The MCW Heavyweight Championship is a
professional wrestlingheavyweightchampionship owned by the
MCW Pro Wrestling (MCW)
promotion. The title was created and debuted on October 11, 1998, at a MCW
live event. In 2003, MCW ceased operations; at its last show MCW Last Dance on July 16, the MCW Heavyweight Championship was
unified with the
FTW Heavyweight and the
MEWF Heavyweight Championships, when then–MCW Heavyweight Champion
Danny Doring defeated MEWF Heavyweight Champion
Romeo Valentino and FTW Heavyweight Champion
Chris Chetti.[2][3][4] MCW reopened in 2005 and held its first show on October 1, 2005, titled Fort Meade Wrestling.[4] The MCW Heavyweight Championship was reinstated on March 26, 2006, at MCW's The Phenomenal Final Four event, where
Julio Dinero won a tournament to become the champion.[5]
Title reigns are determined either by
professional wrestling matches between wrestlers involved in pre-existing scripted feuds and
storylines, or by scripted circumstances. Wrestlers are portrayed as either
villains or
heroes as they follow a series of tension-building events, which culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches for the championship. Title changes happen at live events, which are usually released on DVD. The inaugural champion was Romeo Valentino, who defeated
Corporal Punishment in the finals of a tournament to win the championship on October 11, 1998, at an MCW live event.[1] As of November 2020, The Bruiser holds the record for most reigns, with eleven. At 435 days,
Christian York's second reign is the longest in the title's history. The current champion is Demarcus Kane, who is in his first reign. [1] Overall, there have been 57 reigns shared between 31 wrestlers.
^Milner, John M. (2005-11-20).
"Orlando Jordan's bio". SLAM! Sports: Wrestling.
Canadian Online Explorer. Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved 2009-07-07. On February 9, 2002, Jordan defeated the Bruiser in Lexington, Kentucky to win the MCW Heavyweight title, a championship he dropped back to the Bruiser a week later.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
link)
The MCW Heavyweight Championship is a
professional wrestlingheavyweightchampionship owned by the
MCW Pro Wrestling (MCW)
promotion. The title was created and debuted on October 11, 1998, at a MCW
live event. In 2003, MCW ceased operations; at its last show MCW Last Dance on July 16, the MCW Heavyweight Championship was
unified with the
FTW Heavyweight and the
MEWF Heavyweight Championships, when then–MCW Heavyweight Champion
Danny Doring defeated MEWF Heavyweight Champion
Romeo Valentino and FTW Heavyweight Champion
Chris Chetti.[2][3][4] MCW reopened in 2005 and held its first show on October 1, 2005, titled Fort Meade Wrestling.[4] The MCW Heavyweight Championship was reinstated on March 26, 2006, at MCW's The Phenomenal Final Four event, where
Julio Dinero won a tournament to become the champion.[5]
Title reigns are determined either by
professional wrestling matches between wrestlers involved in pre-existing scripted feuds and
storylines, or by scripted circumstances. Wrestlers are portrayed as either
villains or
heroes as they follow a series of tension-building events, which culminate in a wrestling match or series of matches for the championship. Title changes happen at live events, which are usually released on DVD. The inaugural champion was Romeo Valentino, who defeated
Corporal Punishment in the finals of a tournament to win the championship on October 11, 1998, at an MCW live event.[1] As of November 2020, The Bruiser holds the record for most reigns, with eleven. At 435 days,
Christian York's second reign is the longest in the title's history. The current champion is Demarcus Kane, who is in his first reign. [1] Overall, there have been 57 reigns shared between 31 wrestlers.
^Milner, John M. (2005-11-20).
"Orlando Jordan's bio". SLAM! Sports: Wrestling.
Canadian Online Explorer. Archived from the original on January 15, 2013. Retrieved 2009-07-07. On February 9, 2002, Jordan defeated the Bruiser in Lexington, Kentucky to win the MCW Heavyweight title, a championship he dropped back to the Bruiser a week later.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (
link)