History of the BWR Heavyweight Championship

British Wrestling Revolution recently returned from their pandemic hiatus and crowned a new champion. I felt like watching that and then noticed that almost all of their championship history (with the exception of the inaugural title win) was uploaded to their on demand service. So here is that. Joseph Conners won the title in the first place in 2017 in a four way match against guys whose names I don’t recognize. He held the belt for 10 months. 

July 6, 2018 – Grimsby, Lincolnshire

Jimmy Havoc def. Joseph Conners and Pete Dunne {BWR Heavyweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the First Anniversary Show. This went from being a pretty standard three way to a comedy match once the fight spilled outside of the building and the wrestlers started using fans as human shields. That was clearly fun for the fans involved, but the glee on their faces as they were “put in harm’s way” took me out of the match. Things got a bit more interesting back in the ring, as Conners and Dunne put on a good show while Havoc introduced a barbed wire plank to the match. Dunne got hold of the plank and then hit Conners with the Bitter End, but Havoc shoved him to the floor and stole the pin at 12:23. This was little more than tropes and comedy, but it wasn’t bad. **½ 

November 24, 2018 – Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire

Tyler Devlin def. Jimmy Havoc {BWR Heavyweight Championship Ladder Match}
From the Last Stand. I don’t know what this company has against ringing bells to start and end their matches, but the times listed for both this and the previous match are based on when the action started and ended rather than bells. I hated most of this. The first two thirds of this match was filled with blatant slow climbing. On top of that, there were multiple moments when Havoc had his hand on the belt but then decided to climb down to inflict more punishment on Devlin, who was too far away from the ladder to catch him. That might have flown if there was commentary explaining the feud to us, or if Havoc expressed any emotion in the ring at all and could translate with his expressions that he hated Devlin enough to sacrifice his title reign. But this had neither of those things. There was one great spot in which Devlin was caught hanging from the chain that held the belt and got knocked to the mat by Havoc. Aside from that and one final clever bit with a staple gun, this was all derivative drivel and nonsensical storytelling. Devlin knocked Havoc onto a ladder wrapped in (clearly fake) barbed wire and grabbed the belt at 15:26. *½ 

December 21, 2018 – Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire

Jack Jester def. Tyler Devlin {BWR Heavyweight Championship No Disqualification Match}
From Welcome to Wonderland. An opening bell, finally. A sizable chunk of this match happened in the crowd and was completely obscured from the camera. That included the landing of a Swanton Bomb off of a scaffold through a table. I hope the ten people who could actually see that spot enjoyed it. Sucks for everyone else in the building and anyone watching after the fact. And then the finish was trash, seeing Devlin go to the top rope, get distracted by Havoc’s music playing, and then helpfully climb over Jester’s body so that Jester could hit an avalanche Tombstone Piledriver through a chair at 13:30. Between the nothing match and Jester’s football lace codpiece, I’m starting to get pretty annoyed. *¼ 

July 5, 2019 – Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire

Joe Hendry def. Joseph Conners and David Starr {BWR Heavyweight Championship Triple Threat Match}
From the 2nd Anniversary Show. The show started with the announcement that Jester had vacated the title because he was not in a good mental or emotional place to wrestle after his friend Adrian Lionheart McCallum’s death. That’s a real bummer. What’s not a bummer is there was finally a match in this series that wasn’t bad. In fact, it was quite good. Henry was narrowly focused on Starr, who tried and failed to recruit Conners to his side. Conners played like a wildcard to the more defined issue between the other two, a role that worked for him. The match was short on one-on-the-floor crap and most of the three way spots worked. Starr took out Conners with a title belt shot, but that left him open to Hendry’s anklelock. That got Hendry the win at 15:32. ***½ 

Reese Ryan def. Joe Hendry {BWR Heavyweight Championship Match}
A group of RISE Underground Pro Wrestling goons came out immediately after Hendry’s title win and beat up all three guys as part of an invasion angle. In the aftermath of the attack, Ryan ran out to cash in a MITB ripoff briefcase. He hit Hendry with it and then hit a double arm DDT for the win in 49 seconds. N/A

March 6, 2020 – Cleethorpes, Lincolnshire

Rampage Brown def. Reese Ryan {BWR Heavyweight Championship Match}
From No Gods No Monsters III. Reese is a cowardly heel who begged off of Brown until he could find an opening to attack and then work over the arm. For my taste, too much of the match was that and not enough was Brown teasing a cathartic beating. Reese almost got the win with a low blow and a belt shot, but Brown came back with a lariat and a piledriver for the win at 10:43. It definitely should have been a stronger victory for Brown. This turned out to be Brown’s final indie match, as the pandemic hit and British wrestling was shut down for months. In November, he popped up in NXT UK. Actually, looking into Brown’s indie dates led me to realize that I reviewed an early match of his in WWECW and hilariously figured I’d never see him again. Shows what I know. **¼ 

BWR didn’t run another show until July of 2021 because of the COVID pandemic. Six months after this show, they vacated all their titles citing a lack of defenses and said that all stripped champions would have a chance to win them back when they started running shows again. I frankly love that they did that and wish other companies had done the same. Some were forced to because their titles were held by #speakingout scumbags, but it’s good to see a company do it for kayfabe reasons. That said, I can’t recommend BWR based on what I’ve seen here.