Big Gold Belt
Appearance
The Big Gold Belt is a nickname given to a historic professional wrestling championship belt. It was originally designed on order by Jim Crockett Promotions to give to NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair. The belt was created by a silversmith in Nevada. The belt has three gold plates and was the first to have a name plate into which the holder's name was etched. The original belt simply stated "World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion" without indicating any promotion.
The Big Gold Belt has represented and can refer to one or more of the following championships:
- NWA World Heavyweight Championship (1986 – 1993)
- In January 1991, the NWA title belt was extended to also represent the WCW title.
- From March 21 to May 19, 1991, Tatsumi Fujinami was recognized as NWA Champion following a disputed victory over Ric Flair but Flair retained the belt as WCW Champion.
- While champion, Flair was fired from World Championship Wrestling (WCW) in July 1991. The belt was "by default" the property of Flair as he had a US$25,000 deposit on it and he took the belt with him when Jim Herd refused to pay the deposit back.
- Flair soon signed with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and wore the belt as the "Real World's Champion".
- Upon his signing, Flair was stripped of the title in September 1991 by the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA). The title remained vacant until August 1992. WCW ultimately bought the belt from Flair and it represented the NWA title again but the belt was now owned by WCW.
- WCW World Heavyweight Championship (1991)
- In January 1991, the NWA belt was extended to represent both the NWA title and this newly-created title, aside from the two months in which Fujinami was recognized as NWA Champion while Flair was WCW Champion. During this period the belt only represented the WCW title.
- The belt represented the WCW Champion from the title's formation until Flair was fired in July 1991, when a new belt was created and a new champion was crowned.
- WCW International World Heavyweight Championship (1993 – 1994)
- In September 1993, when WCW withdrew from the NWA, the Big Gold Belt was rechristened the WCW International World Heavyweight Championship.
- WCW World Heavyweight Championship (1994 – 2001)
- The belt represented this title again in 1994 when the WCW International World and WCW World titles were unified. The WCW World title belt and the WCW International World title were dropped.
- After the WWF purchased WCW in 2001, it continued to serve as WCW's top title during the WCW/ECW "Invasion". Following this, the title was unified with the WWF Championship. Its official lineage subsequently ended with Chris Jericho being named the last WCW World Champion.[1]
- WWF Undisputed Championship (2001 – 2002)
- Following the unification of the WWF and WCW World titles, the two belts were collectively used to represent this title until a new, single belt was introduced in April 2002.
- World Heavyweight Championship (WWE) (2002 – present)
- The Big Gold Belt, which bore the name of no promotion, was originally used when this title was introduced in September 2002. It was replaced in March 2003 with a new, similar belt that incorporates the WWE logo at the top of the center plate. The title, defended on the SmackDown! brand, is currently vacant (last held by The Undertaker).
References
- ^ WCW World Champion - Chris Jericho at WWE.com