UWA/UWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship
UWA/UWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship | |||||||||||||
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Details | |||||||||||||
Promotion |
Universal Wrestling Association (1991-1993) Universal Wrestling Federation (1991-1993) Michinoku Pro Wrestling (2001-2002) Kaientai Dojo (2002-2005) | ||||||||||||
Date established | 1984 | ||||||||||||
Date retired |
1993 May 2005 | ||||||||||||
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The UWA/UWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship was a tag team championship created from the working relationship between the Mexican Universal Wrestling Association and the Japanese Universal Lucha Libre (also called Universal Wrestling Federation) from 1991 to 1993, when the title became inactive. The championship was revived in 2001 by Michinoku Pro Wrestling, and later moved to its final home, Kaientai Dojo, the following year. The title was abandoned in 2005, when it was replaced with Kaientai Dojo's Strongest-K Tag Team Championship instead.[1][2]
Title history
- Key
Reign | The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed. |
Event | The event promoted by the respective promotion in which the titles were won |
N/A | The specific information is not known |
— | Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign |
No. | Champions | Reign | Date | Days held | Location | Event | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Punish and Crush | 1 | November 8, 1991 | 220 | Tokyo, Japan | UWF Show | Defeated Los Cowboys (Silver King and El Texano) in a tournament final. | [1] |
2 | Shu El Guerrero and Scorpio, Jr. | 1 | June 15, 1992 | 6 | Soka, Saitama, Japan | UWF Show | [1] | |
3 | Punish and Crush | 2 | June 21, 1992 | 6 | Tokyo, Japan | UWF Show | [1] | |
— | Vacated | N/A | June 21, 1992 | — | N/A | N/A | Punish and Crush split right after winning the title, vacating the championship in the process. | [1] |
4 | Bulldog K.T. (3) and Pat Tanaka | 1 | August 16, 1992 | 96 | Tokyo, Japan | UWF Show | Defeated Kendo and Coolie S.Z. in a tournament final. | [1] |
5 | Gran Hamada and The Great Sasuke | 1 | November 20, 1992 | 42 | Osaka, Japan | UWF Show | Defeated Bulldog K.T. and Villano IV after Tanaka left the promotion. | [1] |
— | Retired | N/A | 1993 | — | N/A | N/A | Title was vacated and retired when the UWA/UWF working relationship ended. Championship was revived by Michinoku Pro Wrestling in 2001. | [1][2] |
6 | Gedo (4) and Dick Togo | 1 | November 2, 2001 | 50 | Akita, Akita, Japan | Michinoku Pro Show | Won the 2001 Michinoku Futaritabi Tag Team League to become the new champions. | [2] |
7 | SASUKE and Sasuke the Great | 1 | December 22, 2001 | 152 | Tokyo, Japan | Michinoku Pro Show | [2] | |
— | Vacated | N/A | May 23, 2002 | — | N/A | N/A | Michinoku Pro vacated the championship due lack of title defenses. The championship was moved to Kaientai Dojo afterwards. | [2] |
8 | Mr. X and Mr. X II | 1 | July 21, 2002 | 125 | Chiba, Chiba, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | Defeated Minoru Fujita and Daigoro Kashiwa in a tournament final. | [2] |
9 | Mike Lee, Jr. and SUPER-X | 1 | November 23, 2002 | 428 | Chiba, Chiba, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | [2] | |
10 | Teppei Ishizaka and Daigoro Kashiwa | 1 | January 25, 2004 | 20 | Chiba, Chiba, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | [2] | |
— | Vacated | N/A | February 14, 2004 | — | N/A | N/A | Title stripped due to an unauthorized title defense against DJ Nira and Apple Miyuki. | [2] |
— | Vacated | N/A | March 27, 2004 | — | N/A | N/A | Kengo Mashimo and Kunio Tojima defeated Hi69 in a handicap match for the vacant title after MIYAWAKI, Hi69's partner, was injured, but refused the title after winning the match. | [2] |
11 | Teppei Ishizaka and Daigoro Kashiwa | 2 | April 25, 2004 | 69 | Tokyo, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | Last eliminated GENTARO and YOSHIYA in an eight-team elimination match. | [2] |
12 | GENTARO and YOSHIYA | 1 | July 3, 2004 | 119 | Tokyo, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | [2] | |
13 | Ryota Chikuzen and Taka Michinoku | 1 | October 30, 2004 | 127 | Chiba, Chiba, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | [2] | |
14 | KAZMA and Kengo Mashimo | 1 | March 6, 2005 | 0 | Chiba, Chiba, Japan | Kaientai Dojo Show | Also held Strongest-K Tag Team Championship. | [2] |
— | Retired | N/A | 2005 | — | N/A | N/A | Championship abandoned and replaced with the Strongest-K Tag Team Championship. | [2] |
See also
- UWA World Tag Team Championship
- WWF Intercontinental Tag Team Championship
- Tohoku Tag Team Championship
- Strongest-K Tag Team Championship
References
External links
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