History of the GCW World Championship

When I got into indie wrestling in the early aughts, Jersey Championship Wrestling established as a rather unimportant regional indie, known to me only because of its geographic proximity to the Pennsylvania based Ring of Honor. In 2004 they stopped running shows, but came back for an unsuccessful two-year stint in 2013. Then, Brett Lauderdale bought the promotion and rebranded it as Game Changer Wrestling. On the back on trashy internet memes and ironic celebrity fandom, GCW has grown much more popular than JCW ever would have been able to. 

Matt Cardona won their World Championship last night (for those of you curious about when I’m writing this) in front of a throng of fans so classy that they pelted him with garbage after the match. My new rule is if I can put together a coherent post of a title’s pre-2021 history after someone new wins the belt, I’ll do just that. So while this title claims the JCW title lineage, I’m skipping that entirely. I’m also glossing over the first two title changes after the GCW reboot because I couldn’t easily find them. But FYI, Kyle the Beast kickstarted the new title by beating Joe Gacy, Pinkie Sanchez, and Joey Janela in a four way, and then he lost the title just under a year later to Matt Tremont. Tremont had a ten-month run with the belt until the seemingly inevitable force of Nick Gage caught up with him. 

December 16, 2017 – Howell, New Jersey

Nick Gage def. Matt Tremont {GCW World Championship Three Layers of Hell Match}
From Ready To Die: The 2nd Anniversary. I have avoided (and am desperately continuing to avoid) Combat Zone Wrestling as much as possible, and I also think Dark Side of the Ring is a net negative television program, so I know way less than your average wrestling fan about Gage. This match doesn’t work. I wonder what I would have thought about it before reviewing the King of Freedom title, because with those matches having been seen I feel like I can condescend to this in a more fleshed out way. First off, there was nothing in this match that made it feel like it was worth 47 minutes of my time. It was primarily shots with light tubes sandwiching punches and kicks that led to nothing. Nothing led to anything, actually, because a half hour into the match they fell into a bed of barbed wire on the floor and couldn’t move until a ton of crew dudes cut them out. Then, Tremont demanded the ropes be taken down and barbed wire be put up. It took a laughable amount of time for them to do that while the wrestlers punched and kicked and Gage put on a bizarrely out of place figure 4 leglock. It’s made even more funny because they never used the barbed wire ropes once they were up. Instead. Gage threw Tremont through glass and chairs on the floor, which only got 2, then hit him with a backbreaker for the win at 47:27. Both guys said they were prepared to die during the match, which okay great, but they said that after the most dangerous spot and then didn’t escalate the violence from there. I’m not mad they didn’t escalate the violence because I didn’t want to see anything worse than two guys getting trapped in a ream of barbed wire, but then why cut the promos? This match gets a lot of love, which explains a lot of America’s woes to me. *½ 

December 8, 2019 – Nashville, Tennessee

AJ Gray def. Nick Gage {GCW World Championship Match}
From Long Live GCW. I have no idea what the storyline going into this was, and I think to enjoy this at all it was imperative to have some inkling. From my perspective, this was six minutes of midcard level wrestling followed by two guys interfering on Gray’s behalf, Gray rejecting it by attacking them, but then Gray deciding to hit a diving legdrop on a prone Gage for the win at 7:10. This would make sense if Gray didn’t do the babyface thing and attack the interlopers. But for him to steal the title after seven minutes right after rejecting their help doesn’t make sense. And what followed also doesn’t make sense to an uninitiated person. *¾ 

Ricky Shane Page def. AJ Gray {GCW World Championship Match}
Page attacke Gray during his celebratory speech and demanded he get his title shot now. I guess all title shots can be MITB ripoffs in GCW? They didn’t explain that this was explicitly cashing in an anytime-anywhere shot. Gray hit all his finishers, but Page kicked out them, went to the eyes, and hit Gage’s backbreaker for the win at 1:01. This company is not for me. N/A

Page held the title throughout the pandemic, losing it back to Gage in the spring of 2021. You can check out my 2021 reviews to see what happened there and with Cardona, but for now I need to watch something else and forget about this title.