WEW 6-Man Tag Team Championship

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WEW 6-Man Tag Team Championship
Details
PromotionFrontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (1999-2002)
World Entertainment Wrestling (2002-2004)
Date establishedJuly 30, 1999
Date retiredMay 5, 2004

The WEW 6-Man Tag Team Championship was a championship in Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling and later in World Entertainment Wrestling. It was active from July 1999 until February 2002 as a substitute for the FMW World Street Fight 6-Man Tag Team Championship.[1] The final champions were Hayabusa, Tetsuhiro Kuroda and GOEMON. They were stripped of the belts on November 5, 2001 when Hayabusa sustained an injury that left him unable to defend the title.[2] The promotion closed in February 2002.[2] The title was later revived in Kodo Fuyuki's World Entertainment Wrestling promotion in 2002 and was used there until the promotion closed on May 5, 2004.

Title history[]

No: Wrestler: Reigns: Date: Days held: Location: Event: Notes:
Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling
1 Team No Respect
(Kodo Fuyuki, Koji Nakagawa and Gedo)
1 July 31, 1999 54 Tokyo, Japan Goodbye Hayabusa tour Defeated Hayabusa, Masato Tanaka and Tetsuhiro Kuroda in the finals of the WEW 6 Man Tag Team Championship tournament to become the inaugural champions.[1]
2 Masato Tanaka, Tetsuhiro Kuroda and Hisakatsu Oya 1 September 23, 1999 [Note 1] Kanazawa, Japan Making of a New Legend III tour [1]
Vacated October 1999 Hisakatsu Oya, Masato Tanaka and Tetsuhiro Kuroda vacated the titles due to splitting up.[1]
3 Ricky Fuji, Flying Kid Ichihara and Chocoball Mukai 1 November 23, 1999 18 Yokohama, Japan 10th Anniversary Show Defeated Koji Nakagawa, Jado and Gedo in a Ladder match for the vacated title[1]
4 Team No Respect
(Koji Nakagawa (2), Jado and Gedo (2))
1 December 11, 1999 136 Tokyo, Japan Making of a New Legend VI tour [1]
5 Kodo Fuyuki (2), Kyoko Inoue and Chocoball Mukai (2) 1 April 25, 2000 8 Tokyo, Japan Night in Shibuya Backdraft Eve [1]
6 Team No Respect
(Koji Nakagawa (3), Jado (2) and Gedo (3))
2 May 3, 2000 25 Fukuoka, Japan Golden Series tour [1]
7 Shin Fuyuki-Gun
(Kodo Fuyuki (3), Kyoko Inoue (2) and Chocoball Mukai (3))
2 May 28, 2000 29 Tokyo, Japan Neo FMW tour [1]
8 Hayabusa, Tetsuhiro Kuroda (2) and Hisakatsu Oya (2) 1 June 26, 2000 81 Gunma, Japan King of Fight tour [1]
9 Shin Fuyuki-Gun
Kodo Fuyuki (4), Mr. Gannosuke and Shinjuku Shark
1 September 15, 2000 2 Kumagaya, Japan Flashover tour [1]
10 Jado (3), Gedo (4) and Kaori Nakayama 1 September 17, 2000 132 Tokyo, Japan Flashover tour [1]
Vacated January 27, 2001 Nakayama vacated the title[1]
11 Complete Players
(Masato Tanaka, Jado (4) and Gedo (5))
1 February 11, 2001 10 Fukuoka, Japan Cluster Battle tour Defeated Kodo Fuyuki, GOEMON, and Onryo for the vacant title[1]
Vacated February 21, 2001 Title vacated when all three champions left FMW.[1]
12 Hisakatsu Oya (3), Ricky Fuji (2) and Flying Kid Ichihara (2) 1 May 22, 2001 69 Sapporo, Japan Neo FMW tour Defeated Azusa Kudo, Shinjuku Shark and Naohiko Yamazaki for the vacant title[1]
13 Kodo Fuyuki (5), Mr. Gannosuke (2) and Kintaro Kanemura 1 July 30, 2001 41 Fukuoka, Japan FMW [1]
14 Hayabusa (2), Tetsuhiro Kuroda (3) and GOEMON (4) 1 September 9, 2001 57 Tokyo, Japan Super Dynamism tour Hayabusa formerly held the title as H and GOEMON formerly held the title as Koji Nakagawa.[1]
Vacated November 5, 2001 Tokyo, Japan Scramble Survivor tour Vacated after Hayabusa suffered an injury in a match against Mammoth Sasaki on October 22, 2001.[2] The title was deactivated after FMW closed on February 15, 2002.
World Entertainment Wrestling
15 Gosaku Goshogawara, TAKA Michinoku and Tetsuhiro Kuroda (4) 1 October 23, 2002 344 Tokyo, Japan WEW Defeated Kuroge Wagyuta, Masato Tanaka and Shinjiro Otani to revive the title.
16 2 Tuff Tony, Kintaro Kanemura (2) and Mad Man Pondo 1 October 2, 2003 216 Takaoka, Japan Fuyuki Army
Retired May 5, 2004 The title was retired on May 5, 2004.
  1. ^ The exact date when Hisakatsu Oya, Masato Tanaka and Tetsuhiro Kuroda vacated the titles is unknown, which means that their title reign lasted between 8 days and 38 days.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "World Entertainment Wrestling 6-Man Tag Team Title". Wrestling Titles. Retrieved 2008-01-25.
  2. ^ a b c "FMW/WEW 6 Man Tag Team Title History". Solie's Title Histories. Retrieved 2008-01-25.
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