IWA World Women's Championship

The IWA World Women's Championship was a tertiary women's professional wrestling title in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling. It had its origins with Stampede Wrestling in Calgary, Alberta in 1987.

IWA World Women's Championship
Details
PromotionStampede Wrestling
Date establishedDecember 1987
Date retiredMay 11, 1997

Made of five plates of pure gold, the I.W.A World Championship belt was made to represent Canada in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling. The belt design resembles the Mexican National Women's Championship.

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 Monster Ripper December 1987 House show N/A 1 N/A Recognized as champion in Stampede Wrestling; announced as having defeated Wendi Richter before coming to Calgary[1]  
2 Chigusa Nagayo September 22, 1988 House show Calgary, Alberta 1 104 Defeats Monster Ripper in tournament final to become first champion[1]  
3 Madusa Miceli January 4, 1989 House show Tokyo, Japan 1 1    
4 Chigusa Nagayo January 5, 1989 House show Tokyo, Japan 2 121    
May 6, 1989 House show N/A 131  
5 Madusa Miceli September 14, 1989 House show Kumamoto, Japan 2 N/A Defeats Beastie  
1991 House show N/A N/A    
6 Kyoko Inoue August 31, 1991 House show Mita, Tokyo 1 238 Defeats Debbie Malenko  
7 Manami Toyota April 25, 1992 House show Yokohama, Japan 1 1,115    
8 Reggie Bennett May 15, 1995 House show Niigata, Japan 1 203    
9 Takako Inoue December 4, 1995 House show Tokyo, Japan 1 413 Unifies with All Pacific Championship, defeating Reggie Bennett on November 21, 1996 in Kobe  
10 Kyoko Inoue January 20, 1997 House show Tokyo, Japan 2 111   [2]
Deactivated May 11, 1997 House show Inoue Was unsatisfied after a match against Kaoru Ito ends in a 60-minute time limit draw; title abandoned.  

See also

References

  1. Laroche, Stephen (January 9, 2001). "SLAM! Wrestling Canadian Hall of Fame: Rhonda Sing / Monster Ripper". SLAM! Wrestling. Retrieved 2008-08-23.
  2. Hoops, Brian (January 20, 2019). "Pro wrestling history (01/20): HHH returns, wins 2002 Royal Rumble". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.