History of the AAW Championship | Part 1 | A Confusing Beginning

All American Wrestling (Now AAW Wrestling Redefined) is a semi-popular indie out of Illinois. People know it because Danny Daniels runs it and Daniels had a brief run as an almost prominent indie wrestler in the mid aughts. There are 28 title changes to deal with (the first and a random one from 2011 are nowhere to be found), so I’m splitting this into two parts based on which ones you can watch on the Highspots Wrestling Network and the older ones you need a subscription to AAW on Demand to watch. 

July 9, 2005 – Berwyn, Illinois

Robert Anthony def. Tony Scarpone {AAW Heavyweight Championship Last Man Standing Match}
From the inaugural Scars & Stripes. Scarpone was the original owner of AAW, and apparently already champion going into this, though I have no idea when he won it. Cagematch and Wikipedia both had Anthony listed as beginning the inaugural championship reign here, but it’s plain as day that Scarpone was the champ going into this match so I updated both listings. You’re welcome, wrestling internet. Oh great, now during the match the commentators say that Anthony was the inaugural champ before Scarpone was champion. But that flies in the face of a claim we’ll see made later that Tyler Black was the first two-time champion. Forget it, I’m just changing the listing to what I can see with my eyes, not what a commentator says. This match is weak and it goes on for an eternity. Scarpone is notably terrible. He moves around the ring like he just woke up. After a full lifetime of watching this match, I am witness to Scarpone hitting Anthony with a back superplex and both guys being counted down. The commissioner comes out and insists the match continue, because if we had to suffer through such a long slog we should at least get a winner. The camera misses the action after the restart because it focuses on a guy in a lucha mask in the crowd. Lucha guy pulls Scarpone into the ropes which allows Anthony to hit a DVD for the win at 27:55. Burn this in a pit in an open field because it shouldn’t exist. *

November 26, 2005 – Berwyn, Illinois

Mike Venom def. Robert Anthony {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Windy City Classic. This is an impromptu match in the opener slot and god bless it for its brevity. There’s nothing to it, just a bunch of punches and kicks and Brad Bradley trying to interfere on Anthony’s behalf and getting immediately punked out. Venom quickly follows that with a Sidewinder Slam on Anthony for the win at 6:17. Short and to the point and now we can forget that this pre-Black stretch ever happened. Venom was stripped of the title after a four-month reign. *¾ 

March 25, 2006 – Berwyn, Illinois

Tyler Black def. Danny Daniels, Eric Priest, and Silas Young {AAW Heavyweight Championship Elimination Match}
From Final Four. This one isn’t on AAW On Demand but rather on their YouTube channel.This was a suitably chaotic match. Jason Dukes ran in to interfere, attacking Young and leaving him prone. Then, Priest knocked Black off the top rope onto Young, causing the first elimination pretty much by accident. That was neat. Then, Priest hit Daniels with the FU69 (an F5 where Priest flipped Daniels in midair into a Sidewalk Slam) to eliminate him. Black and Priest put on a good show to finish the match, which culminated in Black countering the FU69 to a roll up for the win at 16:46. AAW had clearly decided to shift the focus of the top of its card to get in line with what internet wrestling fans wanted. I’m not mad at that. Black turned on his longtime tag team partner Marek Brave after the match. ***½ 

November 25, 2006 – Berwyn, Illinois

Marek Brave def. Tyler Black {AAW Heavyweight Championship No Ropes Barbed Wire Match}
From Windy City Classic II. The video quality is finally good enough to get a solid look at the title belt, and it’s a very generic precursor to the one pictured above. I wanted very badly to like this match, but it was very, very boring. After watching a bunch of death matches from FREEDOMS, I don’t think I’ll ever be able to give dishwater dull attempts at the genre a pass. There were a few impressive bumps that I want to give Brave credit for, like the dropkick into the wire that I’m fairly certain wasn’t meant to send him flying onto the floor. The shirtless sitout powerbomb through a barbed wire board was also fucking crazy. But for the most part it was filled with long breaks between attempts at face-shoving into the wire. That powerbomb I mentioned gave Brave the win at 30:44, so at least the finish happened at the right time. **

May 19, 2007 – Berwyn, Illinois

Jerry Lynn def. Marek Brave {AAW Heavyweight Championship 2/3 Falls Match}
From the inaugural Defining Moment. I suspect this run with the title is what we have to blame for Lynn’s ROH World Championship reign that followed shortly after. Either that or both Daniels and Gabe Sapolsky being ECW marks. The first fall was mostly a feeling out process, which Brave won by countering a victory roll. So if this had been a regular match, Lynn would have lost just like that? I don’t like it when early falls in a multi-fall match feel inconsistent with what would happen in a one-fall match with no explanation. This wasn’t like someone tapping out quickly because they didn’t want their leg ruined for the rest of the match. This was Lynn getting beaten in a few minutes like a dope. The second fall was a bit more eventful, with Brave going for bigger moves and Lynn countering many of them to pinning scenarios. One such scenario scores Lynn the fall. The third fall was a mixed bag. Brave missed a spear and got busted open colliding with the guardrail. Lynn tried to take advantage of Brave’s wooziness by… voluntarily releasing the submission hold he had Brave locked up with? Why? The answer is because AAW has no disqualifications and thus no rope breaks but this wasn’t the moment Lynn was supposed to win. That’s called writing yourself into corners and it’s the dumbest. But Lynn hadn’t hit a low blow yet, which is what he does to lead into his winning piledriver at 19:27. This wasn’t it, kids. Lynn turned heel after the match. **¼ 

July 12, 2008 – Berwyn, Illinois

Tyler Black def. Jerry Lynn {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the fourth Scars and Stripes. Damn, that was a long Lynn reign. With the exception of a severely botched avalanche piledriver, this was pretty good. The pacing was manic and Lynn’s shortcomings were almost completely hidden. Black finally showed off the swagger that got him over too. He hit Lynn with God’s Last Gift for the win at 14:20. ***¼ 

March 28, 2009 – Berwyn, Illinois

Jay Bradley def. Tyler Black, Chandler McClure, and Egotistico Fantastico {AAW Heavyweight Championship Elimination Match}
From the 5th Anniversary Show. I hate Bradley forever for changing his first name from Brad to Jay. Black eliminates McClure immediately with a superkick. Okay then. Bradley collapsed shortly after with an apparent leg injury. The rest of the match is fought between Black and Fantastico, who is Anthony under a mask. And the commentators call him the first ever champion. So is the Scarpone title reign erased or is Anthony considered a two-time champ? It’s all very confusing and the internet provides no easy answers! Anyway, the bulk of the match was better than I expected given that Anthony didn’t impress me with his other matches. He beat up Black pretty bad but fell to God’s Last Gift. But then Bradley snuck back in, having faked the injury, and hit Black with a lariat for the win at 22:09. I’m not wild about matches where the winner sat out the entire time, but I’m trying not to get too upset at the things I cannot control. ***

September 5, 2009 – Berwyn, Illinois

Jimmy Jacobs def. Jay Bradley {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Us vs. Them. This is an impromptu match in the middle of the show. Bradley’s title reign came fresh off of his failed attempt at being a wrestler in WWE. Whoops, he’s not good. Because of that, the beginning of this match was a snooze. But once Jacobs’ plucky comeback kicked in this became a nice little treat. Tables and chairs were introduced and then Jacobs won with a miracle diving senton at 14:21. **¾ 

November 28, 2009 – Berwyn, Illinois

Silas Young def. Jimmy Jacobs and Shane Hollister {AAW Heavyweight Championship Elimination Match}
From Windy City Classic V. Black was supposed to be in this match as well but he was injured. The first elimination was bizarre and saw Jacobs hit Hollister with the Diamond Dust and the Contra Code only for Young to pull him to the floor and pin Hollister himself. Why, though? Would that have made more sense if Black was also there to be eliminated? A reason that many haven’t heard of AAW: the commentators say, “This is what separates AAW from everyone else, you have two really good wrestlers involved in a match.” That’s what everyone else is selling too, guys, a lot of them using the very same wrestlers! Oh, and the finish sucks, as the Crist brothers run out and turn on Jacobs, throwing the title belt to Young who uses it to clock the champ and get the win at 14:26. Big time meh. **½ 

March 12, 2011 – Berwyn, Illinois

Dan Lawrence def. Silas Young and Jimmy Jacobs {AAW Heavyweight Championship Elimination Match}
From the 7th Anniversary Show. Okay, let’s try the same thing again two years later without Hollister and see what we get. Young had defended the title 15 times during his reign, and at some point during that time they finally changed the belt to the one pictured above. There’s no bottom rope, I’m guessing because it was damaged earlier in the show. The commentators acknowledge (as they did in the match where Young won the title) that nobody can see what’s happening when the wrestlers brawl in the crowd. They didn’t have good enough cameras to pick up the action, let alone what this must have been like for most in the building. When the match was in the ring I was enjoying the hell out of it though. That is, until Arik Cannon ran out and hit Jacobs with an enzuigiri, allowing Young to pin him. This company was addicted to lazy progression. After a hell of a fight from behind, Lawrence countered Yount’s post Pee Gee Waja Plunge pin to a crucifix pin for the win at 21:01. Noted drawbacks aside, there was a lot to love in this match. He’s real skinny and I know nothing about him, but based on this performance I’m bummed Lawrence’s career never advanced beyond this level. He lost the title back to Young four months later in a 2/3 Falls Match. It’s the only AAW title change post-Scarpone that I can’t find anywhere. ***¾ 

September 21, 2012 – Berwyn, Illinois

Michael Elgin def. Silas Young {AAW Heavyweight Championship vs. AAW Heritage Championship I Quit Match}
From the fifth Defining Moment. Young’s second title reign didn’t quite surpass his first, but it was still good enough to clock in as the second longest in AAW’s history to that point. Is Elgin the worst Canadian ever? I don’t know a lot of bad Canadians so Elgin seems pretty high on the list. This was a pretty good match though. It was way too long, but it was only boring early on. Later in the match the violence was captivating. Young was dastardly and Elgin was brutal in response. The finish was pretty great, as a roll of duct tape featured in both guys’ offense. Elgin choked Young in the ropes with it and then powerbombed him on two upright chairs before putting on the crossface. Young quit at 39:02. Elgin vacated the Heritage Championship a few months later. ***½ 

June 28, 2013 – Berwyn, Illinois

Shane Hollister def. Michael Elgin {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the third Bound by Hate. Dear Elgin, I know you have bigger problems these days, but your matches were too long. You should know that. The commentators are so interested in this match that they talk about Stephen Dorff and how Hiro Matsuda would get travel visas for non-Japanese wrestlers. And Dave Meltzer’s mother. Yeesh. They built a good match regardless of commentator interest, though at times it was strange that heel Hollister was doing so many babyface fire things. Elgin took out Hollister’s crew when they got involved, but the distraction left him open for Hollister to hit a superkick and Shug’s Last Gift for the win at 27:09. ***½ 

November 30, 2013 – Berwyn, Illinois

Kevin Steen def. Shane Hollister {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Windy City Classic IX. It looks like the Elgin match was Hollister’s peak performance, because he was falling all over himself in this one. Steen held it together as he’s a professional, but this match was nothing doing until the final couple of minutes. Feel free to skip. Steen hit the package piledriver for the win at 13:21. **¾ 

December 28, 2013 – Berwyn, Illinois

Shane Hollister def. Kevin Steen {AAW Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the seventh Twisted Christmas. I only get two Steen matches in this run and they’re both against Hollister. What a load. The finish of this match was cool. Steen mangled a chair by putting Hollister through it, but then Hollister came back by dropping Steen onto its remnants, hitting a Stomp on it, and then hitting Shug’s Last Gift onto it for the win at 17:02. The rest of the match was the usual from Hollister. His lackey and Scarlett Bordeaux both interfered a bunch in bits that were all played for comedy, and this time Steen couldn’t overcome them. It wasn’t a carbon copy of Steen’s title win, but it was only a smidge better. Hollister was locked in as a two-and-three-quarters-to-three star player. ***

Given that the only draw of AAW on Demand is the older chunks of AAW’s library, I can’t recommend dipping your toes into it based on the AAW Championship. Just about everything from here on out is available on Highspots Network. Given that Highspots also has tons of other stuff for their monthly subscription price, I say go with that. In the next post we’ll watch there to see the rest of the AAW title’s lineage.