With Vincent Kennedy McMahon taking over the WWF from his ailing father Vincent James McMahon, the younger McMahon broke several major cardinal rules such as not invading other territories and taking them over and raiding the other promotions of their top talent. He'd even book his shows in other's respective territories.
McMahon acquired many top wrestlers, managers, and announcers in late 1983 and 1984 from various NWA top affiliates as well as Verne Gagne's AWA such as "Rowdy" Roddy Piper, Greg "The Hammer" Valentine, Bob Orton Jr., Bobby "The Brain" Heenan, Ken Patera, "Mean" Gene Okerlund, and the biggest acquisition Hulk Hogan, who was the number one promoter in the WWF.
Even though the elder McMahon and his WWF was not affiliated with the top and oldest wrestling promotion at the time the NWA and it's various territories throughout the United States, the elder McMahon still respected the code of staying in his territory. This was a lot like Gagne and his Minneapolis-based AWA, who also wasn't affiliated with the NWA but stayed only in his region and did not dare go to the other territories and they left him alone.
In 1984, the younger McMahon took over a major NWA affiliate by purchasing Georgia Championship Wrestling and taking over its Saturday night time slot to show his WWF programming beginning on July 14, 1984. The incident was known on as "Black Saturday." The war was on.
Promoters knew they had to either team up against McMahon or be out of business. The owner and promoter of the NWA's therefore wrestling's top promotion Jim Crockett Jr. of Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP) Mid-Atlantic Championship Wrestling decided to fight back.
Crockett formed an alliance with other promoters Gagne of the AWA, Jerry Jarrett and Jerry Lawler of Continental Wrestling Association (CWA), and Ole Anderson of Georgia Championship Wrestling along with other promoters of various NWA territories to create Pro Wrestling USA.
The joint venture was created to promote shows throughout the country and take it to McMahon and the WWF. They taped many shows in East Rutherford, New Jersey in the heart of WWF country in an attempt to undermine them.
Even though the WWF was on its way up with "Hulkamania", the NWA Mid Atlantic-JCP was still the top promotion in 1984 and the NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair was recognized as the top world heavyweight champion in wrestling, even more than the WWF World Heavyweight Champion Hulk Hogan.
Flair won the title, his second reign as NWA world champion, from the legendary Harley Race on Thanksgiving Night November 24, 1983 at the inaugural Starrcade supercars from Greensboro, North Carolina. The inaugural Starrcade event changed the face of professional wrestling as super cards were shown only on closed circuit television and eventually on pay-per-view (PPV).
Both the NWA and soon after the WWF, beginning with WrestleMania, began showing these supercards on PPV once a year and soon added another, and another, and another. Soon there would be a PPV event up to six times a year to now where there is one every month of the year.
Flair was the NWA world champion, the best in the business. After trading the championship with Race during an international tour in March 1984, Flair's next challenger was a kid from Dallas, Texas Kerry Von Erich.
Kerry was from the famous Von Erich family from Texas' NWA affiliate World Class Championship Wrestling (WCCW) as the NWA recognized Kerry as the number one contender to Flair's NWA World Title. Before Kerry, his brother David Von Erich was actually the number one contender to the NWA World Title.
The NWA Championship Committee supposedly voted David to defeat Flair for the title in either March or April 1984. Sadly, on February 10, 1984 during a tour of Japan, David Von Erich died suddenly from an intestinal rupture caused by a stomach ailment. This was the start of the "Von Erich family curse" where brothers Mike, Chris, and Kerry would eventually kill themselves in later years.
Flair defended the NWA title against Kerry at Texas Stadium on May 6, 1984 in the David Von Erich Memorial Parade of Champions event held in the honor of David Von Erich. Over 45,000 fans witnessed the Texan Kerry Von Erich defeating Flair to win the NWA World Heavyweight Championship.
18 days later in Yokosuka, Japan, Flair won back the NWA World Title from Kerry Von Erich for his fourth reign as world champion. This reign as world champion for Flair would last for over two years, 793 days.
Flair defended the title against Dusty Rhodes in a one million dollar challenge at Starrcade '84 on Thanksgiving Night, November 22, 1984 from Greensboro. Flair defeated Rhodes to retain the title when special guest referee and Boxing legend "Smokin" Joe Frazier stopped the match due to excessive blood from Rhodes.
Flair dominated 1984 on his way to an even more successful 1985. The NWA and JCP was quiet outside of the Pro Wrestling USA merger, but things would get interesting as Jim Crockett and the NWA would start consolidating territories into one super power to take on Vince McMahon and the WWF.
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