Sbraccia and Apollo made one last attempt to regain the belts when the ICW Tag Team Championship was declared vacant in the spring of 1990. On March 31, they lost to The Undertakers in Charlton, Massachusetts, in a match to decide the new champions.[6][19] The Dynamic Duo broke up shortly afterwards and Sbraccia formed a tag team with GQ Madison in an attempt to regain the titles from The Undertakers. On September 6, 1990, Sbraccia and GQ Madison fought The Undertakers to a double-disqualification in Newport, Vermont. They were defeated by The Undertakers later that month at the State University of New York at Delhi.[20]
Despite losing the heavyweight title, The Brotherhood still held the NWA New England Tag Team Championship.[24] On the same night he lost the heavyweight title, Sbraccia and Nelson defeated both Slyck Wagner Brown & Steve Morabito and The New York Posse (Curtis Slamdawg & Jay Kobain).[44] They also successfully defended their titles against Bob Evans & Rocky Shore and The New York Posse in Melrose, Massachusetts, on October 17, 1998.[45]
Their victory was considered a high point in the history of NWA England and brought national exposure to the company. The promotion also received attention from wrestling magazine publishers Bill Apter and George Napolitano. The NWA had initially intended the tag title to be traded among its various NWA affiliates shortly after the 50th Anniversary Show, however, Rumble and Sheldon Goldberg took the initiative and began booking title defenses for The Brotherhood on their own. Goldberg was able to contact Wally Yamaguchi, though his brother Shun, and arranged for The Brotherhood to tour Japan as the NWA Tag Team Champions. It was the first time the NWA had toured the country in several years.[52] On January 30, 1999, at a live event for Worldwide Pro Wrestling, The Brotherhood took part in a battle royal at the Kitakyushu Municipal Ogura Northern Gym in Fukuoka, Japan. Sbraccia and Nelson were the final participants along with fellow "gaijin" wrestler The Hater of Pro Wrestling America. Instead of turning on each other, The Brotherhood tossed The Hater out of the ring and were declared co-winners of the battle royal. On another tour six months later, The Brotherhood feuded with The Caffeine Connection (Cola Kid and Pepsi Boy) over the NWA World Tag Team Championship. The Brotherhood appeared to have lost the belts on the tour, during an impromptu match with The Caffeine Connection, which saw interference from both Kinjiro Oki and "Wild" Bill Irwin, however the officials reversed the decision.[53]
On February 26, The Brotherhood were scheduled to defend the belts against Team Extreme at an NWA Southwest show in North Richland Hills, Texas, but were unable to appear due to heavy snow. In addition to the team missing a mandatory title defense, NWA officials were becoming displeased with the promotion holding on to the world tag title for so long. The title was declared held-up on March 3 and the NWA Board of Directors threatened to strip The Brotherhood of the championship if they failed to appear at the next NWA Southwest show at the Bronco Bowl Arena in Dallas that summer. NWA New England would also be fined $5,000 if they did not comply. Sbraccia, especially coming off an international tour to Japan, was concerned that another extended trip to Texas might result in being released from his regular job.[52]
On June 10, 1999, Rick Fuller was brought in to replace Sbraccia at the Dallas show to battle Team Extreme for the vacant tag team championship. The Brotherhood managed to win back the belts via reverse decision.[62][63] Meanwhile, Sbraccia had undergone knee surgery and was subsequently replaced by Dukes Dalton in The Brotherhood's NWA tag team title defenses.[4][64] Nelson and Dalton won the NWA briefly lost the belts to The Public Enemy in Bolton, Massachusetts, but regained them in Dorchester two days later. They eventually dropped the titles to Team Extreme at the NWA's 51st Anniversary Show in Charlotte, North Carolina, that fall.[6][62][64]
Independent circuit and retirement (2000–2002)
Sbraccia eventually returned to action and made a few appearances for Knuckles Nelson's Wrestling Star Wars promotion, most notably, wrestling Tiger Mulligan in Salisbury Beach, Massachusetts, on July 14, 2001.[65] Sbraccia briefly returned to NWA New England, along with fellow Brotherhood member Tre, in February 2002.[66] On February 16, 2002, at the "Broken Hearts & Broken Bones" benefit show, Sbraccia defeated Rick Fuller for the NWA New England Brass Knuckles Championship in Malden, Massachusetts. His comeback was cut short, however, when he left the promotion that summer[67][68] and subsequently retired. In 2015, Sbraccia was inducted into the New England Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame.[69]
PWI ranked Eric Sbraccia # 262 of the 500 best singles wrestlers of the PWI 500 in 1999[4]
References
^ abcdefgPro 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. 50)
^Palladino, Rich. "Arena Reports: Massachusetts - Century Wrestling Alliance TV taping at the CWA Arena." Pro Wrestling Illustrated. October 1996: 49+.
^Baker, David; Graham Cawthon, Barry Rose, Mark Eastridge, Rich Tate, Ron Widmar, and Jim Zordani (November 4, 2009). "Tully Blanchard". MidAtlanticGateway.com. David Baker's Mid-Atlantic Wrestling Superstar Results. Archived from the original on April 2, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^ abcDuncan, Royal and Gary Will; Matt Benaka, Brian Westcott, Eric Roelfsema, Richard Sullivan, Andrew Zadarnowski, Jim Dupree, David Crane, and Joe Dean (2014). "NWA World Tag Team Titles History". Solie.org. Solie's Title Histories.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)