National Backyard Wrestling Alliance
From Bywpedia
National Backyard Wrestling Alliance | |
Details | |
Acronym | NBYWA |
Established | January 22, 2009 |
Creator | Skull Jr. |
Key People | Skull Jr. (Overseer) Jake Xinn (Councilor & Graphic Designer) Sunomi (Councilor) Lance Manion (Councilor) |
Type of site | Website |
Federations under banner | 14 |
Hall of Fame Federations | 6 |
Current status | Active |
External links | NBYWA Website |
National Backyard Wrestling Alliance (NBYWA) is a small backyard wrestling community founded by Skull Jr. on January 22, 2009. Despite having the term "national", NBYWA has not yet assembled a national gathering (it has federations in three of the five regions of the United States, one in Canada, and one in the United Kingdom). It was in conflict with William Parker's National Backyard Wrestling Alliance (NBWA) over the name, to which NBYWA started to brand itself "The REAL NBYWA" and "The REAL National Backyard Wrestling Alliance" until the other community closed it's doors on September 21, 2011. It was also a rival to The Promise's Backyard Wrestling Association.
Contents |
History
Before NBYWA
The history of NBYWA can be considered to have started in July 2007, when Skull Jr.'s BYW federation Total Hardcore Wrestling (THW) went to the internet with it's own website. Without having a camera to take video of the events, THW wasn't taken too seriously (though there is known pictures of events out that are being searched for). This, and the fact that four of it's seven wrestlers wanted to retire, were huge factors in THW's closing on July 12, 2008 (it was revived on July 14, 2011 and promptly joined NBYWA immediately). After talking to Jake Adams of WZW about a possible match, Skull Jr. advertised it on the GBYWN forums, causing a short verbal feud with popular wrestlers, claiming that he wasn't legitimate enough to wrestle Adams by not showcasing his own matches. After the feud ended, Skull Jr. had an abysmal match with RPK of HCW on November 29, 2008, which he was criticized more for. A good match versus RPK and AC occurred on January 10, 2009, which was completely ignored. Soon afterwards, Skull Jr. announced the re-development of the GBYWN video game, which had previously gone into development hell. Through space restrictions, the game would've only been able to have a roster of 8 wrestlers, and 16 to 32-bit graphics. This was criticized by the popular wrestlers, leaving Skull Jr. frustrated with Cam, who wasn't punishing them for their comments, which were against the forum's rules. This led Skull to believe that GBYWN was biased towards popular federations (a belief that he no longer has). He announced he would quit using GBYWN's forum on January 21, 2009.
Origination
NBYWA alternate logo since February 2009. Made by Jake Xinn of ACW. |
NBYWA was founded on January 22, 2009 by Skull Jr. The reason for the creation the site was starting a community where smaller Federations and wrestlers could escape the pressure of being judged and ridiculed by the bigger ones. On January 24, 2009, Skull Jr. asked Jake Xinn of Absolute Championship Wrestling for help and was made the Assistant Manager of the site. They took back and revived the defunct GBYWN Michigan Heavyweight Championship and re-named it the NBYWA International Heavyweight Championship. So far the community has five Federations in the United States, and one in Canada.
Hall of Fame
NBYWA learned of the closing of it's federation Indiana Championship Wrestling on March 23, 2010, two days after the closing happened. To honor the fed, Skull Jr. made the NBYWA Hall of Fame, a new page dedicated to honoring the fallen federations of the community. ICW was moved from the "Federations" list to the "Hall of Fame" list on March 23, 2010. In April 2010, NBYWA became BYWpedia's Monthly Featured Article. NBYWA thanked BYWpedia for it on their site.
Cross-Promotion
NBYWA held it's first five supershows in Michigan, something Skull Jr. was seeing as a problem. After negotiating with Higher Passion Wrestling, it was announced that NBYWA 6 and 7 would for the first time be held out-of-state, in Ohio. The shows were a success, seeing the THW, NBYWA, and TPBYWA World Titles change hands at least once, along with the culmination of a feud that took place throughout the summer of 2011 pitting Skull against one of HPW's top stars, Sean Steel. A short time later, Skull became friendly with the Midwest Wrestling Alliance, and on November 3, 2011, Skull's brother Sunomi became the co-Business Manager of NBYWA.
Reform
"The NBYWA Reform" was enacted on February 9, 2012, as a means to improve and expand the NBYWA. The first act of this was introducing a new logo and slogan, "Bring It Out Back!". More changes are to come in the coming months.
Federations
- Hybrid Championship Wrestling.
- Absolute Championship Wrestling.
- Indiana Championship Wrestling.
- Higher Passion Wrestling.
- Michigan Wrestling Association.
- TKO Wrestling.
- Xtremely Combative Pure Wrestling.
- Total Hardcore Wrestling.
- Epic Backyard Wrestling Association.
- Pure Backyard Wrestling.
- Extremely Shitty Backyard Wrestling.
- CR3 Wrestling.
- Entertainment Backyard Wrestling.
- Real Wrestling Federation.
Hall of Fame
Class of 2010
- Ultimate British Wrestling (closed April 2010, added on July 5, 2010).
- V For Victory (closed October 17, 2010, added on October 18, 2010).
- Extreme Hardcore Wrestling South-East (closed 2010, added on November 30, 2010).
- Intensity Wrestling All-Stars (closed 2010, added on November 30, 2010).
- National Wrestling Organization (closed 2010, added on November 30, 2010).
Class of 2011
- Underground Wrestling Entertainment (closed June 5, 2010 *first*, October 1, 2011 *second*, added on October 3, 2011).
Championships
Championship | Current champion(s) | Date Won | Defeated | Event | Notes |
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