Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship
Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Details | |||||||||||||
Promotion | CyberFight | ||||||||||||
Brand | DDT Pro-Wrestling | ||||||||||||
Date established | June 29, 2000 | ||||||||||||
Current champion(s) | Yuni | ||||||||||||
Date won | November 4, 2024 | ||||||||||||
|
The Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship (Japanese: アイアンマンヘビーメタル級王座, Hepburn: Aianman Hebīmetaru-kyū Ōza) is a professional wrestling championship created and promoted by the Japanese promotion CyberFight in its DDT Pro-Wrestling (DDT) brand. Open to anyone, regardless of gender or DDT employment status, the championship is defended "24/7", as in any time, anywhere, as long as a referee is there to confirm the win. Because of this rule, not only is the championship winnable regardless of gender or number of individuals (in case of a common pinfall or submission), it is also available to "unconventional" champions such as animals or inanimate objects, with title changes regularly occurring outside of regular shows, often with videos posted on the promotion's social media accounts.[1][2]
The championship was introduced on the June 29, 2000 TV taping, during which Poison Sawada Black created the title and awarded it to himself.[3] It was created as a parody of the now-defunct WWE Hardcore Championship, which also had a "24/7 rule". The title is often defended during a 10-minute battle royal, with the current holder not being allowed to leave the match until the end of the time limit; as per 24/7 rules, the championship can change hands during, and not only as the result, of the match. Despite its name and similarly titled championships, it is not specific to Iron Man matches.[1]
The current champion is Yuni, who is in his 7th reign. He won the title by pinning Shunma Katsumata during the DDT Sumida Dramatic Dream! event in Sumida, Tokyo, on November 4, 2024.
History
[edit]On November 2, 1998, Mr. McMahon awarded Mankind the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) Hardcore Championship. As Mankind and hardcore wrestling became more popular with audiences, the Hardcore Championship became a more serious title. Its popularity led competitor World Championship Wrestling (WCW) to create its own Hardcore Championship, a move followed by numerous independent promotions. When Crash Holly won the belt on February 22, 2000, he introduced the "24/7 rule" that the belt was to be defended at all times as long as a referee was present.
On June 29, 2000, Poison Julie Sawada introduced the Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship in DDT as a parody of the WWF Hardcore title and recognized himself as the first champion. Minutes after the unveiling, Mitsunobu Kikuzawa demanded he had a look at the title belt. He then used it to attack Sawada and pinned him to become the second champion.[3]
The 1,000th Ironman Heavymetalweight Champion was crowned on April 29, 2014, when the title belt itself became the champion by pinning Sanshiro Takagi.[4] At Ultimate Party 2023, the championship belt was won by a different title, the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship which pinned its holder at the time, Hiromu Takahashi, only to lose the Ironman title seconds later to Kazuki Hirata.[5]
Belt design
[edit]The championship belt design features three glittery silver plates on a black leather strap which has a snake skin pattern on the back. The central plate features brass knuckles surrounded by chains in the center. The word "IRONMAN" is written along the edge of the top half and the word "CHAMPION", though partially erased by years of wear and tear, is written along the bottom edge. The two side plates, on either side of the central plate, are rectangular and identically state "24 HOURS" ("24" in silver bordered with black; "HOURS" in red).
Reigns
[edit]As of November 10, 2024, there have been 1,677 officially recognized reigns between 424 different human individuals, 7 teams and 56 inanimate objects and animals. The record for most reigns is held by Shinobu, who won it 216 times, including by trading the title back-and-forth with 215-time champion Yuko Miyamoto a total of 303 times on the same night. Danshoku Dino holds the record for longest combined reign with at least 534 days and counting (the exact date of when he won his tenth title is uncertain). Masa Takanashi's sixth reign is the longest singular reign at 333 days. Only 155 individuals have held the title for longer than a day. The title has occasionally been won by unusual means, such as an auction for the belt, rock–paper–scissors, and even a title change that occurred in a dream.
Non-wrestlers to have held the title include AV idol Nao Saejima, TV personality LiLiCo, J-pop idols Akari Suda, Kaori Matsumura, Yuki Arai, Rise Shiokawa, Aika Sawaguchi, Misaki Natsumi, Momomi Wagatsuma and Lingling, Tokyo Metropolitan Assemblyman Shinichiro Kawamatsu, a cat named Bunny, a monkey, a three-time champion ladder, Vince McMahon's Hollywood Walk of Fame star, a copy of The Young Bucks' autobiography Killing the Business, and the title belt itself.
Notable champions
[edit]As of January 2024, there have been over 1,600 title changes for the belt, which has been won by numerous male and female wrestlers and non-wrestlers, including children, animals, entire audiences and inanimate objects.
Animals
[edit]- Yatchan — monkey
- Cocolo — miniature Dachshund dog
- Bunny — cat
Inanimate objects
[edit]- Ladder — steel ladder[a]
- Kitty-Chan — stuffed Hello Kitty doll
- Mah-Kun — another stuffed doll, who defeated Kitty-Chan for the belt
- Zeestar — Zeekstar Tokyo's mascot
- A baseball bat[b]
- Chiririn — chicken doll
- Mr. Kasai — stuffed Jun Kasai doll. Mr. Kasai
- A Pro Wrestling Wave poster
- Big Japan Pro Wrestling ring truck
- Ice Ribbon ringside mat
- A pint of beer
- Three different sticks of yakitori
- Two different steel chairs
- "Kōmyō" — calligraphy by actor Akihiro Miwa
- The title belt itself
- The IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship belt
- Yoshihiko — ragdoll, considered a full time member of the roster[c]
- Akihiro — inflatable love doll, sibling of Yoshihiko[d]
- Vince McMahon's Hollywood Walk of Fame star
- A bus
- TV Tokyo camera crane
- A pork bun
- A kotatsu table
- A trash bin
- Pair of chopsticks
- RN: Konyamoanokodenuitarou — printed E-mail
- A beer can[e]
- Killing the Business — a copy of the Young Bucks' autobiography
- An apple
- A christmas tree
- Stefan the Dinosaur — Unagi Sayaka's stuffed dinosaur
- Maya Yukihi's whip
Non-existent
[edit]- Arnold Skeskejanaker — "invisible wrestler" i.e. non-existent. Opponents sell moves of a wrestler who isn't there, and the title is held by nothing and no-one but the wrestlers and referees act as if they can see and pin the "invisible wrestler". Muscle Sakai "won" the title from this "invisible wrestler" by using a "ray gun" and "infrared visor" to shoot the "invisible wrestler", winning the belt on a KO decision.
- The Invisible Man — another "invisible wrestler"
Collective champions
[edit]- Three elementary school girls (Airi Ueda, Shiori Takahashi and Minami Tanabe)
- The Addiction (Christopher Daniels and Frankie Kazarian)
- The entire audience of Beyond Wrestling's Americanrana '16 event
- The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson and Nick Jackson)
- Hiroshi Yamato and Toru Owashi
- Mizuki Watase, Antonio Honda, Danshoku Dino and Yukio Naya
- The 100,000 subscribers to DDT's official YouTube channel
Notes
[edit]- ^ Would fall on the champion and a pinfall was counted. Ladder successfully defended the title by not being pinned during the time limit battle royal matches. Ladder was a three-time champion and the first inanimate object to win the title. DDT held a formal retirement ceremony for the ladder in September 2003.
- ^ Lost the belt after being broken in half as a KO decision.
- ^ Wrestlers treat it as if it actually was an active wrestler, and actually sell moves "done" by them, mostly high flying moves. For some moves, like outside dives, Yoshihiko is helped by one or more assistants, who throw them out of the ring, pull their foot on the ropes, etc. Opposing wrestlers act as if those assistants are not there and are part of Yoshihiko. The original Yoshihiko was an inflatable love doll. They were "killed" by a knee drop from Antonio Honda, which caused their head to burst open, and was replaced by a second Yoshihiko, who was also a love doll, only modified to resemble the Great Muta. The second Yoshihiko was killed by Kenny Omega by a giant swing that sent Yoshihiko out of the ring, thus splitting his head open and revealing cotton stuffing. Later on in that match however, a third Yoshihiko came out resembling The Undertaker's old American Bad Ass gimmick, even using the same theme music. Following that match, the third Yoshihiko was shot to death by Antonio Honda. A fourth Yoshihiko, resembling Hulk Hogan, debuted shortly afterwards.
- ^ Made its debut on August 18, 2013
- ^ Champion Yukio Sakaguchi drank from the can and fell backwards with the can on top of him. The referee counted the pin. The can lost the belt after Yuki Ueno drank its remaining contents.
See also
[edit]- WWE 24/7 Championship – a title with a similar 24/7 rule
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Iron Man Heavymetalweight Championship". Dramatic DDT. 28 November 2010.
- ^ "Ironman Heavymetalweight Title (Japan)". Wrestling-Title.
- ^ a b DDT 6/29 北沢タウンホール大会 [DDT 6/29 Kitazawa Town Hall event]. extremeparty.heteml.net (in Japanese). June 29, 2000. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
- ^ DDT "Max Bump 2014" 4/29 後楽園ホール大会その3 [DDT "Max Bump 2014" 4/29 Korakuen Hall event Part 3]. extremeparty.heteml.net (in Japanese). April 29, 2014. Retrieved August 5, 2021.
- ^ Simon, Tyriece (November 12, 2023). "DDT Pro Wrestling Ultimate Party Results & Highlights: Chris Brookes vs. Yuki Ueno, Chris Jericho vs. Konosuke Takeshita. DDT held their live event, Ultimate Party, on November 12. SEScoops has the results and highlights here!". sescoops.com. Retrieved November 12, 2023.
External links
[edit]- アイアンマンヘビーメタル級選手権 [Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship]. Extreme Party (in Japanese). Retrieved 2021-05-16.
- "Ironman Heavymetalweight Title". Wrestling-Titles.com. Retrieved 2016-07-20.
- DDT Iron Man Heavy Metal Championship