- List of NWA World Heavyweight Champions
-
The NWA World Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship in the National Wrestling Alliance. Its lineage has been traced from the first World Heavyweight Championship, which traces its lineage to Georg Hackenschmidt's 1905 title and Frank Gotch's 1908 version. This effectively makes it the oldest surviving wrestling championship in the world.
Contents
Title history
† Unofficial title changes not recognized by the NWA.
As of November 23, 2011.
# Wrestler Times Date Days Held Location Event Notes Ref. 1Orville Brown 1January 5, 1948 692 Des Moines, IA Live event Defeated Sonny Myers. In July 1948, the current version of National Wrestling Alliance is founded and Brown is recognized as the first official NWA World champion. Brown was previously the Midwest Wrestling Association champion. 2Lou Thesz 1November 27, 1949 1941 N/A N/A Awarded when Brown suffers career-ending injuries in an automobile accident on November 1, 1949. The title is also unified with the World Heavyweight Championship (National Wrestling Association). Thesz became the Undisputed Champion of all of wrestling by winning the Los Angeles Olympic Auditorium World Heavyweight Title, the remaining major World Championship at the time other than the NWA World Title, on May 21, 1952. -Leo Nomellini 1†March 22, 1955 0 San Francisco, CA Live event Defeated Thesz by countout in the second round and disqualification in the third round. California Athletic Commission recognized the title change by disqualification, but both wrestlers continue to claim the title. -Lou Thesz 2†July 15, 1955 244 Toronto, ON Live event Defeats Nomellini in a rematch. 3Whipper Billy Watson 1March 15, 1956 239 Toronto, ON Live event 4Lou Thesz 2(3)November 9, 1956 217 St. Louis, MO Live event -Édouard Carpentier 1†June 14, 1957 0 Chicago, IL Live event Carpentier was awarded the title by disqualification when Thesz could not continue the match due to a back injury. For 71 days, the NWA recognized the title as being in dispute between Carpentier and Thesz. -Lou Thesz 4†July 24, 1957 113 Montreal, Quebec Live event Thesz won a rematch against Carpentier by disqualification. The NWA initially continued to recognize Carpentier as the champion, but voids any recognition of Carpentier as champion when he withdrew the claim for the title when Montreal promoter Eddie Quinn quit the NWA in August 1958. Some territories such as Boston (AAC), Nebraska and Los Angeles (NAWA/WWA) continued to recognize Carpentier. The AAC recognized Killer Kowalski when he defeated Carpentier in Boston. Nebraska later recognized Verne Gagne when he defeated Carpentier in Omaha. The NAWA/WWA recognized Carpentier as World Champion in July 1959 and Freddie Blassie when he defeated Carpentier in 1961. 5Dick Hutton 1November 14, 1957 421 Toronto, ON Live event 6Pat O'Connor 1January 9, 1959 903 St. Louis, MO Live event The AWA, under Verne Gagne, seceded from the NWA and declared O'Connor their first World Champion in May 1960. This was considered a compromise gesture by the AWA given that Gagne held Édouard Carpentier's disputed version of the title. O'Conner was given 90 days to defend the AWA title against number one contender Gagne and when he did not, the title was awarded to Gagne. 7Buddy Rogers 1June 30, 1961 414 Chicago, IL Live event On August 2, 1962, Bruno Sammartino defeated Rogers in Toronto, but refused to accept the title because Rogers had wrestled with an injury. -Bobo Brazil 1†August 18, 1962 73 Newark, NJ Live event Brazil refused the title because of a groin injury that Rogers had claimed to have. However, on September 6, 1962, Brazil is declared champion because a doctor had determined that Rogers hadn't suffered an injury. This title change isn't recognized by the NWA. -Buddy Rogers 2†October 30, 1962 86 Toledo, OH Live event Killer Kowalski defeated Rogers on November 21, 1961 in Montreal after Rogers broke his ankle in the first fall but was only recognized as champion in some states. Rogers defeated him on January 21, 1963 in New York, but Kowalski claimed the match wasn't for the title. 8Lou Thesz 3(5)January 24, 1963 1079 Toronto, ON Live event Promoters in the northeast United States refuse to recognize Rogers' one-fall loss to Thesz, thus breaking away from the NWA to form a new promotion, the World Wide Wrestling Federation. Rogers is declared the first WWWF World Heavyweight Champion soon after. 9Gene Kiniski 1January 7, 1966 1131 St. Louis, MO Live event 10Dory Funk 1February 11, 1969 1502 Tampa, FL Live event 11Harley Race 1March 24, 1973 118 Kansas City, MO Live event 12Jack Brisco 1July 20, 1973 500 Houston, TX Live event 13Giant Baba 1December 2, 1974 7 Kagoshima, Japan Live event 14Jack Brisco 2December 9, 1974 366 Toyohashi, Japan Live event 15Terry Funk 1December 10, 1975 424 Miami, FL Live event 16Harley Race 2February 6, 1977 926 Toronto, ON Live event 17Dusty Rhodes 1August 21, 1979 5 Tampa, FL Live event 18Harley Race 3August 26, 1979 66 Orlando, FL Live event 19Giant Baba 2October 31, 1979 7 Nagoya, Japan Live event 20Harley Race 4November 7, 1979 302 Amagasaki, Japan Live event 21Giant Baba 3September 4, 1980 5 Saga, Japan Live event 22Harley Race 5September 9, 1980 230 Ohtsu, Japan Live event 23Tommy Rich 1April 27, 1981 4 Augusta, GA Live event 24Harley Race 6May 1, 1981 51 Gainesville, GA Live event 25Dusty Rhodes 2June 21, 1981 88 Atlanta, GA Live event 26Ric Flair 1September 17, 1981 476 Kansas City, MO Live event On February 9, 1982 in Miami, The Midnight Rider (Dusty Rhodes under a mask due to being under suspension in Florida) defeated Flair for the title but returned it when NWA President Bob Geigel asked Rider to unmask or return the belt as NWA rules then forbade masked wrestlers from holding it. In September 1982, Jack Veneno defeated Flair in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic but as he refused to defend the title outside his native country the title was returned to Flair on September 7, 1982. [1] -Carlos Colón 1†January 6, 1983 17 San Juan, PR Live event This title change isn't recognized by the NWA. [1] -Ric Flair 2†January 23, 1983 138 Miami, FL Live event This title change isn't recognized by the NWA. Victor Jovica defeated Flair on February 8, 1983 in Couva, Trinidad but the decision was reversed three days later because Jovica's feet were on the rope during the pin. [1] 27Harley Race 7June 10, 1983 167 St. Louis, MO Live event 28Ric Flair 2(3)November 24, 1983 118 Greensboro, NC Starrcade (1983) This was a Steel Cage match. Former champion Gene Kiniski (above) was special referee. 29Harley Race 8March 21, 1984 2 Wellington, New Zealand Live event This title change was originally ignored. It was recognized retroactively in 1993 to allow WCW to still call Flair a 9-time champion and ignore his (then) WWF title reigns. 30Ric Flair 3(4)March 23, 1984 44 Kallang, Singapore Live event This title change was originally ignored. It was recognized retroactively in 1993 to allow WCW to still call Flair a 9-time champion and ignore his (then) WWF title reigns. 31Kerry Von Erich 1May 6, 1984 18 Irving, TX Parade of Champions 1 32Ric Flair 4(5)May 24, 1984 793 Yokosuka, Japan Live event 33Dusty Rhodes 3July 26, 1986 14 Greensboro, NC The Great American Bash (1986) Flair was pinned by Dusty Rhodes in the main event of Starrcade (1985), but the decision was later reversed (the original Dusty Finish) and turned into a DQ for interference in the match by Ole and Arn Anderson. Therefore the title was returned to Flair. 34Ric Flair 5(6)August 9, 1986 412 St. Louis, MO Live event 35Ron Garvin 1September 25, 1987 62 Detroit, MI Live event 36Ric Flair 6(7)November 26, 1987 452 Chicago, IL Starrcade (1987) On November 21, 1988 WCW joined the NWA 37Ricky Steamboat 1February 20, 1989 76 Chicago, IL Chi-Town Rumble 38Ric Flair 7(8)May 7, 1989 426 Nashville, TN WrestleWar (1989) 39Sting 1July 7, 1990 188 Baltimore, MD The Great American Bash (1990) 40Ric Flair 8(9)January 11, 1991 69 East Rutherford, NJ Live event 41Tatsumi Fujinami 1March 21, 1991 59 Tokyo, Japan WCW/New Japan Supershow I Briefly defended along with the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. This title change was originally ignored in the USA. It was recognized retroactively in 1993 to allow WCW to still call Flair a 9-time champion and ignore his (then) WWF title reigns. 42Ric Flair 9(10)May 19, 1991 112 St. Petersburg, FL SuperBrawl I This title change was originally ignored in the USA. It was recognized retroactively in 1993 to allow WCW to still call Flair a 9-time champion and ignore his (then) WWF title reigns. -Vacated -September 8, 1991 0 N/A N/A Flair was stripped of the title upon signing with the WWF. 43Masahiro Chono 1August 12, 1992 145 Tokyo, Japan Live event Defeated Rick Rude in tournament final. 44The Great Muta 1January 4, 1993 48 Tokyo, Japan WCW/New Japan Supershow III Muta's IWGP Heavyweight Title was also on the line; briefly defended along with the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. 45Barry Windham 1February 21, 1993 147 Asheville, NC SuperBrawl III 46Ric Flair 10(11)July 18, 1993 45† Biloxi, MS Beach Blast (1993) [2] -Vacated -September 1993 0 N/A N/A Vacated when WCW left the NWA. WCW continued to recognize Flair as their WCW International World Heavyweight Champion. 47Shane Douglas 1August 27, 1994 0 Philadelphia, PA NWA/Eastern Championship Wrestling Supershow Defeated 2 Cold Scorpio in tournament final. -Vacated -August 27, 1994 0 N/A NWA/Eastern Championship Wrestling Supershow Douglas threw the NWA World Heavyweight Championship belt down immediately after winning it and declared that he did not want to be the organization's champion; Douglas then declared the NWA-Eastern Championship Wrestling Heavyweight Championship, which he was already in possession of, to be a World Heavyweight Championship. Eastern Championship Wrestling then withdraws from the NWA and becomes Extreme Championship Wrestling. 48Chris Candido 1November 19, 1994 97 Cherry Hill, NJ SMW/NWA Championship Wrestling America Defeated Tracy Smothers in tournament final. 49Dan Severn 1February 24, 1995 1479 Erlanger, KY Live event [3] 50Naoya Ogawa 1March 14, 1999 195 Yokohama, Japan Live event 51Gary Steele 1September 25, 1999 7 Charlotte, NC 51st Anniversary Show Pinned Ogawa in a three-way match also involving Brian Anthony. 52Naoya Ogawa (2) 2October 2, 1999 274 Thomaston, CT Live event -Vacated -July 2, 2000 0 N/A N/A Ogawa vacated the title. 53Mike Rapada 1September 19, 2000 56 Tampa, FL Live event Defeated Jerry Flynn in tournament final. 54Sabu 1November 14, 2000 38 Tampa, FL Live event 55Mike Rapada 2December 22, 2000 123 Nashville, TN Live event 56Steve Corino 1April 24, 2001 172 Tampa, FL Live event -Held up -October 13, 2001 0 N/A N/A Title is held up following a match against Shinya Hashimoto. 57Shinya Hashimoto 1December 15, 2001 84 McKeesport, PA Live event This was 3 matches round robin style. Gary Steele vs. Steve Corino. Gary Steele vs. Shinya Hashimoto. Steve Corino vs. Shinya Hashimoto. Hashimoto won and was then attacked by a masked man who revealed himself to be Dan Severn. 58Dan Severn 2March 9, 2002 80 Tokyo, Japan Live event Match ended in controversy, as the referee gave a fast count. -Vacated -May 28, 2002 0 N/A N/A Severn is stripped of the title after failing to make a defense in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling. Title made exclusive to TNA. 59Ken Shamrock 1June 19, 2002 49 Huntsville, AL TNA Weekly PPV #1 Defeated Malice in the finals of a Gauntlet for the Gold. 60Ron Killings 1August 7, 2002 105 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #8. 61Jeff Jarrett 1November 20, 2002 203 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #22 Unified with the WWA World Heavyweight Championship by defeating Sting on May 25, 2003 in Auckland, New Zealand. 62A.J. Styles 1June 11, 2003 133 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #49 This was a three-way match, also involving Raven. 63Jeff Jarrett 2October 22, 2003 182 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #67 64A.J. Styles 2April 21, 2004 28 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #91 This was a Steel Cage match. 65Ron Killings 2May 19, 2004 14 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #95 This was a four-way match, also involving Raven and Chris Harris. 66Jeff Jarrett 3June 2, 2004 347 Nashville, TN TNA Weekly PPV #97 This was a King of the Mountain match, also involving A.J. Styles, Raven, and Chris Harris. Ron Killings defeated Jarrett on the June 23 TNA Weekly PPV for the title, however due to issues surrounding the title change, the title was held up, before Vince Russo gave Jarrett the title back.[4] -Ray Gonzalez 1†April 3, 2005 0 San Juan, PR IWAPR Juicio Final Live event This title change isn't recognized by the NWA or TNA. 67A.J. Styles 3May 15, 2005 35 Orlando, FL Hard Justice (2005) Defeated Jeff Jarrett for title. [5] 68Raven 1June 19, 2005 88 Orlando, FL Slammiversary (2005) This was a King of the Mountain match, also involving Abyss, Monty Brown, and Sean Waltman. [6] 69Jeff Jarrett 4September 15, 2005 38 Oldcastle, Ontario International Incident 70Rhino 1October 23, 2005 2 Orlando, FL Bound for Glory (2005) Rhino won the right to face Jarrett in a Gauntlet for the Gold match after designated challenger Kevin Nash fell ill and withdrew. [7] 71Jeff Jarrett 5October 25, 2005 110 Orlando, FL Impact! Aired November 3, 2005. 72Christian Cage 1February 12, 2006 126 Orlando, FL Against All Odds (2006) [8] 73Jeff Jarrett 6June 18, 2006 126 Orlando, FL Slammiversary (2006) This was a King of the Mountain match. Jarrett won due to interference by referee Earl Hebner. Jim Cornette stripped Jarrett of the belt later that week, then returned it to him the following week on the condition that he face the winner of a #1 contender match being held at Victory Road on July 16, 2006. [9][10] 74Sting 2October 22, 2006 28 Plymouth, MI Bound for Glory (2006) [11] 75Abyss 1November 19, 2006 56 Orlando, FL Genesis (2006) First masked wrestler to win the title [12] 76Christian Cage 2January 14, 2007 119 Orlando, FL Final Resolution (2007) This was a Three-Way Elimination match, also involving Sting. [13] -Vacated -May 13, 2007 0 N/A N/A Cage is stripped of the championship when the NWA and TNA sever their business relationship. The NWA regains control of the title. 77Adam Pearce 1September 1, 2007 336 Bayamón, Puerto Rico Live event Defeated Brent Albright in the finals of the Reclaiming the Glory Tournament. Pearce competed as a substitute for Bryan Danielson, who defeated Pearce in the semifinals but withdrew from the tournament due to a detached retina. 78Brent Albright 1August 2, 2008 49 New York City, NY Death Before Dishonor VI This marked he first time that a new NWA World Heavyweight Champion was crowned at a Ring of Honor event. [14] 79Adam Pearce 2September 20, 2008 35 Philadelphia, PA Glory By Honor VII [15] 80Blue Demon, Jr. 1October 25, 2008 505 Mexico City, Mexico Live event Blue Demon Jr. is the first Mexican to ever win the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. [16] 81Adam Pearce 3March 14, 2010 357 Charlotte, NC Live event Three-Way Elimination match also featuring Phill Shatter. [17] 82Colt Cabana 1March 6, 2011 48 Hollywood, CA NWA Championship Wrestling from Hollywood taping [18] 83The Sheik 1April 23, 2011 79 Jacksonville, FL NWA Pro Wrestling Fusion "Subtle Hustle" [19] -Vacated -July 11, 2011 20 N/A N/A Sheik is stripped of the title for refusing to defend against Adam Pearce on July 31, 2011. [20] 84Adam Pearce 4July 31, 2011 115+ Columbus, OH NWA at the Ohio State Fair Defeated Chance Prophet, Jimmy Rave and Shaun Tempers in a four-way match to win the vacant title. [21] †There are no records of the day the reign ended, only the month so the first day of the month is counted.
List of top combined reigns
- Key
Symbol Meaning Indicates the current champion As of November 23, 2011.
Rank Wrestler # Of Reigns Combined Days 1. Lou Thesz 3 3,749 2. Ric Flair 10 3,101 3. Harley Race 8 1,862 4. Dan Severn 2 1,559 5. Dory Funk, Jr. 1 1,502 6. Gene Kiniski 1 1,131 7. Jeff Jarrett 6 1,006 8. Pat O'Connor 1 903 9. Jack Brisco 2 866 10. Adam Pearce 4 843+ 11. Orville Brown 1 692 12. Buddy Rogers 1 573 13. Blue Demon, Jr. 1 505 14. Naoya Ogawa 2 469 15. Terry Funk 1 424 16. Dick Hutton 1 421 17. Christian Cage 2 245 18. Whipper Billy Watson 1 239 19. Sting 2 216 20. A.J. Styles 3 196 21. Mike Rapada 2 176 22. Steve Corino 1 175 23. Barry Windham 1 147 24. Masahiro Chono 1 145 25. Ron Killings 2 119 26. Dusty Rhodes 3 107 27. Steve Corino 1 97 28. Raven 1 88 29. Shinya Hashimoto 1 84 30. The Sheik 1 79 31. Ricky Steamboat 1 76 32. Ron Garvin 1 62 33. Tatsumi Fujinami 1 59 34. Abyss 1 56 35. Ken Shamrock 1 49 35. Brent Albright 1 49 36. The Great Muta 1 48 36. Colt Cabana 1 48 37. Sabu 1 38 38. Giant Baba 3 19 39. Kerry Von Erich 1 18 40. Gary Steele 1 7 41. Tommy Rich 1 4 42. Rhino 1 2 43. Shane Douglas 1 0 †Combined length may not be correct. See above.
See also
- National Wrestling Alliance
- Total Nonstop Action Wrestling
- World Championship Wrestling
- Jim Crockett Promotions
- NWA World Heavyweight Championship
References
- General
- "NWA World Heavyweight Championship". Wrestling Titles. http://www.wrestling-titles.com/nwa/world/nwa-h.html. Retrieved 2007-11-27.
- "NWA World Heavyweight Title". National Wrestling Alliance. http://www.nwawrestling.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=41:world-heavyweight-championship&catid=193:orld&Itemid=417. Retrieved 2009-12-16.
- Specific
- ^ a b c "Ric Flair; The 25 Time Heavyweight Champion Of The World". Tony D.'s Professional Wrestling Webpage. http://www.cpol.net/tonyd/ricflair.htm. Retrieved 2009-01-22.[dead link]
- ^ "Beach Blast 1993". PWWEW.net. http://pwwew.net/ppv/wcw/july/1993.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "Smoky Mountain Wrestling: January-March 1995". Pro Wrestling Supercards and Tournaments. http://www.prowrestlinghistory.com/smw/results/1995a.html#022495. Retrieved 2008-01-10. "February 24, 1995 in Erlanger, KY; Dan Severn beat Chris Candido (10:00) via submission to win the NWA World Title."
- ^ Keller, Wade (2005-07-08). "Top 5 Stories 1 Yr. Ago: Flair's autobiography, TNA draws ratings, Angle to return, Mordecai". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Torch_Flashbacks_19/article_13901.shtml. Retrieved 2011-10-04.
- ^ "TNA Hard Justice 2005". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/may/2005.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Slammiversary 2005". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/may/2005.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Bound for Glory 2005". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/october/2005.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Against All Odds 2006". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/february/2006.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Slammiversary 2006". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/february/2006.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Victory Road 2006". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/july/2006.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Bound for Glory 2006". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/october/2006.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Genesis 2005". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/november/2006.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "TNA Final Resolution 2007". PWWEW.net. http://www.pwwew.net/ppv/nwatna/january/2007.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
- ^ "Official Ring of Honor Results page". Ring of Honor Wrestling. http://www.rohwrestling.com/pastresults/. Retrieved 2009-03-27.[dead link] "Death Before Dishonor VI - New York, NY 8/2/08"
- ^ "Official Ring of Honor Results page". Ring of Honor Wrestling. http://www.rohwrestling.com/pastresults/. Retrieved 2009-03-27.[dead link] "Glory By Honor VII - Philadelphia, PA 9/20/08"
- ^ "Official NWA Results page for the NWA Mexico event". National Wrestling Alliance. http://www.nwawrestling.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=841:102508-nwa-mexico-results&catid=52:mexico&Itemid=404. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ^ Caldwell, James (2010-03-14). "New NWA Hvt. champion determined today in Charlotte". PWTorch. http://www.pwtorch.com/members/artman/publish/Other_News_4/article_41485.shtml. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
- ^ Caldwell, James (2011-03-06). "NWA News: NWA World Title spoiler result - Pearce vs. Cabana - from Sunday's NWA Hollywood TV taping (updated w/video)". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Other_News_4/article_48283.shtml. Retrieved 2011-03-07.
- ^ Caldwell, James (2011-04-23). "NWA News: New NWA World Hvt. champion, ending Cabana's title reign, one wrestler calls it a "terrible mistake"". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Other_News_4/article_49538.shtml. Retrieved 2011-04-24.
- ^ "Breaking News! NWA World Title Stripped". NWA Wrestling on Facebook. 2011-07-11. http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150240737073691. Retrieved 2011-07-11.
- ^ Caldwell, James (2011-07-31). "NWA News: New NWA World Hvt. champion - vacant title filled in four-way match Sunday". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/Other_News_4/article_51793.shtml. Retrieved 2011-07-31.
External links
- Official NWA World Heavyweight Title History
- Wrestling-Titles.com - NWA World Heavyweight Title History
National Wrestling Alliance World Championships World Heavyweight (reigns) • World Tag Team (reigns) • World Junior Heavyweight (reigns) • World Welterweight (reigns) • Women's (reigns)National and Regional Championships Current Territories Miscellaneous NWA World Heavyweight Champions Orville Brown · Lou Thesz · Leo Nomellini · Whipper Billy Watson · Édouard Carpentier · Dick Hutton · Pat O'Connor · Buddy Rogers · Bobo Brazil · Gene Kiniski · Dory Funk, Jr. · Harley Race · Jack Brisco · Giant Baba · Terry Funk · Dusty Rhodes · Tommy Rich · Ric Flair · Kerry Von Erich · Ron Garvin · Ricky Steamboat · Sting · Tatsumi Fujinami · Masahiro Chono · The Great Muta · Barry Windham · Shane Douglas · Chris Candido · Dan Severn · Naoya Ogawa · Gary Steele · Mike Rapada · Sabu · Steve Corino · Shinya Hashimoto · Ken Shamrock · Ron Killings · Jeff Jarrett · A.J. Styles · Raven · Rhino · Christian Cage · Abyss · Adam Pearce (current) · Brent Albright · Blue Demon, Jr. · Colt Cabana · The SheikCategories:- Jim Crockett Promotions championships
- National Wrestling Alliance championships
- Total Nonstop Action Wrestling championships
- World Championship Wrestling championships
- World heavyweight wrestling championships
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