Texas All-Star USA Tag Team Championship
The Texas All-Star USA Tag Team Championship was a major tag team title in Texas All-Star Wrestling. The title was first established in Southwest Championship Wrestling in 1981 when it was the SCW Southwest Tag Team Championship. The title's name was changed to the Texas All-Star Texas Tag Team Championship in May 1985 after SCW was sold to Texas All-Star Wrestling in April, and changed again to the Texas All-Star USA Tag Team Championship in 1986 before the title was abandoned in November that year when Texas All-Star was purchased by the World Class Wrestling Association.
Texas All-Star USA Tag Team Championship | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Details | |||||||||
Promotion | Southwest Championship Wrestling Texas All-Star Wrestling | ||||||||
Date established | September 6, 1978 | ||||||||
Date retired | November 1986 | ||||||||
Other name(s) | |||||||||
| |||||||||
|
Title history
Wrestler: | Times: | Date: | Location: | Notes: |
---|---|---|---|---|
SCW Southwest Tag Team Championship | ||||
Coloso Colosetti and Killer Tim Brooks | 1 | September 6, 1978 | San Antonio, TX | Defeat Kevin Von Erich and David Von Erich. |
[...] | ||||
The Dynamic Duo (Tully Blanchard and Gino Hernandez) |
1 | 1981 | Title awarded | |
Wahoo McDaniel and Terry Funk | 1 | August 15, 1981 | San Antonio, TX | [1] |
The Dynamic Duo (Tully Blanchard and Gino Hernandez) |
2 | 1981 | ? | |
Bruiser Brody and Dick Slater | 1 | February 26, 1982 | Houston, TX | |
Ricky Morton and Ken Lucas | 1 | ? | ? | |
The Dynamic Duo (Tully Blanchard and Gino Hernandez) |
3 | April 1982 | ? | |
Ricky Morton and Ken Lucas | 2 | June 11, 1982 | ? | |
The Dynamic Duo (Tully Blanchard and Gino Hernandez) |
4 | August 24, 1982 | ? | |
Dick Slater (2) and Bob Sweetan | 1 | October 1982 | Odessa, TX | Defeat Blanchard and a substitute when Hernandez no-shows but are stripped for pinning the substitute to win the belts. |
Ricky Morton and Ken Lucas | 3 | December 1982 | Corpus Christi, TX | Defeat The Grapplers in tournament final. |
The Grapplers (Len Denton and Tony Anthony) |
1 | January 16, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | [2] |
The Dynamic Duo (Tully Blanchard and Gino Hernandez) |
5 | March 21, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | |
Vacant | March 21, 1983 | Vacant on the same day when Blanchard attacks Hernandez with title belt immediately after victory. | ||
The Grapplers (Len Denton and Tony Anthony) |
2 | April 2, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | |
The Sheepherders (Luke Williams and Jonathan Boyd) |
1 | May 7, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | |
Luke Williams and Bobby Jaggers | 1 | June 1983 | Boyd breaks his leg in an auto accident. | |
Vacant | July 4, 1983 | Williams attacks Jaggers after losing a non-title match to Bob Sweetan and Sweet Brown Sugar in San Antonio, TX. | ||
Bobby Jaggers (2) and Buddy Moreno | 1 | August 29, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | Defeat Bob Sweetan and Ken Timbs in 4-team tournament final. |
The Fabulous Blonds (Eric Embry and Ken Timbs) |
1 | September 26, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | Defeat Moreno and Scott Casey after Luke Williams reportedly breaks Jaggers' arm on September 19, 1983 |
Held up | November 24, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | Title held up after a match against The Rock 'n' Roll Express. | |
The Fabulous Blonds (Eric Embry and Ken Timbs) |
2 | December 3, 1983 | San Antonio, TX | Defeat The Rock 'n' Roll Express in rematch. |
Al Perez and Manny Fernandez | 1 | April 9, 1984 | San Antonio, TX | |
The Fabulous Blonds (Eric Embry and Ken Timbs) |
3 | June 13, 1984 | Awarded when Perez and Fernandez do not defend title | |
The Fabulous Blonds (Eric Embry (4) and Dan Greer) |
1 | July 21, 1984 | Timbs leaves SWCW and is replaced by Greer sometime before July 21, 1984. | |
Brett Sawyer and Chicky Starr | 1 | September 9, 1984 | San Antonio, TX | |
The Fabulous Blonds (Eric Embry (5) and Dan Greer (2)) |
2 | October 18, 1984 | San Antonio, TX | |
Jerry Oske and Rick Casey | 1 | December 17, 1984 | San Antonio, TX | |
The Maoris (Tudui and Wakahi) |
1 | January 20, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | SWCW is sold to Texas All-Star during The Maoris' reign in May 1985. |
Renamed Texas All-Star Texas Tag Team Championship | ||||
American Force (Paul Diamond and Frank Lang) |
1 | May 1985 | ||
New Zealand Maoris | 2 | May 12, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | |
American Breed (Paul Diamond (2) and Nick Kiniski) |
1 | May 25, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | |
Al Madril and Chavo Guerrero | 1 | July 5, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | |
Vacant | August 1985 | Madril and Guerrero split after Guerrero pulls out of a scheduled defence against American Force with Gory Guerrero as a selected guest referee; Madril and substitute Black Gordman lose the match and attack Gory. | ||
Chavo Guerrero | 1 | September 1, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | Chavo defeats Madril to take possession of both belts but chooses to give them away instead of picking a new partner |
American Force (Paul Diamond (3) and Shawn Michaels) |
1 | September 1, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | Given belts by Chavo Guerrero. |
The Masked Hoods (Ricky Santana and Tony Torres) |
1 | September 29, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | |
American Force (Paul Diamond (4) and Shawn Michaels (2)) |
2 | November 17, 1985 | San Antonio, TX | |
Al Madril (2) and Magnificent Zulu | 1 | January 27, 1986 | ? | |
Al Madril (3) and Mike Golden | 1 | April 1986 | Zulu is fired. | |
Renamed Texas All-Star U.S.A. Tag Team Championship | ||||
The Dream Team (King Parsons and Tiger Conway Jr.) |
1 | May 23, 1986 | Pasadena, TX | |
Mike Golden (2) and Dizzy Golden | 1 | August 10, 1986 | Pasadena, TX | |
The Dream Team (King Parsons and Tiger Conway Jr.) |
2 | September 30, 1986 | Houston, TX | |
Mike Golden and Dizzy Golden | 2 | October 1986 | Awarded after Parsons leaves promotion. | |
Title retired | November 1986 | Texas All-Star is sold to World Class Wrestling Association |
References
- Hoops, Brian (August 15, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history: IWGP Champ wins 1-G, Orton beats Benoit". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
- Hoops, Brian (January 16, 2019). "Pro wrestling history (01/16): Arn Anderson & Bobby Eaton win WCW Tag Team Titles". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.