Mid-South North American Heavyweight Championship

Mid-South North American Heavyweight Championship
A color photographs of a shirtless man with a mustache holding a mostly-gold professional wrestling championship belt
Magnum T. A. posing with the championship belt in 1984
Details
PromotionMid-South Wrestling Association
Date establishedJune 23, 1969
Other name(s)
  • NWA North American Heavyweight Championship (Tri-State)
  • MSWA North American Heavyweight Championship
Statistics
First champion(s)Chuck Karbo
Most reignsBill Watts (9 reigns)
Longest reignBill Watts
(404 days)
Shortest reignNikolai Volkoff
(1 day)
Oldest championThe Great Zimm (At least 43 years, 90 days)
Youngest championTed DiBiase (22 years, 320 days)
Heaviest championErnie Ladd (325 lb (147 kg; 23.2 st))
Lightest championTerry Taylor (225 lb (102 kg; 16.1 st))

The Mid-South North American Heavyweight Championship was the major singles title in the Mid-South Wrestling Association from 1979 until the promotion became the Universal Wrestling Federation in 1986. The title was retired then in favor of the UWF Heavyweight Championship. The promotion was originally a member of the National Wrestling Alliance referred to as NWA Tri-State, hence the title was originally the Tri-State version of the NWA North American Heavyweight Championship from 1969 to 1979.

Title history

[edit]
Wrestler: Times: Date: Location: Notes:
NWA North American Heavyweight Championship (Tri-State version)
Chuck Karbo 1 June 23, 1969 Los Angeles Wins a tournament to become the first champion.
Danny Hodge 1 August 15, 1969 Little Rock, AR
Chuck Karbo 2 October 6, 1969
Danny Hodge 2 October 21, 1969 Little Rock, AR
Chuck Karbo 3 October 23, 1969
Tarzan Baxter 1 October 31, 1969 Oklahoma City, OK
The Spoiler 1 February 17, 1970 Little Rock, AR
Danny Hodge 3 March 1970
The Spoiler 2 March 20, 1970 Oklahoma City, OK
Bill Watts 1 April 12, 1970 Tulsa, OK
Dusty Rhodes 1 May 21, 1971 Shreveport, LA
Bill Watts 2 October 1971 Sometime before October 19, 1971.
The Stomper 1 March 1972
Bill Watts 3 April 19, 1972
Dale Lewis 1 May 15, 1972 Shreveport, LA
Bill Watts 4 May 22, 1972 Shreveport, LA Declared vacant in the Tri-State area in August 1973 when Watts leaves the area; Watts continues to defend in Florida and Georgia.
Tri-State version while Watts was in Georgia/Florida
Tank Morgan 1 November 12, 1973 Shreveport, LA Defeats Dewey Robertson in tournament final for Tri-State Version.
Rip Tyler 1 February 11, 1974 Shreveport, LA Recognized champion in Tri-State.
Apache Bull Ramos 1 April 1974 Recognized champion in Tri-State.
Buddy Colt 1 May 3, 1974 Defeats Watts in Florida/Georgia version.[1]
Bob Armstrong 1 June 8, 1974 Recognized Champion in Florida/Georgia and still champion as of February 1975.
Armand Hussian 1 July 29, 1974 Shreveport, LA Recognized champion in Tri-State.
Skandor Akbar 1 December 1974 Shreveport, LA Recognized champion Tri-State and still champion as of may 14, 1975.
Buddy Colt 2 February 1975 Recognized champion in Florida/Georgia.
Bill Watts 5 February 21, 1975 Awarded Florida/Georgia version when Colt is injured in a plane crash.
Danny Miller 1 May 14, 1975 Jackson, MS Recognized champion in Tri-State.
Dick Murdoch 1 June 5, 1975 New Orleans, LA Recognized champion in Tri-State.
Killer Karl Kox 1 October 28, 1975 Shreveport, LA Recognized champion in Tri-State.
Bill Watts 6 November 26, 1975 Jackson, MS Defeats Kox to end the dispute. Has been recognized as champion in Florida and Georgia to unifies the Tri-State version.
The Spoiler 3 November 9, 1976 Shreveport, LA
The Brute 1 November 23, 1976 Awarded after defending title for The Spoiler.
Ted DiBiase 1 December 1976
The Great Zimm 1 February 1977 Shreveport, LA
Dick Murdoch 2 March 1, 1977 Shreveport, LA
Stan Hansen 1 May 2, 1977 Tulsa, OK
Bill Watts 7 June 20, 1977 Tulsa, OK
Dick Murdoch 3 August 4, 1977
Jerry Oates 1 August 1977 Albuquerque, NM
Dick Murdoch 4 November 6, 1977 Shreveport, LA
Ernie Ladd 1 February 14, 1978 Shreveport, LA
Paul Orndorff 1 May 29, 1978 Tulsa, OK
Ernie Ladd 2 June 1978
Paul Orndorff 2 June 1978
Stan Hansen 2 July 1978
Paul Orndorff 3 July 29, 1978 Baton Rouge, LA
Ernie Ladd 3 August 15, 1978
Ray Candy 1 November 17, 1978 Shreveport, LA
Ernie Ladd 4 December 25, 1978 New Orleans, LA Wins by forfeit.
Mr. Wrestling II 1 February 16, 1979 Atlanta, GA Became MSWA Title in August 1979.
Renamed Mid-South North American Heavyweight Championship
Mike George 1 September 5, 1979 Shreveport, LA Wrestling II is still/again billed as champion in Georgia as of October 19, 1979.[2]
Bill Watts 8 December 4, 1979 Baton Rouge, LA
Mike George 2 December 6, 1979 ? Title returned.
Bill Watts 9 January 5, 1980 Alexandria, LA
Mike George 3 January 19, 1980 Alexandria, LA
Ted DiBiase 2 February 1, 1980 Shreveport, LA
The Grappler 1 September 19, 1980 Shreveport, LA
Jake Roberts 1 June 30, 1981 Shevreport, LA
Paul Orndorff 4 July 4, 1981 New Orleans, LA
Ted DiBiase 3 November 1, 1981 Lake Charles, LA
Paul Orndorff 5 January 6, 1982 Shreveport, LA Aired on Mid-South TV January 9, 1982. This match had a special stipulation where disqualification would count as a pinfall. Orndorff wins the match due to outside interference by Bob Roop.
Ted DiBiase 4 January 6, 1982 Shreveport, LA Aired on Mid-South TV January 9, 1982. DiBiase regained the belt via disqualification when Orndorff attacked him with the belt immediately after the match.
Bob Roop 1 March 17, 1982 Shreveport, LA
Junkyard Dog 1 June 21, 1982 New Orleans, LA
Ted DiBiase 5 June 23, 1982 Shreveport, LA
Stagger Lee (Junkyard Dog) 2 November 25, 1982 New Orleans, LA JYD lost loser-leaves-town for 90 days match & returned as masked Stagger Lee.
Vacated February 1983 Vacated when Stagger Lee "left the area" (Junkyard Dog's 90-day suspension ended). Mr. Olympia won a 12-man tournament for the vacated title on March 21, 1983, in Shreveport, Louisiana. The decision was reversed, and the title held up, when it was revealed that the pin was counted with Junkyard Dog face-down on the mat.
Junkyard Dog 3 April 16, 1983 New Orleans, LA Defeats Mr. Olympia in rematch
Butch Reed 1 July 16, 1983 New Orleans, LA [3]
Magnum T. A. - October 12, 1983 Shreveport, LA Junkyard Dog was the special guest referee appointed by Mid-South match maker Grizzly Smith. Junkyard Dog was supposed to be Reed's opponent as the fans had picked the Dog in an applause contest to face Reed for the title but Reed instead refused to defend the title against the Dog and instead picked Magnum T. A. who was in the same applause contest. Butch Reed filed a protest with Mid-South and Mid-South would reverse the match decision on October 24, 1983, citing that Butch Reed did not have the authority to pick his own opponent, therefore that match never happened, the next title match of Magnum T. A. vs Nikolai Volkoff was also stricken from the record, and the title was returned to Reed. That announcement was aired on Mid-South TV October 29, 1983.
Nikolai Volkoff - October 24, 1983 New Orleans, LA Mid-South would strike this match from the record on October 24, 1983. That announcement was aired on Mid-South TV October 29, 1983.
Butch Reed 2 October 24, 1983 New Orleans, LA Aired on Mid-South TV October 29th, 1983. Title returned after Magnum's victory is reversed.
Junkyard Dog 4 October 26, 1983 Shreveport, LA Aired on Mid-South TV October 29th, 1983. Dusty Rhodes was the special guest referee appointed by Mid-South.
Mr. Wrestling II 2 March 12, 1984 New Orleans, LA
Magnum T. A. 1 May 13, 1984 Tulsa, OK
Ernie Ladd 5 October 16, 1984 Shreveport, LA
Brad Armstrong 1 December 5, 1984 Shreveport, LA
Ted DiBiase 6 January 16, 1985 Shreveport, LA [4]
Terry Taylor 1 March 13, 1985 Shreveport, LA
The Nightmare 1 May 22, 1985 Shreveport, LA Aired on Mid-South TV May 30th, 1985.
Dick Murdoch 5 August 10, 1985 New Orleans, LA
Butch Reed 3 October 14, 1985 New Orleans, LA
Dick Slater 1 January 1, 1986 Tulsa, OK
Held up after match against Jake Roberts on January 31, 1986, in Houston, Texas.
Jake Roberts 2 February 14, 1986 Houston, TX Wins rematch.
Dick Slater 2 February 23, 1986 Oklahoma City, OK
Hacksaw Jim Duggan 1 March 16, 1986 Oklahoma City, OK Defeats Buzz Sawyer, who was defending for Slater.
Title retired in May 1986 as Mid-South Wrestling Association becomes the UWF.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ F4W Staff (May 3, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history: Low Ki Vs. Dewitt, Punk wins OVW title, Mutoh wins IWGP belt, Bret wins NA title, Dibiase & Dr. Death, Sheik, Watts, Fargos". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Hoops, Brian (September 5, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history: Gagne vs. Crusher loser leaves town, Von Erichs vs. Freebirds, Young Bucks vs. Machine Guns". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 16, 2017.
  3. ^ Hoops, Brian (July 16, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history (July 16): Dusty Rhodes Vs. Ernie Ladd, Reed Vs. JYD, Bash in Huntington Beach". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  4. ^ Hoops, Brian (January 16, 2019). "Pro wrestling history (01/16): Arn Anderson & Bobby Eaton win WCW Tag Team Titles". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 18, 2019.