Power Slam

This article is about the magazine. For the professional wrestling move, see Powerslam.
Power Slam
Publisher Findlay "Fin" Martin
Frequency Monthly
Year founded 1991
Final issue 14 July 2014
Country United Kingdom
Language English

Power Slam was an independent non-kayfabe magazine published in the United Kingdom from 1991–2014 by SW Publishing, with co-owners Findlay Martin and former WCW Magazine owner Colin Bowman.[1] Power Slam was Europe's best-selling pro wrestling publication.[2]

The magazine began life as Superstars of Wrestling in 1991 before altering its name after 30 issues in July 1994. It was released on a Thursday every five weeks, and provided recent results, colour photographs from live events, articles on historical and contemporary matters within the business, and exclusive interviews with prominent industry figures. Power Slam stopped offering subscriptions on 4 February 2014, in anticipation of the closure of the magazine, which occurred on 14 July with the release of issue 237.[3]

Columnists

Content

The magazine was geared more to pro-wrestling than sports entertainment, covering promotions from all over the world (particularly Japanese puroresu), and has also on occasion covered MMA events. This was often partly to do with involvement of professional wrestling personalities, for example Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović appeared in the pages of Power Slam numerous times due to Japanese promoters (especially K-1) pitting him against wrestlers in legitimate shoot fights.

Power Slam took an impartial view on the wrestling world being non affiliated with any wrestling promotion or organization. Contributor Greg Lambert has been an on-screen talent and behind-the-scenes promoter/booker for Britain's Frontier Wrestling Alliance but the magazine never crossed the grounds of journalistic integrity by inviting/allowing him to promote his real-life business.

A 2009 Power Slam interview with Triple H was subject to scrutiny from the Pro Wrestling Torch, who criticized Triple H's comments within it.[6]

In 2012, Fin Martin defended CM Punk against ongoing rumours that Punk's "straight edge" lifestyle was a ruse. Martin wrote: "We have spoken to many people over the last eight years who have been to bars and nightclubs with Punk and/or traveled with him in Europe and the U.S. and Canada, and all report that Punk has invariably abstained from alcohol, illegal drugs and tobacco."[7]

Power Slam was used as a reference in the Jim Cornette book, Titan Sinking: The decline of the WWF in 1995.[8]

PS 50

Every year the magazine presented the PS 50 (akin to the PWI 500) listing the 50 wrestlers whom the writers believed to have had the most successful year, in terms of workrate and performance. 2012 winner Hiroshi Tanahashi was the first wrestler to be ranked number one in two consecutive PS 50s, followed by Austin Aries and CM Punk. There was also an annual reader's poll for various awards ('match of the year', etc.) similar to that carried out by RSPW.

Despite their criticisms, their readers polls always crowned WWE as the top promotion of the year until 2005, where TNA overtook the company for the first time. TNA would follow up that victory with another in the 2006 reader awards, although in 2007 the percentage of votes for TNA dropped considerably.

PS 50 podium

# Name Country 1 2 3 4-50 Total First appearance Last appearance Federation
1Kurt Angle  USA 3 3 0 5 10 1994 2012 WWE, TNA
2 Shawn Michaels USA31241019942008WWE
3 Chris Benoit  Canada 2 1 1 5 9 1995 2006 WWE, WCW, NJPW
4 Stone Cold Steve Austin  USA 2 0 03519962001 WWE, WCW
5 Kenta Kobashi  Japan 1 2 1 6 10 1994 2005 AJPW, NOAH
6 A.J. Styles  USA 1 0 1 4 6 2003 2012 TNA
7 Mitsuharu Misawa  Japan 1 0 0 9 10 1994 2005 AJPW, NOAH
8 Triple H  USA 1 0 0 9 10 1995 2008 WWE, WCW
9 Edge Canada 1 0 0 8 9 1999 2007 WWE
10 Bret Hart  Canada 1 0 0 5 6 1994 1999 WWE, WCW
11 Keiji Mutoh  Japan 0 2 0 6 819942008NJPW, AJPW, WCW
12 Kenta  Japan 0 1 23620032012 NOAH
13 Nigel McGuinness  England 0 1 1 1 3 20062008 ROH
14 Jushin Thunder Liger  Japan 0 1 0 10 11 1994 2005 NJPW
15 Koji Kanemoto  Japan 0 1 0 9 10 1995 2005 NJPW
16 Yuji Nagata  Japan 0 1 0 10 11 19942005NJPW, WCW
17 Bryan Danielson  USA 0 1 0 5 6 2003 2012 ROH, WWE
18 Toshiaki Kawada  Japan 0 0 1 9 10 1994 2005 AJPW
19 Eddie Guerrero  USA 0 0 1 8 919942005WWE, WCW, NJPW
20 Dean Malenko  USA 0 0 1 5 6 1995 2000 WWE, WCW
21 Mick Foley  USA0015619942004 WWE, WCW, TNA
22 Samoa Joe  USA 0 0 1 5 6 2003 2012 TNA, ROH
23The Rock  USA 0 0 1 4 5 1999 2002 WWE
24 Low Ki  USA0014520012012 TNA, NJPW

Awards

Wrestler of the Year

Babyface of the Year

Heel of the Year

Match of the Year

Card Of The Year

Tag Team

Character of the Year

Most Abysmal Wrestler of the Year

References

  1. 1 2 Rennie, Steve (March 28, 2005). "Patty was Therre". Canoe.ca. Quebecor Media. Retrieved July 25, 2015.
  2. "Wrestler Doug Williams honoured as Morecambe celebrates its grappling history". The Yorkshire Post. April 10, 2015. Retrieved July 25, 2015.
  3. Martin, Findlay. Power Slam closes. psmag.co.uk. Retrieved 19 July 2014.
  4. "Findlay Martin Joins WrestlePod!". Wrestle Talk TV. December 7, 2014. Retrieved July 25, 2015.
  5. Lambert, Greg (2012). Holy Grail: The True Story of British Wrestling's Revival. p. 34.
  6. Gardner, Richard (November 8, 2009). "WWE's Even-Steven booking isn't elevating younger stars, just benefiting Triple H". PWTorch. Retrieved July 25, 2015.
  7. Thomas, Jeremy (May 6, 2012). "Is CM Punk's Straight-Edge Gimmick Genuine?". 411Mania. Retrieved July 25, 2015.
  8. Dixon, James; Cornette, Jim; Richardson, Benjamin (2014). Titan Sinking: The decline of the WWF in 1995. Lulu. ISBN 978-1291996371.
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