Originally Posted by DLVH84
(Post 3953686)
Here's all the controversy in order...
1. During Ric Flair's first reign on February 9, 1982 in Miami, FL, The Midnight Rider (yes, Dusty Rhodes in a mask) defeated Flair to win the title. However, at the time, the NWA forbid masked wrestlers to be their World Heavyweight Champion (it wouldn't be until 2006 when Abyss became the NWA's first masked World Champion). However, Dusty Rhodes was still suspended in the Florida territory at the time, so he chose the mask over the title, so Flair remained champion and his first reign intact.
2. Also during Flair's first reign in September 1982, during a tour of the Dominican Republic, he lost the title to Jack Veneno in Santo Domingo. However, as Veneno refused to defend the title outside his country, the title was returned to Flair days later and his first reign intact.
3. On January 6, 1983 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Flair lost the title in a title vs. title match to WWC World Heavyweight Champion Carlos Colon, who after the match, rechristened his title the WWC Universal Heavyweight Championship. Although Colon lost the title back to Flair in Miami on January 23, both reigns are not recognized by the NWA.
4. On March 21, 1984 in Wellington, New Zealand, Harley Race defeated Flair to win the NWA World title, but Flair regained the title two days later in Kallang, Singapore. Both reigns were not recognized by the NWA until 1993.
5. On March 21, 1991 in Tokyo, Japan, Tatsumi Fujinami defeated Flair to win the NWA World title. At the time, the NWA and WCW World titles were separate, but both were represented by one belt. Furthermore, WCW had erased all mention of the NWA titles and still recognized Flair as the WCW World Champion and had the physical belt. On May 19, 1991 in St. Petersburg, Florida, Flair pinned Fujinami to retain his WCW World title and regain the NWA World title. Originally not recognized in the U.S. until 1993.
6. On July 18, 1993, Flair defeated Barry Windham to win the NWA World title on July 18, 1993 in Biloxi, Mississippi. However, on September 1, 1993, Flair was stripped of the NWA World title, as WCW withdrew from the NWA, due to the break in kayfabe at the WCW Disney tapings and WCW's refusal to allow the NWA World Champion to defend the title in other NWA territories at the time (including the future Extreme Championship Wrestling). Therefore, as of September 1, 1993, Flair was recognized as the WCW International World Heavyweight Champion, making him the first holder of that title.
7. On April 17, 1994, in Chicago, Illinois, Ric Flair, as WCW World Heavyweight Champion, wrestled Ricky Steamboat, and the match ended in a double-pin, forcing the title to be held up. Four days later in Atlanta, Georgia, Flair defeated Steamboat in a rematch to regain the title, adding Flair. The rematch would air on the May 14, 1994 edition of WCW Saturday Night.
8. On June 23, 1994, in Charleston, South Carolina, Flair defeated Sting to regain the WCW International World Heavyweight Championship, unifying it with the WCW World Heavyweight Championship. From that point on, the WCW International World Heavyweight Championship was abandoned and the Big Gold Belt represented the WCW World Heavyweight Championship.
9. On May 29, 2000, Kevin Nash, who had won the title from Jeff Jarrett nearly the week before, gave the title to Flair, who was stripped of the title by Vince Russo the week before, giving Flair another reign, before losing the title the same night to Jarrett.
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