Professional Wrestling Double-team Maneuvers

Professional Wrestling Double-team Maneuvers

In professional wrestling are executed by two wrestlers instead of one and typically are used by tag teams in tag team matches. Many of these maneuvers are combination of two throws, or submission holds. Most moves are known by the names that professional wrestlers give their "finishing move" (signature moves that usually result in a win) names. Occasionally, these names become popular and are used regardless of the wrestler performing the technique. Moves are listed under general categories whenever possible.

Read more about Professional Wrestling Double-team Maneuvers:  Aided Moves, Move Combinations, Dive Combination, Slingshot Catapult, Attack Combination, Leg Drop, Splash Combination, Poetry in Motion, Tandem Moves, Russian Legsweep, Clothesline Combination, Sidewalk Slam, Top-rope Legdrop Combination, Sky Lift Slam, Spanish Fly, Stack-superplex, STO, Big Boot Combination, STO, Russian Legsweep Combination, Superkick-Plex, Wheelbarrow Hold, Top Rope Legdrop Combination

Famous quotes containing the words professional and/or wrestling:

    The relationship between mother and professional has not been a partnership in which both work together on behalf of the child, in which the expert helps the mother achieve her own goals for her child. Instead, professionals often behave as if they alone are advocates for the child; as if they are the guardians of the child’s needs; as if the mother left to her own devices will surely damage the child and only the professional can rescue him.
    Elaine Heffner (20th century)

    We laugh at him who steps out of his room at the very moment when the sun steps out, and says: “I will the sun to rise”; and at him who cannot stop the wheel, and says: “I will it to roll”; and at him who is taken down in a wrestling match, and says: “I lie here, but I will that I lie here!” And yet, all laughter aside, do we ever do anything other than one of these three things when we use the expression, “I will”?
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)