Sponsored Links

Senin, 21 Mei 2018

Sponsored Links

Show Posts - nyannyanexpress!
src: i42.tinypic.com

The Internet Wrestling 19 (IW19) Championship was a women's professional wrestling championship owned by the Ice Ribbon promotion. The championship was introduced on the March 22, 2011, episode of Ice Ribbon's 19 O'Clock Girls ProWrestling (19???????, J?ky?-ji Joshi Puroresu) Ustream program, where Tsukushi defeated Tsukasa Fujimoto in the finals of a tournament to become the inaugural champion. Championship matches had a 19-minute time limit, and, unlike with all other Ice Ribbon championships, in the event of a time limit draw, the champion retained the title. The title was originally defended exclusively on the 19 O'Clock Girls ProWrestling program.

Originally, 19 O'Clock Girls ProWrestling was kept separate from Ice Ribbon, but on August 26, 2011, the program was brought under the Ice Ribbon banner and the IW19 Championship recognized as an Ice Ribbon championship. With the move, the title underwent some changes, including an addition of a nineteen-year age limit and a three-year experience limit and the abolishment of a rule, where a champion must defend the title at least once every four weeks. However, in January 2012, the age and experience limits were seemingly abandoned, when Hamuko Hoshi, 29 years old, Lady Afrodita, 21 years old, Maki Narumiya, 25 years old, Sayaka Obihiro, 25 years old, Tomoki Yagami, 29 years old, and Tsukasa Fujimoto, 28 years old, all entered a number one contender's tournament. During the next ten months, the IW19 Championship was defended once every ten weeks against the winner of an eight-woman single-elimination tournament. On January 7, 2013, Ice Ribbon officially put 19 O'Clock Girls ProWrestling on hiatus as it considered the future of the program, following the departure of its original operator, Sayaka Obihiro. On May 18, Ice Ribbon announced a 19 O'Clock Girls ProWrestling event for June 22, which would see the first defense of the IW19 Championship in six months. This episode would air through Niconico as opposed to Ustream. At the end of the June 22 broadcast, Ice Ribbon officially announced the ending of the 19 O'Clock Girls ProWrestling program, although the promotion looked to hold future events on Niconico. As a result, the IW19 Championship was retired on July 14, 2013, when IW19 Champion Tsukasa Fujimoto defeated ICE×60 Champion Tsukushi in a championship unification match.

Like most professional wrestling championships, the title is won as a result of a scripted match. There were ten reigns shared among seven different wrestlers. Tsukasa Fujimoto was the final champion in the title's history.


Video IW19 Championship



Reigns

Tsukushi was the first champion in the title's history. Tsukasa Fujimoto was the final champion in the title's history. The two and Kurumi had the most reigns as champion, with two each. Hamuko Hoshi had the longest reign in the title's history at 246 days, while Hikari Minami's reign of five days was the shortest in the title's history. Overall, there were ten reigns shared among seven different wrestlers.


Maps IW19 Championship



Title history


Show Posts - nyannyanexpress!
src: i47.tinypic.com


Combined reigns


WiLdKats, Cougars claim region crowns | The Daily Republic
src: www.mitchellrepublic.com


References


GV Sprinters Shine At 5B | Sports | yankton.net
src: bloximages.chicago2.vip.townnews.com


External links

  • Title history at IceRibbon.com
  • 19Pro.ne07.jp

Source of the article : Wikipedia

Comments
0 Comments