CMLL International Gran Prix (2006)

The CMLL International Gran Prix (2006) was a lucha libre, or professional wrestling, tournament produced and scripted by the Mexican professional wrestling promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL; "World Wrestling Council" in Spanish) which took place on May 12, 2006 in Arena México, Mexico City, Mexico, CMLL's main venue. The 2006 International Gran Prix was the ninth time CMLL has held an International Gran Prix tournament since 1994. All International Gran Prix tournaments have been a one-night tournament, always as part of CMLL's Friday night CMLL Super Viernes shows.

CMLL International Gran Prix (2006)
Milano Collection A.T., in Mexico for a short visit
PromotionConsejo Mundial de Lucha Libre
DateMay 12, 2006
CityMexico City, Mexico
VenueArena México
Event chronology
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50. Aniversario de Arena México
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Torneo Gran Alternativa
International Gran Prix chronology
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2005
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2007

The ninth International Gran Prix tournament featured a 16-man torneo cibernetico elimination match between a team representing Mexico (L.A. Park, Dos Caras Jr., Dr. Wagner Jr., Heavy Metal, Mr. Niebla, Héctor Garza, Olímpico and Último Guerrero) facing a team of "International" wrestlers, some who worked for CMLL at the time (Marco Corleone, Shigeo Okumura and Pierroth, a Japanese wrestlers who worked mainly in Mexico at the time (Hajime Ohara and Masada) and as well as three foreign born wrestlers that did not generally work in Mexico at the time (Katsushi Takemura, Milano Collection AT and Johnny Stamboli). The match came down to Último Guerrero and Johnny Stambol as the final two participants and saw Guerrero win the Gran Prix.

Production

Background

In 1994 the Mexican professional wrestling promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) organized their first ever International Gran Prix tournament. The first tournament followed the standard "single elimination" format and featured sixteen wrestlers in total, eight representing Mexico and eight "international" wrestlers.[1] In the end Mexican Rayo de Jalisco Jr. defeated King Haku in the finals to win the tournament.[1] In 1995 CMLL brought the tournament back, creating an annual tournament held every year from 1995 through 1998 and then again in 2002, 2003 and finally from 2005 through 2008.[1]

Storylines

The CMLL Gran Prix show featured four professional wrestling matches scripted by CMLL with some wrestlers involved in scripted feuds. The wrestlers portray either heels (referred to as rudos in Mexico, those that play the part of the "bad guys") or faces (técnicos in Mexico, the "good guy" characters) as they perform.[2]

Tournament

Tournament overview

# Eliminated By Team
1 Hajime Ohara Heavy Metal Team International
2 MAZADA Olímpico Team International
3 Mr. Niebla Katsushi Takemura Team Mexico
4 Heavy Metal Johnny Stamboli Team Mexico
5 Milano Collection AT Héctor Garza Team International
6 Héctor Garza Katsushi Takemura Team Mexico
7 Olímpico Johnny Stamboli Team Mexico
8 Dr. Wagner Jr. Pierroth Jr. Team Mexico
9 L.A. Park Okumura and Katsushi Takemura Team Mexico
10 Marco Corelone Dos Caras Jr. Team International
11 Pierroth Jr. Dos Caras Jr. Team International
12 Okumura Último Guerrero Team International
13 Dos Caras Jr. Katsushi Takemura (Double elimination) Team Mexico
14 Katsushi Takemura Dos Caras Jr. (Double elimination) Team International
15 Johnny Stamboli Último Guerrero Team International
16 Último Guerrero (Winner) Team Mexico

Tournament show

No. Results[3] Stipulations
1 Marcela, Mima Shimoda, and Sahori defeated Hiroka, La Amapola, and Princesa Sujei Best two-out-of-three tag team falls match
2 Último Guerrero defeated Dos Caras Jr., Dr. Wagner Jr., Hajime Ohara, Heavy Metal, Héctor Garza, Johnny Stamboli, Katsushi Takemura, L.A. Park, Mark Jindrak, MAZADA, Milano Collection AT, Mr. Niebla, Okumura, Olímpico, and Pierroth Jr. 2006 International Gran Prix 16-man torneo cibernetico elimination match
3 The Great Muta and Último Dragón defeat Los Guerreros del Atlantida (Atlantis and Rey Bucanero) Best two-out-of-three tag team falls match
4 Black Warrior defeated Místico (c) Best two-out-of-three falls match for the NWA World Middleweight Championship

References

  1. "CMLL Gran Prix Tournament". ProWrestlingHistory.com. Retrieved June 1, 2015.
  2. Madigan, Dan (2007). ""Okay... what is Lucha Libre?"". Mondo Lucha a Go Go: the bizarre & honorable world of wild Mexican wrestling. New York, New York: HarperColins Publisher. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-06-085583-3. featuring clearly distinguished good guys and bad guys, or técnicos and rudos
  3. "Gran Prix Cibernetico 2006". ProWrestlingHistory.com. May 12, 2006. Retrieved August 30, 2009.
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