WOW.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Professional wrestling holds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_wrestling_holds

    Professional wrestling holds. Professional wrestling holds include a number of set moves and pins used by performers to immobilize their opponents or lead to a submission. This article covers the various pins, stretches and transition holds used in the ring. Some wrestlers use these holds as their finishing maneuvers, often nicknaming them to ...

  3. Grappling hold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grappling_hold

    In combat sports a submission hold (colloquially referred to as a "submission") is a grappling hold that is applied with the purpose of forcing an opponent to submit out of either extreme pain or fear of injury. Submission holds are used primarily in ground fighting and can be separated into constrictions (chokeholds, compression locks ...

  4. Professional wrestling strikes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_wrestling_strikes

    Professional wrestling strikes. Strikes can be offensive moves in professional wrestling, that can sometimes be used to set up an opponent for a hold or for a throw. There are a wide variety of strikes in pro wrestling, and many are known by several different names. Professional wrestlers frequently give their finishers new names.

  5. Boston crab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_crab

    The Boston crab is a professional wrestling hold that typically starts with one wrestler lying in a supine position on the mat, with the other wrestler standing and facing them. It is a type of spinal lock where the wrestler hooks each of the opponent’s legs in one of their arms and then turns the opponent face-down, stepping over them in the ...

  6. Suplex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suplex

    Suplex. A suplex is an offensive move used in sport wrestling as well as amateur wrestling and professional wrestling. It is a throw that involves lifting the opponents and bridging or rolling to slam them on their backs. Professional wrestling features many different varieties of suplexes.

  7. Glossary of professional wrestling terms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_professional...

    A. A wrestling event where a company's biggest draws wrestle. [ 1 ]Compare B-show and C-show. A group of a wrestling promotion's top stars who wrestle at an A-show. [ 1 ]Compare B-team. To suddenly discontinue a feud, angle, or gimmick due to a lack of fan interest or some other caveat (like injury), usually without explanation.

  8. Professional wrestling aerial techniques - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_wrestling...

    Aerial techniques, also known as "high-flying moves" are performance techniques used in professional wrestling for simulated assault on opponents. The techniques involve jumping from the ring's posts and ropes, demonstrating the speed and agility of smaller, nimble and acrobatically inclined wrestlers, with many preferring this style instead of throwing or locking the opponent.

  9. Piledriver (professional wrestling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piledriver_(professional...

    Animation of a piledriver. A piledriver is a professional wrestling driver move in which the wrestler grabs their opponent, turns them upside-down, and drops into a sitting or kneeling position, driving the opponent head-first into the mat. [1] The technique is said to have been innovated by Wild Bill Longson.