The WWE Intercontinental Championship is a professional wrestling title. Originally the second-most important title in World Wrestling Entertainment, the championship is now the secondary championship on its RAW brand.
The Intercontinental Championship has traditionally been used as a stepping stone for wrestlers as they advance in their careers. Chris Jericho, Chris Benoit, Eddie Guerrero, Bret Hart, Kurt Angle, Randy Savage, Shawn Michaels, "Stone Cold" Steve Austin, The Rock, Triple H, Edge, Randy Orton, and most recently, Rob Van Dam all held the Intercontinental Championship before becoming World Champions.
The belt has had different leather strap colors during various title reigns. The Ultimate Warrior switched to a yellow strap during his second Intercontinental title reign. Jeff Jarrett, Shawn Michaels, Marty Jannetty and Shane "Dean" Douglas had white leather during their reigns (Michaels also briefly had a blue strap). Goldust had gold leather during his. Eventually, the belt always reverted to its original black leather state. The "Classic" design seen at right was the successor to a green-strap version that was destroyed by Greg Valentine after he lost the title to Tito Santana in a July 1985 steel cage match.
The strap underwent a complete design change in early 1998 shortly before WrestleMania XIV while The Rock was the champion. The design change was a part of the World Wrestling Federation] (WWF) wanting to hold copyrights on the designs of all of its singles titles (Extreme Championship Wrestling's Tag Team Championship belts had the same design as the Intercontinental title). The new belt was slightly smaller, with a complete oval design, and originally had a purple strap.
During the Invasion storyline in 2001, the WCW United States Champion, Edge, defeated the Intercontinental Champion, Test, to unify both titles. Edge then held the Intercontinental Championship, and the United States Championship became inactive.
After the brand extension was introduced in 2002, the Intercontinental Championship and its champion, Rob Van Dam, was drafted to the RAW brand. For a short time in that same year, the Intercontinental Championship was exclusive to the SmackDown! brand when then-champion Chris Benoit took the title with him during a brand open season. The belt returned to RAW when Benoit lost it to Rob Van Dam at SummerSlam 2002.
Rob Van Dam put his Intercontinental Championship on the line, along with Jeff Hardy's European Championship, in a ladder match on July 22, 2002. By winning that match, Rob Van Dam unified the two titles, and continued to hold the Intercontinental Championship, while the European Championship was deactivated. The same would occur on August 26, 2002, when Van Dam defeated the Hardcore Champion, Tommy Dreamer. Dreamer's Hardcore Title was merged with the Intercontinental Championship and was then deactivated.
In late 2002, RAW was left without a top tier title, when then-WWE champion Brock Lesnar became exclusive to SmackDown! The original plan was to unify all the lower tier titles to create a new, equally prestigious title exclusive to RAW, with the WCW United States, WWE European and WWE Hardcore titles all unified into it. The plan was abandoned and the Intercontinental Championship was unified with the World Heavyweight Championship on October 20, 2002, when then-World Heavyweight Champion, Triple H, defeated the Intercontinental Champion, Kane. This time, the Intercontinental Championship became inactive. RAW general manager Eric Bischoff's reasoning for this move was "one show, one champion", possibly referring to the fact that Bischoff may have viewed the Intercontinental Championship as a sort of second World title.
This was a hugely unpopular decision and fans demanded the belt be reactivated. RAW general manager "Stone Cold" Steve Austin reinstated the Intercontinental Championship the following year, and Christian won the belt on May 18, 2003. When revived, the belt received a facelift of sorts - namely, a nameplate was added, a change which had been made to every other WWE championship belt after the introduction of the unified WWE Undisputed Championship belt. The Intercontinental Championship has remained active since.
The WWE United States Championship was also restored in 2003 as the SmackDown! counterpart of the title. The United States Championship was originally WCW's second-tier title, just as the Intercontinental Championship was for the then-WWF.
| Record: | Record holder: | Record number: | Notes: | Most reigns | Chris Jericho | 7 | His sixth reign is the shortest in history. His second reign was shared with Chyna, later a match happened to determine a single champion which he won. | Longest reign | Honky Tonk Man | 454 days | Loss to the Ultimate Warrior | Shortest reign | Chris Jericho | c. 10 minutes | Jericho won the belt from Rob Van Dam on October 27, 2003, only to lose it to him on the same night later in a Steel Cage Match. | Oldest champion | Ric Flair | 56 years | Flair won the title at Unforgiven 2005 from Carlito. | Youngest champion | Jeff Hardy | 23 years, 7 months, 11 days | Pinned Triple H |
World Wrestling Entertainment championships
WWE Intercontinental Championship | WWE・インターコンチネンタル王座 | WWE Intercontinental Championship | WWE Intercontinental Championship | WWE Intercontinental Championship
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