AWA World Heavyweight Championship (Boston version)

Last updated
AWA World Heavyweight Championship
Details
Date establishedFebruary 21, 1928
Date retiredNovember 1952
Statistics
First champion(s) Ed Lewis
Final champion(s) Don Eagle
Most reigns Steve Casey (6 reigns)
Longest reign Frank Sexton (1791 days)
Shortest reign Don Eagle (3 days)
Final champion Chief Don Eagle Chief Don Eagle - 1950.jpg
Final champion Chief Don Eagle

The AWA World Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship promoted by Paul Bowser in Boston. [1]

Contents

The title was created by Bowser after Gus Sonnenberg, who had beaten Ed Lewis for the original World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship in 1929, [2] was stripped of recognition as champion by the National Boxing Association. Browser continued to recognize Sonnenberg as champion and named his championship after the "American Wrestling Association" governing body, which hitherto did not actually exist. [3] Rival promoters, including Jack Curley, countered by forming the National Wrestling Association and its NWA World Heavyweight Championship. [4]

During Don Eagle's second reign, splinter titles were created by regional promoters in Chicago and Ohio. Bowser abandoned the championship later in Eagle's reign, while he was rendered inactive due to injuries in November 1952. [5]

Title history

AWA World Heavyweight Championship (Boston version)

Key
No.Overall reign number
ReignReign number for the specific champion
DaysNumber of days held
No.ChampionChampionship changeReign statisticsNotesRef.
DateEventLocationReignDays
1 Ed Lewis February 20, 1928 Live event St. Louis, Missouri1319Defeated Joe Stecher to win the original main line title [1] [2]
2 Gus Sonnenberg January 4, 1929 Live event Boston, Massachusetts1705 [1]
3 Ed Don George December 10, 1930 Live event Los Angeles, California1124 [1]
4 Ed Lewis April 13, 1931 Live event Los Angeles, California221 [1]
5 Henri Deglane May 4, 1931 Live event Montreal, Quebec1648Won by DQ after allegedly being bitten; recognized in Boston and Montreal as AWA champion; Lewis still recognized in California and also wins New York State Athletic Commission World Heavyweight Championship the following year. [1]
6 Ed Don George February 10, 1933 Live event Boston, Massachusetts2900 [1]
7 Danno O'Mahoney July 30, 1935 Live event Boston, Massachusetts1352The title was unified with the NWA World Heavyweight Championship and New York State Athletic Commission World Heavyweight Championship to be the Unified World Heavyweight Championship; loses to Dick Shikat on March 2, 1936 in New York, but continues to be recognized as champion by AWA. [1]
8 Yvon Robert July 16, 1936 Live event Montreal, Quebec1531 [1]
Vacated December 1937Robert was stripped of the championship for not defending it against Lou Thesz. [1]
9 Lou Thesz December 29, 1937 Live event St. Louis, Missouri144Defeats Everett Marshall for the MWA World Heavyweight Championship and also recognized by AWA. Retroactively recognized by the National Wrestling Alliance as the real World champion. [1]
10 Steve Casey February 11, 1938 Live event Boston, Massachusetts1384Recognized by MWA and AWA, both belts are presented to him. Retroactively recognized by the National Wrestling Alliance as the real World champion until September 13, 1938 due to Casey being out of the country (actually defending the AWA championship during a tour in Casey's native Irish Free State) Retroactive Alliance recognition switched to NWA World Heavyweight Championship. [1]
11 Marv Westenberg March 2, 1939 Live event Boston, Massachusetts114 [1]
12 Gus Sonnenberg March 16, 1939 Live event Boston, Massachusetts213 [1]
13 Steve Casey March 29, 1939 Live event Boston, Massachusetts220 [1]
14 Ed Don George April 18, 1939 Live event Albany, New York3199 [1]
15 Steve Casey November 3, 1939 Live event Buffalo, New York3192 [1]
16 The French Angel May 13, 1940 Live event Boston, Massachusetts1730 [1] [6]
17 Steve Casey May 13, 1942 Live event Boston, Massachusetts4811 [1]
18 The French Angel August 1, 1944 Live event San Francisco, California214 [1]
19 Steve Casey August 15, 1944 Live event San Francisco, California5253Casey joined the US Army; Sándor Szabó emerged from a series of elimination bouts as the duration world champion; Casey defeats Szabo in the consolidation match on April 4, 1945 in Boston, Massachusetts. [1] [7]
20 Sándor Szabó April 25, 1945 Live event Boston, Massachusetts17 [1]
21 Frank Sexton May 2, 1945 Live event Boston, Massachusetts135 [1]
22 Steve Casey June 6, 1945 Live event Boston, Massachusetts621 [1]
23 Frank Sexton June 27, 1945 Live event Boston, Massachusetts21,791 [1]
24 Don Eagle May 23, 1950 Live event Cleveland, Ohio13 [1]
25 Gorgeous George May 26, 1950 Live event Chicago, Illinois197This was a screwjob finish orchestrated by promoter Fred Kohler to weaken Eagle's value as an attraction. The title change was initially ignored by Bowser and other promoters. [1] [8] [9]
26 Don Eagle August 31, 1950 Live event Columbus, Ohio 2 [Note 1] This change re-established the lineage, which was disputed after George defeated Eagle in a screwjob finish. [1] [9]
DeactivatedNovember 1952Vacated in November 1952 when Eagle was inactive due to back injuries. [1] [5]

Splinter titles

AWA World Heavyweight Championship (Chicago version)

Key
No.Overall reign number
ReignReign number for the specific champion
DaysNumber of days held
No.ChampionChampionship changeReign statisticsNotesRef.
DateEventLocationReignDays
1 Don Eagle August 31, 1950 Live event Cleveland, Ohio1244Defeats Gorgeous George for the main line title (above). [10]
2 Ruffy Silverstein May 2, 1951N/AChicago, Illinois1105 [10]
3 Dr. Bill Miller August 15, 1951N/AChicago, Illinois1133 [10]
3 Ruffy Silverstein December 26, 1951N/AChicago, Illinois2296 [10]
4 Buddy Rogers October 17, 1952N/AChicago, Illinois10 [10]
DeactivatedOctober 17, 1952Rogers was already the Ohio AWA Champion (see below) and his reign continued under that lineage.

AWA World Heavyweight Championship (Ohio version)

Ohio-based promoter Al Haft created a splinter version of the title after recognizing Don Eagle's loss to Dr. Bill Miller on May 1, 1952 as a title change. The change was not recognized by Bowser. That title continued until 1954 when incumbent Buddy Rogers was stripped of the title. [5]

Key
No.Overall reign number
ReignReign number for the specific champion
DaysNumber of days held
No.ChampionChampionship changeReign statisticsNotesRef.
DateEventLocationReignDays
1 Don Eagle August 31, 1950 Live event Columbus, Ohio 2609 [1] [5]
2 Dr. Bill Miller May 1, 1952N/APittsburgh, Pennsylvania1124 [5]
3 Don Arnold September 2, 1952N/ADayton, Ohio124 [11]
4 Buddy Rogers October 14, 1952N/ADayton, Ohio179-107 [11]
5 Don Arnold January 1953N/AN/A20-28 [11]
6 Buddy Rogers January 29, 1953N/ACleveland,Ohio233 [11]
7 Antonino Rocca March 3, 1953N/ACleveland Ohio137
8 Buddy Rogers April 9, 1953N/ACleveland,Ohio3387-417 [11]
DeactivatedMay 1954Rogers was stripped of the title in 1954 for not defending his championship against Ruffy Silverstein. A tournament was scheduled to crown a new champion in May 1954 but never took place. [11]

Footnotes

  1. Don Eagle's second reign lasted between 759 and 822 days.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Buddy Rogers (wrestler)</span> American professional wrestler (1921–1992)

Buddy Rogers, better known by the ring name "Nature Boy" Buddy Rogers, was an American professional wrestler who was one of the biggest professional wrestling stars in the beginning of the television era. His performances influenced future professional wrestlers, including "Nature Boy" Ric Flair, who used Rogers's nickname, as well as his look, attitude and finishing hold, the figure-four leglock. He was also known for his rivalry with Lou Thesz, both in and out of the ring.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">USWA Unified World Heavyweight Championship</span> Professional wrestling championship

The USWA Unified World Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship formed in 1988, which consisted of the WCWA World Heavyweight Championship from World Class Championship Wrestling and the AWA World Heavyweight Championship from the American Wrestling Association. The title was unified on December 13, 1988, when AWA World Champion Jerry Lawler defeated WCWA World Champion Kerry Von Erich in a unification match.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AWA World Heavyweight Championship</span> Professional wrestling championship

The AWA World Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship and the highest ranked championship in the defunct American Wrestling Association (AWA). All AWA trademarks, including the AWA World Heavyweight Championship, are now owned by WWE. The championship was generally contested in professional wrestling matches, in which participants execute worked finishes rather than contend in direct competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AWA World Tag Team Championship</span> Professional wrestling tag team championship

The American Wrestling Association (AWA) World Tag Team Championship was a professional wrestling world tag team championship in the American Wrestling Association from 1960 until the promotion folded in 1991.

The NWA Missouri Heavyweight Championship was a singles championship in the National Wrestling Alliance's St. Louis Wrestling Club and Central States Wrestling promotions in the 1970s and 1980s. It was considered a "stepping stone" to the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. A version of the Missouri Championship has been documented to exist in 1899, 1921, 1933 to 1934, 1937, 1947, 1950, and 1954 to 1955, but it was only in 1972 that a serious championship was established. Prior to the creation of the NWA the championship was not recognized outside of the region and used by regional promoters, it is even possible that competing Missouri Heavyweight Championships existed. The championship was abandoned in 1986, as the Central States promotion was being consolidated under Jim Crockett Promotions in order to counter the World Wrestling Federation's national expansion.

The NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling world championship in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA). Created in 1943, the title is competed for by junior heavyweight wrestlers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">WCWA World Heavyweight Championship</span> Professional wrestling championship

The WCWA World Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship promoted by the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex area–based World Class Wrestling Association (WCWA). The championship was originally created in June 1966 by WCWA's predecessor NWA Big Time Wrestling (BTW), billed as the local version of the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship before being renamed the NWA American Heavyweight Championship in May 1968. In 1982, Big Time Wrestling rebranded themselves as "World Class Championship Wrestling" (WCCW) and the championship was renamed the WCCW American Heavyweight Championship. In 1986 WCCW withdrew from the National Wrestling Alliance, creating the World Class Wrestling Association, replacing the WCCW American Heavyweight Championship with the WCWA Heavyweight Championship, replacing the NWA Worlds Heavyweight Championship as the top title recognized by the promotion. In 1989, the WCWA championship was unified with the AWA World Heavyweight Championship to become the USWA Unified World Heavyweight Championship as WCWA merged with the Continental Wrestling Association (CWA) to become the United States Wrestling Association. In 1990 WCWA split from the USWA, but the promotion folded without determining a WCWA World Heavyweight Champion. As it is a professional wrestling championship, the WCWA World Heavyweight Championship was not won by actual competition, but by a scripted ending to a match.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gene Kiniski</span> Canadian professional wrestler

Eugene Nicholas Kiniski was a Canadian athlete who played football for the Edmonton Eskimos and then became a three-time professional wrestling world heavyweight champion. "Canada's Greatest Athlete", as he billed himself for promotional purposes, was born in Edmonton, Alberta. Like Bronko Nagurski before him, Kiniski was one of the first world champions in professional wrestling to have a previous background in football. He is the father of professional wrestler Kelly Kiniski and international amateur and professional wrestler Nick Kiniski.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AWA Southern Heavyweight Championship</span> Professional wrestling championship

The AWA Southern Heavyweight Championship was a major professional wrestling title in the Continental Wrestling Association during the 1970s and 1980s. The title is part of a long lineage that was started when the NWA Southern Junior Heavyweight Championship, in use since 1939, was renamed the NWA Southern Heavyweight Championship (Memphis version) in 1974. The title's name changed again in 1978, when it was renamed the AWA Southern Heavyweight Championship due to a partnership with the American Wrestling Association. It was also called the Mid-Southern Heavyweight Championship in Pro Wrestling Illustrated and its sister publications, in order for this title to not be confused with Championship Wrestling from Florida's version of the title.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ed Lewis (wrestler)</span> American professional wrestler

Robert Herman Julius Friedrich, better known by the ring name Ed "Strangler" Lewis, was an American professional wrestler and trainer. During his wrestling career, which spanned four decades, Lewis was a four-time World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion and overall recognized officially as a five-time world champion. Considered to be one of the most iconic and recognizable sports stars of the 1920s, often alongside boxer Jack Dempsey and baseball player Babe Ruth, Lewis notably wrestled in over 6,000 matches and lost only 32 of them.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">USWA World Tag Team Championship</span> Professional wrestling tag team championship

The USWA World Tag Team Championship was the primary professional wrestling tag team championship promoted by the Memphis, Tennessee-based United States Wrestling Association (USWA). The Continental Wrestling Association and World Class Wrestling Association (WCWA) merged in 1989 to form the USWA. In the merger the USWA replaced both the WCWA World Tag Team Championship and the CWA Tag Team Championship with the USWA version. The promotion awarded Cactus Jack and Scott Braddock the championship after they won the WCWA championship on August 4, 1989. The USWA closed in 1997, with PG-13 as the final champions. There were a total of 116 reigns in the eight year lifetime of the championship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gus Sonnenberg</span> American football player and professional wrestler (1898–1944)

Gustave Adolph Sonnenberg was an American football player and professional wrestler of German descent and World Heavyweight Champion. As a wrestler, he was National Wrestling Association (NWA) world heavyweight champion. He played in the National Football League (NFL) from 1923 until 1930, for the Buffalo All-Americans, Columbus Tigers, Detroit Panthers, and Providence Steam Roller, where he was a member of the 1928 NFL championship team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ed Don George</span> American professional wrestler

Edward Nye "Ed Don" George Jr. was an American amateur and professional wrestler, and wrestling promoter. A former Olympic freestyle wrestler, George competed in the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics and turned pro shortly after. He was two-time AWA World Heavyweight Champion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yvon Robert</span> Canadian professional wrestler (1914 – 1971)

Yvon Robert was a French Canadian professional wrestler who was best known to fans as Yvon "The Lion" Robert.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dr. Bill Miller</span> American professional wrestler (1927–1997)

William M. Miller was an American professional wrestler. He was a one time American Wrestling Association world champion and also wrestled in the National Wrestling Alliance, the World Wrestling Association and the World Wide Wrestling Federation.

The MWA World Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship in the Kansas City, Kansas-based Midwest Wrestling Association (MWA). It was the direct predecessor of the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) World Heavyweight Championship, and a successor of sorts to the early world heavyweight championships. The title was created in 1940, and first held by Bobby Bruns that January.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship (original version)</span> First professional wrestling world heavyweight championship (1905)

The World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship was the first recognized professional wrestling world heavyweight championship created in 1905 to identify the best catch as catch can wrestler in the world.

The MAC World / International Heavyweight Championship was a Canadian professional wrestling championship created and sanctioned by the Montreal Athletic Commission (MAC). While the Commission sanctioned the title, it did not promote the events in which the Championship was defended. From 1935 until 1938, the American Wrestling Association (AWA) controlled the Championship. The AWA World Heavyweight Championship was recognized by the MAC as the world championship until February 1938 when Yvon Robert was stripped of the title after refusing to wrestle Lou Thesz. A separate world title was created specifically for Quebec and, after the Commission granted promoter Eddie Quinn control of the championship, was used as the main singles title for Canadian Athletic Promotions from 1939 to 1963 and finally by the International Wrestling Association / All-Star Wrestling from 1964 until the mid-1970s. In 1975 the championship was abandoned and replaced by the Canadian International Heavyweight Championship.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 "American Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Title". Pro-Wrestling Title Histories.
  2. 1 2 "Gus Sonnenberg Captures World Wrestling Championship From Strangler Lewis". The Hartford Courant . May 1, 1929. Retrieved June 12, 2009.
  3. Solomon, Brian (2015). Pro Wrestling FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the World's Most Entertaining Spectacle. Backbeat Books. ISBN   978-1617135996.
  4. Beekman, Scott (2006). Ringside: A History of Professional Wrestling in America . Praeger Publishing. pp.  62–63. ISBN   978-0275984014.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Oliver, Greg; Johnson, Steven (2012). The Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame: Heroes & Icons. ECW Press. p. 1800. ISBN   978-1770410374.
  6. Hoops, Brian (May 13, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history (May 13): Rick Martel wins AWA gold, Kurt Angle wins TNA title, Nash & Hall beat one man to win tag titles". Wrestling Observer Newsletter . Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  7. Hoops, Brian (August 15, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history: IWGP Champ wins 1-G, Orton beats Benoit". Wrestling Observer Newsletter . Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  8. F4W Staff (May 26, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history (May 26): Dick the Bruiser & Crusher beat Larry Hennig & Harley Race in a nine fall death match, Tiger Mask wins WWF Jr. Heavyweight gold". Wrestling Observer Newsletter . Retrieved February 11, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. 1 2 Laprade, Pat; Hebert, Bertland (2013). Mad Dogs, Midgets and Screw Jobs: The Untold Story of How Montreal Shaped the World of Wrestling. ECW Press. ISBN   1770410945.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 "American Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Title [Chicago]". Pro-Wrestling Title Histories.
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "American Wrestling Association World Heavyweight Title [Ohio]". Pro-Wrestling Title Histories.