Categories
News

901 Wrestling Has New Home

The 901 Wrestling promotion has a new home: Minglewood Hall at 1955 Madison Avenue.

“We’re going to be moving to Sundays monthly at Minglewood starting September 22nd,” says Kevin Cerrito, 901 Wrestling host. Anthony Sain is his commentary partner. Both will be back at the helm at the new location.

And the shows, which will be held in Minglewood’s main room, will be from 5 to 7 p.m. instead of at a later time as in the past, Cerrito says.

One free entry for kids will be available with each purchase of a general admission ticket to the matches.

Tickets will go on sale at 9:01 a.m on 901 day, September 1st, at 901wrestling.com.

Fans can catch up on full shows, including the matches and interviews, by going to youtube.com/901wrestling.

Dorian Vain at 901 Wrestling’s “Wild Card Rumble” at Black Lodge (Credit: MIchael Donahue)

According to info from Cerrito, “Promoter Tommy Jax took over a Holly Springs, Mississippi-based wrestling promotion in 2017 with a group of underutilized talent that was mostly based out of Memphis. In 2018, the promotion moved their shows to Rec Room on Broad Avenue in Memphis and it was rebranded to 901 Wrestling in 2019. Covid ended the Rec Room era, and when 901 Wrestling returned in 2021 its new home was Black Lodge until they closed in August 2024.”

According to Jax, “With 901 Wrestling moving to Minglewood Hall, we all have the opportunity to present the biggest local wrestling shows this city has seen in over a decade. This brings us closer to reaching our goal of bringing wrestling back as a mainstay in Memphis once again. 901 Wrestling is not just putting on wrestling shows. We’re trying to make sure we keep something here that is inherently in our city’s DNA. Like barbecue, basketball, and music, wrestling is part of who we are as Memphians.”

And, as Cerrito says, “It’s going to be a new era. We’re really looking forward to it.”

Categories
We Recommend We Recommend

WE SAW YOU: 901 Wrestling’s Wild Card Rumble

Wrestling fans turned out for 901 Wrestling’s annual Wild Card Rumble, which was held July 20th at Black Lodge.

Anthony Sain, commentator with Kevin Cerrito, describes the event as a “13-man, over-the-top battle royal.”

And, he says, “It’s one of our premier events of the year.”

Tyler “The Lion” LeMasters and Roscoe “The Cajun Catapult” Monroe
“Live Wire” Bobby Ford

Describing the event, Sain says, “It starts off with two guys. A new guy comes in every two minutes. … You’ve got to throw guys over the top rope to be eliminated.”

Everybody is eventually eliminated except one. “The True One of One” Kevin Bless was this year’s winner. “It got down to him and one other person and he threw that person over the top rope.”

“The Star of the Show” Andy Mack
“The True One of One” Kevin Bless
Dorian Vain

As Rumble winner, Bless can participate in the 901 Wrestling Championship, the 1819 Championship, or the Tag Team Championship.

The event was in honor of the late 901 Wrestling wrestler Devin “Wild Card” Taylor, who died in a drowning accident.

Bless is “typically a guy that fans don’t get behind, but they were happy to see him win in honor of Devin Taylor. Bless was the last opponent Devin had before he passed away.”  

More We Saw You photos at memphisflyer.com.

Norman “The Soviet Saint” Meklakov at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“The Merc” Chris Evans at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“The All-American” Ken Dang at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Nighttrain at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Top Shottaz at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“King of Memphis” Hunter Havoc
Morgan the Man at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Shane Shoffner at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Sebastian Moon, Joey Hall, Amos Fitzgerald at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Kevin Cerrito and Anthony Sain at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Connor the Dude at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
“Baddest Man Alive” Dustin Anthony at 901 Wrestling (Credit: Michael Donahue)
We Saw You
Categories
Beyond the Arc Sports

Rivalries, Rebuilding, Rehab, and Rasslin’

I was a guest on Kevin Cerrito’s sports-radio show, Cerrito Live, on Sports 56 last weekend, to discuss, of all things, the Memphis Grizzlies and their Wrestling Night promotions. Every NBA team has themed nights to add some pizzazz to their home games, and Wrestling Night is the home team’s exclusive version of this. It was a great event when it was initially presented back in 2015. The night featured Jerry “The King” Lawler and Ric Flair, and was capped off by the Grizzlies beating a rival Oklahoma City Thunder team with Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, and Serge Ibaka.
Michael Butler Jr.

901 Wrestling

During my radio interview, we talked about how the Grizzlies Wrestling Night went from being an amazing annual event to one that the Grizzlies in-game operations team has run into the ground — resting on past accomplishments and probably serving up too much of a good thing. The Grizzlies had six Wrestling Nights this season, often featuring embarrassingly aging former wrestlers from the 1990s and early 2000s. Unfortunately, this gaffe by the team’s event staff mirrors some of the actions of the organization on the basketball side, as well.

I also attended a local wrestling show that Saturday night, from a promotion called 901 Wrestling. Its owner, Christopher Thompson, has been hosting outstanding shows at the Rec Room on Broad Ave recently, and I was able to bring Grizzlies beat writer Omari Sankofa from The Athletic out with me to experience and learn how deep wrestling is rooted in a certain subculture of the city. He grasped the parallels and passion of it and saw how it adds to what he has already observed about the city since moving here last fall from Detroit to cover the Grizzlies. In Memphis, we love our hoops — and we love our wrestling.

Wrestling and basketball have always played off of each other well in Memphis, due to the fact that both sports have a element of good vs. bad, heroes vs. villains, and intense rivalries with individuals that you may hate when they are on the court or in the ring but still find entertaining. This is what made great Grizzlies rivalries against the Thunder and Clippers so good, because we savored the classic battles between Zach Randolph, Tony Allen, Marc Gasol, and Mike Conley against the likes of Chris Paul, Blake Griffin, Deandre Jordan, Russell Westbrook, and Kevin Durant.

After the Grizzlies latest 113-96 loss to the Clippers on Sunday night, it sunk in for me just how much the once-entertaining Clippers rivalry is now dead. Both teams have new rosters and new directions and Conley is the lone member from either side’s glory days. Something else that stood out was how the Clippers were able to lose Paul, Griffin, and Jordan over the last year and have still managed to find themselves in the Western Conference playoffs, even after dealing Tobias Harris, their star player from earlier this season. The Grizzlies’ former rival embraced their rebuild, took the bumps, and added respectable but non-star free agents, while keeping a proven head coach to lead the retooled roster back to the playoffs. In 2017, Doc Rivers was demoted from his position as director of basketball operations to focus on coaching, and he got his team back in the playoffs ahead of schedule.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, the Grizzlies currently sit tied for the sixth-worst record in the NBA. They have a potential superstar-level talent in Jaren Jackson Jr. but a ton of uncertainty in the front office going forward. There is no obvious sense of direction, outside of what now looks to be failed attempt to convey the draft pick owed to Boston. Jonas Valanciunas, who has had a monster campaign since being traded to the Grizzlies for Marc Gasol, is now out for the season after an ankle injury that he suffered against the Clippers. This adds to a long list of recent injuries, including Jackson, Kyle Anderson, Dillon Brooks, Avery Bradley, CJ Miles, and likely Joakim Noah as players that are out for the season.

The Grizzlies are heading into what will truly be a rebuilding offseason for the franchise, as Mike Conley is also likely to be traded as early as draft night, this summer. It comes with a ton of uncertainty because of the organization’s frustratingly unclear front-office structure, which includes long-time general manager (and scapegoat) Chris Wallace and whoever else seems to be pulling strings and making moves at any time. Can the fans trust an organization that has botched so many major decisions? There is no quick remedy to get the Grizzlies back to being a Western Conference competitor, but just as with their Wrestling Nights, I hope that the team’s leadership realizes that just doing more of the same thing probably isn’t going to work.