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Page "Professional wrestling throws" ¶ 8
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wrestler and grabs
The wrestler grabs one of the opponent's arms, jumps and connects both his knees against the opponent's stretched arm.
An arm drag performed where the attacking wrestler grabs an opponent's arm, runs up the corner ring ropes and springboards, usually off the top rope, over the opponent.
An arm wringer or spinning wristlock is a move in which the wrestler grabs the opponent's arm by the wrist / arm and twists it over the wrestler's head to spin it around with enough force to take the opponent to the mat.
A back body drop or backdrop ( also sometimes called a shoulder back toss ), is a move in which a wrestler bends forward or crouches in front of their opponent, grabs hold of the opponent, and stands up, lifting the opponent up and over and dropping them behind the back.
The wrestler stands to the side of their opponent, grabs him, and throws him forward, causing him to flip over on to his back.
A bulldog, originally known as bulldogging or a bulldogging headlock or the headlock jawbreaker is any move in which the wrestler grabs an opponent's head and jumps forward, so that the wrestler lands, often in a sitting position, and drives the opponent's face into the mat.
Standing next to or diagonally behind an opponent, the attacking wrestler leaps up, grabs the opponent's head and pulls backwards, resulting in both individuals landing supine.
A DDT is a move which a wrestler grabs an opponents head and falls backwards to make the opponents head hit the mat.
The wrestler catches and grabs the opponent from either his waist or both legs, and lifts the opponent so he would either face the mat while being vertically elevated off the mat ( with both his legs grabbed over the wrestler's shoulders ) or literally facing the wrestler's back while being lifted upside down with the wrestler still taking hold of both the opponent's legs ( belly-to-back position ).
This is a legwhip where a wrestler grabs an opponent's leg and holds it parallel to the mat while they are facing each other.
The wrestler then grabs one of the opponent's arms in a stepover armlock, spinning 360 ° so the opponent's arm is bent with pressure on it, and results in the wrestler facing the same direction as he did before applying the hold.
Technically known as a belly-to-back waist lock suplex, the wrestler stands behind the opponent, grabs them around their waist, lifts them up, and falls backwards while bridging his back and legs, slamming the opponent down to the mat shoulder and upper back first.
A modification of this move is the machine gun suplex, in which the attacking wrestler holds the head-and-arm grip using just one of his own arms, and with his other grabs the opponent's free wrist and forces it behind his back to secure a hammerlock.
Holding the opponent's legs in place, the wrestler then grabs the opponent's leg which he has crossed over the other and steps over him, flipping him over into a prone position before leaning back to compress his lower back.
A short-arm lariat is variation where the wrestler grabs one of the opponent's wrists with his hand and pulls the opponent closer, striking him with the lariat with his other arm.
Seen when a wrestler who is on the opposite side of the ring ropes from an opponent ( on the ' apron ') grabs him by the head and drops down, forcing the opponent's throat across the ropes.
Similar to the normal hangman, which sees the wrestler standing outside the ring or on the apron, grabs the back of the opponent's head or neck ( who is lying against the set of ropes, facing to the inside of the ring ) into the ropes.
The attacking wrestler then grabs the opponent's legs, crosses them, and places them under one of their armpits, bending the opponent to a pinning predicament.
The attacking wrestler then grabs the opponent's arms and lifts them over their thighs, similar to a camel clutch.
From this position, the attacking wrestler stands next to the opponent's hip, grabs one arm and applies an armbar.
Another wrestler then climbs to the top turnbuckle, faces away from the ring, and grabs a three-quarter facelock on the opponent, performing a shiranui, while the other wrestler slams the opponent down.

wrestler and her
His mistress, Marcia, finds her name on the imperial execution list and hires the champion wrestler named Narcissus to assassinate Commodus.
At the age of 61, Mae West became romantically involved with one of the musclemen in her Las Vegas stage show, wrestler, former Mr. California, and former merchant marine Chester Rybonski ( 1923 – 1999 ).
Still failing to win her back, Morgan now secures the help of his mother's wrestler friend Wally " The Gorilla " ( Arthur Mullard ) to kidnap Leonie, who still nurtures feelings of residual love tinged with pity for Morgan but in the end, Morgan is arrested and committed to an insane asylum, where a most pregnant Leonie visits him looking visibly terribly pregnant.
Amy Christine Dumas ( born April 14, 1975 ), best known by her stage name Lita, is the lead singer for the band The Luchagors as well as a retired professional wrestler and WWE Diva active from 1999 to 2006.
She gained international fame from the mid-1980s to the early 1990s in the World Wrestling Federation, and the mid-1990s in World Championship Wrestling in her role as the manager to wrestler " Macho Man " Randy Savage.
McMahon then began an on-screen relationship with wrestler Test, which led to a rivalry between him and her older brother Shane.
Psaltis was also offered a contract by WCW, but declined to leave ECW in order to remain with her fiancé, ECW wrestler Simon Diamond.
Stacy Keibler ( born October 14, 1979 ) is an American actress, model, and retired professional wrestler and valet, best known for her work with World Championship Wrestling ( WCW ) and World Wrestling Entertainment ( WWE ).
A move in which the wrestler uses his or her opponent's momentum to the opponent's disadvantage.
The wrestler hooks the opponent's arm and flips him or her over on to the mat.
The wrestler may roll on to his or her side to give the move extra momentum.
This move is performed when an opponent runs towards the wrestler facing him or her.
When the opponent is in range, the wrestler hooks the opponent's near arm with both hands and falls backwards forcing the wrestler's own momentum to cause him or her to flip forwards over the head of the wrestler and on to his or her back.
Periodically called a Manhattan Drop, this is a move in which the wrestler puts his or her head under the opponent's shoulder and lifts the opponent up and then drops his or her " lower abdomen region " or groin first on the wrestler's knee.
The wrestler ducks, hooks one of the opponent's legs with one of his / her arms, stands up and falls backwards, flipping the opponent and driving him / her back first down to the mat, with the wrestler landing on top of the opponent.
A brainbuster is a move in which a wrestler puts his / her opponent in a front facelock, hooks his / her tights, and lifts him / her up as if he / she was performing a vertical suplex.

wrestler and opponent's
In order to score by pinfall, a wrestler must pin both his opponent's shoulders against the mat while the referee slaps the mat three times ( referred to as a " three count ").
If a wrestler's shoulders are down ( both shoulders touching the mat ) and any part of the opponent's body is lying over the wrestler, it is completely legal to start a three count.
For example, an attacking wrestler who is half-conscious may simply drape an arm over a prone opponent, or a cocky wrestler may simply place his foot gently on a prone opponent's body, prompting a three-count from the referee.
Takanohana was largely a yotsu-sumo wrestler, favouring techniques which involved grabbing his opponent's mawashi or belt.
An armbreaker is any move in which the wrestler slams the opponent's arm against a part of the wrestler's body, usually a knee or shoulder.
The wrestler stands beside his opponent to his either side, crosses his arm against the opponent's opposite hand in front of it ( as the wrestler stands beside the opponent, and uses for example his right arm, he would cross it against the opponent's left arm, and vice versa ).
From this point, the wrestler places his leg in front of the opponent's opposite leg, and falls backwards, causing the opponent's arm to be slammed into the mat.
This variation of the armbreaker involves the attacking wrestler grabbing the opponent's left or right arm, holding it across their chest and then falling backwards, dropping the opponent face first as well as damaging the opponent's arm and shoulder.
As the wrestler falls onto his back he forces the opponent's arm down into both knees, thus damaging it.
An arm drag which sees the wrestler being spun in front of the opponent's body in a tilt-a-whirl, and then ending it up with an arm drag.

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