Pro Wrestling League/Renegades of Wrestling – Australian Supershow (Brisbane, 14 Feb 2025)

Shortly after All Elite Wrestling’s announcement of Grand Slam Australia in Brisbane, local promotion Pro Wrestling League and Melbourne’s Renegades of Wrestling announced they would be co-promoting the “Australian Super Show” that all purveyors of Australian wrestling cross their fingers for whenever a major overseas company tours.
I was fortunate to attend the show live with a handful of non-wrestling mates, which gives an interesting perspective of some of the action, but also necessitated waiting for the stream before I posted a review. This is a conjoined review of the stream and the live experience.
Eaton’s Hill Hotel
The venue deserves mentioning because, when all your previous experience of Australian wrestling has been in Melbourne and Sydney, in mostly central locations, this is a pretty rubbish location. The precinct is great, there’s plenty of stuff there, the parking is ok, the room itself is perfect for wrestling – but speaking from the perspective of a visitor to Brisbane, it’s a bugger to access, it’s an area you’d only ever go to for a major event at Eaton’s Hill Hotel, and it sadly ends the night on a slight negative when there’s no public transport and it takes 30 minutes to get a heinously expensive uber! (I found out later on that some people had to leave the show early to get the last bus.)
The venue itself looked outstanding. The lighting and the audio was phenomenal – it was immediately impressive for non-wrestling friends who were immediately struck by the professionalism.
Special shout out too, as a Melburnian who spent 3 days expiring in the Brisbane humidity, to the venue’s air con. The environment was really pleasant, which absolutely helps a crowd cheer and yell and elevate the show.
Opening video
The opening video deserves a mention, it’s a great video supported by an incredible promo from Bobby Bishop hyping the crowd, and hyping the significance of the show to Australian wrestling. Check this video out, it’s outstanding.
Qld Openweight Championship + IPW Unified Championship 6-Person Scramble: Moko Kai (Qld) vs Bojack (Qld) vs JJ Furno (Vic) vs “The Australian Sensation” Craven (WA/Tas) vs “Absolute Excellence” Anth Cava (Vic) vs EC Diamond (C – Qld)
This was a quick start, with Cava thrown to the outside… and the show begins with everyone hitting dives to the outside. That’s one way to get a live crowd involved!
Following that sequence it becomes fairly standard scramble fare, as two guys fight before a third guy comes in, attacks one of them, those two fight, and so on. It works though cos everyone has some high impact moves to hit and the crowd is getting behind it.
At the point that we get 5 guys back in the ring, JJ Furno hits Craven with a wild Spanish Fly from the top rope on top of the pile. For the finish, Craven hits Furno with the Destroyer, Moko turns Craven inside out with a strike, Bojack hits Moko with a 630 splash, Cava hits Bojack with a brain buster, Diamond hits Cava with a superkick… and we get a 3-count that felt botched on the night, and didn’t look any more convincing on the stream.
Winner & STILL Qld Openweight and IPW Unified Champion: EC Diamond
This was a fun, fast-paced opener that got the show and crowd off to a good start. We’ve all seen this type of match before, but it was well executed aside from the confusing finish.
OPW Women’s Tag Team Title Match: “The Golden Bati” Eugenie & “Handsome” Billie Mac (Qld) vs The Backslide Girlz – Kingsley & Shay Kassidy (C – NSW)
The local tag team are super over, and the Backslide Girlz come out to some great heat with a live performance of their entrance. Kingsley in particular does a great job turning from heel to face depending on which promotion she’s working, which is a super underrated talent to possess.
We start with a cheer-off between both teams, with the locals obviously getting the bulk of the crowd support. The more powerful Eugenie and Billie start out dominating their opponents, until Billie misses a blind tag, allowing Kingsley to turn the tide for an elongated heat spot on Billie.
Eugenie eventually gets the tag, and she’s a house of fire on both her opponents, hitting a double spear for a near fall on Kingsley, before outside interference from Kassidy results in Kingsley hitting a Codebreaker for a near fall. Kingsley then has Eugenie stacked in the backslide, but immediately escapes and rolls Kingsley up for the win.
Winners and NEW OPW Women’s Tag Team Champions: Eugenie & Billie Mac

This was a short match, but it was well executed by all four women, and I think the result and the placement on the show was extremely important. I’m not sure anyone was really expecting an OPW title to change hands on this show, but having the local tag team pick up a surprise title win in the second match was a big deal in elevating the crowd to another level. It took a crowd who wasn’t sure how canon this cross-promotion super show was and beat them over the head with the fact that anything could happen.
“The Monster” Rip Rielly (Qld) vs Caveman Ugg (Vic)
A criticism of this show was the lack of one-on-one matches – this designated “meat match” was the only one. Damn they made sure it was a good one though!
This was everything you want from a hoss fight, and a little more as well. They slapped meat inside the ring. They chopped around the ring. Then they started picking each other up for some throws and slams.
The finish comes when Ugg is able to block a suplex, and hit his super-agile looking twisting crossbody followed by his piledriver for the win – he won the hoss fight because because he was able to block Rielly’s power and overcome him with his athleticism.
Winner: Caveman Ugg

I really enjoyed this match, and the crowd really got behind the “meat match” aspect of it. Apart from one blown spot, which was just the result of a mistime between both men, I thought Rielly looked incredible – he absolutely held his own against one of Australia’s best wrestlers. Ugg showed out, but he always does!
PWL Tag Team Championship 4-Way Ladder Match: The Dropouts – The Tuckman & Scott Green (NSW) vs The Ambush – Jarvis & Murdoch (Vic) vs Team QWA – Trent O’Day & Sam Cannon (Qld) vs Strong 94 – Renegade & JJ Avery (C – Qld)
The Dropouts’ music is insanely over! As the other three teams start the match brawling, The Dropouts attempt to reach the belts without any ladders – this obviously doesn’t work! The QWA guys quickly add a ladder to the ring though, and we’re underway.
It’s super spot heavy, with highlights including Scott Green missing a moonsault off a ladder perched in the corner, Jarvis jumping off the ladder before Renegade catches him and sets him up for a drop kick hi-lo from the Strong 94 guys, a sick draping DDT from O’Day onto Renegade, and The Ambush hitting a stomp off the top of the ladder into a package piledriver on Avery (it was as crazy as it sounds!)
The Dropouts and The Ambush fight atop two ladders before Strong 94 tip both ladders and deposit all 4 men to the outside. But as they climb the ladder Wacol’s Most Wanted (Skinny D & The Cockroach) are in the ring to take out Strong 94. They climb the ladder and Cockroach tries to claim the belts, but is tipped from a ladder onto a pile on the outside by Team QWA.
Some late life from Avery leads to Sam Cannon missing a moonsault on top of a ladder. Strong 94 have one more go at climbing the ladder before Renegade is taken out by a Trent O’Day low blow. He hangs Avery up in the ladder, and O’Day retrieves the belts for Team QWA.
Winners and NEW PWL Tag Team Champions: Team QWA – Trent O’Day & Sam Cannon
This match was heaps of fun. Lots of really fun and athletic spots, and another big surprise win on the card. The crowd was wild for this – my non-wrestling fan mates were particularly enthused by the risk taking on display in this one.
The biggest challenge of the match was the inclusion of Wacol’s Most Wanted, cos you have to be a Brisbane wrestling fan to really know who they are, and the reach of this show was greater than that – there were Australian wrestling fans from all over the country who didn’t have any reason to know who they were. We had the opportunity to learn a little bit about the men and women announced for the show, but Wacol’s Most Wanted were in a really tough spot here as an unannounced appearance.
At the live show we went to intermission at this point of the show, but there’s no sign of any break during the stream.
Ahead of the “State of Origin” match we get a Lochy Hendricks video, using metaphors to show what he was going to do to each other state’s representative. It’s another incredible video from Lochy, he’s the best in Australia when it comes to using creativity to add to his matches.
We then get another Bobby Bishop promo, and it’s another “ra-ra” speech about the importance of this show and this match to Qld wrestling. It’s not quite as good as the promo that opened the show, but it’s still bloody outstanding, Bishop is incredible.
5-Person “State of Origin” match: Jack J Bonza w/ Digby (NSW) vs Dean Brady (SA) vs “The Aspirationalist” (Vic) vs “The Don” Michael Morleone (WA) vs “Undeniable” Bobby Bishop (Qld)
Five of the absolute best in the country here, and personally my first experience of Brady, Morleone & Bishop, which is super exciting! It’s an interesting dynamic though, with four guys who are heels in their home promotion, in foreign territory, up against the home towner Bishop.

The match degenerates to a fight on the outside almost immediately, with Digby (from the band Big Red Fire Truck) getting involved on behalf of Bonza.
As this match moved down the stretch I thought it did a particularly good job of involving multiple guys in the ring at the same time. It wasn’t such a formulaic multi-man match, which I really appreciated.
Bobby is undoubtedly the star and the centrepiece of the match, and appears to have the match won after piledriving Dean Brady – however PWL’s Jesse Daniels interferes, Lochy hits Bishop with a low blow and the Britney Spear, and Lochy wins it on behalf of Victoria.
Winner: Lochy Hendricks
I thought this was a fun match, and the crowd was hot for Bobby as the guy whose promo had become a centrepiece of the show.
I do however think the match faced a couple of challenges. While there were people in attendance from across Australia, I’m not sure there was much of a concentration of people from any one state (outside Qld), which meant Bobby was doing a lot of heavy lifting as the only one getting much of a reaction. And the match was rightly laid out to make him the centrepiece, but from the live perspective it felt like a lot of the crowd were only buying in when Bobby was involved.
The second challenge is around the number of masters a wrestling booker serves with a show like this – you have a home promotion with their stars and storylines, a co-promotion with their stars and storylines, and a bunch of top talent from other top promotions that need to be respected and not completely jobbed out for the sole benefit of the home promotion(s). It meant there was a lot going on in this match, and not all of it made a lot of sense, or was particularly relevant to everyone. I think the crowd would’ve really loved Bishop to win this one, and I think Daniels was in the same unfortunate position as Wacol’s Most Wanted where non-Queensland fans hadn’t been given any reason to learn who he was ahead of the show.
We see a promo of Aysha running down her resume of opponents that she’s defeated as Renegades Champion for over 700 days. She talks about the overseas tours of Lena Kross and Lil Marz, but says here nothing will change, and she’ll continue to dominate as the first class champion.
Renegades of Wrestling Women’s Championship: Lil Marz (Qld) vs Lena Kross (WA) vs Aysha (C – Vic)
I thought it watching them live, and I thought it again watching the stream – Aysha and Lena have chemistry forever, and I desperately need to see that match one-one-one! (I feel like it needs to happen soon as well. Following Emma, Peyton/Billie, Rhea, Zaria, Toni & Harley, among others – Lena Kross is the next incredible Australian woman off the production line.)

We see Lena playing the powerhouse role with Marz and Aysha doing an awesome job bouncing off her. She’s not even really playing heel or face, she’s just playing “boss”, which I love – it’s the role she was born to play!
And for the most part it’s the kind of three-way that I personally love – “two people fight while person rests” is such a durge to watch, but watching a fast, athletic three-way that uses creativity to involve all three wrestlers? Hook that into my veins!
We see a really wild, dangerous looking spot where Lena has Aysha up in a vertical suplex, and Marz hits Aysha with a cross-body dive off the top rope, causing an ugly landing for Aysha… which then led to all three women just beating each other.
Marz hits Kross with a face buster, then Aysha with a blue thunder bomb for a very near fall! Kross cuts Marz off as she attempts to climb the turnbuckle before turning her attention to Aysha, who hits a snake eyes across the top rope. Aysha then vaults the rope, vaults Marz, and hits a hurricanrana to Kross – this match rules!
Aysha follows up with a neck breaker to Marz, she counters Kross into a tornado DDT… and Marz breaks up the in! Kross recovers to hit a lariat and a big boot, a facebuster to Aysha landing on Marz, a running knee, and Aysha kicks out!
Kross hits a brutal looking Michonoku Driver to Aysha, but the pin is broken up by Marz. Kross rolls through, but Marz hits the hurricanrana and the 619 to Kross, before Aysha hits the backstabber to Marz, boots Kross from the ring, and plants Marz with the first class DDT. It’s over, and it’s so, so good!
Winner and STILL Renegades of Wrestling Women’s Champion: Aysha
Damn, I need a cigarette. I thought this was very good on the night, I thought it was great on the stream. (I’m pretty sure there were one or two spots edited out.)
Perhaps the wildest thing about this match is that here was one of the world’s best in Lena Kross and one of Australia’s best in Aysha putting on an absolute clinic, looking crisp as a potato chip, making me desperate to see that match one-on-one…
And I’m not even sure they were the biggest stars of the match. Lil Marz absolutely belonged in this company, she didn’t look out of place at all. We saw her challenge Aysha one-on-one for the Renegades title going back about 15 months ago at Essendon, and it was fine, but nothing outstanding.
This? I thought it was a star-making performance for Lil Marz, I thought Aysha and Lena looked great, and this was my favourite match of the show.
Post match, Aysha re-asserts her dominance over the Renegades women’s division, but it’s just setting the stage for…
Indi Hartwell pops up on the screen, says she’s been keeping an eye on Aysha, and it’s crazy how much she’s grown from the little girl she trained with. However, Indi doesn’t like Aysha’s new attitude, and that on 9 March at Northcote Theatre it’s Indi Hartwell vs Aysha for the Renegades of Wrestling Women’s Title!
We see pre-match videos setting up the match. Ricky Utomi said he was going to retire Outback Adam and he did it, he was going to retain his PWL title and he did it. He’s calling for other champions of Australia to join him to prove that Australian professional wrestling is the best on Earth.
Yeet Stephens agrees that Australian wrestling is the best in the world, and if Utomi wants someone to step up, he’s got it – but Stevens isn’t coming alone. It’s going to be a team of contenders/all stars going up against Ricky’s team of champions. He finishes the promo by promising Utomi that he’ll be PWL Champion.
5-on-5 Champions vs All Stars Tag Team Match: All-Stars – Yeet Stevens (Qld), Edward Dusk (Vic), Emman Azman (Vic/Malaysia), Matt Hayter (SA) & Jesse Love (VIC) w/ Jazzy vs Champions – Ricky Utomi (Qld) w/ Ryker, Levi Nixon (Vic), Zac Sabbath (SA), Thirteen (Qld) & Jake Taylor (Vic)
One of the storylines heading into this match was the announcement beforehand that this would be Emman Azman’s last show in Australia for the foreseeable future after a visa situation didn’t go his way. He lost the Renegades title as a heel at the last show, before Levi Nixon immediately cashed in his title opportunity to win the title. Given the circumstances, this match leapt straight to Emman being a face and Levi being a massive jerk.
It’s another match with a lot of masters to serve, but it does a good job. Jazzy looks like a hoss as she chases Ryker to the back. Stevens, Thirteen and Taylor all get an opportunity to show their power. Love shows off some nice striking and athleticism… not to mention showing off that body!
Matt Hayter begins the match in the most outrageous leopard print leotard, which he immediately removes, but with Nixon tagging in for the Champions, Hayter immediately tags in Azman for a hockey fight. They do some real crisp wrestling, and the contest between them is pretty even when Nixon tags out.
We then get an exchange between Dusk and Sabbath, which from a gimmick perspective is a really interesting clash, but it’s a quick exchange as Dusk gets a nearfall and tags out to Hayter… who has a microphone. Excellent!
Hayter begins a promo as Sabbath recovers, and begins calling his moves and selling injuries into the microphone. “Let me go you stupid wizard.” So good!
Utomi tags in and grabs the microphone, and the match breaks down with the Champions attacking the All-Stars from the apron before running a train of offence on Hayter in the corner – the joke being that Hayter kept getting his boot up to Utomi’s attempted offence. Hayter reclaims the mic, and now it’s the All-Stars running the train on Utomi in the corner. Love follows it up with a sick moonsault to Utomi for a near-fall.
The match descends into a 5-onj-5 brawl, and Love and Utomi are left in the ring. Then it’s the procession of finishers! Love hits Utomi with a Fireman’s carry slam, Thirteen hits Love with a chokeslam, Azman hits Thirteen with a lariat, Taylor hits Azman with a big boot, Dusk hits Taylor with a pair of suplexes, Sabbath spits mist in the face of Dusk, Hayter kisses Sabbath to “steal the mist” and spits it back at Sabbath then hits a DDT. Utomi hits Hayter with a couple of knees.
Utomi escapes Stevens’ finisher though, and tags in Nixon who hits a Phoenix Splash for a near fall on Stevens. Stevens kicks out though and hits Nixon with his “Yeet Bomb” before Utomi pulls the ref from the ring.
Stevens throws Nixon into the corner inviting Utomi to tag himself in. Nixon is thrown to the outside taking out a pile of bodies, and Stevens hits Utomi with a Yeet bomb for the win.
Winners: The All-Stars
I liked this match, and it felt like the crowd really liked the match. It was a good way to get a bunch of big names on the card, everyone got a chance to do their best thing (including talking in Hayter’s case), and only one guy takes a fall. On top of that it directly feeds into PWL’s ongoing headline story of 2025 between Ricky Utomi and Yeet Stevens.
Probably the only real criticism was the placement – despite what was coming, this felt like “A Super Show Main Event”. Having the challenger pin the champ in the tag match, then putting up the graphic for the next show as this show finishes is wrestling promoting 101, so it felt a little odd that there was still a match to come.
Post match we get a moment of appreciation for Emman Azman as Hayter lifts him on his shoulders, gives him a kiss, and we get a “Golden Boy” chant.
Best wishes to you Emman, you were the funniest interview I’ve done so far!
We get an ad for PWL’s “THE PURGE: CyberNight” on 15 March at Kedron-Wavell in Chermside.
Ahead of the main event, Todd Eastman cuts a promo on behalf of Mitch Ryder daring Robbie Eagles to put his Soul of PWA Title on the line in this match. Robbie accepts, saying he’s just back from defending his IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Title in Japan, his ROH Global Wars challenge for the ROH Pure Title against Lee Moriarty had been announced the previous day, so he’s not scared to defend his title against two of Queensland’s finest.
Soul of PWA Championship Match – “One Shot” Mitch Ryder (Qld) w/ Todd Eastman vs “The Dark Horse” Zeke Andino (Qld) vs “The Sniper of the Skies” Robbie Eagles (C – NSW)
The match starts out with all three rolling each other up into various pinning combinations, which is a really fun and creative way to start a three-way. The story of the match quickly becomes Andino and Eagles both being good guys with respect for each other, and Ryder being a jerk, deservedly getting cut off and punished when he tries to interject.
Andino has spent some time in Japan recently, and it shows. With the exception of one ugly dive, everything he does is so crisp. He does a step up head scissors that might be the best I’ve ever seen.
Ryder eventually gains some momentum by going high risk with an insane springboard dive to the floor onto both opponents and maintains control in the ring until the good guys team up on him.
Robbie hits Andino with a standing sliced bread into a Ron Miller Special that Ryder needs to interrupt, which results in Ryder copping the dropkick to the knee and Robbie moving to his finishing sequence, but he’s cut off by Zeke.
Eagles avoid a superplex but a refreshed Ryder vaults into the ring, hits Eagles with a German Suplex and superplexes Andino from the top rope. Andino rolls through into a Falcon Arrow that Eagles has to break up, and all three men are down.
We get a three-way exchange of strikes and chops before Ryder ends that with a double eye poke. He eats a bunch of chops and kicks for his trouble and ultimately eats a hi-lo from both opponents. Andino follows up with a lariat to Eagles for a near fall, Eagles then eats a big boot for another near fall.
Ryder cuts off Andino and scores a near fall of his own, and they end up exchanging strikes on the ring apron before Eagles drop kicks them both to the floor and dives through the ropes with a tope con hilo. Eastman tries to get involved, distracting Robbie and buying Mitch some time for a middle rope assisted piledriver… but Andino breaks up the pin with a Swanton Bomb, goes for a pin of his own… and is pulled off the cover by Eastman.
Andino chases Eastman around the ring and gives him a punch to the face, before he cops a dropkick to the outside from Ryder, sending Andino into the railings. Ryder tries to re-enter the ring with a springboard 450 splash but Eagles evades it. Eagles shakes off a big boot then pulls off the turbo backpack. A superkick, a 450 to the knee, and the Ron Miller Special has Ryder tapping as Andino struggles to re-enter the ring.
Winner and STILL Soul of PWA Champion: Robbie Eagles.
This was a really good match between three of Australia’s best. No complaints with the match, it was exactly what you’d expect. But it suffered by going on last because the previous match had felt like the main event, and at the end of a long, hot evening – and with plenty of people having to leave early to get the last bus back to the city – the crowd had started to filter out before and during this match. The drop in energy was noticeable on the night, and the empty seats during the main event are quite polarising on the stream.
Post-match Robbie says we’d better be louder for his match the following night on the AEW show. Interestingly, his promo on the night showed a lot of respect to Andino, with Robbie saying he’d be happy to defend the title again against Zeke – this was cut from the stream, possibly because that isn’t the match that PWL announced, Eagles vs Ryder is.
Eagles thanks the crowd for coming, and shouts out the amount of work done by Pro Wrestling League and Renegades of Wrestling putting the show together. He shouts out the interstate visitors, and says the fans are why he keeps wrestling. He will continue working in Australia no matter where he’s signed. He’s the soul of Australian wrestling, so congratulations to those getting signed overseas who say “bye bye” to Australia, but he comes back every single time, and it’s why everyone’s support tonight, and tomorrow at AEW means so much to him.
He’s “The Mighty”, and The Mighty Don’t Kneel.
We then get a very well done highlights video from the show to close out the stream.
Final thoughts: I left the live show thinking this was one of the best local wrestling events I’d ever been to in Australia. It felt big time, the star power was super exciting, it felt every bit the “super show”, and the crowd felt electric for it.
Unfortunately that electricity didn’t really come through the stream in my opinion. And the reality of any super card is that, when the stream is uploaded two weeks later, you lose the advantage of that excitement around “A Super Show” – two weeks later on the stream it succeeds (or otherwise) on its own merits.
I still thought the stream was great – I thought the women’s title match was excellent, and the ladder match and “meat match” between Rielly and Ugg were both superb as well. And those last two matches are both really great, but as I said I thought they both suffered from not being in the reverse order.
The broadcast team of Lachlan Albert, Bastian James and Chris Dink did an outstanding job of telling stories and calling moves, and the ring announcing was actively adding to the show, and adding to individual matches, which isn’t something I’ve experienced too often. If I were a wrestling promoter I’d want to book Chris Dink! (Lachlan has also written for PWDownUnder about his experience from the announce desk.)
I think this show did an incredible job of showcasing Australian wrestling, and in particular Queensland wrestling. I thought it was pleasing that PWL and Renegades were open to booking and spotlighting everyone, not just their own guys. It also would’ve been really easy to bring in outside talent to job to the “home” promotions, but it wasn’t what happened at all. There wasn’t a single person who left this show looking worse than they did before, I think Queensland as a whole got a great opportunity to shine, and I think PWL will have gained some interest going forwards – a couple of my non-wrestling mates were talking about getting together with their kids for an event, which is really exciting for me!
The challenges of this event have been mentioned previously, namely the challenge of treating so many wrestlers and their home promotions with respect, the order of the last two matches, and some of the crowd leaving early.
Another challenge on a show like this is the number of people on the show. On one hand, I totally appreciate representing as many as 15 different Australian promotions, and needing to book a bunch of multi-person matches to do it. On the other hand though, multi-person matches are tricky. I previously mentioned my distaste for the trope of “two guys fight, one guy rests” – it’s hard to avoid that trope when you’re running so many multi-person matches.
I don’t know the answer though. This already felt like a long show, and the two three-way matches were probably the best two matches on the card. So any further one-on-one or straight up two-on-two tag team matches would’ve needed to replace other matches, which means taking people off the show. I don’t believe that would’ve ultimately been to the show’s benefit.
All in all, a super fun show, and you should go out of your way to watch the stream.
At the same time though? It’s yet another example of why you should attend these shows live if you can. There’s nothing like local wrestling live, the streams are just a substitute option for if you can’t make the live show in my opinion.
This stream will show you a good, fun, high quality wrestling show.
But the live experience? It was electric, it was exciting, I don’t think I’ve ever experienced so much energy within a wrestling crowd.
And so that’s the takeaway of watching the live version and the stream of this show – go watch your local Aussie wrestling!
Where to watch: The show is available to watch for free on YouTube.
Pro Wrestling League‘s next show is THE PURGE: CyberNight on 15 March at Kedron-Wavell. Tickets are currently available. Following on from the Australian Super Show, they’ve announced Robbie Eagles vs Mitch Ryder one-on-one in a massive main event!
Renegades of Wrestling‘s next show is We Are Renegades, THIS SUNDAY 9 March at Northcote Theatre. Standing room tickets are still available, and Indi Hartwell will be conducting a meet & greet ahead of her match against Aysha for the Renegades of Wrestling Championship.
Lifelong wrestling fan. Decade-long fan of local wrestling. Writer. Aspiring interviewer… if it weren’t for that pesky, crippling anxiety!