National Wrestling Alliance
NWA | |
Company type | Private |
Industry | |
Founded | July 14, 1948Waterloo, Iowa, U.S. | in
Founders | Pinkie George Orville Brown Al Haft Harry Light Sam Muchnick Don Owen Tony Stecher |
Headquarters | , U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people |
|
Products |
|
Services | Licensing |
Parent | |
Website | nationalwrestlingalliance |
The National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) is an American professional wrestling promotion and governing body owned by Billy Corgan and operated by its parent company Lightning One, Inc.[4]
Founded in 1948, the NWA began as the governing body for a group of regional promotions, the heads of which made up the board of directors. The group operated a territory system which sanctioned their own company championships while recognizing a singular world champion who defended his title across all the territories, participated in talent exchanges, and collectively protected the territorial integrity of member promotions. Prior to the 1960s, it acted as the sole governing body for professional wrestling in the United States. It remained the largest and most influential body in wrestling until the mid-1980s by which time most of the original member promotions went out of business as a result of the World Wrestling Federation's (WWF, now WWE) national expansion.
In September 1993, the largest remaining member promotion, World Championship Wrestling (WCW), left the NWA.[5] The NWA would continue as a loose coalition of independent promotions,[6] with NWA: Total Nonstop Action (NWA:TNA) given exclusivity over its World Heavyweight and Tag Team championships from June 2002 to May 2007.[7]
In August 2012, the NWA discontinued its memberships and started licensing its brand to wrestling promotions.[8] In 2017, it was purchased by Billy Corgan through his Lightning One, Inc. company.[9] By late 2019–2023, the NWA had transitioned into a stand-alone, singular promotion.[10][11][12]
In October 2023, the NWA re-established its territory system, with Michael Hutter's NWA Exodus Pro Midwest being the first promotion sanctioned.[13]
History
[edit]Part of a series on |
Professional wrestling |
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Formation
[edit]In 1948, Paul "Pinkie" George, a professional wrestling promoter from the U.S. Midwest, founded the National Wrestling Alliance with the backing of six other promoters: Al Haft, Tony Stecher, Harry Light, Orville Brown, Don Owen, and Sam Muchnick. The concept of the NWA was to consolidate the championships of these regional companies into one true world championship of professional wrestling, whose holder would be recognized worldwide. The newly formed NWA Board of Directors decided that Brown would become the first ever NWA World Heavyweight Champion.[14]
Governing body
[edit]1950s–1970s
[edit]In 1950, Sam Muchnick, one of the original promoters of the NWA and Lou Thesz's booker, was named the governing body's President, a position to which he was unanimously re-elected and held until 1960, making him one of the longest-tenured presidents in the organization's history.[citation needed] Following the advent of television, professional wrestling matches began to be aired nationally during this time, reaching a larger audience than ever before. Rising demand and national expansion made wrestling a much more lucrative form of entertainment than in decades previous. This era would go on to be known as the "Golden Age" of professional wrestling.[15][16] From 1948 to 1955, each of the three major television networks broadcast wrestling shows; the largest supporter being the DuMont Television Network.[16]
In 1956, allegations were made that the NWA was an illegal monopoly blocking competition. An investigation led by the US Department of Justice resulted in the NWA Consent Decree of 1956 (United States v. National Wrestling Alliance).[17] Several promoters would leave the organization during this time, with some managing to find niches in the United States. In 1957, Montreal promoter Eddie Quinn walked out of the August NWA meeting in St. Louis, having fallen out with Muchnick over a number of issues. At the time Quinn walked out, a wrestler of his named Édouard Carpentier was involved in an angle where he and Lou Thesz were both being presented around the NWA as world champion after Carpentier had a disputed win over Thesz on June 14, 1957.[18]
As the 1950s came to a close, professional wrestling was losing television ratings, and soon TV stations dropped most wrestling shows from their lineups.[19] The remaining televised wrestling promoters had small, local syndicated shows, which aired as late-night filler programming.[20] Promoters started using localized television by purchasing airtime from rival territories, at the consequence of putting some of them out of business.[21]
On January 24, 1963, at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto, Lou Thesz defeated Buddy Rogers in a one-fall match and was declared NWA World Heavyweight Champion for the third and final time.[citation needed] However, after the event, Vincent J. McMahon and Toots Mondt of the Capital Wrestling Corporation (CWC) refused to recognize the title change since Thesz was not a strong draw in their Northeastern territory. They then withdrew the CWC from the NWA.[22] As a result, McMahon and Mondt formed the World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF, later to be known as WWE) with Rogers as its first world champion in April 1963. Although both Gagne and McMahon promoted their own world champions, their promotions continued to have representatives on the NWA Board of Directors and regularly exchanged talent with NWA promotions during this time.[citation needed]
Wrestling's popularity continued to decline in the 1970s. They changed their name from the World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF) to the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1979. At some point during the decade, Muchnick reportedly declared Atlanta, Georgia as the "leading wrestling city" for its "drawing capacity and near-capacity crowds at the City Auditorium or the Omni every Friday."[23] While the American Wrestling Association (AWA) and World Wide Wrestling Federation/World Wrestling Federation (WWWF/WWF) both faltered during the 1970s, the NWA once again took over as the top promotion and gained huge dominance with their program, Georgia Championship Wrestling, which would become the first nationally broadcast wrestling program on cable television through then-superstation TBS in 1979. They brought in Gordon Solie, dubbed "The Walter Cronkite of Professional Wrestling," from former NWA President Eddie Graham's Championship Wrestling from Florida territory to be lead commentator and host.[23]
1980s–1993
[edit]Videotape trading and cable television paved the way for the decline of the NWA's inter-regional business model, as viewers could now see plot holes and inconsistencies between each territories' storylines. The presence of stars like Ric Flair on TV every week made their special appearances in each region less of a draw.[24]
The WWF left the NWA for good in 1983, as Vincent K. McMahon, who bought the WWF from his father in 1982, worked to get WWF programming on syndicated television all across the United States.[citation needed] That same year, Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP) and the NWA created its primary supercard, Starrcade, the first to be broadcast via closed-circuit networks and was regarded as their flagship event.
On Saturday, July 14, 1984, in what would become known as Black Saturday, McMahon bought NWA member Georgia Championship Wrestling (GCW) and merged it into the WWF. The WWF would take over GCW's TV slot on TBS, which had been home to GCW's World Championship Wrestling program for 12 years.[25] This move proved disastrous as ratings would plummet, and the WWF would end up losing money on the deal. Then-NWA President Jim Crockett, Jr., the owner of JCP, would buy the World Championship Wrestling program from McMahon for $1 million and returned NWA programming to TBS. By 1985, JCP would become the flagship territory of the NWA by acquiring more time slots on TBS and merging with other NWA territories in an attempt to compete with the WWF.[26]
With the success of WrestleMania III in 1987, the WWF would schedule another pay-per-view, Survivor Series, on Thanksgiving night to compete directly with NWA's Starrcade event, and demanded exclusivity from cable providers on carriage of the event. As a result, Starrcade was moved to December the following year, with the show now held around Christmas Day beginning in 1988.[citation needed] The WWF then scheduled their first Royal Rumble event in January 1988 to counterprogram against the NWA's Bunkhouse Stampede.[27] The NWA responded by creating Clash of the Champions on TBS to counterprogram WrestleMania IV.[citation needed]
By 1988, Jim Crockett Promotions was facing bankruptcy. On October 11, under the direction of owner Ted Turner, TBS bought the assets of JCP and renamed it World Championship Wrestling (WCW) after the TV show of the same name.[28] Originally incorporated by TBS as the Universal Wrestling Corporation, Turner promised fans that WCW would retain the athlete-oriented style of the NWA. The sale was completed on November 2, 1988, with a television taping of NWA World Championship Wrestling that very same date in WCW's hometown of Atlanta.[29] By September 1993, WCW would withdraw completely from the NWA.
1993–2012
[edit]On August 27, 1994, NWA: Eastern Championship Wrestling (ECW) held a World Title tournament for the vacant NWA World Heavyweight Championship. Unbeknownst to any one, the event was staged for ECW's public withdrawal from the NWA, with tournament winner Shane Douglas throwing down the NWA title belt and instead picking up the ECW Heavyweight Championship belt, proclaiming himself to be the ECW World Heavyweight Champion. ECW founder Tod Gordon would subsequently announce ECW's secession from the NWA, rechristening the promotion as Extreme Championship Wrestling.[30][31][32]
In 1998, the World Wrestling Federation reached an agreement to use the likeness of the NWA titles, branding, and its history, to create a storyline.[33] It would be later claimed that WWE still owned the rights.[34][35] Despite the NWA receiving international television publicity during the angle, it was considered a failure due to low viewer interests.[36][37]
In June 2002, Jeff and Jerry Jarrett launched a new promotion called NWA: Total Nonstop Action (NWA:TNA). NWA:TNA was given creative control over the NWA World Heavyweight and World Tag Team championships through an agreement with the NWA. This would last until March 2007, when the NWA terminated its agreement with TNA. TNA would lose control over the NWA World Heavyweight and World Tag Team championships by the morning of the 2007 Sacrifice pay-per-view event on May 13.[38][39]
On September 17, 2010, KDOC-TV Los Angeles premiered NWA: Championship Wrestling from Hollywood.
R. Bruce Tharpe and International Wrestling Corp. (2012–2017)
[edit]In August 2012, International Wrestling Corp., a holding company run by Houston, Texas-based attorney and wrestling promoter R. Bruce Tharpe, sued Trobich, Baucom, the NWA, and its then-parent company, Trobich's Pro Wrestling Organization LLC, claiming insurance fraud regarding the NWA's liability insurance policy. A settlement was negotiated that transferred the rights to the NWA name and trademarks from Trobich's company to Tharpe's.[8]
The new organization moved from a membership model to a licensing model and significantly reduced the amount of territory some of the members held,[9] which caused many promotions to immediately cut ties with the NWA. On September 9, 2012, Championship Wrestling from Hollywood (CWFH) announced it had left the NWA.[40] CWFH was the unofficial home promotion of both the then-current NWA champion (Adam Pearce) and the most recent previous champion (Colt Cabana), both of whom publicly left the NWA, with Pearce vacating the NWA World Title while exiting.[41] Other major NWA territories like NWA Pro/NWA Pro West, NWA Georgia, NWA Pro East, NWA Southwest and NWA Midwest folded.
In 2013, the NWA re-established a relationship with New Japan Pro-Wrestling, where Bruce Tharpe became an on-screen character, portraying a villainous manager of wrestlers representing the NWA. Over the next two years, the NWA World Heavyweight, World Tag Team and World Junior Heavyweight Championships all changed hands at NJPW events.[42][43][44]
In September 2016, NWA signed a deal with the new Japanese Diamond Stars Wrestling (DSW) promotion to promote shows in not only Japan, but also other parts of Asia. As part of the deal, DSW chairman Hideo Shimada was appointed the NWA Vice President of the Asian Pacific region while Jimmy Suzuki was appointed senior NWA consultant.[45]
Billy Corgan and Lightning One, Inc. (2017–present)
[edit]2017–2019: Acquisition and relaunch
[edit]On May 1, 2017, it was reported that Billy Corgan, lead singer of the Smashing Pumpkins, had agreed to purchase the NWA, including its name, rights, trademarks and championship belts.[9] The report was confirmed by Tharpe that same day.[46] Over the following weeks, the NWA trademarks were moved from Tharpe's International Wrestling Corp. over to Corgan's Lightning One, Inc. production company.[35] According to multiple sources, as part of his acquisition of the NWA, Corgan would also purchase Tharpe's stake in the NWA's "On Demand" VOD service and licensing of the Paul Boesch wrestling library.[47] Corgan's ownership of the NWA took effect on October 1, 2017. All licenses granted by Tharpe to use the NWA branding expired the previous day, putting Corgan in complete control of both the brand and its championships.[48][4][1]
On September 23, 2017, Nick Aldis made his debut for Championship Wrestling from Hollywood and challenged Tim Storm for the NWA World Heavyweight Championship.[49] The match took place on November 12 and saw Storm retain the title. This was the first title match under the new NWA regime headed by Corgan.[50] On December 9, Aldis defeated Storm in a rematch at Cage of Death 19 to become the new NWA World Heavyweight Champion, making him the second British-born champion after Gary Steele.[51]
In 2018, the NWA briefly allied with Impact Wrestling, the former NWA:TNA, to hold an Empty Arena match at Universal Orlando in Orlando, Florida. It was contested by Tim Storm and Jocephus and served as a qualifier to challenge then-NWA World Heavyweight Champion Nick Aldis. The match was recorded on January 14, 2018, and uploaded to YouTube the next day.[52][53]
Starting in 2018, NWA allied with Ring of Honor (ROH). NWA wrestlers such as Aldis, James Storm, and Eli Drake appeared at several ROH events, with ROH-contracted talent even winning NWA titles.[54][55] On September 1, 2018, the NWA World Heavyweight Championship was featured at All In, with Cody defeating Aldis for the title, becoming the first second-generation NWA World heavyweight champion.[56] After All In, the NWA would return to hosting its own events. The NWA 70th Anniversary Show, which took place on October 21, 2018, was the first to be produced directly under Lightning One,[57][9] and was co-produced with Global Force Entertainment; the event was streamed live on FITE TV.[58] The main event saw Aldis defeat Cody to recapture the NWA World Heavyweight Championship and Willie Mack winning a tournament for the vacant NWA National Championship, which became the main secondary title.
The Fourth Crockett Cup, an eight-team, single-elimination tournament that was revived to crown new NWA World Tag Team Champions, took place on April 27, 2019, as another collaboration between the NWA and ROH. This would be the last event to be co-promoted with ROH; on July 24, 2019, the NWA announced that had ended their partnership. Subsequently, it was announced the following month that the NWA would host tapings in Atlanta on September 30 and October 1 for a new television series, later revealed to be titled NWA Powerrr.[59][60][61]
2020–2023: COVID-19, restructuring, and departures
[edit]In January 2020, Marty Scurll, and other Ring of Honor characters, began to appear at NWA events once again as part of an inter-promotional angle. In addition to re-signing with ROH, Scurll would join the company's booking team, enabling him to appear for both the NWA and ROH.[62][63] However, in the fallout of the Speaking Out Movement, Scurll was accused of having intercourse with a 16-year-old female who was inebriated.[64] After an investigation, Scurll would be removed from his position as booker, and by the following January in 2021, would be no longer under contract.[65][66]
Nick Aldis was scheduled to face PCO at Supercard of Honor XIV on April 4, 2020, before the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[67] On June 18, 2020, Dave Lagana resigned as Vice President of the NWA after allegations of sexual assault were made public.[68] The promotion would go into hiatus as a result of this and the pandemic. During this time, several wrestlers would also leave the NWA, including former Tag Team Champions James Storm,[69] Eli Drake,[70] Marti Belle,[71] and Royce Isaacs,[72] former Women's Champion Allysin Kay,[73] former Television Champion Ricky Starks,[74] former Television Champion Zicky Dice.[75]
NWA World Women's Champion Thunder Rosa would make appearances for All Elite Wrestling (AEW) while under contract with the NWA. On September 5, 2020, Rosa unsuccessfully challenged AEW Women's World Championship Hikaru Shida at All Out.[76] On October 27, 2020, Serena Deeb defeated Rosa during the United Wrestling Network's Primetime Live event to become the new NWA World Women's Champion.[77]
On March 2, 2021, the NWA announced their return to promoting events, with the Back For The Attack and new Powerrr episodes as part of a new distribution agreement with FITE TV.[78][79] As part of this agreement, the NWA would remove content from their YouTube channel.[80]
On January 5, 2022, the NWA announced the launch of the NWA All Access subscription package on FITE TV, including past and upcoming pay-per-view events (PPV), new episodes of Powerrr on Tuesdays, and the newly announced NWA USA weekly series. In addition, it was announced that Powerrr would return to YouTube, airing on Fridays after the FITE premiere, and that NWA USA would air on Saturdays on the platform before moving to Sundays on FITE.[81] Finally, it was announced that the NWA would expand their PPV schedule to six events per year, as part of a new deal with FITE TV.[82] Though the partnership ended in 2023, with NWA's programming returning to YouTube, FITE still carries NWA PPV events.[83]
2023–present: Return of the territories; The CW partnership
[edit]On October 9, 2023, the NWA reestablished itself as a governing body, with EC3's NWA Exodus Pro Midwest being the first territory to be sanctioned.[13] On December 4, NWA welcomed Joe Cazana Promotions (JCP) to their territory system.[84]
On October 18, it was reported by news blog Haus of Wrestling that NWA had signed a deal with The CW to air Powerrr and a reality show documenting behind the scenes footage.[85] However, a controversial segment from that month's Samhain PPV event, in which Father James Mitchell along with several women and wrestlers were seen consuming cocaine, drew negative reactions online.[86] The following month, The CW signed a deal with WWE for its weekly NXT program.[87] Though it was rumored to be in-response to the Samhain segment, Corgan later revealed in a 2024 interview with Fightful that the CW executives didn't have a problem with the spot, and that "it was a completely invented story by either a troll inside the company, a leaker or something.”[88]
Following Samhain, episodes of Powerrr were later added to The CW's app in November.[89] In January 2024, NWA announced that new episodes of Powerrr would be available on The CW app from February 6.[90] On February 20, NWA launched a new territory in Chicago, Illinois,[91] and on April 27 welcomed Kross Fire Wrestling (KFW), which based in Sevierville, Tennessee as one of their territories.[92] On November 2, NWA announced that World League Wrestling, founded by Harley Race, would be NWA's fifth territory in Missouri, and it would serve as NWA's developmental system.[93]
Roster
[edit]Male wrestlers
[edit]Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
AJ Cazana[94] | Unknown | United States Tag Team Champion |
Alex Misery[95] | Alex Figueroa | |
Alex Taylor[96] | Alex Willoughby | World Junior Heavyweight Champion |
Alexander Lev[95] | Unknown | |
Anthony Andrews[95] | Unknown | |
BLK Jeez[97] | Darnell Kittrell | |
Bryan Idol[98] | Brian Balch | |
Bulletproof Troop[99] | Blake Troop | |
Carson Drake[95] | Carson Drake | |
Carnage[100] | Marshé Rockett | |
Colby Corino[101] | Colby Steven Corino | |
Daisy Kill[95] | Unknown | |
Dak Draper[95] | Sam Udell | |
Damage[100] | Rodney Begnaud | |
EC3[102] | Michael Hutter | |
Eric Smallz[95] | Eric Marcum | |
Gaagz the Gymp[103] | Andrew Pulido | Floor director |
Garrison Creed[95] | Unknown | |
Homicide[104] | Nelson "Dee" Erazo | Producer |
Jax Dane[105] | Jackson Laymon | |
Jay Bradley[106] | Bradley Jay | |
Jeremiah Plunkett[95] | Jeremiah Plunkett | Mid-America Heavyweight Champion |
Judais[103] | Michael Cole | |
KC Cazana[95] | Unknown | United States Tag Team Champion |
Kerry Morton[107] | Kerry Morton | |
Knox[108] | Michael Hettinga | World Tag Team Champion |
Kratos[109] | Unknown | |
"Magic" Jake Dumas[110] | Jacob Gill | Producer |
Mims[111] | Matthew Mims | National Champion |
Odinson[109] | Reginald Gibbs | |
Ricky Morton[112] | Richard Morton | |
Rolando Freeman[113] | Unknown | |
Ruffo[114] | Unknown | |
Sage Chantz[95] | Unknown | |
Sal Vation[103] | Salvatore Rinauro | Producer |
Slade[95] | Unknown | |
Talos[115] | Zechariah Smith | |
Thom Latimer[116] | Thomas Latimer | World's Heavyweight Champion |
"Thrillbilly" Silas Mason[117] | Unknown | |
Baron Von Storm[118] | Timothy Scoggins | |
Tommy Rant[95] | Unknown | |
Trevor Murdoch[119] | William Mueller | Producer World Tag Team Champion |
Wrecking Ball Legursky[106] | Waylon Legursky | |
Yabo[114] | Unknown | |
Zyon[95] | Eric Thompson |
Female wrestlers
[edit]Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Big Mama | Unknown | World Women's Television Championship |
Charity King[95] | Unknown | |
CJ[110] | Rebeca Janjigian | |
Danni Bee[95] | Unknown | |
Ella Envy[120] | Madison Hardin | World Women's Tag Team Champion |
Kenzie Paige[121] | Kenzie Paige Henry | World Women's Champion |
Kylie Paige[122] | Kylie Alexa Henry | |
La Rosa Negra | Nilka García Solís | |
Max the Impaler[123] | Unknown | Non-binary; uses they/them pronouns World Television Champion |
Miss Starr[124] | Mikala Smith | World Women's Tag Team Champion |
Natalia Markova[125] | Natalia Markova | |
Ruthie Jay[126] | Ruth Jeanlus | |
Tiffany Nieves[127] | Unknown | |
Taylor Rising[128] | Taylor Maschewski |
Managers
[edit]Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Aron Stevens[129] | Aron Haddad | Manager of Blunt Force Trauma |
Austin Idol[95] | Michael McCord | Manager of Idolmania Sports Management |
Chris Silvio, Esq.[130] | Chris Silvio | Manager of Bulletproof Troop Floor director |
Father James Mitchell[103] | James Mitchell | Manager of The Miserably Faithful |
Joe Cazana[95] | Unknown | Manager of The Country Gentlemen |
Vampiro[95] | Ian Hodgkinson | Manager of Daisy Kill and Talos |
Violent J[114] | Joseph Bruce | Manager of The Brothers of Funstruction |
Broadcast team
[edit]Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Danny Dealz[95] | Anthony Lucassio | Commentator |
Joe Galli[95] | Joseph Galli | Commentator and host Executive operator |
Kyle Davis[95] | Kyle Durden | Commentator Interviewer Executive operator |
May Valentine[131] | Mayra Dias Gomes | Interviewer |
Referees
[edit]Ring name | Real name | Notes |
---|---|---|
Jarrod Fritz[95] | Jarrod Fritz | |
Kevin Keenan[95] | Kevin Keenan | |
Scott Wheeler[95] | Scott Wheeler |
Backstage personnel
[edit]Name (Ring name) |
Notes |
---|---|
William Patrick Corgan Jr. (Billy Corgan) |
Owner President Executive producer |
Pat Kenney | Director of Talent Relations Executive producer |
Billy Trask[132] | Director of Television Production Producer |
Carlene Moore-Begnaud (Jazz) |
Producer |
Bill Behrens | Producer |
Rick Michaels | Producer |
Paul E. Pratt (Pollo Del Mar)[133] |
Floor director Occasional manager |
NWA presidents
[edit]Programming and events
[edit]Current
[edit]NWA Powerrr
[edit]Powerrr is the flagship program of the NWA which currently streams on Tuesday nights on The CW's app. The series debuted on October 8, 2019, originally airing on the NWA's YouTube channel.[134] From 2021 to the end of 2022, the show had a first airing on Tuesday at 6:05 pm ET on FITE TV, with the episode debuting on the NWA's YouTube channel later in the same week in Friday at 6:05 pm ET.[135]
A companion series, titled NWA Power Surge (stylized as NWA Powerrr Surge), premiered on April 13, 2021, and features wrestler interviews, unseen matches, and Powerrr recaps.[136]
Former
[edit]Ten Pounds of Gold
[edit]Ten Pounds of Gold is a documentary series chronicling the journey and career of the current NWA Worlds Heavyweight Champion as well as others in the division. Debuting on October 20, 2017, on the NWA's YouTube channel, it was the first series to be produced after the organization's acquisition.[137]
NWA Shockwave
[edit]NWA Shockwave was a web television program that aired on the NWA's YouTube channel and Facebook page.[138] The series debuted on December 1, 2020. On August 10, 2020, it was announced that the NWA will partner with the United Wrestling Network (UWN) to produce a live, weekly pay-per-view (PPV) series named UWN Primetime Live.[139] Matches from this series would also be featured as part of Shockwave.
NWA USA
[edit]NWA USA is a weekly program that debuted on January 8, 2022, on YouTube and focuses on the NWA Junior Heavyweight Championship division.[140] The last episode was released May 8, 2023.
Championships and accomplishments
[edit]Current champions
[edit]Men's division
[edit]Singles
Championship | Current champion(s) | Reign | Date won | Days held |
Location | Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NWA World's Heavyweight Championship | Thom Latimer | 1 | August 31, 2024 | 75 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Defeated EC3 at NWA 76. | [141] | |
NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship | Alex Taylor | 1 | June 28, 2024 | 139 | Highland Park, Illinois | Defeated Joe Alonzo at NWA Chicago Endless Summer. | [142] | |
NWA World Television Championship | Max the Impaler | 1 | January 13, 2024 | 306 | Fort Lauderdale, Florida | Defeated Mims at Paranoia. Aired at NWA Powerrr on tape delay on February 13, 2024. | [143] | |
NWA National Championship | Mims | 1 | August 31, 2024 | 75 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Won the vacant title by defeating Paul Burchill, Bryan Idol and Carson Drake in a four-way match at NWA 76. | [141] | |
NWA Mid-America Heavyweight Championship | Jeremiah Pluckett | 1 | June 1, 2024 | 166 | Knoxville, TN | Won a four-way elimination match also involving Dante Casanova, Hunter Drake, and Mario Parua, at NWA Back to the Territories to win the re-introduced title. |
Tag Team
Championship | Current champion(s) | Reign | Date won | Days held |
Location | Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NWA World Tag Team Championship | Knox and Murdoch | 1 | June 1, 2024 | 166 | Knoxville, Tennessee | Defeated Blunt Force Trauma (Carnage and Damage) at NWA Back to the Territories. | [144] | |
NWA United States Tag Team Championship | The Country Gentlemen (AJ Cazana and KC Cazana) |
1 (2,1) |
August 31, 2024 | 75 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Defeated defending champions Daisy Kill and Talos, The Fixers L.L.C. (Jay Bradley and Wrecking Ball Legursky) and The Slimeballz (Sage Chantz and Tommy Rant) at NWA 76. | [141] |
Women's division
[edit]Singles
Championship | Current champion(s) | Reign | Date won | Days held |
Days rec. | Location | Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NWA World Women's Championship | Kenzie Paige | 1 | August 27, 2023 | 445 | 445 | St. Louis, Missouri | Defeated Kamille at NWA 75 Night 2. | [145] | |
NWA World Women's Television Championship | Big Mama | 1 | October 18, 2024 | 27 | 27 | Highland Park, Illinois | Defeated Haley J, Natalia Markova and Tiffany Nieves in a four-way match to win the vacant title at NWA Chicago Super Smashing Halloween. | [146] |
Tag team
Championship | Current champion(s) | Reign | Date won | Days held |
Location | Notes | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
NWA World Women's Tag Team Championship | The It Girls (Ella Envy and Miss Starr) |
1 (4,1) |
August 31, 2024 | 75 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Defeated The King Bees (Danni Bee and Charity King) at NWA 76. | [141] |
See also
[edit]- National Wrestling Alliance on television
- List of National Wrestling Alliance championships
- List of National Wrestling Alliance territories
Footnotes
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ a b "Billy Corgan has plans to be the next Vince McMahon". Sports Illustrated. October 2, 2017. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
- ^ "National Wrestling Alliance: 1948 - 1993". Wrestling-Titles. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
- ^ Solomon, Brian (April 1, 2015). Pro Wrestling FAQ: All That's Left to Know About the World's Most Entertaining Spectacle. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 9781617136276 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b c Johnson, Mike (October 2, 2017). "Corgan's reign as NWA owner begins, full details". Pro Wrestling Insider. Retrieved October 2, 2017.
- ^ Schadler, Kyle (January 4, 2012). "Abandoned: The History of the WCW International Heavyweight Championship". Bleacher Report. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
- ^ Loverro, Thom (May 22, 2007). The Rise & Fall of ECW: Extreme Championship Wrestling. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781416561569 – via Google Books.
- ^ The History of TNA: Year 1 (DVD). TNA Home Video. 2006.
- ^ a b "NWA Lawsuit Settled, Promotion to Transfer to New Corporation". PWInsider.com.
- ^ a b c d Johnson, Mike (May 1, 2017). "Exclusive: Billy Corgan finalizes deal to purchase..." Pro Wrestling Insider. Retrieved May 1, 2017.
- ^ "Report: NWA & ROH No Longer Working Together; Nick Aldis Not Advertised For Summer Supercard". Fightful. Retrieved August 4, 2019.
- ^ Jamie Greer (July 24, 2019), NWA Looking To Join Weekly TV Line Up, Last Word on Wrestling, event occurs at 01:11:50, retrieved July 19, 2013
- ^ NWA Announces First TV Tapings For Planned Series, August 7, 2019, retrieved August 13, 2019
- ^ a b "Official Press Release on the return of the territory system beginning with @ExoProWrestling!". National Wrestling Alliance on X. October 9, 2023. Retrieved October 9, 2023.
- ^ Shaun Assael. Sex, Lies, & Headlocks (p.8)
- ^ Thesz, Lou. Hooker. p. 101.
- ^ a b Assael, Shaun. Sex, Lies, and Headlocks. p. 10.
- ^ United States vs. National Wrestling Alliance http://wrestlingperspective.com/legal/consentdecree.html
- ^ "Canadian Hall of Fame: Edouard Carpentier". SLAM! Wrestling. Archived from the original on December 8, 2012. Retrieved April 30, 2008.
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References
[edit]- Tim Hornbaker (2007). National Wrestling Alliance: The Untold Story of the Monopoly that Strangled Pro Wrestling. ECW Press. ISBN 978-1-55022-741-3.
- Shaun Assael and Mike Mooneyham (2002). Sex, Lies, and Headlocks: The Real Story of Vince McMahon and World Wrestling Entertainment. Crown. ISBN 1-4000-5143-6.
External links
[edit]- Media related to National Wrestling Alliance at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website