Mexican National Tag Team Championship: Difference between revisions
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{{TitleDefenseLine|1|[[Oscar Sevilla]] & [[Torero]]|[[2003]].[[02.07]]|[[Queretaro]]}} | {{TitleDefenseLine|1|[[Oscar Sevilla]] & [[Torero]]|[[2003]].[[02.07]]|[[Queretaro]]}} | ||
{{TitleHistoryLine|32|[[Octagon]] & [[La Parka Jr.]] [2]|[[Electro Shock]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2003]].[[06.20]]|[[Veracruz]]}} | {{TitleHistoryLine|32|[[Octagon]] & [[La Parka Jr.]] [2]|[[Electro Shock]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2003]].[[06.20]]|[[Veracruz]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|1|[[Abismo Negro]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2003]].[[11.16]]|[[Tulancingo]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|2|[[Abismo Negro]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2004]].[[08.20]]|[[Puebla]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|3|[[Chessman]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2005]].??.??|[[Salamanca]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|4|[[Chessman]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2005]].[[06.27]]|[[Nuevo Laredo]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|5|[[Chessman]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2006]].[[02.06]]|[[Irapuato]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|6|[[Chessman]] & [[Cibernetico]]|[[2006]].[[04.12]]|[[Veracruz]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|7|[[Alan Stone]] & [[Charly Manson]]|[[2006]].[[05.15]]|[[Domo De La Feria]] - [[Leon]], [[Guanajuato]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine| | {{TitleDefenseLine|8|[[Scorpio Jr.]] & [[Shocker]]|[[2006]].[[06.04]]|[[Poliforum Zamna]] - [[Merida]], [[Yucatan]]}} | ||
{{TitleDefenseLine|9|[[Kenzo Suzuki]] & [[Electro Shock]]|[[2007]].[[11.30]]|Centro de Convenciones de Ciudad Madero, Tamaulipas }} | |||
{{TitleHistoryEnd}} | {{TitleHistoryEnd}} | ||
Revision as of 21:22, 1 December 2007
Current Champions
History of Championship
While being a national commission regulated championship, it has primarily been held and defended in AAA since AAA's formation.
Records for this championship are sparse before 1982. It existed before that period, but may have been an unregulated, similar to the Mexican National Women's Championship. The Mendozas title reign starts the modern age of this title.
From December 1995 until August of 1997, this championship was a source of confusion. Father/son champions Juventud Guerrera and Fuerza Guerrera held the titles in 1995, but the titles were declared vacant when Fuerza left AAA. AAA held a decision match for the vacant title on 1996.01.12 in Neza, where Juventud Guerrera and new partner Psicosis defeated Volador and El Mexicano for the vacant belts. Later that year, after Juventud also left AAA, the commission invalidated that championship match, deciding that the Guerreras were still champions because they never actually lost the titles in a match. In August of that same year, the commission re-vacated the championship for the same reason it originally did - Juvi and Fuerza still did not wrestle in the same promotion and could not team up. Both the Fuerza/Psicosis and the second Psicosis/Juvi reigns are not listed in the lineage due to the commission's decisions.
AAA did not fill the championship again until 1997.
Champions Listing
Sources:
Sources
- [Wrestling-Titles.com]
- Luchas 2000 Especial #21
Gallery
Also Listed As
This article is a stub of a yet to be completed article. Free to add your own details to this article |
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Mexican National Championships |
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Men's: Light (Panterita del Ring Jr.) • Welter (vacant) Middle (Templario) • Light Heavy (Ángel de Oro) Heavy (Euforia) • Tag (Esfinge & Fugaz) Trios (Los Cancerberos del Infierno (Virus, Raziel and Cancerbero)) |
Women's: Singles (Dark Silueta) • Women's Tag (Jarochita & Lluvia) |
Defunct: Mini • Feather • Cruiser • Atomicos |