Pro Wrestling eXpress (PWX, also known as NWA East) is a professional wrestling promotion that was founded in North Versailles, Pennsylvania in 1994 by Jim Miller and Sean "Shocker" Evans. It is the longest-running promotion in the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. PWX was the main rival of Steel City Wrestling during the 1990s and was an affiliate of the National Wrestling Alliance from 1997 to 2012. PWX held a prominent role in the organization during this period. It was part in the annual NWA Anniversary Shows from 1998 to 2000 and brought national and world NWA champions to audiences in the East Coast of the United States. The promotion also collaborated with non-NWA members on the local independent circuit holding several interpromotional shows with Chris Lash's Allied Powers Wrestling Federation (2002; 2009–2010) and participated in Deaf Wrestlefest (2010).

Pro Wrestling eXpress
AcronymPWX
Founded1994
StyleAmerican wrestling
HeadquartersMcKeesport, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Founder(s)Jim Miller
Sean Evans
Mark Wilhelm
Owner(s)Jim Miller (1994–)
Sean Evans (1994–2007)
ParentNational Wrestling Alliance (1997–2012)
Allied Independent Wrestling Federations (2014–2016)
FormerlyNWA East
Atlas Wrestling Company
Pittsburgh Wrestling League

History

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Early history

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An early PWX banner with the promotion's original logo.

Pro Wrestling eXpress was established by Jim Miller and Sean "Shocker" Evans in 1994.[1][2] A wrestling school, the PWX Academy, was subsequently opened at the Eastland Mall with B.A. Briggs and Jimmy Valiant as head trainers.[3] PWX also had a weekly late-night television show that aired on WPTT.[4] The first events were held in October and November 1995. The first PWX Heavyweight Champion, B.A. Briggs, won the championship in a tournament held on October 21, 1995, in North Versailles, Pennsylvania. The first PWX Tag Team Champions were crowned in a tournament final on January 8, 1996, in North Versailles, when Sean Evans and Vince Charming defeated Brian Anthony and Paul Atlas. PWX was also one of several East Coast promotions to feature talent from Extreme Championship Wrestling. On December 13, 1996, Blue World Order members Stevie Richards and The Blue Meanie won the PWX Tag Team Championship.[5]

Rivalry with Steel City Wrestling

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In late 1997, PWX television announcers Norm Connors and Andrew Lazarchik began holding their own wrestling events in the Pittsburgh metropolitan area under the Steel City Wrestling banner. On September 21, 1997, an interpromotional PWX-SCW show was held at Pittsburgh's Sullivan Hall. Connors and Lazarchik left the company at the end of the year, due to creative differences with PWX management, and began directly running against PWX. This led to a near three-year rivalry that lasted until SCW's close in the spring of 2000.[6]

Joining the National Wrestling Alliance

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Around this time, PWX joined the National Wrestling Alliance as NWA East.[7] On October 24, 1998, T. Rantula represented the promotion at the NWA 50th Anniversary Show in Cherry Hill, New Jersey, where he wrestled Abdullah the Butcher.[8] Several NWA East / PWX wrestlers also took part in the NWA 51st Anniversary Show in Charlotte, North Carolina. Brian Anthony wrestled Naoya Ogawa (Universal Fighting-Arts Organization) and Gary Steele (NWA UK Hammerlock) in a Triangle match for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. Vince Kaplack represented PWX in the "Free For All" battle royal to be named number one contender for the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship. NWA East / PWX's The Rage (Samu and Quinn Magnum) battled The Canadian Cartel ("Gorgeous" Michelle Starr and Crusher Carlsen), representing NWA Canada, to a no-contest. This was a semi-final tournament match to determine the top contenders for NWA World Tag Team Championship.[9] A tournament final for the then vacant PWX Tag Team Championship was held at the NWA 52nd Anniversary Show in Nashville, Tennessee which saw Paul Atlas and Jimmy Angel beat Rage to become the new champions.[10]

At one point, PWX was one of three groups under the umbrella of NWA East along with the Pittsburgh Wrestling League and World Legion Wrestling. It was eventually decided to consolidate all three groups into a single company. On June 22–23, 2001, PWX vacated all its championships to create four new titles as part of NWA East.[11] Paul Atlas became the NWA East Triple Jeopardy Champion after defeating Jimmy Angel, Kid Cupid, Kid Ego and Scott Venom. Crusher Hansen defeated J.B. Destiny and Dean Jablonski in a three-way match for the NWA East Three Rivers Championship. The Mon Valley Monsters (Cory K and Big Poppa Gator) beat Armageddon (Rapture and Revelation) in a tournament final to unify the NWA East, Pittsburgh Wrestling League and Pro Wrestling eXpress Tag Team Championships to form the new NWA Pro Wrestling eXpress Tag Team Championship. Brandon K also defeated Dirk Ciglar in a tournament final to unify the NWA East, PWL and PWX Heavyweight titles into the newly formed NWA East Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship.[12] On December 15, 2001, NWA East / PWX hosted the 2001 NWA Clash of the Champions at the McKeesport Sportatorium in which Shinya Hashimoto defeated Steve Corino and Gary Steele in a three-way round-robin "Iron Man" match to capture the then vacant NWA World Heavyweight Championship. After the match, Hashimoto was attacked by a masked wrestler to was revealed to be former NWA world champion Dan Severn.[13] Naohiro Hoshikawa also made his U.S. debut at the event unsuccessfully challenging NWA East Triple Jeopardy Champion Paul Atlas in a Triple Threat match with Nikita Allanov.

In February 2002, NWA East / PWX co-held the Best of the Best Tournament with NWA Tri-State in Titusville, Pennsylvania. Also on the show, Larry Zbyszko defeated Fabulous Frederick, Vito LoGrasso beat NWA Tri-State Champion Magnum in a non-title match, and Rocky Reynolds defeated Jason Rumble to win the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship. NWA East hosted a "champion vs. champion" match between NWA East Heavyweight Champion Nikita Allanov and NWA National Heavyweight Champion Ricky Murdock the following year as well as bringing in talent from NWA New Jersey and NWA Virginia.[14]

Relationship with the Allied Powers Wrestling Federation

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NWA East / PXW had a close working relationship with the Allied Powers Wrestling Federation based in Commodore, Pennsylvania. The two promotions co-hosted several interpromotional shows together from 2002 to 2010. These early shows had the two companies sharing talent, however, a storyline developed which saw relations between APWF and NWA East become confrontational. A showdown of sorts took place at the McKeesport Sportatorium on July 5, 2002, pitting APWF and NWA East wrestlers against each other. According to the pre-match stipulations, the APWF would receive the contracts of NWA East wrestlers if they won the majority of the matches. If the NWA East wrestlers won the majority, APWF wrestlers would be banned from their shows. Bubba Brewer (APWF) defeated Crusher Hansen (NWA East) in the first bout while Spiffy Sean Stylez (NWA East) won the second bout against Kidd Country (APWF) via disqualification. In the final bout, Jimmy Vega$ and Dr. Feelgood (APWF) beat Dirk Ciglar and Brandon K (NWA East) to win the NWA East contracts for the APWF.[15] The APWF-NWA East war continued throughout the summer. The APWF "invasion" came to an end in McKeesport on August 2, 2002, when J.B. Destiny and Sean Stylez defeated Kid Country and Charlie Mansun. APWF promoter Chris Lash was forced to leave the National Wrestling Alliance as a result.[16]

Notable talent

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NWA East / PWX featured a number of wrestlers who were regulars in the East Coast wrestling scene and was the birthplace of Crusher Hanson[1] and Michael Tarver.[17] Like its longtime rival SCW, the promotion regularly featured Pittsburgh "legends" such as Lord Zoltan and T. Rantula as well as many regional "indy stars" such as Bubba the Bulldog, Dennis Gregory, The Hungarian Barbarian, Lou Marconi,[18] Frank Stalletto, Tom Brandi, Darren Wyse and Samu. It also showcased younger up and coming wrestlers including, most notably, Amazing Red, Cody Hawk,[19] Kingdom James, Gregory Iron, Matthew Justice, Ryan Mitchell, Michael Shane, Quinson Valentino, Shark Boy,[19][20] Sterling James Keenan,[21] Xavier, and The S.A.T. (Jose Maximo and Joel Maximo).[22] Bobby Shields, a former NWA East / PWX Three Rivers Champion, participated in East Coast Wrestling Association's 15th annual Super 8 tournament.[23] Female wrestlers Tessa Blanchard and Stacy Hunter have both had notable roles in the company.[24][7]

The promotion also featured talent from Extreme Championship Wrestling. Blue World Order members Stevie Richards and The Blue Meanie are former PWX Tag Team Champions. Shane Douglas held the PWX Heavyweight Championship in the summer of 1999.[5][25] In addition to showcasing national and world NWA champions, Robert Gibson, Larry Zbyszko and other NWA legends have made special guest appearances during the 2000s.

Jon Burton, a sportscaster for SportsRadio 93.7, was recruited by NWA East / PWX promoter Jim Miller to become a "heel" wrestler for the promotion. Burton initially entered pro wrestling for a one-time wrestling match against fellow radio broadcaster Bubba the Bulldog of B94.[26][27] He won the NWA East / PWX Brass Knuckles Championship twice while competing for the company.[28][29]

PWX Wrestleplex and television syndication

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"When we first went down, when they first got this building, it was a school. You know, like an elementary school. And we went down and they unhooked, like [the doors] had been chained shut, and they broke the bolt on it and unchained it. And I'm thinking 'We're gonna' find, you know, the body of a drug addict in here! What is this?'. And the ceilings needed to be torn out. The whole place needed to be gutted. And they have really, and not just Jim and Quinn, but all the wrestlers, trainees, and volunteers, and other people who really went in there and [...] have turned it into a great little arena. Its got great lighting, and its got a stage, and it's also a great training venue where we have a chance to now train new students and train the next generation."

In an April 2015 interview, Chris LeRusso discusses the PWX Wrestleplex[30]

NWA East / PWX held the majority of its shows at the PWX Wrestleplex, located at the Eastland Mall, in North Versailles, Pennsylvania. The promotion moved its events from Eastland Mall, which was demolished in 2005, to the Jacob Woll Pavilion in Renziehausen Park during the mid-2000s.[2] It also held events at The Sportatorium[7] and The Palisades in McKeesport, Pennsylvania.[31] In August 2011, the promotion relocated to McKeesport and established a new home venue, what was dubbed "The New PWX Wrestleplex", at the former St. Stephen's Church fellowship hall and school.[2] The property was in such poor condition that it was necessary for a group of wrestlers, students and other volunteers to do a complete tear out and renovation.[30] The move was officially announced on September 24 at what would be the final show at Jacob Woll Pavilion in Renzie Park. In the main event, NWA North American Tag Team Champions Team MEGA (JR Mega and Ashton Amhurst) successfully defended the title against Patrick Hayes and then PWX Heavyweight Champion Stryder. This was the last NWA East / PWX event in which an NWA championship was contested. On October 29, 2011, the New PWX Wrestleplex was opened to the public. The PWX 17th Anniversary Show featured the return of many alumni and included T. Rantula's induction into the PWX Circle of Respect.

In February 2013, Channel 22 began broadcasting PWX Steel City TV on Saturday mornings. The promotion originally had a late-night television show on WPTT during the late 1990s but had been off local television during the previous decade. PWX Steel City TV was syndicated to Channel 26 in mid-Mon Valley and Channel 56 in Westmoreland County reaching a potential audience of 400,000 viewers. Live shows were filmed at "The New PWX Wrestleplex" using a four-camera setup and a green screen for special features. PXW programming was shown in Western Pennsylvania and parts of Ohio and West Virginia on a total of 12 over-the-air television stations.[4] As of 2015, it is also available online via Roku and Vimeo.[30]

Recent years

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On May 2, 2010, NWA East / PWX took part in Deaf Wrestlefest, an annual benefit show for the Western Pennsylvania School for the Deaf, with Patrick Hayes successfully defending his heavyweight title against Ashton Amherst. Amherst, a longtime NWA East / PWX "heel" wrestler, served as the main antagonist in the 2013 comedy horror film Pro Wrestlers vs Zombies.[32][33][34] On November 30, 2014, Samu was inducted into the Circle of Respect at PWX's 20th Anniversary Show.[2] Samu wrestled his last-ever match in PWX the following year when he and his son Lance Anoa'i joined Quinn Magnum in a six-man tag team match against Payton Graham, Jack Pollock and Stryder.[35]

In March 2015, the PWX Wrestling Academy was featured in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.[3] PWX wrestler Crusher Hanson was profiled by Pittsburgh Post-Gazette a month later.[1] In June 2016, PWX joined Global Force Wrestling and the Renegade Wrestling Alliance for a benefit show at Lackawanna College.[36] Two months later, CBS Pittsburgh named PWX among the best locally based independent promotions along with the Keystone State Wrestling Alliance, International Wrestling Cartel, and Ring of Honor.[37]

Roster

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Male wrestlers
 
Stryder is the current PWX Three Rivers Champion
Ring name Real name Notes
A.J. Matthews A.J. Matthews
Atticus Cogar Jordan Cogar
Beastman Unknown
Brandon K Jason Clements
Boomer Payne Unknown
Bubba the Bulldog Bubba Snider
Chris Helmsly Kevin Pagliai
Christian Black Unknown
Crusher Hansen Jeffrey Davenport
David Lawless Max Petrunya
Dirk Ciglar Greg Ciglar
Don Christopher Unknown
Drake Braddock Unknown
Duke Davis Unknown
Dennis Gregory Dennis Jendrzejewski
Ganon Jones, Jr. Unknown
Jim LaMotta Unknown
Justin Idol Unknown
Kid Ego Unknown
Todd Thompson Unknown NWA East No Barriers Champion
Lee Moriarty Julian Moriarty
Lewis Unknown PWX Tag Team Champion
Mad Mike Unknown
Manic "Hero Champ" PWX Heavyweight Champion
Otis Cogar Unknown
Patrick Hayes Unknown
Quinn Magnum Unknown
Ryan Reign Unknown PWX Television Champion
Shawn Phoenix Steve Schneider
Shirley Doe Unknown
Silas Cogar Unknown
Stryder Unknown PWX Three Rivers Champion
Toryn Flight Unknown PWX Tag Team Champion
Female wrestlers
Ring name Real name Notes
Leah Vaughan Leah Vaughan
Renee Michelle Unknown
Solo Darling Unknown
Tess Valentine Unknown
Referees
Ring name Real name Notes
Joe McCoy Unknown
P.J. Parker Unknown
Shawn Patrick Unknown Senior official
Other on-air personnel
Ring name Real name Notes
Joe Dombrowski Unknown Play-by-plan announcer
Ring announcer
Hank Hudson Henry Klimkowski Ring announcer
Jim Miller Unknown Owner

Events

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Futures Cup Tournament

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The Futures Cup Tournament is an annual professional wrestling single-elimination tournament produced by the Pro Wrestling eXpress (PWX) promotion, which has been held since 2011.

Year Name Date Location Notes
2011 Jimmy Nutts August 2, 2008 McKeesport, Pennsylvania Defeated Ryan Reign in a tournament final.
2012 Jay Flash October 27, 2012 McKeesport, Pennsylvania Defeated Tony Johnson, Danny Able and Deion Cruize in a four-way match.
2014 Cassidy Stone February 14, 2014 McKeesport, Pennsylvania The trophy is defended as a new championship when PWX introduces "Futures" live events in 2015. Stone subsequently surrenders the Futures Cup due to injury.
2015 Drake Braddock April 11, 2015 McKeesport, Pennsylvania Defeated Joey Vengeance and Graham Wellington in a three-way tournament final.
N/A Clinton Crooks June 13, 2015 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
N/A Sonny Vice August 29, 2015 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
N/A David Lawless November 21, 2015 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
N/A Sonny Vice June 11, 2016 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
N/A Chris Helmsly October 1, 2016 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
N/A Stryder November 19, 2016 McKeesport, Pennsylvania This was a four-way match also involving Drake Braddock and Sonny Vice.
201 Ryan Reign February 4, 2017 McKeesport, Pennsylvania

Ray Mendez Memorial Tournament

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The Ray Mendez Memorial Tournament is an annual professional wrestling single-elimination tournament produced by the Pro Wrestling eXpress (PWX) promotion, which was held from 2005 to 2006. It was held in memory of Ray Mendez, a local wrestling fan, who had died. The winner of the tournament earned a title shot for the NWA East / PWX Heavyweight Championship.

Year Name Date Location Notes
2005 Scottie Gash April 30, 2005 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2006 Sam Slej April 29, 2006 McKeesport, Pennsylvania

Sean "Shocker" Evans Memorial Tournament

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The Sean "Shocker" Evans Memorial Tournament is an annual professional wrestling single-elimination tournament produced by the Pro Wrestling eXpress (PWX) promotion, which has been held since 2008. It is held in memory of Sean "Shocker" Evans, the co-founder of PWX, who died from throat cancer on October 2, 2007.[38] It is traditionally the promotion's second biggest event of the year after the PWX Anniversary Show.[2]

Year Name Date Location Notes
2008 Chris Taylor August 2, 2008 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2009 Ryan Mitchell August 7, 2009 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2010 Stryder August 6, 2010 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2011 Patrick Hayes July 23, 2011 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2012 Jack Pollock June 29, 2012 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2013 Chris Taylor August 23, 2013 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2014 JR Mega August 30, 2014 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2015 Bryan Bowers September 12, 2015 McKeesport, Pennsylvania
2016 Beastman August 20, 2016 McKeesport, Pennsylvania

PWX Circle of Respect

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The PWX Circle of Respect is an American professional wrestling hall of fame maintained by the McKeesport-based promotion Pro Wrestling eXpress (PWX). It was established in 2006[39] to honor wrestlers who have wrestled for the promotion.

Inductees
# Year Ring name
(Birth name)[Note 1]
Notes[Note 2]
2 Jim Miller Founder of Pro Wrestling eXpress
1 2006 Shawn Patrick 2001 PWX Tag Team champion with Kingdom James.

Number 12 ranking in NWA World Tag Team championship.

3 2006 Quinn Magnum Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (2 times), PWX Three Rivers Championship (2 times), PWX Television Championship (1 time), and PWX Tag Team Championship (5 times), and PWL Tag Team Championship (2 times)
4 2006 Paul Atlas
(Paul Fabian)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (1 time), PWX Three Rivers Championship (1 time), PWX Brass Knuckles Championship (1 time) and PWX Tag Team Championship (2 times)
5 2007 Crusher Hansen
(Jeffrey Davenport)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (2 times), PWX Three Rivers Championship (2 times), PWX Television Championship (1 time), PWX Tag Team Championship (7 times), and PWL Tag Team Championship (2 times)
6 2008 Sean "Shocker" Evans
(Sean Evans)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (2 times), PWX Television Championship (1 time), and PWX Tag Team Championship (1 time)
7 2008 Vince Kaplack Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (3 times), PWX Television Championship (1 time), PWX Tag Team Championship (3 times)
8 2008 Big Poppa Gator
(David Herchelroath)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (1 time), PWX Tag Team Championship (6 times), and PWL Tag Team Championship (1 time)
9 Brandon K
(Jason Clements)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (3 times), PWX Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship (1 time), PWX Three Rivers Championship (1 time), PWX Television Championship (1 time), and PWX Tag Team Championship (6 times)
10 2009 Mad Mike
11[Note 3] 2009 T. Rantula
(David Younkins)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (1 time) and PWX Tag Team Championship (2 times)
12 2009 Brian Anthony
(Brian Fabian)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (3 times), PWX Brass Knuckles Championship (1 time) and PWX Tag Team Championship (3 times)
13 2009 Boomer Payne
(Joseph Beabout)
Won the PWX Television Championship (2 times), PWX Tag Team Championship (2 times), and PWL Tag Team Championship (1 time)
14 2009 Dennis Gregory
(Dennis Jendrzejewski)
Won the PWX North American Heavyweight Championship (4 times), PWX Television Championship (1 time), and PWX Tag Team Championship (1 time)
15 2009 J.B. Destiny
(Jason Bareford)
PWX Television Championship (3 times), PWX Tag Team Championship (6 times), and PWL Tag Team Championship (2 times)
16 2010 Scott Venom
17 2010 Lou Marconi Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (1 time), PWX North American Heavyweight Championship (2 times), PWX Three Rivers Championship (1 time), PWX Television Championship (1 time), and PWX Tag Team Championship (1 time)
18 B.A. Briggs
(Randy Briggs)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (1 time)
19 2014 Samu
(Samula Anoaʻi)
Won the PWX Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
  1. ^ Entries without a birth name indicates that the inductee did not perform under a ring name.
  2. ^ This section mainly lists the major accomplishments of each inductee in SCW.
  3. ^ Wrestler was originally inducted as part of the Class of 2009 ceremonies but was unable to appear due to the 2009 G20 Pittsburgh summit. His "official" induction ceremony took place at the 2011 edition of the PWX Circle of Respect.

Championships and programming

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Current championships

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Championship Notes
NWA East/PWX Heavyweight Championship The heavyweight title of NWA East/PWX.[5] It was established in 1995 and was a sanctioned championship of the National Wrestling Alliance from 1997 to 2012. The title was also defended within Allied Independent Wrestling Federations from 2014 through 2016.[40][41]
NWA East/PWX Tag Team Championship The tag team title of NWA East/PWX.[5] It was established in 1996 and was a sanctioned championship of the National Wrestling Alliance from 1997 to 2012. The title was also defended within Allied Independent Wrestling Federations from 2014 through 2016.[42][43]
NWA East/PWX Television Championship [5][44][45]
NWA East/PWX Three Rivers Heavyweight Championship [46][47]
PWX Women's Championship [48][49]

Former championships

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Championship Notes
PWX North American Heavyweight Championship The title was established in 1996 and defended through the year. It was unified with the PWX Television Championship.[5][50][51]
PWX Brass Knuckles Championship The title was established in 2002 and defended until 2012.[28][29]
PWX No Barriers Championship The title was established in 2001 and defended through the year.[52][53]
NWA East Heavyweight Championship The title was established in 2000 under National Wrestling Alliance affiliate and PWX precursor, NWA East, and continued to be defended through the year. It was unified with the PWL and PWX Heavyweight Championships to create the NWA East / PWX Triple Crown Championship.[54][55]
NWA East Junior Heavyweight Championship The title was established in 1999 under NWA East[5] and defended until 2001.[56][57]
NWA East Tag Team Championship The title was established in 2000 under NWA East and defended through the year. It was vacated as part of a championship tournament to create the NWA East / PWX Tag Team Championship.[58][59]
NWA East X Championship The title was established in 2002 under NWA East and defended through the year. It was unified with the PWX Three Rivers Championship to create the NWA East / PWX Three Rivers Championship.[60][61]
NWA East SEX Women's Championship The title was established in 2001 under NWA East and defended through the year.[62][63]
PWL Heavyweight Championship The title was established in 1999 under Pittsburgh Wrestling League and defended through the year. It was unified with the NWA East and PWX Heavyweight Championships to create the NWA East / PWX Triple Crown Championship.[64][65]
PWL Tag Team Championship The title was established in 2000 under Pittsburgh Wrestling League and defended through the year. It was vacated as part of a championship tournament to create the NWA East / PWX Tag Team Championship.[66][67]
PWL Triple Jeopardy Heavyweight Championship The title was established in 2000 under Pittsburgh Wrestling League and defended until 2002. It was unified with the NLW Ironman Championship to create the NWA East / PWX Brass Knuckles Championship.[68][69]

Programming

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Programming Notes
PWX Steel City TV (2013–) Syndicated, also broadcast on WBGN.[4]
NWA East TV (1995–1998) Syndicated, also broadcast on WPTT.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b c Goldstein, Andrew (April 12, 2015). "Local pro wrestler Jeff Davenport delivers flowers by day, poundings by night". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  2. ^ a b c d e f DiVittorio, Michael (November 27, 2014). "McKeesport wrestling promoters hope for smashing success with anniversary show". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  3. ^ a b DiVittorio, Michael (March 26, 2015). "Wrestling up-and-comers to strut their stuff at PWX Wrestleplex". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  4. ^ a b c d DiVittorio, Michael (February 23, 2013). "Wrestling promotion returns to TV". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Gary Will and Royal Duncan (2000). "(United States: Western Pennsylvania)". Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. p. 75. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  6. ^ Knavish, Brian (December 3, 2000). "In the Spotlight: Steel City Wrestling lives on in Far North circuit". Beaver County Times.
  7. ^ a b c Meinzer, Melissa (June 28, 2004). "McKeesport home to NWA East Pro-Wrestling Federation". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  8. ^ Magee, Bob (October 18, 2000). "As I See It". PWBTS.com. Pro Wrestling's Between The Sheets.
  9. ^ Horie, Masanori (October 4, 1999). "My Carolina Vacation". View from the Rising Sun.
  10. ^ Oliver, Greg (October 15, 2000). "NWA Convention closes with a whimper". Canadian Online Explorer. SLAM! Sports. Archived from the original on August 4, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  11. ^ "PWX Title Update!!!". NWA East. June 2001. Archived from the original on June 4, 2009. Alt URL
  12. ^ Johnson, Mike (June 23, 2017). "AUSTIN 3:16 IS BORN: 6/23 THIS DAY IN HISTORY". PWInsider.com.
  13. ^ Hornbaker, Tim and Hisaharu Tanabe. "National Wrestling Alliance World Heavyweight Title (1948-Present)".
  14. ^ Koeller, Jon (October 10, 2003). "Indy Report: Nick Bockwinkel, Mad Dog Vachon, Lenny Lane". Pro Wrestling Torch.
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  17. ^ "FCW Sunshine: Michael Tarver (Monster Tarver)". Wrestlecorp.com. January 7, 2017.
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  19. ^ a b Hoops, Brian (March 24, 2017). "Daily Pro Wrestling History (03/24): WWF WrestleMania VII". F4Wonline.com. Wrestling Observer/Figure Four Weekly.
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  22. ^ "InsidePulse's Indy Report 10.12.04: Results & SAT Shows". InsidePulse.com. October 12, 2004.
  23. ^ "The Super 8". East Coast Wrestling Association. 2011.
  24. ^ "Interview with Stacy Hunter". GloryWrestling.com. May 26, 2004.
  25. ^ "Title History". FranchiseFansite.com.
  26. ^ Pefferman, Ray (November 2009). "Tuned In: Burton enjoying new career". Pittsburgh Sports Report.
  27. ^ Montanez, Virginia (December 27, 2010). "Five Questions for ... Jon Burton". Pittsburgh Magazine.
  28. ^ a b "NWA East Brass Knuckles Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories. 2003.
  29. ^ a b "PWX Brass Knuckles Title (Pennsylvania)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003.
  30. ^ a b c Sorg, Michael (15 April 2015). "Indy Mayhem Show 65: Chris Lerusso". Youtube.com (Podcast). Indy Mayhem Show. Event occurs at 08:25. Retrieved 22 June 2017.
  31. ^ "NWA PRO WRESTLING EXPRESS NEW WINTER VENUE". WrestlingFigs.com. November 24, 2005.
  32. ^ DiVittorio, Michael (November 17, 2013). "Wrestling icons take on zombies in 'Pro Wrestlers Vs. Zombies'". The Patriot-News.
  33. ^ Paur, Joey (2014). "Absurd PRO WRESTLERS VS. ZOMBIES Movie Trailer". GeekTyrant.com.
  34. ^ Lussier, Germain (March 14, 2014). "'Pro Wrestlers vs Zombies' Movie Trailer: Rowdy Roddy Piper Battles the Undead". /Film.
  35. ^ DiVittorio, Michael (November 20, 2015). "McKeesport-based pro wrestling group to hold main event Saturday". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  36. ^ "Global Force Wrestling invades Keystone State". GlobalForceWrestling.com. June 3, 2016.
  37. ^ Stockdale, Jennifer (August 15, 2016). "Best Upcoming Pro Wrestling Shows Near Pittsburgh". CBS Pittsburgh.
  38. ^ DiVittorio, Michael (August 29, 2014). "'Shocker' tourney honors memory of pro wrestler from McKeesport". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
  39. ^ PWX Circle of Respect PWXTV.com
  40. ^ Roelfsema, Eric and Hisaharu Tanabe (2003). "PWX Heavyweight Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories.
  41. ^ "NWA East/PWX Heavyweight Title (Pennsylvania)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003.
  42. ^ Roelfsema, Eric (2003). "NWA East/PWX Tag Team Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories.
  43. ^ "NWA East/PWX Tag Team Title (Pennsylvania)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003.
  44. ^ Roelfsema, Eric and Hisaharu Tanabe (2003). "PWX Television Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories.
  45. ^ "NWA East/PWX Television Title (Pennsylvania)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003.
  46. ^ Oliver, Earl and Jeff Capo (2003). "NWA East/PWX Three Rivers Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories.
  47. ^ "NWA East/PWX Three Rivers Title (Pennsylvania)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003.
  48. ^ Tanabe, Hisaharu (2016). "PWX Womens' [sic] Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories. Archived from the original on 25 September 2017.
  49. ^ "PWX Women's Title (Pennsylvania)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003.
  50. ^ Roelfsema, Eric (1999). "PWX North American Heavyweight Title History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories.
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