NWA United National Championship
The NWA United National Championship (often abbreviated to UN Championship ) was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance , and best known for being defended in All Japan Pro Wrestling . It was unified into the Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship , along with the PWF World Heavyweight Championship and the NWA International Heavyweight Championship , in 1989. The original belt remained in use for the Triple Crown until 2013.[ 1]
Title history
Symbol
Meaning
No.
The overall championship reign
Reign
The reign number for the specific wrestler listed.
Event
The event in which the championship changed hands
N/A
The specific information is not known
—
Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign
[Note #]
Indicates that the exact length of the title reign is unknown, with a note providing more details.
#
Wrestler
Reign
Date
Days held
Location
Notes
1
Dale Lewis
1
October 1970
[ Note 1]
Won a tournament to crown the first champion.
2
Pantera Negra
1
October 23, 1970
28
Los Angeles, CA
3
John Tolos
1
November 20, 1970
14
Los Angeles, CA
4
Ray Mendoza
1
December 4, 1970
[ Note 2]
Los Angeles, CA
5
John Tolos
2
March 1971
[ Note 3]
N/A
Tolos returned the championship when the NWA decided the referee used a fast count during his title defense against Mendoza.
6
Antonio Inoki
1
March 26, 1971
262
Los Angeles, CA
-
Vacated
-
December 13, 1971
-
N/A
Vacated on December 13, 1971 when Inoki is fired from the JWA , the promotion to which he had brought the title from the United States.
7
King Krow
1
January 1972
[ Note 4]
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Defeated Sailor Thomas in a fictitious tournament final.
8
Seiji Sakaguchi
1
February 11, 1972
208
Los Angeles, CA
9
The Sheik
1
September 6, 1972
1
Tokyo, Japan
10
Seiji Sakaguchi
2
September 7, 1972
149
Osaka, Japan
11
Johnny Valentine
1
February 3, 1973
33
Yokohama, Japan
12
Akihisa Takachiho
1
March 8, 1973
37
Sano, Japan
-
Deactivated
-
April 14, 1973
-
N/A
Deactivated on April 14, 1973 when the JWA closed.
13
Jumbo Tsuruta
1
August 28, 1976
189
Tokyo, Japan
Defeated Jack Brisco in an AJPW tournament final to revive the championship.
14
Billy Robinson
1
March 5, 1977
18
Akita, Japan
15
Jumbo Tsuruta
2
March 23, 1977
1,067
Miami, FL
16
Dick Murdoch
1
February 23, 1980
11
Kagoshima, Japan
17
Jumbo Tsuruta
3
March 5, 1980
222
Kuroiso, Japan
18
Abdullah the Butcher
1
October 13, 1980
101
Nagoya, Japan
19
Jumbo Tsuruta
4
January 22, 1981
556
Nirasaki, Japan
20
Harley Race
1
August 1, 1982
84
Tokyo, Japan
21
Jumbo Tsuruta
5
October 24, 1982
236
Kitami, Japan
-
Vacated
-
June 17, 1983
-
N/A
Vacated on June 17, 1983 so Tsuruta could focus on defending the NWA International Heavyweight Championship .
22
Ted DiBiase
1
October 14, 1983
106
Sasebo, Japan
Defeated Jerry Lawler in a tournament final via forfeit; wrestled Genichiro Tenryu for his first title defense instead.
23
Michael Hayes
1
January 28, 1984
6
Athens, GA
24
David Von Erich
1
February 3, 1984
7
Dallas, TX
-
Vacated
-
February 10, 1984
-
N/A
Vacated on February 10, 1984 when Von Erich dies of an apparent heart attack .
25
Genichiro Tenryu
1
February 23, 1984
[ Note 5]
Tokyo, Japan
Defeated Ricky Steamboat in a tournament final.
-
Vacated
-
February 1986
-
N/A
Voluntarily vacated in February 1986 when Tenryu is pinned by Yoshiaki Yatsu in a tag team match.
26
Genichiro Tenryu
2
April 26, 1986
823
Ōmiya-ku, Japan
Defeated Ted DiBiase in a tournament final. Tenryu won the PWF Heavyweight Championship on March 9, 1988.
27
Stan Hansen
1
July 27, 1988
265
Nagano, Japan
Also won the PWF Heavyweight Championship.
28
Jumbo Tsuruta
6
April 18, 1989
0
Tokyo, Japan
Retained the NWA International Heavyweight Championship and won the PWF Heavyweight Championship and the UN Championship.
-
Unified
-
April 18, 1989
-
N/A
Title was unified with Tsuruta's NWA International Heavyweight Championship and with Hansen's PWF Heavyweight Championship and UN championship to create the Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship .
Combined reigns
See also
^ The exact date that Dale Lewis won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 0 and 22 days.
^ The exact date that John Tolos won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 87 and 112 days.
^ The exact date that John Tolos won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 0 and 25 days.
^ The exact date that King Krow won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 11 and 41 days.
^ The exact date that Genichiro Tenryu vacated the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 709 and 736 days.
References
^ Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4 .
External links