CHAMPIONSHIP (PROFESSIONAL WRESTLING)

The WWE Championship belt, an example of a championship belt in professional wrestling.

In professional wrestling, a 'championship' or 'title' is a recognition of a wrestler being the best in his or her promotion, or for lesser championships (such as the WWE Cruiserweight Championship), his or her division.
A wrestler can earn a championship by defeating the current champion in a match (by far the most common) or in other ways determined by the promotion, such as winning a tournament for a vacant championship. Most championships are represented by a championship belt, which the wrestler wears around his or her waist or carries over the shoulder (or just carry around by hand).

Contents
How champions are determined
Belt styles
Types of championships
Regional championships
Weight class championships
Gender championships
Gimmick/style championships
Tag team championships
See also

How champions are determined


Championships are usually won/held by a wrestler whom the promotion's bookers believe will generate fan interest in terms of event attendance and TV viewership. Usually, these are wrestlers who generate large fan interest and crowd reactions over a sustained period of time, whether as a face or a heel.
The wrestler can create this crowd reaction either through in-ring skill or from mic skills while cutting promos. Generally, the wrestlers who draw the greatest fan response will be rewarded with a storyline in which he or she competes with the current champion for the title, and eventually the championship itself.

Belt styles


Professional wrestling's championship belts are modeled after the championship belts in boxing. They are made of elaborately designed gold plates, usually bearing the name of the title and the wrestling promotion, on a leather strap. The color and designs vary with each title and promotion.
Since 2002, all major WWE titles, with the exception of the ECW World Championship, have included a nameplate with the current titleholder on the bottom of the main faceplate. This is in the style of the NWA Championship of the 1980s (nicknamed the "Big Gold Belt"), which included a nameplate. When the WWE and WCW titles were merged into the WWE Undisputed Championship, the new belt included a nameplate, which has since been added to the design of new WWE championship belts.

Types of championships


Professional wrestling championships are often split up into various different classifications, each of which designate varying levels of importance to the belts.
Regional championships

The most common types of championships are regional championships. Most national promotions will hold claim to a World Heavyweight Championship or something of the same global status, which always holds the premier position within the promotion. These promotions will also sometimes have other titles of national or international importance as secondary championships.
Examples of World Heavyweight titles include:

IWGP World Heavyweight Championship

AJPW Triple Crown Championship

NWA World Heavyweight Championship

WWE Championship

World Heavyweight Championship (WWE)

ECW World Championship

WCW World Heavyweight Championship

TNA World Heavyweight Championship
Examples of National and International titles include:

NWA North American Heavyweight Championship

WWE United States Championship

WWE Intercontinental Championship

WWE European Championship

NWA National Heavyweight Championship

WCW International Heavyweight Championship
Smaller promotions often opt not to claim a world title due to their scope being limited to a specific area. In these promotions, a national title, state title, or even more sectioned regional title will be considered the top prize in the promotion.
Examples of State and Regional titles include:

ECW Maryland Championship

ECW Pennsylvania Championship

NWA Texas Heavyweight Championship

NWA Pacific Northwest Heavyweight Championship

NWA Hawaii Heavyweight Championship
Regional designations are also used to apply to other types of titles.
Weight class championships

Another common classification of championships are by weight classes. Typically promotions prefer to have a heavyweight title as their top prize, with other designators such as cruiser weight, middleweight, or light-heavyweight titles. Despite having different weight limits from their boxing counterparts, these titles are considered to be equal standing with their boxing classes. Promotions often utilize one sub-heavyweight classification, while others sometimes may have more. In the rise of British wrestling, Mountevans' committee (a governing body that instilled rules from professional wrestling) created seven formal weight divisions:
:
★ Lightweight (154 pound limit)
:
★ Welterweight (165)
:
★ Middleweight (176)
:
★ Heavy middleweight (187)
:
★ Light heavyweight (198)
:
★ Mid-heavyweight (209)
:
★ Heavyweight
Calling for champions to be crowned at each weight.
Examples of other Weight Class championships include:

WCW World Cruiserweight Championship (under 225)

WWF Light Heavyweight Championship (under 215)

NWA World Light Heavyweight Championship (EMLL/CMLL) (Note: This Title Is Not Sanctioned By The NWA)

NWA World Welterweight Championship (EMLL/CMLL) (Note: This Title Is No Longer Sanctioned By The NWA)

NWA World Middleweight Championship (EMLL/CMLL) (Note: This Title Is No Longer Sanctioned By The NWA)

NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship
Gender championships

Gender occasionally plays a role in the classifications of championship belts. For gender-specific titles, the classification "Men's" or "Women's" is often included at the beginning of the championship's name. Due to professional wrestling generally being a sport dominated by men, only women's titles are given official gender classifications. In promotions featuring only a single gender (such as Women of Wrestling or SHIMMER), gender classifications are often thrown out the window as well.
Entertainer and comedian Andy Kaufman once parlayed gender classifications to his advantage, turning inter-gender competitions into a unique wrestling side-show. Kaufman declared himself the "Inter-Gender Champion of the World", and offered $1,000 to any woman who could pin him. None were successful during the run of the gimmick, though in other promotions such as WCW and WWE, women have successfully pinned men, most notably in a few isolated championship matches.
Examples of gender championships include:

NWA Women's Championship

WCW Women's Championship

WWE Women's Championship

WWF Women's Tag Team Championship

AWA Women's Tag Team Championship
Gimmick/style championships

Gimmick match classifications sometime come into prominence in the creation of title belts. In these classifications, special skill in a certain type of match or a certain style of wrestling is the signature of the division, and the champion is considered to be the most skilled wrestler at that specific style.
Gimmick championships often take very differing forms. A common variation is the Hardcore Championship, which throws rules out the window in favor of a weapons-filled and often-bloody competition. Another common variation is the Television Championship, which involves more frequent title defenses as well as the stipulations that the belt can only change hands on television within a 15-minute time limit.
Style championships also take very different forms. A Pure wrestling Championship focuses on mat-based and technical wrestling, while the X Division title in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling promotes a faster-paced, high-flying style. The cruiser weight title is often considered to be a style championship due to the X Division like pace and style of its competitors.
Examples of Gimmick and Style championships include:

WWE Hardcore Championship

WCW Television Championship

ECW World Television Championship

ROH Pure Championship

TNA X Division Championship

NWA World Television Championship
Tag team championships

Tag Team championships are yet another different form of wrestling title. Some consider it to be a style championship, but tag team championships are unique in their ability to include multiple wrestlers on teams competing for multiple belts. The most common form of tag team championships are in 2-on-2 format, which is often implicitly understood. Other tag team championships include 3-on-3 and 4-on-4 formats, which are often explicitly stated within the championship name to distinguish them from the 2-on-2 championships.
Examples of Tag Team Championships include:

NWA World Tag Team Championship

World Tag Team Championship (WWE)

WWE Tag Team Championship

TNA World Tag Team Championship
Tag Team Championships are also often combined with regional modifiers, gimmick modifiers, and weight class modifiers to further distinguish them. In such cases, the world championships are often given higher priority, while the other championships are seen as secondary tag team titles.
Examples of Modified Tag Team Championships include:

NWA North American Tag Team Championship

WCW Cruiserweight Tag Team Championship

NWA National Tag Team Championship

See also



World Heavyweight Championship

World Tag Team Championship

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves