ICW Southeastern Tag Team Championship

The ICW Southeastern Tag Team Championship was a short-lived secondary tag team championship in International Championship Wrestling.[1] Because the championship is a professional wrestling championship, it is not won or lost competitively but instead by the decision of the bookers of a wrestling promotion. The championship is awarded after the chosen team "wins" a match to maintain the illusion that professional wrestling is a competitive sport.[2]

ICW Southeastern Tag Team Championship
Details
PromotionInternational Championship Wrestling
Date establishedJuly 1979
Date retiredNovember 1980

Title history

Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days
1 Bob Roop and Bob Orton Jr. July 1979 ICW show [Note 1] 1 [Note 2]    
Championship history is unrecorded from July 1979 to July 1979.
2 Masked Assassin and Colonel Yan Kim July 1979 ICW show [Note 1] 1 [Note 3]    
Championship history is unrecorded from July 1979 to August 1979.
3 Ron Garvin and Terry Gibbs August 1979 (NLT) ICW show [Note 1] 1 [Note 4]    
Championship history is unrecorded from August 1979 to September 1979.
4 Boris Malenko and the Assassin September 1979 (NLT) ICW show [Note 1] 1 [Note 5]    
Championship history is unrecorded from September 1979 to October 1979.
5 Bob Orton Jr. (2) and Barry Orton October 1979 (NLT) ICW show [Note 1] 1 [Note 6]    
6 Bob Roop (3) and Terry Gibbs (2) January 12, 1980 ICW show Knoxville, Tennessee 1 91 Or sometime before February 16 1980.  
7 Bob Orton Jr. (3) and Tony Peters April 12, 1980 ICW show Knoxville, Tennessee 1 [Note 7] Still billed as champions on May 23, 1980.  
Championship history is unrecorded from April 12, 1980 to August 1980.
8 Bob Roop (4) and Big Boy Williams August 1980 ICW show [Note 1] 1 [Note 8]    
Deactivated November 1980 The championship was retired when Bob Roop was injured.  

Footnotes

  1. The location of the match was not captured as part of the championship documentation.
  2. The date the championship was won and lost has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 1 day and 30 days
  3. The date the championship was won and lost has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 1 day and 60 days
  4. The date the championship was won and lost has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 1 day and 90 days
  5. The date the championship was won and lost has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 1 day and 60 days
  6. The date the championship was won and lost has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 73 days and 103 days
  7. The date the championship was lost has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 41 days and 141 days
  8. The date the championship was won and later abandoned has not been documented which means the championship reign lasted anywhere between 1 day and 30 days

References

  1. Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  2. Ed Grabianowski. "How Pro Wrestling Works". How Stuff Works. Archived from the original on November 18, 2013. Retrieved April 5, 2009.
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