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CWF Heavyweight Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Professional wrestling championship
NWA Southeast Continental Heavyweight Championship
Details
PromotionSoutheastern Championship Wrestling
Date establishedMay 21, 1984
Date retiredDecember 1989
Other name
CWF Heavyweight Championship
Statistics
First championRon Fuller
Final championTom Prichard
Most reignsBob Armstrong (5 reigns)
Shortest reignBoomer H. Lynch (0 days)

TheNWA Continental Heavyweight Championship was a major title in theNational Wrestling Alliance'sAlabama territory calledSoutheastern Championship Wrestling. It existed from 1984 until 1988 when SECW became the Continental Wrestling Federation. The title continued on as theCWF Heavyweight Championship from 1988 until 1989 when the CWF closed.[1]

Key
No.Overall reign number
ReignReign number for the specific champion
DaysNumber of days held
No.ChampionChampionship changeReign statisticsNotesRef.
DateEventLocationReignDays
1Ron FullerMay 21, 1984House showBirmingham, Alabama163DefeatedMichael Hayes[1]
2Bob ArmstrongJuly 23, 1984House showBirmingham, Alabama1[Note 1] [1]
3Mr. Wrestling IIAugust 1984House showN/A1[Note 2] [1]
4Bob ArmstrongNovember 1984House showN/A2[Note 3] [1]
5Boomer H. LynchMay 1985House showN/A10 [1]
6Bob ArmstrongMay 1985House showN/A3[Note 4]Title returned because Lynch was not the scheduled opponent.[1]
7The FlameJune 17, 1985House showBirmingham, Alabama1[Note 5] [1]
8Bob ArmstrongJune 24, 1985NLTHouse showDothan, Alabama4[Note 6] [1]
9The FlameJuly 9, 1985House showMobile, Alabama2[Note 7] [1]
10Lord HumongousJuly 1985House showN/A1[Note 8] [1]
11The FlameJuly 29, 1985House showBirmingham, Alabama34 [1]
12Tommy RichAugust 2, 1985House showBirmingham, Alabama152 [1]
13The FlameSeptember 23, 1985House showBirmingham, Alabama470 [1]
14Roberto SotoDecember 2, 1985House showBirmingham, Alabama121 [1]
15Robert FullerDecember 23, 1985House showBirmingham, Alabama181 [1]
16Brad ArmstrongMarch 14, 1986House showMobile, Alabama1[Note 9] [1]
17Robert Fuller1986House showN/A2[Note 10]Title returned when Armstrong is injured[1]
18Jerry StubbsMay 12, 1986House showMobile, Alabama142 [1]
19Brad ArmstrongJune 23, 1986House showBirmingham, Alabama221 [1]
20Jerry StubbsJuly 14, 1986House showBirmingham, Alabama256 [1]
21Brad ArmstrongSeptember 8, 1986House showBirmingham, Alabama34 [1]
22Kevin SullivanSeptember 11, 1986House showBirmingham, Alabama188 [1]
23The BulletDecember 8, 1986House showBirmingham, Alabama57Bob Armstrong wearing amask[1]
24Kevin SullivanDecember 15, 1986House showBirmingham, Alabama251 [1]
25Ron FullerFebruary 4, 1987House showHouston, Texas224 [1]
26Buddy LandellFebruary 28, 1987House showChattanooga, Tennessee158 [1][2]
27Wendell CooleyApril 27, 1987House showBirmingham, Alabama1[Note 11] [1]
vacantOctober 1987N/AN/ACooley vacated due to a knee injury.[1]
28Dutch MantelOctober 30, 1987House showKnoxville, Tennessee1[Note 12]Defeated Wendell Cooley.[1]
April 1988CCW changed its name to the CWF on April 30, 1988. Mantel turned the championship belt over to general manager Jack Curtis on May 7, 1988 episode of CWF.[1]
CWF Heavyweight Championship
29Tom PrichardOctober 3, 1988House showBirmingham, Alabama1186DefeatedTony Anthony in tournament final.[1]
30Wendell CooleyApril 7, 1989House showKnoxville, Tennessee177 [1]
31Tom PrichardJune 23, 1989House showKnoxville, Tennessee2149 [1]
32Dennis CondreyJuly 22, 1989House showDothan, Alabama1137 [1]
33Tom PrichardDecember 6, 1989House showN/A3[Note 13] [1]
DeactivatedDecember 1989The CWF closed.[1]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between 1 day and29 days.
  2. ^The exact date the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between−1,003 and−974 days.
  3. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between−943 and−913 days.
  4. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between 1 day and69 days.
  5. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between 1 day and68 days.
  6. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between 1 day and67 days.
  7. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between 1 day and29 days.
  8. ^The exact date that the championship was won and lost is unknown, which means that the title reign lasted between 1 day and29 days.
  9. ^The exact date the championship was lost is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and58 days.
  10. ^The exact date the championship was won is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and58 days.
  11. ^The exact date that Cooley retired is uncertain, which means that his reign lasted between157 and159 days.
  12. ^The exact date that the CCW became the CWF is uncertain, which means that his reign lasted between63 and339 days.
  13. ^The exact date that the CWF ceased to operate is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and25 days.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakRoyal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). "(Alabama) Birmingham: NWA Continental Heavyweight Title".Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications.ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  2. ^Hoops, Brian (February 28, 2017)."Daily pro wrestling history (02/28): Andersen & Hansen win NWA Tag Titles". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2017.
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