- Mexican National Women's Championship
-
Mexican National Women's Championship
Campeonato Nacional FeminilDetails Current champion(s) Princess Blanca Date won January 30, 2009 Promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL)
Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA)(previously)Date established No later than 1959 Statistics Most reigns Isabel Romero (3 reigns) First champion(s) Isabel Romero Longest reign Martha Villalobos (1,399 days) Shortest reign La Diabólica (50 days) The Mexican National Women's Championship (Campeonato Nacional Feminil in Spanish) is a professional wrestling championship for female wrestlers created and sanctioned by the Comisión de Box y Lucha Libre Mexico D.F. (the Mexico City Boxing and Wrestling Commission). While the Commission sanctions the title, it does not promote the events in which the Championship is defended. The championship is currently promoted by the Mexican Lucha Libre wrestling based promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) and has in the past also been promoted by the Mexican based Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA) promotion. Being a professional wrestling championship, it is not won legitimately; it is instead won via a scripted ending to a match or awarded to a wrestler because of a storyline. The title was not officially sanctioned by the Comisión until 1986 where they lifted the ban on Women's wrestling in Mexico City, the first officially recognized Mexican National Women's champion was Reyna Gallegos, who at the time was the Mexican Women's champion a title that was created in the 1950s. The Comisión chose to recognize the lineage of the title that predated their endorsement to give the title more credibility.
The first recognized Mexican Woman's champion was Isabel Romero who won the title some time in 1959. The championship lineage From 1959 until the Comisión sanctioned the title remains unclear and for large stretches of time undocumented. Martha Villalobos holds the record for the longest reign with 1,399 days while Lady Apache's 2 reigns combine for 1,470 days the longest of any champion. Isabel Romero has held the title three times, while five women are tied with two reigns since the title was officially sanctioned; Lady Apache, La Sirenita, Tiffany, Martha Villalobos and Zuleyma. La Diabólica holds the record for the shortest title reign, with 50 days. The current champion is Princessa Blanca, having defeated Marcela on January 30, 2009 to win the championship.[1] It is her first reign with the title, she's the 17th officially recognized champion and the 12th overall champion of the sanctioned era.
Contents
Title history
- Key
Symbol Meaning Reign The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed. Event The event promoted by the respective promotion in which the titles were won N/A The specific information is not known — Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign (n) Indicates that a title change took place "no later than" the date listed.[Note 1] Indicates that there was a period where the lineage is undocumented due to the lack of written documentation from that time period. + Indicates that the date changes daily for the current champion. # Wrestler Reign Date Days
heldLocation Event Notes A Isabel Romero 1 1959 (n) Unknown A Live event B Irma Gonzales 1 1959 Unknown A Live event C Isabel Romero 2 1964 Unknown A Live event D Jarochita Rivero 1 May 12, 1966 91 Puebla Live event E Isabel Romero 3 August 11, 1966 Unknown Tampico Live event F Rossy Moreno 1 1980 Unknown A Live event 1 Reyna Gallegos 1 March 30, 1986 [Note 2] Apatlaco Live event Defeats La Briosa; — Vacated — 1988 — N/A N/A Championship vacated when Reyna Gallegos retires 2 La Briosa 1 March 30, 1988 102 Apatalco Live event Defeats Zuleyma in tournament final. 3 Zuleyma 1 July 10, 1988 394 Xochimilco Live event 4 La Marquesa 1 August 8, 1989 234 Apatalco Live event 5 Zuleyma 2 March 30, 1990 330 Mexico City, Mexico Live event — Vacated — February 23, 1991 — N/A N/A Championship vacated when Zuleyma wins the UWA World Women's Championship. 6 Neftali 1 November 7, 1991 253 Nezahualcoyotl Live event Defeats Vicky Carranza. 7 La Sirenita 1 July 17, 1992 [Note 3] Cuautla Live event — Vacated — January 1993 — N/A N/A Championship vacated when La Sirenita becomes pregnant 8 La Diabólica 1 August 21, 1993 50 Mexico City, Mexico Live event Defeats Lady Apache in tournament final; — Vacated — October 10, 1993 — N/A N/A Championship vacated when La Diabólica wins the CMLL World Women's Championship. 9 La Sirenita 2 January 18, 1994 676 Mexico City, Mexico Live event Defeats Maria del Angel. 10 Martha Villalobos 1 November 25, 1995 Unknown Culiacan Live event 11 Martha Villalobos 2 June 21, 1996 1,399 Culiacan Live event Defeats La Practicante. 12 Tiffany 1 April 20, 2000 745 San Luis Potosí Live event 13 Lady Apache 1 May 5, 2002 301 Monterrey Live event 14 Tiffany 2 March 2, 2003 336 Monterrey Live event 15 Lady Apache 2 February 1, 2004 1,169 Zapopan Live event — Vacated — April 15, 2007 — N/A N/A Championship vacated four months after Lady Apache won the CMLL Women's World Championship.[2] 16 Marcela 1 May 4, 2007 637 Mexico City, Mexico Live event Defeats Princesa Sujei after the two become the finalist in the 14-women elimination match.[2] 17 Princesa Blanca 1 January 30, 2009 1,018+ Mexico City, Mexico Live event [1] Reigns by combined length
- Key
Symbol Meaning § Indicates that the length of one reign is too uncertain to calculate. ¤ The exact length of at least one title reign is uncertain, so the shortest possible length is used. † Indicates the current champion + Indicates that the date changes daily for the current champion. Rank Wrestler # of reigns Combined days 1 Lady Apache 2 1,470 2 Martha Villalobos 2 1,399§ 3 Tiffany 2 1,081 4 Princessa Blanca † 1 1,018+ 5 La Sirenita 2 844¤
[Note 3]6 Zuleyma 2 724 7 Reyna Gallegos 1 642¤
[Note 2]8 Marcela 1 637 10 Neftali 1 253 11 La Marqueza 1 234 12 La Briosa 1 102 13 Jarochita Rivero 1 91 14 La Diabólica 1 51 Footnotes
- ^ Documentation of the specific date of a title change is not found but documentation of the champion holding the title on that date/in that period.
- ^ a b The exact date on which the title was vacated is not known, which means the title reign lasted between 642 and 730 days
- ^ a b The exact date on which the title was vacated is not known, which means the title reign lasted between 168 and 198 days
References
- General
- Royal Duncan and Gary Will (2000). "Mexico: National Women's Title". Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. pp. 394. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
- Lucha 2000 Staff (December 20, 2004). "Los Reyes de Mexico: La Historia de Los Campeonatos Nacionales" (in Spanish). Lucha 2000. Especial 21.
- Specific
- ^ a b polazky (January 31, 2009). "Resultados Arena México (30 en 08)" (in Spanish). SuperLuchas Magazine. http://superluchas.net/?p=14181. Retrieved July 14, 2009.
- ^ a b SuperLuchas staff (December 26, 2007). "2007 Lo Mejor de la Lucha Mexicana" (in Spanish). SuperLuchas. 244. http://superluchas.net/?p=1491. Retrieved July 11, 2009.
Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) championships CMLL World Heavyweight (Reigns) • World Light Heavyweight (Reigns) • World Middleweight (Reigns) • World Welterweight (Reigns) • World Super Lightweight • World Tag Team (Reigns) • World Trios (Reigns) • World Mini-Estrellas • World Women's • Arena Coliseo Tag Team • Azteca (Reigns) • International Junior (reigns)Mexican National NWA Annual Tournaments Gran Alternativa • Leyenda de Plata • Reyes de Aire • Leyenda de Azul • International Gran Prix • CMLL Universal Championship
Comisión de Box y Lucha Libre Mexico D.F. championships Current Light Heavyweight Champions • Middleweight Champions • Welterweight Champions • Tag team Championship • Trios Championship • Women's ChampionshipInactive Categories:- Championships promoted by Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre
- Mexican national wrestling championships
- Women's professional wrestling championships
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.