Pacific Coast Middleweight Championship

The Pacific Coast Middleweight Championship was a professional wrestling championship that was contended for in the Pacific Northwest from the 1920s to the late 1930s.[1]

Pacific Coast Middleweight Championship
The championship belt
Details
PromotionPacific Northwest
Date establishedJuly 1920
Statistics
First champion(s)Ted Thye
Final champion(s)Pat O'Dowdy

Title history

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
[Note #] Indicates that the exact length of the title reign is unknown, with a note providing more details.
# Wrestler Reign Date Days held Location Event Notes Ref.
1 Ted Thye 1 July 1920 [Note 1] Portland, Oregon House show Defeated Henry Irslinger to become the first champion  
                 
2 Harold Heibert 1 Before 1933 [Note 1] N/A House show    
3 Thor Jenson 1 July 12, 1933 120 Eugene, Oregon House show   [2]
4 Ois Clingman 1 November 9, 1933 [Note 1] Eugene, Oregon House show    
                 
5 Del Kunkel 1 August 5, 1935 [Note 1] Portland, Oregon House show Defeated Danny McShain to win the title, unclear if McShain was the champion or if it was a tournament.  
                 
6 George Wagner 1 1938 [Note 1] Eugene, Oregon House show Defeated Buck Lipscomb to win the title, unclear if Lipscomb was the champion or if it was a tournament.  
                 
7 Pat O'Dowdy 1 Before April 1938 [Note 1] N/A House show    

Footnotes

  1. The length of the reign is too uncertain to calculate.

References

  1. Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2006). Wrestling Title Histories (4th ed.). Archeus Communications. ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  2. Hoops, Brian (July 12, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history (July 12): Gagne, Bruiser & Crusher, Ladd wins Americas title, 1992 Bash with Sting vs. Vader". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.