Soviet Wrestling

Soviet wrestling (Russian: Советская рестлинг; tr.: Sovetskaja restling) is a type of professional wrestling with more complex rules (e.g. 12 rounds for undercard matches and 15 rounds for main event matches with a 3 minute timer, as in professional boxing, three judges for each fight, as in boxing and MMA, music being played to accompany fights, as in muay thai, glove taps, as in boxing, bowing, as in Japanese martial arts, a half-time show and fighters swapping to other corners, as in most team sports, the blue corner and the red corner of the ring, as in boxing and MMA, no clothing regulations in fights, etc.), and is made out from Systema, a Russian martial art.

Also, it combines pro wrestling with elements of amateur wrestling, professional boxing, MMA, other types of pro wrestling (like lucha libre), many other combat sports, live-action battle gaming, fight play, mock combat, stage combat and ancient Roman gladiator games (lacking death due to the Soviet Wrestling Life Regulation Policy, as enacted by the Unified Soviet Red Assault Command).