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==Competition==
Power Slam recently gained some competition with the launch of [[Fighting Spirit magazine]] on [[April 13]] [[2006]]. This new publication includes regular contributions from well known wrestling pundits such as [[Bill Apter]], [[Bryan Alvarez]] and [[Lance Storm]]. Although this new publication has increased the pressure on Power Slam, the magazine continues to be the lead source of information for fans.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 09:58, 28 May 2008

Power Slam is an independent monthly non-kayfabe wrestling magazine published in the United Kingdom by SW Publishing, with co-publishers Findlay Martin and Colin Bowman. It began life as Superstars of Wrestling before altering to its current name after 30 issues in 1994. The magazine's UK-wide release occurs on the last Thursday of every month. In December of 2006 Power Slam achieved its 150 issue mark.

Columnists

  • Findlay "Fin" Martin, current editor.
  • Mohammed Chatra, also known for presenting Pro Wrestling NOAH on the UK's satellite sports channel TWC Fight! (formerly The Wrestling Channel).
  • Greg Lambert, a respected British journalist, wrestling manager and promoter for the XWA.
  • Patty Therre, former editor of WCW Magazine, editor of Wrestling On The Fringe[1] and contributing editor to GardenandHearth.[2]
  • Stately Wayne Manor,[3] the only featured columnist to maintain kayfabe, living up to his image as an ultra-conceited heel manager. Manor joined the staff halfway through the "Superstars of Wrestling" period. He recently put his autograph up for sale on Yahoo auctions with a starting price of $9,000,000.[4] It failed to sell.
  • Oliver Hurley
  • Phil Jones (also a photographer)
  • Ant Evans, formerly editor of boxing news site SecondsOut[5] and writer for Boxing Monthly magazine. Evans now works for the UFC in the UK.

Content

The magazine is geared more to pro-wrestling than sports entertainment, covering promotions from all over the world (particularly Japanese puroresu), and has also on occasion covered MMA events. This has often partly been to do with involvement of professional wrestling personalities, for example Mirko "Cro Cop" Filipović has appeared in the pages of Power Slam numerous times due to Japanese promoters (especially K-1) pitting him against wrestlers in legitimate shoot fights.

Power Slam takes an impartial view on the wrestling world being non affiliated with any wrestling promotion or organization, and is not afraid to criticize the promotions it covers. Contributor Greg Lambert has been an on-screen talent and behind-the-scenes promoter/booker for Britain's Frontier Wrestling Alliance but the magazine has never crossed the grounds of journalistic integrity by inviting/allowing him to promote his real-life business.

Regular features

  • Summary of recent results, occurrences of note and injuries from the American, Japanese and British scenes.
  • Readers questions answered.
  • "On the Road" results from House Shows for WWE, TNA and FWA.
  • "I'm Just Being Honest With You..." (formerly "If I Can Be Serious"), a section of the most ironic or bizarre quotations from wrestling television the previous month.
  • "Baloney.com", a subsection devoted to humorous fan comments from the Usenet newsgroup rec.sport.pro-wrestling and occasionally other fan-owned websites.
  • Reader Feedback.

This is in addition to articles penned every month which can range from full show reviews (TNA and RoH shows are now in almost every issue); critiques of a wrestler, promotion or existing storyline; articles looking at the history of a promotion or wrestling personality and obituaries.

PS 50

Every year the magazine presents the PS 50 (akin to the PWI 500) listing the 50 wrestlers whom the writers believe to have had the most successful year, in terms of workrate and performance. Kurt Angle came top in the most recent PS 50, followed by Nigel McGuinness and KENTA.

There is also an annual reader's poll for various awards ('match of the year', etc) similar to that carried out by RSPW. Many of their polls listed, for their time, surprising and unsurprising results (at least two polls once labeled popular wrestling stars like The Undertaker and John Cena as the "Most Abysmal Wrestlers" of their respective years, Undertaker in 2001, John Cena in 2005.

Despite their criticisms, their readers polls always crown WWE as the top promotion of the year until 2005, where TNA overtook the company for the first time. TNA would follow up that victory with another in the 2006 reader awards, although in 2007 the percentage of votes for TNA dropped considerably.



References