At the event, O'Malley had originally defeated The World's Greatest Wrestling Clown and afterwards put out an open challenge to the rest of the MEWF roster. He successfully defeated two other wrestlers, Billy Brat and Johnny Taylor, and was in the middle of wrestling the Ultimate Comet when referee Dave the Wave was bumped from the ring. In the confusion, Corporal Punishment entered the ring, attacked the Ultimate Comet, and was able to pin O'Malley by the time the referee came to. At the end of the match, fellow referee Jeff Jones confronted Dave the Wave and berated him on the outcome of the match. Their argument escalated into a full-blown fist fight which had to be broken up by Axl Rotten, Dr. Pain and the Ultimate Comet, the three sending Jones back to the locker room and setting up a "referee vs. referee" match between the two men.[7]
He later began teaming with Joe Thunder and the two briefly held the MEWF Tag Team Championship, defeating then reigning champion Michael Sweet and Rockin' Rebel (substituting for Sweet's Models Inc. tag team partner Johnny Handsome) on 8 July 1995, before losing the titles to Quinn Nash and Adam Flash the following day.[5][8] Other notable tag team partners on the "indy circuit" included Bobby Taylor, The Inferno Kid, Lucifer, Morgus the Maniac, Cueball Carmichael, and Buster Maccabi.[4]
On 7 January 2000, nearly five years after losing the MEWF tag team title, O'Malley and Joe Thunder were awarded the belts when then champions The Good, The Bad and The Ugly broke up; the titles were eventually vacated. During the first half of 2000, he made several attempts to win the MEWF Heavyweight Championship from Lucifer. Though losing to him in a cage match several months earlier, O'Malley challenged Lucifer at an MEWF house show in Dundalk, Maryland on 24 June. He confronted the champion at the start of the show, who was then conducting an in-ring interview, and took issue with Lucifer's announcement to the crowd that he would be defending the heavyweight title against the "younger and newer competition in the MEWF". O'Malley ended up attacking Lucifer and, though getting the better of him, he was pinned by the champion in the main event later that night.[20]
O'Malley appeared less and less frequently during the MEWF's last years; his final major appearance was at a memorial show for Dino Casanova in Baltimore on 9 June 2002, where he won a battle royal. O'Malley retired shortly before the MEWF closed in 2004.[21]
PWI ranked him #497 of the top 500 singles wrestlers in the PWI 500 in 1998[22]
PWI ranked him #421 of the top 500 singles wrestlers in the PWI 500 in 1996[23]
References
^ abcdefPro Wrestling Illustrated. "Statistics for Professional Wrestlers." PWI 2001 Wrestling Almanac and Book of Facts. Vol. IV. No. 1. Fort Washington, Pennsylvania: London Publishing Co., 2001. (pg. 48)
^ abcde"The PWI 500." Pro Wrestling Illustrated. Fort Washington, Pennsylvania: London Publishing Company. (Winter 1996): pg. 56.
^ abcd"The PWI 500." Pro Wrestling Illustrated. Fort Washington, Pennsylvania: London Publishing Company. (Holiday 1998): pg. 76.
^ abRoyal Duncan & Gary Will; Brian Westcott and Eric Roelfsema (2004). "MEWF Tag Team Title History". Solie's Title Histories. Solie.org. Retrieved 5 October 2011.
^Mid-Eastern Wrestling Federation (Producer) (1995). MEWF TELEVISION (VHS). Maryland: TCTapes.net.
^"RF Video Update – February 2, 2007." DeclarationofIndependents.net. Ed. Sean McCaffrey. N.p., 2 February 2007. Web. 5 October 2011. <www.declarationofindependents.net/doi/pages/rf22.html>.