CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Championship

The CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Championship (Campeonato Mundial Micro-Estrellas de CMLL in Spanish) is a professional wrestling championship promoted by the Mexican Lucha libre wrestling-based promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL; Spanish for "World Wrestling Council"). The championship is exclusively competed for in the Micro-Estrellas, or Micros, division where all competitors have dwarfism.

CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Championship
The Micro-Estrellas championship belt
Details
PromotionConsejo Mundial de Lucha Libre
Date establishedDecember 11, 2019
Current champion(s)Chamuel
Date wonDecember 25, 2019

The championship was revealed on December 11, 2019. The championship is the first Mexican based championship solely for wrestlers with dwarfism. As it is a professional wrestling championship, it is not won legitimately; it is instead won via a scripted ending to a match or awarded to a wrestler because of a storyline. Chamuel is the current and inaugural champion. He won a six-man torneo cibernetico elimination match on December 25, 2019.

Background

The origins of the Micro-Estrella division lies in Midget wrestling, which in Mexico was popularized in the 1970s when promoters used the American concept and had a number of Mexicans with dwarfism, individuals with an adult height of less than 147 centimetres (4 ft 10 in), perform as a "special attraction" on lucha libre shows. In the early days saw the popularity of wrestlers such as Gran Nikolai, Pequeno Goliath and Arturito.[1] By the 1980s midget wrestling was less popular in Mexico, especially since few new wrestlers had joined the division.[lower-alpha 1] In the early 1990s Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), created a new concept, the Mini-Estrella division. The division was created by Antonio Peña who worked for CMLL at the time, who came up with the idea of using both wrestlers with dwarfism and wrestlers who were simply very short together, and to have those Mini-Estrellas work as smaller versions of popular wrestlers of the time. Peña and CMLL created the CMLL World Mini-Estrella Championship in 1992, which is considered the official birth of the division.[2] CMLL's Mini-Estrellas division featured a number of skilled, high flying wrestlers which helped make the concept an immediate success, replacing Midget wrestling with the Mini-Estrellas division in Mexico.[lower-alpha 1]

Three of the micro-estrellas and a micro-estrella referee in a CMLL ring.

On April 30, 2017 CMLL began promotion a series of matches for the Micro-Estrellas ("Micro Stars") division, with all competitors being people with dwarfism. The first match in the new division saw Microman and Gallito defeat the team of Mije and Zacarias.[4] The match even had a micro referee as would the Micro-Estrella matches going forward.[5] Prior to the match Gallito, Mije and Zacarias had worked as Mascotas for various CMLL wrestlers and got physically involved in matches, but hardly ever wrestled.[6] In subsequent years the Micro-Estrellas became a regular feature on CMLL shows, leading to the first Micro-Estrellas Lucha de Apuestas, mask vs. mask match between Microman and Chamuel at the CMLL 86th Anniversary Show, which saw Chamuel lose and be forced to unmask.[7] On the December 11, 2019 Informa show CMLL introduced the CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Championship and unveiled the size-appropriate championship belt.[8] Chamuel is the current CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Champion, having won a six-man torneo cibernetico elimination match on December 25, 2019 to become the inaugural champion.[9][10]

As with all professional wrestling championships, matches for the CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Championship are not won or lost competitively, but by a pre-planned ending to a match, with the outcome determined by the CMLL bookers and match makers.[lower-alpha 2] On occasion the promotion declares a championship vacant, which means there is no champion at that point in time. This can either be due to a storyline,[lower-alpha 3] or real life issues such as a champion suffering an injury being unable to defend the championship,[lower-alpha 4] or leaving the company.[lower-alpha 5] The championship will be the first exclusively for people with dwarfism in Mexico, while several have been promoted in the United States such as the NWA World Midget's Championship[lower-alpha 6], and Mini-Estrella championships have been promoted in Mexico since 1992, but those are not exclusively for wrestlers with dwarfism.[2]

Title history

Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days
1 Chamuel December 25, 2019 CMLL Navidad Mexico City, Mexico 1 234+ Defeated Microman, El Gallito, Zacarias el Perico, Guapito, and Átomo [9][10]

Tournaments

2019

CMLL held a six-man torneo cibernetico elimination match featuring Microman, Chamuel El Gallito, Zacarias el Perico, Guapito, and Átomo on December 25, 2019 to determine the first CMLL World Micro-Estrellas Champion. The first wrestler eliminated was Átomo, pinned by Zacarias. Eliminations two through four were: Guapito (by El Gallito), Zacarias (by Microman) and El Gallito (by Chamuel). In the end Chamuel pinned long time rival Microman to win the match and the championship as well.[9][10][16]

# Eliminated[9][10][16] Eliminated by[9][10][16]
1 Átomo Zacarias el Perico
2 Guapito El Gallito
3 Zacarias el Perico Microman
4 El Gallito Chamuel
5 Microman Chamuel
6 Chamuel Winner

Bibliography

  • Duncan, Royal; Will, Gary (2000). Wrestling title histories: professional wrestling champions around the world from the 19th century to the present. Waterloo, ON: Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Hornbaker, Tim (2016). "Statistical notes". Legends of Pro Wrestling - 150 years of headlocks, body slams, and piledrivers (Revised ed.). New York, New York: Sports Publishing. p. 550. ISBN 978-1-61321-808-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Madigan, Dan (2007). Mondo Lucha a Go Go: the bizarre & honorable world of wild Mexican wrestling. New York, New York: HarperColins Publisher. ISBN 978-0-06-085583-3.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Footnotes

  1. Chapter You ain't seen nothing yet: the minis[3]
  2. Hornbaker (2016) p. 550: "Professional wrestling is a sport in which match finishes are predetermined. Thus, win/loss records are not indicative of a wrestler's genuine success based on their legitimate abilities – but on now much, or how little they were pushed by promoters"[11]
  3. Duncan & Will (2000) p. 271, Chapter: Texas: NWA American Tag Team Title [World Class, Adkisson] "Championship held up and rematch ordered because of the interference of manager Gary Hart"[12]
  4. Duncan & Will (2000) p. 20, Chapter: (United States: 19th Century & widely defended titles – NWA, WWF, AWA, IW, ECW, NWA) NWA/WCW TV Title "Rhodes stripped on 85/10/19 for not defending the belt after having his leg broken by Ric Flair and Ole & Arn Anderson"[13]
  5. Duncan & Will (2000) p. 201, Chapter: (Memphis, Nashville) Memphis: USWA Tag Team Title "Vacant on 93/01/18 when Spike leaves the USWA."[14]
  6. Duncan & Will (2000) p. 397, chapter North America: NWA World Midget's title.[15]
gollark: There are probably some things where you need the most CPU power per server - big database servers which aren't horizontally scaleable, video encoding, whatever - but I don't think that's the majority of use.
gollark: IIRC lots are already having issues with the high power of recent server CPU generations.
gollark: Most customers want to maximize compute per *rack*, not per server.
gollark: I can't see this actually being very useful outside of weirdly specific scenarios, honestly.
gollark: It's only 50% more cores than previously. And the chiplet-y design is meant to make it easy to shove extra cores on if you don't care about power much.

References

  1. "La Pequeña Escala / On a small scale". Lucha Libre: Masked Superstars of Mexican Wrestling. Distributed Art Publishers, Inc. 2005. pp. 80–86. ISBN 968-6842-48-9.
  2. Ocampo, Ernesto (October 7, 2006). "El fin de una era: Adiós a Antonio Peña" [The end of an era: goodbye to Antonio Peña]. Súper Luchas (in Spanish). issue 182. Retrieved October 14, 2009.
  3. Madigan 2007, pp. 209–212.
  4. "CMLL Domingos Arena Mexico". CageMatch. April 30, 2017. Retrieved December 11, 2019. Gallito & Microman defeat Mije & Zacarias (13:00)
  5. Ocampo, Ernesto (May 1, 2017). "Micromán, un gran acierto del CMLL — Recordamos la historia de las luchas de personas pequeñas" [Micromán, a great success of the CMLL - We remember the history of the struggles of little people]. Súper Luchas (in Spanish). Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  6. Beltran, William (February 27, 2011). "El Perico... Mascota de La Peste Negra ya tiene nombre.... ¡Zacarías!" [The parrot... Mascot of the Black Plague gets a name.... ¡Zacarías!]. Súper Luchas (in Spanish). Retrieved November 4, 2012.
  7. Ocampo, Ernesto (September 27, 2019). "CMLL Aniversario 86 (27 de septiembre 2019) | Resultados en vivo | 7 cabelleras en juego" [CMLL 86th Anniversary (September 27, 2019) | Live results | 7 scalps at play]. Súper Luchas (in Spanish). Retrieved September 28, 2019.
  8. VideosOficialesCMLL (December 11, 2019). "CMLL informa 11 de diciembre de 2019" [CMLL Informa December 11, 2019] (in Spanish). YouTube. Retrieved December 11, 2019.
  9. Cardoso, Javier (December 25, 2019). "Marcela y Chamuel los triunfadores en la gran función de Navidad en el CMLL" [Marcela and Chamuel are triumphant at CMLL's great christmas event]. Marca (in Spanish). Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  10. Dark Angelita (December 25, 2019). "CMLL: Chamuel, primer monarca mundial de Micro Estrellas" [CMLL: Chamuel, first king of the Micro Stars]. Súper Luchas (in Spanish). Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  11. Hornbaker 2016, p. 550.
  12. Duncan & Will 2000, p. 271.
  13. Duncan & Will 2000, p. 20.
  14. Duncan & Will 2000, p. 201.
  15. Duncan & Will 2000, p. 37.
  16. Lizarranga, Alfonso (December 26, 2019). "El más Buscado la medicina del Último de su Estirpe" [The most wanted medicine for the last of his race]. The Gladiatores (in Spanish). Retrieved January 4, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.