Front Row Wrestling
Acronym | FRW |
---|---|
Founded | 2003 |
Defunct | 2012 |
Style | American Wrestling |
Headquarters | Rochester, New Hampshire |
Founder(s) | Scott C. Despres |
Owner(s) | Scott C. Despres |
Sister | Eastern Wrestling Alliance |
Website | FrontRowWrestling.net Front Row Wrestling on Myspace |
Front Row Wrestling is an American independent professional wrestling promotion located in Rochester, New Hampshire. It is one of the few New England–based promotions outside Massachusetts, such as Pro Wrestling America Live in Maine and Joel Gertner's MXW Pro Wrestling in Connecticut, and is the only wrestling promotion active in the state of New Hampshire. Founded by wrestler Scott C. Despres in 2003, it is the sister promotion of Eastern Wrestling Alliance and an affiliate of the National Wrestling Alliance. FRW has co-promoted events and hosted sanctioned title defenses of both promotions.
A number of Northeastern independent stars competed for FRW, including Brian Milonas, Chase Del Monte, Tommaso Ciampa, Johnny Handsome, "The Alpha Male" Justin Powers and Antonio "The Promise" Thomas. The promotion also has a small women's division, largely dominated by Sarah Blackheart, Mistress Belmont and Vanity Vixxxen, but also brought in Sara Del Rey, Mercedes Martinez, Ariel, Alere Little Feather and Awesome Kong. Matt Calamare, the only working deaf professional wrestling referee, also regularly appeared for the promotion.
On February 26, 2010, Despres announced the promotion would be forming a partnership with NWA Liberty States, formerly No Limit Pro, to promote wrestling events throughout New England under the banner of the National Wrestling Alliance.
History
[edit]Front Row Wrestling was started by Scott C. Despres, better known as New England independent wrestler Maverick Wild, in 2003 and held its first show in Milford, New Hampshire, that year. When Steve Bradley's Wrestling Federation of America closed its doors a year later, the promotion became the sole wrestling promotion in the state of New Hampshire.[1][2] Although the promotion struggled financially during its first years, partly due to Despres' inexperience as a promoter, it eventually gained a small but loyal following in the Rochester area. The promotion not only established a home arena at the Rochester American Legion Hall but began touring cities throughout New Hampshire within two years. In the summer of 2006, they visited Claremont where it performed at a children's community center in Claremont Park.[3] That same year, they co-promoted an event in Gardner, Massachusetts, with the Eastern Wrestling Alliance. It was one of FRW's first successful shows, with a record 175 fans in attendance.
It eventually took over the WFA's former home base in Dover, New Hampshire, as well. This change influenced one of the promotion's earliest storylines, which pitted one-time WFA stars, known as the Dover Legends, against "heel" manager The Grand Wizard of Wrestling and his Stable of Assassins. Among its earliest stars were former WFA mainstays such as "The Alpha Male" Justin Powers and Antonio "The Promise" Thomas as well as Northeastern independent stars including Maverick Wild, Chase Del Monte, Tommaso Ciampa, Brian Milonas,[4] and Johnny Handsome. Handsome spent part of his early career in the promotion. FRW also developed a small women's division, largely dominated by Sarah Blackheart, Mistress Belmont and Vanity Vixxxen,[5] and would come to include Sara Del Rey, Mercedes Martinez, Ariel, Alere Little Feather and Awesome Kong. Matt Calamare, the only working deaf referee in professional wrestling, also frequently appeared for the promotion.[6]
In early 2007, the promotion was involved in a minor controversy with Rochester city officials when they suddenly shut down Rochester American Legion Hall a little over eight hours before the start of FRW's January 12 supercard "Friday the 12th". According to Despres, an estimated 90-150 fans were turned away. FRW was forced to offer a full refund for all the tickets purchased and was prohibited from running shows in the city until he was issued a special permit by the city council. He met with the council in May[7] and again in November 2007[8] in order to promote shows in the town. Meanwhile, FRW continued to tour New Hampshire, returning to Claremont in the spring[9] and looking into securing an alternate venue outside of Rochester. Eventually, Despres and the city came to a settlement allowing FRW the use of the Rochester American Legion Hall.
On June 23, 2007, FRW held its first card outside the New Hampshire area at the Memorial Ice Arena in Winchendon, Massachusetts. The main event featured a first-ever "champion vs. champion" match between FRW All Star Champion Kid Krazy and Granite State Champion Christian Angers. On February 8, 2008, Despres was a guest on the internet radio show Rumble Radio Online.[1] On June 11, FRW was one of several New England independent promotions which participated in a special benefit show for Brandon Cusick, a 5-year-old child diagnosed with leukemia, at the Bank Street Armory in Fall River, Massachusetts.[10][11] Seven months later in Rochester, on November 15, 2008, the FRW Tag Team Championship changed hands in a 6-person intergender match between The Pleasures of Pain & Mistress Belmont and Tony Star, Sethoran and Vanity Vixxxen. Also on the card, Shane Sharpe defeated Justin Shaype in a 2 out of 3 falls match to win the heavyweight championship.[12]
On July 31, 2009, on the first night of his tour of the East Coast of the United States, Antonio Thomas defeated Shane Sharpe in an Iron Man match in Rochester.[13] In addition to running shows in New Hampshire and Massachusetts,[12] FRW made its Vermont debut in White River Junction on September 25.[14] Tony Spencer, then FRW Granite State Champion, appeared on the October 10th edition of the internet call-in radio show Late Nite JengaJam. Among the topics he discussed included his thoughts on the death of Lou Albano, the state of the wrestling industry and World Wrestling Entertainment, and his own career in Front Row Wrestling.[2] On November 6, 2009, Maverick Wild was forced to leave FRW after losing to Bruiser Costa at the American Legion in Rochester.[15] Also on the card, Christian Angers & Stephen Marriott won the FRW Tag Team Championship from Shawn Sharp and Cameron Blaze, and Johnny Vegas defeated Sethoran to become the new FRW All Star Champion.[16]
On February 26, 2010, Despres announced the promotion would be forming a partnership with NWA Liberty States, formerly No Limits Pro, to promote wrestling events throughout New England under the banner of the National Wrestling Alliance.[17] Despres continued co-promoting NWA Liberty States with Joey Eastman for another year. The promotion was then taken over by Todd Sople, which left the NWA around this time, and relocated to Dracut, Massachusetts as Liberty States Pro Wrestling. In an October 2017 interview, Despres confirmed he would not bring back Front Row Wrestling due to his retirement and believed running an independent promotion in New England was no longer profitable.[18]
Alumni
[edit]- Male wrestlers
Birth name: | Ring name(s): | Tenure: | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Richard Adorno | Punisher Don Vega | 2008 | |
Jeremy Barron | Dr. Reginald Heresy / Dr. Heresy | 2006-2009 | |
Jeff Costa | Bruiser Costa | 2008-2010 | |
Tom Demers | Johnny Punch | 2008 | |
Maverick Wild | Maverick Wild | 2005-2010 | |
Robert Evans | Brutal Bob Evans | 2006-2007 2009 |
|
Michael Gallagher | Mike Nice | 2007-2008 | |
Jared Ganem | Paul Lombardi | 2006 | |
Matthew Marinelli | Matt Taven | 2010 | |
Thomas Matera | Antonio "The Promise" Thomas | 2007-2010 | |
Tom McCormack Jr. | Tommy Mack | 2006-2009 | |
Justin McIsaac | Justin Shaype | 2007-2009 | |
Brian Milonas | Brian Milonas | 2006-2007 | |
James Milonas | Jimmy James | 2007 | |
Max Pelham | Max Impact | 2006 | |
Corey Peloquin | Chi Chi Cruz | 2006 | |
Alex Pliakos | Alex Arion | 2006 | |
Joseph Puffer III | Christian Angers | 2006-2010 | |
Francesco Roda | Frankie Arion | 2008 | |
Todd Smith | Don Chesterfield | 2007-2008 | |
David Tombari | Tony Omega | 2006 | |
Sarath Ton | Kid Mikaze | 2007-2008 | |
John Vitale | Johnny Vegas | 2006-2010 | |
Tommaso Whitney | Thomaso Ciampa / Tommy Pennmanship | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | AJ Mulkie | 2006 | |
Unknown | Alex Payne | 2006 | |
Unknown | The Alternate Warrior | 2008 | |
Unknown | Arson | 2007 | |
Unknown | B.A. Tatum | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Billy King | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Brandon Locke | 2007 | |
Unknown | Bryan Logan | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Cameron Blaze | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Chase Del Monte | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Dan Thunder | 2007-2009 | |
Unknown | Dave Barron / DJ Dave / Moondog Barron | 2006-2009 | |
Unknown | Ethan Masters | 2008-2009 | |
Unknown | Flash Farenhyte / Master Flash Farenhyte | 2006 | |
Unknown | Frankie Armadillo | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Gary "The Torch" Kudalis | 2007 | |
Unknown | Guthrie O'Dwyer | 2007-2008 | |
Unknown | Hawaiian Hotbody Vain | 2007 | |
Unknown | Hawaiian Joe Simone | 2009 | |
Unknown | John Magnus | 2009 | |
Unknown | John Poe | 2010 | |
Unknown | Johnny Royal | 2009 | |
Unknown | Jonny Idol | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | JT Fox | 2010 | |
Unknown | Justin Sharpe | 2008 | |
Unknown | Kid Krazy | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Kurt Adams | 2007 | |
Unknown | Larry Huntley | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Link | 2008 | |
Unknown | Lynch 2.0 | 2008 | |
Unknown | Mad Dog Mulligan | 2007 | |
Unknown | Master Flesh | 2006-2009 | |
Unknown | Matt Logan | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Matt Spectro / Tarzan Taylor | 2007-2010 | |
Unknown | Michael Sain | 2006 | |
Unknown | Morbid Malitia | 2007 | |
Unknown | Nick Steel | 2007 | |
Unknown | Panther Martin | 2006-2010 | |
Unknown | Psycho | 2006-2008 | |
Unknown | Rocco Abruzzi | 2006 | |
Unknown | Scott Reed | 2007 | |
Unknown | Sethoran / Vampire Sethoran | 2007-2009 | |
Unknown | Shane Sharpe / Shane Sharp / Shayne Sharp / American Thunder | 2007-2010 | |
Unknown | Shawn Sharp / Shawn Sharpe | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Sonny Goodspeed / Strutting Sonny | 2006-2010 | |
Unknown | Stretcher McGuirk | 2008 | |
Unknown | Tim Walker | 2006-2007 | |
Unknown | Todd Sopple / Todd Sople | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Tom Kane | 2007-2008 | |
Unknown | Tom Liddell | 2007-2008 | |
Unknown | Tommy Boy | 2008 | |
Unknown | Tony Star | 2008-2009 | |
Unknown | "Tough Talk" Tony Spencer | 2007-2010 |
- Female wrestlers
Birth name: | Ring name(s): | Tenure: | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Catherine Belmont | Mistress Belmont | 2009-2010 | |
Taeler Conrad-Mellen | Taeler Hendrix | 2010 | |
Alisha Inacio | Alexxis | 2010 | |
Nicole Raczynski | Nikki Rox | 2008 | |
Unknown | Kimaya | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Sarah Blackheart | 2009-2010 | |
Unknown | Vanity Vixxxen / Vanity Vixen | 2008-2009 |
- Stables and tag teams
Tag team/Stable(s) | Members | Tenure(s) |
---|---|---|
The Apex | Cameron Blaze and Shawn Sharpe | 2009-2010 |
The Boogie Woogie Express | 2009 | |
Chunky But Funky | DJ Dave and Strutting Sonny | 2007-2008 |
Dr. Reginald Heresy and Christian Angers | Dr. Reginald Heresy and Christian Angers | 2006-2008 |
The Logan Brothers | Bryan Logan and Matt Logan | 2006-2007 |
The Marriott Corporation | Steven Marriott, Johnny Vegas & Justin Shaype, Max Impact | 2006-2010 |
The Pleasures of Pain | Maverick Wild and Master Flesh | 2007-2008 |
The Science of Insanity | Christian Angers and Steven Marriott | 2009-2010 |
Technical Thunder | Tony Spencer and Dan Thunder | 2008 |
Managers and valets
Birth name: | Ring name(s): | Tenure: | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Catherine Belmont | Mistress Belmont | 2007-2010 | |
Unknown | Dr. Everett Payne / Dr. Payne | 2006–2007 | |
Unknown | George Romero / Jorge Romero / Jorge Akbar | 2008-2010 | |
Unknown | Joey Eastman | 2007-2010 | |
Unknown | Lexxus | 2008 | |
Unknown | Marshall McNeil | 2008-2010 | |
Unknown | Nurse Kiki Van Dyke | 2006 | |
Unknown | Steven Mariott / Stephen Marriott | 2006–2010 | |
Unknown | Vanity Vixxxen / Vanity Vixen | 2007-2009 |
Championships
[edit]FRW All Star Championship
[edit]The FRW All Star Championship was the main professional wrestling championship defended in Front Row Wrestling. It was the original heavyweight title of the All-Star Wrestling Association from 2002 to 2005, and continued to be defended in FRW until the promotion merged with NWA Liberty States, the National Wrestling Alliance affiliate in Massachusetts, in February 2010.
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
No. | The overall championship reign |
Reign | The reign number for the specific wrestler listed. |
Event | The event in which the championship changed hands |
N/A | The specific information is not known |
— | Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign |
(nlt) | Indicates that a title change took place "no later than" the date listed.[Note 1] |
Indicates that there was a period where the lineage is undocumented due to the lack of written documentation |
Title history
No. | Champion | Reign | Date | Days held | Location | Event | Notes | Ref(s). |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Johnny Vegas | 1 | November 19, 2005 | 301 | Claremont, New Hampshire | live event | As the last holder of the All-Star Wrestling Association Championship, Johnny Vegas was recognized as the first FRW All Star Champion. | [19] |
2 | Maverick Wild | 1 | September 16, 2006 | 62 | Gardner, Massachusetts | live event | This was an interpromotional "champion vs. champion" match co-hosted with the Eastern Wrestling Alliance. Maverick Wild won both the FRW All Star and EWA Heavyweight Titles. | [19] |
3 | Kid Krazy | 1 | November 17, 2006 | 227 | Rindge, New Hampshire | live event | [19] | |
— | Vacated | — | July 2, 2007 | — | N/A | N/A | Kid Krazy was stripped of the title for undocumented reasons | [19] |
4 | Christian Angers | 1 | August 3, 2007 | 301 | Rochester, New Hampshire | Ultimate Endurance | Defeated Don Chesterfield in an "Ultimate Endurance" tournament final | [19] |
5 | Shane Sharpe | 1 | May 30, 2008 | 126 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [19] | |
6 | Justin Shaype | 1 | October 3, 2008 | 43 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [19] | |
7 | Shane Sharpe | 2 | November 15, 2008 | 174 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | This was a two out of three falls match | [19] |
— | Vacated | — | May 8, 2009 | — | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | Held up when Shane Sharpe and Antonio Thomas struck a referee during their match. It was decided by the promotion to award the title to the winner of Ultimate Endurance 3. | [19] |
8 | Sethoran | 1 | June 19, 2009 | 140 | Rochester, New Hampshire | Ultimate Endurance 3 | Defeated Master Flesh in an "Ultimate Endurance" match for the vacant title. | [19] |
9 | Johnny Vegas | 2 | November 6, 2009 | 112 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [19] | |
— | Deactivated | — | February 26, 2010 | — | N/A | N/A | FRW merged with NWA Liberty States on February 26, 2010, and the title was abandoned. | [19] |
FRW Granite State Championship
[edit]The FRW Granite State Championship was a secondary professional wrestling championship defended in Front Row Wrestling. As its name suggests, the title was contested in matches specifically in the state of New Hampshire and existed from 2005 until present, despite FRW's merger with NWA Liberty States, the National Wrestling Alliance affiliate in Massachusetts, in 2010, Tough Talk Tony Spencer still defends this championship actively.
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
No. | The overall championship reign |
Reign | The reign number for the specific wrestler listed. |
Event | The event in which the championship changed hands |
N/A | The specific information is not known |
— | Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign |
(nlt) | Indicates that a title change took place "no later than" the date listed.[Note 2] |
Indicates that there was a period where the lineage is undocumented due to the lack of written documentation |
Title history
No. | Champion | Reign | Date | Days held | Location | Event | Notes | Ref(s). |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dave Barron | 1 | May 20, 2006 | 119 | Claremont, New Hampshire | live event | Barron became the first champion by winning the title in a battle royal. | [20] |
2 | Flash Farenhyte | 1 | July 29, 2006 | 63 | Keene, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
3 | Tim Walker | 1 | September 30, 2006 | 147 | Claremont, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
4 | Christian Angers | 1 | February 24, 2007 | 83 | Rindge, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
5 | Maverick Wild | 1 | May 18, 2007 | 77 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
6 | Shayne Sharpe | 1 | August 3, 2007 | 175 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
7 | Steven Marriott | 1 | January 25, 2008 | 49 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
8 | Tommy Mack | 1 | March 14, 2008 | 127 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
9 | Matt Spectro | 1 | July 19, 2008 | 293 | Rochester, New Hampshire | Ultimate Endurance 2 | Defeated Tommy Mack in an "Ultimate Endurance" tournament in which the title was on the line. | [20] |
10 | Tony Star | 1 | May 8, 2009 | 148 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
11 | Tony Spencer | 1 | October 3, 2009 | 146 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | [20] | |
— | Deactivated | — | February 26, 2010 | — | N/A | N/A | FRW merged with NWA Liberty States on February 26, 2010, however, Tough Talk Tony Spencer does defend the championship regularly and is recognized as the longest reigning champion in New England. | [20] |
FRW Tag Team Championship
[edit]The FRW Tag Team Championship was the major tag team title in Front Row Wrestling from 2005 until 2010. As former holders of the All-Star Wrestling Association Tag Team Championship, albeit with separate partners, Dr. Reginald Heresy and Christian Angers were introduced as the inaugural tag team champions in late 2005. The title existed until FRW's merger with NWA Liberty States, the National Wrestling Alliance affiliate in Massachusetts, in 2010.
Title history
No. | Overall reign number |
---|---|
Reign | Reign number for the specific team—reign numbers for the individuals are in parentheses, if different |
Days | Number of days held |
No. | Champion | Championship change | Reign statistics | Notes | Ref. | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Event | Location | Reign | Days | ||||
1 | Dr. Reginald Heresy and Christian Angers | 2005 (n) | live event | Unknown | 1 | N/A | Heresy and Angers were introduced as the first tag team champions | [21] |
2 | Tim Walker and Tommy Mack | April 8, 2006 | live event | Claremont, New Hampshire | 1 | 0 | This was a no disqualification match. Tommy Mack suffers a serious head injury during the match, however, and is unable to compete for several months. | [21] |
3 | Dr. Reginald Heresy and Christian Angers | April 8, 2006 | live event | Claremont, New Hampshire | 2 | 112 | Due to Tommy Mack's injury, the titles were returned to Heresy and Angers. | [21] |
4 | Tommy Mack and Panther Martin | July 29, 2006 | live event | Keene, New Hampshire | 1 | 111 | [21] | |
5 | The Logan Brothers (Matt Logan and Bryan Logan) |
November 17, 2006 | live event | Rindge, New Hampshire | 1 | 130 | [21] | |
6 | Tommy Mack and Panther Martin | March 27, 2007 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 2 | 94 | [21] | |
7 | The Marriott Corporation (Johnny Vegas and Justin Shaype) |
June 29, 2007 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 1 | 141 | [21] | |
8 | Chunky But Funky (DJ Dave and Strutting Sonny) |
November 17, 2007 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 1 | 118 | [21] | |
9 | Pleasures of Pain (Maverick Wild and Master Flesh) |
March 14, 2008 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 1 | 246 | [21] | |
10 | Sethoran and Tony Star | November 15, 2008 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 1 | 97 | [21] | |
11 | Dr. Reginald Heresy and Johnny Vegas | February 20, 2009 | live event | Rindge, New Hampshire | 1 | 161 | [21] | |
12 | Shawn Sharp and Cameron Blaze | July 31, 2009 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 1 | 98 | [21] | |
13 | Christian Angers and Steven Marriott | November 6, 2009 | live event | Rochester, New Hampshire | 1 | 112 | [21] | |
— | Deactivated | February 26, 2010 | — | — | — | — | FRW merged with NWA Liberty States on February 26, 2010, and the title was abandoned. |
FRW Ladies All Star Championship
[edit]The FRW Ladies All Star Championship was a short-lived women's professional wrestling title in Front Row Wrestling, which was defended for less than a year before the promotion merged with NWA Liberty States, the National Wrestling Alliance affiliate in Massachusetts, in February 2010.
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
No. | The overall championship reign |
Reign | The reign number for the specific wrestler listed. |
Event | The event in which the championship changed hands |
N/A | The specific information is not known |
— | Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign |
(nlt) | Indicates that a title change took place "no later than" the date listed.[Note 3] |
Indicates that there was a period where the lineage is undocumented due to the lack of written documentation |
Title history
No. | Champion | Reign | Date | Days held | Location | Event | Notes | Ref(s). |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Mistress Belmont | 1 | July 31, 2009 | 210 | Rochester, New Hampshire | live event | Defeated Vanity Vixen and Kimaya in a three-way match to become the first FRW All Star Ladies Champion. | [22] |
— | Vacated | — | February 26, 2010 | — | N/A | N/A | FRW merged with NWA Liberty States on February 26, 2010, and the title was abandoned. | [22] |
Notes
[edit]- ^ Documentation of the specific date of a title change is not found but documentation of the champion holding the title on that date/in that period.
- ^ Documentation of the specific date of a title change is not found but documentation of the champion holding the title on that date/in that period.
- ^ Documentation of the specific date of a title change is not found but documentation of the champion holding the title on that date/in that period.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Eastman, Joey; P.J. Drummond; Pete Kreten; Pat Creed (2008-02-08). "Joey Eastman 2: Electric Boogaloo (2 of 3)". RumbleRadioOnline.com. Retrieved 2010-06-14.[permanent dead link ]
- ^ a b "Late Nite JengaJam Ep. 140 - Tough Talk With Tony Spencer". Late Nite JengaJam. Talkshoe.com. 2009-10-20. Archived from the original on 2012-02-29. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ City of Claremont Parks & Recreation (Summer 2006). "May - August 2006 Brochure" (PDF). Claremont Parks & Recreation. ClaremontNH.com. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ East Coast Wrestling Association (2009). "ECWA Pro Wrestling: 14th Annual Super 8". Super 8 News. ECWAprowrestling.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-20. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ "Vanity Vixxxen". G.L.O.R.Y. Wrestling: The Wrestlers. GloryWrestling.com. 2009-05-06. Archived from the original on 2010-01-13. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ "Wrestling Respect Interview with referee Matt Calamare". WrestlingRespect.com. 2008-10-13. Archived from the original on 2010-10-21. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ Eisenberg, Sheryl L. (2007-05-01). "Rochester City Council Meeting: Tuesday, May 1, 2007". Public Documents. RochesterNH.net. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ Eisenberg, Sheryl L. (2007-11-07). "Rochester City Council Meeting: Wednesday, November 7, 2007". Public Documents. RochesterNH.net. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ City of Claremont Parks & Recreation (Summer 2007). "May - August 2007 Brochure" (PDF). Claremont Parks & Recreation. ClaremontNH.com. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ "Benefit for Brandon." DOIwrestling.com. Ed. Sean McCaffrey. N.p., July 2008. Web. 8 July 2010. <www.declarationofindependents.net/doi/pages/ben711r.html>
- ^ O'Domski, Shawn (July 2008). "Independent Wrestling Results - July 2008". Miscellaneous Independent Results. OnlineWorldofWrestling.com. Retrieved 8 July 2010.
- ^ a b Tanaka, Dan (2009). "Match Listings: (1001-1100)". Match History. ProWrestlingReferee.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ "Independent Wrestling Results - July 2009". Results. OnlineWorldofWrestling.com. July 2009. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ Tanaka, Dan (2010). "Match Listings: (1101-1200)". Match History. DanTanaka.com. Archived from the original on 2010-09-22. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ Meltzer, Dave (2009-11-06). "THURS UPDATE: Vince talks business; GSP signs deal; New PPV match; Ratings; Hogan; Pillman; Rogers". Wrestling Observer/Figure Four Online. F4Wonline.com. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ "Front Row Wrestling results from 11/6 in Rochester, NH". Newswire. IndyWrestlingNews.com. 2009-11-09. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ Despres, Scott C. (2010-02-26). "Big Change Ahead: NWA Liberty States". FRWrestling.com. Retrieved 2010-06-12.
- ^ Connors, Leo (host) (October 2017). "Maverick Wild, 1st Visit". The Ring & All Other Sports. Episode 71. Nashua TV.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "FRW All Star Title History". Solie.org. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "FRW Granite State Title History". Solie.org. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "FRW Tag Team Title History". Solie.org. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
- ^ a b "FRW All Star Ladies Title History". Solie.org. Retrieved November 8, 2018.
External links
[edit]- FrontRowWrestling.net
- Front Row Wrestling, original website
- Photographs: Front Row Wrestling