Texas All-Star Wrestling

For the NWA regional territory based in San Antonio during the 1970s and 1980s, see Southwest Championship Wrestling.
Texas All-Star Wrestling
Acronym TASW
Founded January 15, 1994
Style American Wrestling
Headquarters Humble, Texas
Founder(s) Bob Murphy
Owner(s) Bob Murphy (1994-)
Website TASWwrestling.com

Texas All-Star Wrestling (TASW) is a professional wrestling promotion that was established by Bob Murphy in Humble, Texas in 1994. It is the oldest independent promotion in the state of Texas[1][2] and one of three based in the Greater Houston area along with Booker T's Reality of Wrestling and Lone Star Championship Wrestling.

It was the first successful wrestling promotion to open in Texas following the close World Class Championship Wrestling in 1990, and the Global Wrestling Federation in 1994. It not only remained the only major "indy" promotion in the state during the 1990s but is one of the oldest wrestling promotions in operation in the United States. The promotion has been profiled by both the Houston Press and the Houston Chronicle. Ken Hoffman, a longtime columnist for the Chronicle, has participated in several wrestling matches for charity. The Galveston County Daily News has called TASW the top promotion in the entire state.

Necro Butcher and Shawn Hernandez, both started their careers in TASW. Samoa Joe, Harlem Heat 2000 (Big T and Stevie Ray) from World Championship Wrestling, and Tammy Lynn Sytch, Christy Hemme and Daivari from World Wrestling Entertainment have all made appearances for the promotion as well as older wrestlers such as Abdullah the Butcher, Kamala and "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan, the latter holding the promotion's heavyweight title in 2003.

History

Background and early history

Texas All-Star Wrestling was started by Bob Murphy, a 10-year veteran who wrestled throughout Texas during the 1980s, who grew frustrated with the unethical business practices of small-time promoters following the collapse of the NWA territory system at the end of the decade. With the civic center yet to be built, he considered using Humble High School or another venue in the local area.[3] Murphy and his then tag team partner rented out a bingo hall by U.S. Route 59 in Humble, Texas and promised the owner, Casey Musick, $500 plus the proceeds from the concession stand. Renaming the building the "Humble Bingo Arena", they held their first show on January 15, 1994, which was attended by 450 fans and brought in over $2,000.[4] The promotion established its first championship titles between December 1994 and December 1996.[1]

Professional wrestling had been very popular in Houston, especially during the 1970s and 1980s, but had considerably declined in the years following the retirement of legendary wrestling personality Paul Boesch in 1987. It was not until the close of World Class Championship Wrestling in 1990, and the Global Wrestling Federation in 1994, that Murphy began promoting wrestling events after an absence of several years. It was the first successful independent promotion in Texas and, with the exception of occasional events held by Tugboat Taylor at Hofheinz Pavilion, remained the only organization in the entire state for nearly a decade.[5]

The shows immediately found an audience with its traditional Southern-style wrestling, rather than the "sports entertainment" favored by mainstream promotions such as World Championship Wrestling and the World Wrestling Federation, and established a strong and loyal following in the Greater Houston area. Many fans were so enthusiastic at the events that many wanted to participate themselves prompting Murphy to open a small gym in the back of the Humble Bingo Arena in 1996. Within two years, this eventually evolved into the present-day training facility and wrestling school where many of the top wrestlers on the Texas "indy" circuit would be trained, most notably, Shawn "Hot Stuff" Hernandez.[6] Prospective students of the school were required to volunteer at events in roles such as refereeing matches, escorting wrestlers to the ring as a "valet" or acting as security for several months prior to their first match. The entire training period generally took six months to one year, though some students graduated within four to five months.[3]

Humongous defended the TASW Heavyweight Championship against Abdullah the Butcher at the Humble Bingo Arena on March 22, 1997.[7] Older veterans such as "Mean" Mike Tatum, "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan and Kamala the Ugandan Giant also had short stints in the promotion. Both Tatum and Duggan held the TASW Heavyweight Championship during the early-2000s. Although speculated to become a major promotion, Murphy himself said in interviews that he was unconcerned about the expansion of the company and instead wanted to focus on developing younger locally based talent and "help them make it to the next level". In addition to its Houston-based roster, Texas independent wrestlers Rasta Savage and Necro Butcher also regularly competed in the promotion. Later stars to emerge during the next decade included Bobby 2-Badd, Mr. Mayhem, Zen-Zen, VooDoo the Xecutioner, Nasty Nick Daniels, Dylan Starr and Nark the Nevulon.[8] River City Wrestling's Joey "Super Shot" Spector, an alumnus of the Texas Wrestling Academy, also wrestled for the promotion early in his career.[9]

Ken Hoffman and The Houston Chronicle

On January 16, 1999, at the TASW's 6th annual "Rumble in Humble" supercard, Houston Chronicle columnist Ken Hoffman made his pro wrestling debut against The Jester in the opening bout;[10] he not only lost the match but had to be carried out of the ring on a stretcher.[11] Hoffman had previously covered the promotion during the mid-1990s and would continue to make occasional appearances over the next few years donating his prize money to charities. The journalist was signed to a series of Texas Death-style matches, with no referee present and "anything goes", against The Jester. These matches were held at the Silverwings Ballroom in Brenham on February 13, the Civic Center in Diboll on March 5, the Humble Bingo Arena on March 6, in Port Lavaca on March 13 and at Spring High School in Spring, Texas on March 20, 1999.[12] Miss Hooters Girl 1999 winner Alisa Wong was his valet for these matches.[13]

That summer, the promotion began producing a weekly late-night series which aired on KNWS-TV.[14][15] Hoffman also made a return at the "Rumble in Humble" where he unexpectedly won the TASW Cruiserweight Championship in a Three-Way Dance with Bones and "Loverboy" Joey Corman. He was helped in his victory due to outside interference from Alisa Wong and his manager Sean "The Cablinasian" Pendergast.[16] Hoffman also entered the "Humble Rumble",[11] a 20-man battle royale for $15,000 and a title shot against then TASW Heavyweight Champion "Mean" Mike Tatum, but quickly eliminated himself after entering the ring.[17] He retained the title in a rematch with Bones on February 12[18] and successfully defended the title for six months against opponents such as Brother Icarus, Bonez and the Jester until finally surrendering the title to TASW promoter Bob Murphy that summer.[8][19]

21st century

By 2000, TASW was regularly drawing between 300 and 800 fans each month at its home arena in Humble and also promoted shows in other cities outside Harris County and Houston including Texas City, Baytown, Port Lavaca, Brenham and El Campo. In August of that year, a story on Murphy and TASW was featured in the Houston Press and profiled several its top stars including female wrestlers Skyler and Nadia Payne, Big Daddy from Cincinnati, Mini Stuff, Mr. Fu Ku, Spanish Fly, "Playboy" Joey Corman, Rasta Savage, Necro Butcher and Shawn Hernandez.[4] The story received a positive response from readers, however, Warriors of Wrestling (World of Wrestling) promoter wrote a letter to the editor criticizing the article for its "lack of research and professionalism" as well as the TASW for its inappropriate fan behavior. She requested the newspaper provide "equal exposure" and invited the author, Jesse Washington, to attend an upcoming show.[20]

A year later, "Hacksaw" Jim Duggan wrestled for the promotion during the summer and early fall of 2001. During this first stint with TASW, Duggan feuded Harlem Heat 2000 (Big T and Stevie Ray) from World Championship Wrestling.[21] Kamala and Mike Tatum headlined a TASW show at the Humble Bingo Arena on February 22, 2003.[22] Later that year, the promotion held a memorial show for one of its former stars and official announcer, Brother Icarus, at the arena on October 4, 2003.[23] Ken Hoffman, who had wrestled him two years before, wrote a column in memory of his passing.[24] He recalled in a later column that during the match he secretly had Jim Adler, a celebrity TV attorney known as the "Tough Texas Lawyer", interfere in the match on his behalf. He ordered Brother Icarus to stop attacking Hoffman, who had been choking him and pulling his hair, and threatened to have Icarus arrested for assault and battery. When fans began booing, Adler threatened to subpoena the entire audience as witnesses. This distraction allowed Hoffman to roll-up his opponent for the victory and quickly escaped with the belt.[25]

The promotion was praised by The Galveston County Daily News, the oldest newspaper of record in the state of Texas, as "the best-run independent group in the state" and crediting Bob Murphy for keeping TASW out of the well-publicized feuding seen among rival Texas promotions.[26] Scott E. Williams, a journalist for The Galveston County Daily News, wrote in early-2004 that TASW was "arguably the top independent wrestling group in the entire state".[27] On January 10, 2004, several TASW wrestlers participated in a show for High Impact Wrestling at Texas City’s Nessler Center headlined by Johnny Blade and Kamala. The event also served as the professional wrestling debut of Scott E. Williams who agreed to participate as the special guest referee in the main event in exchange for a donation to The Daily News’ United Way fund.[27] On June 5, Tom Prichard, the top talent scout for World Wrestling Entertainment, conducted a "no-holds-barred" clinic at TASW's wrestling school in Humble.[28] Also that summer, Jim Duggan returned to the promotion[29] and, at the August 7th "Tomball Streetfight" supercard,[30] defeated TASW Heavyweight Champion Zen-Zen for the title.[31] At the time of its 11th anniversary at the 2005 "Humble Rumble", Williams wrote "In addition to being one of the country’s longest-lived independents, TASW has become the best one in Texas".[32]

Recent years

On May 20, 2007, the promotion had its first card at the Armadillo Event Center where it held a 10-man "Hardcore Street Fight" inside a steel cage as the main event.[8] The promotion and its school was again featured in the Houston Chronicle three months later. Scoby Gober, a three-time TASW Hardcore Champion, was interviewed for the story.[3] On October 13, Ken Hoffman also made a return appearance as TASW's "SlamFest '07" supercard where he and Sean Pendergast won the TASW Tag Team Championship from Scoby Gober & Bones in a Triple Threat match with Nate Slater & Rocco Carmanooch at the Humble Bingo Arena. Like his previous victory, Hoffman was helped by valet Alisa Wong and manager Sheik Ali Ramzanali. Both men donated their prize money to charity.[33][34][35] On December 8, 2007, Tammy Lynn Sytch made an appearance at the "Seasons Beatings" supercard at the Humble Bingo Arena.[36] That same month, The Houston Press covered a TASW event at the Armadillo Events Center featuring Spider Boy, whom the author referred to as "the world's laziest Spider-Man", in a match with Steve "Bones" Monckton.[37]

In February 2008, the Houston Chronicle also covered the Texas All-Star Wrestling's 15th-annual "Humble Rumble" where a photo was taken of "BLT" Bubba Lee Travis and an 8-year-old child attending the event with his father. The event boasted a sold-out crowd and was one of the promotion's biggest show of the new year.[38] The following month at "Scar Wars", WWE superstar Daivari who was originally there for an autograph signing but was later involved in an alterication with Dylan Starr which led to impromptu match between the two. Later that night, he became involved in a post-match brawl after Starr interfered in a Triple Threat match between Hector Montoya, Nasty Nick Daniels and TASW Cruiserweight Champion Chip Dumas causing a no-contest.[39]

The promotion celebrated its 16th anniversary at the 2009 "Humble Rumble" at the Humble Bingo Arena on January 10, 2009.[40] At the end of the year, TexasIndyWrestling.com ranked Texas All-Star Wrestling #5 of the top ten wrestling promotions in Texas.[41]

Roster

  • "Adorable" Anthony Andrews
  • Alex Evans
  • "Addictive and Expensive" Byron Wilcott
  • Claudia Del Solis
  • David Stahr
  • Darkstar
  • Dark Tiger
  • Delilah Doom
  • Diamond Dawg
  • Divinity
  • Dylan Starr
  • Douki
  • El Latino
  • Estrella Galactica
  • Edson Baeza
  • Enygma
  • Erik Ortiz
  • Gallo Mayo
  • Guerrero Astral
  • Haywire
  • Hector Montoya
  • Jared Wayne
  • J-Sin Sullivan
  • Jesse K. Logan
  • "The Giant" Kash
  • Kratoz
  • Lemus Dos
  • Lil' Chunky
  • MadDog
  • Medico Loco
  • Mr. Bigg
  • Mr. Peligro
  • Nate Andrews
  • Peligro Jr.
  • Poder Nocturno
  • Rayo Potosino
  • Rayadicto
  • Ricky Starks
  • Scoby Gober
  • Sajibran
  • T-Bone
  • Onyx Cooper
  • Wence Lopez
  • The Inmate
  • Jacob Sharp
  • Thomas "The HitMan" Barnes

Championships

Championship Champion(s) Previous champion(s) Date Won Location Event
TASW Heavyweight Championship J-Sin Sullivan "Adorable" Anthony Andrews March 26, 2016 Humble, Texas Humble Rumble
TASW Cruiserweight Championship "LoverBoy" Nate Andrews Haywire March 26, 2016 Humble, Texas Humble Rumble
TASW Tag Team Championship "Adorable" Anthony Andrews and "Loverboy" Nate Andrews Nate Laws and Onyxx Cooper February 20, 2016 Houston, Texas Beat Down

References

  1. 1 2 Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  2. Rouner, Jef (June 14, 2012). "Texas-All-star Wrestling". Houston Press. Houston, Texas: Voice Media Group.
  3. 1 2 3 Hughes, Kim (August 9, 2007). "Being Tossed On The Mat; Get the crowd into wrestling, Humble boasts its own venue, school for sport". Houston Chronicle.
  4. 1 2 Ring Dings; Bound for the World Wrestling Federation or not, these folks learn to take their lumps at Texas All-Star Wrestling (August 10, 2000). "Washington, Jesse". Houston Press.
  5. Dyer, R.A. "Who Are Those Masked Men?; Wrestling, Mexican-style, blends culture, morality and crowd screaming passion in Houston arenas". Texas Magazine.
  6. Hoffman, Ken (2009). "Bright Future For Big, Quick Man". Miami Herald.
  7. Hoffman, Ken (February 14, 1997). "New FM talk station reveals its programming lineup". Houston Chronicle.
  8. 1 2 3 Hoffman, Ken (May 17, 2007). "This deal is very easy to compute". Houston Chronicle.
  9. "Bio". JoeySpector.com. 2009. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  10. Hoffman, Ken (December 31, 1998). "Turner's forecast shows blue skies". Houston Chronicle.
  11. 1 2 Hoffman, Ken (December 28, 1999). "Here's a prediction that may come true". Houston Chronicle.
  12. Hoffman, Ken (January 31, 1999). "Anchoring TV news is sometimes a matter of gender". Houston Chronicle.
  13. Hoffman, Ken (February 28, 1999). "Raw meat prompts apology from Channel 2 weatherman". Houston Chronicle.
  14. Hoffman, Ken (April 29, 1999). "Obi-Wan Kenobi calls LaPorte home". Houston Chronicle.
  15. Hoffman, Ken (July 8, 1999). "Wendy's searching for hamburger lover". Houston Chronicle.
  16. Hoffman, Ken (January 18, 2000). "Trucker far more than a semi-fan". Houston Chronicle.
  17. Hoffman, Ken (January 23, 2000). "The gravy stains would be a sure giveaway". Houston Chronicle.
  18. Hoffman, Ken (February 10, 2000). "Summer camp to go for the pin". Houston Chronicle.
  19. Hoffman, Ken (September 4, 2007). "Minute Maid Park wants more shows". Houston Chronicle.
  20. Hoffman, Ken (August 24, 2000). "Letters". Houston Chronicle.
  21. Hoffman, Ken (August 9, 2001). "Alternative country is shaking up KIKK". Houston Chronicle.
  22. Hoffman, Ken (February 20, 2003). "Playmate coming to spin the bottle". Houston Chronicle.
  23. Hoffman, Ken (September 7, 2003). "Speaking of Foronda, she's now in fine voice". Houston Chronicle.
  24. Hoffman, Ken (September 2, 2003). "He acted mean, but it was a front". Houston Chronicle.
  25. Hoffman, Ken (June 12, 2007). "Lawyer looks for tough talk about safety". Houston Chronicle.
  26. Williams, Scott E. (April 10, 2003). "Small operations can be a dirty business". The Galveston County Daily News.
  27. 1 2 Williams, Scott E. (January 4, 2004). "No real standard bearer ranks as top wrestler". The Galveston County Daily News.
  28. Hoffman, Ken (May 6, 2004). "Playboy Club ready to swing". Houston Chronicle.
  29. Williams, Scott E. (July 11, 2004). "Flair's autobiography well worth the price". The Galveston County Daily News.
  30. Williams, Scott E. (August 1, 2004). "Scattered notes about the wrestling world". The Galveston County Daily News.
  31. "Independent Wrestling Results - August 2004". 2004 Results Archive: August. OnlineWorldofWrestling.com. August 2004. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  32. Williams, Scott E. (January 9, 2005). "Wrestling: TASW celebrates 11th birthday". The Galveston County Daily News.
  33. Hoffman, Ken (September 18, 2007). "Tickets weren't easy for Hannah Montana". Houston Chronicle.
  34. Hoffman, Ken (September 23, 2007). "Special Sunday Mail Delivery; Parents are still hot about hot tickets". Houston Chronicle.
  35. Hoffman, Ken (October 11, 2007). "Five on Five gets Texans' point of view". Houston Chronicle.
  36. "Season's Beatings". TASWwrestling.com. December 2007. Archived from the original on December 23, 2007.
  37. Kramer, Daniel (December 13, 2007). "Bayousphere". Houston Press.
  38. "Reading him the riot act". Houston Chronicle. February 7, 2008.
  39. Murphy, Bob. "Daivari invades TASW". TASW News. TASWwrestling.com. Archived from the original on 15 March 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  40. Martin, Adam (January 6, 2009). "Indy News #1: Abdullah the Butcher, TASW Wrestling". WrestleView.com. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
  41. "The Top Ten Wrestling Promotions in Texas". TexasIndyWrestling.com. December 14, 2009. Retrieved 31 July 2010.
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