Top Rope Promotions

Top Rope Promotions
Acronym TRP
Founded 1984
Style Professional wrestling
Headquarters New Bedford, Massachusetts (1996-2000)
Fall River, Massachusetts (2000-present)
Founder(s) Joe Eugenio
Owner(s) Steve Ricard (2000-present)
Formerly Yankee Pro Wrestling (1994-2004)
New England Wrestling Association (1988-1994)
Website TopRopePromotions.com

Top Rope Promotions (formerly known as Yankee Pro Wrestling) is a North Eastern independent professional wrestling promotion based in New Bedford, Massachusetts and is the largest promotion in the Southern New England area rivaling other North Eastern promotions including Chaotic Wrestling, the Millennium Wrestling Federation and New England Championship Wrestling.[1] Along with its head trainer Matt Hyson, their seminars have been hosted by Ring of Honor alumni Jamie Noble and A.J. Styles. A number of independent wrestlers competed in Yankee Pro Wrestling during their early careers including Amanda Storm,[2][3] Andy Jaxx,[4] DC Drake,[5] Slyck Wagner Brown, Johnny Heartbreaker, Shark Boy, Christian York, Metal Maniac, Robbie Ellis,[6] Rick Fuller and Dan "The Beast" Severn.

Following the close of Extreme Championship Wrestling, several ECW mainstays such as Amish Roadkill,[7] Dawn Marie, Simon Diamond, Perry Saturn, Tony DeVito, Little Guido, Jerry Lynn, Steve Corino, Justin Credible, Julio Dinero, Chris Hamrick, Big Dick Dudley and Joel Gertner had brief stints in the promotion. In recent years, TNA wrestlers Christy Hemme, Talia, Abyss, Jay Lethal, Joey Matthews, Ron "The Truth" Killings, Bubba Ray Dudley, and Devon Dudley have also made appearances.

History

The promotion began holding events in the Fall River-New Bedford area during the early-1980s, picking up the old territorial area previously run by the World Wide Wrestling Federation during the 1970s. After going through several name changes and owners, the promotion changed its name from New England Wrestling Association to Yankee Pro Wrestling during the 1990s. During this time, the promotion gained a strong following in southern New England regularly bringing in former WWF stars from the 1980s and 90s. The promotion features many wrestlers who compete for Impact Wrestling or for ROH Wrestling. The promotion also features wrestlers who have or would go on to compete for the WWE.

The promotion was purchased by head booker Steve Ricard in 2000. Under the Top Rope Promotions banner, he continued running monthly shows in the Fall River-New Bedford area successfully making between $500–$5,000 a show.[8] The majority of its shows are held at the PAL Hall in Fall River, Massachusetts and the Top Rope Arena in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The promotion also ran a weekly cable television program in the local area.

In addition to monthly events at the PAL Hall in Fall River, Top Rope Promotions runs events at the Creative Auction Centers in Fall River and New Bedford, the historic Adams-Turners Hall in Adams, and the Elks Lodge in Franklin. Top Rope Promotions also appears at the annual Whaling City Festival at Buttonwood Park in New Bedford and at the annual Wolcott Country Fair in Wolcott, Connecticut. The promotion also holds annual events at Outdoor World campground in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, and also appears on occasion at The Wapping Fair in South Windsor Connecticut, however they have not been since 2008.

The Lock-Up Wrestling School

The school was founded by Top Rope Promotions owner Steve Ricard and former head trainer Matt Hyson (formerly known as Spike Dudley) in 2005. Hyson had been the school's head trainer from 2005 to 2013, The school is responsible for training several independent stars such as Teddy Goodz, TK O'Ryan, former Ring of Honor Television Champion, former Ring of Honor Tag Team Champion, former IWGP Tag Team Champion Matt Taven and Ring of Honor Star Vinny Marseglia. Top Rope Promotions veterans "H2O" Ryan Waters and " Nightmare" Nick Steel became the school's trainers in 2013 after Hyson left the promotion. Although he stepped down as the head trainer, Hyson is still on great terms with the promotion.

Special Guest Appearances

WWE Tough Enough contestants

Scott Hall incident

On April 8, 2011, one day after his rumored overdose, Hall showed up clearly intoxicated to his appearance at a Top Rope Promotions wrestling show in Massachusetts. Hall, who was still wearing a hospital bracelet, was in such poor condition that he had to be helped into the ring by two men because he was unable to walk on his own. Hall proceeded to cut a promo and was confronted by a local wrestler named Gorgeous Gino Giovanni, who was trying to begin a match with Justin Credible. Most of the fans were confused by his behavior, while some understood what was happening and proceeded to heckle Hall to the point where he yelled back at the crowd. Unfortunately, Scott was apparently so impaired that he thought he was in England instead of New England, and called the crowd a bunch of Wankers, which is a British insult. After the match between Giovanni and Credible ended, Hall, who was still slurring, tried to goad Giovanni to come back into the ring. Former wrestler, Scotty 2 Hotty was at the show and said seeing Hall in that condition was one of the saddest, most embarrassing things he has ever witnessed, and asked how many people have to die before they learn. After the event, Hall was on hand for autograph signings and was clearly still intoxicated.

TMZ reported on April 9, 2011, that Hall was taken to the hospital following his appearance at an indy wrestling show in Massachusetts a day earlier. Hall was treated for cardiac issues and remained in the hospital for three days. Hall was reported to be on ten different medications, which TMZ reports led to his overdose on April 7, although his agent quickly denied that report.

Top Rope Promotions released a statement on April 11, 2011 regarding Hall's behavior and performance at their April 8 show. Thirty-one-year-old owner Steve Ricard said that Hall arrived the day before the event in a wheelchair with 3 bottles of prescription pills in his possession though the following day he showed in the state he was in demanding appearance fee although he was already paid. Hall made many threats to the staff and made many demands about money and when he would perform. According to Ricard, Hall was threatening to "kill [him] if [he] 'screwed' [Hall] over."

That same year on the E-60 documentary from ESPN it is discussed with the owner of Top Rope the incident involving wrestler Scott Hall at a Top Rope event. The owner basically in his own words stated that "he didn't know Scott Hall so he paid him and put him out there" referring to Scott Hall being brought to the ring in a bad state and after even having him sign autographs. Wrestler Sean Waltman also added on the special that it was awful and that the owner of Top Rope was wrong for doing this. Scott Hall that night was taken to the hospital and admitted.

Roster

Male wrestlers

Female Wrestlers

Managers

Tag Teams/Stables

Others

Championships and accomplishments

Championship Current champion(s) Date won Event Previous champion(s) Days
held
Notes
TRP Heavyweight Championship Teddy Goodz May 20, 2016 Spindle City Shakedown "H2O" Ryan Waters 199 Goodz became first to hold both TRP Heavyweight Championship and TRP Interstate Championship simultaneously
TRP Interstate Championship Vain December 2, 2016` Kowalski Cup Tournament Teddy Goodz 3
TRP Tag Team Championship The Closers (Brad Hollister & Hammer Tunis) May 20, 2016 Spindle City Shakedown Special Forces (Little Man & Smith) 199 Won titles after losing the titles via count out per order of TRP Owner Steve Ricard (Tunis replaced TK O'Ryan As Hollister's partner)

Accomplishments

Accomplishment Previous winner Date won Event Notes
Spindle City Rumble "H2O" Ryan Waters January 1, 2016 Spindle City Rumble Waters defended and retained TRP Heavyweight Championship in this match
Kowalski Cup Nico Silva December 2, 2016 Kowalski Cup Tournament

References

  1. "Interview For Burning Hammer". Burning-Spirit.com. 2004.
  2. Storm, Amanda. "So You're that Girl Wrestler?". AmandaStorm.com.
  3. "Amanda Storm". Amanda Storm of G.L.O.R.Y. Wrestling. GloryWrestling.com.
  4. Wood, Ryan (2008-06-25). "A chance to say goodbye". Wicked Local Plymouth.
  5. Schwan, Brett (2006). "Ten Questions With ... D.C. Drake". WrestlingClothesline.com.
  6. "Interview with ECW's Roadkill". SmashWrestling.com. 2001-01-01.
  7. "Interview with ECW's Roadkill". SmashWrestling.com. 2001-01-01.
  8. Lindsey, Joe (2007-04-24). "Just Another Night In Fall River". Living Now.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 12/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.