TPBYWA World Heavyweight Championship
From Bywpedia
TPBYWA World Heavyweight Championship | |
Design used June 21, 2011 - Present. | |
Details | |
Current champion | Sean Steel |
Date won | June 21, 2011 |
Promotion | Higher Passion Wrestling |
Community/Organization | The Promise's Backyard Wrestling Association |
Date introduced | June 21, 2011 |
Most reigns | Sean Steel (1) |
First champion | Sean Steel |
Longest reign | Sean Steel (0 days) |
Shortest reign | Sean Steel (0 Days) |
TPBYWA (The Promise's Backyard Wrestling Association) World Heavyweight Championship is a backyard wrestling World Heavyweight Championship as recognized by The Promise's Backyard Wrestling Association. The belt was first awarded to Sean Steel of Higher Passion Wrestling.
Background
On May 21, 2011, Sean Steel, James Blackwell, and "Big Daddy" Paul Steel challenged National Backyard Wrestling Alliance stars Skull Jr. and whoever the NBYWA World Heavyweight Champion was to come to HPW's next show "Dirty Black Summer". Skull responded, insisting HPW come to his supershows NBYWA 4 and NBYWA 5 instead. Sean Steel, on June 21, declined the offer and claimed the NBYWA World Title since his challenge went unaccepted. The next day, Skull denied any title change since Steel had no authority in NBYWA and asserted Lance Manion was still the champion, so the title Steel carries around is known as the TPBYWA World Title. On July 2, Steel made an outlandish promo against Skull and was suspended 30 days because of it. Steel founded the TPBYWA because of that, to speak his mind freely about the situation. For the next month, Steel, Skull, and James Blackwell argued until Skull confirmed his and Lance's appearance for the HPW shows "Homecoming" and "Hell-O-Ween". At "Homecoming", a triple threat Street Fight was booked for Steel, Blackwell, and Skull that saw the TPBYWA and NBYWA World Titles be unified. On September 3, Steel won.
Title History
# | Wrestler: | Reign: | Date: | Event: | Notes: |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steel claimed the NBYWA World Heavyweight Championship after a challenge to the champion at the time, Lance Manion, wasn't accepted. Since this reign is not official, the belt is known as the TPBYWA World Heavyweight Championship. |