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IWF Monthly #11, July 1998

IWF WORLD CHAMPION
MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Ripping Ron Chaff breezed to the IWF World Title after winning the heavyweight strap in his league, Hardcore Blood Wrestling in the Tough Guy Division. Chaff had an unmatched 499 for his managern Evil Eli (owned by Mr. Whitney Smith) of Oregon, who had an awesome cycle, and who also wins the 25 free matches along with the honor of being World champ.

INTERCONTINENTAL CHAMPION
Winning the IWF Intercontinental Championship as the king of all Jr. Heavyweight champions was
MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Baby (Censored) Orlando Fuentes, who had a great 498 out of Hardcore Blood Wrestling.  He is also managed by Evil Eli (Mr. Whitney Smith) of Oregon and wins another 15 freebies!

GLOBAL CHAMPION
Evil Eli (Mr. Whitney Smith) of Oregon completed the Hat Trick of IWF singles titles by also winning the Global Championship with his wrestler, MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Big (Censored) Leaky of Hardcore Blood Wrestling.  He had to edge out DP:  Dark Underling #1 (HBW) and MOFOS:  Major Lee Pyst (HBW) by point concentration en route to the title.  Leaky�s prize is 10 free!

WORLD TAG CHAMPIONS
World Tag was actually not won by Evil Eli!
DM�s:  Hitman Howard Capone (no relation to our Howard) and Crazy Carl Capone bested all tag teams with a 522 pointer out of Sheer Technical Wrestling.  They are managed by Chris Dutschmann of Texas, of IWF web-page fame, who wins another 10 free matches.!

WORLD SIX-MAN CHAMPS
Evil Eli (Mr. Whitney Smith) of Oregon capped off an historic cycle by also winning the IWF World Six-Man Championship out of Disgruntled Veterans Wrestling with his team known as the Three Disgruntled Kickass Brawlers (MAIM/XX/WDCS�:  Lobo the Crippler, Frag Master, and Spine Snapper), who had a 530 pointer.  He wins another 10 free matches!  

ROOKIE CHALLENGE
SP:  Fat Ass Eric Cartman, from the hilarious cartoon known as South Park, made a strong debut here in the IWF in United States Wrestling.  He went on to win the Rookie Challenge for his manager, Chad Hull of Iowa.

IWF-WIDE REGION CHAMPS
East:  
DP:  Dark Underling #1 (HBW)  *496
North:  
MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Big (Censored) Leaky (HBW) *496
Plains:  
MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Mutant Dog (Censored) Jim Benson (HBW) *495
South:  
CLAN:  Psycho Santa (HBW) *495
West:  
MOFOS:  Major Lee Pyst (HBW) *496

DIVISION CHAMPIONS
CLAN:  Nick �Nitro� Glyceron of Canadian Pride Wrestling prevailed after a titanic struggle on point concentration with MOFOS:  Bugs Caparelli (USW) to win the Continental Division Championship with a 493 point strategy.  Nick is managed by Julius Hudson of Virginia.  Meanwhile, MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Ripping Ron Chaff of Hardcore Blood Wrestling reigned supreme in the Tough Guy Division and went on to win the World title for manager Evil Eli and owner Mr. Whitney Smith of Oregon.

ULTIMATE ROYAL CHAMP
Ultimate Royal once again boiled down to a point concentration war.  In the end, however,
MOFOS:  �Italian Stallion� Guido Fedrico of Canadian Pride Wrestling outdid Dralock (USW) and SBWC:  Jacob �Full of Class� Gabriel (STW), who all had 137 point battle royal strategies, to win the title for his manager, Michael Bamberg of Lousiana.

MANAGER RANKINGS
1) Nathan Couch- 1256 pts.
2)
Evil Eli (Mr. Whitney Smith)- 528 pts.
3)
Michael Bamberg- 419 pts.
4)
T.J. Allan- 395 pts.
5)
Mike Paciga- 267 pts.
6)
Erik Engstrom- 241 pts.
7)
Julius Hudson- 223 pts.
8)
Chris Dutschmann- 210 pts.
9)
Bill James- 204 pts.
10)
Robert Coplin- 132 pts.

WRESTLER RANKINGS
1) CLAN:  Avatarr the Collector (STW)- 210
2)
CLAN:  Crono-Father (STW)- 205
3)
MOFOS:  Salvatore Lucania (CPW)- 170
4)
MOFOS:  Left-Out Lefty (STW)- 170
5)
QW:  Fat Guy Who Needs A Bra (USW)-168
6)
MOFOS:  Johnny Carlito (STW)-150
7)
CLAN:  The Cuban Warlord (USW)- 150
8)
MAIM/XX/WDCS:  Ripping Ron Chaff (HBW)- 147 pts.
9)
DGM:  The IWF Franchise (USW)- 140
10)
CLAN:  Nick �Nitro� Glyceron (CPW)-137

From the desk of the IWF
We are happy to announce that cycle #12 will mark the one-year anniversary of the IWF!  We have been delighted to give you the cutting edge in fantasy wrestling over the last year, and we will try to do so for many more!  To commemorate this, we will end all competition for manager of the year and wrestler of the year rankings next cycle, and the winners will be announced in cycle #13.  (We have yet to decide what the prizes for these will be.)  In addition, the IWF-Wide Pay-Per-View extravaganza will also mark our one year anniversary.  We need all matches, which are only $2 each and which include a full match description, in by the start of cycle #12.  On a different note, we realize that it is unfair to many of our managers to lose titles or matches to wrestlers that have been perennially inactive.  Therefore, starting with this cycle, you will notice a different system in regards to inactive wrestlers.  If a wrestler is inactive for one cycle, his strategy from the prior cycle will be used and he will still be eligible to win a title.  However, once a wrestler is inactive for two cycles, he will be ineligible to win a title and less likely to win matches, as his strategy will be 478.  If a wrestler with a winning record is inactive for three or more cycles, his strategy will be 470; if a wrestler with a losing record is inactive for three or more cycles, his strategy will be 450.  These innovations should make it fairer for our active managers, while making our lives easier in the process.   Look for more info. on our ad in a wrestling magazine, the �Play For Free For Six Months� contest, the Supercard, and MLW in next month�s IWF Monthly.  Here are the top 10 reasons managers love the IWF (courtesy of Joe Toon):
1) Real customer service--if we screw up, we take full responsibility and correct it, but our record as far as mistakes go is few and far between.
2) Freedom to have your wrestlers speak freely.  We have the most liberal censors in the pbm world.
3) Promotional Reports--Other PBM�s just slop together what its managers send in; the IWF actually reads what you send in and integrates it into the promotional report, one of the most innovative segments in play-by-mail, where the wrestlers in the league are talked about, angles pushed, etc.
4) Color bulletins, not that cheesy black and white stuff!
5) Commissioner/Event Promoter Reports allow for an interplay of commissionership and role-playing that is unique in the pbm industry.  Other PBM�s certainly do not allow its commissioners this much authority, airtime, influence, etc.
6) Modern Hold Values--We're not stuck in the dark ages with punches, kicks, and hip tosses.
7) In the IWF there are more holds that can hit, thus the difficulty of the hold values is much greater, therefore it's not easy to dominate.  
8) Cheaper Prices--In the IWF you can get a match steal of 18 for $8 and 4 for 1 after!
9) Convenience--The IWF allows you to e-mail your comments.
10) Contests--Free Match Bonzanza and Play For Free are real and winnable and not stupid contests.
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