IPW New Zealand Heavyweight Championship explained

Championshipname:IPW Heavyweight Championship
Currentholder:Horus
Won:8 June 2024
Promotion:Impact Pro Wrestling
Created:9 April 2002
Mostreigns:Dal Knox, Kingi and Vinny Dunn (4 reigns)
Firstchamp:The Machine
Longestreign:Jake Shehaan (693 days)
Shortestreign:Brook Duncan (4 minutes and 16 seconds)
Youngest:Lyte Playa
Heaviest:Jamie Tagataese
Lightest:Alfred Valentine

IPW New Zealand Heavyweight Championship is the top professional wrestling championship title in the New Zealand promotion Impact Pro Wrestling. It was the original heavyweight title of the Mania Pro Wrestling promotion, later used in IPW as its primary singles title. It was introduced as the MPW Heavyweight Championship on 9 April 2002. When a new promotion was founded by a core group of MPW wrestlers in 2003, the title was established as its new heavyweight championship. The current champion is Horus who is in his second reign.

The championship is regularly defended throughout New Zealand, most often in central Auckland, at monthly live shows. It has formerly been defended at live events such as the Armageddon Expo and on weekly series IPW Ignited.[1] In 2007, the title made its debut in the Northland Region, with the promotion's IPW Collision event in Whangārei. The title match featured Jon E. King facing off against the Samoan Silverback Alexander.[2] It has also been defended at several interpromotional events both in New Zealand and Australia. IPW Heavyweight Champion Jon E. King competed at the 2006 NZPWI Invitational with KPW Heavyweight Champion H-Flame where both men made it to the semi-finals and where King was eliminated by "Heartless" Alfred Valentine. The 2007 NZPWI Invitational saw the first ever "champion vs. champion" match when returning champions Jon E. King and H-Flame faced each other in a non-title match in the opening rounds. King went on to win the tournament.

The championship is contested in professional wrestling matches. The inaugural champion was The Machine, who defeated Jon E. King in Māngere, Auckland on 9 April 2002 to become the first MPW Heavyweight Champion; King had won a Royal Rumble-type match, eliminating "Superstar" Troy Daniels to earn a place in the championship decider. IPW recognised both MPW Heavyweight Championship reigns when the promotion became Impact Pro Wrestling in 2003. King and Davey Deluxeo hold the record for most reigns, with three each.[3] At 515 days, Deluxeo's first reign was the longest in the title's history. Vinny Dunn's second reign, which lasted mere minutes, was the shortest in the history of the title. Overall, there have been 21 reigns shared between 11 wrestlers, with one vacancy.

The promotion has often been represented by the reigning IPW Champion in the national media. In May 2005, TVNZ's Hadyn Jones conducted an interview with The Machine and then IPW Champion The Economist at their Auckland gym.[4] On 2 February 2006, Jon E. King was a guest on Ngati Hine FM where he was interviewed by disc jockey Darcy Edwards[5] and with fellow IPW wrestler Alfred Valentine on the TV One's morning talk show Breakfast by Kay Gregory that summer.[6] [7] Jordan Invincible was among the wrestlers featured on 10 October 2008 edition Television New Zealand's IAM TV and where Invincible wrestled the host in a mock battle at their IPW facility in Auckland.[8] IPW New Zealand Champion Dal Knox was interviewed at the 2008 Armageddon Expo, along with IPW colour commentator Dion McCracken, as part of an upcoming documentary on professional wrestling in New Zealand, A Kiwi Century On The Mat, in April 2009.[9] Knox was also profiled by 20/20 in a special report on professional wrestling in New Zealand,[10] as well as on the Māori Television sports show Hyundai Code.[11]

Title history

Reigns

Combined reigns

As of, .

Indicates the current champion
RankWrestlerNo. of
reigns
data-sort-type="number"Combined
days
14 956
22 833
3 3 728
42 595
53 476
61 449
73 448
4 448
91 378
102 365
114 315
122 281
132 266
142 +
152 210
161 189
171 171
181 154
192 119
201 105
211 98
1 98
232 85
241 28
251 15
261 <1

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: IPW brings New Zealand pro-wrestling back to television!. McCracken, Dion. 2 August 2010. Fight Times. Fight Times Magazine.
  2. Web site: WRESTLING - Wrestling returns to Whangārei. 5 February 2007. 2 August 2010. Eves, Tim. The Northern Advocate. APN News & Media Ltd.
  3. Web site: Auckland pro wrestlers battle it out for hero status. 26 October 2007. Rawhiti-Forbes, Troy. The New Zealand Herald. APN Holdings NZ Limited. 2 August 2010.
  4. Hadyn Jones (Interviewer) . 5 May 2005 . Close Up: Kiwi Wrestlers Aim High . Television production . Auckland . Television New Zealand.
  5. Edwards, Darcy (Interviewer) . 2 February 2006 . Ngati Hine FM interviews Jon E. King . Radio interview . . . 30 July 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100520193912/http://www.nzpwi.co.nz/images/stories/nzscene/2007/060205_king_ngati_hine.wma . 20 May 2010 . dead .
  6. Web site: Tuesday news: Drug testing, ECW tonight, Mexico, Tito vs. Ken rematch set, Tank to fight again, more . Alvarez, Bryan . Bryan Alvarez . 8 August 2006 . Wrestling Observer/Figure Four Online . F4Wonline.com . 8 July 2010.
  7. Tuesday August 8 . Breakfast . Kay Gregory (Interviewer) . . . 8 August 2006 .
  8. IAM TV. IPW New Zealand Stars on TVNZ's IAM TV . . . Auckland . 10 October 2008.
  9. Web site: Shooting this weekend at Armageddon . Hutchings, Mark . 4 April 2009 . KiwiWrestling.com . 8 July 2010.
  10. 20/20: The Wrestler . 20/20 . 20/20 (New Zealand) . Sonia Wilson (Interview) . . 20 July 2009 . 13:12 .
  11. Impact Pro Wrestling . Hyundai Code . . 6 August 2009.