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NWA National Television Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NWA National Television Championship
A version of the championship belt
Details
PromotionGeorgia Championship Wrestling
Date established1969
Date retired1972, 1981 and 1985
Other name(s)
  • NWA Georgia Television Championship
  • NWA World Television Championship
Statistics
First champion(s)Joe Scarpa
Most reignsRon Garvin (5 reigns)
Longest reignRay Gunkel
(291 days)
Shortest reignJake Roberts (Less than 5 minutes)
Oldest championBob Roop (41 years+)
Youngest championBobby Eaton (22 years, 161 days)

The NWA National Television Championship was a secondary singles championship in the National Wrestling Alliance's Georgia Championship Wrestling territory. It started as the NWA Georgia Television Championship before becoming the National Television Championship. For a while, it called the NWA World Television Championship, but later reverted back to National Television Championship. On April 21, 1985, the championship was abandoned. The championship was revived in 2023 under the GCW brand

Title history

[edit]
Name Duration
NWA Georgia Television Championship 1969–1979
NWA National Television Championship 1979–1984
NWA World Television Championship 1984–1985
NWA National Television Championship 1985
Georgia Championship Wrestling Television Championship 2023- present


Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days
1 Joe Scarpa November 22, 1969 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 42 Scarpa defeated Assassin #2 in an 8-man tournament final to become the first champion. [1]
2 Nick Bockwinkel January 3, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 63
3 El Mongol March 7, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 3
Vacated March 10, 1970 Title held-up after the tape shows Mongol using an illegal karate blow.
4 Nick Bockwinkel March 20, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 22 Bockwinkel defeated El Mongol in a rematch.
5 Assassin #2 April 11, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 42
Vacated May 23, 1970 The Assassins were suspended and Assassin #2 was stripped of the title. Nick Bockwinkel and Joe Scarpa had a match for the vacant title on May 29, 1970 in Atlanta, Georgia that ended in a no-contest.
6 Nick Bockwinkel June 15, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 3 61 Defeated Joe Scarpa.
7 Bobby Shane August 15, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 126 [2]
8 Luke Graham December 19, 1970 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 91
9 Klondike Bill March 20, 1971 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 203
10 Big Bad John October 9, 1971 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 6
11 Ray Gunkel October 15, 1971 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 291
Deactivated August 1, 1972 Title deactivated when Gunkel died of heart attack after match with Ox Baker in Savannah, Georgia.
12 Tony Atlas February 1, 1977 Live event N/A 1 10 Defeated Ole Anderson in a tournament final.
13 Abdullah the Butcher February 11, 1977 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 49
14 Thunderbolt Patterson April 1, 1977 Live event N/A 1 85
15 French Angel May 7, 1977 Live event N/A 1 20
16 Thunderbolt Patterson May 27, 1977 Live event N/A 2 66
Vacated August 1, 1977 Title vacated when Thunderbolt Patterson lost in a loser leaves town match.
17 Bob Armstrong December 9, 1977 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 63 Defeated Jacques Goulet in a tournament final.
18 Ole Anderson February 10, 1978 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 81
19 Thunderbolt Patterson May 2, 1978 Live event Macon, Georgia 3 287
20 Ole Anderson February 13, 1979 Live event N/A 2 71
21 Bob Armstrong April 25, 1979 Live event Columbus, Georgia 2 19
22 Blackjack Lanza May 14, 1979 Live event Augusta, Georgia 1 81
23 Ray Candy August 3, 1979 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 88
24 Ernie Ladd October 30, 1979 Live event N/A 1 3
25 Stan Hansen November 2, 1979 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 1
26 Killer Karl Kox November 3, 1979 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 28
27 Ray Candy November 30, 1979 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 7
28 Austin Idol December 7, 1979 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 29 Title renamed NWA National Television Championship.
29 Steve Travis January 5, 1980 Live event N/A 1 7
30 Austin Idol January 12, 1980 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 15 [3]
31 Kevin Sullivan January 27, 1980 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 25
32 Austin Idol February 21, 1980 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 3 2
33 Tommy Rich February 23, 1980 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 71
Vacated May 4, 1980 Rich vacated the title in order to pursue Harley Race's NWA World Heavyweight Championship.
34 Terry Taylor August 22, 1980 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 51 Defeated Ken Patera and Bob Armstrong in a tournament round-robin final.
35 Terry Funk October 12, 1980 Live event Columbus, Ohio 1 21
36 Steve Keirn November 2, 1980 Live event N/A 1 27
37 Kevin Sullivan November 29, 1980 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 48
38 Steve O January 16, 1981 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 6 [4]
39 Bobby Eaton January 22, 1981 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 1 [5]
40 Steve O January 23, 1981 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 29 [6]
41 Kevin Sullivan February 21, 1981 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 3 8
42 Steve Keirn March 1, 1981 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 31 [7]
Deactivated April 1, 1981
43 The Iron Sheik May 28, 1983 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 50 Defeated Ron Garvin by disqualification in a tournament final to win the reactivated title.
44 Ron Garvin July 17, 1983 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 112 [8]
45 Jake Roberts November 6, 1983 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 1 153 Title recognized as the NWA World Television Championship after March 1984.
46 Ron Garvin April 7, 1984 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 71
47 Jake Roberts June 17, 1984 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 2 0 This was shown on tape delay on Georgia Championship Wrestling as part of the "NWA Superstars" series. [9]
Vacated June 17, 1984 Atlanta, Georgia Immediately vacated because Roberts used a foreign object. [9]
48 Ron Garvin July 1, 1984 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 3 63 After the WWF purchased GCW on Black Saturday, NWA member successor promotion, Championship Wrestling from Georgia, continued to recognize Garvin as champion, however on CWG television, the title was once again referred to as the National Television Title.
49 Bob Roop September 2, 1984 Live event N/A 1 117
50 Ron Garvin December 28, 1984 Live event Saginaw, Michigan 4 190 [10]
51 Bob Roop January 7, 1985 Live event N/A 2 97
51 Ron Garvin April 14, 1985 Live event Atlanta, Georgia 5 7
Deactivated April 21, 1985 Title deactivated after Jim Crockett Promotions purchased Championship Wrestling from Georgia in late March, 1985.

List of combined reigns

[edit]
Rank Wrestler No. of
reigns
Combined days
1 Ron Garvin 5 443
2 Thunderbolt Patterson 3 438
3 Ray Gunkel 1 291
4 Bob Roop 2 214
5 Klondike Bill 1 203
6 Jake Roberts 2 153
7 Ole Anderson 2 152
8 Nick Bockwinkel 3 146
9 Bobby Shane 1 126
10 Ray Candy 2 95
11 Luke Graham 1 91
12 Bob Armstrong 2 82
13 Blackjack Lanza 1 81
Kevin Sullivan 3 81
15 Tommy Rich 1 71
16 Steve Keirn 2 58
17 Terry Taylor 1 51
18 The Iron Sheik 1 50
19 Abdullah the Butcher 1 49
20 Joe Scarpa 1 42
Assassin #2 1 42
21 Austin Idol 3 36
22 Steve O 2 35
23 Killer Karl Kox 1 28
24 Terry Funk 1 21
25 French Angel 1 20
26 Tony Atlas 1 10
27 Steve Travis 1 7
28 Big Bad John 1 6
29 El Mongol 1 3
Ernie Ladd 1 3
31 Stan Hansen 1 1
Bobby Eaton 1 1

Notes

[edit]

References

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  1. ^ Hoops, Brian (November 22, 2019). "Daily pro wrestling history (11/22): Starrcade 1984 - The Million Dollar Challenge". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  2. ^ Hoops, Brian (August 15, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history: IWGP Champ wins 1-G, Orton beats Benoit". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  3. ^ Hoops, Brian (January 12, 2019). "Pro wrestling history (01/12): The Outsiders win WCW Tag team titles". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  4. ^ Hoops, Brian (December 18, 2019). "On this day in pro wrestling history (01/16): AJ Styles wins X Division title". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 16, 2019.
  5. ^ Hoops, Brian (December 18, 2019). "On this day in pro wrestling history (01/22): WWF Royal Rumble 1994". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
  6. ^ Hoops, Brian (January 23, 2020). "Pro wrestling history (01/23): Hulk Hogan defeats Iron Sheik for WWF title". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  7. ^ Hoops, Brian (December 18, 2019). "On this day in pro wrestling history (03/01): Kobashi defeats Misawa to win GHC title". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved March 1, 2019.
  8. ^ Hoops, Brian (July 17, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history, Kangaroos, Gagne vs. Kiniski in Hawaii, Gordy wins Triple Crown, Hogan wins WCW title from Flair at Bash at the Beach, famous Punk vs. Cena Chicago bout". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  9. ^ a b Hoops, Brian (June 17, 2019). "On this day in pro wrestling history (06/17): Kurt Angle wins TNA World title". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  10. ^ Hoops, Brian (December 28, 2017). "On this day in pro wrestling history (12/28): Hollywood Hulk Hogan vs. Sting at Starrcade 97". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
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