MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Championship

MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Championship
Details
Current champion(s) Vacant
Date won September 3, 2007
Date established September 20, 1997
Promotion Mason-Dixon Wrestling

The MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling secondary championship in Mason-Dixon Wrestling (MDW). It was the original television title of the Atlantic Coast Championship Wrestling promotion during its first year of operation. In December 1998, the promotion became Mason-Dixon Wrestling and the title was replaced by the MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Championship.

The inaugural champion was "Freebird" Buddy Rose, who defeated Bart Batten in New Martinsville, West Virginia on September 20, 1997 to become the first ACCW Television Champion. Latin Tornado, Chick Scott, and Mason Hunter are tied for the record of most reigns, with two each. At 399 days, Punchy McGee's first reign is the longest in the title's history. Tony Nardo's only reign was the shortest in the history of the title, lasting less than a day, losing the belt to Latin Tornado on the same night it was awarded to him. Overall, there have been 21 reigns shared between 15 wrestlers, with one vacancy.

Title history

Key
# Order in reign history
Reign The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed
Event The event in which the title was won
Used for vacated reigns so as not to count it as an official reign
N/A The information is not available or is unknown
+ Indicates the current reign is changing daily

Names

Name Years
ACCW Television Championship 1997 1998
MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Championship 1998 2002

Reigns

As of January 18, 2016.

# Wrestlers Reign Date Days
held
Location Event Notes Ref.
1 Buddy Rose 1 September 20, 1997 49 New Martinsville, West Virginia Live event Rose defeated Bart Batten to become the first ACCW Television Champion.
2 Mr. Attitude 1 November 8, 1997 35 Kingwood, West Virginia Live event [1]
3 Scotty Blaze 1 December 13, 1997 144 Buckhannon, West Virginia Live event [2]
4 Colonel Payne 1 May 6, 1998 87 Clarksburg, West Virginia Live event
5 T. Rantula 1 August 1, 1998 141 Clarksburg, West Virginia Live event
Deactivated December 20, 1998 N/A N/A The promotion was renamed Mason-Dixon Wrestling in December 1998, and the title was replaced by the MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Championship.
1 Punchy McGee 1 March 13, 1999 399 Nutter Fort, West Virginia Live event McGee defeated Bob Brown to become the first MDW Tri-State Heavyweight Champion. [3]
2 Chick Scott 1 April 15, 2000 49 Morgantown, West Virginia Live event [4]
3 Latin Tornado 1 June 3, 2000 7 Kingwood, West Virginia Live event [5]
4 Chick Scott 2 June 10, 2000 56 Elkins, West Virginia Live event [6]
5 Tony Nardo 1 August 5, 2000 0 Nutter Fort, West Virginia Live event Awarded title via forfeit.
6 Latin Tornado 2 August 5, 2000 14 Nutter Fort, West Virginia Live event [7]
7 Scotty McKeever 1 August 19, 2000 194 Elkins, West Virginia Live event [8]
Vacated March 1, 2001 N/A N/A The championship is vacated when Scotty McKeever is stripped after failing to appear for scheduled title defenses.
8 Lance Malinowski 1 March 10, 2001 175 Morgantown, West Virginia Live event Malinowski won a battle royal to win the vacant title. [9]
Vacated September 1, 2001 N/A N/A The championship is vacated when Lance Malinowski is stripped after failing to appear for scheduled title defenses.
9 Mason Hunter 1 September 29, 2001 146 Morgantown, West Virginia Live event Hunter defeated Zubov to win the vacant title. [10]
10 Magnum 1 February 22, 2002 9 Stonewood, West Virginia Live event This was a three-way title unification match also involving MDW Heavyweight Champion Brock Singleton. As a result of Magnum's victory, he holds the MDW Heavyweight and Tri-State titles in addition to the NWA Tri-State Championship. [11][12]
11 Mason Hunter 2 March 10, 2002 364 Morgantown, West Virginia Live event This was a Three-Way Dance also involving Brock Singleton. On March 16, 2002, Hunter lost the NWA Tri-State Championship to Matt Vandal in Parkersburg, West Virginia. [12]
Vacated September 3, 2003 N/A N/A The championship is vacated when Mason Hunter is forced to relocate to the Midwestern United States due to commitments to the United States military.

List of combined reigns

<1 Indicates that the reign lasted less than one day.
Rank[N 1] Wrestler # of reigns Combined days
1 Mason Hunter 2 510
2 Punchy McGee 1 399
3 Chick Scott 2 107
4 Scotty McKeever 1 194
5 Lance Malinowski 1 175
6 Scotty Blaze 1 144
7 T. Rantula 1 141
8 Colonel Payne 1 87
9 Buddy Rose 1 49
10 Mr. Attitude 1 35
11 Latin Tornado 2 21
12 Magnum 1 9
13 Tony Nardo 1 <1

Footnotes

  1. Each reign is ranked highest to lowest; reigns with the same number mean that they are tied for that certain rank.

References

General
Specific
  1. Hawkins, James, Jr. "Arena Reports: West Virginia - Atlantic Coast Championship Wrestling at the Armory." Pro Wrestling Illustrated. April 1998: 51+.
  2. Miller, J. Travis. "Arena Reports: West Virginia - Atlantic Coast Championship Wrestling at the Upshur County Armory." Pro Wrestling Illustrated. May 1998: 51+.
  3. McGaw, Graeme J.; Allan Barrie (March 21, 1999). "The Kilt Report #187 part 2/2". TKR Results Center. Whoowrestling.com. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  4. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (04.15.2000)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  5. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (03.06.2000)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  6. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (10.06.2000)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  7. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (05.08.2000)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  8. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (19.08.2000)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  9. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (05.08.2000)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  10. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (29.09.2001)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  11. Kreikenbohm, Philip. "MDW (08.03.2002)". Events. Cagematch.net. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  12. 1 2 "NWA Tri-State Heavyweight Title". Wrestling-Titles.com. Puroresu Dojo. 2003. Retrieved 1 June 2012.

External links

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