释义 |
- Title history
- Tournaments Takeover the Independent Tournament
- List of combined reigns
- References
{{Infobox pro wrestling championship |championshipname=WEW Heavyweight Championship |image= |image_size= |caption= |currentholder=Kim Duk |won=June 10, 2018 |aired= |promotion= |brand=Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (1999-2002) World Entertainment Wrestling (2002-2004) Apache Army (2004-2016) Pro Wrestling A-Team (2018-present) |created=September 24, 1999 |mostreigns=Kintaro Kanemura (6 reigns) |firstchamp=Kodo Fuyuki |longestreign=Tomohiro Ishii (1,079 days) |shortestreign=Kintaro Kanemura (<1 day) |oldest= |youngest= |heaviest= |lightest= |pastnames=WEW Single Championship |titleretired= |pastlookimages= }}The WEW Heavyweight Championship was a professional wrestling championship, most recently contested in Apache Army. It was originally created for Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling as the WEW Single Championship.[1] The title was revived in Pro Wrestling A-Team in 2018. Title historyNo: | Wrestler: | Reigns: | Date: | Days held: | Location: | Event: | Notes: | |
Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling | 1 | Kodo Fuyuki | 1 | September 24, 1999 | September 24, 1999|November 23, 1999}} | Tokyo, Japan | Making of a New Legend III tour | FMW Commissioner Kodo Fuyuki awarded the title to himself.}} | 2 | Masato Tanaka | 1 | November 23, 1999 | November 23, 1999|January 5, 2000}} | Yokohama, Japan | FMW 10th Anniversary Show | This was a loser leaves FMW" 13,000 volt thunderbolt cage death match.}} | 3 | Tetsuhiro Kuroda | 1 | January 5, 2000 | January 5, 2000|May 5, 2000}} | Tokyo, Japan | New Year Generation tour | 4 | Kodo Fuyuki | 2 | May 5, 2000 | May 5, 2000|April 1, 2001}} | Tokyo, Japan | 11th Anniversary Show: Backdraft | 5 | Tetsuhiro Kuroda | 2 | April 1, 2001 | April 1, 2001|May 22, 2001}} | Tokyo, Japan | Fighting Creation tour | 6 | Hayabusa | 1 | May 22, 2001 | May 22, 2001|August 11, 2001}} | Sapporo, Japan | Neo FMW tour | This was a Barbed Wire Double Hell Death Match.}} | 7 | Kintaro Kanemura | 1 | August 11, 2001 | August 11, 2001|January 6, 2002}} | Tokyo, Japan | Super Dynamism tour | Hayabusa defeated Kanemura on September 5 in Sapporo, but Kanemura was returned the title on September 9 due to Hayabusa using a low blow in winning the title.}} | 8 | Kodo Fuyuki | 3 | January 6, 2002 | January 6, 2002|February 15, 2002}} | Tokyo, Japan | FMW | — | Retired | — | February 15, 2002 | — | — | — | The title was retired due to FMW closing.}} | |
World Entertainment Wrestling | 9 | Kintaro Kanemura | 2 | August 23, 2002 | August 23, 2002|May 1, 2003}} | Tokyo, Japan | WEW | Defeated Tetsuhiro Kuroda to re-establish the title.}} | — | Retired | — | May 1, 2003 | — | — | — | Retired when WEW promotion closed.}} | |
Apache Army | 10 | Togi Makabe | 1 | September 24, 2006 | September 24, 2006|June 24, 2007}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro 3rd Anniversary Show | Defeated Kintaro Kanemura in a street fight barbed wire barricade chain death match to re-establish the title.}} | 11 | Kintaro Kanemura | 3 | June 24, 2007 | June 24, 2007|July 29, 2007}} | Tokyo, Japan | Form of Challenge | 12 | Toru Yano | 1 | July 29, 2007 | July 29, 2007|September 23, 2007}} | Tokyo, Japan | Lock Up | 13 | Mammoth Sasaki | 1 | September 23, 2007 | September 23, 2007|July 12, 2008}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | 14 | Tomohiro Ishii | 1 | July 12, 2008 | July 12, 2008|February 26, 2011}} | Tokyo, Japan | Lock Up | 15 | Kintaro Kanemura | 4 | February 26, 2011 | February 26, 2011|May 27, 2011}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | 16 | Arashi | 1 | May 27, 2011 | May 27, 2011|April 26, 2012}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | 17 | Tetsuhiro Kuroda | 3 | April 26, 2012 | April 26, 2012|July 25, 2012}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | |
— | Vacated | — | July 25, 2012 | — | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | Kuroda vacated the title to enter the "Takeover the Independent" tournament.}} | 18 | Tetsuhiro Kuroda | 4 | September 21, 2012 | September 21, 2012|September 1, 2013}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | Defeated Takeshi Minamino in the final of the 16-man "Takeover the Independent" tournament.}} | 19 | Kintaro Kanemura | 5 | September 1, 2013 | September 1, 2013|November 15, 2015}} | Tokyo, Japan | Apache Pro | 20 | Tomohiko Hashimoto | 1 | November 15, 2015 | November 15, 2015|February 21, 2016}} | Osaka, Japan | Apache Pro | 21 | Koji Kanemoto | 1 | February 21, 2016 | February 21, 2016|December 25, 2016}} | Osaka, Japan | Apache Pro | 22 | Kintaro Kanemura | 6 | December 25, 2016 | December 25, 2016|December 25, 2016}} | Tokyo, Japan | Final Gong | — | Retired | — | December 25, 2016 | — | Tokyo, Japan | Final Gong | The title was retired when Apache Army closed.}} | |
Pro Wrestling A-Team | 23 | Daisaku Shimoda | 1 | April 13, 2018 | April 13, 2018|June 10, 2018}} | Tokyo, Japan | A-Team | Defeats Blue Shark to re-establish the title.}} | 24 | Kim Duk | 1 | June 10, 2018 | June 10, 2018| }} | Tokyo, Japan | A-Team |
TournamentsTakeover the Independent TournamentThe "Takeover the Independent Tournament" was a sixteen-man single-elimination tournament held by Apache Army between July 25, 2012 and September 21, 2012. {{#invoke:RoundN|main|columns=4 |3rdplace=no|bold_winner=|widescore=yes |RD1=First Round |July 25, 2012|Tetsuhiro Kuroda|TKO|Kintaro Kanemura|7:12 |July 25, 2012|Manjimaru|Pin|Tomohiko Hashimoto|4:33 |July 25, 2012|Arashi|Pin|Shota|0:44 |July 25, 2012|Kazushi Miyamoto|Pin|Kotaro Nasu|5:52 |July 25, 2012|Takeshi Minamino|Pin|Shoichi Ishimiya|5:52 |July 25, 2012|Masato Shibata|DQ|Rikiya Fudo|8:06 |July 25, 2012|HIROKI|Pin|Daisaku Shimoda|13:18 |July 25, 2012|Keita Yano|Pin|Kengo Nishimura|11:19 |RD2=Quarter-Finals |August 28, 2012|Tetsuhiro Kuroda|Pin|Manjimaru|10:56 |August 28, 2012|Arashi|TKO|Kazushi Miyamoto|11:27 |August 28, 2012|Takeshi Minamino|Pin|Masato Shibata|5:42 |August 28, 2012|HIROKI*|Pin|Keita Yano|16:40 |RD3=Semi-Finals |September 21, 2012|Tetsuhiro Kuroda|Pin|Arashi|4:20 |September 21, 2012|Takeshi Minamino|Pin|HIROKI|8:40 |RD4=Final |September 21, 2012|Tetsuhiro Kuroda|Sub|Takeshi Minamino|13:57 }}- HIROKI's Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship was on the line in the match.
List of combined reignsRank | Wrestler | No. of reigns | Combined days | 1. | Kintaro Kanemura | 6 | 1,336 | 2. | Tomohiro Ishii | 1 | 1,079 | 3. | Tetsuhiro Kuroda | 4 | 603 | 4. | Kodo Fuyuki | 3 | 465 | 5. | Arashi | 1 | 335 | 6. | Koji Kanemoto | 1 | 308 | 7. | Mammoth Sasaki | 1 | 293 | 8. | Togi Makabe | 1 | 273 | 9. | Tomohiko Hashimoto | 1 | 99 | 10. | Hayabusa | 1 | 81 | 11. | Toru Yano | 1 | 56 | 12. | Masato Tanaka | 1 | 43 | 13. | Kim Duk | 1 | 1 | {{Portal|Professional wrestling|Japan}}References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.wrestling-titles.com/japan/fmw/fmw-wew-s.html|title=WEW Single Title [FMW] (Japan)|website=Wrestling-Titles.com}}
{{WEW World Heavyweight Championship}}{{FMW Championships}} 3 : Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling championships|Heavyweight wrestling championships|Hardcore wrestling championships |