1995 in professional wrestling describes the year's events in the world of professional wrestling.
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List of notable promotions
editThese promotions held notable events in 1995.
Promotion Name | Abbreviation | Notes |
---|---|---|
Asistencia Asesoría y Administración/Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide | AAA | During this year, AAA ceased using the full name, as the company bought out Televisa and became independent, and thus became Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide, but often abbreviated to just AAA. |
Catch Wrestling Association | CWA | |
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre | CMLL | |
Extreme Championship Wrestling | ECW | |
Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling | FMW | |
New Japan Pro-Wrestling | NJPW | |
World Championship Wrestling | WCW | |
World Wrestling Council | WWC | |
World Wrestling Federation | WWF |
Calendar of notable shows
editJanuary
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 4 | NJPW | Battle 7 | Tokyo, Japan | Shinya Hashimoto (c) defeated Kensuke Sasaki in a Singles match for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship | |
January 22 | WWF | Royal Rumble | Tampa, Florida, United States | Shawn Michaels won by last eliminating The British Bulldog in a 30-man Royal Rumble match for a WWF Championship match at WrestleMania XI | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
February
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 4 | ECW | Double Tables | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | Sabu and The Tazmaniac (with Paul E. Dangerously) defeated The Public Enemy (Johnny Grunge and Rocco Rock) (c) in a Double tables match for the ECW World Tag Team Championship | |
February 19 | WCW | SuperBrawl V | Baltimore, Maryland, United States | Hulk Hogan (c) (with Jimmy Hart) defeated Vader by disqualification in a Singles match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship | |
February 25 | ECW | Return of the Funker | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | Cactus Jack defeated D. C. Drake (with the Sandman and Woman) by pinfall in a Singles match | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
March
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 18 | ECW | Extreme Warfare | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | The Sandman (with Woman) and Terry Funk defeated Cactus Jack and Shane Douglas by pinfall in a tag team match | |
March 19 | WCW | Uncensored | Tupelo, Mississippi, United States | Hulk Hogan (with The Renegade) defeated Vader (with Ric Flair) in a Leather Strap match | |
March 24 | CMLL | Salvador Lutteroth Trios Tournament | Mexico City, Mexico | Bestia Salvaje, Emilio Charles Jr. and Sangre Chicana defeated Los Brazos (Brazo de Oro, Brazo de Plata and El Brazo) in a tournament final[1] | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
April
editMay
editJune
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 10 | AAA | Triplemanía III-A | Orizaba, Veracruz, Mexico | Payasito Rojo lost to Super Muñequito Other participants included Espectrito I, Espectrito II, Jerrito Estrada, Fuercita Guerrera, Mascarita Sagrada, Mini Calo, Ninjita, Octagoncito, La Parkita, Payasito Azul, and Torerito in a 13-Mini-Estrella Steel Cage Elimination match, Lucha de Apuestas, "Mask vs. Mask" with the last man in the cage being unmasked. | |
June 17 | ECW | Barbed Wire, Hoodies & Chokeslams | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | The Sandman (c) (with Woman) defeated Cactus Jack by TKO in a Barbed wire match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship | |
June 18 | AAA | Triplemanía III-B | Tonalá, Jalisco, Mexico | Winners defeated Marabunta in a Best two-out-of-three falls Lucha de Apuestas "Mask vs. Mask" match | |
June 18 | WCW | The Great American Bash | Dayton, Ohio, United States | Ric Flair defeated Randy Savage (with Angelo Poffo) in a Singles match | |
June 25 | WWF | King of the Ring | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | Bam Bam Bigelow and Diesel defeated Sycho Sid and Tatanka (with Ted DiBiase) in a tag team match[7] | |
June 30 | AAA | Triplemanía III-C | Madero, Mexico | Super Caló defeated Winners in a Best two-out-of-three falls Lucha de Apuesta, "Mask vs. Mask" match | |
June 30 | ECW | Mountain Top Madness | Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania, United States | The Sandman (c) (with Woman) defeated Tommy Dreamer by pinfall in a Singles match for the ECW World Heavyweight Championship | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
July
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
July 1 | ECW | Hardcore Heaven | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | The Public Enemy (Rocco Rock and Johnny Grunge) defeated The Gangstas (New Jack and Mustafa Saed) in a tag team match | |
July 7 | CMLL | International Gran Prix | Mexico City, Mexico | Headhunter A defeated Vampiro Canadiense in a 1995 International Gran Prix final match[8] | |
July 8 | CWA | Euro Catch Festival in Graz | Graz, Austria | Rambo (c) defeated Jim Neidhart in Round 7 in a Singles match for the CWA World Heavyweight Championship | |
July 15 | ECW | Heat Wave | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | The Gangstas (New Jack and Mustafa Saed) defeated The Public Enemy (Rocco Rock and Johnny Grunge) in a tag team match | |
July 16 | WCW | Bash at the Beach | Huntington Beach, California, United States | Hulk Hogan (c) (with Jimmy Hart) defeated Vader by escaping the cage in a steel cage match[9] | |
July 23 | WWF | In Your House 2 | Nashville, Tennessee, United States | Diesel (c) defeated Sycho Sid (with Ted DiBiase) in a Lumberjack match for the WWF Championship[10] | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
August
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
August 5 | ECW | Wrestlepalooza | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | The Gangstas (Mustafa and New Jack) defeated The Public Enemy (Johnny Grunge and Rocco Rock) in a Stretcher match | |
August 13 | WWC | WWC 22nd Aniversario | Caguas, Puerto Rico | Carlos Colón (c) vs. Hercules Ayala in a Singles match for the WWC Universal Heavyweight Championship | |
August 15 | NJPW | G1 Climax | Tokyo, Japan | Keiji Mutoh defeated Shinya Hashimoto in the finals | |
August 27 | WWF | SummerSlam | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States | Diesel (c) defeated King Mabel (with Sir Mo) in a Singles match for the WWF Championship[11] | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
September
editOctober
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
October 22 | WWF | In Your House 4 | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | The British Bulldog defeated Diesel (c) by disqualification in a Singles match for the WWF Championship | |
October 26 | CMLL | Copa de Oro | Mexico City, Mexico | Máscara Mágica and Ringo Mendoza defeated Chicago Express and Pierroth Jr. in a tournament final match[15] | |
October 29 | WCW | Halloween Havoc | Detroit, Michigan, United States | The Giant (with The Taskmaster) defeated Hulk Hogan (c) (with Jimmy Hart) by disqualification in a Singles match for the WCW World Heavyweight Championship | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
November
editDate | Promotion(s) | Event | Location | Main Event | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
November 18 | ECW | November to Remember | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States | Terry Funk and Tommy Dreamer defeated Raven and Cactus Jack in a tag team match | |
November 19 | WWF | Survivor Series | Landover, Maryland, United States | Bret Hart defeated Diesel (c) in a No Disqualification match for the WWF Championship | |
November 26 | WCW | World War 3 | Norfolk, Virginia, United States | Randy Savage won by last eliminating One Man Gang in a 60-man World War 3 match for the vacant WCW World Heavyweight Championship | |
(c) – denotes defending champion(s) |
December
editNotable events
edit- May 14 – The first WWF in Your House two hour PPV debuts in Syracuse, NY with a Sid Vicious vs WWF World Heavyweight Champion "Big Daddy Cool" Diesel main event.
- September 4 – WCW Monday Nitro debut on TNT and with it the official start of the Monday Night War
- The Universal Wrestling Association closed.
- November 9 – WCW Pro debut their first episode from the Disney/MGM Studios in their custom arena.
- November 26 – SMW closed their doors after their final live event in Cookeville, Tennessee wrapping up the SMW vs USWA feud.
Accomplishments and tournaments
editAJW
editAccomplishment | Winner | Date won | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japan Grand Prix 1995 | Manami Toyota | September 3 | |
Rookie of the Year Decision Tournament | Mari Mogami | ||
Tag League The Best 1995 | Kyoko Inoue and Tomoko Watanabe | December 10 |
AJPW
editAccomplishment | Winner | Date won | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Champion Carnival 1995 | Mitsuharu Misawa | April 15 | |
World's Strongest Determination League 1995 | Toshiaki Kawada and Akira Taue | December 9 |
JWP
editAccomplishment | Winner | Date won | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Blue Star Cup 1995 | Carlos Amano |
WCW
editAccomplishment | Winner | Date won | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Slim Jim Challenge | Paul Orndorff | May 27 | |
WCW United States Championship Tournament | Sting | June 18 | |
World War 3 | Randy Savage | November 26 |
WCW Hall of Fame
editInductee |
---|
Wahoo McDaniel |
Dusty Rhodes |
Antonio Inoki |
Angelo Poffo |
Terry Funk |
Big John Studd |
Gordon Solie |
WWF
editAccomplishment | Winner | Date won | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Royal Rumble | Shawn Michaels | January 22 | |
WWF Tag Team Championship Tournament | The 1–2–3 Kid and Bob Holly | January 22 | |
King of the Ring | Mabel | June 25 |
WWF Hall of Fame
editCategory | Inductee | Inducted by |
---|---|---|
Individual | Antonino Rocca | Diesel |
"Big Cat" Ernie Ladd | Bobo Brazil | |
George "The Animal" Steele | Doink the Clown | |
Ivan Putski | Scott Putski | |
The Fabulous Moolah | Alundra Blayze | |
The Grand Wizard | Sgt. Slaughter | |
Pedro Morales | Savio Vega |
Awards and honors
editPro Wrestling Illustrated
editWrestling Observer Newsletter
editTitle changes
editECW
editIncoming champion – Shane Douglas
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
April 15 | The Sandman | Hostile City Showdown | ||
October 28 | Mikey Whipwreck | Live event | ||
December 9 | The Sandman | December to Dismember |
Incoming champion – Dean Malenko
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
March 18 | 2 Cold Scorpio | ECW Hardcore TV | ||
April 8 | Eddie Guerrero | Three Way Dance | ||
July 21 | Dean Malenko | ECW Hardcore TV | ||
July 28 | Eddie Guerrero | ECW Hardcore TV | ||
August 25 | 2 Cold Scorpio | Live event | ||
December 29 | Mikey Whipwreck | Holiday Hell | This was a match where Scorpio put both his World Television Championship and the ECW World Tag Team Championship held by Scorpio and The Sandman on the line. |
Incoming champions – The Public Enemy (Johnny Grunge and Rocco Rock) | ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
February 4 | The Dangerous Alliance (Sabu and The Tazmaniac) |
Double Tables | ||
February 25 | The Triple Threat (Chris Benoit and Dean Malenko) |
Return of the Funker | ||
April 8 | The Public Enemy (Johnny Grunge and Rocco Rock) |
Three Way Dance | ||
June 30 | Raven and Stevie Richards | Mountain Top Madness | ||
September 19 | The Pitbulls (Pitbull #1 and Pitbull #2) |
Gangstas Paradise | ||
October 7 | Raven and Stevie Richards | Hardcore TV #131 | ||
October 7 | The Public Enemy (Johnny Grunge and Rocco Rock) |
Hardcore TV #131 | ||
October 28 | 2 Cold Scorpio and The Sandman | Hardcore TV #133 | ||
December 29 | Cactus Jack and Mikey Whipwreck | Holiday Hell |
FMW
editFMW Brass Knuckles Heavyweight Championship | ||||
Incoming champion – Atsushi Onita
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 21 | Mr. Pogo | FMW | ||
May 4 | Atsushi Onita | FMW | ||
May 5 | Vacant | 6th Anniversary Show | ||
June 27 | Hayabusa | FMW | ||
June 27 | Vacant | FMW | ||
September 26 | The Gladiator | FMW |
FMW Brass Knuckles Tag Team Championship | ||||
Incoming champions – W*ING Alliance (Mr. Pogo and The Gladiator)
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
February 24 | Atsushi Onita and Mr. Gannosuke | FMW | ||
March 7 | W*ING Alliance (Mr. Pogo and The Gladiator) |
FMW | ||
May 5 | Lethal Weapon (Ricky Fuji and Hisakatsu Oya) |
6th Anniversary Show | ||
September 5 | Daisuke Ikeda and Yoshiaki Fujiwara | Grand Slam Tour | ||
December 21 | Lethal Weapon (Ricky Fuji and Hisakatsu Oya) |
Year End Spectacular |
FMW Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship | ||||
Incoming champion – Ricky Fuji
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
February 6 | Hideki Hosaka | House show | ||
March 30 | Koji Nakagawa | House show | ||
Unknown | Vacated | N/A | ||
November 20 | Koji Nakagawa | House show |
FMW Women's Championship | ||||
Incoming champion – Vacant
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
March 30 | Bad Nurse Nakamura | FMW | ||
May 5 | Megumi Kudo | 6th Anniversary Show | ||
November 20 | Shark Tsuchiya | FMW | ||
December 10 | Combat Toyoda | FMW |
NJPW
editIncoming champion – Shinya Hashimoto | ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
May 3 | Keiji Mutoh | Wrestling Dontaku 1995 |
Incoming champions – Hiroshi Hase and Keiji Mutoh | ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
May 6 | Vacant | N/A | ||
June 10 | Cho-Ten (Hiroyoshi Tenzan and Masahiro Chono) |
Fighting Spirit Legend | ||
July 7 | Vacant | N/A | ||
July 13 | Junji Hirata and Shinya Hashimoto | Best of the Super Jr. II |
Incoming champion – Norio Honaga | ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
February 19 | Koji Kanemoto | Live event | ||
May 3 | Sabu | Wrestling Dontaku 1995 | ||
June 14 | Koji Kanemoto | Live event |
WCW
editIncoming champion – Hulk Hogan
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
October 29 | The Giant | Halloween Havoc | ||
November 6 | Vacated | Nitro | ||
November 26 | Randy Savage | World War 3 | ||
December 27 | Ric Flair | Starrcade |
Incoming champion – Vader
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
March 25 | Vacated | Saturday Night | Vader was stripped of the title by WCW commissioner Nick Bockwinkel for hospitalizing Dave Sullivan one week prior | |
June 18 | Sting | The Great American Bash | Defeated Meng in a tournament final | |
November 13 | Kensuke Sasaki | WCW World in Japan | ||
December 27 | One Man Gang | Starrcade | Won in a post-PPV dark match. Although the match was restarted and Kensuke Sasaki subsequently retained the title, it was never acknowledged by WCW, nor is it acknowledged by WWE |
Incoming champion – Johnny B. Badd
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 8 | Arn Anderson | Main Event | ||
June 18 | The Renegade | The Great American Bash | ||
September 17 | Diamond Dallas Page | Fall Brawl | ||
October 29 | Johnny B. Badd | Halloween Havoc |
Incoming champions – Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray) | ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
May 21 | The Nasty Boys (Jerry Sags and Brian Knobbs) |
Slamboree | ||
May 3 | Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray) |
WorldWide | Aired on tape delay on June 24. | |
June 21 | Dick Slater and Bunkhouse Buck | Saturday Night | Aired on tape delay on June 24. | |
September 17 | Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray) |
Fall Brawl | ||
September 18 | The American Males (Marcus Alexander Bagwell and Scotty Riggs) |
Nitro | ||
September 27 | Harlem Heat (Booker T and Stevie Ray) |
Saturday Night | Aired on tape delay on October 28. |
WWF
editIncoming champion – Diesel
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
November 19 | Bret Hart | Survivor Series | It was a No Disqualification Match for the WWF Championship. |
Incoming champion – Razor Ramon
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 22 | Jeff Jarrett | Royal Rumble | ||
April 26 | Vacant | WWF Action Zone | Held up when match between Jeff Jarrett and Bob "Spark Plug" Holly ended in controversy | |
April 26 | Jeff Jarrett | WWF Action Zone | Aired on tape delay on May 7 | |
May 19 | Razor Ramon | House show | ||
May 21 | Jeff Jarrett | House show | ||
July 23 | Shawn Michaels | In Your House 2: The Lumberjacks | ||
October 22 | Dean Douglas | In Your House 4 | Won the title by forfeit due to Shawn Michaels being attacked outside a nightclub in Syracuse, NY on October 14, 1995 | |
October 22 | Razor Ramon | In Your House 4 |
Incoming champion – Bull Nakano
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
April 3 | Alundra Blayze | Raw | ||
August 27 | Bertha Faye | SummerSlam | ||
October 23 | Alundra Blayze | Raw | ||
December 13 | Deactivated | N/A | Title deactivated when Blayze left the WWF. Blayze then joined World Championship Wrestling and, during Nitro in Augusta, GA on December 18 dropped the title belt in a trash can |
Incoming champions – Vacated
| ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
January 22 | The 1–2–3 Kid and Bob Holly | Royal Rumble | ||
January 23 | The Smoking Gunns (Billy and Bart Gunn) |
Raw | ||
April 2 | Owen Hart and Yokozuna | WrestleMania XI | ||
September 24 | Two Dudes with Attitudes (Diesel and Shawn Michaels) |
In Your House 3: Triple Header | ||
September 25 | Owen Hart and Yokozuna | Raw | ||
September 25 | The Smoking Gunns (Billy and Bart Gunn) |
Raw |
(Title recreated)
| ||||
unsanctioned championship | ||||
Date | Winner | Event/Show | Note(s) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
December 18 | The Ringmaster | Raw | Aired on tape delay on January 8, 1996. |
Births
edit- April 1 – Logan Paul
- May 29 - Konosuke Takeshita
- June 9
- July 26 – Tessa Blanchard
- August 19 – The Velveteen Dream[19]
- August 29 – Rey Celestial (died in 2017)
- October 16 – Fuego Del Sol
- October 28 – Mansoor
- November 9 – Yuki Ishikawa
- December 10 - Satnam Singh
Debuts
editUncertain debut date
editDebut date
edit- January 8 – Yuki Miyazaki and Tsubasa Kuragaki
- January 13 - Kanako Motoya
- January 19 - Abyss
- February 10 - Keiko Aono
- February 16 - Sanshiro Takagi
- February 17 - Kancho Nagase
- March 31 - Shinigami and Onryo
- April 15 - Chikayo Nagashima and Sugar Sato
- May 24 - Cosmo*Soldier
- June – Christian
- July 29 - Makie Numao
- August 18 - Muhammad Yone and Alexander Otsuka
- September 13 - Takashi Sato
- October 4 - Mari Mogami (All Japan Women's)
- October 13 – Kuuga
- October 14 - Kayo Noumi (All Japan Women's)
- October 18 - Averno
- October 25 - Miss Mongol (FMW)
- November 12 - Shadow WX
- December 27 - Nosawa Rongai
Retirements
edit- Lord Alfred Hayes (1950s–1995)
- Animal Hamaguchi (1969–1995)
- Archie Gouldie (November 2, 1962 – September 2, 1995)
- Baron von Raschke (1966–1995)
- Bryant Anderson (1993–1995)
- Dan Spivey (1983–October 1995)
- Francisco Flores (1960s-1995)
- Gordon Solie (1950s–1995)
- Jack Tunney (September 2, 1984 – July 12, 1995)
- Jim Crockett, Sr. (1973–1994)
- John Tatum (1983–1995)
- Jorge Gonzalez (May 19, 1990 – December 8, 1995)
- Jos LeDuc (1968–1995)
- Junkyard Dog (1976–1995)
- Kevin Von Erich (1976–1995)
- Lou Albano (1953–1995)
- Pete Sanchez (1958-1995)
- Pez Whatley (1973–1998)
- Phil Apollo (1986-1995)
- The Sheik (1947-1995, did not announce his retirement until 1998)
- El Supremo (1976–1995)
- Toni Adams (1985–1995)
Deaths
edit- January 22 – Jerry Blackwell, 45
- February 18 – Eddie Gilbert, 33
- March 20 – Big John Studd, 47
- April 11 - Harry Pennington (wrestler), 92
- May 10 - Ilio DiPaolo, 68
- May 28 - Chris Colt, 48
- August 24 – Killer Karl Krupp, 61
- October 2 – John Ayers, 42
- December 4 – Little Beaver, 60
- December 20 - Benny Ramírez, 63
See also
editWikimedia Commons has media related to 1995 in professional wrestling.
References
edit- ^ "Salvador Lutteroth Tournament 1995". Pro Wrestling History. March 24, 1995. Retrieved November 11, 2012.
- ^ Lucha 2000 Staff (April 2006). "Arena México: 50 anos de Lucha Libre". Lucha 2000 (in Spanish). Especial 28.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "CMLL Gran Alternativa #2". Pro Wrestling History. April 7, 1995. Retrieved September 3, 2009.
- ^ Meltzer, Dave. "April 11, 2016 Wrestling Observer Newsletter". f4wonline.com. Wrestling Observer. Retrieved April 7, 2016.
The all-time pro wrestling attendance record would be for shows on April 28 and April 29, 1995 at May Day Stadium in Pyongyang, North Korea. The announced crowds for those shows were 165,000 and 190,000, although the real numbers were about 150,000 and 165,000. The first show was headlined by Scott Norton vs. Shinya Hashimoto and the second by Antonio Inoki vs. Ric Flair. While there were tickets sold, most of the people attending got in free, and were pretty much ordered to attend, so it's not really a fair comparison.
- ^ PWTorch.com – WCW FLASHBACK – "Collision in Korea" 20 yrs. ago today: Flair & WCW crew head to N. Korea with New Japan Pro Wrestling
- ^ Criscuolo, Scott; Rozzero, Justin (May 22, 2007). "In Your House 1 Review". The History of WWE. Archived from the original on May 29, 2010. Retrieved October 25, 2007.
- ^ Cawthon, Graham. "WWF 1995 Results". The History of WWE. Retrieved October 25, 2007.
- ^ "Gran Prix Tournament 1995". ProWrestlingHistory.com. July 7, 1995. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
- ^ "Bash at the Beach 1995". Pro Wrestling History. July 16, 1995. Retrieved September 1, 2015.
- ^ Criscuolo, Scott; Rozzero, Justin (June 20, 2007). "In Your House 2 Review". The History of WWE. Archived from the original on May 29, 2010. Retrieved July 12, 2008.
- ^ Criscuolo, Scott; Rozzero, Justin (July 5, 2007). "SummerSlam 1995 Review". The History of WWE. Archived from the original on May 29, 2010. Retrieved July 16, 2008.
- ^ "Copa Junior Tag Team Tournament 1995". Pro Wrestling History. September 1, 1995. Retrieved November 12, 2012.
- ^ "62nd Anniversary Show". ProWrestlingHistory. September 22, 1995. Retrieved February 19, 2010.
- ^ "Historical Cards: In Your House 3 (September 24, 1995. Saginaw, Michigan)". PWI Presents: 2007 Wrestling Almanak and book of facts. Kappa Publications. p. 150. 2007 Edition.
- ^ Royal Duncan and Gary Will (2000). "Mexico: Copa de Oro 1995". Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 398. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
- ^ "Historical Cards: In Your House 5 (December 12, 1995. Hershey, Pennsylvania)". PWI Presents: 2007 Wrestling Almanak and book of facts. Kappa Publications. p. 150. 2007 Edition.
- ^ "In Your House #5". Pro Wrestling History. December 17, 1995.
- ^ Cawthon, Graham (2013). the History of Professional Wrestling: WWF 1990 – 1999. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ASIN B00RWUNSRS.
- ^ "Velveteen Dream Profile". Online World of Wrestling. Archived from the original on October 7, 2017. Retrieved October 4, 2017.