- Mike Quackenbush
-
Mike Quackenbush
Quackenbush at a Chikara show in June 2008.Ring name(s) M. Quackenbush[1]
Mike Quackenbush[1]
Spyrazul[2]Billed height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[3] Billed weight 191 lb (87 kg)[3] Born March 18, 1976 [3]
West Lawn, Pennsylvania[3]Billed from West Lawn, Pennsylvania Trained by Ace Darling[2][4]
Jorge "Skayde" Rivera[2][4]
Reckless Youth[2]Debut May 20, 1994[1][4] Michael Spillane[1] (born March 18, 1976),[3] better known by his ring name Mike Quackenbush, is an American professional wrestler, trainer, author and the founder of both The Wrestle Factory and Chikara.[2] Quackenbush is best known as the patriarch of the Chikara family and his work on the independent circuit, the latter of which has spanned for over 15 years. He has written seven books: Fantastic Finishers (1998), Headquarters (2001), Secret Identity (2004), Chikara Yearbook (2002, 2004, 2009 and 2011). From 1998 to 2008, he penned a regular column for The Wrestler magazine entitled 'From Bell To Bell' and 'International Report' in Pro Wrestling Illustrated. Both Headquarters and Secret Identity were re-released as e-books for the Kindle in May 2010. He is also the host of the weekly video podcast entitled "Chikara Podcast–A–Go–Go".[5] Quackenbush also hosts a non-wrestling related podcast called "The Grizzly Bear Egg Cafe" with his long-time friend, Fox News host Clayton Morris. In wrestling, Quackenbush is a former NWA World Junior Heavyweight Champion and one half of the Chikara Campeones de Parejas with Jigsaw.[2]
Contents
Career
Early career
Quackenbush began taking bookings for multiple local independent companies, including PCW and SCW in late 1998. Growing up, Quackenbush idolized Japanese professional wrestler Jushin "Thunder" Liger and adopted the nickname "Lightning" in tribute to him.[6] Entering the business untrained, Quackenbush received training from wrestler Ace Darling, who took Quackenbush in as his protege. In 1999, he was ranked #128 by Pro Wrestling Illustrated in the annual PWI 500 as well as being named the June Flavour of the Month by the publication.[7] Quackenbush eventually befriended independent wrestlers Reckless Youth and Don Montoya. They began teaming together as a trio, dubbed The Black T-Shirt Squad (abbreviated to The BTS), due to all three wearing black t-shirts in their wrestling attire, by fellow wrestlers, which eventually was used as their stage name. Quackenbush started taking most bookings with his fellow stablemates opposed to performing as a singles wrestler.
Combat Zone Wrestling (1999, 2004–2005)
Quackenbush first appeared in Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW) on June 19, 1999, at Down In Flames, where he defeated Reckless Youth and Ric Blade in the opening three-way dance.[8] On May 14, 2005, he won CZW's Best of the Best 5 elimination tournament in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania after defeating Arik Cannon, Claudio Castagnoli, B-Boy, Kevin Steen and Super Dragon.[2] He also held the CZW World Junior Heavyweight Championship twice.[2]
Chikara (2002–present)
Quackenbush founded a professional wrestling school branded The Wrestle Factory in January 2002 along with Reckless Youth, where both men were appointed as head trainers for the school.[9] They opened the promotion Chikara in May of the same year. At the inaugural show on May 25, 2002, Quackenbush teamed with fellow BTS stablemates Reckless Youth and Don Montoya in a match, where they defeated the Gold Bond Mafia (CM Punk, Colt Cabana and Chris Hero).[10] On the last show of 2002 Quackenbush finished his first feud in Chikara, by pinning Mitch Ryder.[2] The following year Quackenbush formed the SuperFriends tag team with Chris Hero and went the whole year undefeated.[2] In 2004 Quackenbush teamed up with Team F.I.S.T. (Icarus and Gran Akuma) and started a feud with the Toxic Trio (Eddie Kingston, BlackJack Marciano and Jigsaw). The two teams faced each other on May 22, 2004, at Aniversario 3: Dodging the Sophomore Jinx, where Quackenbush and F.I.S.T. were victorious and as per stipulation of the match, Kingston and Marciano were shaved bald.[11] In the spring of 2004 Quackenbush started disappearing from Chikara shows, just as Larry Sweeney's Sweet 'n' Sour International rose to prominence.[2] He returned on October 30 during the first annual torneo cibernetico match at The Cibernetico Cometh under a mask and the ringname Spyrazul as a member of the Sweet 'n' Sour International. However, at the end of the match Spyrazul attacked his own team mates, removed his mask and walked out on Sweeney, who ended up being pinned by Jigsaw to end the match.[12]
In March 2005 the Chikara Wrestle Factory assumed control of the Combat Zone Wrestling wrestling school. Quackenbush served as head trainer of the joint facility for the two year duration, until the schools separated in March 2007. Quackenbush re-formed his SuperFriends tag team with Chris Hero and together the two of them entered the 2005 Tag World Grand Prix. They would make it to the finals of the tournament, where they were defeated by AC/DC (Arik Cannon and Claudio Castagnoli), after Hero turned on Quackenbush.[2] Together Hero, Castagnoli and Cannon would form the highly successful stable and later tag team Kings of Wrestling, with whom Quackenbush, Reckless Youth and Jigsaw would feud with the rest of the year.[2]
In late 2005 Quackenbush suffered a career-threathening back injury.[2] He would make his in-ring return on March 18, 2006, at a westside Xtreme wrestling event, where he defeated Ares for the wXw World Heavyweight Championship.[2][13] In his Chikara return on March 31, he would drop the title back to Ares.[2] He then recruited Jigsaw and Shane Storm to help him battle the Kings of Wrestling, who had replaced Arik Cannon with Quackenbush's former partners Team F.I.S.T.[2] Quackenbush set his sights on Chris Hero and defeated Gran Akuma and Icarus with his new finishing maneuver Quackendriver III.[2] At the conclusion of the year Quackenbush, Storm and Jigsaw saved Claudio Castagnoli from a beatdown at the hands of his Kings of Wrestling partners.[2]
2007 started with Quackenbush, Jigsaw and Storm defeating Team Canada (Jagged, Shane Matthews and Max Boyer), Team TNA (Alex Shelley, Chris Sabin and Sonjay Dutt), Team Mucha Lucha (Lince Dorado, El Pantera and Sicodelico, Jr.) and finally MIYAWAKI, Yoshiaki Yago and KUDO to win the inaugural King of Trios tournament.[14][15] The following month on March 25 Claudio Castagnoli defeated Quackenbush to win the right to represent Chikara in the first ever King of Europe Cup.[2] That same month Chikara Podcast–A–Go–Go was launched.[5] The weekly video podcast debuts a new episode every Monday night and is available through iTunes, YouTube and other online outlets.
On April 22, 2007, Quackenbush refereed a match between former partners Chris Hero and Claudio Castagnoli and counted the pinfall that forced Castagnoli to re-join the Kings of Wrestling.[16] The following month Quackenbush faced Hero in a match two years in the making and defeated him after debuting a new submission maneuver, the Chikara Special.[17]
Following the match, Quackenbush announced that since he knew Hero would never be able to break the Chikara Special, he would teach it and the counter to it to every tecnico wrestler on the Chikara roster. However, to Quackenbush's amazement it did not take long for Hero to break the hold and apply it himself in a match against Equinox.[18] In order to find out who leaked the move, Quackenbush sent Tim Donst to infiltrate the rudo stable the Order of the Neo-Solar Temple, led by UltraMantis Black. Meanwhile, Quackenbush and Shane Storm gained three straight victories, which would give them the right to challenge for the Chikara Campeonatos de Parejas (Tag Team Championship), but on June 14, 2008, Donst returned from his assignment and informed Quackenbush that his partner Shane Storm had been the one who leaked the move to UltraMantis Black, who in turn taught it to Hero.[2] Quackenbush attacked Storm, who would find new partners in Vin Gerard and Colin Delaney, while renaming himself STIGMA.[2]
On September 7, 2008, Jigsaw, who had unmasked himself while in Ring of Honor, returned to Chikara and saved Quackenbush and Donst from the UnStable.[2] Quackenbush returned the favor the following month, but refused to re-form the team with Jigsaw until he put his mask back on.[2] On December 14 at the season seven finale Quackenbush and Jigsaw, under a mask, defeated STIGMA and Delaney in a tag team match.[19] In early 2009 Quackenbush and Jigsaw gained three points, but were unable to defeat the Campeones de Parejas The Osirian Portal (Amasis and Ophidian) on April 25. After May's anniversary shows Quackenbush decided to take some time off from in-ring competition in order to heal his injured back.[2]
In 2010 Quackenbush became embroiled in a feud with Bruderschaft des Kreuzes (BDK), who had formed on the final show of 2009 and were threatening to take over Chikara, with its members quickly winning the Young Lions Cup, Campeonatos de Parejas and King of Trios, while also having one of its members as the Chikara Director of Fun.[20] After UltraMantis Black declared that rudos and tecnicos would have to come together in order to stop BDK, Quackenbush announced on August 11 that he would join his seven man team facing BDK in the annual torneo cibernetico match on October 23.[21] After defeating The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson) and BDK members Lince Dorado and Pinkie Sanchez, Quackenbush and Jigsaw were looking to get a shot at BDK's Claudio Castagnoli and Ares and their Campeonatos de Parejas.[22][23] However, on August 27 Quackenbush and Jigsaw failed in their attempt at getting a third point by losing to BDK members Daizee Haze and Sara Del Rey, after some shady officiating from the stable's own referee Derek Sabato.[24] The following day Quackenbush and Jigsaw restarted their march towards three points by defeating the House of Truth (Josh Raymond and Christian Abel).[25] On September 18 they picked up their second point by defeating BDK's Lince Dorado and Tim Donst.[26] On October 23 Quackenbush represented Chikara in the torneo cibernetico match, where the company's originals faced BDK. He managed to eliminate Tim Donst from the match after countering his Inverted Chikara Special into the original Chikara Special, but was immediately afterwards eliminated himself by BDK's Claudio Castagnoli.[27] The following day Quackenbush and Jigsaw once again failed in their attempt at getting their third point in a match against BDK members Pinkie Sanchez and Tursas.[28] This failure led to Quackenbush's and Jigsaw's former partner STIGMA reminding them that he and Quackenbush still had the three points they had earned two and a half years earlier, but Quackenbush made it clear that he wanted to win the Campeonatos de Parejas with Jigsaw, not STIGMA.[29][30] On November 22 Quackenbush and Jigsaw competed in a four–way elimination match with Sara Del Rey and Daizee Haze, The Osirian Portal and F.I.S.T. (Icarus and Chuck Taylor) and after eliminating all three teams, finally earned the three points needed in order to challenge for the Campeonatos de Parejas.[31] On December 12, 2010, at the season nine finale Reality is Relative Quackenbush and Jigsaw cashed in their points and defeated Ares and Castagnoli two falls to one to win the Campeonatos de Parejas for the first time.[32] Quackenbush and Jigsaw made their first successful defense of the title on February 19, 2011, defeating The Batiri (Obariyon and Kodama).[33] For the 2011 King of Trios, Quackenbush and Jigsaw formed a trio with Japanese joshi legend Manami Toyota, who had made her Chikara debut alongside Quackenbush the previous September, and on April 15 defeated Amazing Red, Joel Maximo and Wil Maximo in their first round match.[34] The following day, the trio was eliminated from the tournament in the quarterfinal stage by Team Michinoku Pro (Dick Togo, Great Sasuke and Jinsei Shinzaki).[35] On September 18, Quackenbush and Jigsaw lost the Campeonatos de Parejas to F.I.S.T. (Chuck Taylor and Johnny Gargano) in their third defense.[32] From May to October 2011, Quackenbush took part in 12 Large: Summit, a tournament used to determine the first ever Chikara Grand Champion. Quackenbush ended up winning his block of the tournament with a record of four wins and one loss to set up a final match with the winner of the other block, Eddie Kingston.[36][37] On November 13 at Chikara's first internet pay-per-view, High Noon, Quackenbush was defeated by Kingston in a match to determine the first Chikara Grand Champion.[38]
National Wrestling Alliance (2007–2010)
Quackenbush defeated Tiger Mask IV at the now defunct Fight Sports Midwest, to capture the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship on May 11, 2007.[2] Throughout the match, Quackenbush unlaced and loosened Tiger Mask's mask, a major sign of disrespect amongst masked wrestlers. In the finish of the match Quackenbush completely pulled off his opponent's mask and used the distraction to pin him for the title. In a promo after the match, Quackenbush explained that he did everything to get the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship and that he was, in no way, proud of it. He said he viewed the belt as his ticket to Japan, as Japanese promotions had not booked him in any events. He has since defended the title in Chikara against the likes of Black Tiger IV and Akira Raijin.[2] On November 6, 2010, Quackenbush lost the title to Craig Classic at Pro Wrestling Fusion's November Coming Fire pay-per-view, ending his reign at 1,275 days, the second longest reign in the title's history.[39]
Ring of Honor (2007, 2008, 2009)
On April 27, 2007, Quackenbush made his debut for Ring of Honor, at The Battle of Saint Paul.[1] Throughout the remainder of the year, he made multiple appearances, several times teaming with Jigsaw. He has competed against the likes of Claudio Castagnoli, Matt Sydal and Bryan Danielson. Quackenbush was supposed to compete more for Ring of Honor in 2007, but a back injury suffered at the 2007 Ted Petty Invitational caused him to leave Ring of Honor. Although he did compete in one six man tag team match at Ring of Honor's Transform show on January 12, 2008, he did not compete in ROH again till March 2009 when he wrestled, and lost to, Bryan Danielson and Jerry Lynn in singles matches on March 20 and March 21, respectively.
Independent Wrestling Association Mid-South (2007)
In September 2007 Quackenbush won the 2007 Ted Petty Invitational held by Independent Wrestling Association Mid-South by defeating Billy Roc, Joey Ryan and Josh Abercrombie on his way to the finals where he eliminated both Claudio Castagnoli and Chuck Taylor to win the tournament.[2] Quackenbush also captured the IWA Mid-South Heavyweight Championship.[13] Quackenbush made his debut in Japan for Michinoku Pro, defeating Shibaten in the village of Takazawa.[40] He wrestled for the same company, the next night, defeating Rei. In a four way elimination match against Chris Hero, Eddie Kingston and Chuck Taylor, Quackenbush put his IWA Mid-South Heavyweight Championship and IWA Mid-South Light Heavyweight Championship on the line. Quackenbush was pinned by Chuck Taylor, thus capturing the IWA Mid-South Light Heavyweight Championship. Eddie Kingston then pinned Quackenbush, capturing the IWA Mid-South Heavyweight Championship.
Dragon Gate USA (2009–2011)
On July 25, 2009, Quackenbush appeared on Dragon Gate USA's first pay-per-view Enter the Dragon in an eight man tag team Chikara showcase match, where Quackenbush, Jigsaw, Fire Ant and Soldier Ant defeated Gran Akuma, Icarus, Amasis and Hallowicked. Following the match Quackenbush started a promo, which was interrupted by YAMATO, who low-blowed him. Jigsaw and Gran Akuma ran to make the save, but Akuma turned on his fellow Chikara wrestlers and assisted YAMATO in assaulting Quackenbush and Jigsaw.[41] On September 6 at the second PPV titled Untouchable Quackenbush and Jigsaw defeated YAMATO and Akuma.[42] On November 28 at the third PPV Freedom Fight Quackenbush entered the tournament to crown the first Open the Freedom Gate Champion, but was eliminated in the first round in a four-way match with Jorge Rivera, Super Crazy and the winner of the match, CIMA.[43] On January 23, 2010, at the fourth PPV, Fearless, Quackenbush and Jigsaw defeated CIMA and Super Crazy in a tag team match.[44] At the two following shows, Open the Ultimate Gate and Mercury Rising, on March 26 and 27, Quackenbush and Jigsaw lost to Genki Horiguchi and Susumu Yokosuka and defeated The Young Bucks (Matt and Nick Jackson) in tag team matches.[45][46] On May 7 at Open the Northern Gate Quackenbush and Jigsaw defeated Kamikaze USA representatives Gran Akuma and Akira Tozawa in a tag team match and were then assaulted by their team mates YAMATO and Shingo.[47] At the following day's tapings of the Uprising pay-per-view, Quackenbush and Jigsaw were defeated by the team of Naruki Doi and PAC.[48] After the match Quackenbush challenged YAMATO to a tag team match, before he and Jigsaw were once again jumped by the members of Kamikaze USA.[48] On July 24 at the tapings of the Enter the Dragon 2010 pay–per–view, Quackenbush, Jigsaw and Hallowicked teamed up with the Open the Dream Gate Champion Masato Yoshino to defeat Kamikaze USA's YAMATO, Gran Akuma, Akira Tozawa and Jon Moxley in an eight man elimination tag team match.[49] On September 25 at Untouchable 2010, Quackenbush competed in a three–way match, which was won by BxB Hulk and also included Akira Tozawa.[50] The following day at Way of the Ronin, Quackenbush wrestled in a six–way match, which was won by Brodie Lee.[51] On February 21, 2011, Dragon Gate USA announced that Quackenbush had decided to disband the Chikara Sekigun stable and take a leave of absence from the promotion in order to concentrate on defending his newly won Campeonatos de Parejas in Chikara.[52]
Other
Quackenbush has toured Canada, Mexico and several European countries during his career. In 2004, he briefly united six championships from three different countries (USA, Mexico and Germany) into the "I-Crown".[13] During his 2000 hiatus from wrestling, Quackenbush wrote his novel Headquarters, produced a direct–to–video project called Crusaders and hosted an improv comedy show and jousting tournament.[9] He returned to the ring in April 2000, after just two full months off.
On December 11, 2010, Quackenbush wrestled his idol Jushin "Thunder" Liger at a Jersey All Pro Wrestling event. In the end, Liger defeated Quackenbush to retain his JAPW Light Heavyweight Championship.[53]
In wrestling
- Finishing moves
-
- Chikara Special (Kneeling step–over head–hold wrist–lock followed by hooking the opponent's far leg)[2] – innovated
- Jig 'n' Tonic (Cradle back to belly piledriver)[54][55] – adopted from Jigsaw
- QD – Quackendriver (Standing iconoclasm)[2][3]
- QD II – Quackendriver II (Cross-legged reverse piledriver)[2][3]
- QD III – Quackendriver III (Spinning modified fisherman driver)[2][3][4]
- QD IV – Quackendriver IV (Arm trap gutwrench brainbuster)[2][3]
- Signature moves
-
- Alligator Clutch (Double leg trap rana pin)[2][3]
- Black Tornado Slam (Standing or a spinning inverted Samoan drop)[2][3][4]
- Bulldog,[3] usually preceded by a corner clothesline[56]
- Chain Lightning (Triple jump moonsault)[2][3]
- Déjà Vu DDT (Spinning headscissors takedown transitioned into a DDT)[2][3]
- Double knee drop[3]
- High-angle senton bomb[57]
- Inazuma Suplex Special (Vertical suplex followed by a brainbuster)[2][3]
- Inazuma Suplex Special II (Vertical suplex followed by a double underhook DDT)[2][3]
- La Quackica (Tilt-a-whirl headscissors takedown transitioned into a single arm DDT floated over into a Fujiwara armbar)[58]
- Lightning Lock (Crossface / Over the shoulder cloverleaf combination)[2][3]
- Lightning Lock β (Inverted cloverleaf)[2][3][4]
- Lightning Lock δ (Seated over the shoulder single leg Boston crab)[2][3]
- Lightning Lock Ω (Over rotated step-over toe-hold sleeper)[2]
- Quacken–Rana (Reverse frankensteiner)[59]
- QuackenSmash (Double springboard corkscrew senton)[2]
- Sitout double underhook powerbomb,[1] sometimes from the top rope[1]
- Tail of the Dragon (Springboard swinging DDT)[3]
- Thrust palm strike[2][3]
- Tiger Driver '91 (Kneeling double underhook ganso bomb)[60]
-
- "The Touch" by Stan Bush (1995–2001)
- "Just A Hero" by Michinoku Pro Wrestling[62] (2001–2005)
- "Break It Down Again" by Tears for Fears[62] (2005–present)
- Wrestlers trained
-
- Amasis[63]
- Andy Sumner[63]
- Angel de Fuego[63]
- Ares[64]
- BlackJack Marciano[63]
- Blind Rage[63]
- Bryce Remsburg (referee)[63]
- Chris Dickinson[63]
- Claudio Castagnoli[65]
- Create-A-Wrestler[63]
- Crossbones[63]
- Danny Havoc[63]
- Davey Vega[63]
- DJ Skittlez[63]
- Dr. Cheung[63]
- Dragon Dragon[63]
- DragonFly[63]
- Drew Gulak[63]
Championships and accomplishments
- Alianza Universal Lucha Libre
- Allied Powers Wrestling Federation
-
- APWF Internet Championship (1 time)[2]
-
- Chikara Campeonatos de Parejas (1 time) – with Jigsaw[32]
- King of Trios (2007) – with Jigsaw and Shane Storm[2]
- Eastern Wrestling Federation
-
- EWF Light Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- Far North Wrestling
-
- FNW Freeweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- Future Wrestling Alliance
-
- FWA Championship (3 times)[2]
- International Pro Wrestling
- Independent Wrestling Association Deep South
-
- IWA Deep South Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- Independent Wrestling Union
-
- IWU Light Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- North East Wrestling
-
- NEW Junior Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- Pennsylvania Championship Wrestling
- Pro Wrestling Entertainment
- Steel City Wrestling
- United States Championship Wrestling
-
- USCW Junior Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[2]
- westside Xtreme wrestling
Book references
- Mike Quackenbush (2001) Headquarters
- Mike Quackenbush (2002) CHIKARA Yearbook: 2002
- Mike Quackenbush (2004) Secret Identity
- Mike Quackenbush (2004) CHIKARA Yearbook: 2004
- Mike Quackenbush (2009) CHIKARA Yearbook: 2009 Edition
- Mike Quackenbush (2011) CHIKARA Yearbook: 2011 – Update
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Online World of Wrestling profile". Online World of Wrestling. http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/profiles/m/mike-quackenbush.html. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs "CHIKARA Fans - Mike Quackenbush". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=1056. Retrieved 2009-10-05.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Spillane, Michael (2008-10-10). "Profile". QuackenHeadQuarters. http://www.chikarapro.com/QHQ/profile.htm. Retrieved 2009-02-06.
- ^ a b c d e f "Evolve profile". Evolve. http://www.evolvewrestling.com/roster/quackenbush.htm. Retrieved 2011-03-08.
- ^ a b Chikara Podcast-A-Go-Go
- ^ "Blog #190 – Mike Quackenbush". Chikara. 2010-12-10. http://www.chikarapro.com/blog190.shtml. Retrieved 2010-12-11.
- ^ a b "Pro Wrestling Illustrated Top 500–1999". Pro Wrestling Illustrated. Wrestling Information Archive. http://www.100megsfree4.com/wiawrestling/pages/pwi/pwi50099.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
- ^ "Down In Flames". Combat Zone Wrestling. http://www.czwrestling.com/archives/1999/DownInFlames.php. Retrieved 2011-07-27.
- ^ a b "Chikara Pro Biography Page 1". Chikara Pro. http://www.chikarapro.com/QHQ/bio.htm.
- ^ ""CHIKARA Live" (debut show) – 5/25/2002". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=548. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""Aniversario 3: Dodging the Sophomore Jinx" – 5/22/2004". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=628. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""The Cibernetico Cometh" – 10/30/2004". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=642. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ a b c "Chikara Pro Biography Page 3". Chikara Pro. http://www.chikarapro.com/QHQ/bio3.htm.
- ^ ""King of Trios 2007: Night Two" – 2/17/2007". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=825. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""King of Trios 2007: Night Three" – 2/18/2007". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=827. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""Rey de Voladores" – 4/22/2007". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=835. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""Aniversario?" – 5/26/2007". Chikara Fans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=837. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""The Sordid Perils of Everyday Existence" – 11/17/2007". ChikaraFans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=866. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ ""Duel and Duality" – 12/14/2008". ChikaraFans. http://chikarafans.com/?page_id=2056. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
- ^ Ford, Kevin (2009-11-28). "Contemplating CHIKARA 11.28.09: Long Tall Weekend". 411Mania. http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/columns/123128. Retrieved 2010-08-28.
- ^ "Blog #143 - Mike Quackenbush". Chikara. 2010-08-11. http://www.chikarapro.com/blog143.shtml. Retrieved 2010-08-28.
- ^ Ford, Kevin (2010-05-01). "The CHIKARA Special 05.01.10: King of Trios Retrospect". 411Mania. http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/columns/137690/The-CHIKARA-Special-05.01.10:-King-of-Trios-Retrospect.htm. Retrieved 2010-08-28.
- ^ Greer, Paul (2010-06-28). "6/27 CHIKARA results in Cleveland: Bryan Danielson's second return match, Danielson mentions TNA". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Arena_Reports_10/article_42217.shtml. Retrieved 2010-08-28.
- ^ Cambo, Rick (2010-09-15). "CHIKARA Young LionsCup day one DVD report". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. http://www.f4wonline.com/content/view/17552/. Retrieved 2010-09-16.
- ^ Cambo, Rick (2010-09-18). "CHIKARA Young Lions Cup day two report". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. http://www.f4wonline.com/content/view/17595/. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ Csonka, Larry (2010-09-19). "CHIKARA Eye to Eye Report 9.18.10". 411Mania. http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/news/153788/CHIKARA-Eye-to-Eye-Report-9.18.10.htm. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ Carroll, John (2010-10-24). "Chikara Torneo Cibernetico show review". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. http://www.f4wonline.com/content/view/18049/. Retrieved 2010-10-24.
- ^ Boutwell, Josh (2010-10-29). "Viva La Raza! Lucha Weekly". WrestleView. http://www.wrestleview.com/viewnews.php?id=1288376845. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ "Blog #176 – STIGMA". Chikara. 2010-11-10. http://www.chikarapro.com/blog176.shtml. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ "Blog #177 – Mike Quackenbush". Chikara. 2010-11-11. http://www.chikarapro.com/blog177.shtml. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- ^ Higham, Joshua (2010-11-21). "CHIKARA Report 11.21.10 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania". 411Mania. http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/news/163089/CHIKARA-Report-11.21.10-%E2%80%93-Philadelphia,-Pennsylvania.htm. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
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External links
- Official website
- Mike Quackenbush on Twitter
- Online World of Wrestling Profile
- Evolve profile
- Interview With Mike Quackenbush By GenickBruch.com
- Interview With Mike Quackenbush By UKEvents.net
- The Grizzly Bear Egg Café Podcast Website
Categories:- American professional wrestlers
- People from Berks County, Pennsylvania
- 1976 births
- Living people
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