The WCW World Heavyweight Championship was the primary championship in the World Championship Wrestling professional wrestling organization. It was created in January 1991, and a variation of the physical belt continues to be used in WWE as the World Heavyweight Championship. It has been held by many successful professional wrestlers, including Ric Flair, Sting, Hulk Hogan, Chris Benoit, Bret Hart, and Goldberg.
History
Origin
In
December 1988,
Ted Turner purchased
Jim Crockett Promotions, which had promoted under the name "NWA World Championship Wrestling". While the promotion remained a member of the
National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), the use of the NWA name was gradually reduced on televised programming, in favor of the name "World Championship Wrestling", or "WCW".
On January 11, 1991, Ric Flair defeated Sting to win the NWA World Heavyweight Championship, and was recognized as the WCW World Heavyweight Champion. The new championship was not initially represented by its own title belt, and WCW continued to use the NWA World Heavyweight Championship title belt. Because of this, WCW regularly claimed the NWA World Championship lineage for its own championship.
On July 1 1991, a creative disagreement with WCW Executive Vice President Jim Herd led to Flair leaving WCW for Vince McMahon's World Wrestling Federation. When Herd refused to return his States dollar|$" target="_blank" >*25,000 deposit (that was left with the NWA), Flair kept the "Big Gold Belt" that had represented the NWA World Heavyweight Championship. WCW was forced to create its own title belt (rumored to have been the long-retired NWA Western States Heritage Championship with a gold plate tacked on its faceplate with the words "WCW WORLD HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION"), which was awarded to Lex Luger after he defeated Barry Windham in a cage match for the vacant WCW World Heavyweight Championship at the 1991 WCW Great American Bash. Shortly after the Bash, a more proper WCW World Heavyweight Championship belt was created.
In late 1991, WCW sued Flair for using the Big Gold Belt on WWF television, but later settled out of court, paying Flair $38,000 for the amount of the NWA deposit, plus interest. Flair returned the Big Gold Belt to WCW. The Big Gold Belt was used for the revived NWA World Heavyweight Championship, a co-promotional gimmick between WCW and New Japan Pro Wrestling.
In September 1993, WCW left the NWA over a dispute regarding the other NWA members demanding that NWA World champion be available for booking, and due to the use of the NWA World Heavyweight Championship on syndicated programming recorded months in advance. By fall 1993, Rick Rude was appearing at the "Disney Tapings" as the NWA World Heavyweight Champion, despite the fact that in regards to the storyline, Flair was still champion. After leaving the NWA, WCW kept the Big Gold Belt, and it was re-named the WCW International World Heavyweight Championship.
At
StarrCade 93, Flair won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, by defeating
Vader. WCW decided to unify the WCW World Heavyweight Championship (represented by the new belt) and International Championship (represented by the "Big Gold Belt"), by having Flair wrestle Sting in
June 1994. Flair won and the International Title belt replaced the old World Heavyweight belt while the International Championship itself was dropped. Hulk Hogan entered WCW and won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship (now represented by the "Big Gold Belt") from Flair. Holding the title off and on until
2000, Hogan helped WCW become the top wrestling company in the
United States. However, by 2001, it had suffered a succession of failures.
WWF/WWE
In
March 2001, World Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. purchased the assets of WCW from
AOL-Time Warner for $7,000,000. Initially, Vince McMahon claimed that he wanted to revive the company in his own image, and a two-hour timeslot for WCW programming was proposed to
TNN. Instead (due to contract obligations), McMahon orchestrated the infamous "
Invasion"
storyline of
2001, in which both
WCW and
ECW were ultimately dismantled. McMahon then decided to unify the WCW and WWF World Titles. The WCW Championship was then renamed the "World Championship" after the WWF storyline which eliminated WCW as an active entity. Some regard this as McMahon simply stroking his own ego, due to the fact that WCW nearly put the WWF out of business.
Chris Jericho unified the titles by pinning The Rock (World Champion) and Stone Cold Steve Austin (WWF Champion) at the WWF Vengeance 2001 Pay-Per-View. The belts stayed unified as the WWE Undisputed Championship until won by Brock Lesnar. When Lesnar decided to wrestle only for the SmackDown! brand, RAW General Manager Eric Bischoff awarded the World Heavyweight Championship to Triple H, represented by the old "Big Gold Belt". It should be noted that, despite appearances, it is now a different title belt, as the current design features a subtle WWE trademark logo above the words "World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion."). Since May, 2006, the new belt was renamed the "World Championship" again when Rey Mysterio was champion as he is not a "heavyweight".
Facts
- Big Show is the only wrestler to have held the WCW world title, the WWE world title, and ECW world title.
- Ric Flair is the only wrestler that has held the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, WCW International World Heavyweight Championship, the NWA World Heavyweight Championship and the WWE Championship.
- Six other different wrestlers have won both the WCW World Heavyweight Championship while in WCW, and the WWE Championship: Hulk Hogan, Randy Savage, Bret Hart, Kevin Nash (as Diesel in the WWF), Sid Vicious (as Sycho Sid in WWF), and The Giant (as The Big Show in WWF/WWE). Kurt Angle, The Rock, and Chris Jericho won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship between WCW's purchase by the WWF and the unification of the WCW and WWF Championships in late 2001.
- Three other different wrestlers have won both the WCW World Heavyweight Championship and the NWA World Heavyweight Championship: Ric Flair, Sting and Jeff Jarrett.
- David Arquette and Vince Russo are the only non-wrestlers to hold the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
- David Arquette is the only American actor to hold the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
- The oldest WCW Champion was Ric Flair, who started his eighth title reign at age 51.
- The youngest WCW Champion was The Giant, who started his first title reign at age 23.
- Kurt Angle is the only professional wrestler to have won the WWE Championship (4), WCW World Heavyweight Championship (1), and the World Heavyweight Championship (1).
- Kurt Angle, Goldberg and Chris Benoit are the only professional wrestlers to have won the WCW World Heavyweight Championship and the World Heavyweight Championship (in the WWE), though for Benoit, he forfeited the title upon leaving WCW.
- Ron Simmons is considered to be the first ever African-American to win the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
- Booker T is the second African-American to win the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
- Even though he is half-Samoan, The Rock is the third African-American to win the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
- Hogan had stated on radio (98Rock in Tampa) that he did not give the WCW World title belt back to WWE before leaving WCW and to this day, he still has the belt hanging on a wall at home.
- According to WCW there have been only 23 wrestlers who have held the WCW World Heavyweight Championship individually. After WWE bought out WCW in 2001, WWE state that there have been 26 wrestlers who have held the title. The three extra wrestlers are Kurt Angle, The Rock and Chris Jericho.
See also
External links
World heavyweight wrestling championships | World Championship Wrestling championships | World Wrestling Entertainment championships | Heavyweight wrestling championships