By Trapper Tom, Editor, KSWA Digest
The most overlooked item in Keystone State Wrestling Alliance (KSWA) legend will fall silent after the Main Event on Saturday December 6 at the American Legion in Sheraden. It’s the famed KSWA ring.
Four steel posts, the four sidebars, the support posts, the wood planks, the padding, the ropes, the canvas, ring skirts, the turnbuckles and the connectors that hold it all in place. What has been a 16 foot by 16 foot collection of memories.
The current ring is not the original from Peabody High School in 2000. That was a rental. But after a few years and successful cards later, an investment was made to bring in a new stage for the Megastars.
Since those earliest of days just over two decades ago, the ring has been stored, piled into a U-Haul truck, unloaded, set up, disassembled, loaded and unloaded hundreds of times. Most times it has been hauled and cared for by a small conglomerate—sometimes as few as two, sometimes four (and oftentimes a few more)—who have gathered earlier than many workdays, and toiled through extreme cold, rain, snow, as well as sweltering summer days.
The exercise has been a rite of passage. Occasionally, teens have “lifted boards,” but usually has been a pack of now-50-somethings that have been gotten splinters, dropped steel on a toe, or simply poked fun at each other for two decades.
In the past quarter century, there hasn’t been more lofty equipment in the Pittsburgh wrestling scene. It has served a key role in crowning dozens of championship matches, as well as thousands of others. For those who care about the biggest names in the business, it has hosted Bruno Sammartino, Dominic DeNucci, Donna Christiantello, Angie Minelli, Bob Backlund, the Rock n’ Roll Express, James J. Dillon, “Big Bully” Nick Busick, “Luscious” Johnny Valliant, Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Hillbilly Jim, Ricky “The Drago” Steamboat, Bill Apter, Tito Santana, Nikita Koloff, the “Hands of Stone” Ronnie Garvin and many more.
City and borough Mayors, local leaders and children holding American flags have entered between the ropes. National star Gabby Barrett, the Virginia Military Institute’s first female Regimental Commander Kasey Meredith and next May’s star of Disney’s The Little Mermaid Jr., Samantha Knavish, have all performed the National Anthem inside the squared circle.
But it’s also been home to Shawn Blanchard, Lou Martin, “King” Del Douglas, Shane Starr, “Big Country” Matt McGraw, Tyler Grayson, Mitch Napier, Freek E. Doyle, Man-Child, and “The Count” Mark Charles III who have all in recent years muscled up in and out of the ring. There was a time in which 70-something year old KSWA Hall of Famer Howard Kernats wasn’t shy about lending a hand.
The KSWA ring has provided the platform for 20 toy drives, hundreds of fundraisers, thousands of dollars and countless memories. Thanks to a neighborhood of caring friends, some $14,000 was raised in one day for a man in need. It held several Deaf Wrestlefest fundraisers that included the likes of Shane Douglas, Mick Foley and Tony Atlas. It was the location of the very last “cross-promotional” super shows the region will ever hold.
The ring has been housed and maintained by the KSWA Championship Committee, while Kommissioner Tim Steiner has personally welded the structure and built the steps that have welcomed hundreds into the ring. At the conclusion of FanFest on December 6, the KSWA will pull away from the most famed wrestling ring in Pittsburgh since Studio Wrestling. It will be decades before anything will come close to that again.


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