History of the IWTV Championship

I haven’t gotten deep into indie wrestling since I started watching wrestling again in 2018 (after a five year break). One very neat thing that happened while I was away was Powerbomb.tv forming as a streaming hub for indie promotions. They even established a championship to be defended at participating promotions. In 2019, the company changed its name to Independent Wrestling.tv and changed the championship name from the Powerbomb.tv Independent Championship to the IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship. That championship acts sort of as a modern take on the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, though the crowds for its defenses are closer to the ‘90s defenses than the ‘70s ones. Let’s take a gander. 

October 22, 2017 – Olde Forge, Pennsylvania

Jonathan Gresham def. Joey Lynch {Powerbomb.tv Independent Championship Match}
From Powerbomb.tv Futures. This was the first Gresham match I’d ever seen, and I felt he lived up to what I’d heard about him. He did a lot of things that seem so obvious to do but that nobody else does; you have to assume the guy is a giant wrestling nerd. He spent a lot of the match working over Lynch’s arm, and at one point just straight up jabbed Lynch’s bicep to be a jerk. Effective and heelish; you’ve gotta love it. Lynch held his own well too. Gresham put on the Octopus Stretch for the win at 23:01. The very small crowd wasn’t able to pull together an atmosphere to make this feel like a big deal, but I’ll give this a ton of credit for staying interesting for over twenty minutes despite a quiet crowd. ***½ 

February 25, 2018 – Worcester, Massachusetts

Tracy Williams def. Jonathan Gresham and Martin Stone {Powerbomb.tv Independent Championship Elimination Match}
From Beyond Abbondanza. This was during a period when Stone was freelancing as well as working NXT. He started being exclusive to NXT shortly after this. Gresham did a great job selling his fingers being dislocated by Stone. I wish more people would be specific about that in Pete Dunne matches. Stone got eliminated about halfway through after Gresham hit him with the title belt. I wasn’t digging Williams much while Stone was around, but when it came down to him vs. Gresham, he got a chance to show off. This was more about the story than the action, though the action wasn’t bad at all. I’m very interested in seeing the Gresham vs. Williams Pure Championship match now, as they did spots here (specifically the apron Figure 4 drop) that I’ve never seen before and I’m shocked I haven’t seen ripped off by guys in bigger companies. Problems within the Dream Team (Gresham & MJF) because of lack of leadership after manager Stokely Hathaway was ejected led to Williams putting on the crossface for the win at 22:15. ***¾ 

December 31, 2018 – Worcester, Massachusetts

Orange Cassidy def. Tracy Williams {Powerbomb.tv Independent Championship Match}
From Beyond Heavy Lies the Crown. I don’t understand the problem people have suspending their disbelief for Cassidy. In fact, I’m glad I finally found an excuse to review one of his matches because the push back against this gimmick makes no sense to me. There’s no difference between Cassidy wrestling the early part of a match with his hands in his pockets and a muscle-bound wrestler flexing. There’s no difference between Cassidy putting his hands back in his pockets near the end of the match and Hulk Hogan hulking up. It’s mind games, and it rarely (if ever) breaks the match. It definitely didn’t break the match here. The crowd was deeply invested in Cassidy, going crazy every time he kicked out of one of Williams’ gnarly piledrivers. I could have done with a big more exhaustive selling from both guys, but Cassidy’s plucky underdog story here was a ton of fun. He got a roll up for the win at 18:22. ***½ 

May 26, 2019 – Chicago, Illinois

Kris Statlander def. Orange Cassidy {IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship Match}
From IWTV Midwest Mixtape. Cassidy came into this with the updated title belt, which was swapped in pretty much right after Cassidy won it. They packed a ton into a very short match. I could have used another five minutes of this, especially since almost half of the match was comedy. But once Cassidy avoided the axe kick and started working on Statlander’s leg, this got to be very engaging. Statlander fought back from the injury (which again, I think deserved more time) and hit the Big Bang Theory for the win at  9:51. ***

June 9, 2019 – Boston, Massachusetts

Orange Cassidy def. Kris Statlander and Kimber Lee {IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship Triple Threat Match}
From Beyond Secret Show. Cassidy wasn’t originally scheduled for his match, so Lee is furious. The match is very choreographed and quite silly, but entertaining even still. In the end, Lee hit Statlander with the title belt and dragged an unconscious Cassidy (who’d been hit with the Big Bang Theory) on top of the champ to give him the win at 12:37. After the match, Lee (who went 18 months without losing in Beyond) says she did this to embarrass Statlander and end the alien’s win streak at under nine months. That doesn’t explain why she didn’t take the title for herself though. ***

September 21, 2019 – Summit, Illinois

Erick Stevens def. Orange Cassidy {IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship Match}
From Black Label Pro Turbo Graps. This was also the opening round match of the Turbo Graps tournament. It turned out that the title would be defended throughout the tournament. It was also the main event of an afternoon show, with the rest of the tournament happening in the evening. I didn’t get much out of this one. Cassidy did his typical early match stuff, and Stevens imitating him felt kind of lame, even if it seems the plan was to lull Cassidy into a trap (which didn’t work). Then the match went on without much of note before Stevens hit the gutwrench powerbomb out of nowhere for the win at 9:30. Pretty short for a main event. **¾ 

Warhorse def. Erick Stevens {IWTV Independent Wrestling Championship Match}
From the tournament finals. Stevens successfully defended the title in a four-way semifinal match. Dave Prazak has been on commentary for a few of these matches, and he’s really quite bad at it. Here he makes the case that wrestling is exempt from political correctness (which is just scumbag code for not wanting to be a decent person) because he doesn’t think anyone cares. Fuck you, dude. I do my best to ignore him because the match is pretty good. It had a dope bash-em-up energy. It was like a ‘90s King’s Road style match without the feeling out process (or the huge crowds). Warhorse hammered Stevens with suplexes and put him down with a diving double stomp at 14:13. ****

Matches contested for this title are really easy to watch and make for a great diversion from the stuff on television. There’s a lot of comedy, but then a serious banger thrown in here and there. I had a blast following this title and I’m excited to continue to do so. As of this writing the Masked Wrestler is going on to see who gets a shot at Warhorse. It’s the Masked Singer, but for wrestling, so it presents the interesting challenge of having wrestlers work without doing any of their signature offense or style. I find it a little boring, but I’m stoked to see the title match at the end of it.