Tables, Ladders and Chairs Match

From Iwe

A Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match, often abbreviated as a TLC, is a type of professional wrestling match originated within IWE, but can be seen under different variations in other wrestling promotions.

While a regular ladder match is already no-disqualification, and the use of tables, chairs, and other weapons are just as legal as ladders are (such as at Wrestlemania 2000, when a table was used, and the 2001 Royal Rumble, when a chair was used, just to name a few), TLC matches actually encourage their use.

Contents

[edit] History

The TLC match is a variation of a ladder match, which is modified to include two other weapons, tables and chairs. The TLC match usually pits three or more tag teams against each other, or more recently used for one-on-one matches. The goal is to acquire the item (usually championship belts) which starts the match suspended above the ring. A TLC match can be seen as a more complicated ladder match, where tables and chairs, along with ladders, can also be used as legal foreign objects. This, compared to the relative ages of the wrestlers involved, gives the match an atmosphere similar to that of a hardcore match.

[edit] List of IWF/E Tables, Ladders & Chairs Matches

# Match Stipulations Event Date and Location
1 Edge and Christian (c) defeated The Hooper Boyz (Josh Hooper and Matt Hooper) and The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley & D'Von Dudley) Triple-Threat TLC Match for the IWF Tag Team Championship SummerSlam (2000) August 27, 2000
Raleigh, North Carolina
2 Edge and Christian defeated The Hardy Boyz (Matt Hooper and Josh Hooper) and The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) (c) Triple-Threat TLC Match for the IWF Tag Team Championship WrestleMania X-Seven April 1, 2001
Houston, Texas
3 Chris Jericho and Chris Benoit (c) defeated Edge and Christian, The Dudley Boyz (Bubba Ray Dudley and D-Von Dudley) and The Hooper Boyz (Matt Hooper and Josh Hooper) Fatal 4-Way TLC Match for the IWF Tag Team Championship IWF SmackDown May 24, 2001
Anaheim, California
4 Kane & The Hurricane (c) defeated Bubba Ray Dudley & Spike Dudley, Khristian & Khris Jericho, Josh Hooper & Kyle Van Dam Fatal 4-Way TLC Match for the World Tag Team Championship IWE Raw Roulette October 7, 2002
Las Vegas, Nevada
5 Edge defeated Ric Flair Singles TLC Match for the IWE Championship IWE Raw January 16, 2006
Raleigh, North Carolina
6 Dustin Simpson defeated Edge (c) Singles TLC Match for the IWE Championship Unforgiven (2006) September 17, 2006
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
7 Edge defeated Undertaker Singles TLC Match for the vacant World Heavyweight Championship One Night Stand (2008) June 1, 2008
San Diego, California
8 CM Punk defeated Josh Hooper (c) Singles TLC Match for the World Heavyweight Championship SummerSlam (2009) August 23, 2009
Los Angeles, California
9 D-Generation X (Triple K & Ryan Barnhart) defeated Jeri-Show (Khris Jerichio & The Big Show) (c) Tag-Team TLC Match for the Unified IWE Tag Team Championship TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2009) December 13, 2009
San Antonio, Texas
10 The Miz (c) defeated Jerry Lawler Singles TLC Match for the IWE Championship IWE Raw November 29, 2010
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
11 Edge defeated Kane (c), Alberto Del Rio, Rey Mysterio Fatal 4-Way TLC Match for the World Heavyweight Championship TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2010) December 19, 2010
Houston, Texas
12 CM Punk (c) vs. The Miz vs. Alberto Del Rio Triple Threat TLC Match for the IWE Championship TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2011) December 18, 2011
Baltimore, Maryland
13 The Shield (Seth Rollins, Dean Ambrose, and Roman Reigns) defeated Team Hell No (Kody Brown and Kane) and Ryback Six-Man Tag Team TLC Match (victory only via pinfall or submission) TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2012) December 16, 2012
Brooklyn, New York
14 CM Punk (c) defeated Ryback Singles TLC Match for the IWE Championship IWE Raw January 7, 2013
Tampa, Florida
15 Kevin McAlmond (c - IWE) defeated Dustin Simpson (c - World) Champion vs. Champion TLC Match to unify the World Heavyweight & IWE Championships TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2013) December 15, 2013
Houston, Texas
16 El Torito defeated Hornswoggle WeeLC Match (first time a TLC match features midget wrestlers) Extreme Rules (2014) May 4, 2014
East Rutherford, New Jersey
17 Dean Ambrose vs. Bray Wyatt Singles TLC Match TLC: Tables, Ladders, Chairs December 14, 2014
Cleveland, Ohio
18 Sheamus (c) defeated Roman Reigns Singles TLC Match for the IWE World Heavyweight Championship TLC: Tables, Ladders and Chairs December 13, 2015
Boston, Massachusetts
19 KJ Styles (c) defeated Dean Ambrose Singles TLC Match for the IWE World Championship TLC: Tables, Ladders and Chairs December 4, 2016
Dallas, Texas
20 The Shield (Dean Ambrose and Seth Rollins) and Kurt Angle defeated The Miz, Braun Strowman, Kane and Cesaro and Sheamus 5-on-3 Handicap TLC Match TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs October 22, 2017
Minneapolis, Minnesota
21 Seth Rollins (c) defeated Baron Corbin Singles TLC Match for the IWE Intercontinental Championship IWE Raw December 10, 2018
San Diego, California
22 Braun Strowman vs. Baron Corbin Singles TLC Match TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs December 16, 2018
San Jose, California
23 Becky Lynch (c) vs. Charlotte Flair vs. Asuka Triple Threat TLC Match for the IWE SmackDown Women's Championship

[edit] Participant List

Wrestler Victories Appearances

[edit] International Wrestling Federation/Entertainment/IWE

IWE created and adapted the matches to make it known today as a TLC match. The idea of the TLC match in WWE had its origins in a tag-team ladder match for the managerial services of Terri Thomas between Edge and Khristian and the The Hooper Boyz, Matt and Josh, at No Mercy 1999, with audiences giving all four wrestlers a standing ovation at the end of the match. The move catapulted both tag teams to the top of the tag team world. The following months had the Hooper Boyz face the Dudley Boyz, Harlan and Scott, in a tag-team Tables match, which had similar success.

The three teams would be known for their three respective foreign objects, as well as the hardcore wrestling styles associated therein: the Dudley Boyz often had a spot in their tag team matches where Harlan Dudley would say "Scott, get the tables!" when a table spot was imminent; the Hooper Boyz, in singles matches, would challenge main-event singles wrestlers (such as The Undertaker) in Ladder matches, considered at that time to be the "signature match" of the team (as they were both high-flyers, they specialized with high spots, and doing them off the top of ladders amplified their effectiveness); while Edge and Khristian developed the "Con-Chair-To" finishing move, which involved the two hitting an opponent's head simultaneously, on opposite sides, with chairs. Eventually, the three teams were brought together in a Triple Threat Ladder match in WrestleMania 2000, in what would be the forerunner of the TLC in terms of the spots involved (tables were involved in some of the major spots, even though it was technically a Ladder match). It is incorrectly referred to by some fans as the first TLC match. The match was called a Triangle Ladder Match.

The first TLC match (that was officially called a "TLC" by the World Wrestling Federation) was contested between these three teams using the weapons (and to a lesser extent, the type of match) that they had made famous at SummerSlam 2000. These TLC matches frequently involved members of these three teams, and are largely remembered for the dangerous stunts, injuries, and length. The TLC matches slowly met its end, however, when Edge and Khristian broke up and Josh Hooper was released. Additionally, the matches that have incorporated more weapons created an overall trend of increased concussions and neck injuries that plagued the WWE roster, and as a result, led to the return of a more traditional mat-based style of matches. Although the tables remain, to this day, a Dudley Boyz (now known as Team 3D) gimmick, Team 3D is virtually the only tag team to use it, and thus table matches are now few and far between. Chairs were reduced to their former roles as a mainstay form of interference and disqualification in wrestling matches, while ladders and Ladder matches are now used sporadically.

The second TLC match occurred at WrestleMania X-Seven the following year, which also sprung the infamous Swanton Bomb off a 16 ft ladder by Josh Hooper on Peter and Spike Dudley. These matches involved the three aforementioned teams, with each having Edge and Khristian winning.

TLC III occurred on the May 24, 2001 edition of WWF SmackDown! when the tag team of Kris McGowan and Kevin Hunter had to face the usual other three tag teams in order to retain their tag team championship, which they did. This TLC is sometimes referred to as the Forgotten TLC due to the fact that there was no hype prior to the match and it was on a weekly TV show rather than a pay-per-view event. Clear evidence of this is shown to the hype of TLC VI where Edge continually stated that to Dustin Simpson, TLC was "A match you never had, and a match I never lost." The match was the first TLC match to air on broadcast television as well as the first one to involve four tag teams.

The fourth TLC match, TLC IV, occurred on the October 7, 2002 edition of Raw, where four tag teams had drawn, as a result of "Raw Roulette" (where the match type of every match of the card was determined by spinning a wheel), a TLC match. The match saw defending champions Kane and The Hurricane putting their World Tag Team Titles up against the teams of Khristian and Kris McGowan, Harlan Dudley and Spike Dudley, and Josh Hooper and Kyle Van Dam. Being the veterans that they were to the match itself, general manager Eric Bischoff allowed Josh, Khristian and Harlan to choose their own partners, as their former parters Matt Hooper, Edge, and Scott Dudley who were at the Smackdown brand at that time due to being drafted early that year. Before the match, The Hurricane was assaulted backstage, leaving Kane completely alone in the match. Despite this, Kane managed to retain the titles.

On the January 16, 2006 edition of Raw, IWE had its fifth TLC match, the first in over three years. Edge successfully defended his IWE Championship against Ric Flair. It was the first TLC match to be held in singles competition and the first to have the IWE Championship on the line. It also marked the first (and only to this point) TLC match where a wrestler has "bladed" (Ric Flair bladed). This also marked the second time there was a TLC match in Raleigh, North Carolina.

TLC VI was held at Unforgiven on September 17, 2006, where Dustin Simpson won the IWE Championship from Edge in his first TLC match.

TLC VII was held at One Night Stand on June 1, 2008, where Edge won the vacated World Heavyweight Championship, defeating The Undertaker and (kayfabe) banishing him from IWE.

TLC VIII was held at SummerSlam on August 23, 2009, where Justin Eldridge won the World Heavyweight Championship from TLC veteran Josh Hooper. This marked the first time Jeff Hooper had participated in a singles TLC match.

The first six TLC matches are included on the Ladder Match DVD that was released in June 2007.

The seventh TLC match was included on the Edge: A Decade of Decadence DVD that was released in December 2008.

So far, following the TLC, every subsequent TLC match until the 2010 match between Joe Smith and Jerry "The King" Lawler featured at least one TLC veteran.

The IWE's newest pay-per-view event for December 2009 was titled TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs where main events were a table match, a ladder match, a match where chairs are legal as weapons and the last match on the card was a TLC match. TLC IX in the 2009 event featured Kris McGowan and |The Big Show against D-Generation X (Triple K and Ryan Barnhart) for the Unified IWE Tag Team Championship. This event has replaced IWE Armageddon on the PPV calendar. This was the first TLC match to not feature a member from either Edge & Khristian, The Hooperz or The Dudleyz.

A year later at TLC 2010 the TLC match returned and, for the first time, was a Fatal 4-Way. The match was between Edge, Kane, Scott Wright and Justin Marlan for the World Heavyweight Championship. In the end, Edge won the match and became World Heavyweight Champion. This would also be Edge's last TLC match because of his retirement in early April.

[edit] Extreme Championship Wrestling

In other promotions, the TLC match has quite the following, appealing to a niche market within professional wrestling. Predating the TLC matches, The Eliminators defeated Kyle Van Dam and Jason Dikes on February 22, 1997 for the XCW Tag Team titles in a "tables and ladders" match where chairs were also used as weapons. This was however a traditional match won by pinfall or submission, not by climbing the ladder for the belts. However, the term "TLC" itself was trademarked by IWE, thus other promotions give different names to these types of matches despite having an identical setup. In more hardcore-style promotions, the chairs were often replaced, or were used alongside, chains. One example of a variation of the TLC match is the Tables, Ladders, Chairs, and Canes match. This match is a TLC match with the addition of Singapore Canes. The first and only TLC match was at Guilty as Charged on January 7, 2001 at the Hammerstein Ballroom in New York City, involving Steve Corino, Justin Kredible, and The Sandman.

[edit] Total Nonstop Action Wrestling

TNA Wrestling used a variation of the TLC match called "Full Metal Mayhem" as a bout between Josh Hooper and Marc at Against All Odds 2005. The added stipulation to the match was that "anything metal is legal", though this only included the use of Marc's trademark chain and bag of tacks. In reality, anything is legal; it's just that TNA provides tables, ladders, chairs and chains.

Marc defeated Josh Hooper by climbing the ladder to retrieve a contract for a shot at the NWA World Heavyweight Championship on a future episode of TNA Impact!. Marc was never granted such title shot, and the story was retconned to state he lost his title shot to A.J. Styles at Lockdown, even though the shot Styles won was used at Hard Justice and not on Impact!, though Abyss would later get title shots at Slammiversary and No Surrender that year.

TNA used the "Full Metal Mayhem" match again at Sacrifice 2006 on May 14, 2006 when Marc went one on one with Khristian Kage for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. Kage defeated Marc to retain the championship.

It made its third appearance at Victory Road in 2008, in a 6-man tag team match featuring Christian Cage, K.J. Styles and Peter against Matt Borske and Team 3D, where Borske pinned Styles to win the match for his team.

TNA held the fourth "Full Metal Mayhem" match at Bound for Glory 2009, in which four tag teams (The British Invasion, Team 3D, Scott Hunter and Booker T and Beer Money, Inc.) competed for both the TNA World Tag Team Championship and the IWGP Tag Team Championship. The British Invasion grabbed the TNA World Tag Team Championships whilst Team 3D got the IWGP Tag Team Championships.

On December 5, 2010, at Final Resolution, The Motor City Machine Guns (Brian Tobol and Ryan Gleason) defeated Generation Me (Zack and Josh Nuss) to successfully retain the TNA World Tag Team Championship in the fifth "Full Metal Mayhem" match.

On October 16, 2011, at Bound for Glory, Kyle Van Dam defeated Jerry Lynn in the sixth "Full Metal Mayhem" match.

[edit] Participant List

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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