Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation

Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation
Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation
Acronym MEWF
Founded August 2, 1991
Style American Wrestling
Headquarters Essex, Maryland (1991-2004)
Founder(s) Dennis Wippercht
Tim Burke
Owner(s) Dennis Wippercht (1991-2002)
Tim Burke (1991-2002)
Donna M. Burke (2002-2004)
Website MEWF.com

The Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation was a Mid-Atlantic independent professional wrestling promotion based in Essex, Maryland. Founded by promoter Dennis Wippercht and wrestler Tim "Lucifer" Burke in 1991, the MEWF was one of the leading independent promotions on the East Coast during the 1990s rivaling promotions such as East Coast Wrestling Association, Jersey All Pro Wrestling and Maryland Championship Wrestling.

Among its roster included Extreme Championship Wrestling regulars such as Raven,[1] Stevie Richards, The Blue Meanie,[2] Damien Kane, Pit Bull #2, referee "Judge" Jeff Jones,[3] and Bad Breed (Ian and Axl Rotten) as well as some of the leading independent wrestlers such as Cueball Carmichael, Johnny Gunn, Max Thrasher, Devon Storm, Morgus the Maniac, Boo Bradley, Jimmy Cicero, Hollywood Bob Starr, Ruckus, Dino Casanova, Corporal Punishment, Bad Crew and Darkside (Glen Osborne and Rockin' Rebel).

Former World Wrestling Federation wrestlers such as Barry Horowitz, Road Warrior Hawk, Jim Neidhart, The Honky Tonk Man and The Headbangers as well as World Championship Wrestling veterans "Jumping" Joey Maggs[4] and Disco Inferno also had short stints in the promotion.

Contents

History

Early history

Dennis Wippercht, after promoting several wrestling events during 1990, joined Tim Burke in establishing the Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation holding its first card in Pasadena, Maryland on August 2, 1991; during the event, the Lords of Darkness (Pain and Agony) would defeat Cream Team (Dino Casanova and Rip Sawyer) to become the first MEWF Tag Team champions. Three months later, the MEWF held a fundraiser for the North Carroll High School in Hampstead, Maryland to help purchase computer software for its business department. The card included stars such as "Hot Stuff" Eddie Gilbert, A.C. Golden, Morgus the Maniac, Axl Rotten, The Cream Team (Dino Casanova & Rip Sawyer), female wrestlers Rusty "The Fox" Thomas and MEWF Women's Champion Heidi Lee Morgan, and midget wrestler Haiti Kid. Max Thrasher wrestled The Honky Tonk Man in the main event.[5]

During its early years, the promotion featured such wrestlers as Jim "The Anvil" Neidhart, Road Warrior Hawk and Jake "The Snake" Roberts, however, their cruiserweight division gained a considerable following with The Lightning Kid and Jimmy Jannetty feuding over the Light Heavyweight Championship during early 1993.

On July 8, 1995, the promotion held an event at the National Guard Armory in Annapolis, Maryland which featured Corporal Punishment, Axl Rotten, Mad Dog O'Malley and the debut of Pat Patterson, Jr. (the kayfabe "son" of Pat Patterson); the card was the first professional wrestling event ever held in Annapolis.[6] Expanding outside the Baltimore-area, the promotion regularly appeared at the Secret Cove, a popular restaurant and bar in southern Fairfax County, Virginia.[7]

During the next several years, some of the top lightheavyweight wrestlers appeared in televised matches for the promotion including Mark "the Shark" Shrader, Earl the Pearl, Steve Corino,[8] Danny Doring,[9] Quinn Nash, Adam Flash and Joey Mercury,[10] with whom Christian York feuded with The Hardy Boyz,[11] as well as participated in the ECWA's Super 8 Tournament during the late 1990s.

Rivalry with Maryland Championship Wrestling

In 1998, following a dispute with MEWF management and wrestlers over creative control and payment disagreements,[12] Corporal Punishment and Mark Shrader left the promotion taking half of its roster with them to form Maryland Championship Wrestling. After a nearly 5 year rivalry, the two promotions began working together in October 2002 and eventually co-hosted Maryland Championship Wrestling's final event at Michael's Eighth Avenue in Glen Burnie, Maryland on July 16, 2003.[13]

During this interpromotional card, the MCW Championship titles were merged with Mid-Eastern Championship Wrestling most notably the Christian York winning the Shane Shamrock Memorial Cup as well as the MCW/MEWF Cruiserweight Championship defeating Joey Matthews, Reckless Youth, Qenaan Creed, Jay Briscoe and Crash Holly in a six-way elimination match. The event also featured Headbanger Thrasher, Gillberg and Van Hammer.[14]

Later years

In early 2002, Tim's wife, Donna Burke took over day to day running began promoting shows twice a month at Dundalk's North Point Flea Market[15][16] and held a memorial show for Dino Casanova on June 20, 2002.

The following year, Burke promoted a show with Ring of Honor in Glen Burnie, Maryland on January 29[17] and World Wrestling Entertainment in Fair Hill, Maryland on July 31.[18] The promotion was unable to keep the fanbase of Maryland Championship Wrestling, however, and, within several months, the promotion became inactive after its last card at Hunter's Sail Barn in Rising Sun, Maryland on October 30, 2004; this was the first wrestling event ever held in the building.[19]

Roster

  • Adam Flash
  • Max Thrasher
  • Steve Corino
  • "The Smoke" Smokey Myavia
  • "Mad Dog" Buzz Stryker
  • The Cat Burglar
  • Otto Schtark
  • Dino Casanova
  • Morgus the Maniac
  • Jim Christian
  • Stevie Riggs
  • Drew Pain
  • Doug Delicious
  • Ricky Blues
  • Romeo Valentine
  • Sean Patrick
  • Danny Doring
  • Bad Breed (Ian and Axl Rotten)
  • Bad Crew
  • Badstreet Boys (Joey Matthews and Christian York)
  • Black and Blue
  • Cream Team (Dave Casanova and Rip Sawyer)
  • Darkside (Glen Osborne and Rockin' Rebel).
  • Dope and Sideswype
  • Flexx Wheeler and O-Dogg
  • The Goodfellows (Romeo Valentino & Dino Casanova)
  • The Good, The Bad And The Ugly
  • The Headbangers (Mosh and Thrasher)
  • The Hollywood Hunks (Lucifer and Bob Starr)
  • The Holy Rollers (Earl the Pearl and Rich Myers)
  • Leather and Lace (Rich Carlisle and Adrian Hall)
  • Lords of Darkness (Pain and Agony)
  • Marvelous Inc. (Jimmy Jannetty and Ramblin Rich Myers)
  • Mason Dixon (Bulldozer Benton and JR Willett)
  • Menace 2 Society (Adam Flash, Romero Valentino and Quinn Nash)
  • Michael Sweet and Johnny Handsome
  • The Misfits (Harley Lewis and Derek Domino)
  • Outrageous Ones (Ricki Lane and Quinn Nash)
  • Sweet and Sour ("Luscious" Johnny Brown and Rob Noxious)
  • Simply Delusional (Alex Lunar and Eagle)
  • The Slackers (Chad Bowman and Dino Devine)
  • Sonic Express (Ricky Blues and Nick Tarentino)
  • Steve Corino and Jimmy Cicero
  • Suicide and Bruiser
  • Tokyo Terrors (Keushiro and Watsumi)

Championships

References

  1. ^ "Raven Match Results Archive: July 1995". TheRavenEffect.com. 2007-08-17. http://www.theraveneffect.com/results/july95.html. 
  2. ^ Schwann, Brett (2001). "Ten Questions With ... the Blue Meanie". WrestlingClothesline.com. http://www.wrestlingclothesline.com/blue.htm. 
  3. ^ Epstein, Jack (March 1999). "The Jack Epstein Interview: Jeff Jones". JackEpstein.com. http://www.angelfire.com/nj/jackepstein/interview.html. 
  4. ^ Oliver, Greg (2006-10-16). "SLAM! Wrestling: Joey Maggs dead at age 37". SLAM! Sports. http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/2006/10/16/2041104.html. 
  5. ^ "Pro wrestling card benefits N. Carroll". Baltimore Sun. 1992-11-20. http://articles.baltimoresun.com/1992-11-20/sports/1992325172_1_grudge-match-challenge-match-stretcher-match. Retrieved 2010-05-23. 
  6. ^ Gallagher, Mary Grace. "Wrestle Mania". The Capital. 02 Jul 1995
  7. ^ Robberson, Tod. "Wrestling, With Reservations; Fairfax County Supervisor Says Restaurant's Wrestling Ring Is Not What Route 1 Needs". The Washington Post. 12 Jan 1997
  8. ^ Corino, Steve (2007-08-17). "Steve Corino: Bench Press champion". Steve Corino's LiveJournal. http://corino.livejournal.com/#12108. 
  9. ^ Wojcik, Alan (2007-11-01). "Wojcik Interview with Danny Doring". WrestlingClothesline.com. http://www.danny-doring.com/interview1.htm. 
  10. ^ Milner, John M. (2005-12-18). "SLAM! Sports: Joey Mercury". SLAM! Sports. http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Wrestling/Bios/mercury-joey.html. 
  11. ^ Hardy, Matt and Jeff. The Hardy Boyz: Exist 2 Inspire. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 2003. (pg. 253) ISBN 0-06-052154-6
  12. ^ Shady, Chunk (2004-03-29). "The Inside Credle Report: Entertainment, Honey's and Wrestling from the Bad Boys of Baltimore!". BelowTheBeltShow.com. http://www.belowthebeltshow.com/columns-shady011.htm. 
  13. ^ Snyder, Ron. "Wrestling fans bid adieu to MCW". Maryland Gazette. 19 Jul 2003
  14. ^ Pro Wrestling Illustrated (2007). "Pro Wrestling Illustrated: Wrestling History". PWI-Online.com. http://www.pwi-online.com/pages/wrestlingframe.html. 
  15. ^ "Maryland State Athletic Commission, Minutes - Thursday, August 28, 2003". Maryland State Athletic Commission. 2003-08-28. http://www.dllr.state.md.us/license/min/ath-aug2003.doc. 
  16. ^ "Maryland State Athletic Commission, Minutes - Thursday, December 18, 2003". Maryland State Athletic Commission. 2003-12-18. http://www.dllr.state.md.us/license/min/ath-dec2003.doc. 
  17. ^ "Maryland State Athletic Commission, Minutes - Thursday, February 26, 2004". Maryland State Athletic Commission. 2004-02-26. http://www.dllr.state.md.us/license/min/ath-feb2004.doc. 
  18. ^ "Maryland State Athletic Commission, Minutes - Thursday, July 29, 2004". Maryland State Athletic Commission. 2004-02-26. http://www.dllr.state.md.us/license/min/ath-july2004.doc. 
  19. ^ "Maryland State Athletic Commission, Minutes - Thursday, September 30, 2004". Maryland State Athletic Commission. 2004-02-26. http://www.dllr.state.md.us/license/min/ath-sept2004.doc. 
  20. ^ a b c d e Royal Duncan & Gary Will (4th Edition 2000). Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4. 
  21. ^ Westcott, Brian; Eric Roelfsema (2004). "MEWF Heavyweight Title History". Solie's Title Histories. http://www.solie.org/titlehistories/whtmewf.html. 
  22. ^ Westcott, Brian; Eric Roelfsema (2004). "MEWF Mid-Atlantic Heavyweight Title History". Solie's Title Histories. http://www.solie.org/titlehistories/mahtmewf.html. 
  23. ^ Westcott, Brian (2004). "MEWF Cruiserweight Title History". Solie's Title Histories. http://www.solie.org/titlehistories/cwtmewf.html. 
  24. ^ Westcott, Brian (2004). "MEWF Light Heavyweight Title". Solie's Title Histories. http://www.solie.org/titlehistories/lhtmewf.html. 
  25. ^ Westcott, Brian; Eric Roelfsema (2004). "MEWF Tag Team Title History". Solie's Title Histories. http://www.solie.org/titlehistories/ttmewf.html. 

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