History of the WCW Championship | Part 1 | Who’s The Man?

I just got done suffering through the history of the ECW Championship title changes, so now I’m going to look at another group that branched off from the NWA in WCW. We start with the first man to be recognized as the WCW Champion. 

January 11, 1991 – East Rutherford, New Jersey

Ric Flair def. Sting {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
So Flair becomes the champion by beating the NWA World Heavyweight Champion and is the first and only person to hold WCW World Heavyweight Championship while it was still recognized by the NWA. The match was joined in progress near the end with 4:34 shown, and I’m not sure which show they aired this on. The action was good in what we saw, but the finish was ridiculous; the ref got bumped, Flair and Sting bumped heads, Flair fell on top and then pulled Sting’s foot off of the ropes for the win and the title. I rated the heavily clipped WWWF stuff, so I guess I have to rate this too. **

July 14, 1991 – Baltimore, Maryland

Lex Luger def. Barry Windham {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Steel Cage Match}
From the seventh Great American Bash. I’d imagine anyone reading this knows the story behind this match already, but if for some reason you don’t: Flair was fired two weeks before this because he wouldn’t take a pay cut and change his gimmick. A month later he was having a good run in WWF and WCW shoehorned Barry Windham into Flair’s spot for a match that the WCW fans absolutely did not want. Also, Flair took the title belt with him and showed it off on WWF television while WCW used some crappy customized Florida Championship belt here. The camera actually cutting to fans loudly chanting for Flair before this match began was hilarious. Luger and Windham took it pretty easy here, walking through a dull (though not terrible) match, culminating in Luger winning with a piledriver after an awkward distraction by Harley Race and Mr. Hughes at 12:25. Luger looked almost embarrassed to be carrying the pretender belt. **¼ 

February 29, 1992 – Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Sting def. Lex Luger {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From SuperBrawl II. I haven’t seen a ton of WCW from this era, so it’s weird for me to hear Jesse Ventura on commentary here. This started off pretty hot but died when Luger took control. Thankfully, it’d be five years until he got his hands on the title again so I get a break from his walking and posing. Sting’s comeback was a lot of fun, and makes me wonder why the crowd didn’t really get behind it. I liked that Sting pushed through Race to get to Luger and the belt at 13:02, especially after Race helped Luger win the belt in the first place. **½ 

July 12, 1992 – Albany, Georgia

Big Van Vader def. Sting {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the eighth Great American Bash. This had a great start, with Sting coming in with a ton of fire, pretending to be baited into a test of strength so he could use cheap shots to stay in control, and knocking Vader loopy. Vader’s control stretch slowed things down a great deal, and the finish made Sting seem like an idiot. That’s worse than him looking outclassed, that’s for sure. Sting banged his head on the post during a Stinger Splash and Vader hit a powerbomb for the win at 17:17. Not as good as it could have been with a better finish. ***½ 

August 2, 1992 – Baltimore, Maryland

Ron Simmons def. Big Van Vader {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From a house show in Baltimore, airing on Main Event. Simmons was replacing an injured Sting here. The match is very punchy-kicky, but the crowd is insane for Simmons and the match benefits a great deal as a result. Vader dominates here, but Simmons’ comebacks are really well timed and very believable. They’re frequent but unsustained, so you get a lot of little pops and really feel for Simmons as an underdog. A surprise powerslam wins the title for Simmons at 9:41, and the locker room rushes out to celebrate with him. What an awesome moment in front of a molten crowd. This is an unheralded great match that I wish had lasted five minutes longer. ***¾ 

December 30, 1992 – Baltimore, Maryland

Big Van Vader def. Ron Simmons {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
A few months later, Baltimore got to witness the end of the title reign they saw birthed in front of their eyes. It was supposed to happen the night before in Philadelphia, but Simmons no-showed that event. I think it worked out nicely and gave his reign some symmetry. This didn’t air on WCW TV, but it’s available as a Hidden Gem on the WWE Network with commentary from Tony Schiavone. This match started as basically a carbon copy of the Vader vs. Sting match from the Bash, but then Simmons started showing off his strength. That did not work as well as the dynamic in Simmons’ title win, as the crowd doesn’t respond to him as the dominating champion as much and I don’t respond to the rest holds that are plopped in the middle of this match. Vader kicks out of the powerslam that beat him, and a couple minutes later hits a shoudlerbreaker for the win at 12:39. Not at the same level as their first match, but a decent enough match. The crowd is rather furious about title change. **¾ 

March 11, 1993 – Brent, London

Sting def. Big Van Vader {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
Sting got a cup of coffee with the title during a European tour, and while I’m not positive it was addressed on television it is a recognized extra title reign for both guys (as you’ll see, Vader wins it back in short order). There’s handheld footage of this entire show online, but it’s very rough and unless you’re a serious completionist I don’t recommend risking the motion sickness. They kept this pretty basic, and it even got a little sloppy in the middle. But the finish was wild, with Sting persevering through a metric tonne of Vader’s offense and countering the avalanche off the ropes to a slam and a roll up for the win at 14:33 (slightly clipped). ***

March 17, 1993 – Dublin, Leinster

Big Van Vader def. Sting {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
This is also from a house show, but the footage available online was clearly taped by WCW crew. There was a lot more gaga in this than in previous matches between the two that I’ve watched for this series. Sting slammed Harley Race before the match began, and Race interfered liberally. Sometimes Race would get attacked by runaway train Vader, but it didn’t cause problems between the two. In the end, Vader won his title back at 17:42. This didn’t do much for me, as despite the wild crowd and the title change it felt very much like a throwaway house show match. **½ 

December 27, 1993 – Charlotte, North Carolina

Ric Flair def. Big Van Vader {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the 11th Starrcade. I’m sure this has been said before, but billing this as the tenth anniversary of Starrcade is really dumb in a world where you number your SuperBrawls by the number that have occurred (a la WrestleMania). You don’t celebrate anniversaries of things that you do over and over again. Things like weddings and company foundings happen once, and you celebrate a year of them continuing to exist. Starrcade only comes once a year, it’s not happening all year long. Okay, I’m done with that. The story here was great, and can be told through the lens of a bad marriage. Flair had been the hunky husband who could seemingly do no wrong for years. But then when things got rough at home, he left and had his mid-life crisis affair with WWF. He returned, but found that the father-in-law he’d won over ten years earlier (Race) was now supporting a new man (Vader), and Flair would have to go through them to get back to the top of WCW. Vader made it really hard for him, stiffing the crap out of Flair for twenty minute and barely allowing him to survive. Bloody-mouthed, he fought back, brutalized Vader’s leg, and finally took control. He softens up the leg, starts using the Figure 4 Leglock, avoids Race’s interference and rolls Vader up for the win at 21:18. I’ve heard people call the roll up a botch but give me a fucking break, it looked great! ****½ 

April 17, 1994 – Rosemont, Illinois

Ricky Steamboat draw Ric Flair {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the inaugural Spring Stampede. Oh my god Michael Buffer’s earring looked dumb. WCW did such a great job nodding to its own history, having Steamboat face Flair for the title in the city where he last beat him for the title. This didn’t have the magic of their ‘89 matches, but it had very hard work and some maneuvering from Steamboat that you just don’t see from anyone else, ever. It also had racist language from Bobby Heenan on commentary which has aged so poorly. They probably could have dumped ten minutes from this match and improved it. You wouldn’t expect a match between these two to feel as long as it is, but this sure did. The work was good, and Steamboat as the virtuous mirror-Flair was fun but it just didn’t peak when it should have. Steamboat fell backwards while holding the double chicken wing and both guys’ shoulders were counted to the mat at 32:19. Commissioner Nick Bockwinkle declared Flair was still the champion, but he told the commentators that he’d have to talk to the board about it. The commentators heavily hint that Flair won’t be champion by Saturday. The board stripped Flair of the title and scheduled a rematch between the two. ***¾ 

May 14, 1994 – Atlanta, Georgia

Ric Flair def. Ricky Steamboat {WCW World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Saturday Night. Woof, this was even longer than their PPV match! Luckily it was paced better than the Spring Stampede match. My mind never drifted as I watched Steamboat try to weaken Flair’s back and then legs before trying to end this thing with the Figure 4 Leglock. It didn’t work, and Flair cheated his way back to control. The finish was quite odd, as Flair hit was looked like a headbutt to the gut of a leaping Steamboat for the win at 36:25. I also don’t understand how the commercials affected the match, as the match time came from my timer but the ring announcer called it the same. How can that be if there were commercials? Anyhow, I’d check this one out even though the draw in the last match was the better finish. ****

For as great as this era was for the main event of WCW, it was about to come to an end as Hulk Hogan had fish to fry in this company. I’m not exactly looking forward to watching the downfall of workrate in WCW, but a part of me is certainly curious in a car crash sort of way.