ICW United States Tag Team Championship | |||||||||||||||||||
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Details | |||||||||||||||||||
Promotion | International Championship Wrestling | ||||||||||||||||||
Date established | June 14, 1979 | ||||||||||||||||||
Date retired | 1984 | ||||||||||||||||||
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The ICW United States Tag Team Championship was the top tag team championship in International Championship Wrestling. [1] Because the championship is a professional wrestling championship, it is not won or lost competitively but instead by the decision of the bookers of a wrestling promotion. The championship is awarded after the chosen team "wins" a match to maintain the illusion that professional wrestling is a competitive sport. [2]
No. | Overall reign number |
---|---|
Reign | Reign number for the specific champion |
Days | Number of days held |
No. | Champion | Championship change | Reign statistics | Notes | Ref. | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Event | Location | Reign | Days | ||||||
1 | Lanny Poffo and George Weingeroff | June 14, 1979 | ICW show | Salt Lake City, Utah | 1 | 681 | Won a tournament to become the first champions. | |||
2 | The Devil's Duo (Jeff Sword and Doug Vines) | April 25, 1981 | ICW show | Lexington, Kentucky | 1 | 141 | ||||
3 | Lanny Poffo and George Weingeroff | May 14, 1981 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 2 | 5 | ||||
4 | The Devil's Duo (Jeff Sword and Doug Vines) | May 19, 1981 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 2 | 27 | ||||
5 | Lanny Poffo and George Weingeroff | June 15, 1981 | ICW show | Owenton, Kentucky | 3 | [Note 3] | ||||
6 | The Convertible Blondes (Rip Rogers and Ricky Starr) | July 4, 1981 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 1 | [Note 4] | ||||
7 | Lanny Poffo and George Weingeroff | July 7, 1981 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 4 | [Note 4] | ||||
8 | The Devil's Duo (Jeff Sword and Doug Vines) | October 10, 1981 | ICW show | Symsonia, Kentucky | 3 | [Note 4] | ||||
Championship history is unrecorded from October 1981 to December 1981. | ||||||||||
— | Vacated | December 31, 1981 | — | — | — | — | Championship vacated, reason undocumented | |||
Championship history is unrecorded from December 1981 to May 1982. | ||||||||||
9 | Rip Rogers and Pez Whatley | May 1982 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 1 | [Note 4] | ||||
10 | Lanny Poffo (5) and Mike Doggendorf | 1982 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 1 | [Note 4] | ||||
11 | Tojo Yamamoto and Gypsy Joe | 1982 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 1 | [Note 4] | ||||
12 | Lanny Poffo (6) and Mike Doggendorf (2) | 1983 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 2 | [Note 4] | ||||
13 | Tojo Yamamoto and Gypsy Joe | 1983 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 2 | [Note 4] | ||||
14 | Bart Batten and Johnny Wilhoit | 1983 | ICW show | [Note 2] | 1 | [Note 4] | ||||
— | Deactivated | 1984 | — | — | — | — | Championship abandoned when ICW closed in 1984. |
The NWA World Six-Man Tag Team Championship was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) and originally promoted in Chicago as the NWA World Three-Man Tag Team Championship. The NWA Mid-America territory based out of Tennessee re-introduced the title as the NWA Six-Man Tag Team Championship, promoting it from 1974 until 1981. In 1984, another NWA territory Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP) brought the concept back, this time as the "NWA World Six-Man Tag Team Championship", which continued to be promoted by JCP's successor World Championship Wrestling until 1989. The championship was briefly revived in February 1998 by Dennis Coralluzzo's NWA New Jersey territory, also known as Championship Wrestling America. The championship was retired in December 1998. As the name indicates the championship was exclusively for three man teams that competed in six-man tag team matches. Because the championship was a professional wrestling championship, it was won or lost by the decision of the bookers of a wrestling promotion.
The Florida version of the NWA World Tag Team Championship was the primary professional wrestling championship for tag teams in Championship Wrestling from Florida (CWF) that was used between 1961 and 1969. When the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) was created in 1948, the board of directors decided to allow each NWA member to create its own local version of the NWA World Tag Team Championship. As it is a professional wrestling championship, it is not won or lost competitively, but instead determined by the decision of the bookers of a wrestling promotion. The title is awarded after the chosen team "wins" a match to maintain the illusion that professional wrestling is a competitive sport.
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