History of the Paradigm Championship

I wish there was some kind of pro wrestling registry where people could reserve acronyms for their companies and then no one else could use those acronyms. Case in point, Pennsylvania Premier Wrestling has been around since 2013. Paradigm Pro Wrestling (which used to be Prodigy Pro Wrestling) was established in 2017. And if I had my way, neither company would be able to call themselves PPW because Packerland Pro Wrestling started in 1998. The truth is, if you count only three-letter acronyms using only letters and not numbers, there are 17,576 available combinations. But indie wrestling is the wild west and I’m being neurotic. Whatever, I’ll just call this one Paradigm and leave it at that. I’m trying to hit all of the featured promotions on IWTV, hence Paradigm. 

Paradigm established its championship in 2018, though none of its 2018 shows are currently on IWTV. So we skip Daniel Eads beating Corey Storm to become the first champion and Eads dropping the title to AJ Gray in a match also featuring Shane Andrews. We join Paradigm at the end of Gray’s run. 

November 22, 2019 – Jeffersonville, Indiana 

Cole Radrick def. AJ Gray {Paradigm Championship Match}
From Regulate. I did not expect Radrick to be a tiny white guy. This was exactly what you’d expect if you saw a little guy getting an upset over a big guy in a WWE TV main event. Radrick attacked before the bell, quickly lost his upper hand, got dominated by Gray the entire (short) match, and then countered a suplex to a roll up for the win at 8:10. Very basic stuff. **¼ 

July 24, 2020 – Sellersburg, Indiana 

Freddie Hudson def. Cole Radrick {Paradigm Championship Match}
From Heavy Hitters 2. This was the opening match, as the rest of the show was a tournament consisting of UWFi-themed matches or street fights, culminating in a big multi-man main event. This was very short, but they packed a lot into it and got across what they wanted. Radrick was game to match Hudson on the mat and in striking, but Hudson caught him with a triangle choke. When Radrick couldn’t powerbomb his way out of it, he tapped at 4:36. This was fought in the spirit of the UWFi show, which is a nice change of pace from most of the stuff I’ve been watching lately. **¾ 

September 25, 2020 – Sellersburg, Indiana 

Myron Reed def. Freddie Hudson {Paradigm Championship 2/3 Falls Match}
From Same Energy, the 3rd Anniversary Show.  Given when this show was happening, I’m relieved to see that at least the fans were all wearing masks. I thought something cool was happening at the end of the first fall, but on second thought it’s more likely that it was a botched attempt at interference. It looked like Reed’s assistant was trying and failing repeatedly to swipe at Hudson’s legs when he’d run the ropes, which would have been a cool flourish. But in hindsight, it’s more likely he was supposed to successfully swipe the leg so that Reed countering the Shining Wizard to a roll up and win the first fall would seem more overt. Either way, the fall worked fine. Hudson hit a Michinoku Driver out of nowhere, and frankly out of place, to win the second fall moments later. The third fall was a little better than the first two, but not much. The assistant pulled the referee at one point so Hudson chased him around the ring. It was so half hearted it looked like something out of Benny Hill. Back in the ring, Reed hit Hudson with his loaded vest and then hit the Air Raid Crash for the win at 18:51. Pretty rough, overall. **

Welp, this was underwhelming. Not that the other PPW I’ve covered so far was leagues better (on average, it was a little worse), but that’s not the company you want to be keeping.