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词条 All Asia Heavyweight Championship
释义

  1. Title history

  2. See also

  3. Footnotes

  4. References

  5. External links

{{Infobox pro wrestling championship
| championshipname =Pacific Wrestling Federation (PWF) All Asia Heavyweight Championship
| image =
| image_size =
| caption =
| currentholder =Kim Nam-Seok
| won =January 27, 2019
| promotion =Japan Wrestling Association
All Japan Pro Wrestling
Land's End
| brand =
| created =November 22, 1955
| firstchamp =Rikidōzan
| longestreign = Giant Baba (1,262 days), Rikidōzan (2,945 days) (JWA version)
| shortestreign =Bill Dromo (18 days)
| oldest =
| youngest =
| heaviest =
| lightest =
| pastnames = Asia Heavyweight Championship
| titleretired =
| pastlookimages =
}}

The Pacific Wrestling Federation (PWF) All Asia Heavyweight Championship is a title contested for originally in Japan Wrestling Association (JWA).[1] When JWA shut down in 1973, the title went inactive until being reactivated in All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) in 1976 after New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) announced the creation of its own version of the title.[2] The NJPW title was retired in 1981, while the AJPW title was retired in 1995, following the retirement of final champion Kintaro Ohki.[2]

On December 15, 2017, the Land's End promotion announced that it had gotten the blessing of Pacific Wrestling Federation chairman Dory Funk Jr. and Mitsuo Momota, the son of inaugural champion Rikidōzan, to revive the Asia Heavyweight Championship with a tournament to crown the new champion set to take place in South Korea on January 21, 2018.[2]

Title history

Key
SymbolMeaning
No.The overall championship reign
ReignThe reign number for the specific wrestler listed.
EventThe event in which the championship changed hands
N/AThe 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.
#WrestlerReignDateDays heldLocationEventNotesRef.
1Rikidōzan11955|11|22}}day1=22|month1=11|year1=1955|day2=15|month2=12|year2=1963}}Tokyo, JapanJWA House showDefeated King Kong Czaya in tournament final to become the first champion.[3]
1.5|-}}Vacated -1963|12|15}}N/AN/AN/ATitle vacated when Rikidōzan died.[3]
2Kintaro|Ohki}}11968|11|9}}day1=9|month1=11|year1=1968|day2=15|month2=1|year2=1971}}Seoul, South KoreaHouse showDefeated Buddy Austin to win the vacant title.[3]
3Dromo|Bill Dromo}}11971|1|15}}day1=15|month1=1|year1=1971|day2=2|month2=2|year2=1971}}Tokuyama, JapanJWA House show [3]
4Kintaro|Ohki}}21971|2|2}}day1=2|month1=2|year1=1971|day2=24|month2=9|year2=1976}}Hiroshima, JapanJWA House showThe title became inactive on April 14, 1973, when the JWA closed, and was reactivated on March 26, 1976, after New Japan Pro-Wrestling announces creation of its own version of the title.[3]
4.5|-}}Vacant -1976|9|24}}N/AN/AN/ATitle held up after match against Waldo Von Erich in Omiya, Japan.[3]
5Kintaro|Ohki}}31976|10|21}}day1=21|month1=10|year1=1976|day2=29|month2=10|year2=1977}}Fukushima, JapanAJPW House showDefeated Waldo Von Erich in a rematch to win the held up title.[3]
6Giant Baba11977|10|29}}day1=29|month1=10|year1=1977|day2=13|month2=4|year2=1981}}Kuroiso, JapanAJPW House showAlready held the PWF Heavyweight Championship, so both titles may have been defended simultaneously, or not at all.[3][4]
6.5|-}}Vacated -1981|4|13}}N/AN/AN/AChampionship vacated for undocumented reasons.[3]
7Kintaro|Ohki}}41981}}{{age in days nts|day1=31|month1=12|year1=1984|day2=4|month2=2|year2=1995}}|[5]}}South KoreaHouse show [3]
8|-}}Title abandoned -1995|4|2}}N/AN/AN/AOhki, who had not wrestled in nearly a decade, officially retired and the title was abandoned.[3]
8Ryoji|Sai}}12018|1|21}}{{age in days nts|day1=21|month1=1|year1=2018|day2=29|month2=7|year2=2018}}Goyang, South KoreaHouse showDefeated Bodyguard in a tournament final to win the vacant title
9Bodyguard12018|7|29}}{{age in days nts|day1=29|month1=7|year1=2018|day2=27|month2=1|year2=2019}}Osaka, JapanAJPW Summer Action Series 2018
10Kim Nam-Seok12019|1|27}}{{age in days nts|day1=27|month1=1|year1=2019}}+Seoul, South KoreaHouse Show

See also

  • All Japan Pro Wrestling
  • Japan Wrestling Association
  • All Asia Tag Team Championship

Footnotes

1. ^{{cite book | author=Royal Duncan & Gary Will | title=Wrestling Title Histories | publisher=Archeus Communications | year=2006|edition=4th | isbn=0-9698161-5-4 }}
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.landsend2016.com/%E7%B7%8A%E6%80%A5%E5%91%8A%E7%9F%A5%EF%BC%81%EF%BC%81/|title=緊急告知!!|date=2017-12-15|accessdate=2017-12-16|work=Land's End|language=Japanese}}
3. ^10 11 12 {{cite web|title=All Asia Heavyweight Title|work=Wrestling Titles|url=http://www.wrestling-titles.com/japan/alljapan/asia-h.html|accessdate=2008-02-15| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20080218223344/http://www.wrestling-titles.com/japan/alljapan/asia-h.html| archivedate= 18 February 2008 | deadurl= no}}
4. ^{{cite web|title=PWF Heavyweight Title|work=Wrestling Titles|url=http://www.wrestling-titles.com/japan/alljapan/pwf-h.html|accessdate=2008-02-15| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20080226100037/http://www.wrestling-titles.com/japan/alljapan/pwf-h.html| archivedate= 26 February 2008 | deadurl= no}}
5. ^While not being defended for nearly a decade the championship was not officially retired until Ohki officially retired, which puts this title reign at between {{age in days nts|day1=31|month1=12|year1=1984|day2=2|month2=4|year2=1995}} and {{age in days nts|day1=14|month1=4|year1=1984|day2=2|month2=4|year2=1995}} days.

References

{{reflist}}

External links

  • Wrestling-Titles.com
{{AJPW}}

3 : All Japan Pro Wrestling championships|Heavyweight wrestling championships|Continental professional wrestling championships

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