The British Rules of Pro Wrestling were known under the various names, but it appears that since the very introduction of all-in style in the 1930s they all were pretty much the same. This ruleset is called Modern International Catch As Catch Can.
I am still wondering why Irslinger went to the trouble of going around the world, spreading the "new wrestling" style?
If he was being paid a cut from every promoter who he introduced the style to, and helped get it off the ground, then it would make sense, but I doubt that was the case. Maybe he negotiated a one-off "finders fee" for introducing it and then moved on to the next place.
Or maybe it was because he was paid to train the initial group of wrestlers in every territory, and then made an agents fee, supplying wrestlers from one country to go on tour in other countries.
SaxonWolf it's a dilemma...why? It appears to me that sooner or later this new style would have taken over the worlds pro wrestling. Old school or what I call "pretend to be real sport" kind of pro wrestling of the 1800s irritated fans simply because they trusted it for so long (and wasted and lost money on it, hahahah) and after it was exposed worldwide around 1910 their trust was gone. It couldn't simply disappear so to survive it turned into "all-in" comedy club "ultra-violence" farce.
I am still wondering why Irslinger went to the trouble of going around the world, spreading the "new wrestling" style?
If he was being paid a cut from every promoter who he introduced the style to, and helped get it off the ground, then it would make sense, but I doubt that was the case. Maybe he negotiated a one-off "finders fee" for introducing it and then moved on to the next place.
Or maybe it was because he was paid to train the initial group of wrestlers in every territory, and then made an agents fee, supplying wrestlers from one country to go on tour in other countries.
Fascinating, to me at least.