Throughout the history of professional wrestling, most wrestlers' ring names aren't actually their real names. Wrestlers are ...
The final version of the Four Horsemen started in 1998 when Ric Flair returned to WCW after his long suspension and personal issues with Eric Bischoff. Dean Malenko joined Flair, Steve “Mongo” ...
Ric Flair, considered to be one of the four faces on the Mount Rushmore of Wrestling, was a mainstay of both the NWA and WCW after the company branched out on its own. With multiple championship ...
After a five-year hiatus, WWE Hall of Famer Diamond Dallas Page is making his return to the WWE 2K video game series, and it ...
Being a great babyface is an art, and WCW had some all-time great babyfaces on the roster throughout its history.
WCW added wild contrast to the main event between Ric Flair and Ricky Steamboat by booking Cactus and Maxx Payne vs. The ...
He spent time in the AWA, WWE, NWA, and Georgia Championship Wrestling, before it became WCW. Notably, he won the AWA World Tag Team Championship alongside his brother, "Mad Dog" Vachon.
A top-ranked Superstar during the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s, his career saw him earn a slew of singles and tag team championships in different eras of sports-entertainment history in the NWA ...
What’s clear is that he started out in 1970 as a generic grappler in smaller NWA territories ... of jock bullies dubbed The Varsity Club in WCW in the late ’80s. And alliances with Tazz ...
Here are a few dozen of the big-time wrestlers who were affiliated with both WCW and NWA over the years.
Fair enough, but what a match to pin down the show with. Sting returning to grab opportunity with both hands and send Baltimore into raptures is classic and very-much timeless NWA/WCW fare.