Championship unification: Difference between revisions

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'''Championship unification''' or '''championship consolidation''' is the act of combining two or more separate championships into a single title.

==Boxing==
In the [[World Boxing Association]], when a boxer holds the WBA title and also holds a world title (in the same weight division) from another major sanctioning body (the [[World Boxing Council|WBC]], [[International Boxing Federation|IBF]], or [[World Boxing Organization|WBO]]), the WBA gives special recognition to the boxer.
*If the boxer holds the WBA title and one other title, he is recognized as the unified champion.
*If the boxer holds the WBA title and two other titles, he is recognized as the undisputed champion.
*If the boxer holds the WBA title and all three other titles, he is recognized as the super champion. (Middleweight [[Jermain Taylor]] was the most recent super champion.)

There can be only one unified, undisputed, or super champion per weight division. The main reason for these classifications is that, when a boxer gains more titles, the WBA allows more time between mandatory WBA title defenses.

When a boxer becomes unified, undisputed, or super champion, the WBA creates a second world title in the same weight division. Two other boxers then fight for the vacant 'regular' world title. This second title allows the WBA to charge world title sanctioning [[Fee|fees]] for what is, in effect, an interim title. Additionally, if a unified, undisputed, or super champion loses his non-WBA title(s) (without losing the WBA title), then the WBA will strip him of his WBA title.

==Professional wrestling==
In [[professional wrestling]], championships may be unified to consolidate the number of championships in a given promotion, or to add legitimacy and prestige to a certain title's lineage. In a title-for-title match, one of three things will happen:

*The lesser championship will be dropped.

*A brand new championship will be created. (very rare, but AJPW's Triple Crown and Double Cup titles are prominent examples)

*Both championships retain their identity and may be defended and lost individually.

===Examples===
*The first two prominent unifications of titles in the U.S. were done by [[Nikita Koloff]]. In [[1986]], he unified the '''[[NWA National Heavyweight Championship]]''' into his '''[[WWE United States Championship|NWA United States Heavyweight Championship]]''' by defeating [[Wahoo McDaniel]], and in [[1987]] he unified the (Mid-South) '''[[UWF Television Championship]]''' into his '''[[WCW World Television Championship|NWA World Television Championship]]''' by defeating [[Terry Taylor]]. In both cases, the unification process was started by Nikita's home promotion, [[Jim Crockett Promotions]], upon absorbing another promotion ([[Georgia Championship Wrestling]] and the Mid-South UWF, respectively), and in both cases the titles from the absorbed promotions were abandoned.

*The '''[[AJPW Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship]]''' was created with the unification of the '''[[NWA International Heavyweight Championship]]''', the '''[[PWF World Heavyweight Championship|PWF Heavyweight Championship]]''' and the '''[[NWA United National Championship]]''', when the NWA International Heavyweight Champion [[Jumbo Tsuruta]] defeated the PWF Heavyweight and NWA United National Champion [[Stan Hansen]] on April 18, 1989.

*The '''[[AWA World Heavyweight Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[World Heavyweight Championship (Omaha)|Omaha World Heavyweight Championship]]''' (a belt created by promoters in [[Omaha, Nebraska]] ) twice when Omaha World Champion [[Reginald Lisowski|The Crusher]] defeated AWA World Champion [[Verne Gagne]] in Omaha, Nebraska on July 9, 1963 and then the titles was unified again on September 7, 1963 when AWA World Champion Verne Gagne defeated Omaha World Champion [[Fritz Von Erich]] in Omaha, Nebraska. The Omaha version was abandoned after absorb with the AWA World title.
*The '''AWA World Heavyweight Championship''' and the '''[[WCWA World Heavyweight Championship|WCCW Heavyweight Championship]]''' were unified to create the '''[[USWA Unified World Heavyweight Championship]]''' at [[SuperClash#SuperClash III|SuperClash III]], when the AWA World Heavyweight Champion [[Jerry Lawler|Jerry "The King" Lawler]] defeated the WCCW Heavyweight Champion [[Kerry Von Erich]]. The WCCW World Heavyweight Title was quickly abandoned, and later the [[American Wrestling Association|AWA]] stripped the AWA World Heavyweight Title from Jerry Lawler.

*The '''[[J-Crown]]''', a combination of several lightweight championships from various wrestling promotions (including the '''[[WWF Light Heavyweight Championship]]'''), was defended mostly in Japan and Mexico. The title has since been abandoned and all belts returned to their home promotions.

*The '''[[WCW International World Heavyweight Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[WCW World Heavyweight Championship]]''' when WCW Champion [[Ric Flair]] defeated International Champion [[Steve Borden|Sting]] at [[Clash of the Champions#Clash of the Champions XXVII|Clash of the Champions XXVII]]. The International Championship was immediately abandoned, though the physical belt was used as the WCW Championship.

*The '''[[ECW World Heavyweight Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[ECW FTW Heavyweight Championship|FTW Heavyweight Championship]]''' (an unrecognized title created by [[Tazz]]) on March 21, 1999 at [[Living Dangerously]] when ECW World Champion Taz defeated FTW Champion [[Terry Brunk|Sabu]]. The FTW title was abandoned when Taz continued to defend the ECW title.

*The '''[[ECW World Heavyweight Championship]]''' and the '''[[ECW World Television Championship]]''' were unified when TV Champion [[Terry Gerin|Rhino]] defeated World Champion [[Jim Fullington|The Sandman]] at [[Guilty as Charged#2001|ECW Guilty as Charged]] in January 2001. The Television title was abandoned upon [[Extreme Championship Wrestling|ECW]]'s demise soon after.

*The '''[[WWE Cruiserweight Championship|WCW Cruiserweight Championship]]''' was briefly unified with the '''WWF Light Heavyweight Championship''' on July 30, 2001 when Light Heavyweight Champion [[Sean Waltman|X-Pac]] defeated Cruiserweight Champion [[Billy Kidman]]. The titles continued to be defended separately and X-Pac lost the Light Heavyweight Championship to [[Yoshihiro Tajiri|Tajiri]] a week later.

*The '''[[WWE United States Championship|WCW United States Heavyweight Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[WWE Intercontinental Championship|WWF Intercontinental Championship]]''' at [[Survivor Series (2001)|Survivor Series 2001]] when US Champion [[Adam Copeland|Edge]] defeated IC Champion [[Andrew Martin|Test]]. The United States title was abandoned, then revived in 2003 by [[Stephanie McMahon]] as a [[WWE Friday Night SmackDown|SmackDown!]]-exclusive title.

*The '''[[WCW World Tag Team Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[World Tag Team Championship (WWE)|WWF Tag Team Championship]]''' at Survivor Series 2001, when the WCW Tag Team Champions, [[Dudley Boyz]], defeated the WWF Tag Team Champions, [[Hardy Boyz]]. The Dudleys won the WWF Tag Team Championships, and their WCW Tag Team Championship was absorbed into the WWF titles and abandoned. The Titles had previously been unified at Summerslam 2001 when WCW Tag Team Champions The [[Brothers of Destruction]] defeated WWF Tag Team Champions [[Diamond Dallas Page]] & [[Chris Kanyon]], although at that time both belts were held together instead of becoming one championship.

[[Image:HHHwmX8.jpg|right|thumb|200px|Triple H holding the unified WCW and WWF Championships]]
*The '''[[WCW World Heavyweight Championship]]''' and the '''[[WWE Championship|WWF Championship]]''' were unified to create the '''WWF Undisputed Championship''' at [[Vengeance (2001)|Vengeance 2001]] when [[Chris Jericho]] defeated WWF Champion [[Stone Cold Steve Austin]] and WCW Champion [[Dwayne Johnson|The Rock]] in the same night. Essentially, the WWF Championship became the Undisputed Championship while the WCW Championship was retired, although the belts used to represent the two championships would adorn the Undisputed Champion for several months afterwards. After the brand extension, which split the WWF roster into two brands ([[WWE Raw|Raw]] and [[WWE Friday Night SmackDown|SmackDown!]]), the Undisputed title served as the prime championship for both groups. The title became "disputed" when champion [[Brock Lesnar]] announced he would only defend the belt on SmackDown! The following week, Raw General Manager [[Eric Bischoff]] announced the creation of the '''[[World Heavyweight Championship (WWE)|World Heavyweight Championship]]'''.

*The '''[[WWE European Championship]]''' was unified with the '''WWE Intercontinental Championship''' in July 2002, when Intercontinental Champion [[Rob Van Dam]] defeated European Champion [[Jeff Hardy]] on Raw in a title unification match. The European title was abandoned as a separate championship.

*The '''[[WWE Hardcore Championship]]''' was unified with the '''WWE Intercontinental Championship''' in August 2002, when Intercontinental Champion Rob Van Dam pinned Hardcore Champion [[Tommy Dreamer]]. The Hardcore Championship was abandoned soon after.

*The ''' WWE Intercontinental Championship''' was unified with the '''[[World Heavyweight Championship (WWE)|World Heavyweight Championship]]''' at [[No Mercy (2002)|No Mercy]] when World Champion [[Triple H]] defeated Intercontinental Champion [[Glenn Jacobs|Kane]]. The Intercontinental Championship was immediately abandoned, then revived in [[May 2003]] by Raw [[Professional wrestling authority figures#Raw brand authorities|Co-General Manager]] [[Stone Cold Steve Austin|Steve Austin]].

*The '''[[WWA World Heavyweight Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[NWA World Heavyweight Championship]]''' when NWA Champion [[Jeff Jarrett]] defeated WWA Champion [[Steve Borden|Sting]] on May 25, 2003 in [[Auckland]], [[New Zealand]] in an inter-promotional match.

*The '''[[ROH World Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[ROH Pure Championship]]''' when ROH Pure Champion [[Nigel McGuinness]] lost to ROH World Champion [[Bryan Danielson]] in [[Liverpool]], [[England]] on August 12, 2006, in a match contested under pure wrestling rules with the stipulation that both championships could be lost by disqualification or count out.

*The [[International Wrestling Association]] unified the '''[[IWA World Heavyweight Championship]]''' with the '''[[WWC Universal Heavyweight Championship]]''' when the [[World Wrestling Council]]'s champion abandoned the company and participated in a unification match which was recognized by the [[National Wrestling Alliance]], in the process creating the first Undisputed World Heavyweight Champion in Puerto Rico.

*The [[NJPW]] version of the '''[[IWGP Heavyweight Championship]]''' unified with the '''[[Inoki Genome Federation|IGF's]]''' version of the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship when NJPW IWGP Champion [[Shinsuke Nakamura]] defeated IGF IWGP Champion [[Kurt Angle]] in Tokyo on February 17, 2008. The titles are unified due to a working agreement between [[Total Nonstop Action Wrestling|TNA]] and [[New Japan Pro Wrestling]] in which Angle wrestles for TNA.

*In a dark match before [[WrestleMania XXV]], the '''[[WWE Tag Team Championship]]''' was unified with the '''[[World Tag Team Championship (WWE)|World Tag Team Championship]]''' when WWE Tag Team Champions [[The Colóns]] ([[Carly Colón|Carlito]] & [[Eddie Colón|Primo]]) defeated World Tag Team Champions [[John Morrison and The Miz]] in [[Houston|Houston, Texas]] on April 5, 2009 to become the "[[Unified WWE Tag Team Championship|Unified WWE Tag Team Champions]]"; WWE has not retired either title.

==References==
{{reflist}}

[[Category:Boxing]]
[[Category:Professional wrestling championships]]
[[Category:Professional wrestling slang]]

Revision as of 20:30, 16 May 2010