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In One Small Coal Town, Wrestling is Where Community Gathers

Emily Hilliard/ WV Folklife Program

This story is part of an episode of Inside Appalachia about Professional Wrestling in Appalachia. Click hereto listen to the full episode. In Madison, West Virginia, All Star Wrestling draws hundreds of people to most matches. The crowd is no different than any West Virginia high school sporting event: Plenty of kids, small children to teenagers—and parents, grandparents, and others who you can tell by the skeptical  look on their faces, are not that into it. They brought their kid who loves wrestling and that’s the only reason why they are sitting in an audience surrounded by screaming fans with music blaring.

Some of the adults look as though they came straight from work: They’re teachers, mechanics, coal miners, people of all kinds love to come watch two men fight it out in the ring.

On one side of the court the bleachers are extended, and a basketball hoop hangs from the rafters. When the lights finally go down, the wrestling ring sits brightly light, in the center of the arena, and the stage for tonight’s events has been set.

ASW promotes about 10 events a year here in Madison, with hundreds in attendance each time, and there are a lot of regulars.

One of the regulars here is Brandon Burns. “It’s just something fun to do, that we don’t have to drive to Charleston. It’s really the only thing in town we can do once a month. I don’t ride four-wheelers, I don’t play golf, you know, I basically just teach school, coach and raise my family. It’s nice to be able to come and do something that I enjoy, which is watching wrestling, where I don’t have to put out 40 or 50 dollars to watch a WWE event in Charleston. I can come here for $10 bucks, bring my whole family for under 50 bucks and have a great time.”

Shows at the Madison Civic Center are smaller and more intimate than the Charleston Civic Center, where the WWE does live events a couple times a year, that intimacy is what some fans love the most.

Credit Adam Harris

“It’s not expensive. I mean we could pay a lot more money to go see other wrestling but we don’t, we come here,” said Travis Craddock a father who brought his family to the ASW Ten Year Anniversary show.

He said he's been attending ASW since promoter ASW first started, and they hardly miss a show.

“It brings families together. It gives us something to do. There’s not much to do, and Gary has provided a lot of entertainment over the years.”

He’s talking about Gary Damron, who organizes all of ASW’s shows. “This area has been hit so hard financially. A lot of jobs have been lost here and a lot of people are out of work. It kinda gives them something to look forward to and forget their problems for a little bit and just come out and enjoy a night of wrestling.”

Like a lot of forms of entertainment, wrestling provides escape, it’s a safe place we can go to forget our problems and be in our own universe.

One of the local wrestlers here at ASW, is a man who goes by the name of Rocky Rage. He said wrestling is his escape because it helped him get away from some of the gangs and drugs that many of his other friends were getting into.

ASW Poster Featuring Wrestler Illustration of Rocky Rage
Credit Emily Hilliard/ WV Folklife Program
ASW Poster Featuring Wrestler Illustration of Rocky Rage

“I don’t think I would have went down a different path, but I think it helped keep me away from certain settings," said Rage. "I think it was something that made me stay away from some other friends that were getting involved in gangs and this and that. And I’m like no, I can go wrestle and learn how to body slam somebody. I think I’ll do that instead.”

WVPB's Chuck Roberts contributed to this story

Copyright 2018 West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Adam is a native of Greenbrier County and graduated from Radford University in 2005 with a degree in Music Business and minor in Media Studies. After completing an internship with Mountain Stage, he was hired as Assistant Producer in October 2005. He became Executive Producer when his predecessor and co-founder Andy Ridenour retired in August 2011.
Jessica Lilly
Jessica Lilly covers southern West Virginia for West Virginia Public Radio and can be heard weekdays on West Virginia Morning, the station’s daily radio news program and during afternoon newscasts.