WWE Hardcore Championship
WWE Hardcore Championship | |||||||||||||||||||||
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The WWF/WWE Hardcore Championship (November 1998–August 2002). | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Date established | November 2, 1998 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Date retired | August 26, 2002 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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The WWE Hardcore Championship was a hardcore wrestling championship in WWE (formerly the World Wrestling Federation), 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 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
Mr. McMahon awarded Mankind the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) Hardcore Championship on November 2, 1998. After Mankind lost the title to Big Boss Man, he never attempted to recapture it, mainly because of the main event push he received shortly afterward. At the time of conception, the idea was for the belt to be used in comedy segments to play on Mankind's reputation as a hardcore wrestler. However, as Mankind and hardcore wrestling became more popular with audiences, the Hardcore Championship became a more serious title. Its popularity led competitor World Championship Wrestling (WCW) to create its own Hardcore Championship, a move followed by numerous independent promotions.
24/7 rule
When Crash Holly won the belt, he introduced the "24/7 rule" which said 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 WrestleMania X8, Maven defended the title against Goldust. After they knocked each other out with trash can lids, Spike Dudley entered and pinned Maven to win the title. Then, in the backstage area, The Hurricane pinned Spike for the title. Mighty Molly (The Hurricane's sidekick) told The Hurricane to go to the "Hurri-cycle" before knocking him out with a frying pan when his back was turned and pinning him. While looking for a safe place, Christian won the title by pinning Molly after hitting her in the head with a door. As he was about to leave the building in a taxi, he was attacked and pinned by Maven, who regained the title and escaped in the taxi.
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 WrestleMania 2000, a battle royal match, in the style of Championship Scramble was booked where the title changed hands 10 times during the 15 minutes. The eventual winner was Hardcore Holly. Tazz, Viscera, Funaki, Rodney, Joey Abs, Thrasher, Pete Gas and Crash Holly all held the title for varying times throughout the match, usually for very short periods of time. The longest reign in the match was Viscera holding the title for nearly seven minutes.[1]
Between the Invasion storyline and Wrestlemania X-8, 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). After Maven won the title from The Undertaker on the February 5, 2002 episode of SmackDown!, the 24/7 rule resumed.
The 24/7 rule ended on August 19, 2002 when Raw general manager Eric Bischoff suspended it after 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.
In 2005, a somewhat similar concept was created for the WWE's world championship titles with the Money in the Bank briefcase. The championship isn't always up for grabs like the Hardcore title was, but the holder of the briefcase can challenge whomever the champion is at any time, any venue in the middle of the ring in a title match (if challenged while the champion is defending it in a match, it turns into a triple threat match) with no advance notice within a year of winning the annual Money in the Bank ladder match. The only rule is that the champion must either be medically cleared to compete or able to stand. However, this rule seems to be subjective as Daniel Bryan won the World Heavyweight Championship by pinning Big Show while he was still incapacitated. Yet only a few weeks prior he successfully "cashed in" on then champion Mark Henry only for the ruling to be reversed because Henry was not medically cleared. The practice is still active, with a new briefcase holder being decided at WWE's annual Money in the Bank pay-per-view in a ladder match. The match was originally held annually at WrestleMania before being moved.
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 [2] This was one month after Van Dam defeated Jeff Hardy in a ladder match to unify the Intercontinental and European Championships.
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.[3]
Edge and Foley declared themselves co-holders of the championship in 2006, as part of a storyline involving alumni of the hardcore wrestling-based Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) promotion.[4] 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" WWF Championship belt, which was smashed in several places and reassembled with two pieces of duct tape, and inscribed with the words "Hardcore" and "Champion" in marker. During a feud between "Mr. Perfect" Curt Hennig and then champion Hulk Hogan, Hennig stole the championship belt and smashed the center medallion with a hammer during an interview. As Hennig had done so much genuine damage, a replica belt had to be used for the remainder of the story line. The center medallion on the replica and the Hardcore championship is identical. Mick Foley commented that he did not know if the belt that Hennig smashed was later used as the Hardcore Championship, but quipped that "it makes ‘perfect’ sense." WWE listed this theory as one of its urban legends, but was unable to determine whether it was true.[5]
When Bradshaw won the title in June 2002, he briefly renamed it the Texas Hardcore Championship,[6] and wore a belt customized with the Texas flag and artificial bull horns. The original design returned when Raven reclaimed the championship. Tommy Dreamer used a variation of the belt with a New York license plate as a centerplate, right 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.[7]
See also
- Hardcore wrestling
- List of WWE Hardcore Champions
- WCW Hardcore Championship
- OVW Hardcore Championship
- Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship – a title with a similar 24/7 rule
References
- ↑ The Hardcore Title changed hands 10 times in one night
- ↑ Milner, John M.; Kapur, Bob; Kamchen, Richard (April 7, 2006). "Bio: Tommy Dreamer". Slam! Sports. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved July 31, 2009.
Dreamer lost a Hardcore vs. Intercontinental title unification match vs. Rob Van Dam.
- ↑ 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.
- ↑ "WWE Raw" (July 29, 2002)
- ↑ "WWE Raw" (August 26, 2002)