The NWA United National Championship (often abbreviated to UN Championship ) was a professional wrestling championship sanctioned by the National Wrestling Alliance , and best known for being defended in All Japan Pro Wrestling . It was unified into the Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship , along with the PWF World Heavyweight Championship and the NWA International Heavyweight Championship , in 1989. The original belt remained in use for the Triple Crown until 2013.
Title history
Symbol
Meaning
No.
The overall championship reign
Reign
The reign number for the specific wrestler listed.
Event
The event in which the championship changed hands
N/A
The specific information is not known
—
Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign
[Note #]
Indicates that the exact length of the title reign is unknown, with a note providing more details.
#
Wrestler
Reign
Date
Days held
Location
Notes
1
Dale Lewis
1
October 1970
Won a tournament to crown the first champion.
2
Pantera Negra
1
October 23, 1970
28
Los Angeles, CA
3
John Tolos
1
November 20, 1970
14
Los Angeles, CA
4
Ray Mendoza
1
December 4, 1970
Los Angeles, CA
5
John Tolos
2
March 1971
N/A
Tolos returned the championship when the NWA decided the referee used a fast count during his title defense against Mendoza.
6
Antonio Inoki
1
March 26, 1971
262
Los Angeles, CA
-
Vacated
-
December 13, 1971
-
N/A
Vacated on December 13, 1971 when Inoki is fired from the JWA , the promotion to which he had brought the title from the United States.
7
King Krow
1
January 1972
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Defeated Sailor Thomas in a fictitious tournament final.
8
Seiji Sakaguchi
1
February 11, 1972
208
Los Angeles, CA
9
The Sheik
1
September 6, 1972
1
Tokyo, Japan
10
Seiji Sakaguchi
2
September 7, 1972
149
Osaka, Japan
11
Johnny Valentine
1
February 3, 1973
33
Yokohama, Japan
12
Akihisa Takachiho
1
March 8, 1973
37
Sano, Japan
-
Deactivated
-
April 14, 1973
-
N/A
Deactivated on April 14, 1973 when the JWA closed.
13
Jumbo Tsuruta
1
August 28, 1976
189
Tokyo, Japan
Defeated Jack Brisco in an AJPW tournament final to revive the championship.
14
Billy Robinson
1
March 5, 1977
18
Akita, Japan
15
Jumbo Tsuruta
2
March 23, 1977
1,067
Miami, FL
16
Dick Murdoch
1
February 23, 1980
11
Kagoshima, Japan
17
Jumbo Tsuruta
3
March 5, 1980
222
Kuroiso, Japan
18
Abdullah the Butcher
1
October 13, 1980
101
Nagoya, Japan
19
Jumbo Tsuruta
4
January 22, 1981
556
Nirasaki, Japan
20
Harley Race
1
August 1, 1982
84
Tokyo, Japan
21
Jumbo Tsuruta
5
October 24, 1982
236
Kitami, Japan
-
Vacated
-
June 17, 1983
-
N/A
Vacated on June 17, 1983 so Tsuruta could focus on defending the NWA International Heavyweight Championship .
22
Ted DiBiase
1
October 14, 1983
106
Sasebo, Japan
Defeated Jerry Lawler in a tournament final via forfeit; wrestled Genichiro Tenryu for his first title defense instead.
23
Michael Hayes
1
January 28, 1984
6
Athens, GA
24
David Von Erich
1
February 3, 1984
7
Dallas, TX
-
Vacated
-
February 10, 1984
-
N/A
Vacated on February 10, 1984 when Von Erich dies of an apparent heart attack .
25
Genichiro Tenryu
1
February 23, 1984
Tokyo, Japan
Defeated Ricky Steamboat in a tournament final.
-
Vacated
-
February 1986
-
N/A
Voluntarily vacated in February 1986 when Tenryu is pinned by Yoshiaki Yatsu in a tag team match.
26
Genichiro Tenryu
2
April 26, 1986
823
Ōmiya-ku, Japan
Defeated Ted DiBiase in a tournament final. Tenryu won the PWF Heavyweight Championship on March 9, 1988.
27
Stan Hansen
1
July 27, 1988
265
Nagano, Japan
Also won the PWF Heavyweight Championship.
28
Jumbo Tsuruta
6
April 18, 1989
0
Tokyo, Japan
Retained the NWA International Heavyweight Championship and won the PWF Heavyweight Championship and the UN Championship.
-
Unified
-
April 18, 1989
-
N/A
Title was unified with Tsuruta's NWA International Heavyweight Championship and with Hansen's PWF Heavyweight Championship and UN championship to create the Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship .
Combined reigns
See also
^ The exact date that Dale Lewis won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 0 and 22 days.
^ The exact date that John Tolos won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 87 and 112 days.
^ The exact date that John Tolos won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 0 and 25 days.
^ The exact date that King Krow won the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 11 and 41 days.
^ The exact date that Genichiro Tenryu vacated the championship is uncertain, which puts the title reign at between 709 and 736 days.
References
^ Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4 .
External links