Showing posts with label Ticket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ticket. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2020

Remembering the Jim Crockett Scholarship Fund (1973)

by Dick Bourne
Mid-Atlantic Gateway

Ticket stub from Thanksgiving Night in Greensboro 1973

The Territory's Biggest Night

When Jim Crockett passed away in 1973, the family decided to establish a scholarship in his name. According to a report in the Greensboro News & Record, the traditional Thanksgiving night event in the Greensboro Coliseum was the first in a series of scholarship events to be held in the coming weeks to honor the legacy and memory of James Allen Crockett, Sr. Proceeds from the event would go to that fund.

The Thanksgiving event in Greensboro, which was always a big affair and one of the biggest shows of the year in the entire territory, was particularly loaded that evening. The NWA world champion Jack Brisco was booked to defend the ten pounds of gold against former champion Dory Funk, Jr. in what was another in a series of classic battles between the two wrestlers who defined pro-wrestling in the 1970s. Jack had defeated Harley Race in July of that same year for the title, and the angle now was that Brisco had never defeated his arch-rival Funk, Jr. in a title match.  This was a huge deal at the time and billed as a special event selected for Greensboro. To add even more star power to that main event, former legendary champion Lou Thesz was brought in to act as special referee for the title contest.

A number of other big names were brought in from outside the area for the show, which wasn't that unusual for big shows in Greensboro. Terry Funk was in to challenge Eastern heavyweight champion Jerry Brisco in a battle of the younger brothers who were in the main event that night. Indeed, Thanksgiving night in Greensboro was a Funk vs. Brisco showcase.



Also in were the father and son combination of Eddie and Mike Graham. Eddie and Mike were top stars for Championship Wrestling from Florida, and Eddie was also the promoter of that territory. They squared off against one of the Mid-Atlantic territory's top legendary heel tag teams Rip Hawk and Swede Hanson. What a classic brawl that must have been.

Another top star in for the big card that didn't wrestle regularly in the territory was Cowboy Bill Watts. A regular in Georgia and Florida, Watts had made several special appearances in Greensboro that year, but was not a regular member of the Crockett roster.


TRANSCRIPTS

Championships At Stake In Thanksgiving Wrestling  
Thanksgiving night in the Greensboro Coliseum will be wrestling championship night, the finest card ever presented to Piedmont sports fans. 
Jack Brisco, the new world heavyweight title-holder, will risk his crown against Dory Funk Jr. of Texas, the former champion. Funk lost his title some time ago to Harley Race, who in turn was beaten by Brisco ... and Jack Brisco has never beaten Funk in a title match. Lou Thesz, a former world champ, will be the special referee. 
Younger brothers of both champions clash In the Eastern Heavyweight title match. Jerry Brisco, who holds the crown, will take on Terry Funk. Both title features will be one hour time limit.  
This Thanksgiving special, which usually draws the season's largest wrestling crowd at the Greensboro Coliseum, will be the first in a series of Jim Crockett Scholarship Fund events throughout the area. Wrestlers and promoters alike are working to set up a series of college scholarships to honor the late Jim Crockett, regarded as the South's outstanding promoter at the time of his death last spring.  
Other matches include Cowboy Bill Watts versus Beauregard, Bob Bruggers versus El Gaucho and The Destroyer versus Rufus R. Jones. A special tag team match will have Rip Hawk and Swede Hanson against Eddie and Mike Graham. 

Wrestling Set Tonight  
The late Jim Crockett will be honored tonight during professional wrestling in the Greensboro Coliseum tonight involving world champions. 
Lou Thesz, who held the world crown for many years, will referee a match between current champ Jack Brisco and Dory Funk Jr.  Funk lost his title to Harley Race who was beaten by Brisco.
The Eastern Heavyweight title is also at stake with present titlist Jerry Brisco being challenged by Terry Funk. Rip Hawk and Swede Hanson will have a tag team battle against Eddie and Mike Graham and there will be several singles events. 


A Rare Thanksgiving Night Card in Charlotte

With so many big outside names taking the top spots on the Greensboro card, one could easily wonder where the rest of the Mid-Atlantic roster was that night. Typically, Norfolk, VA, also hosted a big card of wrestling on Thanksgiving night. But in 1973, Charlotte instead played host to a rare Thanksgiving night show that, like Greensboro, also featured some special guest stars.


The headline event for the Charlotte Coliseum featured the top two singles stars in the territory at the time, Johnny Valentine vs. Johnny Weaver. In the semi-main event, the Mid-Atlantic tag team titles were on the line as new champions Jay York and Brute Bernard defended against the area's most popular tag-team combination, former champs Sandy Scott and Nelson Royal. As an added bonus, former world boxing champion Joe Louis was in town and had been assigned as special referee for the title contest.

Two big outside names were brought in for the show as well. Area favorite Paul Jones had been campaigning in the state of Florida for the last couple of years and had won the Florida heavyweight championship. He was in the midst of a red-hot feud with Buddy Colt. The two had traded the Florida title several times during the year of 1973 and now they brought their heated rivalry to Charlotte for Thanksgiving night. The Florida title was not on the line in Charlotte, but it was a bit of a homecoming for Jones who had wrestled on cards throughout the Mid-Atlantic territory for years before moving down to the sunshine state. Charlotte fans were well familiar with the feud because "Championship Wrestling from Florida" was seen on Charlotte area television in those years.

Charlotte's traditional night for wrestling was Monday night, and as a testament to the city's ability to support pro-wreslting, Jim Crockett Promotions returned to the city the very next Monday night 11/26, only four days following the big Thanksgiving night show. The main event back at the cozy confines of the Charlotte Park Center was Johnny Valentine vs. Rufus R. "Freight Train" Jones.

The death of Jim Crockett had saddened the entire Mid-Atlantic area earlier that year, but on this big night Jim Jr., David, Jackie, and Frances did their father proud with one huge night of wrestling in their showcase cities. It was the territory's biggest night of the year and was 1973's shining moment.

 Originally published June 30, 2015 on the Mid-Atlantic Gateway


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Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Thanksgiving Memories: Starrcade '85 Turns 30


This Thanksgiving marks the 30th anniversary of Starrcade '85, one of the most successful events in Jim Crockett promotions history.

Starrcade '85 took place on Thursday, November 28, 1985 in two big venues - - the Greensboro Coliseum in Greensboro, NC and the Omni in Atlanta, GA. It was also broadcast on closed-circut television to dozens of venues across the southeast, including the Louisiana Superdome where it was part of a big Mid-South Wrestling card held there promoted by Bill Watts.

In celebration of that great event on this Thanksgiving Day, and in memory of what was once a special part of many folk's Thanksgiving tradition for a several years, we take a look back at some of the memorabilia surrounding Starrcade '85. Happy Thanksgiving!


Program Cover


Ticket Stub



Photograph of Ric Flair moments before ring introductions for Starrcade '85


Line-Up Sheet


Newspaper result from the event in Greensboro, NC


RESULTS

  • Don Kernodle defeated Tommy Lane by pinfall
  • Denny Brown defeated Rocky King by pinfall to retain the NWA Junior Heavyweight Title
  • Krusher Khruschev defeated Sam Houston by pinfall to win the vacant Mid-Atlantic Title
  • Ron Bass defeated Black Bart by pinfall in a bullrope match
  • James J. Dillon defeated Ron Bass by pinfall in a bullrope match
  • "The Nature Boy" Buddy Landel defeated Terry Taylor to win the National Title
  • Magnum T.A. defeated Tully Blanchard in an "I Quit" steel cage match by digging a broken chair leg into Tully's forehead to win the NWA U.S. Title
  • The Rock-N-Roll Express defeated Ivan & Nikita Koloff by pinfall to win the NWA World Tag Titles
  • Thunderfoot defeated The Italian Stallion by pinfall
  • "Pistol" Pez Whatley defeated Mike Graham by pinfall
  • "The Ragin' Bull" Manny Fernandez defeated Abdullah the Butcher in a pole match
  • "The Boogie Woogie Man" Jimmy Valiant & Miss Atlanta Lively defeated The Midnight Express (Eaton & Condrey) by pinfall in a street fight match
  • Billy Graham defeated The Barbarian by DQ in an arm wrestling match
  • Arn & Ole Anderson defeated Wahoo McDaniel & Billy Jack Haynes by pinfall
  • "The American Dream" Dusty Rhodes defeated "The Nature Boy" Ric Flair by DQ in an NWA World Title match




THE MID-SOUTH CONNECTION


Mid-South Wrestling presented the closed circuit broadcast of Starrcade 85 at the Superdome in New Orleans along with some of their big main events at the time.


Mid-South main events live in the Superdome as part of Starrcade '85:
  • Jake "The Snake" Roberts vs. Humongous with Sir Oliver Humperdink
  • The Hacksaws: Butch Reed & Jim Duggan vs. Dick Slater and Buzz Sawyer






Sunday, August 09, 2015

Super Summer Sizzler Tour


During the summer of 1986, somewhat coinciding with the Great American Bash tour, Jim Crockett Promotions presented the "Rock and Roll Express Super Summer Sizzler Tour." 

The ticket stub above is from the event in Florence, SC on August 9, 1986 - - 29 years ago today!

Contests were held for the following:

  • Rock 'N Roll Express Look-Alike Contest
  • Miss Rock 'N Roll Express
  • Rock 'N Roll Express Dream Date Contest


The contests were primarily designed to develop a mailing list to market the Rock 'N Roll Express Fan Club kits that came out early the next year. 

There was nothing really special about the tour events themselves. They were basically just regular house shows or put on in conjunction with the Great American Bash tour.

The winners of the Rock 'N Roll Express Look-Alike Contest were presented on Mid-Atlantic Wrestling with Ricky and Robert during an interview with Bob Caudle.

The winner of the Miss Rock 'N Roll Express contest, along with the runners-up who formed her "court", accompanied Ricky and Robert to the ring for a match on television taped in Asheville, North Carolina. It was a six-man match against three of the Four Horsemen (Ole and Arn Anderson and Tully Blanchard) with Ricky and Robert taking Dick Murdoch as their partner. 

Not sure how that Rock 'N Roll Express Dream Date Contest turned out! 


Monday, July 20, 2015

Tickets for Wrestling at WRAL-TV





During the years that wrestling was taped at WRAL channel 5 in Raleigh (1959-1981), admission was free for the 300 or so folks that could be seated on the bleachers in studio A, but you had to write in for tickets.

Each week Bob Caudle would give TV viewers instructions on how to request those tickets:





That was in the mid-1970s. It was so simple then, you didn't even need a PO Box number or a zip code. Just Tickets, WRAL TV, Raleigh, North Carolina. Later, they would add the PO Box 12000.

Over the years, the tickets changed in appearance. By the end of the run at WRAL, they were actually sending you a letter instead of tickets.



I'm not sure which I format I liked better! The tickets are very cool, but the letter I received in April of 1981 to attend my one and only taping at WRAL was very special for different reasons. It was on Jim Crockett Promotions letterhead and had the Mid-Atlantic and Wide World Wrestling logos at the bottom, as well as the logo for the other family business, the Charlotte O's baseball team.

All of the logos were in color, and I've always regretted not making a color copy of the letter. But color copiers were very rare in 1981, and even if you found one, the copy was very expensive to make.

I am fortunate to have been able to attend a taping at WRAL. In August of 1981, four months after my visit, Jim Crockett Promotions moved the taping of the shows to WPCQ-36 studios in Charlotte.

- Dick Bourne
Mid-Atlantic Gateway






For more on the three decades of TV tapings at WRAL, see this article on the Studio Wrestling website. : Television History: WRAL-5 Raleigh, NC

This article is mirrored at the Studio Wrestling website, part of the Mid-Atlantic Gateway.


Monday, July 06, 2015

The First Great American Bash (1985)



Thirty years ago today, July 6, 1985, Jim Crockett Promotions presented the first Great American Bash event in front of a reported 27,000 fans at Memorial Stadium in Charlotte, North Carolina.

In the main event of the huge stadium show, Ric Flair defended the NWA world heavyweight championship against Nikita Koloff in what was called "The Freedom Challenge." David Crockett, who had been hit a few weeks earlier by Nikita Koloff's vicious "Russian cycle" clothesline during an interview, was assigned as the special referee.

Included here is some memorabilia from the event including a ticket stub and program cover. These original programs for this particular event are pretty hard to come by. Like all of the special event programs produced by the company in those years, the program was printed in full color on high quality medium-stock glossy paper.

The Japanese press covered the event and provided some great images from the matches and a few behind-the-scenes as well. We've included several of those pages here:


Ric Flair vs. Nikita Koloff (Click to enlarge.)

More Japanese wrestling magazine coverage and event results after the jump.....


Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Jim Crockett Scholarship Fund (1973)

by Dick Bourne
Mid-Atlantic Gateway

Ticket stub from Thanksgiving Night in Greensboro 1973


The Territory's Biggest Night

When Jim Crockett passed away in 1973, the family decided to establish a scholarship in his name. According to a report in the Greensboro News & Record, the traditional Thanksgiving night event in the Greensboro Coliseum was the first in a series of scholarship events to be held in the coming weeks to honor the legacy and memory of James Allen Crockett, Sr. Proceeds from the event would go to that fund.

The Thanksgiving event in Greensboro, which was always a big affair and one of the biggest shows of the year in the entire territory, was particularly loaded that evening. The NWA world champion Jack Brisco was booked to defend the ten pounds of gold against former champion Dory Funk, Jr. in what was another in a series of classic battles between the two wrestlers who defined pro-wrestling in the 1970s. Jack had defeated Harley Race in July of that same year for the title, and the angle now was that Brisco had never defeated his arch-rival Funk, Jr. in a title match.  This was a huge deal at the time and billed as a special event selected for Greensboro. To add even more star power to that main event, former legendary champion Lou Thesz was brought in to act as special referee for the title contest.

A number of other big names were brought in from outside the area for the show, which wasn't that unusual for big shows in Greensboro. Terry Funk was in to challenge Eastern heavyweight champion Jerry Brisco in a battle of the younger brothers who were in the main event that night. Indeed, Thanksgiving night in Greensboro was a Funk vs. Brisco showcase.



Also in were the father and son combination of Eddie and Mike Graham. Eddie and Mike were top stars for Championship Wrestling from Florida, and Eddie was also the promoter of that territory. They squared off against one of the Mid-Atlantic territory's top legendary heel tag teams Rip Hawk and Swede Hanson. What a classic brawl that must have been.

Another top star in for the big card that didn't wrestle regularly in the territory was Cowboy Bill Watts. A regular in Georgia and Florida, Watts had made several special appearances in Greensboro that year, but was not a regular member of the Crockett roster.


The newspaper clippings are shown above and transcripts of the articles follow.