IWC World Heavyweight Championship

IWC World Heavyweight Championship

Seventh champion L.A. Park.
Details
Promotion International Wrestling Council
(1993 - 1995)
Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (1995 - 2007)
Date established November 13, 1993

The International Wrestling Council (IWC) World Heavyweight Championship (Campeonato Mundial de Peso Completo de la IWC in Spanish) was a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship in the Mexican professional wrestling promotion, Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA). The Championship it existed since 1993 until 2007. The championship was generally contested in professional wrestling matches, in which participants execute scripted finishes rather than contend in direct competition.

History

The IWC World Heavyweight Championship was created by Ron Skoler to promote the shows of Asistencia Asesoría y Administración in the United States. On 1995, AAA and IWC splits and Antonio Peña took all control of IWC World Heavyweight Title and continued promoting the championship. At finals of 1999, Pirata Morgan arrives to AAA from International Wrestling Revolution Group (IWRG) and took with he the IWRG Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship. Morgan began to be promoted as IWC World Heavyweight Champion and the real champion at time, L.A. Park began to defend the title as "IWC World Hardcore Champion".[1]

Reigns

The inaugural champion was Cien Caras, who defeated Konnan at Live Event on November 13, 1993 in San Jose, California. The longest reigning champion was Cibernético who held the title for 2554 days from August 18, 2000 to August 16, 2007. The youngest champion is Cibernético who won at the age of 25 years and 128 days. The shortest reigning champion was Héctor Garza who held the title for 7 days from August 11, 2000 to August 18, 2000. Pirata Morgan has held the title the most times with 3 championship reigns. The oldest champion is Perro Aguayo who won at the age of 48 years and 299 days. Currently the championship is inactive, because was unified with GPCW SUPER-X Monster Championship, Mexican National Heavyweight Championship and UWA World Light Heavyweight Championship to create the AAA Mega Championship.[2]

References

  1. "International Wrestling Council World Heavyweight Title". Wrestling-Titles. 2011-12-18.
  2. "AAA World Heavyweight Title Tournaments". Pro Wrestling History. 2011-12-18.

External links

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