This is an old revision of this page, as edited by TJ Spyke (talk | contribs) at 18:37, 3 April 2014 (→List of combined reigns: Hitman and Stone Cole are nicknames, not ring names (so we don't write "The Best in the World" CM Punk, for example)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 18:37, 3 April 2014 by TJ Spyke (talk | contribs) (→List of combined reigns: Hitman and Stone Cole are nicknames, not ring names (so we don't write "The Best in the World" CM Punk, for example))(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The WWE World Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling world heavyweight championship in WWE. It is the first world title established in WWE, having been introduced in 1963 as the World Wide Wrestling Federation (WWWF) World Heavyweight Championship. After ending its affiliation with the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) the promotion was renamed World Wrestling Federation (WWF) with the title also renamed to reflect the acronym.
In 2001, it was unified with the World Championship (formerly the WCW Championship) following the WWF's buyout of World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and became the Undisputed Championship. In 2002, the WWF was renamed World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) and split its roster into two franchises, Raw and SmackDown, in a brand extension. The title was then designated to the SmackDown brand, while WWE established an alternate world title known as the World Heavyweight Championship for the Raw brand. The WWE Undisputed Championship was then renamed simply as the WWE Championship. On December 15, 2013, the World Heavyweight Championship was unified with the WWE Championship, resulting in the retiring of the former, and the renaming of the latter to its current name of the WWE World Heavyweight Championship.
The championship is generally contested in professional wrestling matches, in which participants usually execute scripted finishes rather than contend in direct competition. Some reigns were held by champions using a ring name, while others used their real name. The first champion was Buddy Rogers, who won the championship in 1963. The champion with the single longest reign is Bruno Sammartino with a reign of 2803 days. Overall, there have been 44 different official champions, with John Cena having the most reigns at eleven. Only seven men in history have held the championship for a continuous reign of one year (365 days) or more. They are Bruno Sammartino, Bob Backlund, Hulk Hogan, Pedro Morales, Randy Savage, John Cena, and CM Punk.
Title history
- Key
Reign | The reign number for the specific set of wrestlers listed |
# | Indicates what number the reign is |
Event | The event promoted by the respective promotion in which the titles were won |
N/A | The information is not available or is unknown |
— | Used for vacated reigns so as not to count it as an official reign |
+ | Indicates the current reign is changing daily. |
Names
Name | Years |
---|---|
WWWF World Heavyweight Championship | April 25, 1963 – February 8, 1971 |
WWWF Championship | February 8, 1971 – 1979 |
WWF Championship | 1979 – December 9, 2001 |
Undisputed WWF Championship | December 9, 2001 – May 6, 2002 |
WWE Undisputed Championship | May 6, 2002 – September 2, 2002; August 14, 2011 - September 18, 2011 |
WWE Championship | September 2, 2002 – December 15, 2013 |
WWE World Heavyweight Championship | December 15, 2013 – present |
Reigns
As of December 28, 2014
- indicates title changes not recognized by WWE.
# | Champion | Reign | Date | Days held | Location | Event | Notes | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Buddy Rogers | 1 | April 25, 1963 | 22 | Rio de Janeiro, Brazil | N/A | Won an apocryphal tournament in Rio de Janeiro after the WWWF left the National Wrestling Alliance. | |
2 | Bruno Sammartino | 1 | May 17, 1963 | 2,803 | New York, NY | House show | ||
3 | Ivan Koloff | 1 | January 18, 1971 | 21 | New York, NY | House show | ||
4 | Pedro Morales | 1 | February 8, 1971 | 1,027 | New York, NY | House show | Title renamed WWWF Heavyweight Championship when WWWF rejoined the NWA in 1971. | |
5 | Stan Stasiak | 1 | December 1, 1973 | 9 | Philadelphia, PA | House show | ||
6 | Bruno Sammartino | 2 | December 10, 1973 | 1,237 | New York, NY | House show | ||
7 | Billy Graham | 1 | April 30, 1977 | 296 | Baltimore, MD | House show | ||
8 | Bob Backlund | 1 | February 20, 1978 | 2,135 (648) |
New York, NY | House show | The title was renamed the WWF Heavyweight Championship when the World Wide Wrestling Federation became the World Wrestling Federation in March 1979. | |
— | Antonio Inoki | 1 | November 30, 1979 | 6 | Tokushima, Japan | House show | Reign is not recognized by WWE | |
— | Vacated | — | December 6, 1979 | — | Tokushima, Japan | House show | Inoki immediately vacated the title after a rematch with Backlund ended in a no contest. | |
— | Bob Backlund | 2 | December 17, 1979 | 1,470 | New York, NY | House show | Defeated Bobby Duncum in a Texas Death match. During this reign a controversial ending to a bout between Backlund and Greg Valentine took place on 10/19/81 at Madison Square Garden, in which the dazed referee raised Valentine's arm in victory, thinking it was Backlund, after the champion had scored the pinfall. A rematch was held at MSG on 11/23/81 with Backlund defeating Valentine. Backlund defended the belt in other arenas between the two matches taking place, indicating that he was still the recognized champion. | |
9 | The Iron Sheik | 1 | December 26, 1983 | 28 | New York, NY | House show | The Iron Sheik won by forfeit after Backlund's manager Arnold Skaaland threw in the towel on his behalf to prevent any major injury as a result of Sheik's signature move "The Camel Clutch", but Backlund never officially submitted. | |
10 | Hulk Hogan | 1 | January 23, 1984 | 1,474 | New York, NY | House show | ||
11 | André the Giant | 1 | February 5, 1988 | <1 | Indianapolis, IN | The Main Event I | André defeated Hogan when referee Earl Hebner, who was bribed by Ted DiBiase, scored the three-count, despite Hogan raising his shoulder past the two-count. | |
— | Vacated | — | February 5, 1988 | — | Indianapolis, IN | The Main Event I | Immediately after winning the title from Hogan, André sold the title to DiBiase; President Jack Tunney nullified this decision, and vacated the title. | |
12 | Randy Savage | 1 | March 27, 1988 | 371 | Atlantic City, NJ | WrestleMania IV | Defeated Ted DiBiase in a tournament finals to win the vacant title. | |
13 | Hulk Hogan | 2 | April 2, 1989 | 364 | Atlantic City, NJ | WrestleMania V | ||
14 | The Ultimate Warrior | 1 | April 1, 1990 | 293 | Toronto, ON | WrestleMania VI | This match was also for Warrior's WWF Intercontinental Championship, which was vacated shortly after this match. | |
15 | Sgt. Slaughter | 1 | January 19, 1991 | 64 | Miami, FL | Royal Rumble (1991) | ||
16 | Hulk Hogan | 3 | March 24, 1991 | 248 | Los Angeles, CA | WrestleMania VII | ||
17 | The Undertaker | 1 | November 27, 1991 | 6 | Detroit, MI | Survivor Series (1991) | ||
18 | Hulk Hogan | 4 | December 3, 1991 | 1 | San Antonio, TX | This Tuesday in Texas | ||
— | Vacated | — | December 4, 1991 | — | N/A | WWF Superstars of Wrestling | Hogan was stripped of the title by Tunney due to the controversy surrounding both of the previous title changes. This aired December 7, 1991. | |
19 | Ric Flair | 1 | January 19, 1992 | 77 | Albany, NY | Royal Rumble (1992) | Won the Royal Rumble match by last eliminating Sid Justice. | |
20 | Randy Savage | 2 | April 5, 1992 | 149 | Indianapolis, IN | WrestleMania VIII | ||
21 | Ric Flair | 2 | September 1, 1992 | 41 | Hershey, PA | Prime Time Wrestling | Aired on September 14, 1992. | |
22 | Bret Hart | 1 | October 12, 1992 | 174 | Saskatoon, SK | House show | ||
23 | Yokozuna | 1 | April 4, 1993 | <1 | Las Vegas, NV | WrestleMania IX | ||
24 | Hulk Hogan | 5 | 70 | Mr. Fuji offered Hogan a match against Yokozuna and offered to put the title on the line after Hogan came down to help Hart, who had salt thrown in his eyes by Fuji during the match. | ||||
25 | Yokozuna | 2 | June 13, 1993 | 280 | Dayton, OH | King of the Ring (1993) | ||
26 | Bret Hart | 2 | March 20, 1994 | 248 | New York, NY | WrestleMania X | Roddy Piper was the guest referee. | |
27 | Bob Backlund | 2 | November 23, 1994 | 3 | San Antonio, TX | Survivor Series (1994) | This was a "Throw in the Towel" submission match, where the only way to win was to have the opponent's cornerman throw a towel into the ring. | |
28 | Diesel | 1 | November 26, 1994 | 358 | New York, NY | House show | ||
29 | Bret Hart | 3 | November 19, 1995 | 133 | Landover, MD | Survivor Series (1995) | This was a no-disqualification match. | |
30 | Shawn Michaels | 1 | March 31, 1996 | 231 | Anaheim, CA | WrestleMania XII | This was a 60-minute Iron Man match, which Michaels won in overtime after a 0–0 draw. | |
31 | Sycho Sid | 1 | November 17, 1996 | 63 | New York, NY | Survivor Series (1996) | ||
32 | Shawn Michaels | 2 | January 19, 1997 | 25 | San Antonio, TX | Royal Rumble (1997) | ||
— | Vacated | — | February 13, 1997 | — | Lowell, MA | Thursday Raw Thursday | Michaels forfeited the title due to a knee injury. | |
33 | Bret Hart | 4 | February 16, 1997 | 1 | Chattanooga, TN | In Your House 13: Final Four | This was a four-way elimination match also involving Stone Cold Steve Austin, The Undertaker and Vader. | |
34 | Sycho Sid | 2 | February 17, 1997 | 34 | Nashville, TN | Raw | ||
35 | The Undertaker | 2 | March 23, 1997 | 133 | Rosemont, IL | WrestleMania 13 | This was a no-disqualification match. | |
36 | Bret Hart | 5 | August 3, 1997 | 98 | East Rutherford, NJ | SummerSlam (1997) | Shawn Michaels was the guest referee. | |
37 | Shawn Michaels | 3 | November 9, 1997 | 140 | Montreal, QC | Survivor Series (1997) | Won the title in the Montreal Screwjob. | |
38 | Steve Austin | 1 | March 29, 1998 | 91 | Boston, MA | WrestleMania XIV | Mike Tyson was the special outside enforcer. | |
39 | Kane | 1 | June 28, 1998 | 1 | Pittsburgh, PA | King of the Ring (1998) | This was a first blood match. | |
40 | Steve Austin | 2 | June 29, 1998 | 90 | Cleveland, OH | Raw is War | ||
— | Vacated | — | September 27, 1998 | — | Hamilton, ON | Breakdown: In Your House | Vacated after Kane and The Undertaker simultaneously pinned Austin in a triple threat match. A subsequent match for the vacant title at Judgment Day: In Your House between Kane and The Undertaker ended in a no-contest. | |
41 | The Rock | 1 | November 15, 1998 | 44 | St. Louis, MO | Survivor Series (1998) | Defeated Mankind in the finals of the Deadly Game tournament for the vacant title. | |
42 | Mankind | 1 | December 29, 1998 | 26 | Worcester, MA | Raw is War | This was a no-disqualification match. Aired on January 4, 1999. | |
43 | The Rock | 2 | January 24, 1999 | 2 | Anaheim, CA | Royal Rumble (1999) | This was an "I Quit" match. The Rock won by knocking Mankind unconscious while someone backstage played an audio recording of Mankind saying "I quit" while The Rock placed the microphone against his face. | |
44 | Mankind | 2 | January 26, 1999 | 20 | Tucson, AZ | Halftime Heat | This was an empty arena match that aired as a special during halftime of Super Bowl XXXIII on January 31, 1999. | |
45 | The Rock | 3 | February 15, 1999 | 41 | Birmingham, AL | Raw is War | This was a ladder match. | |
46 | Steve Austin | 3 | March 28, 1999 | 56 | Philadelphia, PA | WrestleMania XV | Mankind was the special guest referee in this no-disqualification match. | |
47 | The Undertaker | 3 | May 23, 1999 | 36 | Kansas City, MO | Over the Edge | Both Vince and Shane McMahon were special guest referees. | |
48 | Steve Austin | 4 | June 28, 1999 | 55 | Charlotte, NC | Raw is War | ||
49 | Mankind | 3 | August 22, 1999 | 1 | Minneapolis, MN | SummerSlam (1999) | This was a triple threat match also involving Triple H, with Jesse Ventura as guest referee. | |
50 | Triple H | 1 | August 23, 1999 | 22 | Ames, IA | Raw is War | Shane McMahon was the guest referee. | |
51 | Vince McMahon | 1 | September 14, 1999 | 6 | Las Vegas, NV | SmackDown | Aired on September 16, 1999 with Shane McMahon as guest referee. | |
— | Vacated | — | September 20, 1999 | — | Houston, TX | Raw is War | McMahon vacated the title. | |
52 | Triple H | 2 | September 26, 1999 | 49 | Charlotte, NC | Unforgiven (1999) | This was a Six-Pack Challenge match, also involving The Rock, Mankind, The Big Show, The British Bulldog and Kane. Austin was the special outside enforcer. | |
53 | The Big Show | 1 | November 14, 1999 | 50 | Detroit, MI | Survivor Series (1999) | This was a triple threat match, also involving The Rock. | |
54 | Triple H | 3 | January 3, 2000 | 118 | Miami, FL | Raw is War | On April 17, 2000, Chris Jericho defeated Triple H for the WWF Championship after Earl Hebner's fast-count. Later that night, Triple H forced Hebner to reverse the decision, nullifying Jericho's reign and continuing Triple H's. | |
55 | The Rock | 4 | April 30, 2000 | 21 | Washington, D.C. | Backlash (2000) | Shane McMahon was the guest referee. | |
56 | Triple H | 4 | May 21, 2000 | 35 | Louisville, KY | Judgment Day (2000) | This was a 60-minute Iron Man match, which Triple H won 6–5 with Shawn Michaels as the guest referee. | |
57 | The Rock | 5 | June 25, 2000 | 119 | Boston, MA | King of the Ring (2000) | This was a six-man tag team match with The Rock, The Undertaker and Kane vs. Triple H, Mr. McMahon and Shane McMahon. The Rock pinned Mr. McMahon to win Triple H's title. | |
58 | Kurt Angle | 1 | October 22, 2000 | 126 | Albany, NY | No Mercy (2000) | This was a no-disqualification match. | |
59 | The Rock | 6 | February 25, 2001 | 35 | Las Vegas, NV | No Way Out (2001) | ||
60 | Steve Austin | 5 | April 1, 2001 | 175 | Houston, TX | WrestleMania X-Seven | This was a no-disqualification match. | |
61 | Kurt Angle | 2 | September 23, 2001 | 15 | Pittsburgh, PA | Unforgiven (2001) | ||
62 | Steve Austin | 6 | October 8, 2001 | 62 | Indianapolis, IN | Raw | ||
63 | Chris Jericho | 1 | December 9, 2001 | 98 | San Diego, CA | Vengeance (2001) | Earlier that night, Jericho had already defeated (WCW) World Champion The Rock for that title. By defeating Austin for the WWF Championship, he unified both titles as the Undisputed Championship. | |
64 | Triple H | 5 | March 17, 2002 | 35 | Toronto, ON | WrestleMania X8 | ||
65 | Hulk Hogan | 6 | April 21, 2002 | 28 | Kansas City, MO | Backlash (2002) | The title was renamed the WWE Undisputed Championship on May 6, 2002 after World Wrestling Federation settled a lawsuit with the World Wide Fund for Nature, and became World Wrestling Entertainment. | |
66 | The Undertaker | 4 | May 19, 2002 | 63 | Nashville, TN | Judgment Day (2002) | On May 20, 2002, Rob Van Dam defeated The Undertaker for the title. Later that night, Ric Flair restarted the match and Undertaker defeated him, nullifying Van Dam's reign and continuing Undertaker's. | |
67 | The Rock | 7 | July 21, 2002 | 35 | Detroit, MI | Vengeance (2009) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Kurt Angle. | |
68 | Brock Lesnar | 1 | August 25, 2002 | 84 | Uniondale, NY | SummerSlam | "Undisputed" was removed from the title's name after it became exclusive to the SmackDown! brand on September 2, 2002, which resulted in the creation of the World Heavyweight Championship for the Raw brand. | |
69 | The Big Show | 2 | November 17, 2002 | 28 | New York, NY | Survivor Series (2002) | ||
70 | Kurt Angle | 3 | December 15, 2002 | 105 | Sunrise, FL | Armageddon (2002) | ||
71 | Brock Lesnar | 2 | March 30, 2003 | 119 | Seattle, WA | WrestleMania XIX | ||
72 | Kurt Angle | 4 | July 27, 2003 | 51 | Denver, CO | Vengeance (2003) | This was a triple threat match, also involving The Big Show. | |
73 | Brock Lesnar | 3 | September 16, 2003 | 152 | Raleigh, NC | SmackDown | This was a 60-minute Iron Man match, aired September 18, 2003 on SmackDown. | |
74 | Eddie Guerrero | 1 | February 15, 2004 | 133 | Daly City, CA | No Way Out (2004) | ||
75 | John "Bradshaw" Layfield | 1 | June 27, 2004 | 280 | Norfolk, VA | The Great American Bash (2004) | This was a Texas Bullrope match. | |
76 | John Cena | 1 | April 3, 2005 | 280 | Los Angeles, CA | WrestleMania 21 | The title became exclusive on the Raw brand on June 6, 2005 when Cena was drafted to Raw as the first pick in the 2005 Draft Lottery. | |
77 | Edge | 1 | January 8, 2006 | 21 | Albany, NY | New Year's Revolution (2006) | Cashed in his "Money in the Bank" contract from WrestleMania 21 immediately after Cena won an Elimination Chamber match. | |
78 | John Cena | 2 | January 29, 2006 | 133 | Miami, FL | Royal Rumble (2006) | ||
79 | Rob Van Dam | 1 | June 11, 2006 | 22 | New York, NY | ECW One Night Stand (2006) | Cashed in his Money in the Bank contract from WrestleMania 22. This was an Extreme Rules match. The title became property of the ECW brand. Van Dam became the first person to hold both the WWE and ECW World Championship. | |
80 | Edge | 2 | July 3, 2006 | 76 | Philadelphia, PA | Raw | This was a triple threat match, also involving Cena. The title became exclusive on the Raw brand. | |
81 | John Cena | 3 | September 17, 2006 | 380 | Toronto, ON | Unforgiven (2006) | This was a Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match. | |
— | Vacated | — | October 2, 2007 | — | Dayton, OH | ECW on Sci Fi | Vacated when Cena suffered a torn right pectoral tendon on the October 1 edition of Raw. | |
82 | Randy Orton | 1 | October 7, 2007 | <1 | Rosemont, IL | No Mercy (2007) | Awarded the title by Mr. McMahon. | |
83 | Triple H | 6 | <1 | |||||
84 | Randy Orton | 2 | 203 | This was a Last Man Standing match. | ||||
85 | Triple H | 7 | April 27, 2008 | 210 | Baltimore, MD | Backlash (2008) | This was a Fatal-Four Way Elimination match, also involving Cena and Layfield. The title became a SmackDown exclusive title once again when Triple H was drafted to SmackDown on June 23, 2008. | |
86 | Edge | 3 | November 23, 2008 | 21 | Boston, MA | Survivor Series (2008) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Vladimir Kozlov. Jeff Hardy had originally been scheduled to take part in the match, but did not participate after being (in storyline) attacked prior to the event. Triple H and Kozlov started the match before Edge was revealed as Hardy's surprise replacement. | |
87 | Jeff Hardy | 1 | December 14, 2008 | 42 | Buffalo, NY | Armageddon (2008) | This was a triple threat match, also involving Triple H. | |
88 | Edge | 4 | January 25, 2009 | 21 | Detroit, MI | Royal Rumble (2009) | This was a no-disqualification match. | |
89 | Triple H | 8 | February 15, 2009 | 70 | Seattle, WA | No Way Out (2009) | This was an Elimination Chamber match, also involving Jeff Hardy, Kozlov, The Undertaker and The Big Show. The title became a Raw exclusive title once again when Triple H was drafted to Raw on April 13, 2009. | |
90 | Randy Orton | 3 | April 26, 2009 | 42 | Providence, RI | Backlash (2009) | This was a six-man tag team match with Orton, Ted DiBiase, Jr. and Cody Rhodes against Triple H, Shane McMahon and Batista, in which Orton would win the championship if his team won. | |
91 | Batista | 1 | June 7, 2009 | 2 | New Orleans, LA | Extreme Rules (2009) | This was a steel cage match. | |
— | Vacated | — | June 9, 2009 | — | N/A | Announced on WWE.com | Vacated when Batista suffered a torn left bicep. | |
92 | Randy Orton | 4 | June 15, 2009 | 90 | Charlotte, NC | Raw | This was a Fatal Four-Way match also involving Triple H, Cena and Big Show. | |
93 | John Cena | 4 | September 13, 2009 | 21 | Montreal, QC | Breaking Point | This was an "I Quit" match. If anyone interfered on Orton's behalf, he would have automatically lost the title. | |
94 | Randy Orton | 5 | October 4, 2009 | 21 | Newark, NJ | Hell in a Cell (2009) | This was a Hell in a Cell match. | |
95 | John Cena | 5 | October 25, 2009 | 49 | Pittsburgh, PA | Bragging Rights (2009) | This was a 60-Minute Anything Goes Iron Man match in which Cena won 6-5. If Cena lost, he would have had to leave the Raw brand. | |
96 | Sheamus | 1 | December 13, 2009 | 70 | San Antonio, TX | TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2009) | This was a Tables match. | |
97 | John Cena | 6 | February 21, 2010 | <1 | St. Louis, MO | Elimination Chamber (2010) | This was an Elimination Chamber match, also involving Triple H, Orton, Sheamus, Ted DiBiase and Kofi Kingston. | |
98 | Batista | 2 | 35 | |||||
99 | John Cena | 7 | March 28, 2010 | 84 | Glendale, AZ | WrestleMania XXVI | ||
100 | Sheamus | 2 | June 20, 2010 | 91 | Uniondale, NY | Fatal 4-Way | This was a Fatal Four-Way match also involving Edge and Orton. | |
101 | Randy Orton | 6 | September 19, 2010 | 64 | Rosemont, IL | Night of Champions (2010) | This was a Six-Pack Challenge Elimination match also involving Edge, Cena, Jericho and Wade Barrett. | |
102 | The Miz | 1 | November 22, 2010 | 160 | Orlando, FL | Raw | The Miz cashed in his Money in the Bank contract after Orton successfully defended the WWE Championship against Barrett. | |
103 | John Cena | 8 | May 1, 2011 | 77 | Tampa, FL | Extreme Rules (2011) | This was a triple threat steel cage match also involving John Morrison. | |
104 | CM Punk | 1 | July 17, 2011 | 28 | Rosemont, IL | Money in the Bank (2011) | Punk was scripted to leave WWE the day after with the championship. He returned on the July 25 episode of Raw; his reign was deemed to continue through this period. | |
105 | Rey Mysterio (and CM Punk) |
1 (1) |
July 25, 2011 | <1 | Hampton, VA | Raw | Defeated The Miz in the final of an eight man tournament to crown a new champion. CM Punk was also the WWE Champion at this time. | |
106 | John Cena (and CM Punk) |
9 (1) |
20 | CM Punk was also the WWE Champion at this time. | ||||
— | CM Punk | 1 | August 14, 2011 | <1 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam (2011) | Beat Cena in a match to determine the undisputed champion. This is considered a continuation of his first reign. Triple H was the special guest referee. | |
107 | Alberto Del Rio | 1 | August 14, 2011 | 35 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam (2011) | Cashed in his Money in the Bank contract and defeated CM Punk, who had just become the undisputed WWE Champion but was attacked by Kevin Nash after defeating Cena. | |
108 | John Cena | 10 | September 18, 2011 | 14 | Buffalo, NY | Night of Champions (2011) | ||
109 | Alberto Del Rio | 2 | October 2, 2011 | 49 | New Orleans, LA | Hell in a Cell (2011) | This was a triple threat Hell in a Cell match also involving CM Punk. | |
110 | CM Punk | 2 | November 20, 2011 | 434 | New York, NY | Survivor Series (2011) | ||
111 | The Rock | 8 | January 27, 2013 | 70 | Phoenix, AZ | Royal Rumble | Punk had initially won, but the match was then restarted by Vince McMahon due to interference by The Shield. | |
112 | John Cena | 11 | April 7, 2013 | 133 | East Rutherford, NJ | WrestleMania 29 | ||
113 | Daniel Bryan | 1 | August 18, 2013 | <1 | Los Angeles, CA | SummerSlam (2013) | Triple H was the special guest referee. | |
114 | Randy Orton | 7 | 28 | Orton cashed in his Money in the Bank contract. Triple H, who attacked Bryan immediately preceding the match, was the special guest referee. | ||||
115 | Daniel Bryan | 2 | September 15, 2013 | 1 | Detroit, MI | Night of Champions (2013) | ||
— | Vacated | — | September 16, 2013 | — | Cleveland, OH | Raw | Vacated after a controversial finish when Bryan defeated Orton to win the title. A subsequent match for the vacant title at Battleground between Bryan and Orton ended in a no-contest. | |
116 | Randy Orton | 8 | October 27, 2013 | 4,080+ | Miami, FL | Hell in a Cell (2013) | Defeated Daniel Bryan in a Hell in a Cell match for the vacant title with Shawn Michaels serving as the special guest referee. On December 15, 2013 at the TLC pay-per-view, Orton defeated John Cena to unify the World Heavyweight Championship into his WWE Championship. The title is now known as the WWE World Heavyweight Championship. |
List of combined reigns
Symbol | Meaning |
---|---|
Indicates the current champion | |
<1 | The reign is shorter than one day. |
As of December 28, 2024.
Rank | Champion | No. of reigns | Combined Days |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Bruno Sammartino | 2 | 4,040 |
2 | Hulk Hogan | 6 | 2,185 |
3 | Bob Backlund | 2 | 2,138 |
4 | John Cena | 11 | 1,191 |
5 | Pedro Morales | 1 | 1,027 |
6 | Bret Hart | 5 | 654 |
7 | Randy Orton | 8 | 4528+ |
8 | Triple H | 8 | 539 |
9 | Steve Austin | 6 | 529 |
10 | Randy Savage | 2 | 520 |
11 | CM Punk | 2 | 462 |
12 | Shawn Michaels | 3 | 396 |
13 | The Rock | 8 | 367 |
14 | Diesel | 1 | 358 |
15 | Brock Lesnar | 3 | 355 |
16 | Kurt Angle | 4 | 297 |
17 | Billy Graham | 1 | 296 |
18 | The Ultimate Warrior | 1 | 293 |
19 | John "Bradshaw" Layfield | 1 | 280 |
Yokozuna | 2 | 280 | |
21 | The Undertaker | 4 | 238 |
22 | Sheamus | 2 | 161 |
23 | The Miz | 1 | 160 |
24 | Edge | 4 | 139 |
25 | Eddie Guerrero | 1 | 133 |
26 | Ric Flair | 2 | 118 |
27 | Chris Jericho | 1 | 98 |
28 | Sycho Sid | 2 | 97 |
29 | Alberto Del Rio | 2 | 84 |
30 | The Big Show | 2 | 78 |
31 | Sgt. Slaughter | 1 | 64 |
32 | Mankind | 3 | 47 |
33 | Jeff Hardy | 1 | 42 |
34 | Batista | 2 | 37 |
35 | The Iron Sheik | 1 | 28 |
36 | Buddy Rogers | 1 | 22 |
Rob Van Dam | 1 | 22 | |
38 | Ivan Koloff | 1 | 21 |
39 | Stan Stasiak | 1 | 9 |
40 | Vince McMahon | 1 | 6 |
41 | Kane | 1 | 1 |
Daniel Bryan | 2 | 1 | |
43 | Rey Mysterio | 1 | <1 |
André the Giant | 1 | <1 |
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- "Yokozuna's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-20.
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- "Yokozuna's second reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-20.
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- "Bob Backlund's second reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-20.
- "Diesel's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-20.
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- "Shawn Michaels's reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-21.
- "Sycho Sid's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-21.
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- http://www.wwe.com/shows/judgmentday/history/judgmentday1998/mainevent/
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- ^ "Mr. McMahon's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-22.
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- "The Big Show's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-22.
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- "Kurt Angle's third reign". WWE. Retrieved 2007-03-22.
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- "John Cena's third reign". WWE. Retrieved 2012-08-03.
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- "Sheamus' second reign". WWE. Retrieved 2010-09-20.
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- "The Miz's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
- "John Cena's eighth reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-05-24.
- "CM Punk's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
- "Rey Mysterio's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-07-25.
- "John Cena's ninth reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-07-27.
- "Alberto Del Rio's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-08-15.
- "John Cena's tenth reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-09-19.
- "Alberto Del Rio's second reign". WWE. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
- "CM Punk's second reign". WWE. Retrieved 2012-02-19.
- "The Rock's eighth reign". WWE. Retrieved 2013-01-28.
- "John Cena's eleventh reign". WWE. Retrieved 2013-04-08.
- "Daniel Bryan's first reign". WWE. Retrieved 2013-08-19.
- "Randy Orton's seventh reign". WWE. Retrieved 2013-09-16.
- "Daniel Bryan's second reign". WWE. Retrieved 2013-09-16.
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- "Randy Orton's eighth reign". WWE. Retrieved October 27, 2013.
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