| CWUSA Television Championship |
|---|
|
| Promotion | Championship Wrestling USA |
|---|
| Date established | August 22, 1992 |
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| Date retired | June 1997 |
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|
The Championship Wrestling USA Television Championship was a professional wrestling championship defended in Championship Wrestling USA (the former Pacific Northwest Wrestling promotion), owned by Sandy Barr. It was CWUSA's longest running title, lasting from 1992 through 1997.[1]
Title history
- Key
| Symbol
|
Meaning
|
| No.
|
The overall championship reign
|
| Reign
|
The reign number for the specific wrestler listed.
|
| Event
|
The event in which the championship changed hands
|
| N/A
|
The specific information is not known
|
| —
|
Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign
|
| [Note #]
|
Indicates that the exact length of the title reign is unknown, with a note providing more details.
|
| (NLT)
|
"No Later Than"
|
| #
|
Wrestler
|
Reign
|
Date
|
Days held
and
|
Location
|
Event
|
Notes
|
Ref.
|
| 1
|
Bart Sawyer
|
1
|
August 22, 1992
|
49
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
Defeated Ron Harris in tournament final to become the first champion.
|
|
| 2
|
Mike Winner
|
1
|
October 10, 1992
|
4
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 3
|
John Rambo
|
1
|
October 14, 1992
|
24
|
Salem, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 4
|
Dirty White Boy
|
1
|
November 7, 1992
|
[Note 1]
|
N/A
|
House show
|
|
|
| 5
|
John Rambo
|
2
|
1992
|
[Note 2]
|
N/A
|
House show
|
|
|
| 6
|
Bart Sawyer
|
2
|
January 9, 1993
|
14
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 7
|
Colonel DeBeers
|
1
|
January 23, 1993
|
28
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 8
|
Bart Sawyer
|
3
|
February 20, 1993
|
7
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 9
|
Colonel DeBeers
|
2
|
February 27, 1993
|
119
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 10
|
Silver Shadow
|
1
|
June 26, 1993
|
134
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 11
|
Colonel DeBeers
|
3
|
July 10, 1993
|
196
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 12
|
Bruiser Brian
|
1
|
January 22, 1994
|
35
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
|
| 13
|
Colonel DeBeers
|
4
|
February 26, 1994
|
722
|
Portland, Oregon
|
House show
|
|
[2]
|
| 14
|
Buddy Wayne
|
1
|
February 18, 1996
|
[Note 3]
|
Vancouver, Washington
|
House show
|
Won the title after accidentally pinning his tag team partner DeBeers in a match against Bart Sawyer and Sumito.
|
|
| 15
|
Sumito
|
1
|
July 6, 1996 (NLT)
|
[Note 4]
|
N/A
|
House show
|
|
|
| 16
|
Buddy Wayne
|
2
|
July 7, 1996
|
[Note 5]
|
Vancouver, Washington
|
House show
|
|
|
| 17
|
Sumito
|
2
|
August 31, 1996 (NLT)
|
[Note 6]
|
N/A
|
House show
|
|
|
| 18
|
Buddy Wayne
|
3
|
November 30, 1996 (NLT)
|
[Note 7]
|
N/A
|
House show
|
|
|
| 19
|
Bart Sawyer
|
4
|
December 15, 1996
|
7
|
Vancouver, Washington
|
House show
|
|
|
| 20
|
Buddy Wayne
|
4
|
December 22, 1996
|
79
|
Vancouver, Washington
|
House show
|
|
|
| 21
|
Matt Borne
|
1
|
March 11, 1997
|
7
|
Vancouver, Washington
|
House show
|
|
|
| 22
|
Colonel DeBeers
|
5
|
March 18, 1997
|
[Note 8]
|
Vancouver, Washington
|
House show
|
|
|
| 23
|
Buddy Wayne
|
5
|
March 31, 1997 (NLT)
|
[Note 9]
|
N/A
|
House show
|
|
|
| -
|
Abandoned
|
-
|
June 1997
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
N/A
|
Promotion closed.
|
|
See also
- ^ The exact date the championship was lost is uncertain, which means this title reign lasted between 1 and 54 days.
- ^ The exact date that the championship was won is uncertain, which means the title reign lasted between 9 and 62 days.
- ^ The exact date Buddy Wayne lost the championship is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and 139 days.
- ^ The exact date Sumito won the championship is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and 139 days.
- ^ The exact date Buddy Wayne lost the championship is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and 55 days.
- ^ The exact date Sumito won and lost the championship is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 1 day and 145 days.
- ^ The exact date Buddy Wayne won the championship is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 15 and 105 days.
- ^ The exact date Col. DeBeers lost the championship is uncertain, which means the championship reign lasted between 1 day and 13 days.
- ^ The exact date the championship was won and abandoned is uncertain, which means the championship reign lasted between 62 and 103 days/
References
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| Championships | |
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| Key personnel | |
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| Events | |
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