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The title was established in 1970 when The Destroyer, who held the Hawaii version of the NWA North American Heavyweight Championship, had the belt which would become the PWF United States Championship made to replace the original North American title belt, which had fallen into disrepair. The Destroyer then embarked on a world tour, on which he ...
Pages in category "PWF United States Heavyweight Champions" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The title was originally known as the PWF Intercontinental Heavyweight Championship [14] [15] It was renamed following a tournament in January 1995. [16] [17] [51] PWF Lightweight Championship December, 1992 (n) Scotty Hardbody N/A N/A N/A [10] PWF United States Championship January, 1993 (n) Austin Steele N/A N/A N/A [11] PWF Southern Championship
Hansen's AWA World Heavyweight Championship was also on the line. The match ended in a disqualification. Because the PWF Championship could be won by disqualification but the AWA Championship could not, Choshu only won the PWF Championship. -Vacated - March 1987 - N/A N/A Vacated when Choshu left for New Japan Pro-Wrestling. 12 Stan Hansen: 3
NWA United National Championship [29] PWF United States Heavyweight Championship [30] PWF World Heavyweight Championship [31] Champion Carnival (1976, 1979) [32] [33] January 4 Korakuen Hall Heavyweight Battle Royal (2008) [34] Champion Carnival Fighting Spirit Award (1977) [35] Champion Carnival Outstanding Performance Award (1981) [36]
PWF United States Heavyweight Championship ; 50th State Big Time Wrestling. NWA Hawaii Heavyweight Championship [11] NWA Hawaii Tag Team Championship - with Jim Hady (1), Billy White Wolf (1), and Sam Steamboat (2) [12] NWA All-Star Pro Wrestling. NWA Australasian Heavyweight Championship [5]
PWF United States Heavyweight Championship; V. Tokyo Pro Wrestling; W. WWE United States Championship This page was last edited on 22 April 2018, at 17:58 (UTC). Text ...
A week later he dropped the title back to Brisco. [14] Baba would regain the PWF Heavyweight Championship in America from Abdullah The Butcher in 1979, making another 13 successful defences before dropping the title to Harley Race in 1982. [15] Baba would go on to hold the title four times for a total of 3,847 days, or just over ten years.