Also known as pro wrestling, pro-wrestling
fictionalized martial arts events with professional athletes who are allowed the use of throws, jumps, grappling, and striking techniques
Professional wrestling is a form of entertainment featuring trained athletes who perform choreographed matches using techniques like throws, jumps, grappling, and strikes. It matters to millions of fans worldwide as a popular form of sports entertainment that combines athletic skill with theatrical storytelling.
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Christopher Daniels performing a flying crossbody on Jonny Storm; like all wrestling moves, this requires coordination between both wrestlers in order to ensure each other's safety.
Professional wrestling, often referred to as pro wrestling, or simply, wrestling, is a form of athletic theater centered around mock combat, with the premise that its performers are competitive wrestlers. The legitimate sport of wrestling has never been popular enough in the United States to sustain a professional scene because the action is considered too slow-paced. In the late 19th century, wrestlers dealt with this by quietly fixing their matches so that they could display more entertaining action. Through improvisation and choreography, they could perform more spectacular moves that rarely (if ever) occurred in a real wrestling match, and thus managed to draw sustainable audiences.
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