WWE Hardcore Championship
WWE Hardcore Championship | |||||||||||
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Promotion | WWE | ||||||||||
Date established | November 2, 1998 | ||||||||||
Date retired | August 26, 2002 | ||||||||||
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The WWF Hardcore Championship was a hardcore wrestling championship in WWE which was contested under "hardcore" rules (no disqualifications, no countouts, and pinfalls count anywhere). In the latter part of the title's history, a rule was implemented allowing anyone to challenge the champion at any place or time, provided a referee was present (dubbed the "24/7 rule"). It is considered one of the most defining titles of the Attitude Era.[1] It was established on November 2, 1998, with Mankind as the inaugural champion. In 2002, it was unified with the WWE Intercontinental Championship by Rob Van Dam, the final Hardcore Champion.
History
Ratification
During a storyline where The Corporation was manipulating Mankind, Vince McMahon awarded the taped-up, broken championship belt to Mankind as a backhanded compliment to keep him away from WWF Championship contention. Rather than reject the dilapidated title belt, Mankind embraced it with gratitude, calling McMahon "dad," to the disgust of The Corporation. The title was won by the Big Boss Man a month later, and was then defended as a regular title.[citation needed]
24/7 rule
When Crash Holly won the belt, he introduced the "24/7 rule" that the belt was to be defended at all times as long as a referee was present. This allowed for many comic relief moments, such as the belt changing hands while the champion was asleep, and The Headbangers chasing Crash Holly around an amusement park in Brooklyn (Holly eventually escaped from a ball pit and ran from the building, still the champion).
At
Trish Stratus faced Jazz (managed by then-Hardcore Champion Stevie Richards) for the Women's Championship, and lost due to Richards' interference. After the match, Bubba Ray Dudley attacked Richards from behind and pinned him for the title. Raven appeared and pinned Dudley, but quickly lost the title to Justin Credible, who was then pinned by Crash Holly. Dudley hit Holly with a trash can, but Stratus stole the pin on him. Dudley tried to attack Stratus from behind, but Jazz sprayed him with a fire extinguisher. Richards then stole the final pin of the night after Dudley accidentally powerbombed Stratus through a wooden table.
This rule has allowed the shortest title reigns and quickest title changes in WWE history.
Four women have held the Hardcore Championship: Molly Holly (as Mighty Molly), Trish Stratus, Terri Runnels, and The Godfather's ho.
The championship often changed hands at house shows, to give the audience a "big moment". In the end, the title always returned to its original holder.
At
Between the Invasion storyline and WrestleMania X8, the "24/7" rule was only used twice, during matches on the Raw Is War episodes of August 13, 2001 and September 10, 2001 respectively. Both matches were coincidentally between Kurt Angle and Rob Van Dam. On the August 13 episode of Raw Is War, Jeff Hardy interfered and brought a referee with him, and pinned Van Dam for the title, setting up a match for them at that year's SummerSlam. On the September 10 episode of Raw Is War, however, Angle won the match, then was thrown off the entrance ramp by Stone Cold Steve Austin, who then also threw Van Dam off the ramp too. Van Dam landed on Angle and a referee counted the pin.
After the Invasion storyline, The Undertaker won the title from Van Dam. He defended against numerous opponents (usually smaller than him) and assaulted them after the matches (with the exception of Big Show). Although the 24/7 rule was still in effect during his reign, The Undertaker was not challenged by others under the rule; in storyline, commentator Jim Ross attributed this fact to no wrestler being "stupid enough" to do so.
The 24/7 rule ended on August 19, 2002 when Raw general manager Eric Bischoff suspended it before a six-minute hardcore battle royal, won by Tommy Dreamer. Previously, a 24-hour suspension on the rule was in place for Rob Van Dam and Jeff Hardy's match at WWF Invasion. Commissioner Mick Foley also suspended the rule while Shane McMahon held the title, to ensure he was still the champion at SummerSlam, to defend against Steve Blackman, whom he cheated out of the belt.
On May 20, 2019, WWE unveiled a new championship, the WWE 24/7 Championship, which was contested under the same 24/7 rule.[3]
Unification and retirement
The title was unified with the Intercontinental Championship on August 26, 2002, when Intercontinental Champion Rob Van Dam defeated Hardcore Champion Tommy Dreamer.[4] This was one month after Van Dam defeated Jeff Hardy in a ladder match to unify the Intercontinental and European Championships.
Sporadic appearances
On the June 23, 2003 episode of Raw, Mick Foley (who was the first champion, as "Mankind") was awarded the Hardcore Championship belt (but not the championship) by the Raw authority figure Stone Cold Steve Austin for his contributions to hardcore wrestling.[5]
On May 22, 2006, Edge and Foley declared themselves co-holders of the championship as part of a storyline involving alumni of the hardcore wrestling-based Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) promotion and were brought to ECW One Night Stand when they and Lita fought Tommy Dreamer, Terry Funk, and Beulah McGillicutty in an intergender tag team Extreme Rules match.[6] The title was not defended and soon quietly disappeared.
Origin of the belt
The Hardcore Championship belt was rumored to have been a replica of the "Winged Eagle"
When Bradshaw won the title in June 2002, he briefly renamed it the Texas Hardcore Championship,[9] and wore a Smoking Skull belt customized with the Texas flag, artificial bull horns and a Bullrope on the centerplate.
Tommy Dreamer, in the last title defense of the Hardcore Championship, used a variation of the belt with a New York license plate as a centerplate, over a replica of a European Championship. The reason for these changes was because the original belt had become so damaged from wear and tear.[10]
Reigns
References
- ^ "Ring Rust Radio's Attitude Era Draft Results and Fantasy Cards". Bleacher Report.
- ^ The Hardcore Title changed hands 10 times in one night
- ^ Keller, Wade (May 20, 2019). "5/20 WWE Raw Results: Keller's report on Money in the Bank fallout, will Brock Lesnar announce his intensions [sic], Mick Foley reveals new WWE Title". PW Torch. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
- )
- ^ Guttman, James (June 23, 2003). "6/23 Raw review: Guttman's "alt perspective" review". PWTorch.com. Retrieved August 2, 2009.
Stone Cold then presented Foley with the Hardcore title and congratulated him
- ^ Keller, Wade (May 22, 2006). "Keller's WWE Raw report 5/22: Ongoing "virtual time" analysis of live show". PWTorch.com. Retrieved August 2, 2009.
Foley presented Edge with the old Hardcore Title belt....He whispered something to Lilian. She announced they are the new co-holders of the WWE Hardcore Championship. Edge, Foley, and Lita held the belt up together.
- ^ "The truth behind 8 WWE urban legends". WWE. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
- ^ "Hulk Hogan's Real Wrestlemania 5 Winged Eagle WWF Belt Destroyed by Mr. Perfect on SNME". BeltFanDan via YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
- ^ "WWE Raw" (July 29, 2002)
- ^ "WWE Raw" (August 26, 2002)