Profiles
Hank Remington, The Cowboy Diplomat
Silver-tongued heel who weaponized verbosity and handshake betrayals across the Great Plains Territory from 1980-1993. Never used one word when twenty would do.
The Powerhouse of Pro Wrestling. (January 1, 1976 – December 31, 1987) The zenith of GWA popularity emphasizing authenticity, legendary feuds, and the rise of iconic champions. Core value: Authenticity.
Profiles
Silver-tongued heel who weaponized verbosity and handshake betrayals across the Great Plains Territory from 1980-1993. Never used one word when twenty would do.
Profiles
A delusional colonial bureaucrat who enforces imperial order through ceremony, convinced he represents an authority that publicly denies his existence—the Wrestling Viceroy is territorial wrestling's most pompous tyrant.
Golden Era (1976-1987)
"Tomorrow's Man, Today" - a high-flying tech enthusiast ahead of his time. Betamax promised crystal-clear performance in silver trunks but delivered tragic obsolescence in an industry not ready for his futuristic vision.
Golden Era (1976-1987)
A steel-town brawler who fought wrestling's evolution into spectacle, Brody Broscious stood as the GWA's most uncompromising antihero—respected by peers, feared by opponents, and beloved by fans who craved authenticity in an increasingly manufactured world.
Golden Era (1976-1987)
A stoic guardian of tradition emerging from Costa Rica's rugged coastlands, "El Cadejo" Alejandro Vargas brought mythic intensity to the squared circle. Not flashy or bombastic, but through raw authenticity, punishing technique, and the quiet storm of a man fighting for something justice.
Profiles
From the diesel-stained beltways of Barstow to the roaring arenas of the West, "Big Rig" Charlie Bravo hauled more than freight—he carried the dreams of every working stiff who ever punched a clock. The CB radio's favorite son had arrived.
Profiles
Atlanta's corporate kingpin brings Wall Street warfare to the squared circle. With surgical precision and unwavering composure, "Executive Excellence" doesn't just defeat opponents—he devalues them, proving that in wrestling, as in business, excellence is the only currency that matters.
Profiles
The embodiment of rural defiance—a broad-shouldered farm woman who lost everything in the Farm Crisis and found redemption in the squared circle. Not just a wrestler, but a living storm front of Midwestern grit who fights for the forgotten heartland.
Profiles
A swashbuckling outlaw born where the sea meets the streets, El Bucanero rides the tides of justice through the GWA. With sea-salt in his blood & a code stronger than a reef knot, this rogue pirate of the Pacific champions the forgotten while stealing the hearts of fans across the territories.
History
In wrestling's territory days, The Grapple Gazette rewired the sport's cultural DNA. Their Dynasty Destroyers ad wasn't mere promotion; it was revolution in print, transforming four wrestlers into punk icons while forever blurring the lines between counterculture and canvas.
Profiles
A hockey enforcer turned wrestling bruiser, Jacques LeBlanc brings the unforgiving code of the rink to the squared circle. With taped fists and a vintage Flin Flon Bombers jersey, this Québécois brawler doesn't chase glory—he delivers justice with forearms and a granite jaw that's never quit.
Profiles
A bitter blue-collar bruiser from the steel mills of Scranton, Toscanelli is wrestling's unsung gatekeeper - the man who makes every wrestler earn their cheers through pain, one grinding hold and stiff forearm at a time.