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Encyclopedia > Cage match

This is a list of match types seen in professional wrestling. Professional wrestling is a form of performance entertainment where the participants engage in simulated sporting matches. ...

Contents

1.1 One Fall
1.2 No Disqualification Match
1.3 Best Two [out] of Three falls
1.4 Submission Match
1.5 Falls Count Anywhere Match
1.6 Iron Man Match

1.7 Steel Cage Match
1.8 Six Sides of Steel
1.9 Elimination Match
1.10 Lumberjack Match
1.11 Street Fight
1.12 Hardcore Match
1.13 Ladder Match
1.14 Table Match
1.15 Chairs Match
1.16 T.L.C. - Tables, Ladders, and Chairs Match
1.17 Triple Threat Match
1.18 Special Referee
1.19 Special Outside Referee
1.20 Flag Match
1.21 Luchas de Apuestas

1.22 Triangle Match
1.23 Three Way Dance
1.24 Fatal Four Way Match
1.25 Hell in a Cell Match
1.26 Scaffold match
1.27 First Blood Match
1.28 Barbwire Match
1.29 Casket Match
1.30 Buried Alive Match
1.31 Battle Royal

1.32 Gauntlet Match
1.33 Last Man Standing Match
1.34 Death Match
1.35 Texas Death Match
1.36 Bra and Panties Match
1.37 Evening Gown Match
1.38 Tuxedo Match
1.39 The Ultimate X match
1.40 Elimination Chamber Match
1.41 War Games
1.42 Football Classic Match
1.43 (Object) on a Pole Match
1.44 "I Quit" Match
1.45 Texas Bullrope Match
1.46 Dog Collar Match
1.47 Gorilla/Body Slam Match
1.48 Finisher Match
1.49 Splash Match
1.50 Pin Only
1.51 Stretcher Match
1.52 Blindfold Match
1.53 Retirement Match
1.54 Three Strikes, You're Out!
1.55 Battle of Respect
1.56 Double Tables Match
1.57 Silver Dollar Match
1.58 Junkyard Scrap
1.59 Total Conquest Match
1.60 Final Wars Brawl
1.61 Short Leash Match
1.62 Singapore Cane Match
1.63 Parking Lot Brawl
1.64 Boiler Room Brawl
1.65 Relay Match
1.66 Ambulance Match
1.67 Last Ride Match
1.68 Good Housekeeping Match
1.69 Handicap Match

Variations of singles matches

One Fall

The standard wrestling match. All normal rules apply.


No Disqualification Match

Normal rules apply, except that there are no disqualifications. This can also be called a No Holds Barred Match.


Best Two [out] of Three falls

To win, a wrestler must score two falls on his opponent before his opponent can score two on him. Sometimes each of the falls is fought under different stipulations (called Three Stages of Hell), such as one pinfall, one submissions only fall and one no disqualification fall. This type of match is almost always booked to go to the third fall. In the event that one of the three falls ends in a disqualification, the match continues, but any titles at stake will not change hands.


see also: 2 out of 3 falls match


Submission Match

The first man to make his opponent submit wins.


Falls Count Anywhere Match

This match has pinfalls anywhere in the arena. Otherwise, normal rules apply. 2nd type : You lose if you come back to the ring and your opponent didn't make his way back in the next 60 seconds ( e.g:WM X = Crush vs Macho Man)


Iron Man Match

This match is a contest with a fixed time limit, usually sixty minutes (or one hour), and the wrestler with the most amount of pinfalls, submissions, opponent disqualifications, and opponent count-outs is the winner.


See also: Iron man match An Iron Man match is a 60 minute professional wrestling match where the man with the most pinfalls, submissions, count out and disqualification victories at the end of the time limit is declared the winner. ...


Ultimate Submission Match

This match is a variation of an Iron Man Match. The variation is that the wrestler with the most submissions at the end of the match is the winner.


Steel Cage Match

Enlarge
Ric Flair and Randy Orton in a cage match

Possibly one of the most famous stipulation matches, this match takes place inside a steel cage, usually about fifteen feet high with an open top. There are two types of cage matches. The traditional cage match, known as a shark cage match, is won by being the first wrestler to escape the cage and have both feet touch the floor. The other variation is basically a one fall match inside a cage. Sometimes a cage match incorporates both escape and pinfalls or submission, permitting either to end the match. There are no disqualifications. Can also be modified to include objects designed to stop the wrestlers from climbing out, such as barbed wire.
The Nature Boy Ric Flair (born February 25, 1949 in Memphis, Tennessee) has been one of the leading personalities in professional wrestling since the 1970s. ... Randall Keith Orton, better known as Randy Orton, (born April 1, 1980 in Knoxville, Tennessee) is a third-generation professional wrestler currently working for World Wrestling Entertainments RAW brand. ...


Six Sides of Steel

A Steel Cage match held inside a hexagonal ring. A regular hexagon A hexagon (also known as sexagon) is a polygon with six edges and six vertices. ...


Elimination Match

A match that ussually involves 6 to 8 wrestlers. Wrestlers are eliminated by pinfall, submission, countout or disqualification, and the winner is the last man in the ring.


Lumberjack Match

A match where the ring is surrounded by a group of "lumberjacks", normally fellow wrestlers. When one participant in the match leaves the ring for any reason, the lumberjacks are supposed to return him to the ring as soon as possible. The lumberjacks are generally a combination of faces and heels, who sometimes fight among themselves outside the ring. Sometimes, as part of a storyline, a face will wrestle a heel with a group of lumberjacks consisting entirely of heels. A variation of this match is called a Canadian Lumberjack Match, in which the lumberjacks are equipped with leather straps. Usually a gimmick match. In professional wrestling jargon, a face is a character who is portrayed as being moral or approving - that is, faces are good guys or crowd favorites. The vast majority of wrestling angles (or storylines) - though not all - place a heel (or bad guy) against a face. ... In professional wrestling, a heel is a character who is portrayed as behaving in an immoral manner; sometimes they are humourously referred to as evil. In non-wrestling jargon, heels are often bad guys in professional wrestling storylines. ...


Street Fight

This match cannot end in a disqualification. Otherwise, all of the normal rules apply. A variation of this match is called a Southside Scuffle in which two wrestlers fight in a back alley with either sides blocked off by other wrestlers. Another variation of this match is called a Harbor Brawl in which the wrestlers battle near or on a dock. The first wrestler to either win by knockout or throw their opponent in the water is declared the winner.


Hardcore Match

This match has no disqualifications, no count-outs and no holds barred. Pinfalls count anywhere. There was also a championship belt denoting the most hardcore person in the WWF/E. World Wrestling Entertainments Hardcore Championship, was a championship defended under hardcore rules: No Disqualifications meaning all weapons are legal. ...


see also Hardcore wrestling


Ladder Match

A match between two or more wrestlers where the winner is the one who climbs the ladder and grabs a reward (usually a championship belt). There is also another variation called a Stairway to Hell Match in which there is barbed wire as the reward and the wrestler can use it on his opponent; only way to win is by submission.


Table Match

This match has wrestlers against each other with provided tables. First wrestler to put their opponents through a table is declared the winner. There are no disqualifications.


Chairs Match

This match has steel chairs as legal weapons. No disqualifications but other rules apply.


T.L.C. - Tables, Ladders, and Chairs Match

Same rules as a ladder match except that tables and chairs are readily available as weapons. Usually this match features tag-teams of wrestlers (but no tag rules apply). A Tables, Ladders and Chairs match, often abbreviated as a TLC, is a type of professional wrestling match originated with World Wrestling Entertainment, but can be seen in other wrestling varioations. ...


Triple Threat Match

See also: Three Way Dance This is a one fall match where three wrestlers fight instead of two. The winner of this match is the first wrestler to get a pin fall or submission. There is usually no disqualfication or count-out. If a championship is on the line, the champion does not have to be pinned or submitted for the title to change hands. This is a list of match types seen in professional wrestling. ...


Special Referee

Also known as Special Guest Referee is any match in which the usual referee is replaced with a "guest" filling in as the official. Celebrities, managers and other wrestlers can "guest" as the special referee. In some cases, a special referee is put into a match which is already a different match type or stipulation (for example: Hell in a Cell with a Special Referee).


Special Outside Referee

Also known as Special Enforcer or Special Guest Enforcer is same as the Special Referee but the guest referee stays on the outside enforcing what the normal referee doesn't see. These guests are sometimes known as "enforcers", the most famous of which was Mike Tyson. Michael Gerard Tyson (born June 30, 1966, New York City, USA) is a professional boxer. ...


Flag Match

Each wrestler has a flag that they must retrieve and one that they must defend. They must get their flag from the opponents' corner before the opponents can get their flag. There is also a tag-team variation of this match.


Luchas de Apuestas

Any match where both wrestlers have put something on the line such as a title or mask. They are more popular in Mexico but they do happen from time to time in Japan and the United States. Some variations follow. In any case of a draw, both wrestlers lose what they put up.


Hair v. Mask Match

A wrestler with hair, usually long hair, wrestles a masked wrestler. The loser is either unmasked or their head is shaved. This usually takes place in Mexico, where it is called Caballera contra Mascara.


Hair v. Hair Match

The loser of the match gets his head shaved. In Mexico, this is called Caballera contra Caballera.


Mask v. Mask Match

The loser of the match is unmasked. In Mexico, this is called Mascara contra Mascara. In Mexico it is the most important match in a wrestler's career, since almost every wrestler begins their career masked. Only a few of the greatest wrestlers will keep their mask their whole career, such as Mil Mascaras and El Hijo del Santo. In Mexico, once you are unmasked, you may never wear one again. Aaron Rodríguez (born July 15, 1942), best known as Mil Mascaras (meaning Man of a Thousand Masks in Spanish), is a Mexican professional wrestler born in San Luis Potosí. Mascaras made his wrestling debut in April of 1965 in Guadalajara, Mexico. ... El hijo del santo means the son of the saint. ...


Triangle Match

A three-way, one-fall tag match wherein one of the competitors must remain outside the ring to await a tag from one of the other combatants before replacing him in the ring. Being tagged out is a serious disadvantage as you cannot win from this position.


Three Way Dance

Same as a Triple Threat Match, this time with the loser of a fall being eliminated from competition. The last wrestler remaining is victorious. This match was a specialty of Extreme Championship Wrestling. There is also another variation called a Four Way Dance or Collision Course Royal Rumble in which the match starts out as a typical Battle Royal or Royal Rumble but when there are four wrestlers remaining, a referee gets into the ring and the match turns into a Fatal Four Way Elimination Match. Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) was a groundbreaking and influential professional wrestling league, and was a stop for many popular wrestlers seen today. ...


Fatal Four Way Match

Same as a Triple Threat Match, but with four wrestlers in the ring at the same time instead of three. On occasion, this may be booked as an "elimination match" similar to a Three Way Dance. This is a list of match types seen in professional wrestling. ...


Hell in a Cell Match

Enlarge
A Hell in a Cell match

This is essentially a one fall match inside a steel cage, which is fully enclosed. Pins or submissions only and can count inside or outside the structure. This cage is larger than a traditional cage in that it also contains the immediate floor around the ring. Even though the main hook in this match is that there's "no possible way to escape the cage", in practice, the action always ends up being taken outside, and it is very common to see wrestlers fighting on top of this steel structure. One of (if not the) most famous such match took place in 1998 in the then-WWF (now WWE) between The Undertaker and Mankind. Another variation, called a Hell in a Cell Ladder Match is when there is a ladder in the ring with the reward hanging at the top of the cell. First wrestler to get the reward wins. See Also: Hell in a Cell.
1998 is a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year of the Ocean. ... World Wrestling Entertainment, or WWE, is a professional wrestling organization. ... Deadman Undertaker raising the lights during his ring entrance Mark Calaway (also spelled [incorrectly] as either Callaway or Calloway; born March 24, 1965 in Houston, Texas), better known by his stage name of The Undertaker, is an American professional wrestler with World Wrestling Entertainment. ... Michael Francis Mick Foley (born June 7, 1965) is an American professional wrestler and author. ... The Hell In A Cell is a type of professional wrestling match sometimes seen in World Wrestling Entertainment where the ring and ringside area are surrounded by a roofed steel cage. ...


Scaffold match

This match takes place on a scaffold above the ring. The two ways to win the match are to push the opponent off of the scaffold so that he/she hits the mat or to grab the flag from the opponent's home base of the scaffold and return it to one's own home base. Some variations include putting weapons or objects into the ring for when the opponent lands, for example card tables.


Another variation, called a Scaffold Cage Match, is when the wrestlers beat each other until one is knocked off of the scaffold and into the ring. The ring is surrounded by a high steel cage and the only way to win is by pinfall.


First Blood Match

This match has no disqualifications. The only way to win is to draw blood from the opponent.


Barbwire Match

Enlarge
A Barbed Wire match

This match has the ropes replaced with barbed-wire. Almost inevitably someone gets thrown against it. In the United States, this match was mainly seen in Extreme Championship Wrestling, but it is also popular in some Japanese promotions. A famous Barbwire match was one between Mick Foley (then known as Cactus Jack) and The Sandman.
The United States of America — also referred to as the United States, the U.S.A., the U.S., America, the States, or (archaically) Columbia—is a federal republic of 50 states located primarily in central North America (with the exception of two states: Alaska and Hawaii). ... Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) was a groundbreaking and influential professional wrestling league, and was a stop for many popular wrestlers seen today. ... Michael Francis Mick Foley (born June 7, 1965) is an American professional wrestler and author. ...


Casket Match

The winner of this match is the first wrestler to put his/her opponent into a closed casket. This match has been a trademark of the WWE wrestler The Undertaker. A number of variants exist, where the object is to place the other wrestler in other closed containers. The Casket is often placed on the ringside, but the other variants might have the container on top of the ramp. The casket may be replaced by other containers, such as a dumpster (in which case the match becomes a Dumpster Match), an ambulance (Ambulance Match), or a hearse (known as a Last Ride Match introduced at No Mercy 2004). See Also: Casket Match. Deadman Undertaker raising the lights during his ring entrance Mark Calaway (also spelled [incorrectly] as either Callaway or Calloway; born March 24, 1965 in Houston, Texas), better known by his stage name of The Undertaker, is an American professional wrestler with World Wrestling Entertainment. ... WWE No Mercy is an annual World Wrestling Entertainment pay-per-view event. ... Casket Match is a type of match in professional wrestling closely linked to the gimmick of The Undertaker. ...


Buried Alive Match

Enlarge
Buried Alive match

The object is to bury the other wrestler alive in a makeshift grave inside the arena. No other rules apply. In this match type, the wrestler who is buried alive always survives in the storyline. Another variation of this match is a Concrete Crypt Match which had the Undertaker's manager, Paul Bearer buried in concrete. William Moody as the famous WWE character and wrestling manager Paul Bearer William Alvin Moody (born April 10, 1954 in Mobile, Alabama) is a professional wrestling manager, best known for playing the character of Paul Bearer in World Wrestling Entertainment. ...


Battle Royal

The winner of this match is the last person in the ring after all other wrestlers have been thrown over the top-rope. In some cases, wrestlers can also be pinned or KO'd. Usually happens with either ten, fifteen or twenty wrestlers and in some cases, the winner gets a chance to face a wrestler for a championship. See also Battle Royal. For the Japanese novel/film/manga with a similar name, see Battle Royale. ...


Royal Rumble Match

Same as a battle royal, except that it starts out with two men featuring a new opponent per timed interval (usually 90 seconds). WWE annually runs a pay-per-view show which features a 30-man Royal Rumble Match as its main event named the Royal Rumble (a WWE trademark). Pay-per-view is the name given to a system by which television viewers can call and order events to be seen on TV and pay for the private telecast of that event to their homes later. ... The Royal Rumble is an annual professional wrestling pay-per-view event, produced by World Wrestling Entertainment. ...


Gauntlet Match

Similar to a Battle Royal, but when only two entrants remain, the match continues as a standard one-fall match.


Another version of this match pits one initial wrestler against another in a normal rules contest. If said wrestler wins, another opponent takes his place until all set opponents are defeated or the initial wrestler loses. Sometimes this match can be in a series (one different opponent per day until all are defeated). This is called Running the Gauntlet or Slobber Knocker, which was done in WCW in the early 90's


Last Man Standing Match

A no disqualification, no count-out match with no pinfalls. Whenever a wrestler is knocked down, they must regain their feet within a ten count or they will lose the match.


Death Match

See Hardcore Match.


Texas Death Match

Cross between a Last Man Standing match and a Hardcore Match. When an opponent is pinned he is administered a ten count. If they are able to answer the count, the match continues.


Bra and Panties Match

A match between two (usually) women in which the winner is the first to strip her opponent down to her bra and panties. In some promotions, the one who loses has to be nude for 5 minutes and dance on top of the entrance where there will be a pole and a camera ready.


Evening Gown Match

A match between two women in evening gowns; the winner is the first to remove her opponent's gown. In practice, the end result is usually the same as in a Bra and Panties Match. However, in the Evening Gown Match booked for WrestleMania XX in 2004, all four women in the match stripped to their undergarments before wrestling started; the match then proceeded as a normal tag team match with no further undressing. WrestleMania XX was a WWE pay-per-view event that took place on Sunday, March 14, 2004 in New York City, NY at the world-famous arena, Madison Square Garden. ... 2004 is a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


(Sometimes done with Kimonos instead of gowns, then referred to as a Kimono Match)


Tuxedo Match

The chronological predecessor to the evening gown match, and contested between two men in outfits resembling men's formal wear. Most such matches have involved non-wrestling performers (announcers or managers).


The Ultimate X match

A four man elimination event. An X is formed with ropes placed on top of the ring.Similar to a Three Stages of Hell match, it starts out as a tag team match. Then, when one man is pinned, it turns into a Triple-Threat match, where the ropes come into play. Similarly to the Ladder match, a championship belt or some other reward is then placed in the center of the X. The winner is the first person to take possession of the object. This match was created for, and is a centerpiece of, the X Division of Total Nonstop Action. So far, the only item held from the ropes has been the X Division Championship. Past winners(of the match, not the belt) include: Michael Shane (twice), Chris Sabin (twice), Frankie "The Future" Kazarian (co-holder with Michael Shane), AJ Styles, and "The Fallen Angel" Christopher Daniels, who is the most recent winner of the match and current X Division champion. This match is also reffered to as "The Ultimate X", "X match", "Ultimate X Challenge", "X Challenge", and "X2". Total Nonstop Action Wrestling is an American Independent professional wrestling Promotion founded by Jeff Jarrett and his father Jerry Jarrett. ... Matthew Bentley, better known as Michael Shane, is an American professional wrestler, currently working for Total Nonstop Action. ... A.J. Styles (born June 2, 1978), birthname Allen Jones, is a professional wrestler who began his career in NWA Wildside and feuded there with Adam Jacobs. ... Daniel Christopher Covell aka Fallen Angel Christopher Daniels is a professional wrestler currently performing for TNA. Before becoming an TNA exclusive wrestler, he frequently tagged in WWF (now WWE) with Aaron Aguilera as Dos one half of the Los Conquistadores. ...


Elimination Chamber Match

Enlarge
The Elimination Chamber

A six-person elimination match that takes place in a specially constructed round cage, with a metal floor at ring height between the ring apron and the wall of the cage. Two of the six participants start in the ring, while the other four are initially locked up in holding cells within the cage, and are released at intervals of five minutes (in the match at the 2002 Survivor Series) or three minutes (in the match at SummerSlam 2003). A wrestler who has been eliminated in the usual manner (pin or submission) is forced to leave the cage until one remains. See Also: Elimination Chamber. 2002 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ... Survivor Series 2004 Poster Advertisement. ... WWE SummerSlam is an annual WWE pay-per-view event that is held in August of every year. ... The Elimination Chamber is a match type in professional wrestling (seen in World Wrestling Entertainment), which is a variation of the steel cage and Hell in a Cell matches, in that the ring is surrounded by a steel structure of chain and girders, but is circular allowing for four inner...


This type of match is only performed in the WWE.


War Games

Two rings surrounded by an enclosed steel cage with two teams versus each other. One man from each team starts out with another from either team at random entering the cage via a timed interval. The winning team must get a member of another team to submit after all members of each team are in the cage.


Football Classic Match

Two cages are placed at ringside, inside each of which is locked a manager with a weapon. The key for each cage is fastened to a football. Two teams of wrestlers must try and gain possession of the football and take it over to their manager's cage, use the key to unlock the cage, then use the manager's weapon to attack the other team. To get the ball to the cage, the wrestlers must pass it between themeselves and attack any opposing wrestlers who have possession of the ball. Mick Foley describes the match as "A fun, fan-inclusive cross between keep away, monkey in the middle, and kill the guy with the ball." In professional wrestling, a manager is a non-wrestler character who is paired with a wrestler. ... A football, when used in the singular, is a ball used to play one of the sports known as football. ... Michael Francis Mick Foley (born June 7, 1965) is an American professional wrestler and author. ...


(Object) on a Pole Match

Similar to a ladder match except the first man to reach the object hanging from a pole in the corner of the ring wins. In this variation, the object is often a contract guaranteeing the winner a championship match.


Alternately the match is fought under one fall rules with the object on the pole considered a legal foreign object. It may be used as a weapon by the wrestler who retrieves it. Some examples of this variation include the Guitar on a Pole Match and the Brass Knuckles on a Pole Match.


"I Quit" Match

Enlarge
Bret Hart and Bob Backlund in an I Quit match

Similar to a submission match with one exception; you must force your opponent to actually say "I Quit" into a microphone in order for this match to end. See Also: "I Quit" Match. You may have been looking for the author Bret Harte. ... Bob Backlund - Wikipedia /**/ @import /skins/monobook/IE50Fixes. ...


Texas Bullrope Match

Two wrestlers are tied to the opposite ends of a bullrope (usually with a cowbell in the middle). The first man to touch all four turnbuckles consecutively with no offense from the other wins. No disqualifications or count-outs but if either man unties himself from the rope, he is disqualified. Some variations can include a chain or leather strap instead of a bullrope (otherwise called an "Indian Strap Match"). Pinfalls can be permitted depending on the promotion but there's usually no submission. Another variation is a regular strap and fight until one wrestler touches all four corners successfully (called a Strap Match).


Dog Collar Match

Same as above but using two dog collars around each wrestler's neck connected to a chain.


Gorilla/Body Slam Match

A wrestler must body slam his opponent to win. Pinfalls and submissions count in this match.


Finisher Match

The first wrestler to perform their finishing manuever wins.


Splash Match

A variation of the Finisher Match or Body Slam Match in which the only way to win is to successfully score some type of splash on your opponent. To my knowledge, this match has only been carried out in WAWwrestling.com.


Pin Only

A match in which only pinfalls count as a win. There are no submissions or count-outs, and there may or may not be disqualifications.


Stretcher Match

Strap your opponent to a stretcher to win. Some rules state that you must push your opponent a certain distance or into an ambulance.


Blindfold Match

Enlarge
A Blindfold Match

Both competitors wear blindfolds and wrestle. Otherwise normal rules apply.


Retirement Match

The loser of this match must retire from professional wrestling, leave the federation or leave the town.


Three Strikes, You're Out!

The idea for this match is to get three victories in a specific order; pinfall, submission and knock out. First wrestler to get all those done, wins. Often combined with Street Fight rules.


Battle of Respect

This match has no winners. Two wrestlers wrestle each other for a fixed amount of time without pinfalls or submissions.


Double Tables Match

This match has a cage where there is a table hooked to each side of the cage. The only way to win is put your opponent through two tables.


Silver Dollar Match

In this match, rolls of silver dollars are considered legal weapons, and are used as fist loads. Closed fists are also legal. The wrestlers attack each other with punches until one can not answer the ten count.


Junkyard Scrap

This match takes place in a junkyard. First wrestler to escape the junkyard wins the match.


Total Conquest Match

This match has two wrestlers fighting throughout a house until a pinfall is made.


Final Wars Brawl

This match has two wrestlers in a steel cage for thirty minutes with other wrestlers entering at a timed interval to help out one of the opponents.


Short Leash Match

This match has two wrestlers tied together with a short leash (making the opponents one foot away from each other) and the only way to win is by either submission or knock-out. Another variation is called a Chain Match in which there are No Holds Barred and the wrestlers can only win by submission.


Singapore Cane Match

This match has two wrestlers carrying kendo sticks or Singapore canes into the ring and using them as legal weapons. Victory is only by pinfall.


Parking Lot Brawl

This match is a regular match with the exceptions of no disqualification and it takes place in a parking lot. Other variations include a Bar Room Brawl which takes place in a bar. Other variations also included:


Boiler Room Brawl

The winner is the first man to escape the boiler room. Any weapons found in the room can be used. See Boiler Room Brawl. A Boiler Room Brawl is a professional wrestling match type. ...


Relay Match

The match has two (could have more) teams of between 3 or 12 members to a team and before the match there will be a coin toss to see which team switches out first.Every 3 or 5 minutes the teams will switch.The first team to get a pinfall wins. It can also have hardcore rules.


Ambulance Match

This match cannot end in a disqualification and it's anything goes. The only way to win is by beating your opponent until he or she is put into the back of an ambulance and will be taken to the hospital.


Last Ride Match

Related to the ambulance match, but unlike the ambulance match, a hearse is used instead. The opponent who gets beaten up so severely that there is nothing left for him or her to do, and gets thrown into the back of hearse that will be driven to the funeral home loses the match. As a result, it is also called a Hearse Match.


Good Housekeeping Match

A singles match in which household appliances and kitchenware can legally be used as weapons.


Handicap Match

A match in which one wrestler or one team of wrestlers faces another team of wrestlers with numerical superiority.


Tag-team match variations

Tag-Team match

A match in which two teams of two wrestlers face each other. Only one wrestler from each team is allowed in the ring at a time, though heels will often break this rule and gang up on a single opponent. The other(s) wait on the apron outside the ropes in a specified corner adjacent to the other team. Offensive cooperation from a team member can happen as long as they are within the referee's count of five and after an official tag. A tag team match involving more than two wrestlers per team is often referred to by the total number of people involved (eg. a six-man tag team match involves two teams of three), while a tag team match involving more than two teams is referred to by normal qualifiers (eg. a triple threat tag team match involves three teams of two). In professional wrestling, a heel is a character who is portrayed as behaving in an immoral manner; sometimes they are humourously referred to as evil. In non-wrestling jargon, heels are often bad guys in professional wrestling storylines. ...


A wrestler must do the following in order to make a legal tag:

  • Both feet of the wrestler on the outside must be flat on the apron.
  • The wrestler outside the ring must hold on to the tag rope tied in the corner
  • Tags must be done over the top rope.
  • Tags are legal as long as the two team members touch.

A referee can be allowed to overlook any of these tag rules at his discretion. All standard match rules apply but the legal man must make a pin or submission on another legal man to win. Only legal men can be counted out but either team can be disqualified regardless if a team member is legal or not.


Elimination Tag-Team Match

Same as a tag-team match except that the wrestler suffering the loss of a fall is eliminated from participation. The match continues until all members of one team are eliminated. The WWE uses the term Survivor Series Match to denote a ten-person match held during the yearly Survivor Series pay-per-view. Lucha Libre uses the term Torneo Cibernetico (cybernetic tournament) for multi-man elimination matches. Sometimes in these matches, there can be only one winner so even after the other team has been eliminated, former team mates face each other in an elimination match. World Wrestling Entertainment, or WWE, is a professional wrestling organization. ... Survivor Series 2004 Poster Advertisement. ... Pay-per-view is the name given to a system by which television viewers can call and order events to be seen on TV and pay for the private telecast of that event to their homes later. ... Lucha libre, a Spanish phrase loosely translated into English as free fight, is a genre of professional wrestling developed in Mexico. ...


Intergender Tag-Team Match

This is a tag-team match featuring mixed-sex teams. It differs from a Mixed Tag-Team match (see below) in that men and women can be in the ring at the same time.


Mixed Tag-Team Match

This type of match also features mixed-sex teams, but differs from an Intergender match in that only wrestlers of the same sex may be in the ring at the same time. For example, if a woman tags her male partner, both women leave the ring and both men enter.


Tornado Tag-Team Match

This is a team match where all wrestlers involved are allowed in the ring at the same time. All men are legal so any wrestler is vulnerable to a decision. Usually there is no disqualification or count-out. Despite its name, is not a true tag-team match, as it involves no tagging.


Parejas Incredibles Match

In this match the teams are composed of enemies or rivals. It is meant to illustrate the tension between the desire to win and the hatred for one's rival. As the name suggests, these pairs matches are used more frequently in Mexico than anywhere else.


Parejas Suicidas

Another Lucha Libre variation of the tag team match. It begins as a regular tag match but the two members from the losing team face each other in a Lucha de Apuesta.


Other match types

These can include Hardcore, Battle Royal (if one member of a team is thrown over the top-rope, both members are eliminated), Ladders, Tables (one team wins when a member of another team is forced into and through a table - no tags), Chairs, Tables/Ladders/Chairs, Cage, etc. Just about any match type can be converted to tag-team rules.


Extreme variations

10,000 Thumbtacks Death Match

This match has 10,000 thumbtacks placed in the ring. The wrestlers can use the thumbtacks as weapons. Victory by either pinfall, submission or knocking out the opponent. A variation of this match is a cross between a Ladder Match and 10,000 Thumbtacks Match called a Thumbtacks Ladder Match in which a ladder is placed in the ring with a reward at the top. Thumbtacks are also spread out across the ring.


Barbed-Wire Bat 10,000 Thumbtack Match

A solid baseball bat with the end wrapped in barb wire hangs off a pole in a corner of the ring as a box filled with 10,000 thumbtacks lays at ringside. The only way to win is to put your opponent in the box of 10,000 Thumbtacks and to make the pin. The bat is just to make the match a little more brutal than it already is.


Barbed-Wire Steel Cage Match

A regular steel cage match, with barbed and razor wire lining the top of the cage. The first Barbed-Wire Steel Cage Match in the WWE was in No Way Out 2005, where John Bradshaw Layfield defeated The Big Show. World Wrestling Entertainment, or WWE, is a professional wrestling organization. ... There are different things named No Way Out: No Way Out (1950 movie) is a 1950 movie starring Richard Widmark and Sidney Poitier. ... 2005 is a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar. ... John Bradshaw Layfield featured in the No Mercy pay-per-view poster. ... The Big Show after the Kurt Angle incident (read below) Paul Wight (born February 8, 1972 in Tampa, Florida), best known by his ring names of The Big Show or simply The Giant, is a professional wrestler currently working for WWE on the SmackDown! brand. ...


Beds of (Objects) Death Match

A hardcore match that has beds of thumbtacks, nails, barb wire, glass, and/or lightbulbs. Up to three of these can be involved in the match. These matches usually occur in Deathmatch Title matches or Deathmatches in general.


Inferno Match

The ring is surrounded by flames. The object of the match is to set your opponent on fire. The wrestler who is able to burn their opponent is declared the winner. The first Inferno Match in the then-WWF was Undertaker vs Kane at Unforgiven 1998.


Brimstone Match

A match where the only way to win is to throw your oppenent in burning hot coals laid on the floor next to the ring.


Explosion Match

Usually accompanied with barb wire ropes, a large barb wire wrapped explosion board is placed in the ring laced with a small amount of C4. The loser is the man that is blown up. In another variation, the match ends with a pin or submission and the explosives serve as weapons. C4 or Composition C4 is a common variety of military plastic explosive. ...


Rage in a Cage

A cage that looks like an oval that is typically used as the arena for the "blowoff match" of a feud. It can be used for a tag team or singles match. In this match, wins are usually by pinfall. A professional wrestling feud is a staged disagreement between two wrestlers or factions of wrestlers over a purported slight or insult. ...


Scramble Cage

A cage match with wooden platforms in each of the corners of the cage for use in "high risk" moves.


Triple Cage Match aka Doomsday Cage

This is a Cage match where there 3 cages constructed on top of each other, only been used in the old WCW days the object of the match is to climb up to the top of the third cage to grab an object (in the case of WCW it was to climb up a grab the World Title belt) WCW logo until 1999 World Championship Wrestling or WCW, was a professional wrestling promotion that existed from 1988 to 2001. ... The WCW World Heavyweight Championship (sometimes simply WCW Championship or WCW Title) was the primary championship in the World Championship Wrestling professional wrestling organisation. ...


Lucha en Juala Electrificada

A variation of the cage match, in this contest the cage is electrified (explaining the name "fight in an electric cage") and the only way to win is by escape. The cage is turned off in certain intervals, allowing the participants a chance at escape. Used by the AAA promotion in Mexico. Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA) is a Lucha Libre wrestling promotion based in Mexico. ...


200 Light tube Deathmatch

A match type first used in Combat Zone Wrestling at an event called "They Said it Couldn't be Done". The object of this match is to win by pinfall. The use of fluorescent light tubes—officially, two hundred are available for use—as weapons is allowed. [1]  (http://www.obsessedwithwrestling.com/results/czw/000625.html) Combat Zone Wrestling,(CZW) began as a professional wrestling school run by John Zandig (real name: John Corso). ... A compact fluorescent lamp A fluorescent lamp is a type of electric lamp that excites argon and mercury vapor to create luminescence. ...


Chamber of horrors

This match type was used once at WCW Halloween Havoc in 1991, with eight men inside a large Thunder Cage. They object is to put one's opponent inside a "chair of torture", which is in the center of the ring inside a smaller cage, and pull the lever. 1991 is a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...


WWE article on match types (http://www.wwe.com/inside/specialty_matches/)


  Results from FactBites:
 
History of the Cage - Steel Cage Match (641 words)
The Steel Cage Match is the most brutal professional wrestling matches in the world of sporting entertainment, the match to end all feuds and rivarlys.
Some say that the cage match's origins are in the west.
This was the kind of wrestling environment that needed the exsistence for a cage match, an environment with the likes of Freddie Blassie.
Newsletters (2691 words)
The traditional cage match, known as a shark cage match, is won by being the first wrestler to escape the cage and have both feet touch the floor.
The two ways to win the match are to push the opponent off the scaffold so that he/she hits the mat or to grab the flag from the opponent's home base of the scaffold and return it to their own home base.
This is a match between two (usually) women in which the winner is the first to strip her opponent down to her bra and panties.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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