|
Wrestler: |
Times: |
Date: |
Location: |
Notes: |
|
Buddy Rogers |
1 |
April 29,
1963[1] |
Washington, D.C. |
Rogers was
awarded the title with the explanation that he
defeated
Antonino Rocca in the finals of a tournament in
March 1963 in
Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil to become the first WWWF World
Heavyweight Champion.[3] |
|
Bruno Sammartino |
1 |
May 17,
1963 |
New York, NY |
Held title for
eight years, a record for professional wrestling
world champions.[4] |
|
Ivan Koloff |
1 |
January 18,
1971 |
New York, NY |
[5] |
|
Pedro Morales |
1 |
February 8,
1971 |
New York, NY |
The championship
was referred to as the WWWF Heavyweight Championship
when WWWF rejoined the NWA in 1971.[6] |
|
Stan Stasiak |
1 |
December 1,
1973 |
Philadelphia, PA |
[7] |
| Bruno Sammartino |
2 |
December 10,
1973 |
New York, NY |
First to have held
the title twice.[8] |
|
Billy Graham |
1 |
April 30,
1977 |
Baltimore, MD |
[9] |
|
Bob Backlund |
1 |
February 20,
1978 |
New York, NY |
The title was
renamed the WWF Heavyweight Championship when the
World Wide Wrestling Federation became the World
Wrestling Federation in March 1979.[10] |
|
Antonio Inoki |
1† |
November 30,
1979 |
Tokushima, Japan |
[2] |
| Vacated† |
December 6,
1979 |
Tokyo, Japan |
Vacated when
Backlund pins Inoki, but WWF president
Hisashi Shinma declares the match a no contest
due to interference by
Tiger Jeet Singh. Inoki refused the championship
following Shinma's decision, and the title was
declared vacant.[2] |
| Bob Backlund |
1(2)† |
December 12,
1979 |
New York, NY |
Defeated
Bobby Duncum in a
Texas Death match.[2] |
| Held up† |
October 19,
1981 |
New York, NY |
Title held up after
a match against Greg Valentine in which the referee
gave him the title after Backlund pinned him.[2] |
| Bob Backlund |
1(3)† |
November 23,
1981 |
New York, NY |
Defeated
Valentine in a rematch to win the held up title.
According to the official championship history,
Backlund's reign lasted from
February 20,
1978 to
December 26,
1983 and was never interrupted.[11]
The title was referred to as the WWF World
Heavyweight Championship in 1983 after the WWF
withdrew from the NWA.[2] |
|
The Iron Sheik |
1 |
December 26,
1983 |
New York, NY |
[12] |
|
Hulk Hogan |
1 |
January 23,
1984 |
New York, NY |
[13] |
|
André the Giant |
1 |
February 5,
1988 |
Indianapolis, IN |
Won the title at
The Main Event I.[14] |
| Vacated |
February 5,
1988 |
Indianapolis, IN |
Immediately
after winning the title from Hogan, André
surrendered the title to
Ted DiBiase; President
Jack Tunney nullified this decision, and vacated
the title.[14] |
|
Randy Savage |
1 |
March 27,
1988 |
Atlantic City, NJ |
Defeated Ted
DiBiase in a tournament final at
WrestleMania IV.[15] |
| Hulk Hogan |
2 |
April 2,
1989 |
Atlantic City, NJ |
Won the title
at
WrestleMania V.[16] |
|
The Ultimate Warrior |
1 |
April 1,
1990 |
Toronto, ON |
This match, at
WrestleMania VI, was also for Warrior's
WWF Intercontinental Championship.[17] |
|
Sgt. Slaughter |
1 |
January 19,
1991 |
Miami, FL |
Won the title
at
Royal Rumble.[18] |
| Hulk Hogan |
3 |
March 24,
1991 |
Los Angeles, CA |
Won the title at
WrestleMania VII.[19] |
|
The Undertaker |
1 |
November 27,
1991 |
Detroit, MI |
Won the title
at
Survivor Series 1991.[20] |
| Hulk Hogan |
4 |
December 3,
1991 |
San Antonio, TX |
Won the title at
Tuesday in Texas.[21] |
| Vacated |
December 4,
1991 |
|
Hogan was
stripped of the title by WWF President Jack Tunney
due to the controversy surrounding both of the
previous title changes. This aired
December 7,
1991 on
Superstars.[21] |
|
Ric Flair |
1 |
January 19,
1992 |
Albany, NY |
Won the
Royal Rumble match.[22] |
| Randy Savage |
2 |
April 5,
1992 |
Indianapolis, IN |
Won the title
at
WrestleMania VIII.[23] |
| Ric Flair |
2 |
September 1,
1992 |
Hershey, PA |
[24] |
|
Bret Hart |
1 |
October 12,
1992 |
Saskatoon, SK |
Won the title
in a dark match at a TV taping.[25][26] |
|
Yokozuna |
1 |
April 4,
1993 |
Las Vegas, NV |
Won the title at
WrestleMania IX.[27] |
| Hulk Hogan |
5 |
April 4,
1993 |
Las Vegas, NV |
Won the title
at WrestleMania IX.[28] |
| Yokozuna |
2 |
June 13,
1993 |
Dayton, OH |
Won the title at
King of the Ring.[29] |
| Bret Hart |
2 |
March 20,
1994 |
New York, NY |
Won the title
at
WrestleMania X.[30] |
| Bob Backlund |
2(4) |
November 23,
1994 |
San Antonio, TX |
This was a "Throw
in the Towel" match at
Survivor Series.[31] |
|
Diesel |
1 |
November 26,
1994 |
New York, NY |
Won the title
at a house show.[32] |
| Bret Hart |
3 |
November 19,
1995 |
Landover, MD |
This was a
no-disqualification match at
Survivor Series.[33] |
|
Shawn Michaels |
1 |
March 31,
1996 |
Anaheim, CA |
This was a
60-minute Iron Man match at
WrestleMania XII, which Michaels won in overtime
after a 0-0 draw.[34] |
|
Sycho Sid |
1 |
November 17,
1996 |
New York, NY |
Won the title at
Survivor Series.[35] |
| Shawn Michaels |
2 |
January 19,
1997 |
San Antonio, TX |
Won the title
at
Royal Rumble.[36] |
| Vacated |
February 13,
1997 |
Lowell, MA |
Michaels forfeited
the title due to a knee injury.[36] |
| Bret Hart |
4 |
February 16,
1997 |
Chattanooga, TN |
This was a
four-way elimination match also involving
Steve Austin,
The Undertaker and
Vader, held at
In Your House: Final Four.[37] |
| Sycho Sid |
2 |
February 17,
1997 |
Nashville, TN |
Won the title on
RAW.[38] |
| The Undertaker |
2 |
March 23,
1997 |
Rosemont, IL |
Won the title
at
WrestleMania 13.[39] |
| Bret Hart |
5 |
August 3,
1997 |
East Rutherford, NJ |
Won the title at
SummerSlam with Shawn Michaels as the guest
referee.[40] |
| Shawn Michaels |
3 |
November 9,
1997 |
Montreal, QC |
Won the title
at
Survivor Series in the
Montreal Screwjob.[41] |
|
Steve Austin |
1 |
March 29,
1998 |
Boston, MA |
Won the title at
WrestleMania XIV.[42] |
|
Kane |
1 |
June 28,
1998 |
Pittsburgh, PA |
This was a
first blood match at
King of the Ring.[43] |
| Steve Austin |
2 |
June 29,
1998 |
Cleveland, OH |
Won the title on
RAW is WAR.[44] |
| Vacated |
September 28,
1998 |
Detroit, MI |
Vacated on
RAW is WAR after Kane and The Undertaker
simultaneously pinned Austin in a triple threat
match the previous night at
Breakdown in
Hamilton, ON.[44] |
|
The Rock |
1 |
November 15,
1998 |
St. Louis, MO |
Defeated
Mankind in a
tournament final at
Survivor Series.[45] |
|
Mankind |
1 |
December 29,
1998[2] |
Worcester, MA |
Aired
January 4,
1999 on RAW is WAR.[46] |
| The Rock |
2 |
January 24,
1999 |
Anaheim, CA |
This was an
"I Quit" match at
Royal Rumble.[47] |
| Mankind |
2 |
January 26,
1999 |
Tucson, AZ |
This was an
empty arena match that aired as a special named
Halftime Heat during halftime of
Super Bowl XXXIII on
January 31,
1999.[48] |
| The Rock |
3 |
February 15,
1999 |
Birmingham, AL |
This was a
ladder match on RAW is WAR.[49] |
| Steve Austin |
3 |
March 28,
1999 |
Philadelphia, PA |
Won the title
at
WrestleMania XV.[50] |
| The Undertaker |
3 |
May 23,
1999 |
Kansas City, MO |
Won the title at
Over the Edge with
Shane McMahon as special guest referee.[51] |
| Steve Austin |
4 |
June 28,
1999 |
Charlotte, NC |
Won the title
on RAW is WAR.[52] |
| Mankind |
3 |
August 22,
1999 |
Minneapolis, MN |
This was a triple
threat match also involving Triple H at
SummerSlam, with
Jesse Ventura as guest referee.[53] |
|
Triple H |
1 |
August 23,
1999 |
Ames, IA |
Won the title
on RAW is WAR with Shane McMahon as special
guest referee.[54] |
|
Vince McMahon |
1 |
September 14,
1999 |
Las Vegas, NV |
Aired
September 16,
1999 on
SmackDown! with Shane McMahon as special
guest referee.[55] |
| Vacated |
September 20,
1999 |
Houston, TX |
McMahon vacated
the title on RAW is WAR.[55] |
| Triple H |
2 |
September 26,
1999 |
Charlotte, NC |
This was a Six-Pack
Challenge match at
Unforgiven, also involving The Rock, Mankind,
Big Show,
The British Bulldog and
Kane.[56] |
|
Big Show |
1 |
November 14,
1999 |
Detroit, MI |
This was a
triple threat match at
Survivor Series, also involving The Rock.[57] |
| Triple H |
3 |
January 3,
2000 |
Miami, FL |
Won the title on
RAW is WAR.
Chris Jericho defeated Triple H on
April 17,
2000 in
State College, PA to win the title, but the
decision was reversed and the title returned to
Triple H 18 minutes later.[2][58] |
| The Rock |
4 |
April 30,
2000 |
Washington, D.C. |
Won the title
at
Backlash.[59] |
| Triple H |
4 |
May 21,
2000 |
Louisville, KY |
This was a
60-minute Iron Man match at
Judgment Day, which Triple H won 6-5 with Shawn
Michaels as the guest referee.[60] |
| The Rock |
5 |
June 25,
2000 |
Boston, MA |
Defeated Triple
H in a six-man tag team match with The Rock, The
Undertaker and Kane vs. Triple H, Vince McMahon and
Shane McMahon in which anyone to pin Triple H or
one of the McMahons would win the title.[61] |
|
Kurt Angle |
1 |
October 22,
2000 |
Albany, NY |
Won the title at
No Mercy.[62] |
| The Rock |
6 |
February 25,
2001 |
Las Vegas, NV |
Won the title
at
No Way Out.[63] |
| Steve Austin |
5 |
April 1,
2001 |
Houston, TX |
Won the title at
WrestleMania X-Seven.[64] |
| Kurt Angle |
2 |
September 23,
2001 |
Pittsburgh, PA |
Won the title
at
Unforgiven.[65] |
| Steve Austin |
6 |
October 8,
2001 |
Indianapolis, IN |
Won the title on
RAW.[66] |
|
Chris Jericho |
1 |
December 9,
2001 |
San Diego, CA |
Jericho won a
four man one night tournament consisting of himself,
The Rock, Steve Austin and Kurt Angle to
unify the
World Championship with the WWF Championship at
Vengeance. Austin defeated Angle to advance to
the finals while Jericho defeated The Rock and
subsequently defeated Austin in the finals. The
unified title was named the WWF Undisputed
Championship.[67] |
| Triple H |
5 |
March 17,
2002 |
Toronto, ON |
Won the title at
WrestleMania X8.[68] |
| Hulk Hogan |
6 |
April 21,
2002 |
Kansas City, MO |
Won the title
at
Backlash.[69]
The title was renamed the WWE Undisputed
Championship on
May 6,
2002 after World Wrestling Federation
Entertainment, Inc. settled a lawsuit with the
World Wide Fund for Nature, and became simply
World Wrestling Entertainment.[2] |
| The Undertaker |
4 |
May 19,
2002 |
Nashville, TN |
Won the title at
Judgment Day.[70] |
| The Rock |
7 |
July 21,
2002 |
Detroit, MI |
This was a
triple threat match at
Vengeance, also involving Kurt Angle.[71] |
|
Brock Lesnar |
1 |
August 25,
2002 |
Uniondale, NY |
Won the title at
SummerSlam. "Undisputed" was removed from the
title's name after it became exclusive to the
SmackDown! brand on
September 2,
2002, which resulted in the creation of the
World Heavyweight Championship for the
RAW brand.[72] |
| The Big Show |
2 |
November 17,
2002 |
New York, NY |
Won the title
at
Survivor Series.[73] |
| Kurt Angle |
3 |
December 15,
2002 |
Sunrise, FL |
Won the title at
Armageddon.[74] |
| Brock Lesnar |
2 |
March 30,
2003 |
Seattle, WA |
Won the title
at
WrestleMania XIX.[75] |
| Kurt Angle |
4 |
July 27,
2003 |
Denver, CO |
This was a triple
threat match at
Vengeance, also involving The Big Show.[76] |
| Brock Lesnar |
3 |
September 16,
2003 |
Raleigh, NC |
This was a
60-minute Iron Man match, aired
September 18,
2003 on SmackDown!.[77] |
|
Eddie Guerrero |
1 |
February 15,
2004 |
San Francisco, CA |
Won the title at
No Way Out.[78] |
|
John "Bradshaw" Layfield |
1 |
June 27,
2004 |
Norfolk, VA |
This was a
Texas Bullrope match at the
Great American Bash.[79] |
|
John Cena |
1 |
April 3,
2005 |
Los Angeles, CA |
Won the title at
WrestleMania 21; the title became RAW-exclusive
on
June 6,
2005 in St. Louis, MO when Cena was drafted to
RAW as the first pick in the 2005
Draft Lottery.[80] |
|
Edge |
1 |
January 8,
2006 |
Albany, NY |
Cashed in his "Money
in the Bank" contract from
WrestleMania 21 after Cena won an
Elimination Chamber match at
New Year's Revolution just minutes earlier.[81] |
| John Cena |
2 |
January 29,
2006 |
Miami, FL |
Won the title at
Royal Rumble.[82] |
|
Rob Van Dam |
1 |
June 11,
2006 |
New York, NY |
Cashed in his
"Money in the Bank" contract from
WrestleMania 22. This was an
Extreme Rules match at
ECW One Night Stand.[83] |
| Edge |
2 |
| |