History of the ECW Championship | Part 2 | Enter Sandman

When we last left off, Shane Douglas had recaptured the Eastern Championship Wrestling title. A few months later, Douglas won the NWA World Championship, threw it down, and declared that ECW was no longer part of the NWA. The company was renamed Extreme Championship Wrestling. It had already been transforming into a sort of renegade company, and now that it was “extreme” things got turned up on that front. Mostly that meant that the main event was about gross dudes who were mad about other gross dudes leering at their wives, all while they treated those wives of theirs badly. Yeah, I’m not the biggest ECW fan. Keep that in mind as we look at Extreme Championship Wrestling’s pre-PPV days. 

April 15, 1995 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Sandman def. Shane Douglas {ECW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the second Hostile City Showdown. Sandman used his cane in front of the referee, so I guess it was just that anything goes in ECW matches at this point? This was a surprisingly fun brawl. If Sandman would have sold anything at all it would have been quite good actually. In the end, Douglas had Sandman in a crossface chicken wing, but Woman turned on him and hit him in the leg with the Sandman’s cane allowing Sandman to fall on top of him for the win and the title at 7:52. Douglas flipped out and put on a Monday Night Raw shirt after the match. ***

October 31, 1995 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Mikey Whipwreck def. The Sandman {ECW World Heavyweight Championship Ladder Match}
From Extreme Championship Wrestling #132. Yeah, it’s just easier if the numbering convention stays the same even as the name of the show changes. It’s the same damn show. Good lord, these royalty free versions of the classic ’90s songs that these guys came out to are terrible. The knockoff of Beck’s Loser is absurdly bad. Steve Austin comes out before the match to rip on WCW and both competitors in the match. It’s wild to hear him call people jabronis years before his generational rival did. He makes fun of Woman being married to a midget and who it’s odd that he’s not talking about Chris Benoit. Then he kidnaps her so the match can be fair. Whipwreck shoved the ladder into Sandman’s face with so much force; it’s one of the most disturbing things I’ve ever seen. Moments later, Whipwreck hit a Superfly Splash for the win at 6:24. It was a ladder match in that they used a ladder as a weapon, but it was really just a regular match featuring a ladder. And it wasn’t much of a match either outside of the final 30 seconds, but damn the crowd was happy for Whipwreck. **

December 12, 1995 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Sandman def. Mikey Whipwreck and Steve Austin {ECW World Heavyweight Championship Triangle Elimination Match}
From December to Dismember, aired in full on Extreme Championship Wrestling #138. Was it common for a competitor to come into a Triangle Match late? Or did they just not have enough for Sandman to do? On the WWE Network, the tradition of having Sandman’s entrance music play for so long (because they’d let the entire song play through) sure did backfire in hindsight thanks to not wanting to pay for a Metallica song forever. Anyway, he came in at about five minutes in and Whipwreck got eliminated at around thirteen minutes in after a Stun Gun, though not much of note happened otherwise up to that point. After that we got a sometimes okay but most of the time shitty brawl. The match ended when Sandman clocked Austin with brass knuckles and the ref counted Austin down at 20:03, despite Austin’s foot being on the ropes. Apparently there were disqualifications in this match? ECW’s rules are really confusing to me. **¼ 

January 30, 1996 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Raven def. The Sandman {ECW World Championship Match}
From Extreme Championship Wrestling #145. Woman and Sandman were not on the same page before the match, basically telegraphing the title change. The match was joined in progress and only a minute is really shown before Tommy Dreamer and Cactus Jack run in to attack Raven and Sandman, respectively. Douglas and the Blue Meanie get involved too. Sandman misses a diving legdrop and actually sells it this time, and Raven hits a DDT on a chair for the win and the title at 3:24 (shown). After the match, Woman tries to get Sandman to leave with him for WCW now that he’s not champ anymore. 2 Cold Scorpio comes to her defense when Sandman gets aggressive, but then he chooses to stay in ECW and he carries her out of the building. I’m surprised this didn’t end with her getting knocked out given how things usually went for women in ECW. *¾ 

October 8, 1996 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Sandman & Tommy Dreamer def. Stevie Richards & Brian Lee {ECW World Heavyweight Championship Ultimate Jeopardy Match}
From the second Ultimate Jeopardy, but airing on Extreme Championship Wrestling #181. Richards was subbing in for a no-showing Raven here. If Sandman lost, he’d be caned ten times. If Dreamer lost, Beulah McGillicutty would be banned from ECW. If Lee loses he has to shave his head. And of course, if Richards loses, Raven loses the title. People were clearly really invested in these characters, because ECW main event matches were just mindless brawling without any story. I’m not sure why they let matches in ECW go this long, as the crowd sits on their hands whenever something extra curricular isn’t going on. And even the extra curriculars, like Beulah and Lori Fullington getting involved, don’t lead to anything; they’re just ignored as soon as the spots are over so the brawling can continue as before. The final minute was fun, with Richards superkicking Sandman around the ring because he was distracted by Fullington. But that’s pretty much it and it took forever to get there. Sandman hit a DDT on Richards for the win and the title at 15:13. *¾ 

December 10, 1996 – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Raven def. The Sandman {ECW World Heavyweight Championship No Rope Barbed Wire Match}
This occurred on the fourth Holiday Hell, but that show isn’t on the WWE Network for some reason. So I have to settle for a three-minute music video with highlights. But it’s some crappy, off-tone royalty-free music because ECW no doubt used some Offspring song or something. The match looked pretty brutal and dare I say possibly interesting. They show Raven getting the winning pin, but not what he did to knock Sandman out. Presumably they wanted you to buy the video tape of Holiday Hell. Almost wish I could, and if I ever get my hands on the real match I’ll update this review. N/A

A few months later, ECW debuted on PPV with Barely Legal, and you better believe the title changed hands there. We’ll check that out in the next section, which will take us through ECW’s debut on The Nashville Network.