NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Details | |||||||||||||
Promotion | Pacific Northwest Wrestling Wrestling International New Generations Blue Collar Wrestling | ||||||||||||
Date established | 1955 | ||||||||||||
Date retired | 2017 | ||||||||||||
Other name(s) | |||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||
|
The NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) and defended in its member promotion Pacific Northwest Wrestling (PNW), which promoted shows in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington, and occasionally other areas in the northwestern United States.
The title was created in 1955 by Don Owen for the NWA's Pacific Northwest territory, [1] and became the top singles title for that area. The first champion was Luther Lindsay. [1] Early in the championship's history, the title would be won by Ed Francis, who was already the territory's top non-heavyweight singles champion, holding the Pacific Coast Junior Heavyweight Championship. [1] Upon Francis winning the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship, his Pacific Coast Junior Heavyweight Championship was retired. [1] In addition to the northwestern United States, the title was also briefly defended in Asia in the Japanese promotion Wrestling International New Generations (W*ING), but the title changes in W*ING were not officially recognized by PNW.
The title remained active until July 1992, [1] when Don Owen retired and sold PNW to Sandy Barr. [2] Barr retired all of Owen's NWA championships after renaming the company to Championship Wrestling USA (CWUSA), creating new CWUSA championships in their places. The physical Owen-era NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship belt was owned by "The Grappler" Len Denton, who later auctioned off the belt to Bruce Owens. Wrestling belt maker Dave Millican purchased it from Owens and later sold it to an unknown collector. [1]
Elite Canadian Championship Wrestling (ECCW), also known as NWA: Extreme Canadian Championship Wrestling, became NWA's Pacific Northwest territory in 1998. [3] The promotion's top championship, the ECCW Championship, was briefly referred to as the NWA/ECCW Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship. ECCW left the NWA in 2011, leaving the NWA without a Pacific Northwest-based member promotion. In January 2015, the Portland-based Blue Collar Wrestling (BCW) promotion joined the NWA, reintroducing the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship – tracing the lineage back to the original version of the title. [3] The championship was retired after Billy Corgan purchased the NWA and ended its relationships with existing member promotions.
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 | Luther Lindsay | May 24, 1955 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 28 | Lindsay defeated Roger Mackay in a tournament final. | [3] |
2 | Ivan Kameroff | June 21, 1955 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 105 | [3] | |
3 | John Paul Henning | October 4, 1955 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 137 | [3] | |
4 | Bull Montana | February 18, 1956 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 1 | 103 | [3] | |
5 | Herb Freeman | May 31, 1956 | PNW Show | Albany, Oregon | 1 | 76 | [3] | |
6 | Bud Curtis | August 15, 1956 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 55 | [3] | |
7 | Ed Francis | October 9, 1956 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 240 | [3] | |
8 | Bill Savage | June 6, 1957 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 36 | [1] | |
9 | Herb Freeman | July 12, 1957 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 28 | [1] [4] | |
10 | Doug Donovan | August 9, 1957 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 66 | [1] | |
11 | Kurt Von Himmler | October 14, 1957 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 88 | [1] | |
12 | Nick Kozak | January 10, 1958 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 70 | [1] | |
13 | Bill Savage | March 21, 1958 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 161 | [1] | |
14 | Ed Francis | August 29, 1958 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 77 | [1] | |
15 | Eric Pederson | November 14, 1958 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 3 | [1] | |
16 | Ed Francis | November 21, 1958 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 112 | [1] | |
17 | Bill Savage | March 13, 1959 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 70 | [1] | |
18 | Kurt Von Poppenheim | May 22, 1959 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 42 | [1] | |
19 | Bill Savage | July 3, 1959 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 70 | [1] | |
20 | Ed Francis | September 11, 1959 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 160 | [1] | |
21 | Shag Thomas | February 18, 1960 | PNW Show | N/A | 1 | 29 | [1] | |
22 | Ed Francis | March 18, 1960 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 173 | [1] | |
23 | Tony Borne | September 7, 1960 | PNW Show | N/A | 1 | 93 | [1] | |
24 | Herb Freeman | December 9, 1960 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 112 | [1] | |
25 | Iron Mike DiBiase | March 31, 1961 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 56 | [1] | |
26 | Luther Lindsay | May 26, 1961 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 122 | [1] | |
27 | Nicoli Volkoff | September 25, 1961 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 67 | [1] | |
28 | Billy White Wolf | December 1, 1961 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 36 | [1] | |
29 | Fritz Von Goering | January 20, 1962 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 1 | 230 | [5] | |
30 | Luther Lindsay | August 24, 1962 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 41 | [1] | |
31 | Mad Dog Vachon | October 4, 1962 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 114 | [1] | |
32 | Herb Freeman | January 26, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 21 | [1] | |
33 | Mad Dog Vachon | February 16, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 83 | [1] | |
34 | Herb Freeman | May 10, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 7 | [1] | |
35 | Mad Dog Vachon | May 17, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 49 | [1] | |
36 | Billy White Wolf | July 5, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 50 | [1] | |
37 | Tony Borne | August 24, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 12 | [1] | |
38 | King Curtis Iaukea | September 5, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 14 | [1] | |
39 | Tony Borne | September 19, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 41 | [1] | |
40 | Nick Bockwinkel | October 30, 1963 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 22 | [1] | |
41 | Mad Dog Vachon | November 21, 1963 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 43 | [1] | |
42 | The Destroyer | January 3, 1964 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 98 | [1] | |
43 | Tony Borne | April 10, 1964 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 11 | [1] | |
44 | The Destroyer | April 21, 1964 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 31 | [1] | |
45 | Nick Bockwinkel | May 22, 1964 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 32 | [1] | |
46 | Pampero Firpo | June 23, 1964 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 1 | 46 | [1] | |
47 | Don Manoukian | August 8, 1964 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 1 | 25 | [1] | |
48 | Pepper Martin | September 2, 1964 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 1 | 30 | [1] | |
49 | Pat Patterson | October 2, 1964 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 43 | [1] | |
50 | Pepper Martin | November 14, 1964 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 50 | [1] | |
51 | Pat Patterson | January 3, 1965 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 2 | 5 | [1] | |
52 | Pepper Martin | January 8, 1965 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 62 | [1] | |
53 | The Mad Russian | March 11, 1965 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 81 | [1] | |
54 | Pepper Martin | May 31, 1965 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 4 | 5 | [1] | |
55 | Mad Dog Vachon | June 5, 1965 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 13 | [1] | |
56 | Stan Stasiak | June 18, 1965 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 258 | [1] | |
57 | Paul Jones | March 3, 1966 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 76 | [1] [6] | |
58 | Stan Stasiak | May 18, 1966 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 2 | 28 | [1] | |
59 | Pepper Martin | June 15, 1966 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 5 | 93 | [1] | |
60 | Tony Borne | September 16, 1966 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 48 | [1] | |
61 | Shag Thomas | November 3, 1966 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 2 | 7 | [1] | |
62 | Tony Borne | November 10, 1966 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 6 | 29 | [1] | |
63 | Pat Patterson | December 9, 1966 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 9 | [1] | |
64 | Tony Borne | December 18, 1966 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 7 | 11 | [1] | |
65 | Paul Jones | December 29, 1966 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 2 | 7 | [1] | |
66 | Tony Borne | January 5, 1967 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 8 | 127 | [1] | |
67 | Ripper Collins | May 12, 1967 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 17 | [1] | |
68 | Tony Borne | May 29, 1967 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 9 | 4 | [1] | |
69 | Luther Lindsay | June 2, 1967 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 21 | [1] | |
70 | Moondog Mayne | June 23, 1967 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 34 | [1] | |
71 | Johnny Kostas | July 27, 1967 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 99 | [1] | |
72 | Moondog Mayne | November 3, 1967 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 63 | [1] | |
73 | Stan Stasiak | January 5, 1968 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 70 | [1] | |
74 | Moondog Mayne | March 15, 1968 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 76 | [1] | |
75 | Mad Dog Vachon | May 30, 1968 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 6 | 7 | [1] | |
76 | Moondog Mayne | June 6, 1968 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 4 | 71 | [1] | |
77 | Stan Stasiak | August 16, 1968 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 14 | [1] | |
78 | Moondog Mayne | August 30, 1968 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 92 | [1] | |
79 | Luther Lindsay | November 30, 1968 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 133 | Lindsay defeated Beauregard, substituting for Mayne, to win the title. | [1] |
80 | Moondog Mayne | April 12, 1969 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 6 | 122 | [1] | |
81 | Roger Kirby | August 12, 1969 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 29 | [1] | |
82 | Moondog Mayne | September 10, 1969 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 7 | 34 | [1] | |
83 | Roger Kirby | October 14, 1969 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 57 | [1] | |
84 | Moondog Mayne | December 10, 1969 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 8 | 79 | [1] | |
85 | Kurt Von Steiger | February 27, 1970 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 12 | [1] [7] | |
86 | Moondog Mayne | March 11, 1970 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 9 | 66 | [1] | |
87 | The Claw | May 16, 1970 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 38 | [1] | |
88 | Moondog Mayne | June 23, 1970 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 10 | 46 | [1] | |
89 | Mr. Fuji | August 8, 1970 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 77 | [1] [8] | |
90 | Moondog Mayne | October 24, 1970 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 11 | 49 | [1] | |
91 | Dutch Savage | December 12, 1970 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 105 | [1] | |
92 | Stan Stasiak | March 27, 1971 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 35 | [1] | |
93 | Kurt Von Steiger | May 1, 1971 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 91 | [1] | |
94 | Jonathan Boyd | July 31, 1971 | PNW Show | N/A | 1 | 85 | [1] | |
95 | Dutch Savage | October 24, 1971 | PNW Show | N/A | 2 | 35 | [1] | |
96 | Jonathan Boyd | November 28, 1971 | PNW Show | N/A | 2 | 30 | [1] | |
97 | Dutch Savage | December 28, 1971 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 123 | [1] | |
98 | Bull Ramos | April 29, 1972 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 196 | [1] | |
99 | Steven Little Bear | November 11, 1972 | PNW Show | N/A | 1 | 19 | [1] | |
100 | Bull Ramos | November 30, 1972 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 69 | [1] | |
101 | Dutch Savage | February 7, 1973 | PNW Show | Medford, Oregon | 4 | 62 | [1] | |
102 | Bull Ramos | April 10, 1973 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 220 | [1] | |
103 | Jimmy Snuka | November 16, 1973 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 1 | 57 | [1] | |
104 | Ripper Collins | January 12, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 42 | [1] | |
105 | Jimmy Snuka | February 23, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 35 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | March 30, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | — | — | Vacated after a match against Ripper Collins. | |
106 | Ripper Collins | April 13, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 52 | Collins won the championship during a rematch with Jimmy Snuka. | [1] |
107 | Jimmy Snuka | June 4, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 67 | [1] | |
108 | Rasputin | August 10, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 58 | [1] | |
109 | Jimmy Snuka | October 7, 1974 | PNW Show | N/A | 4 | 35 | [1] | |
110 | Dale Lewis | November 11, 1974 | PNW Show | N/A | 1 | 33 | [1] | |
111 | Dutch Savage | December 14, 1974 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 167 | [1] | |
112 | Bull Ramos | May 30, 1975 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 4 | 71 | [1] | |
113 | Jimmy Snuka | August 9, 1975 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 161 | [1] | |
114 | Jesse Ventura | January 17, 1976 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 77 | [1] [9] | |
115 | Dutch Savage | April 3, 1976 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 6 | 104 | [1] [10] | |
116 | Jesse Ventura | July 16, 1976 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 2 | 197 | [1] | |
117 | Jimmy Snuka | January 29, 1977 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 6 | 84 | [1] | |
118 | Ron Bass | April 23, 1977 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 100 | [1] | |
119 | Dutch Savage | August 1, 1977 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 7 | 103 | [1] | |
120 | Ed Wiskoski | November 12, 1977 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 182 | [1] | |
121 | Jerry Oates | May 13, 1978 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 34 | [1] [11] | |
122 | Ed Wiskoski | June 16, 1978 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 2 | 67 | [1] | |
123 | Jonathan Boyd | August 22, 1978 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 169 | [1] | |
124 | Roddy Piper | February 7, 1979 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 143 | [1] [12] | |
125 | Stan Stasiak | June 30, 1979 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 6 | 124 | [1] | |
126 | Buddy Rose | November 1, 1979 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 1 | [1] | |
127 | Stan Stasiak | November 2, 1979 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 8 | 14 | [1] | |
128 | Buddy Rose | November 16, 1979 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 83 | [1] | |
129 | Rick Martel | February 7, 1980 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 2 | [1] | |
130 | Buddy Rose | February 9, 1980 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 42 | [1] | |
131 | Rick Martel | March 22, 1980 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 2 | 147 | [1] | |
132 | Buddy Rose | August 16, 1980 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 19 | [1] | |
133 | Roddy Piper | September 4, 1980 | PNW Show | N/A | 2 | 16 | [1] | |
134 | Buddy Rose | September 20, 1980 | PNW Show | N/A | 5 | 98 | [1] | |
135 | Jay Youngblood | December 27, 1980 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 9 | [1] | |
136 | Buddy Rose | January 5, 1981 | PNW Show | Longview, Washington | 6 | 2 | [1] | |
137 | Jay Youngblood | January 7, 1981 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 2 | 66 | [1] | |
138 | The Destroyer | March 14, 1981 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 7 | [1] | |
139 | Jay Youngblood | March 21, 1981 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 19 | [1] | |
140 | Buddy Rose | April 9, 1981 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 7 | 2 | [1] | |
141 | Jay Youngblood | April 11, 1981 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 13 | [1] | |
142 | Buddy Rose | April 24, 1981 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 8 | 5 | [1] | |
143 | Matt Borne | April 29, 1981 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 1 | 1 | [1] | |
144 | Buddy Rose | April 30, 1981 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 9 | 1 | [1] | |
145 | Jay Youngblood | May 1, 1981 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 4 | 15 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | May 16, 1981 | PNW Show | N/A | — | — | Championship vacated when Youngblood left the promotion. | [1] |
146 | Steve Regal | June 30, 1981 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 1 | 46 | Regal won a tournament final to win the vacant title. | [1] |
147 | Buddy Rose | August 15, 1981 | PNW Show | N/A | 7 | 52 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | October 6, 1981 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | — | — | Vacated after a match against Steve Regal. | [1] |
148 | Steve Regal | October 24, 1981 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 42 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | December 5, 1981 | PNW Show | N/A | — | — | Title vacated when Regal was injured. | [1] |
149 | Brett Sawyer | January 2, 1982 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 42 | Sawyer won a battle royal to become champion. | [1] |
— | Vacated | February 13, 1982 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | — | — | The championship was vacated after a match against Buddy Rose. | [1] |
150 | Brett Sawyer | February 16, 1982 | PNW Show | N/A | 2 | 67 | Sawyer won the vacant championship during a rematch with Buddy Rose. | [1] |
151 | Rip Oliver | April 24, 1982 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 82 | [1] | |
152 | Rocky Johnson | July 15, 1982 | PNW Show | N/A | 1 | 16 | [1] | |
153 | Rip Oliver | July 31, 1982 | PNW Show | N/A | 2 | 25 | [1] | |
154 | Brett Sawyer | August 25, 1982 | PNW Show | Coos Bay, Oregon | 3 | 3 | [1] | |
155 | Rip Oliver | August 28, 1982 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 25 | [1] | |
156 | Brett Sawyer | September 22, 1982 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 3 | 76 | [1] | |
157 | Sheik Abdullah Ali Hassan | December 7, 1982 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 154 | [1] | |
158 | Curt Hennig | May 10, 1983 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 120 | [1] | |
159 | The Dynamite Kid | September 7, 1983 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 1 | 30 | [1] | |
160 | Billy Jack | October 7, 1983 | PNW Show | Salem, Oregon | 1 | 54 | [1] | |
161 | Rip Oliver | November 30, 1983 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 4 | 14 | [1] | |
162 | Billy Jack | December 14, 1983 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 2 | 11 | [1] | |
163 | Rip Oliver | December 25, 1983 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 5 | 125 | [1] | |
164 | Buddy Rose | April 28, 1984 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 11 | 14 | [1] | |
165 | Rip Oliver | May 12, 1984 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 6 | 154 | [1] | |
166 | Billy Jack | October 13, 1984 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 21 | [1] | |
167 | Rip Oliver | November 3, 1984 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 7 | 32 | [1] | |
168 | Bobby Jaggers | December 5, 1984 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 1 | 80 | [1] | |
169 | Karl Steiner | February 23, 1985 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 50 | [1] | |
170 | Bobby Jaggers | April 14, 1985 | PNW Show | Centralia, Washington | 2 | 20 | [1] | |
171 | Mike Miller | May 4, 1985 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 84 | [1] | |
172 | Ricky Vaughn | July 27, 1985 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 105 | Vaughn defeated Mike Miller during a tournament final. | [1] |
173 | Bobby Jaggers | November 9, 1985 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 73 | [1] | |
174 | Tom Zenk | January 21, 1986 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 47 | [1] | |
175 | Bobby Jaggers | March 9, 1986 | PNW Show | Findley, Washington | 4 | 34 | [1] | |
176 | Billy Jack | April 12, 1986 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 19 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | May 1, 1986 | PNW Show | N/A | — | — | Billy Jack was stripped of the title. | [1] |
177 | Rip Oliver | June 13, 1986 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 8 | 63 | Oliver won a battle royal to win the vacant title. | [1] |
178 | Cocoa Samoa | August 15, 1986 | PNW Show | Albany, Oregon | 1 | 36 | [1] | |
179 | Rip Oliver | September 20, 1986 | PNW Show | Seattle, Washington | 9 | 70 | [1] | |
180 | The Assassin | November 29, 1986 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 14 | [1] | |
181 | Rip Oliver | December 13, 1986 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 10 | 98 | [1] | |
182 | Ricky Santana | March 21, 1987 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 28 | [1] | |
183 | Rip Oliver | April 18, 1987 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 11 | 70 | [1] | |
184 | Mike Miller | June 27, 1987 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 49 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | August 15, 1987 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | — | — | Title was held up following a match against Rip Oliver. | [1] |
185 | Mike Miller | August 22, 1987 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 70 | Miller defeated Rip Oliver by forfeit in a rematch to win the vacant title. | [1] |
186 | The Grappler | October 31, 1987 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 279 | [1] | |
187 | Scott Peterson | August 5, 1988 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 1 | 34 | [1] | |
188 | The Grappler | September 8, 1988 | PNW Show | Newport, Oregon | 2 | 25 | [1] | |
189 | Top Gun | October 3, 1988 | PNW Show | Longview, Washington | 3 | 7 | [1] | |
190 | The Grappler | October 10, 1988 | PNW Show | N/A | 3 | 5 | [1] | |
191 | Tatsumi Fujinami | October 15, 1988 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 56 | Fujinami was awarded the title after The Grappler failed to defeat him in 30 minutes. | [1] |
192 | The Grappler | December 10, 1988 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 15 | [1] | |
193 | Top Gun | December 25, 1988 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 4 | 34 | [1] | |
194 | The Grappler | January 28, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 63 | [1] | |
195 | Carl Styles | April 1, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 14 | [1] | |
196 | The Grappler | April 15, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 6 | 7 | [1] | |
197 | Carl Styles | April 22, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 40 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | June 1, 1989 | PNW Show | N/A | — | — | Title was vacated after Styles suffered an injury. | [1] |
198 | Scotty The Body | September 2, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 35 | Scotty The Body defeated Carl Styles in a tournament final to win the vacant title. | [1] |
199 | Rex King | October 7, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 7 | [1] | |
200 | Scotty The Body | October 14, 1989 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 112 | [1] | |
201 | Curtis Thompson | February 3, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 55 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | March 30, 1990 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | — | — | Scotty The Body initially defeated Curtis Thompson to win the championship; the decision was later reversed and the title vacated after Scotty The Body was caught cheating to win the match against Thompson. | [1] |
202 | Brian Adams | April 21, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 21 | Defeated Larry Oliver in a tournament final to win the vacant title. | [1] |
203 | Scott Norton | May 12, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 14 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | May 26, 1990 | PNW Show | N/A | — | — | Title vacated after Norton was suspended for attacking several wrestlers. | [1] |
204 | Scotty The Body | June 2, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 56 | Scotty The Body defeated The Grappler to win the vacant title. | [1] |
— | Vacated | July 28, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | — | — | Title held up following a match against The Grappler. | [1] |
205 | The Grappler | August 4, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 7 | 98 | The Grappler defeated Scotty The Body in a rematch to win the vacant title. | [1] |
206 | Steve Doll | November 10, 1990 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 239 | [1] | |
— | Vacated | July 7, 1991 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | — | — | Title held up following a match against Ron Harris. | [1] |
207 | Billy Jack Haynes | August 17, 1991 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 5 | 28 | Won a full nelson challenge to win the vacant title. | [1] |
208 | Steve Doll | September 14, 1991 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 14 | [1] | |
209 | Rip Oliver | September 28, 1991 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 12 | 14 | [1] | |
210 | Demolition Crush | October 12, 1991 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 98 | [1] | |
211 | Ron Harris | January 18, 1992 | PNW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 20 | [1] [13] | |
212 | Steve Doll | February 7, 1992 | PNW Show | Eugene, Oregon | 3 | 46 | [1] [12] | |
213 | Ron Harris | March 24, 1992 | PNW Show | Vancouver, Washington | 2 | 28 | [1] | |
214 | C.W. Bergstrom | April 21, 1992 | PNW Show | Vancouver, Washington | 1 | 88 | [1] | |
† | Yukihiro Kanemura | May 5, 1992 | W*ING Show | Osaka, Japan | — | — | Kanemura defeated The Grappler on May 5, 1992 in Osaka, Japan to claim the title, as Grappler owned the physical belt representing the title. Kanemura was not officially recognized as champion by PNW. [14] Kanemura continued to defend the title in W*ING as the "W*ING Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship". | |
— | Deactivated | July 18, 1992 | — | — | — | — | Title retired when Pacific Northwest Wrestling closed and reopened as Championship Wrestling USA. | [1] |
215 | "Badd Blood" BJ Darden | January 10, 2015 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 425 | "Badd Blood" BJ Darden was awarded the reactivated championship when Blue Collar Wrestling joined the NWA. | [15] |
— | Vacated | March 10, 2016 | BCW Show | N/A | — | — | "Badd Blood" BJ Darden vacated the title upon winning the NWA Continental Heavyweight Championship. | [15] |
216 | Buddy Highway | March 17, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 143 | Highway defeated Demarcus James, Havoc, and Ares Toretto in four-way tournament final to win the vacant title. | [15] |
217 | Tommy Celcious | August 7, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 13 | [15] | |
218 | Dave Hollenbeck | August 20, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 1 | 1 | [15] | |
219 | Tommy Celcious | August 21, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 29 | [15] | |
220 | Buddy Highway | September 18, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 2 | 28 | [15] | |
221 | Tommy Celcious | October 16, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 14 | [15] | |
222 | Buddy Highway | October 30, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 35 | [15] | |
223 | Gregor Petrov | December 4, 2016 | BCW Show | Portland, Oregon | 3 | 300 | Petrov defeated Highway in a three-way match that also involved Jeff Cobb. | [15] |
— | Deactivated | September 30, 2017 | — | — | — | — | The championship was retired when the NWA terminated the contracts with its member promotions. | [15] |
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.
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 National Championship is a professional wrestling championship owned and promoted by the U.S.-based, National Wrestling Alliance (NWA).
The Mid-South North American Heavyweight Championship was the major singles title in the Mid-South Wrestling Association from 1979 until the promotion became the Universal Wrestling Federation in 1986. The title was retired then in favor of the UWF Heavyweight Championship. The promotion was originally a member of the National Wrestling Alliance referred to as NWA Tri-State, hence the title was originally the Tri-State version of the NWA North American Heavyweight Championship from 1969 to 1979.
The Mid-South Louisiana Heavyweight Championship was a secondary professional wrestling championship that was used and defended from 1964 though 1983. Initially, the championship originated in the NWA affiliated Gulf Coast Championship Wrestling. During this time, it was referred to as the NWA Gulf Coast Louisiana Heavyweight Championship until 1972. Beginning in '72, the title was used in the NWA affiliated NWA Tri-State then was called the NWA Tri-State Louisiana Heavyweight Championship from 1972 until 1979. In 1979, however, wrestler and promoter "Cowboy" Bill Watts purchased the Tri-State territory and renamed it Mid-South Wrestling Association. Although Watts kept close ties with the NWA for purpose of having access to wrestling talent, he withdrew Mid-South from the NWA and, as a result, renamed all of the promotion's championships accordingly.
The NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship was a major title in Championship Wrestling from Florida and is now the major title in NWA Florida Wrestling Alliance. It started in 1937 and was abandoned in 1949. It was picked back up in 1966 by CWF and lasted until 1987 when the company was purchased by Jim Crockett Promotions. In 1988, the newly created Florida Championship Wrestling (FCW), soon renamed Pro Wrestling Federation (PWF), picked it back up in 1988 and it continued its lineage through NWA Florida, until they ceased operations in 2006. In 2009, Pro Wrestling Fusion revived the title until they left the NWA in 2011. For several months in 2012, a new Championship Wrestling from Florida affiliated with the NWA, briefly reviving the title until NWA Florida Underground Wrestling took over the 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.
The NWA Detroit United States Heavyweight Championship was a version of the NWA United States Heavyweight Championship contested in Big Time Wrestling from 1959 until 1980. It was first introduced as the Chicago version of the championship and contested on shows produced by Fred Kohler Enterprises before moving to Detroit six years later. While the National Wrestling Alliance recognized only one World Heavyweight Champion, there were multiple "NWA United States Heavyweight Champion"s, as many NWA-affiliated promotions/"territories" across the U.S. each had its own version of an "American" or "United States" championship. For most such territories -- including Detroit -- the U.S. Title was the promotion's primary singles championship. Over its history, the title was held by stars including Bobo Brazil, The Sheik, Wilbur Snyder, Johnny Valentine, and multi-time AWA World Heavyweight Champions Verne Gagne and Dick the Bruiser.
The NWA Texas Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling title that has existed since the 1930s. Though its exact date of creation isn't known, it is among the oldest championships used in professional wrestling today. The title has used a variety of different names over the years, which consists of initial changes to represent the various companies that have controlled the title at different times. Originally, it was simply known as the Texas Heavyweight Championship until its name was changed after the formation of the National Wrestling Alliance in 1948. For most of the title's existence, at least until the early 1990s, it was defended almost exclusively within the Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio areas of Texas. From the 1930s to the mid-1960s, these cities and the surrounding towns were within the territory operated by Ed McLemore, which was known simply as Southwest Sports, Inc. at the time. After McLemore's death, the territory came under the control of Fritz Von Erich and was renamed as Big Time Wrestling. However, the promotion would be renamed World Class Championship Wrestling in the early 1980s, which is the name the territory is best remembered under today. The championship remained an NWA affiliated title until February 1986.
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.
The Vancouver version of the NWA Pacific Coast Heavyweight Championship was the major singles title in two National Wrestling Alliance-affiliated Vancouver territories. The championship was originally used in Big Time Wrestling from 1948 to about 1958, then was reactivated for use in NWA All Star Wrestling from 1970 until 1981, when the title was abandoned.
The ECCW Canadian Championship was the top singles title in Maple Leaf Wrestling from 1978 until 1984, when it was abandoned after the Toronto promotion partnered with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). Its national scope was in name only, similar to the NWA National Heavyweight Championship in Georgia. The title was reinstated as the present-day, NWA Board-controlled version of the NWA Canadian Heavyweight title. Previous versions also existed in Calgary, Halifax and Vancouver. Has been defended in the World Wrestling Federation.
The Stampede Wrestling North American Heavyweight Championship was the major title in the Canadian professional wrestling promotion Stampede Wrestling. From its establishment in 1968 until 1972, it was Stampede's secondary singles championship, becoming the top title in 1972 after the previous top championship, the Calgary version of the NWA Canadian Heavyweight Championship, was abandoned.
The NWA Pacific Northwest Television Championship was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance and defended in its member promotion Pacific Northwest Wrestling. It served as PNW's second-tier title, lasting from 1987 through 1990. As of March 2015, the championship was reactivated when Blue Collar Wrestling became the NWA's new Portland affiliate.
The NWA Pacific Northwest Tag Team Championship was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance and defended in its member promotion Pacific Northwest Wrestling, which promoted shows in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington.
The NWA Americas Heavyweight Championship was the top singles championship in the National Wrestling Alliance's Los Angeles territory, known officially as NWA Hollywood Wrestling, from 1968 until the promotion closed in 1982. The title was first established in 1967 as a secondary championship in NWA Hollywood's predecessor, Worldwide Wrestling Associates. Although the name of the title implies that it was defended throughout North, Central and South America, it was rarely defended outside of Southern California. As a result, the title was essentially a regional title rather than a national one. A number of NWA affiliated promoters at various points over the years have used their own regional versions or variations of "national" championships for the purpose of giving crowds the idea that the company was larger than it actually was, or that the company was the biggest or most successful within the ranks of the National Wrestling Alliance.
The NWA Americas Tag Team Championship was a professional wrestling tag team title in the National Wrestling Alliance's NWA Hollywood Wrestling based out of Los Angeles, California.
The Stampede International Tag Team Championship was the main tag team title in the Canadian professional wrestling promotion Stampede Wrestling. It was created in 1958 as the NWA International Tag Team Championship. When promoter Stu Hart resigned from the National Wrestling Alliance in 1982 the title was renamed the Stampede International Tag Team Championship. When Stampede wrestling closed down in 1989 the titles were retired, but brought back in 2000 when Stampede Wrestling was restarted by Bruce Hart and Ross Hart. and remained active until the promotion closed in 2008.
The NWA Southern Junior Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling title for lighter wrestlers, board-controlled by the National Wrestling Alliance since December 1949.
Larry Richard Oliver was an American professional wrestler, known as "Crippler" Rip Oliver, who had success in Pacific Northwest Wrestling (PNW).
Fuji would go on to win the NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight title before heading to the World Wide Wrestling Federation in 1972.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)