.C. Thunder to the North Carolina Heavyweight title (February 1997), defeating Big Slam in a tournament final to become the promotion's first-ever champion. On June 27, 1998, he again led Dragoff to recapture SCW title, and persuaded Boris Dragoff to rejoin the Brotherhood, who had left the previous year. Five months later, on November 21, 1998, he helped Cueball Carmichael win the vacant SCW Heavyweight Championship from Big Slam, then substituting for an injured James "Poison" Ivey, in Louisburg, North Carolina. Club Security (Rumble and Rukkus) captured the SCW Tag Team titles from Pat & C.W. Anderson and Otto Schwanz the North Carolina title,[7] with assistance from Mosorjak, making it one of The Brotherhood's most successful years.
Mosorjak and The Brotherhood also toured the Southern independent circuit with many in the group, especially Major DeBeers, winning titles in most of the promotions they visited. In the summer of 1996, he and Major DeBeers were suspended from the Great American Wrestling Federation after Grog threw a fireball at DeBeers' opponent "Iceman" Mike Murphy.[20] Mosorjak's antics saw him being voted by fans as "Manager of the Year" in both SCW and Southern States Wrestling in 1997.[19] The Brotherhood was also involved in a longrunning feud revolving around Mosorjak and "Boogie Woogie Man" Jimmy Valiant which set attendance records in towns from Fall Branch, Tennessee to Butner, North Carolina. Many times, Valiant would manage to get his hands on Count Grog after defeating one of his goons.[21] In 1999, Pro Wrestling Illustrated called Count Grog the "least employee friendly boss around", due to his tendency of double-crossing his own wrestlers.[22] Since forming the group, Mosorjak twice turned on Major DeBeers, Boris Dragoff, Otto Schwanz, Jimmy Cicero, and Venom, though many eventually rejoined the group.
Mosorjak, who had been brought up in an era dominated by the National Wrestling Alliance, attempted to find a balance between his traditionalist roots and the newer style of wrestling popularized by Philadelphia's Extreme Championship Wrestling, and later adopted by mainstream World Championship Wrestling and World Wrestling Federation. The result was a combination of familiar "family friendly" Southern-style 'Rasslin[8] with modern hardcore wrestling, which Mosorjak described as "old time hardcore",[5] though it also used a variety of other styles.
The promotion became well-known for its wild brawls in the mid-to late 1990s, most especially at the Berkeley Café in Raleigh, described by Matt and Jeff Hardy as a popular bar "full of drunk college kids".[15] At one of these shows, during a ladder match between Steve Corino and Joey Matthews, the ceiling lights were knocked out causing sparks and fire which, according to Mosorjak, resembled an exploding ring match. Mosorjak, as Count Grog, was DDTed on the ladder by Corino near the end of the match though few people saw this because the lights were still out. In addition, Corino was arrested for assault at SCW's 3rd Anniversary show in Louisburg, NC, on November 22, 1997, when police were called after hitting manager Dexter Holly with a chair. The incident was sorted out by Mosorjak shortly after their arrival at the building. It was turned into an "angle", with Corino being arrested in the ring, and fans were asked to come down to the police station to sign statements verifying it was part of the show.[6]
Southern Championship Wrestling enjoyed a longtime working relationship with Matt and Jeff Hardy's OMEGA promotion, which ran in Cameron, North Carolina, until the Hardys signed with the World Wrestling Federation in 1999. Mosorjak was also an active manager in OMEGA[23] leading Christian York to the OMEGA Junior Heavyweight Championship in 1998.[7] He also managed many of these younger stars in his own promotion, most notably, when Shane Helms defeated Otto Schwanz for the SCW title on November 29, 1999, in Raleigh.[19][21] Mosorjak also managed Death & Destruction (Frank Parker and Roger Anderson)[24][25] in their feuds with Serial Thrillaz (Shane Helms & Mike Maverick) and Thug Life (Christian Cage and Sexton Hardcastle).[26] SCW-OMEGA cross-promotional activities extended to included championship titles being both recognized and defended in both promotions.[13] Prior to making their WWF debut, Surge, Venom and Pain wrestled Toad, Mike Maverick, and Otto Schwanz in a 6-man tag team "WWF vs. SCW" elimination match which ended with Maverick turning on Otto Schwanz.[27]
The promotion began experiencing financial troubles, as did other North Carolina indies, with state legislation putting professional wrestling under the jurisdiction of the North Carolina Boxing Commission in 2001. Regulation by the state commission tripled the cost of promoters to put on a wrestling show and, with the industry already in a post-"Attitude Era" recession, threatened to put an end to local independent wrestling entirely. SCW informed fans of the bill days after being passed and appealed to them to write to their representatives.[28] Its roster was hampered by a string of injuries during this time,[29] in addition to longtime talent splitting their time between SCW and other promotions, and was forced to fall back on younger less experienced wrestlers;[10] one of these wrestlers, Jacey North, was featured with SCW in an article by The Free Lance–Star in October 2000.[3] The retirements of Cham Pain and Major DeBeers also hurt the promotion's drawing power.[6]
Mosorjak managed to keep the promotion running for another year or two. He was able to expand its visibility with SCW's television show being seen Greensboro, North Carolina and Manhattan, New York, as well a regular internet television series via ProWrestlingTV.com in October 2002. By late-2004, however, with several key shows being cancelled or postponed, Mosorjak eventually decided to close the promotion. The decision was finally made due due to declining attendance and Mosorjak working extra hours his regular job in educational research. SCW, like many independent promotions, tended to run above cost requiring Mosorjak to use his personal finances to keep the promotion going and put a strain on his budget as a result.[8] SCW held its final show, "Blowout Bash", and featured Count Grog helping Otto Schwanz defeat C.W. Anderson to become the last SCW Heavyweight Champion.[19] A number of former SCW alumni appeared for the event. Lexie Fyfe, in particular, specifically requested a match against Brandi Wine for the SCW Diva Championship, a match which she won.[11][30][31]
After spending several years in semi-retirement, Mosorjak resumed running wrestling shows out of King's Barcade in Raleigh under the GOUGE (Gimmicks Only Underground Grappling Entertainment) banner. Unlike Southern Championship Wrestling, Mosorjak's new promotion was geared more towards comedy-based "family friendly" satire of hardcore wrestling and spoofs of popular gimmicks portrayed by independent wrestlers.[13] GOUGE Wrestling has been compared to the American version of HUSTLE.[21] Since running its first event on April 21, 2006, it has held shows thought the state of North Carolina including Stem, NC, Apex, NC, Allensville, NC, Butner, NC, Fuquay Varina, NC, Youngsville, NC, Seagrove, NC, and Wake Forest, NC.[32][33]
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Event | Date | Venue | City |
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Over the Top | January 20, 2001 | National Guard Armory | Butner, North Carolina |
Ground Zero | February 22, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Downtown Destruction | March 29, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Royal Pain | April 26, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Misery | May 31, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Cyberwar: The Fan Xperience | June 28, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Independents Day | July 26, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Cruel Intentions | August 30, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Imposion | September 27, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Maul-O-Ween | October 25, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
SCW 7th Anniversary Show | November 18, 2001 | The Cat's Cradle | Carrboro, North Carolina |
Event | Date | Venue | City |
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Over the Top | January 19, 2002 | Stem Fire Hall | Stem, North Carolina |
Ground Zero | February 28, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Downtown Destruction | March 28, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Royal Pain: Unfinished Business | April 25, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Ruckus | June 8, 2002 | Dorton Arena | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Fan Inferno | June 27, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Stampede | July 20, 2002 | Stem Fire Hall | Stem, North Carolina |
Independents Day | July 25, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Cruel Intentions | August 29, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
McDowell Street Massacre | September 20, 2002 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Maul-O-Ween | October 30, 2002 | Lincoln Theater | Raleigh, North Carolina |
SCW 8th Anniversary Show | November 23, 2002 | Riverside Elementary School | Louisburg, North Carolina |
Event | Date | Venue | City |
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Over the Top | January 4, 2003 | Stem Fire Hall | Stem, North Carolina |
Ground Zero | February 22, 2001 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Rasslemania | March 30, 2003 | Kings Barrcade | Raleigh, North Carolina |
Heatwave | July 12, 2003 | Burlington Athletic Park | Burlington, North Carolina |
SCW 9th Anniversary Show | November 7, 2003 | Butner Middle School | Butner, North Carolina |
Event | Date | Venue | City |
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Over the Top | February 7, 2004 | Stem Fire Hall | Stem, North Carolina |
Summer Heat | August 28, 2004 | Stem, North Carolina | |
Maul-O-Ween[Note 1] | October 30, 2004 | Bedford YMCA | Bedford, Virginia |
Blowout Bash[Note 2] | November 20, 2004 | Bethesda Athletic Association Gym | Durham, North Carolina |
Championship | Notes |
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SCW Heavyweight Championship | The heavyweight title of SCW. It was established in 1995 and continued to be defended within the promotion until 2004.[7][34] |
SCW Tag Team Championship | The tag team title of SCW. It was established in 1994 and continued to be defended until 2004.[7][35] |
SCW North Carolina Championship | The regional title of SCW. The title was established in 1997 and continued to be defended until 2004.[7][36] |
SCW Brass Knuckles Championship | The hardcore title of SCW. The title was established in 1995 and continued to be defended until 2004.[7][37] |
SCW Junior Heavyweight Championship | The light heavyweight title of SCW. The title was established in 1997 and continued to be defended until 2004.[7][38] |
SCW Diva Championship | The women's wrestling title of the SCW, it was established in 2001 and continued to be defended until 2004.[39] |