Contested for between January 1991 and December 2001, the WCW World Heavyweight Championship was a wrestling title equal parts gorgeous and grotesque. Represented by the beautiful Big Gold Belt, WCW’s top prize was held by a who’s who of wrestling legends, behind-the-scenes staff, and one actor, withstanding a horde of the squared circle’s most questionable creative decisions.

Related

10 Worst WCW World Championship Reigns

WCW often faltered with the Big Gold Belt’s booking, and many World Champions suffered bad reigns because of it.

All but two of its holders found success in WWE either before or after ascending to the top of the WCW mountain, many lifting, too, the WWE Championship – but who had better luck where the big boys played, and who achieved more in the sports entertainment emperium?

Success in WWE will be ranked by how many championships a wrestler held. If a wrestler is tied with another, they will be ranked on how many times they held the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. Those who held the championship after WWE purchased WCW also won’t be acknowledged, bar Booker T as he held it in WCW first.

19

David Arquette

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 1

David Arquette Wins World Title

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

  • 04/25/2000
  • Aired 04/26/2000
  • Eric Bischoff & Jeff Jarrett
  • Diamond Dallas Page was the defending champion

05/07/2000

Jeff Jarrett

That David Arquette isn’t the definitive worst WCW World Heavyweight Champion is exponentially telling of the dire state the company was in, in 2000. Arquette lifted the title from Diamond Dallas Page while teaming with him against Eric Bischoff and Jeff Jarrett, mercifully reigning as champion for around two weeks:

that’s longer than some reigns from Randy Savage, Kevin Nash, and Sting!

Arquette, thankfully, never continued his wrestling aspirations in WWE.

18

Vince Russo

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 1

Vince Russo cutting a promo as WCW Champion.

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

09/25/2000

Booker T

10/02/2000

Title vacated

If David Arquette isn’t WCW’s worst World Champion, then Vince Russo is. Russo, the company’s Head Writer, booked himself to win the Big Gold Belt from Booker T – only to vacate it a week later! Booker, who regained the vacant strap, discussed Vince Russo’s self-booked run as a wrestler on his Hall of Fame podcast:

[He] Not just put himself on the show as a talent, but he wins the [WCW] World Heavyweight Championship…Everything that Vince Russo talks about, it’s kind of hypocritical. It’s kind of hypocritical. He’s gotten so much from this business as far as him still being able to make money off it and then when he was in it, he implemented himself right into the main stories of the business. I just don’t get someone like that. (h/t Wrestling Inc)

While he never appeared on-screen for WWE,

Russo worked successfully as WWE’s Head Writer during a portion of the Attitude Era
, contributing heavily to stories such as ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin vs. Vince McMahon, and the Three Faces of Foley.

17

Big Van Vader

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 3

Vader WCW Champion

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

07/12/1992

Sting

  • 08/02/1992
  • Aired 08/16/1992

Ron Simmons

12/30/1992

Ron Simmons

03/11/1993

Sting

03/17/1993

Sting

12/27/1993

Ric Flair

With three reigns and a combined 377 days as champion, Big Van Vader was the original dictator of the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. A bruising, rugged powerhouse who packed as much force into a worked punch as he did a Powerbomb, ‘The Mastodon’ was quintessential to the title’s early history.

Related

Why Vader’s WWE Championship Win Was Scrapped, Explained

Plans were set in motion for Vader to become WWE Champion in 1996, but due to some controversial backstage politics, those plans were cancelled.

That same success didn’t follow him to WWE, though, as reported backstage issues with favored talent, like Shawn Michaels, prohibited the semi-masked man from reaching his potential under the McMahon banner. He did, however, wrestle a handful of must-watch Attitude Era classics, including a potent war vs. Ken Shamrock from the fifteenth In Your House.

16

Sting

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 6

Sting Halloween Havoc 1999

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

02/29/1992

Lex Luger

07/12/1992

Big Van Vader

03/11/1993

Big Van Vader

03/17/1993

Big Van Vader

12/28/1997

Hollywood Hogan

01/08/1998

Title vacated

02/22/1998

Hollywood Hogan (vacant title)

04/19/1998

Randy Savage

04/26/1999

Diamond Dallas Page

04/26/1999

Diamond Dallas Page

09/12/1999

Hollywood Hogan

10/25/1999

Title vacated

Sting arrived too late in WWE: that is the sole reason for his lack of championships.

‘The Icon’ didn’t debut until 2014’s Survivor Series
, thirteen years after WCW folded, and wrestled a mere four televised matches.

In World Championship Wrestling, though, the baseball bat-wielding ‘Stinger’ was a six-time World Champion, the longest of those reigns being his first, in 1992, at 134 days. He was also part of two controversies surrounding the title following Starrcade 1997 and Halloween Havoc 1999, respectively.

15

Lex Luger

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 2

Lex Luger WCW Champion 1st Reign Cropped

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

07/14/1991

Barry Windham (vacant title)

02/29/1992

Sting

08/04/1997

Hollywood Hogan

08/09/1997

Hollywood Hogan

Six years separated Lex Luger’s two reigns at the WCW mountaintop, as ‘The Total Package’ enjoyed success in two distinct eras of the company. His second reign, coming during the Monday Night Wars, was the infamous time he dethroned Hollywood Hogan in a delirious Nitro match, only to be toppled by ‘The Hulkster’ five days later.

Luger failed to become WWE’s Ace between his two WCW stints, despite the company grooming him to be the next Hulk Hogan. He did, however, manage a Royal Rumble victory, albeit shared with Bret Hart.

14

Ron Simmons

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 1

Ron Simmons as WCW World Champion

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

  • 08/02/1992
  • Aired 08/16/1992

Big Van Vader

12/30/1992

Big Van Vader

Modernistic professional wrestling is still shy of black World Champions
, with Bobby Lashley, Kofi Kingston, and Swerve Strickland being the only notable examples. This has, depressingly, long been the trend, as Ron Simmons was the solitary African American holder of the WCW World Heavyweight Championship, with his 1992 defeat of Big Van Vader remaining a standout highlight of the company’s perilous history.

Simmons, in WWE, was cast as a tag team guy, being part of both The Nation of Domination and The APA, being a two-time World Tag Team Champion as part of the latter.

13

Scott Steiner

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 1

Scott-Steiner-WCW-Champion-Flexing-2000-2

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

11/26/2000

Booker T

03/26/2001

Booker T

WCW is where Scott Steiner graduated from the midcard to become a legitimate main event star, cemented when he won the World Heavyweight Championship from Booker T at 2000’s Mayhem pay-per-view. ‘Big Poppa Pump’ exemplified the charisma required to carry a company as its face, while also growing exponentially between the ropes.

In returning to WWE, Steiner regressed significantly,

a dull Triple H feud doing him no favors
before he became a lower midcard act for the remainder of his run. Pre-WCW, though, Scott and his brother Rick were twice WWE’s World Tag Team Champions.

12

Sid Vicious

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 2

Sid Vicious WCW World Heavyweight Champion

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

01/24/2000

Kevin Nash (vacant title)

  • 01/25/2000
  • Aired 01/26/2000

Title vacated

  • 01/25/2000
  • Aired 01/26/2000

Kevin Nash and Ron Harris (vacant title)

04/10/2000

Title vacated

The late Sid Vicious’ WCW career is best remembered for his freak leg break at Sin 2001
, as an attempted middle-rope Big Boot saw Sid’s ankle snap faster than Randy Savage tucking in to a Slim Jim. Vicious was a two-time WCW World Heavyweight Champion, his second reign ending when Vince Russo and Eric Bischoff hilariously ‘rebooted’ the company.

Related

10 Things You Forgot About WCW’s Reboot In 2000

WCW was in bad shape entering 2000, so the company decided to reboot their storylines and reset their champions!

As Sycho Sid in WWE, the seven-footer found similar success, as a two-month WWE Championship reign certified the Arkansas native as a headline act. His second reign confirmed this, as he dropped the title to The Undertaker in WrestleMania 13’s show-closer.

11

Diamond Dallas Page

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 3

DIamond Dallas Page As WCW Champion Cropped

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

04/11/1999

Ric Flair

04/26/1999

Sting

04/26/1999

Sting

05/09/1999

Kevin Nash

04/24/2000

Jeff Jarrett

  • 04/25/2000
  • Aired 04/26/2000

David Arquette

A three-time WCW World Heavyweight Champion, Diamond Dallas Page can often be conveyed as a pillar of the company, given that he was also a one-time World Television Champion, a two-time United States Heavyweight Champion, and a four-time World Tag Team Champion: indeed, DDP was WCW.

Page was a failure in WWE, despite winning a championship match – for the European Title – at a WrestleMania. His introduction as The Undertaker’s wife’s stalker was career suicide, particularly as he lost every major match in the rivalry, and then, a year later, he was forced into medical retirement after a botched Superplex against Hardcore Holly.

10

Goldberg

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 1

Goldberg-Raises-WCW-World-Heavyweight-Championship-1998

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

07/06/1998

Hollywood Hogan

12/27/1998

Kevin Nash

Goldberg only needed one reign with the WCW World Heavyweight Championship to certify himself as the company’s best homegrown talent. ‘Da Man’ toppled Hollywood Hogan in a euphoric moment at the Georgia Dome, holding the World and United States Heavyweight Championships simultaneously. Dropping the title – and his undefeated streak – to Kevin Nash can be earmarked as the beginning of the end for WCW, though.

Goldberg was a force in WWE, too, holding three World Championships, but his career in the company was held back by his inability to put over the newer generation: only Drew McIntyre and Roman Reigns appeared to benefit from facing the aging Oklahoman.

9

Randy Savage

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 4

Randy-Savage-WCW-Championship

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

11/26/1995

Won the World War 3 match (vacant title)

12/27/1995

Ric Flair

01/22/1996

Ric Flair

02/11/1996

Ric Flair

04/19/1998

Sting

04/29/1998

Hollywood Hogan

07/11/1999

Kevin Nash

07/12/1999

Hollywood Hogan

Randy Savage, much like Sting, was crowned as WCW World Heavyweight Champion in two distinct eras, first holding the title in a pre-nWo 1995 after winning the inaugural World War 3 match. His final reign, though, didn’t come until 1999, when WCW was all but confirmed dead.

‘The Macho Man’, of course, was a heralded act of WWE’s Golden Era, emotionally capturing the vacant WWE Championship at the end of a tiresome WrestleMania 4 tournament. It was unequivocally one of the earliest ‘Mania moments, ruined only by Hulk Hogan’s inability to share the spotlight 365 days later.

8

Kevin Nash

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 3

Kevin Nash WCW Champion 4th Reign

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

12/27/1998

Goldberg

01/04/1999

Hollywood Hogan

05/09/1999

Diamond Dallas Page

07/11/1999

Randy Savage

05/23/2000

Jeff Jarrett

05/29/2000

Ric Flair (awarded title)

Kevin Nash had three reigns as WCW World Heavyweight Champion, but you only recall one of them: his first. Bookended by controversially stunning Goldberg out of the title at 1998’s Starrcade and

being poked by nWo pal Hollywood Hogan on Nitro’s infamous January 4, 1999 broadcast
, ‘Big Daddy Cool’s’ maiden voyage as WCW World Champion helped kill WWE’s competition.

Kevin Nash had a fourth (third overall) reign as WCW World Heavyweight Champion that saw him, as the WCW Commissioner, award himself the vacant title on Thunder’s January 26, 2000 broadcast. This reign is not recognized: instead, WWE’s title records go from the title being vacated to Sid Vicious becoming the champion on the aforementioned Thunder, where he bested Nash and Ron Harris.

Nash, a two-time WWE Hall of Famer, was successful in the company before turning his head to WCW, tyrannically holding the WWE Championship for one year, though this reign is oft-considered the worst in company history.

7

Ric Flair

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 8

Ric-Flair-As-WCW-World-Heavyweight-Champion-CROPPED

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

01/11/1991

  • Sting
  • For the NWA World’s Heavyweight Championship

07/01/1991

Title vacated

12/27/1993

Big Van Vader

04/17/1994

Title vacated

  • 04/21/1994
  • Aired 05/14/1994

Ricky Steamboat (vacant title)

07/17/1994

Hulk Hogan

12/27/1995

Randy Savage

01/22/1996

Randy Savage

02/11/1996

Randy Savage

  • 04/22/1996
  • Aired 04/29/1996

The Giant

03/14/1999

Hollywood Hogan

04/11/1999

Diamond Dallas Page

05/15/2000

Jeff Jarrett

05/22/2000

Title vacated

05/29/2000

Kevin Nash (awarded title)

05/29/2000

Jeff Jarrett

The face of the Big Gold Belt, Ric Flair was a record eight-time WCW World Heavyweight Champion. He was the first, too, besting Sting for the NWA World’s Heavyweight Championship in 1991, with WWE recognizing this reign of ‘The Nature Boy’ as being under the NWA banner as well as the inaugural WCW Championship reign.

Related

5 Best World Title Reigns Of Ric Flair’s Career (& 5 Worst)

Some of Ric Flair’s World title reigns have worked to perfection, while others have completely missed the mark.

Ric was mighty successful in WWE between runs in WCW as well, as he won the heralded

1992 Royal Rumble
for the vacant WWE Championship. There, ‘Naitch’ set a precedent for what has become a Rumble staple, being the first competitor in history to last more than one hour between bells.

6

Hulk Hogan

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 6

Hulk Hogan WCW Champion 2nd Reign 1996 Cropped

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

07/17/1994

Ric Flair

10/29/1995

The Giant

08/10/1996

The Giant

08/04/1997

Lex Luger

08/09/1997

Lex Luger

12/28/1997

Sting

04/20/1998

Randy Savage

07/06/1998

Goldberg

01/04/1999

Kevin Nash

03/14/1999

Ric Flair

07/12/1999

Randy Savage

09/12/1999

Sting

Hulk Hogan held the WCW World Heavyweight Championship for 52.99% of his time in the Ted Turner-helmed organization, and when he didn’t hold the strap, he was around it like ants to crumbs. Controversy surrounded much of his time involved with the title, too, as moments such as the Sting debacle from Starrcade 1997 and the Bash at the Beach 2000 incident marred Hogan’s success.

Similarly, in WWE, Hogan was within the vicinity of the WWE Championship for much of his first era-defining stint in the company, amassing a combined 2,185 days across six reigns – the second-longest total days as champion in history, behind only Bruno Sammartino at 4,040 days.

5

Jeff Jarrett

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 4

Jeff Jarrett WCW Champion Spring Stampede 2000 Cropped

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

04/16/2000

Diamond Dallas Page (vacant title)

04/24/2000

Diamond Dallas Page

05/07/2000

David Arquette

05/15/2000

Ric Flair

05/22/2000

Kevin Nash (vacant title)

  • 05/23/2000
  • Aired 05/24/2000

Kevin Nash

05/29/2000

Ric Flair

07/09/2000

Booker T

Stunningly, Jeff Jarrett’s four runs as WCW World Heavyweight Championship were spread across only five months, as with the company suffering terribly against a scintillating WWE in 2000, WCW executives chose car crash TV with quick, unnecessary title swaps over long, story-driven reigns: case in point, ‘The King of the Mountain’.

‘Double J’ was a successful midcarder in WWE before this, though he departed on bad terms, having reportedly held Vince McMahon up for $200,000 to drop the Intercontinental Championship to Chyna on his way out.

4

Bret Hart

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 2

Bret Hart WCW World Champion

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

11/21/1999

Chris Benoit (vacant title)

12/20/1999

Title vacated

12/20/1999

Goldberg (vacant title)

01/16/2000

Title vacated

Bret Hart’s time as WCW World Heavyweight Champion was unique in that he never dethroned anyone for the prize, and he was never dethroned himself. Indeed, ‘The Hitman’s’ two reigns stemmed from him winning the vacant title, and both times, he was forced to relinquish the title, the second of which was caused by an

infamously errant Goldberg kick that forced Hart into retirement
.

Before the Montreal Screwjob imploded Bret’s relationship with WWE, he was a bonafide Superstar, being a five-time WWE Champion. Championships aside, Hart was a workhorse,

producing electric matches against myriad WWE Superstars
, from Shawn Michaels and The Undertaker to ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin and Mr Perfect.

3

Chris Benoit

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 1

Chris Benoit WCW Champion 2000

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

01/16/2000

Sid Vicious (vacant title)

01/17/2000

Title vacated

Chris Benoit holds the record for the least combined days as WCW World Heavyweight Champion, holding WCW’s top prize for just one day. Though storylines dictated that Benoit was stripped of the title due to Sid Vicious’ foot being underneath the ropes during the winning submission, the reality was that he, alongside Eddie Guerrero, Dean Malenko, and Perry Saturn, had departed for WWE amid contract disputes.

It was in WWE that Benoit flourished as a headliner, winning the World Heavyweight Championship from Triple H in a fierce WrestleMania 20 main event.

2

Booker T

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 5

Booker-T-WCW-World-Heavyweight-Champion-Victorious-CROPPED-2

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

07/09/2000

Jeff Jarrett

08/28/2000

Kevin Nash

09/17/2000

Kevin Nash

09/25/2000

Vince Russo

10/02/2000

Jeff Jarrett (vacant title)

11/26/2000

Scott Steiner

03/26/2001

Scott Steiner

  • 07/24/2001
  • Aired 07/26/2001

Kurt Angle

07/30/2001

Kurt Angle

08/19/2001

The Rock

Had it not been for Hulk Hogan closing the door on his WCW career, Booker T may never have captured the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. The wrestler-turned-commentator has admitted as much previously, explaining the situation on his Hall of Fame podcast:

I found out many years later that Hulk Hogan was supposed to win the championship and then come back at Halloween Havoc, and they were gonna do whatever they did with it. Eric was on board with that 100%. Now this is my thing also. I’ve given Eric a lot of props over the years, but I found out now if Vince Russo wouldn’t have done what he did, I wouldn’t have won the World Championship, and perhaps I wouldn’t have never won it, ever. (h/t 411Mania)

Related

WCW: Vince Russo Vs. Hulk Hogan At Bash At The Beach 2000, Explained

Bash at the Beach 2000 was Hulk Hogan’s controversial exit from WCW. Here’s a look back at the conflict between Hogan, Eric Bischoff & Vince Russo.

Booker captured five total WCW World Championships, one of which occurred in WWE, and followed it with a sixth on SmackDown after becoming King Booker in 2006.

1

The Giant

WCW World Heavyweight Championship Reigns: 2

Date Won

Defeated

Date Lost

Defeated By

10/29/1995

Hulk Hogan

11/06/1995

Title vacated

  • 04/22/1996
  • Aired 04/29/1996

Ric Flair

08/10/1996

Hollywood Hogan

It was Kevin Nash who coined the phrase, ‘Where the big boys play’, when referring to WCW, and in the case of The Giant, it couldn’t have been a more apt descriptor. The real-life Paul Wight, at his heaviest, weighed 500 pounds, which coupled well with his staggering seven feet in height. Understandably, he won the big one in WCW, doing so twice.

In WWE as The Big Show, the success continued, as Vince McMahon’s petulance with larger-than-life individuals allowed ‘The World’s Largest Athlete’ to capture a combined eighteen titles, five of which were World Championships.



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