


During this time, the Big Gold Belt represented the NWA World Heavyweight Championship as well as the newly established WCW World Heavyweight Championship. In January 1991, WCW officially recognized Ric Flair as their world champion in conjunction with the NWA's recognition.

WCW World Heavyweight Championship ĭiamond Dallas Page as WCW World Heavyweight Champion
Design championship belt tv#
He launched the promotion World Championship Wrestling (WCW), which took its name from JCP's flagship tv show, and inherited its membership in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), continuing to promote the NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair. In 1988, the assets of JCP were purchased by media mogul Ted Turner, whose cable network TBS broadcast JCP programming. The championship belt debuted on February 14, 1986, at a Championship Wrestling from Florida card called "Battle of the Belts II", where NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair defended the title against Barry Windham. Jim Crockett Jr., of Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP), commissioned Charles Crumrine, a Reno, Nevada, silversmith specializing in rodeo-style belt buckles, to produce the new championship belt. The Big Gold Belt was first introduced in 1986 to replace the NWA World Heavyweight Championship belt that had been used since 1973, historically known as the "domed globe", and nicknamed by both wrestlers and fans the "Ten Pounds of Gold". History NWA World Heavyweight Championship 1.7 Unbranded World Heavyweight Championship.1.4 WCW International World Heavyweight Championship.1.3 "Real World's Heavyweight Championship".Following the championship belt's introduction in WWE, the distinctive name plate feature of the Big Gold Belt was swiftly incorporated into the belt designs of other WWE championships. In 2003, World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) added its logo to the design for copyright purposes. The original championship belt design was known for being unbranded as it only read "World Heavyweight Wrestling Champion" and bore no initials or trademark of its owning promotion. While not the first wrestling championship belt to incorporate a name plate, it popularized the concept. Originally designed in 1985 by silversmith Charles Crumrine and commissioned by Jim Crockett Promotions for NWA World Heavyweight Champion Ric Flair, the championship belt has three large gold plates with a distinctive name plate onto which the champion's name was etched.
Design championship belt professional#
The Big Gold Belt is a historic professional wrestling championship belt that has represented multiple world championships throughout its history. WWE would reintroduce the design for the unbranded World Heavyweight Championship in 2002, incorporating their logo. The original Big Gold Belt first used in the National Wrestling Alliance, then World Championship Wrestling, and finally WWE (then World Wrestling Federation).
