AAAW Single Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
AAAW Single Championship
Details
PromotionGaea Japan
Date establishedNovember 2, 1996
Date retiredApril 10, 2005
Other name(s)
AAAW Heavyweight Championship
(1996–1998)

The AAAW (All Asia Athlete Women's) Single Championship or AAAW Championship was a women's professional wrestling championship belt contested in the Japanese women's professional wrestling promotion Gaea Japan The belt was abandoned in 2005, after Gaea was closed down.

On March 12, 2021 it was announced that the AAAW Singles Championship would be revived, along with the AAAW Tag Team Championship, at the GAEAISM show on April 29.[3]

Title history[]

Names[]

Name[4] Years[4]
AAAW Heavyweight Championship November 2, 1996 – May 1998
AAAW Single Championship May 1998 – April 10, 2005

Reigns[]

Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days
1 Chigusa Nagayo November 2, 1996 We Are Gaea Japan! Singapore 1 322 Nagayo defeated Devil Masami to become the inaugural champion. [4]
2 Devil Masami September 20, 1997 Double Destiny Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 337 [4]
3 Chigusa Nagayo August 23, 1998 Hard Luck – Day 2 Tokyo, Japan 2 268 [4]
4 Aja Kong May 18, 1999 Wipe Out – Day 3 Tokyo, Japan 1 607 [4]
5 Mayumi Ozaki January 14, 2001 Wild Times – Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 1 287 [4]
6 Aja Kong October 28, 2001 God Only Knows – Day 2 Nagoya, Japan 2 48 [4]
7 Meiko Satomura December 15, 2001 Deep Endless – Day 4 Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 169 [4]
8 Chikayo Nagashima June 2, 2002 Ring On The Beat – Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 1 140 [4]
9 Manami Toyota October 20, 2002 Yokohama Mega Ride Yokohama, Japan 1 406 [4]
10 Dynamite Kansai November 30, 2003 Iron Heart – Day 4 Tokyo, Japan 1 42 [4]
11 Ayako Hamada January 11, 2004 Wild Times – Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 1 110 [4]
12 Meiko Satomura April 30, 2004 Yoyogi Limit Break Tokyo, Japan 2 338 [4]
13 Aja Kong April 3, 2005 Yokohama Final Impact Yokohama, Japan 3 7 [4]
Deactivated  April 10, 2005 Eternal Last Gong Tokyo, Japan The title retired at the final Gaea show. [4]

Combined reigns[]

Record three-time and longest reigning AAAW Single Championship Aja Kong
Rank Wrestler No. of
Reigns
Combined
Days
1 Aja Kong 3 658
2 Chigusa Nagayo 2 590
3 Meiko Satomura 2 510
4 Manami Toyota 1 406
5 Devil Masami 1 337
6 Mayumi Ozaki 1 287
7 Chikayo Nagashima 1 140
8 Ayako Hamada 1 110
9 Dynamite Kansai 1 42

References[]

  1. ^ "Devil Masami Profile". Archived from the original on 2007-07-04. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
  2. ^ "Chikayo Nagashima Profile". Archived from the original on 2007-08-07. Retrieved 2007-07-13.
  3. ^ "GAEAISM ―Decade of quarter century―".
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "AAAW Singles Title (Japan)". wrestling-titles.com.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""