WCPW Heavyweight Championship

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WCPW Heavyweight Championship
Details
PromotionWindy City Pro Wrestling
Date establishedApril 13, 1988
Date retiredDecember 16, 2010
Other name(s)
WCW Heavyweight Championship
Statistics
First champion(s)Steve Regal
Final champion(s)Sean Mulligan
Most reignsSean Mulligan (4)
Longest reignRipper Manson (1,092 days)
Shortest reignSean Mulligan (<1 day)
Youngest championJosh Hardy (18 yrs 200 Days)
Lightest championJosh Hardy (210lbs)

The WCPW Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling heavyweight championship in Windy City Pro Wrestling (WCPW). It was the original top singles championship for the promotion before the creation of the WCPW League Championship in 1993 and its incorporation into the then newly created weight-class division as a legitimate heavyweight title (over 240 lbs). It was eventually unified with the Bare Knuckles and League Championships to create the "WCPW World Heavyweight Championship".

The inaugural champion was "Mr. Electric" Steve Regal, who won the title in Chicago, Illinois on April 13, 1988 to become the first WCPW Heavyweight Champion. Sean Mulligan holds the record for most reigns, with four.[1] At 1,092 days, Ripper Manson's first and only reign is the longest in the title's history. He is the only wrestler in the promotion's history to retire as champion. Mulligan's second reign was the shortest in the history of the title as it was returned to him on the same night as he lost it. Overall, there have been 28 reigns shared between 19 wrestlers, with two vacancies, and 1 deactivation.

Title history[edit]

Key
# Order in reign history
Reign The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed
Event The event in which the title was won
Used for vacated reigns so as not to count it as an official reign
N/A The information is not available or is unknown
+ Indicates the current reign is changing daily

Names[edit]

Name Years
WCW Heavyweight Championship 1988 — 1996
WCPW Heavyweight Championship 1997 — 2008
WCPW World (Unified) Heavyweight Championship 2008 — 2010

Reigns[edit]

# Wrestlers Reign Date Days
held
Location Event Notes Ref.
1 Steve Regal 1 April 13, 1988 619 Chicago, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
2 Frank Melson 1 December 23, 1989 126 Harvard, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
3 Hurricane Smith 1 April 28, 1990 238 Dixon, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
4 Frank Melson 2 December 22, 1990 147 Harvard, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
5 Ron Powers 1 May 18, 1991 421 Chicago, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
6 K.C. Knight 1 July 12, 1992 664 Stone Park, Illinois Live event [2][3][4][5]
7 Mike Samson 1 May 7, 1994 952 Hammond, Indiana Live event [2][3][4]
8 Mike Anthony 1 December 14, 1996 938 Hammond, Indiana Live event [2][3][4]
9 The Polish Crippler 1 July 10, 1999 88 Chicago, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
10 Killer Khalsa Singh 1 October 6, 1999 N/A Schaumburg, Illinois Live event [2][3][4]
Vacated November 1999 N/A N/A The championship is vacated when Singh is stripped of the title. [3][4]
11 The Polish Crippler 2 December 11, 1999 161 N/A Season's Beatings (1999) The Polish Crippler won the vacant championship in a tournament final. [3][4]
12 Willie Richardson 1 May 20, 2000 371 Hammond, Indiana Battle of the Belts 12 (2000) [3][4]
13 Steve Boz 1 May 26, 2001 82 Hammond, Indiana Battle of the Belts 13 (2001) [3][4][6][7][8]
14 Willie Richardson 2 August 16, 2001 107 Fairbury, Illinois Live event [3][4]
15 Steve Boz 2 December 1, 2001 168 Chicago, Illinois Live event [3][4][8][9]
16 Ripper Manson 1 May 18, 2002 1,092 Cicero, Illinois Live event [3][4]
17 Josh Hardy 1 May 14, 2005 227 Cicero, Illinois Live event [3][4]
18 Vito Fontaine 1 2005 179 Cicero, Illinois Live event [4]
19 Baltazar 1 June 24, 2006 185 Midlothian, Illinois Live event [4][10]
20 Ryan Mitchell 1 December 26, 2006 304 Cicero, Illinois Live event [3][4]
21 Austin Roberts 1 October 26, 2007 561 Chicago, Illinois Monster Bash (2009) Roberts defeated Ryan Mitchell in a cage match to win the championship. On May 17, 2008, the title was unified with the Bare Knuckles and League Championships to create the "WCPW World Heavyweight Championship". [4][11]
22 Sean Mulligan 1 May 9, 2009 62 Calumet City, Illinois Battle of the Belts 21 (2009) [4][12]
23 Psycho 1 July 10, 2009 36 Bridgeview, Illinois Legends Under the Stars (2009) Psycho won all of WCPW's singles titles, with exception to the lightweight championship, in a "Pot of Gold" battle royal. On August 15, 2009, due to his controversial victory, he was ordered by WCPW promoter Sam DeCero to defend his titles in a second battle royal during "Hot Summer Nights". He failed to win and the titles were returned to the previous champions. [4]
24 Sean Mulligan 2 August 15, 2009 <1 Chicago, Illinois Hot Summer Nights (2009) The heavyweight championship was returned to Mulligan when the titles were returned to the previous champions. [4]
25 Mike Anthony 2 August 15, 2009 70 Chicago, Illinois Hot Summer Nights (2009) [4]
26 Sean Mulligan 3 October 24, 2009 119 Chicago, Illinois Monster Bash (2009) [4]
27 Bailey Mannix 1 February 20, 2010 210 Chicago, Illinois Live event [4]
Vacated September 18, 2010 Chicago, Illinois WCPW Studio Show The championship is vacated when WCPW "general manager" Psycho strips all champions of their titles. [4]
28 Sean Mulligan 4 September 18, 2010 89 Chicago, Illinois WCPW Studio Show Defeated Justin Reno to win the vacant championship. [4]
Deactivated December 16, 2010 N/A N/A WCPW merged with Chicago Pro Wrestling Academy on December 16, 2010, to form Dynasty Sports Entertainment and Mulligan was the final champion in WCPW as a company.

Combined reigns[edit]

<1 Indicates that the reign lasted less than one day.
Rank Wrestler No. of reigns Combined days
1 Ripper Manson 1 1,092
2 Mike Anthony 2 1,008
3 Mike Samson 1 952
4 K.C. Knight 1 664
5 Steve Regal 1 619
6 Austin Roberts 1 561
7 Ron Powers 1 421
8 Willie Richardson 2 478
9 Ryan Mitchell 1 304
10 Frank Melson 2 273
11 Sean Mulligan 4 270
12 Steve Boz 2 250
14 The Polish Crippler 2 249
14 Hurricane Smith 1 238
15 Josh Hardy 1 227
16 Bailey Mannix 1 210
17 Balthazar 1 185
18 Vito Fontaine 1 179
19 Psycho 1 36

References[edit]

  1. ^ "'Irish Car Bomb' Hopes To Begin New Wrestling Dynasty". Southwest City News-Herald. September 30, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Windy City Pro Wrestling (2002). "WCPW Heavyweight (over 240 lb.)..." WCPW/UAPW Title Histories. WindyCityProWrestling.com. Archived from the original on October 12, 2002. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Kreikenbohm, Philip. "WCPW World Heavyweight Championship". Titel. Cagematch.de. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  5. ^ Benaka, Lee (1991). "K.C. Knight". The Lee Benaka Interviews. DeathValleyDriver.com. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  6. ^ "WCPW - 12/10/01 (Current Champions)". Windy City Pro Wrestling Archive. TheCubsFan.com. December 2001. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  7. ^ "WCPW - 02/04/02 (WCPW: (BoB13) 2000CC/Warlocks/Mexicanos, Boz/Richardson)". Windy City Pro Wrestling Archive. TheCubsFan.com. February 2002. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  8. ^ a b Boz, Steve (2004). "History of THE BOZ". Bio. The Windy City Icon - "He's All That" Steve Boz. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  9. ^ "WCPW - 01/07/02 (WCPW: Jazz/Dawber, Vic/Vihsion, Boz/Richardson)". Windy City Pro Wrestling Archive. TheCubsFan.com. January 2002. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  10. ^ "A Sonny Day In The Nation's Capital". Cigar News. CigarCyclopedia.com. September 2006. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  11. ^ Jay, Sara (May 13, 2011). "Sara Jay Goes 5 Minutes with Austin Roberts". X-Factor by Sara Jay. ProWrestlingDigest.com. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  12. ^ Windy City Pro Wrestling (May 13, 2009). "Battle of the Belts 21 results". Official WCPW's Blog. MySpace.com. Retrieved November 12, 2011.

External links[edit]