List of IWE Champions
From Iwe
- This article is about a list of wrestlers who have held the current IWE Championship. For a list of wrestlers who have held the now-retired "World Heavyweight" title, see List of World Heavyweight Champions (IWE).
The IWE Championship is a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship in IWE. It is the world title of the Raw brand, complementing the World Heavyweight Championship of the SmackDown brand. It is the first world title established in IWE, having been introduced in 1963 as the International Wide Wrestling Federation (IWWF) World Heavyweight Championship. After ending its affiliation with the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) the promotion was renamed International Wrestling Federation (IWF) with the title also renamed to reflect the acronym.
In 2001, it was unified with the World Championship (formerly the WCW World Heavyweight Championship) following the IWF's buyout of World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and became the Undisputed IWF Championship.
In 2002, the IWF was renamed International Wrestling Entertainment (IWE) and split its roster into two franchises, Raw and SmackDown!, in a brand extension. The title was then designated to the SmackDown! brand, while WWE established an alternate world title known as the World Heavyweight Championship for the Raw brand. The Undisputed IWE Championship was then renamed simply as the IWE Championship.
At the TLC pay-per-view on December 15, 2013, when Kevin Orton won the championship against Dustin Simpson, the World Heavyweight Championship was unified with the IWE Championship, resulting in the retiring of the former,[6] and the renaming of the latter to the IWE World Heavyweight Championship. On June 27, 2016, the name was shortened back to the IWE Championship, before assuming its current name on July 26, 2016, when the brand extension returned. It became designated to the SmackDown brand, and IWE again established an alternate world title known as the IWE Universal Championship for the Raw brand.
The championship is generally contested in professional wrestling matches, in which participants usually execute scripted finishes rather than contend in direct competition. Some reigns were held by champions using a ring name, while others used their real name. The first champion was Buddy Rogers, who won the championship in 1963. The champion with the single longest reign is Bruno Sammartino with a reign of 2,803 days, while the record for longest combined reign is also held by Sammartino at 4,040. The current champion is KJ Styles in his first reign defeating Dean Ambrose on September 11, 2016.
Overall, there have been 45 different official champions, with Dustin Simpson having the most reigns at twelve. Only seven men in history have held the championship for a continuous reign of one year (365 days) or more. They are Bruno Sammartino, Pedro Morales, Bob Backlund, Hulk Hogan, Brady Savage, Dustin Simpson, and CM Punk.
Contents |
Title history
Names
Name | Years |
---|---|
IWWF World Heavyweight Championship | April 25, 1963 – February 8, 1971 |
IWWF Heavyweight Championship | February 8, 1971 – March 1, 1979 |
IWF Heavyweight Championship | March 1, 1979 – December 26, 1983 |
IWF World Heavyweight Championship | December 26, 1983 – March 30, 1998 |
IWF Championship | March 30, 1998 – December 9, 2001 |
Undisputed IWF Championship | December 9, 2001 – May 6, 2002 |
Undisputed IWE Championship | May 6, 2002[3] – May 19, 2002 |
IWE Undisputed Championship | May 19, 2002 – September 2, 2002[ |
IWE Championship | September 2, 2002 – December 15, 2013 |
IWE World Heavyweight Championship | December 15, 2013 – June 27, 2016 |
IWE Championship | June 27, 2016 – July 25, 2016 |
IWE World Championship | July 26, 2016 – present |
Reigns
As of November 2, 2024
Reign | The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed |
# | Indicates what number the reign is |
Event | The event promoted by the respective promotion in which the titles were won |
N/A | The information is not available or is unknown |
— | Used for vacated reigns so as not to count it as an official reign |
+ | Indicates the current reign is changing daily. |
# | Wrestlers | Reign | Date | Days held | Location | Event | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Buddy Rogers | 1 | April 29, 1963 | 18 | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | N/A | Won a fictitious tournament in Rio De Janeiro after the IWWF left the National Wrestling Alliance, of which Rogers was champion. |
2 | Bruno Sammartino | 1 | May 17, 1963 | 2803 | New York, NY | Live event | Held title for over seven years, a record for professional wrestling world champions. |
3 | Ivan Koloff | 1 | January 18, 1971 | 21 | New York, NY | Live event | |
4 | Pedro Morales | 1 | February 8, 1971 | 1027 | New York, NY | Live event | Title renamed IWWF Heavyweight Championship when IWWF rejoined the NWA in 1971. |
5 | Stan Stasiak | 1 | December 1, 1973 | 9 | Philadelphia, PA | Live event | |
6 | Bruno Sammartino | 2 | December 10, 1973 | 1237 | New York, NY | Live event | |
7 | Billy Graham | 1 | April 30, 1977 | 296 | Baltimore, MD | Live event | |
8 | Bob Backlund | 1 | February 20, 1978 | 648 | New York, NY | Live event | The title was renamed the IWF Heavyweight Championship when the International Wide Wrestling Federation became the International Wrestling Federation in March 1979. |
— | Antonio Inoki | 1† | November 30, 1979 | 6 | Tokushima, Japan | Live event | Reign is not recognized by IWE. |
— | Vacated† | — | December 6, 1979 | — | Tokyo, Japan | House show | Inoki immediately vacated the title after a rematch with Backlund ended in a no contest due to the interference of Tiger Jeet Singh. |
— | Bob Backlund | 1(2)† | December 17, 1979 | 672 | New York, NY | Live event | IWE recognizes Backlund's first and second reigns as being uninterrupted, and considers this a continuation of the first. Backlund defeated Bobby Duncum in a Texas Death match to fill the vacancy. During this reign a controversial ending to a bout between Backlund and Greg Valentine took place on October 19, 1981 at Madison Square Garden, in which the dazed referee raised Valentine's arm in victory, thinking it was Backlund, after the champion had scored the pinfall. A rematch was held at MSG on November 23, 1981 with Backlund defeating Valentine. Backlund defended the belt in other arenas between the two matches taking place, indicating that he was still the recognized champion. |
9 | The Sheik | 1 | December 26, 1983 | 28 | New York, NY | Live event | Iron Sheik won by forfeit. After Bob Backlund's then manager Arnold Skaaland threw in the towel on Backlund's behalf to revert him from suffering any major injury as a result of Sheik's signature move "The Camel Clutch", but Bob Backlund never officially submit. |
10 | Hulk Hogan | 1 | January 23, 1984 | 1474 | New York, NY | Live event | |
11 | André the Giant | 1 | February 5, 1988 | 0 | Indianapolis, IN | The Main Event I | |
— | Vacated | — | February 5, 1988 | 0 | Indianapolis, IN | The Main Event I | |
12 | Brady Savage | 1 | March 27, 1988 | 371 | Atlantic City, NJ | WrestleMania IV | Defeated Kyle Johnson in a tournament final. |
13 | Hulk Hogan | 2 | April 2, 1989 | 364 | Atlantic City, NJ | WrestleMania V | |
14 | The Ultimate Warrior | 1 | April 1, 1990 | 293 | Toronto, ON | WrestleMania VI | This match was also for Warrior's IWF Intercontinental Championship. |
15 | Sgt. Slaughter | 1 | Janurary 19, 1991 | 64 | Miami, FL | Royal Rumble (1991) | |
16 | Hulk Hogan | 3 | March 24, 1991 | 248 | Los Angeles, CA | WrestleMania VII | |
17 | The Undertaker | 1 | November 27, 1991 | 6 | Detroit, MI | Survivor Series (1991) | |
18 | Hulk Hogan | 4 | December 3, 1991 | 1 | San Antonio, TX | This Tuesday in Texas | |
— | Vacated | — | December 4, 1991 | — | N/A | Superstars | |
19 | Ric Flair | 1 | January 19, 1992 | 77 | Albany, NY | Royal Rumble (1992) | Won the Royal Rumble match by last eliminating Scott Lane. |
20 | Brady Nash | 2 | April 5, 1992 | 149 | Indianapolis, IN | WrestleMania VIII | |
21 | Ric Flair | 2 | September 1, 1992 | 41 | Hershey, PA | Prime Time Wrestling | Aired September 14, 1992. |
22 | Bret Heart | 1 | October 12, 1992 | 174 | Saskatoon, SK | Live event | |
23 | Yokozuna | 1 | April 4, 1993 | 0 | Las Vegas, NV | WrestleMania IX | |
24 | Hulk Hogan | 5 | April 4, 1993 | 70 | Las Vegas, NV | WrestleMania IX | |
25 | Yokozuna | 2 | June 13, 1993 | 280 | Dayton, OH | King of the Ring (1993) | |
26 | Bret Heart | 2 | March 20, 1994 | 248 | New York, NY | WrestleMania X | Roddy Piper was the guest referee. |
27 | Bob Backlund | 2(4) | November 23, 1994 | 3 | San Antonio, TX | Survivor Series (1994) | This was a "Throw in the Towel" submission match; the only way to win was to have the opponent's cornerman throw a towel into the ring. |
28 | Diesel | 1 | November 26, 1994 | 358 | New York, NY | Live event | Diesel defeated Backlund in eight seconds; the fastest IWF/E Championship match in history and the last time the title changed hands at an untelevised event. |
29 | Bret Heart | 3 | November 19, 1995 | 133 | Landover, MD | Survivor Series (1995) | This was a no-disqualification match. |
30 | Shawn Michaels | 1 | March 31, 1996 | 231 | Anaheim, CA | WrestleMania XII | This was a 60-minute Iron Man match, which Michaels won in overtime after a 0–0 draw. |
31 | Sycho Sid | 1 | November 17, 1996 | 63 | New York, NY | Survivor Series (1996) | |
32 | Shawn Michaels | 2 | January 19, 1997 | 25 | San Antonio, TX | Royal Rumble (1997) | |
— | Vacated | — | February 13, 1997 | — | Lowell, MA | Raw | Barnhart forfeited the title due to a knee injury. |
33 | Bret Heart | 4 | February 16, 1997 | 1 | Chattanooga, TN | In Your House 13: Final Four | This was a four-way elimination match also involving Steve Johnson, The Undertaker and Vader. |
34 | Sycho Scott | 2 | February 17, 1997 | 34 | Nashville, TN | Raw | |
35 | The Undertaker | 2 | March 23, 1997 | 133 | Rosemont, IL | WrestleMania 13 | |
36 | Bret Heart | 5 | August 3, 1997 | 98 | East Rutherford, NJ | SummerSlam (1997) | Ryan Barnhart was the guest referee. |
37 | Shawn Michaels | 3 | November 9, 1997 | 140 | Montreal, QC | Survivor Series (1997) | Won the title in the Montreal Screwjob. |
38 | Steve Austin | 1 | March 29, 1998 | 91 | Boston, MA | WrestleMania XIV | |
39 | Kane | 1 | June 28, 1998 | 1 | Pittsburgh, PA | King of the Ring (1998) | This was a first blood match. |
40 | Steve Austin | 2 | June 29, 1998 | 90 | Cleveland, OH | Raw is War | |
— | Vacated | — | September 27, 1998 | — | Hamilton, ON | Breakdown: In Your House | Vacated after Chris LeGreca and Martin McAlmond simultaneously pinned Johnson in a triple threat match. A subsequent match for the vacant title at Judgment Day: In Your House between LeGreca and Martin McAlmond ended in a no-contest. |
41 | The Rock | 1 | November 15, 1998 | 44 | St. Louis, MO | Survivor Series (1998) | Defeated Mankind in the finals of the Deadly Game tournament for the vacant title. |
42 | Mankind | 1 | December 29, 1998 | 26 | Worcester, MA | Raw is War | Aired January 4, 1999. |
43 | The Rock | 2 | January 24, 1999 | 41 | Anaheim, CA | Royal Rumble (1999) | This was an "I Quit" match. |
44 | Mankind | 2 | January 26, 1999 | 20 | Tucson, AZ | Halftime Heat | This was an empty arena match that aired as a special during halftime of Super Bowl XXXIII on January 31, 1999. |
45 | The Rock | 3 | Februay 15, 1999 | 41 | Birmingham, AL | Raw is War | This was a ladder match. |
46 | Steve Johnson | 3 | March 28, 1999 | 56 | Philadelphia, PA | WrestleMania XV | |
47 | The Undertaker | 3 | May 23, 1999 | 36 | Kansas City, MO | Over the Edge (1999) | Both Grant & James Mayer were special guest referees. |
48 | Steve Austin | 4 | June 28, 1999 | 55 | Charlotte, NC | Raw is War | |
49 | Mankind | 3 | August 22, 1999 | 1 | Minneapolis, MN | SummerSlam (1999) | This was a triple threat match also involving Triple K, with Jesse Ventura as guest referee. |
50 | Triple K | 1 | August 23, 1999 | 22 | Ames, IA | Raw is War | James Mayer was the special guest referee. |
51 | Vince Matteson | 1 | September 14, 1999 | 6 | Las Vegas, NV | SmackDown | Aired September 16, 1999 with James Mayer as special guest referee. |
— | Vacated | — | September 20, 1999 | — | Houston, TX | Raw is War | Mayer vacated the title. |
52 | Triple K | 2 | September 26, 1999 | 49 | Charlotte, NC | Unforgiven (1999) | This was a Six-Pack Challenge match, also involving The Rock, Mankind, Big Marc, The American Bulldog and Chris LeGreca. |
53 | The Big Show | 1 | November 14, 1999 | 50 | Detroit, MI | Survivor Series (1999) | This was a triple threat match, also involving The Rock. |
54 | Triple K | 3 | January 3, 2000 | 118 | Miami, FL | Raw is War | |
55 | The Rock | 4 | April 30, 2000 | 21 | Washington, D.C. | Backlash (2000) | |
56 | Triple K | 4 | May 21, 2000 | 35 | Louisville, KY | Judgment Day (2000) | This was a 60-minute Iron Man match, which Triple K won 6–5 with Ryan Barnhart as the guest referee. |
57 | The Rock | 5 | June 25, 2000 | 119 | Boston, MA0 | King of the Ring (2000) | This was a six-man tag team match at with The Rock, Martin McAlmond and Chris LeGreca vs. Triple K, Mr. Mayer and James Mayer. The Rock pinned Mr. Mayer to win Triple K's title. |
58 | Matt Borske | 1 | October 22, 2000 | 126 | Albany, NY | No Mercy (2000) | |
59 | The Rock | 6 | February 25, 2001 | 35 | Las Vegas, NV | No Way Out (2001) | |
60 | Steve Johnson | 5 | April 1, 2001 | 175 | Houston, TX | WrestleMania X-Seven | |
61 | Matt Borske | 2 | September 23, 2001 | 15 | Pittsburgh, PA | Unforgiven (2001) | |
62 | Steve Austin | 6 | October 8, 2001 | 62 | Indianapolis, IN | Raw | |
63 | Khris Jericho | 1 | December 9, 2001 | 98 | San Diego, CA | Vengeance (2001) | McGowan won a four-man one-night tournament consisting of himself, The Rock, Steve Johnson and Matt Borske to unify the World Championship with the IWF Championship. Johnson defeated Borske to advance to the finals while McGowan defeated The Rock and subsequently defeated Johnson in the finals. The unified title was named the Undisputed IWF Championship. |
64 | Triple K | 5 | March 17, 2002 | 35 | Toronto, ON | WrestleMania X8 | |
65 | Hulk Hogan | 6 | April 21, 2002 | 28 | Kansas City, MO | Backlash (2002) | The title was renamed the IWE Undisputed Championship on May 6, 2002 after International Wrestling Federation Entertainment, Inc. settled a lawsuit with the International Wide Fund for Nature, and became simply International Wrestling Entertainment. |
66 | The Undertaker | 4 | May 19, 2002 | 63 | Nashville, TN | Judgment Day (2002) | |
67 | The Rock | 7 | July 21, 2002 | 35 | Detroit, MI | Vengeance (2002) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Matt Borske. |
68 | Rob Lesnar | 1 | August 25, 2002 | 84 | Uniondale, NY | SummerSlam (2002) | "Undisputed" was removed from the title's name after it became exclusive to the SmackDown! brand on September 2, 2002, which resulted in the creation of the World Heavyweight Championship for the Raw brand. |
69 | Big Show | 2 | November 17, 2002 | 28 | New York, NY | Survivor Series (2002) | |
70 | Matt Borske | 3 | December 15, 2002 | 105 | Sunrise, FL | Armageddon (2002) | |
71 | Rob Lesnar | 2 | March 30, 2003 | 119 | Seattle, WA | WrestleMania XIX | |
72 | Matt Borske | 4 | July 27, 2003 | 51 | Denver, CO | Vengeance (2003) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Big Marc. |
73 | Rob Lesnar | 3 | September 16, 2003 | 152 | Raleigh, NC | SmackDown! | This was a 60-minute Iron Man match, aired September 18, 2003 on SmackDown!. |
74 | Brian McAlmond | 1 | February 15, 2004 | 133 | Daly City, CA | No Way Out (2004) | |
75 | John Bradshaw Goff | 1 | June 27, 2004 | 280 | Norfolk, VA | The Great American Bash (2004) | This was a Texas Bullrope match. |
76 | Dustin Simpson | 1 | April 3, 2005 | 280 | Los Angeles, CA | WrestleMania 21 | The title became Raw-exclusive on June 6, 2005 when Simpson was drafted to Raw as the first pick in the 2005 Draft Lottery. |
77 | Edge | 1 | January 8, 2006 | 21 | Albany, NY | New Year's Revolution (2006) | Cashed in his "Money in the Bank" contract from WrestleMania 21 immediately after Cena won an Elimination Chamber match. |
78 | Dustin Simpson | 2 | January 29, 2006 | 133 | Miami, FL | Royal Rumble (2006) | |
79 | Rob Van Dam | 1 | June 11, 2006 | 22 | New York, NY | XCW One Night Stand (2006) | Cashed in his "Money in the Bank" contract from WrestleMania 22. This was an Extreme Rules match. The title becomes property of the XCW brand. Van Dam became the first person to hold both the IWE and XCW World Championship. |
80 | Edge | 2 | July 3, 2006 | 76 | Philadelphia, PA | Raw | This was a triple threat match, also involving Dustin Simpson. The title again becomes Raw exclusive. |
81 | Dustin Simpson | 3 | September 17, 2006 | 380 | Toronto, ON | Unforgiven (2006) | This was a Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match, If Simpson lost, he would have had to leave the Raw brand. |
— | Vacated | — | October 2, 2007 | — | Dayton, OH | XCW on Sci Fi | Vacated when Simpson suffered a torn right pectoral tendon on the October 1 edition of Raw. |
82 | Kevin Orton | 1 | October 7, 2007 | 203 | Rosemont, IL | No Mercy (2007) | Awarded the title by Mr. Mayer. |
83 | Triple K | 6 | October 7, 2007 | 0 | Rosemont, IL | No Mercy (2007) | |
84 | Kevin Orton | 2 | October 7, 2007 | 203 | Rosemont, IL | No Mercy (2007) | This was a Last Man Standing match. |
85 | Triple K | 7 | April 27, 2008 | 210 | Baltimore, MD | Backlash (2008) | This was a Fatal-Four Way Elimination match, also involving Dustin Simpson and John "Bradshaw" Goff. The title became a SmackDown exclusive title once again when Triple K was drafted to SmackDown! on June 23, 2008. |
86 | Edge | 3 | November 23, 2008 | 21 | Boston, MA | Survivor Series (2008) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Jake Wilson. Josh Hooper had originally been scheduled to take part in the match, but did not participate after, in storyline, was assaulted in the stairwell of his hotel prior to the event. Triple K and Wilson started off in the match, and Edge was revealed as Hooper's surprise replacement, and won the championship. |
87 | Josh Hooper | 1 | December 14, 2008 | 42 | Buffalo, NY | Armageddon (2008) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Triple K. |
88 | Edge | 4 | January 25, 2009 | 21 | Detroit, MI | Royal Rumble (2009) | This was a no-disqualification match. |
89 | Triple K | 8 | February 15, 2009 | 70 | Seattle, WA | No Way Out (2009) | This was a Elimination Chamber match, also involving Josh Hooper, Jake Wilson, Martin McAlmond and Big Marc. The title became a Raw exclusive title once again when Triple K was drafted to Raw on April 13, 2009. |
90 | Kevin Orton | 3 | April 26, 2009 | 42 | Providence, RI | Backlash (2009) | Won a six-man tag team match in which McAlmond would win the championship if his team won. |
91 | Batista | 1 | June 7, 2009 | 2 | New Orleans, LA | Extreme Rules (2009) | This was a Steel Cage match. |
— | Vacated | — | June 9, 2009 | — | N/A | Announced on IWE.com | Vacated when Jesse Dern suffered a torn left biceps. |
92 | Kevin Orton | 4 | June 15, 2009 | 90 | Charlotte, NC | Raw | This was a Fatal Four-Way match also involving Triple K, Dustin Simpson and Big Marc. |
93 | Dustin Simpson | 4 | September 13, 2009 | 21 | Montreal, QC | Breaking Point | This was an "I Quit" match. If anyone interfered on Orton's behalf, he would have automatically lost the title. |
94 | Kevin Orton | 5 | Ocotber 4, 2009 | 21 | Newark, NJ | Hell in a Cell (2009) | This was a Hell in a Cell match. |
95 | Dustin Simpson | 5 | October 25, 2009 | 49} | Pittsburgh, PA | Bragging Rights (2009) | This was a 60-Minute Anything Goes Iron Man match. If Simpson lost, he would have had to leave the Raw brand. |
96 | Sheamus | 1 | December 13, 2009 | 70 | San Antonio, TX | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2009) | This was a Tables match. |
97 | Dustin Simpson | 6 | February 21, 2010 | 0 | St. Louis, MO | Elimination Chamber (2010) | This was an Elimination Chamber match, also involving Triple K, Kevin McAlmond, Kyle Johnson and Kofi Kingston. |
98 | Batista | 2 | February 21, 2010 | 35 | St. Louis, MO | Elimination Chamber (2010) | Awarded a title shot by Mr. Mayer immediately after Simpson won the Elimination Chamber match. |
99 | Dustin Simpson | 7 | March 28, 2010 | 84 | Glendale, AZ | WrestleMania XXVI | Title is returned solely to the Raw brand. |
100 | Sheamus | 2 | June 20, 2010 | 91 | Uniondale, NY | Fatal 4-Way | This was a Fatal Four-Way match also involving Edge and Randy Orton . |
101 | Kevin Orton | 6 | September 19, 2010 | 64 | Rosemont, IL | Night of Champions (2010) | This was a Six-Pack Challenge Elimination match also involving Edge, Dustin Simpson, Kris McGowan and Daniel Gonzalez. |
102 | The Miz | 1 | November 22, 2010 | 160 | Orlando, FL | Raw | Jose Smith cashed in his Money in the Bank contract after Kevin McAlmond successfully defended the IWE Championship against Daniel Gonzalez at the main event of the show. |
103 | Dustin Simpson | 8 | May 1, 2011 | 77 | Tampa, FL | Extreme Rules (2011) | This was a Triple Threat Steel Cage match also involving Joe Linderman. |
104 | CM Punk | 1 | July 17, 2011 | 28 | Rosemont, IL | Money in the Bank (2011) | Moments after winning the championship, Eldridge "left" the IWE with the title in hand, only to return a week later on the July 25 episode of Monday Night RAW. |
105 | Rey Mysterio (and CM Punk) | 1 | July 25, 2011 | 0 | Hampton, VA | Raw | Rey Mysterio defeated The Miz in the final of an eight man tournament to crown a new champion. CM Punk was also the IWE Champion at this time. |
106 | Dustin Simpson (and CM Punk) | 9 (1) | July 25, 2011 | 20 | Hampton, VA | Raw | According to IWE COO Triple K, CM Punk was also the IWE Champion at this time. |
— | CM Punk | 1 | August 14, 2011 | <1 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam (2011) | Beat Simpson in a match to determine the undisputed champion. This is considered a continuation of his first reign. |
107 | Alberto Del Rio | 1 | August 14, 2011 | 35 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam (2011) | Cashed in his Money in the Bank briefcase and defeated Justin Eldridge, who had just become the Undisputed IWE Champion after defeating Dustin Simpson. |
108 | Dustin Simpson | 10 | September 18, 2011 | 14 | Buffalo, NY | Night of Champions (2011) | |
109 | Alberto Del Rio | 2 | October 2, 2011 | 49 | New Orleans, LA | Hell in a Cell (2011) | This was a Triple Threat Hell in a Cell match also involving Justin Eldridge. |
110 | CM Punk | 2 | November 20, 2011 | 434 | New York City, NY | Survivor Series (2011) | The longest reign in the last 25 years. |
111 | The Rock | 8 | January 27, 2013 | 70 | Phoenix, AZ | Royal Rumble (2013) | Punk had initially won, but the match was then restarted by Vince Matteson due to interference by The Shield. |
112 | Dustin Simpson | 11 | April 7, 2013 | 133 | East Rutherford, NJ | WrestleMania 29 | |
113 | Kody Brown | 1 | August 18, 2013 | <1 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam | Triple H was the guest referee. |
114 | Kevin Orton | 7 | August 18, 2013 | 28 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam | Kevin Orton cashed in his Money in the Bank contract. Triple H was the guest referee. |
115 | Kody Brown | 2 | September 15, 2013 | 1 | Detroit, MI | Night of Champions | |
— | Vacated | — | September 16, 2013 | — | Cleveland, OH | Raw | Vacated after a controversial finish between Brown and McAlmond the next night on Raw. |
116 | Kevin Orton | 8 | October 27, 2013 | 161 | Miami, FL | Hell in a Cell | This was a Hell in a Cell match with Shawn Michaels as special guest referee.. On December 15, 2013 at the TLC pay-per-view, Orton defeated Dustin Simpson to unify the World Heavyweight Championship into his WIE Championship. The title is now known as the IWE World Heavyweight Championship. |
117 | Kody Brown | 3 | April 6, 2014 | 64 | New Orleans, LA | WrestleMania XXX | Triple Threat match including Batista |
— | Vacated | — | June 9, 2014 | — | Minneapolis, MN | Raw | Brown was stripped of the title due to a neck injury. |
118 | Dustin Simpson | 12 | June 29, 2014 | 49 | Boston, MA | Money in the Bank | Defeated Alberto Del Rio, Bray Wyatt, Cesaro, Kane, Kevin Orton, Roman Reigns and Sheamus in a Ladder match to win the vacant title. |
119 | Rob Lesnar | 4 | August 17, 2014 | 224 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam | |
120 | Seth Rollins | 1 | March 29, 2015 | 221 | Santa Clara, CA | WrestleMania 31 | Rollins cashed in his Money in the Bank contract in the middle of a singles match between Lesnar and Roman Reigns, thus making it a triple threat match also involving Reigns. |
— | Vacated | — | November 5, 2015 | — | — | — | Vacated after Rollins injured his knee at a house show in Dublin, Ireland on November 4, 2015. |
121 | Roman Reigns | 1 | November 22, 2015 | <1 | Atlanta, GA | Survivor Series | Defeated Dean Ambrose in a tournament final for the vacant title. |
122 | Sheamus | 3 | 22 | Sheamus cashed in his Money in the Bank contract. | |||
123 | Roman Reigns | 2 | December 14, 2015 | 41 | Philadelphia, PA | Raw | This was a title vs. career match. |
124 | Triple K | 9 | January 24, 2016 | 70 | Orlando, FL | Royal Rumble | This was the Royal Rumble match, in which Triple K last eliminated Dean Ambrose. |
125 | Roman Reigns | 3 | April 3, 2016 | 77 | Arlington, TX | WrestleMania 32 | |
126 | Seth Rollins | 2 | June 19, 2016 | <1 | Las Vegas, NV | Money in the Bank | |
127 | Dean Ambrose | 1 | 84 | Ambrose cashed in his Money in the Bank contract. On June 28, 2016, the name of the title was shortened back to IWE Championship, before being renamed IWE World Championship after the title became exclusive to SmackDown following the 2016 WWE draft. The IWE Universal Championship was created for the Raw brand on August 21, 2016, making Ambrose the last person to have held the title as the sole world champion in IWE. | |||
128 | AJ Styles | 1 | September 11, 2016 | 115+ | Richmond, VA | Backlash | In December 2016, the championship's name was shortened back to IWE Championship. |
Combined reigns
As of November 2, 2024.
+ | Indicates the current champion |
---|
Rank | Champion | No. of reigns | Combined days |
---|