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NWA Florida Tag Team Championship

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Championship Wrestling from Florida (CWF) was the corporate and brand name of the Tampa, Florida wrestling office existing from 1961, when Eddie Graham first bought into the promotion, until 1987, when it closed down. It is also referred to as Florida Championship Wrestling . When Mike Graham tried a return to promoting, the rights to the name had been acquired by an outside party, forcing him to use another name, Florida Championship Wrestling .

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74-711: Professional wrestling tag team championship NWA Florida Tag Team Championship [REDACTED] A previous version of the championship belt Details Promotion Championship Wrestling from Florida NWA Florida Pro Wrestling Fusion NWA Florida Underground NWA Florida Wrestling Alliance Date established December 10, 1968 Statistics First champion(s) The Medics Most reigns Mike Graham and Steve Keirn (11 times) Longest reign Vince Lewis and James Morrison (745 days) Shortest reign Hiro Matsuda and Tim Woods (15 days) The NWA Florida Tag Team Championship

148-558: A ring announcer . When Eddie Graham committed suicide in January 1985, due to a combination of personal and business problems, responsibility for the office went to Hiro Matsuda and Duke Keomuka , both of whom bought in during the 1960s. The other remaining owners were Mike Graham, Eddie's brother Skip Gossett, Dusty Rhodes and Buddy Colt . The promotion continued losing money and merged with Jim Crockett Promotions in February 1987. Most of

222-474: A fill-in for absent or injured wrestlers in house shows or dark matches , as well as assisting with setting up the ring . With his decades of experience, during his last five years with the WWF Sprott also took on the role of referee . Sprott finally left the sport around 1996, stating in a 2006 interview that "... for thirty-six years I was a professional wrestler and loved every minute of it". Hunter

296-792: A level necessary to enhance the territory further. In May he decided to part ways with the PWF and join the World Wrestling Federation as a wrestler. Before departing, Rhodes was defeated by The Big Steel Man on May 13, 1989 for the PWF title at an event in Sarasota, FL. His final match with the company was on May 20, where he wrestled Steel Man at an event in Fort Lauderdale. The promotion closed shortly after holding its last show June 29, 1991, in Nassau, Bahamas, which saw Tyree Pride beat Steve Keirn for

370-2112: A match between Mike Graham and Steve Keirn vs. Ivan Koloff and Mr. Saito.   81 Ivan Koloff (3) and Mr. Saito December 6, 1977 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 27 Defeated the Masked Marauders in a tournament final.   82 Mike Graham (9) and Steve Keirn (3) January 2, 1978 CWF Show Florida 2 8     83 Ivan Koloff (4) and Mr. Saito January 10, 1978 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 3 14     84 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (8) and Jerry Brisco ) January 24, 1978 CWF Show Miami, Florida 6 42     85 Mr. Saito (4) and Mr. Sato March 7, 1978 CWF Show Florida 1 98     86 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (9) and Jerry Brisco ) June 13, 1978 CWF Show Miami, Florida 7 14     87 The Spoilers ( Spoiler I and Spoiler II ) June 27, 1978 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 46     88 Mike Graham (10) and Steve Keirn (4) August 12, 1978 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 3 5     89 The Spoilers ( Spoiler I and Spoiler II ) August 17, 1978 CWF Show Florida 2 19     90 Mike Graham (11) and Steve Keirn (5) September 5, 1978 CWF Show Lakeland, Florida 4 6     91 Mr. Saito (5) and Mr. Sato September 11, 1978 CWF Show Florida 2 12     92 Mike Graham (12) and Steve Keirn (6) September 23, 1978 CWF Show Florida 5 10     93 Kox and Bobby Duncum (3) October 3, 1978 CWF Show Florida 1 11     94 Pak Song and Eric

444-1778: A match between Stan Lane and Bryan St. John vs. Mr. Sakurada and Mr. Hito.   105 Mike Graham (16) and Steve Keirn (10) November 13, 1979 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 8 12 Defeated Mr. Sakurada and Mr. Hito in a tournament final.   106 Stan Lane and Bryan St. John November 25, 1979 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 2 106     107 Jack Brisco (10) and Jimmy Garvin (2) March 10, 1980 CWF Show West Palm Beach, Florida 1 52     108 Stan Lane and Bryan St. John May 1, 1980 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 3 52     109 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (10) and Jerry Brisco ) June 22, 1980 CWF Show Orlando, Florida 8 46     110 Ivan Koloff (5) and Nikolai Volkoff August 7, 1980 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 1 33     111 Dusty Rhodes (4) and Bobo Brazil (2) September 9, 1980 CWF Show Florida 1 39     112 Barry Windham and Scott McGhee October 18, 1980 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 45     113 The Cowboy Connection ( Bobby Jaggers and R.T. Tyler) December 2, 1980 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 31     114 Barry Windham (2) and Mike Graham (17) January 2, 1981 CWF Show Orlando, Florida 1 10     — Vacated January 12, 1981 — — — — After Barry Windham won

518-740: A match between The Brisco Brothers and Ivan Koloff and Pat Patterson.   77 Ivan Koloff and Pat Patterson June 20, 1977 CWF Show West Palm Beach, Florida 1 91     78 Rocky Johnson and Pedro Morales September 19, 1977 CWF Show West Palm Beach, Florida 1 37     79 Ivan Koloff (2) and Mr. Saito October 26, 1977 CWF Show Florida 1 28     80 Mike Graham (8) and Steve Keirn (2) November 23, 1977 CWF Show Florida 1 3     — Vacated November 26, 1977 — — — — After

592-2698: A rematch.   4 Brian Blair (3) and Cyborg November 14, 2000 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 238 Blair defeated Keirn to win the controls for the tag team titles and choose a new partner.   — Vacated July 10, 2001 — — — — Vacated when both wrestlers were injured.   5 The Shane Twins ( Mike and Todd Shane ) July 10, 2001 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 151 Won three-way match.   5 Quickiemart (Yaz and Agent Steele) December 8, 2001 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 62     6 Wrongful Death (Naphtali and Dagon Briggs) February 8, 2002 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 49     7 Nick Berk and Z-Barr March 29, 2002 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 1     8 Wrongful Death (Naphtali and Dagon Briggs) March 30, 2002 CWF Show Crystal River, Florida 2 56     9 The Shane Twins ( Mike and Todd Shane ) May 25, 2002 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 2 139     10 Scoot Andrews and Mike Sullivan October 11, 2002 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 120     11 The Shane Twins ( Mike and Todd Shane ) February 8, 2003 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 3 126     12 The Vandalz (Tommy Vandal and Ricky Vandal) June 14, 2003 CWF Show Pinellas Park, Florida 1 63     13 The Shane Twins ( Mike and Todd Shane ) August 16, 2003 CWF Show Pinellas Park, Florida 4 196     14 Fahrenheit 420 (Stash and David Mercury) February 28, 2004 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 49     15 Mikey Tenderfoot and Justice April 17, 2004 CWF Show Brandon, Florida 1 154     16 Jerrelle Clark and Mikey Batts September 18, 2004 CWF Show Brandon, Florida 1 63     17 Frankie Capone and Marcus Dillon November 20, 2004 CWF Show Brandon, Florida 1     — Deactivated June 2005 — — — — NWA Florida closed   Pro Wrestling Fusion [ edit ] Key No. Overall reign number Reign Reign number for

666-615: A sixty-minute time-limit draw, with a rematch on 21 May going for ninety minutes before The Gladiator lost by disqualification. The Gladiator teamed with Lester Welch to defeat the team of The Medics (Billy Garrett and Jim Starr) for the NWA Florida Tag Team Championship on 29 April in Tampa, becoming only the second team to hold this title. The Gladiator and Welch lost these belts to the team of Yasuhiro Kojima and The Missouri Mauler on 27 May. The Gladiator then regained

740-719: A street fight St. Petersburg, Florida 1 168   6 Team Lucha (Jay Rios and Cruz) September 26, 2014 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 170     7 Generation Genesis (Mitch Mitchell and Jeff Boom) March 15, 2015 CWF Show Plant City, Florida 2 226 Defeated Circle of Disrespect ( Francisco Ciatso and Simon Sez.)   8 Dirty Blondes (Leo Brien and Mike Patrick) October 27, 2015 CWF Show Brandon, Florida 1 }} Defeated Circle of Disrespect (Francisco Ciatso and Simon Sez.)   — Deactivated November 2015 — — — — Promotion left

814-809: A variation of his real name, Buddy Sprott. He won his first championship, the Atlas Wrestling Club junior heavyweight title, by defeating Ray Lasko in September 1958 in Lockport, Manitoba . In September 1961 he teamed with George Eakin to defeat John DePaulo and Stan Mykietowich to win the Madison Wrestling Club tag team titles in Winnipeg, losing them two months later to Bob Brown and John DePaulo. In early 1962 Sprott expanded from his base in Manitoba, entering

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888-633: Is the primary tag team title in NWA Florida Underground Wrestling. It started out in 1968 as the main tag team title in Championship Wrestling from Florida and lasted until 1990 when it was abandoned. It was picked back up in 1997 by NWA Florida, where it was the primary tag team title until June 2005, when the company shut down. In August 2009, the title was picked up by Florida-based Pro Wrestling Fusion until 2011. NWA Florida Underground transformed its FUW Tag Team championship to

962-446: Is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 18 and 47 days. ^ The exact date the championship reign began is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 13 and 42 days. ^ The exact date the championship was abandoned is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 50 and 80 days. ^ The length of the championship reign is too uncertain to calculate. ^ The exact date

1036-403: Is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 20 and 50 days. ^ The exact date that the championship reign ended is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 22 and 52 days. ^ The exact date the championship reign ended is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 84 and 114 days. ^ The exact date that the championship reign ended

1110-471: The Cuban Assassin and Pepe Prado to win the championship.   — Vacated August 15, 2000 — — — — Championship held up after match between Steve Keirn and Brian Blair and The Bushwackers ended in controversial fashion.   3 Steve Keirn (15) and Brian Blair September 2000 CWF Show N/A 2 Defeated The Bushwackers in

1184-827: The NWA Canadian Tag Team Championship in Vancouver . This was Sprott's first and only title as the maskless Ricky Hunter, and the last championship title he would hold; they dropped these belts to Lewis and Mr. Saito on 10 August 1975. Sprott remained wrestling chiefly in California and the Northwest until mid- to late 1979. He then spent several months in the American Wrestling Association (AWA) in Minneapolis, and from mid-1980 divided his time between

1258-712: The NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship for the first time. The Gladiator dropped the belt to Hans Mortier two-and-half months later, on 4 February 1969. Following this, on 3 April 1969 in Jacksonville The Gladiator defeated Boris Malenko for the NWA Florida Brass Knuckles Championship , which he lost back to Malenko two weeks later on 17 April. On 23 April The Gladiator fought the reigning NWA World Heavyweight Champion and future Hall of Famer Dory Funk, Jr. to

1332-781: The NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship .   115 The Cowboy Connection ( Bobby Jaggers and R.T. Tyler) January 16, 1981 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 27 Defeated Manny Fernandez and Mike Graham for the vacant titles.   116 Dusty Rhodes (5) and André the Giant February 12, 1981 CWF Show Ft. Lauderdale, Florida 1 3     — Deactivated February 15, 1981 N/A N/A — —     117 New Breed ( Chris Champion and Sean Royal ) December 25, 1986 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 58 Defeated Kendall Windham and Vic Steamboat to win

1406-741: The NWA Western States promotion, based in Amarillo, Texas , famous as the home territory of the Funks. Wrestling as The Spartan, on 14 April 1971 he defeated Pak Song to win the NWA Western States Heavyweight Championship , losing the belt to Terry Funk in May. He returned to the Hawaii and California territories through to 1972, wrestling again as Ricky Hunter. In April 1972 he returned to

1480-591: The NWA World Tag Team Championship The FUW Tag Team Titles were renamed the NWA Florida Tag Team Championship 4 Kennedy Kendrick and Deimos January 25, 2014 NWA FUW Underground Shines 2 Tampa, Florida 1 76 Won a Fatal Four-way match   5 Generation Genesis (Mitch Mitchell and Jeff Boom) April 11, 2014 Defeated Kennedy Kendrick in

1554-514: The bookers as he was able to take on a multitude of roles. Sprott stated that at times he would wrestle two matches in a night, one as each of his characters. Sprott's last recorded match with the WWF was on December 11, 1990 in Tampa, Florida , where he teamed with Dennis Allen losing to The Bushwhackers on WWF Superstars of Wrestling . Despite this, Sprott stayed in the business, wrestling occasionally as

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1628-768: The masked wrestler The Gladiator . He was best known for his title-winning success in Championship Wrestling from Florida in the late 1960s, and for his stint from the mid-1980s in the World Wrestling Federation (now WWE). Sprott was active for over 30 years, mainly performing in a number of National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) promotions. He wrestled throughout the United States and Canada , and internationally, including in Australia , Japan , and England . Sprott made his debut on October 16, 1957 in his hometown of Winnipeg , Manitoba , Canada , wrestling under

1702-478: The ASWA Georgia Tag Team Championship, which they would hold until 9 October before losing it back to the same opponents. On Friday, 24 August 1973 The Atlanta Constitution & Journal reported that Sprott had sued the reigning NWA World Heavyweight Champion Jack Brisco for slander and harassment , seeking a $ 75,000 payment plus losses. The lawsuit arose from an alleged incident in

1776-797: The AWA and the NWA Pacific Northwest, as well as spending some time overseas, including in England . Sprott said after retiring that the Portland territory was by far his favourite, and he also enjoyed wrestling in the San Francisco territory, thus explaining the extended time he spent in these areas. Throughout this period Sprott shared the ring with many of the biggest names in wrestling, as both opponents and tag team partners. This included both past and future World Champions, and future Hall of Famers , including

1850-638: The Giant , Jim Duggan , Butch Reed , Rick Steiner , The Freebirds , Cactus Jack , Scott Hall , Terry Allen (later more famous as Magnum T. A. ), Percy Pringle (later more famous as Paul Bearer ), Luna Vachon , Jimmy Garvin , Adrian Street , Héctor Guerrero , Chavo Guerrero Sr. , Oliver Humperdink , One Man Gang , J. J. Dillon , Gary Hart (wrestler) , Bob Roop , Mark Lewin , Dutch Mantel , Mike Graham (Eddie's son), The Sheepherders , Kevin Sullivan – whose cult-like Army of Darkness got tremendous heat from

1924-555: The Great Malenko (Larry Simon), Johnny Valentine , Hiro Matsuda , Bob Orton Sr. and later Bob Orton Jr. , Joe Scarpa (later known as Chief Jay Strongbow), Wahoo McDaniel , the Funks ( Terry and Dory Jr. ), the Briscos ( Jack and Jerry ), Buddy Colt (Ron Read), Dusty Rhodes , Blackjack Mulligan , Bruiser Brody , Kendall Windham , Barry Windham , Mike Rotunda , Lex Luger , Rick Rood (later Rick Rude ), Harley Race , André

1998-461: The NWA Footnotes [ edit ] ^ This was Doug Gilbert under a mask. ^ The exact date the championship reign ended is uncertain, which means it lasted between 1 and 22 days. ^ The exact date the championship reign began is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 11 and 33 days. ^ The exact date that the championship reign ended

2072-1670: The NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship   — Vacated June 8, 1976 — — — — After a match between The Brisco Brothers and Bob Orton and Bob Roop.   69 Bob Orton Sr. (5) and Bob Roop (5) June 22, 1976 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 7 Defeated the Brisco Brothers in a rematch.   70 Bob Backlund and Steve Keirn June 29, 1976 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 70     71 The Hollywood Blonds ( Buddy Roberts and Jerry Brown) September 7, 1976 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 55     72 Mike Graham (7) and Ken Lucas November 1, 1976 CWF Show Orlando, Florida 1 43     73 Bob Orton Jr. (6) and Bob Roop (6) December 14, 1976 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 3 27     74 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (6) and Jerry Brisco ) January 10, 1977 CWF Show Orlando, Florida 4 82     75 Ox Baker and "Superstar" Billy Graham April 2, 1977 CWF Show N/A 1 62     76 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (7) and Jerry Brisco ) June 3, 1977 CWF Show Ft. Lauderdale, Florida 5 10     — Vacated June 13, 1977 — — — — After

2146-571: The NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship by defeating Mortier on 13 June 1969 to become a two time heavyweight champion, but shortly after again lost the belt back to Mortier. Following his successful run in Florida, Sprott again moved around the wrestling territories of the time. Throughout the remainder of 1969 and 1970 he returned to Hawaii as Ricky Hunter, and fought through Shire's San Francisco territory as The Gladiator. In early 1971 he again toured Japan as Ricky Hunter, and then spent several months in

2220-644: The NWA Florida Tag Team championship in 2012 Title history [ edit ] Key Symbol Meaning No. The overall championship reign Reign The reign number for the specific wrestler listed. Event The event in which the championship changed hands N/A The specific information is not known — Used for vacated reigns in order to not count it as an official reign Championship Wrestling from Florida [ edit ] Key No. Overall reign number Reign Reign number for

2294-510: The PWF Florida Championship. CWF filmed and later taped its weekly TV wrestling show at the famed Sportatorium at 106 N. Albany in Tampa, Fla., which was in reality a small television studio with seating for a live audience of about 100 people (1/40th of the seating capacity of its Dallas counterpart ), with the wrestling office and gym in the same building. Arena footage was always also used, and full arena show broadcasts began in

NWA Florida Tag Team Championship - Misplaced Pages Continue

2368-784: The Pacific Northwest as Ricky Hunter, as well as still appearing in Manitoba as Buddy Sprott. During this time he faced notable opponents such as Mad Dog Vachon , Pat Patterson , and Mr. Fuji . Sprott continued to develop his in-ring ability and success rate, wrestling mainly in Hawaii and the American and Canadian Pacific Northwest through to 1966, but including at least one international tour, wrestling in Australia in 1963. In March 1966 Sprott began wrestling in Roy Shire's NWA San Francisco territory, where he would remain for most of that year. Sprott credited his time in California with Shire as

2442-681: The Pacific Northwest, where he remained for the rest of the year. In 1973 he moved onto World Class Championship Wrestling based in Texas . In mid-1973, adopting the new moniker of The Super Gladiator, he entered the recently created independent All-South Wrestling Alliance (ASWA) based in Atlanta , a non- National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) competitor to Georgia Championship Wrestling. On 31 July 1973 in Atlanta The Super Gladiator teamed with Tommy Seigler to beat Rock Hunter and Assassin #2 to win

2516-880: The Red October 14, 1978 CWF Show Lakeland, Florida 1 27     95 Pak Song (2) and Mr. Uganda (6) November 10, 1978 N/A N/A 1 85 Title given to Mr. Uganda, after Eric the Red was involved in a traffic accident.   96 Mike Graham (13) and Steve Keirn (7) February 3, 1979 CWF Show Florida 6 26     97 Bugsy McGraw and Pak Song (3) March 1, 1979 CWF Show Florida 1 25     98 Mike Graham (14) and Steve Keirn (8) March 26, 1979 CWF Show West Palm Beach, Florida 7     99 Bugsy McGraw (2) and Thor

2590-943: The Viking May 1979 CWF Show Florida 1     100 Jimmy Garvin and Steve Keirn (9) July 31, 1979 CWF Show Florida 1 25     101 Mr. Hito and Mr. Sakurada August 25, 1979 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 35     102 Bobo Brazil and Sweet Brown Sugar September 29, 1979 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 10     103 Ray Stevens (2) and Mike Graham (15) October 9, 1979 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 21     104 Stan Lane and Bryan St. John October 30, 1979 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 7     — Vacated November 6, 1979 — — — — After

2664-596: The WWF). Dusty Rhodes made his debut for the company on March 4, 1989 at an event in Titusville, FL when he teamed with Steve Keirn to defeat the duo of The Big Steel Man and Dick Slaytor. A week later at the PWF Homecoming event in Tampa, FL he pinned Big Steel Man to become the first PWF Heavyweight Champion. Later that spring as the PWF began to grow Rhodes received a surprise backstage visit from Bobby Heenan , who inquired on

2738-968: The area.   60 Ciclón Negro (4) and Omar Negro July 9, 1975 CWF Show Miami Beach, Florida 1 38 Won a tag team battle royal.   61 J. J. Dillon (2) and Roger Kirby (3) August 16, 1975 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 32     62 Ciclón Negro (5) and Omar Negro September 17, 1975 CWF Show Miami Beach, Florida 2 89     63 Roger Kirby (4) and Rip Hawk December 15, 1975 CWF Show West Palm Beach, Florida 1 8     64 Eddie Graham and Mike Graham (6) December 23, 1975 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 28     65 Bob Orton Jr. and Bob Roop (3) January 20, 1976 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 0 Defeated Eddie Graham and Bill Dromo, who

2812-3174: The championship under the name "The Zodiac".   — Vacated September 5, 1972 — — — — Orton defeated Matsuda to win both tag team belts, but the NWA ruled that the championship was vacant.   36 Ron Fuller and Jimmy Golden September 19, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 21 Defeated Paul Jones and Dick Murdoch in tournament final.   37 Norvell Austin and Sputnik Monroe October 10, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 37     38 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (5) and Jerry Brisco ) November 16, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 3 41     39 Bobby Shane (2) and Chris Markoff (3) December 27, 1972 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 21     40 Tim Woods (2) and Big Bad John January 17, 1973 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 27   41 Bobby Shane (3) and Gorgeous George Jr. February 13, 1973 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 7     42 Mike Graham and Kevin Sullivan February 20, 1973 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 102 43 The Samoans (Tio Tio and Reno Tufuuli) June 2, 1973 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 59   44 Mike Graham and Kevin Sullivan July 31, 1973 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 14     45 The Samoans (Tio Tio and Reno Tufuuli) August 14, 1973 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 7     46 Mike Graham and Kevin Sullivan August 21, 1973 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 3 46     47 Dick Slater and Dusty Rhodes (2) October 6, 1973 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 48     48 Jos LeDuc and Paul LeDuc November 23, 1973 CWF Show Tallahassee, Florida 1 81     49 Dick Slater (2) and Stan Vachon February 12, 1974 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 29     50 Haystacks Calhoun and Kevin Sullivan (4) March 13, 1974 CWF Show Miami Beach, Florida 1 6     51 The Hollywood Blonds ( Buddy Roberts and Jerry Brown) March 19, 1974 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 168     52 Dick Slater (3) and Mike Graham (4) September 3, 1974 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 14     53 Dusty Rhodes (3) and Mike Graham (5) September 17, 1974 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 14 Graham defeated Slater to win

2886-2679: The championship was won is unknown, which means the championship reign lasted between 45 and 74 days. ^ The exact date NWA Florida closed is uncertain, which means that the championship reign lasted between 193 and 222 days. ^ The exact date the promotion left the NWA is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 5 and 34 days. References [ edit ] ^ Royal Duncan and Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN   0-9698161-5-4 . ^ "NWA Florida Tag Team Title" . Wrestling-titles.com . ^ Hoops, Brian (April 17, 2020). "Daily pro wrestling (04/17): WCW Spring Stampede 1994" . Wrestling Observer Newsletter . Retrieved April 17, 2020 . v t e Championship Wrestling from Florida Championships World NWA World Heavyweight Championship NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship NWA World Tag Team Championship (Florida version) National NWA North American Tag Team Championship (Florida version) NWA United States Tag Team Championship (Florida version) Regional NWA Brass Knuckles Championship (Florida version) NWA Florida Bahamian Championship NWA Florida Global Tag Team Championship NWA Florida Heavyweight Championship NWA Florida Junior Heavyweight Championship NWA Florida Tag Team Championship NWA Florida Television Championship NWA Florida Women's Championship NWA Southern Heavyweight Championship (Florida version) NWA Southern Tag Team Championship (Florida version) NWA Southern Women's Championship (Florida version) Personnel Eddie Graham Mike Graham Duke Keomuka Hiro Matsuda Dusty Rhodes Gordon Solie Home base Tampa Sportatorium Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=NWA_Florida_Tag_Team_Championship&oldid=1249271832 " Categories : Championship Wrestling from Florida championships National Wrestling Alliance championships Professional wrestling in Florida State professional wrestling championships Tag team wrestling championships National Wrestling Alliance state wrestling championships Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Articles with hCards Championship Wrestling from Florida The original owner and promoter

2960-650: The championship.   10 The Nasty Boys ( Brian Knobs and Jerry Sags ) August 22, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 4 56     11 Jumbo Barretta and Dennis Knight October 17, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1 26     12 Mark Starr and Lou Pérez November 12, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1 4     13 The Bounty Hunters ( Big Al Green and Tim Parker) November 16, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1 51 Defeated Lou Pérez and Brickhouse Brown to win

3034-1352: The championship.   118 Southern Boys ( Steve Armstrong and Tracy Smothers ) February 21, 1987 CWF Show Sarasota, Florida 1 22     119 The MOD Squad ( Basher and Spike ) March 15, 1987 CWF Show N/A 1 33     120 Mike Graham (18) and Steve Keirn (11) April 17, 1987 CWF Show N/A 9 67   121 The Sheepherders ( Butch Miller and Luke Williams ) June 23, 1987 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 67     122 Mike Graham (19) and Steve Keirn (12) August 29, 1987 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 10 10     123 The Mighty Yankees (Bob Cook and Jerry Grey) September 8, 1987 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 39     124 Mike Graham (20) and Steve Keirn (13) October 17, 1987 CWF Show Lakeland, Florida 11     — Vacated December 1987 — — — — CWF Closed   Florida Championship Wrestling (Renamed FCW Tag Team Titles) [ edit ] Key No. Overall reign number Reign Reign number for

NWA Florida Tag Team Championship - Misplaced Pages Continue

3108-1231: The championship.   14 The Nasty Boys ( Brian Knobs and Jerry Sags ) January 6, 1990 FCW Show Nassau, Bahamas 5 96     15 Robert Fuller and Kendall Windham April 12, 1990 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1 27     16 Mike Graham (22) and Joe Gomez May 9, 1990 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1     vacated August 1990 N/A N/A Mike Graham retired   17 Mark Starr (2) and Sgt. Rock September 13, 1990 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1 Defeated Joe Gomez and Hurricane Walker   18 Hurricane Walker and Tim Parker October 1990 FCW Show Florida 1     19 Sgt. Rock and Ron Slinker November 12, 1990 FCW Show Florida 1     — Deactivated January 1991 N/A N/A — —     NWA Florida Major League Wrestling / NWA Florida [ edit ] Key No. Overall reign number Reign Reign number for

3182-437: The control of the NWA Florida Tag Team Championship and chose Johnny Weaver as the new tag team partner.   58 Harley Race and Roger Kirby April 16, 1975 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 59     59 Roger Kirby (2) and Bob Roop (2) June 14, 1975 CWF Show St. Petersburg, Florida 1 25 Bob Roop replaced Harley Race after Race left

3256-667: The control of the tag team titles and chose Rhodes as his new partner.   54 Dick Slater (4) and Toru Tanaka October 1, 1974 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 88     55 Dominic DeNucci and Tony Parisi December 28, 1974 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 0     56 Dick Slater (5) and J. J. Dillon February 4, 1975 CWF Show Florida 1 7     57 Dick Slater (6) and Johnny Weaver February 11, 1975 CWF Show Florida 1 64 Dick Slater defeated J. J. Dillon to win

3330-628: The dormant CWF territory. Once Dusty departed from WCW they reached out to him, and ultimately partnered to launch the new Professional Wrestling Federation in February 1989. Rhodes had larger visions for the fledgling regional territory, which included a name change from FCW to the non-regional PWF. The new startup promotion featured a raft of current and future stars, including Terry Funk , Dick Slater , Bam Bam Bigelow , Al Perez , The Nasty Boys , Scott Hall , Dustin Rhodes , Mike Awesome , Dallas Page and The Big Steel Man (who would become Tugboat in

3404-437: The early '80s. CWF Spin-off shows were Championship Wrestling Superstars , Global Wrestling , North Florida Championship Wrestling , United States Class Wrestling , American Championship Wrestling and Southern Professional Wrestling . In 1960, Gordon Solie became the lead announcer for CWF's Saturday morning television shows, a spot he would occupy for the next quarter-century. In 1980, he hired singer Barbara Clary, who

3478-405: The fans – and, in the words of the promotion's legendary commentator and a star in his own right Gordon Solie , 'a host of others'. Solie's deadpan interviewing style often buoyed the outlandish behavior and actions of Sullivan and his minions, bringing a legitimacy to the on-air segments no matter what depths Sullivan would descend to. Dusty Rhodes stands out among the noted performers because of

3552-688: The larger wrestling market in the United States . He went to train with Verne Gagne of the American Wrestling Association in Minneapolis, Minnesota , and Don Owen of the Pacific Northwest Wrestling promotion in Portland, Oregon . He then wrestled with Ed Francis' promotion in Hawaii and Worldwide Wrestling Associates in Los Angeles run by Mike and Gene LeBell under the name Rocky Hunter, in

3626-613: The last recorded television champion when the promotion closed in November 1974. In mid-1974 Sprott went back to wrestling in California as Ricky Hunter. In April 1975 he again returned to wrestle in the NWA Pacific Northwest promotion and the Canadian Northwest Wrestling promotion's NWA: All-Star Wrestling based in British Columbia . On 16 June 1975 he teamed with Guy Mitchell to defeat Gene Kiniski and Dale Lewis for

3700-431: The likes of André the Giant , Jesse The Body Ventura , Rowdy Roddy Piper , Superfly Jimmy Snuka , Superstar Billy Graham , and Soulman Rocky Johnson . Approaching fifty years of age, and beyond his prime, Sprott joined the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) (now WWE) in mid-1985, shortly after the first WrestleMania event. In the WWF he performed as both Rick Hunter and The Gladiator, with both characters taking on

3774-567: The match between Jack Brisco and Nick Kozak and the Medics.   2 The Medics (Billy Garrett and Jim Starr) January 28, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 18 Won a tournament.   — Vacated February 15, 1969 — — — — Titles held up after match between Bobby and Lee Fields and the Medics.   3 The Medics (Billy Garrett and Jim Starr) February 18, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 3 70 Won

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3848-557: The number of rivalries he had on air through most of CWF's broadcasting history. Well known heels, newcomers and babyfaces who turned heel during their tenure with CWF often sought out Rhodes to make their names in the territory. His rivals over the years included Superstar Billy Graham , Ray Stevens , Ernie Ladd , Ivan Koloff , Ox Baker , Ron Bass , Kamala , Abdullah the Butcher , Ric Flair , his old Texas Outlaws partner Dick Murdoch and of course, Kevin Sullivan. Mike Moore served as

3922-446: The parking lot of WTCG-TV the previous month, where Sprott claimed Brisco had called him names "in hearing distance of a number of wrestling fans" waiting for a wrestling television taping. The result of the case is not known, but the alleged incident would have occurred at the height of tensions between the NWA's Georgia Championship Wrestling and Sprott's rebel independent All-South Wrestling Alliance. Just over two weeks after losing

3996-570: The point where they developed his masked wrestling character The Gladiator. In early 1967 Sprott moved onto Central States Wrestling where he would compete with the likes of Lou Thesz and Bob Orton , and later that year he entered Georgia Championship Wrestling . At the start of 1968 he undertook an extensive tour of Japan , wrestling with the Japan Wrestling Association , and then returned via Hawaii to again wrestle in Georgia. At

4070-727: The promotion began operating under the NXT banner, dropping references to FCW. On June 28, 2013, the WWE formally shuttered the Florida Championship Wrestling Arena, moving all equipment and personnel to the WWE Performance Center in Orlando. General Specific Ricky Hunter Charles B. Sprott (March 1, 1936 – February 8, 2022) was a Canadian professional wrestler, better known by his ring names Ricky Hunter and

4144-1691: The rematch 4 Lester Welch and The Gladiator April 29, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 28     5 Hiro Matsuda and Missouri Mauler May 27, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 56     6 Jack Brisco and Ciclón Negro July 22, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 14     7 Hiro Matsuda and Missouri Mauler August 5, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 29     8 Ciclón Negro (2) and Sammy Steamboat September 3, 1969 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 52   9 Bronko Lubich and Chris Markoff October 25, 1969 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 73     10 Ciclón Negro (3) and Jack Brisco January 6, 1970 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 24     11 Bronko Lubich and Chris Markoff January 30, 1970 CWF Show Tallahassee, Florida 2 43     12 Missouri Mauler (3) and Dale Lewis March 14, 1970 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 37     13 Jose Lothario and Argentina Apollo April 20, 1970 CWF Show Orlando, Florida 1 150     14 The Texas Outlaws ( Dick Murdoch and Dusty Rhodes ) September 17, 1970 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 1     — Vacated December 1970 — — — — The Texas Outlaws were stripped of

4218-436: The role of a jobber , cleanly losing to the stars of the day. Both Rick Hunter and The Gladiator made regular appearances on WWF Championship Wrestling and the later WWF Superstars of Wrestling , the WWF's nationally and internationally broadcast weekly television programs of the time. Despite the sustained record of losses at this time, Sprott's personas, particularly Rick Hunter, put up many creditable performances, and he

4292-797: The specific champion Days Number of days held No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref. Date Event Location Reign Days 1 Johnny Ace and The Terminator September 20, 1988 FCW show Tampa, Florida 1 107   2 The Nasty Boys ( Brian Knobs and Jerry Sags ) January 5, 1989 FCW Show Nassau, Bahamas 1 21     3 Johnny Ace and The Terminator January 26, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 2 57     4 The Nasty Boys ( Brian Knobs and Jerry Sags ) March 24, 1989 FCW Show St. Petersburg, Florida 2 4 This

4366-411: The specific champion Days Number of days held No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref. Date Event Location Reign Days 1 The Dark City Fight Club ( Jon Davis and Kory Chavis ) August 22, 2009 CWF Show Daytona Beach, Florida 1 224 Defeated Sinn Bodhi and Dagon to win

4440-636: The specific champion Days Number of days held No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref. Date Event Location Reign Days 1 Blackhearts (Apocalypse and Destruction ) 1997 CWF Show N/A 1 records are unclear as to whom they defeated   — Vacated 1998 — — — — Championship vacated for undocumented reasons   2 Steve Keirn (14) and Brian Blair November 13, 1998 CWF Show Gainesville, Florida 1 641 Defeated

4514-521: The specific champion Days Number of days held No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref. Date Event Location Reign Days 1 The Medics (Billy Garrett and Jim Starr) December 10, 1968 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 42 Defeated José Lothario and Wahoo McDaniel in a tournament final.   — Vacated January 21, 1969 — — — — Championship held up after

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4588-511: The stars had gone to Jim Crockett Promotions or the WWF by that point. CWF continued operating as a JCP subsidiary until its last card on November 14, 1987, in Robarts Arena in Sarasota; in the main event, NWA Western States Heritage champion Barry Windham battled Dory Funk Jr. to a 20-minute time-limit draw. In late 1988 during the acquisition of Jim Crockett Promotions the duo of Mike Graham and Steve Keirn were attempting to revive

4662-426: The start of November 1968 Sprott moved to the Championship Wrestling from Florida promotion, where he started performing as his masked persona of The Gladiator. He became one of the first wrestlers to employ the inverted suplex manoeuvre, and it was in this promotion that he had his greatest success, winning multiple titles over the next year. On 23 November 1968 The Gladiator defeated Nick Kozak in Tampa to win

4736-485: The state of the company's business. Shortly thereafter Vince McMahon reached out to Rhodes and made an offer to acquire the PWF as a developmental territory and to bring Rhodes into the WWF. He refused, as his desire was to grow the territory into a national brand that could compete with WCW and the WWF. However the Professional Wrestling Federation's backers did not have a desire to fund the company at

4810-600: The tag team titles he shared with Tommy Seigler, on 27 October 1973 The Super Gladiator defeated Seigler to win the ASWA Georgia Television Title. He would never relinquish this title, retaining it in his last recorded title defence against El Mongol in March 1974. Although briefly successful and attracting several high-profile wrestlers, the ASWA was squeezed out of business by the powerful NWA, with The Super Gladiator being

4884-1030: The title for being disqualified too many times.   15 Jose Lothario (2) and Danny Miller December 25, 1970 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 10 Defeated the Infernos in a one night six-tag team tournament.   16 The Infernos (Frankie Cain and Rocky Smith) January 4, 1971 CWF Show Orlando, Florida 1 43     17 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (3) and Jerry Brisco ) February 16, 1971 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 42   18 The Funk Brothers ( Dory Funk Jr. and Terry Funk ) March 30, 1971 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 14     19 The Brisco Brothers ( Jack Brisco (4) and Jerry Brisco ) April 13, 1971 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 2 57     — Vacated June 9, 1971 — — — — Jerry Brisco

4958-460: The vacant championship.   2 The New Heavenly Bodies ( Chris Nelson and Vito DeNucci) April 3, 2010 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 13     3 The Dark City Fight Club ( Jon Davis and Kory Chavis ) April 16, 2010   Sanford, Florida 2 218   — Vacated November 20, 2010 — — — — The Dark City Fight Club won

5032-414: Was "Cowboy" Clarence Preston Luttrall, a former journeyman heel wrestler who once fought a widely publicized boxing match, resulting from a wrestling angle, with a forty-something Jack Dempsey . It worked but Cowboy took a severe beating. Cowboy opened the office in 1949, and Eddie Graham bought into the promotion in 1961, then took over completely in 1971, because of health reasons with Cowboy. The office

5106-766: Was a Steel Cage match .   5 Southern Force ( Black Bart and Bobby Jaggers (3) ) March 28, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1 42     6 Mike Graham (21) and Dustin Rhodes May 9, 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1     7 Southern Force ( Black Bart (2) and Tony Anthony ) May 1989 FCW Show Tampa, Florida 1     8 The Nasty Boys ( Brian Knobs and Jerry Sags ) June 11, 1989 FCW Show Orlando, Florida 3     9 The Playboys ( Brett Sawyer and Jim Backlund ) July 1989 N/A N/A 1 The Playboys were awarded

5180-767: Was a member of the National Wrestling Alliance during the entire CWF era, Eddie Graham serving two terms as NWA president, and loosely aligned before that, with other 'world' champions sometimes defending their titles. CWF became a staple in many Southern households in the 1970s and 1980s, with Dusty Rhodes arguably its most noted headliner, his babyface turn beginning May 14, 1974 against former partner Pak Song . The promotion competed against other syndicated shows on Saturday night like The Lawrence Welk Show and Solid Gold for years. The promotion thrived with stars such as NWA champions Lou Thesz and Gene Kiniski , Graham, Bobby Shane , Robert Lee Schoenberger, Don Curtis , Sam Steamboat , The Magnificent Muraco (Don Muraco) ,

5254-505: Was a substitute for Mike Graham   66 Roger Kirby (4) and Rip Hawk January 20, 1976 CWF Show Florida 2 63     67 The Orton Family ( Bob Orton Sr. (3) and Bob Orton Jr. (2) ) March 23, 1976 CWF Show Florida 1 63     68 Bob Orton Sr. (4) and Bob Roop (4) May 25, 1976 N/A N/A 1 14 Bob Roop replaced Bob Orton Jr. after Junior won

5328-525: Was bilingual to conduct interviews in both English and Spanish. Solie was joined on commentary by Buddy Colt during the program's final years. On March 2, 2006, the CWF library was purchased by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) for the DVD on Dusty Rhodes . In 2007, World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) revived the promotion as a developmental territory under the name Florida Championship Wrestling (FCW). In 2012,

5402-2408: Was injured and unable to defend the championship.   20 Ron Garvin and Ole Anderson July 2, 1971 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 1 34 Won a tournament.   21 The Australians ( Ron Miller and Larry O'Dea ) August 5, 1971 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 1 77     22 Dick Murdoch (2) and Bobby Duncum October 21, 1971 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 13     23 The Australians ( Ron Miller and Larry O'Day ) November 3, 1971 CWF Show Miami, Florida 2 35     24 The Alaskans (Mike York and Frank Monte) December 8, 1971 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 14     25 The Australians ( Ron Miller and Larry O'Day ) December 22, 1971 CWF Show Miami, Florida 3 19     26 The Infernos (Frankie Cain and Rocky Smith) January 10, 1972 CWF Show West Palm Beach, Florida 2 36     27 The Australians ( Ron Miller and Larry O'Day ) February 15, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 4 23     28 Bobby Shane and Bearcat Wright March 9, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 61     29 Boris Malenko and Bob Roop May 9, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 22     30 Mike Webster and The Professional May 31, 1972 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 24     31 Boris Malenko (2) and Johnny Walker June 24, 1972 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 1 5     32 The Zodiac and Taurus June 29, 1972 CWF Show Jacksonville, Florida 1 6     33 Hiro Matsuda (3) and Tim Woods July 5, 1972 CWF Show Miami, Florida 1 15     34 Nick Bockwinkel and Ray Stevens July 20, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 26     35 Matsuda (4) and Bob Orton (2) August 15, 1972 CWF Show Tampa, Florida 1 21 Bob Orton previously held

5476-419: Was sometimes teamed with bigger name characters to take the pinfall in tag team matches. By performing as both a masked and an unmasked wrestler, Sprott was often used as a heel or 'bad guy', losing to the big-name face or 'good guy' characters, while his other persona could be a face, losing to the big-name heels. This, along with his ability to put on credible matches, made Sprott a very useful jobber for

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