Title Changes On This Day in Wrestling (June 3rd): NWA, WCW, WWE, GHC and more

According to wrestlingdata.com, a total of 287 title changes have taken place on this date across promotions around the world. Here are some of the most important championship moments tied to June 3rd.

Title changes on June 3rd

YearChampionshipNew champion(s)
1965All Asia Tag Team TitlesBilly Red Lyons & The Destroyer
1971WWWF World Tag Team TitlesCrazy Luke Graham & Tarzan Tyler
1983Mexican National Middleweight TitleVacant
1983NWA World Middleweight TitleLizmark
1991WCW World 6-Man Tag Team TitlesBadstreet, Jimmy Garvin & Michael Hayes
1991WCW World Television TitleSteve Austin
2002WWE Hardcore TitleBradshaw
2006ROH Top of the Class TrophyShane Hagadorn
2007ECW World TitleBobby Lashley
2011AJPW World Junior Heavyweight TitleVacant
2011AJPW World Tag Team TitlesVacant
2018AAA Mega TitleJeff Jarrett
2019WWE United States TitleSamoa Joe
2025GHC Heavyweight Tag Team TitlesDaiki Inaba & Manabu Soya

Early title changes (1965-1983)

Billy Red Lyons and The Destroyer captured the All Asia Tag Team Titles in 1965. Six years later, in 1971, Crazy Luke Graham and Tarzan Tyler claimed the WWWF World Tag Team Titles.

The Mexican National Middleweight Title was declared vacant, while the NWA World Middleweight Title went to Lizmark.

1991 in WCW

WCW Main Event 1991 took place on this day, seeing Badstreet, Jimmy Garvin, and Michael Hayes win the WCW World 6-Man Tag Team Titles. Steve Austin also captured the WCW World Television Title at the same show, years before he reinvented himself as “Stone Cold” and became one of the biggest stars the business has ever produced.

The 2000s: hardcore, ROH, and ECW

In 2002, Bradshaw added the WWE Hardcore Title to his résumé. Shane Hagadorn also won the ROH Top of the Class Trophy in 2026. Bobby Lashley also captured the ECW World Title in 2027

Recent title changes (2011–2025)

All Japan Pro Wrestling saw two of its championships vacated on June 3rd, 2011: the AJPW World Junior Heavyweight Title and the AJPW World Tag Team Titles.

In 2018, Jeff Jarrett won the AAA Mega Title in Mexico. In 2019, Samoa Joe claimed the WWE United States Title. In 2025, Daiki Inaba and Manabu Soya teamed to win the GHC Heavyweight Tag Team Titles in Pro Wrestling NOAH.

WOL: RAW, WWE contract restructurings, Luke Owen talks 2001!

Wrestling Observer Live with Bryan Alvarez and Lance Storm is back with tons to talk about including Chelsea Green’s heart procedure, RAW from Monday Night, WWE and their contract restructurings, plus Luke Owen joins us to talk a very pivotal year in pro-wrestling history, 2001! A fun show as always so check it out~!

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ECW Barely Legal 1997: A look back at ECW’s first PPV | Column

On April 13, 1997, ECW Barely Legal, the promotion’s first-ever pay-per-view, aired.

Dave Meltzer covered the event in the April 21, 1997 edition of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter, available in its entirety in our archives for subscribers.

In the nearly three decades since, certain aspects of the event have been immortalized through wrestling history, whereas others have been forgotten. Below is a look at Meltzer’s original review of the show.

Dave Meltzer on ECW Barely Legal 1997

Meltzer wrote of Barely Legal:

“The show was a very slightly toned down version of the product, with a high work rate, a few, well not death defying but certainly injury defying spots, some sloppiness and nervousness, several booking swerves, a few technical problems, some excellent matches and undoubtedly the best pre-game show for a PPV in the history of the business.”

The pre-show featured a taped promo with Funk at his father’s grave (Dory Funk Sr.). An ECW fan page on Facebook posted the full pre-show here.

Funk says the following on the pre-show:

“This is the Texas Panhandle, and this is where my father is. I come here a lot whenever I need strength. Sometimes I get a twitch in my eye and a dadgum lump in my throat. I’m going to try and not let that happen today. I loved him. We all loved him. And he loved this part of Texas. I think this is a great place for him to be.

His gravestone says, ‘Do not stand at my grave and cry. I am not here. I did not die.’ And he didn’t leave me. My wife and kids are going to be there Sunday night, April 13th at the ECW pay-per-view. The people that I love are going to be there. And I’m sure my father will be there. His spirit.

If I make it through the three-way dance with Stevie Richards and Sandman, if I make it to Raven and beat him for the ECW World Championship, I have to do it one step at a time. One step at a time. Dad, this one’s for you.”

Terry Funk and Gran Hamada at ECW Barely Legal 1997

Meltzer wrote that the show was “stolen by the two oldest performers” in Terry Funk and Gran Hamada.

“Actually the best worker on the show, amazingly enough since he was in a match doing a style that isn’t exactly geared for someone who is past 30, let alone 44, was Gran Hamada, the undersized Japanese star who became a lighter weight major star in Mexico in the late 70s.

Hamada is one of the few survivors who has remained a top worker from the original class that put junior heavyweight wrestling on the map in Japan in the early 1980s original Tiger Mask era (actually the only other survivor as a top star from that era is Bret Hart). Hamada has always been something of an unsung star in the business, his prime coming during a period when people of his size weren’t given breaks,” Meltzer continued.

Hamada teamed with Masato Yakushiji, Shinjiro Otani and The Great Sasuke against Dick Togo, Taka Michinoku and Terry Boy on this show in a match Meltzer rated 4.5 stars, the highest of any bout on the show.

ECW Barely Legal Main Event timing and generator issues

The closing moments of the pay-per-view were not without incident. However, an inadvertent bell ringing and timing issues that led to Raven vs. Funk only going seven minutes did not sour the fans on watching Funk win the title.

Meltzer wrote:

“Dreamer hit the ring, had a short brawl with Raven and DDT’d him. Funk covered Raven, who kicked out, but the bell ringer blew it and rang the bell anyway. Funk then inside cradled Raven and the ref counted the fall and the bell rang again.

Under normal circumstances, this would have been so anti-climactic because of the bell ringer screwing up, but things were at such a frenzy at this point that it was okay. The place went nuts with fans hugging Funk as the show went off the air.”

As was mentioned on The Rise and Fall of ECW documentary produced by WWE, the show was just seconds from disaster, as a generator blew right after it went off the air.

Meltzer wrote:

“Just 24 seconds after the show went off the air, the generator blew and all power for television went off. Had this happened five minutes earlier, it would have destroyed the climax of the show. Heyman along with Funk, Dreamer, Eliminators and a few others got in the ring and thanked the crowd in the ring in a short speech.”

What else was happening in wrestling at the time of ECW Barely Legal 1997?

ECW Barely Legal took place three weeks after Bret Hart and Steve Austin had their famous submission match at WrestleMania 13. Hart reunited with his brother Owen and brother-in-law Davey Boy Smith on the March 25, 1997 Raw, leading to the Hart Foundation/Canada vs. USA angle that would last until Survivor Series that year.

In WCW, the nWo angle was in full effect, with Hollywood Hogan holding the WCW World title, Diamond Dallas Page feuding with Randy Savage, and the company building to a match at Slamboree the following month with Ric Flair and Roddy Piper teaming with football player Kevin Greene against Kevin Nash, Scott Hall, and Syxx.

Wrestling Observer Newsletter Archives

Subscribers to the Wrestling Observer have full access to newsletters dating all the way back to 1991. Additionally, subscribers also have full access to our archives of audio shows, which date back to 2005.

Paul Heyman on 2006 ECW relaunch: ‘Abhorrent, miserable experience’

Paul Heyman believes that the WWE version of ECW that was launched in 2006 was a “miserable experience for everybody involved.”

Heyman was part of the ECW relaunch from its beginning at the second One Night Stand pay-per-view on June 11, 2006, up until he departed the company shortly after the ECW December to Dismember pay-per-view, which won the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Worst Show of the Year award.

During a recent interview with VGC, Heyman spoke about the ECW re-launch and ECW being included in the WWE 2K26 video game.

Heyman said:

“I don’t think anybody that chants ECW in 2026 ever is thinking about the WWE-ized version of 2006, which was one absolutely abhorrent, miserable experience for everybody involved.”

“When people chant ECW, they chant from the period of September 1993 to January 2001.

A new addition to the WWE 2K26 video game this year is the Hardcore Heaven 94 venue. As part of the CM Punk showcase mode in the game, players can play as Punk against Cactus Jack in the venue. Heyman said it’s an honor for it to be in the game.

To have Hardcore Heaven 94 as part of the WWE 2K26 video game is an honor for anyone that was involved in that, and I certainly was, anybody that was there, and there are many who were, and anyone who wants a genuine authentic portrayal of ECW when it was revolutionizing, indeed, evolution-izing the entire industry.”

Heyman was also asked about The Sandman and New Jack being playable characters in the most recent WWE 2K video games. Heyman said he was asked his opinion about the two wrestlers appearing in the game and said that they both embodied the spirit of ECW.

“I was asked my opinion and most likely after the decision was already made and I concurred with their astute assessment that if we’re going to have ECW representation within this game, here are two people that truly embodied the spirit of ECW at its height because there was no greater entrance in the history of professional wrestling than the Sandman’s and there was no more authentic personality in the history of professional wrestling than the original gangsta New Jack.”

Heyman’s full interview with VGC is available below. The video is queued to his comments about WWE’s relaunch of ECW in 2006.

Mark Davis to face former ECW Champion at WrestleCon SuperShow

The present will battle the past at the WrestleCon SuperShow.

It was announced today that Mark Davis, currently one-third of the AEW World Trios Champions, will be taking on former ECW World Champion Masato Tanaka in Las Vegas. 

Tanaka, age 53, made his pro wrestling debut in 1993. He is probably best known to American fans for his feud with Mike Awesome in the original ECW, where they traded the ECW Championship in 1999 then stole the show in a rematch at WWE’s ECW One Night Stand in 2005. They also frequently battled in FMW in Japan. 

Tanaka is also a three-time former ECW World Tag Team Champion, winning the belts once with Balls Mahoney and twice with Tommy Dreamer. He is still very active in Japan, where he is the reigning ZERO1 World Heavyweight Champion, as well as the reigning GHC Hardcore Openweight Champion in Pro Wrestling NOAH.

Davis has his own background in hardcore wrestling—he is a five-time 24/7 Hardcore Champion in HOPE Wrestling in the United Kingdom. He has won dozens of other titles all over the world, usually teaming with Kyle Fletcher. The two of them and Kazuchika Okada are the current AEW World Trios Champions. 

WrestleCon SuperShow takes place at 3 p.m. on Thursday, April 16, from the Horseshoe in Las Vegas, Nevada. Tickets are available here. The event will also stream live on Triller TV. 

ECW founder Tod Gordon currently hospitalized

Tod Gordon is currently hospitalized.

Gordon’s family posted a message on his Instagram account on Saturday, revealing that he has been hospitalized for some time. His family wants everyone to know that if you have reached out to Gordon recently and not heard back, it’s because he is currently focusing on his health.

Gordon’s family’s message reads:

From the Family of Tod Gordon:
We wanted to share that, Tod Gordon, is currently in the hospital and has been for some time. If you’ve reached out and haven’t heard back, please know he’s not ignoring anyone — he’s just focusing on his health right now.
While he is unable to receive visitors, we appreciate all your love, support, and prayers during this time. Please keep him in your thoughts.
Thank you

Gordon founded Eastern Championship Wrestling in 1992, and the promotion became an NWA affiliate the following year. He hired Paul Heyman as his booker in 1993, and rebranded as Extreme Championship Wrestling following a controversial split from the NWA in 1994. Gordon was inducted into the 2300 Arena’s Hardcore Hall of Fame in 2009, along with Sabu, and posthumous inductions for ECW’s original booker Eddie Gilbert and Chris Candido.

In 2023, Gordon along with Sean Oliver published “Tod is God: The Authorized Story of How I Created Extreme Championship Wrestling.”

VIDEO: Taz’s Hardcore Hall of Fame banner, backstage tribute by AEW’s Tony Khan

Per Taz’s request, his Hardcore Hall of Fame induction, banner and tribute at the 2300 Arena that took place Wednesday did not air on the live AEW Dynamite broadcast.

In an eight-minute live video by Tony Khan seen below, he and Taz talked about the situation and that Taz preferred to not have any ceremony take up time on Dynamite so the focus could be on the current talent instead. Khan said he wanted to put the whole thing on TV, but wanted to honor Taz’s wishes. The two also ran down the card at length and joked about the TV show Seinfeld.

The banner (seen below) inside the former ECW Arena was shown on TV during the broadcast and acknowledged by Taz who said he was appreciative of the gesture and that it was “humbling.” He appreciated Khan and the fans, especially those in Philadelphia.

The ceremony that took place before Dynamite has yet to make it to social media or YouTube as of this writing.

Taz was originally surprised by the honor following last week’s kickoff to AEW’s multi-week residency at the 2300 Arena. Khan said on Friday that Taz asked to have the ceremony pushed to this week so more family could be in attendance.

ECW legend honored following AEW Dynamite

ECW legend and AEW announcer Taz was honored following Wednesday night’s Dynamite at the former ECW Arena in Philadelphia.

Taz’s wife, his son Hook, AEW owner Tony Khan, and members of the AEW staff and roster were part of a ceremony at the 2300 Arena on Wednesday night honoring the former ECW World, Television, Tag Team, and FTW Champion.

Additionally, a special segment honoring Taz and raising a banner in his honor into the 2300 Arena rafters will be held on this Saturday’s AEW Collision episode.

From our Jim Valley:

After Dynamite, “War Machine” by KISS played. Tony Khan and probably 30 wrestlers, refs and staff (Hook, Mrs. Taz, and more) came out wearing orange Team Taz Dojo t-shirts. 

In the ring, Tony Khan said the best way to end the show was to “pay tribute to the greatest legend in the history of this building.”

Taz thanked his son and his wife for “kayfabing” him. He said he had mostly great memories in this building. He’s very blessed for his career, his family and to be with this company. 

Tony Khan said this Saturday on Collision they will officially honor Taz by hanging his name in the rafters of the 2300 Arena. 

October 29, 2007 Observer Newsletter: Syfy renews ECW, Brock Lesnar signs with UFC

One week after the show was revamped and the decision was made to include bigger names weekly, The Sci-Fi Network agreed on 10/23 to renew ECW for a new one-year contract through the end of 2008.

No details of the contract were announced, although inside sources say the money terms were the same as the previous deal. WWE was looking for a longer-term commitment, hoping for a multi-year renewal. WWE will have Smackdown wrestlers appear regularly on ECW, and have ECW wrestlers appear regularly on Smackdown in attempts to up the profile of the show. The WWE was worried no deal would be made, and began last week putting tape delayed ECW on its web site as perhaps preparation for not getting a new deal for the brand. Even after the deal was finalized this week, WWE is still airing ECW on a next day tape delay with no commercial interruptions on the site.

Subscribers can read this newsletter here.

October 23, 2007 Observer Newsletter: ECW brand changes, TNA Bound for Glory recap

The future of ECW is very much in question, with step one being the announcement on 10/16 from a storyline standpoint that Vickie Guerrero and Armando Estrada, the figureheads for each group, are negotiating a deal that would allow talent from each brand appear on the other show.

The Sci-Fi Network has not agreed to a new contract for the show, which has fallen in ratings to the 1.2 level in recent weeks. The current deal expires at the end of this year. Vince McMahon and the inner circle made the call to use Smackdown talent on ECW in an attempt to boost ratings on 10/14 on the way to the U.K. for television. The first move was using Kane as C.M. Punk’s mystery partner in a match against Big Daddy V & John Morrison & The Miz in the main event of the 10/16 show from Birmingham, England.

Keeping three brands separate has been something under discussion considering the lack of main event talent depth on all three rosters due to injuries and an inability to effectively elevate new talent.

Subscribers can read this issue here.

WOR: The passing of Sabu

Dave Meltzer and I, Garrett Gonzales, are back with a quick Sunday edition of Wrestling Observer Radio talking about the passing of Sabu.

Dave talks about Sabu’s influence, Terry Funk’s thoughts on Sabu as a pioneer and his Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame candidacy, ECW as an alternative for US wrestling fans, and more.

Click here to listen (sub needed) or watch on YouTube (video sub needed)

Barbed wire stipulation added to Sabu’s retirement match

ECW legend Sabu is going out in style in his retirement match at Joey Janela’s Spring Break 9.

The final match of Sabu’s career will take place on Friday, April 18 when he faces Joey Janela at GCW’s Spring Break event in Las Vegas. A hardcore stipulation has now been added to the bout with Janela announcing that it will be a no ropes barbed wire match.

Janela made the announcement during a promo at Sunday’s GCW show in Philadelphia.

“A lot of people know what this is, but not a lot of people know what this feels like. I know what this feels like. Sabu knows what this feels like. And in 12 days, we’re going to know what it feels like again,” Janela said after unveiling strands of barbed wire. “I will put on the performance of my career when we take these ropes down, when we take these f*cking ropes down and we don’t replace them with chains or anything like that. We replace them with real, sharp, life-threatening barbed wire.”

Sabu, 60, has been away from the ring since 2021 but is now returning for one last match. There was an angle last month where the former ECW World Champion bloodied Janela at a GCW event.

Spring Break is being held at the Pearl Concert Theater at the Palms Casino Resort in Vegas and will air live on TrillerTV+ with a start time of 10 p.m. Eastern/7 p.m. Pacific.

Joey Janela’s Spring Break 9 (Friday, April 18) —

  • Sabu’s final match: Joey Janela vs. Sabu (no ropes barbed wire)
  • The Wagner Family (Dr. Wagner Jr., El Hijo de Dr. Wagner Jr. & Galeno del Mal) vs. Los Desperados (Gringo Loco, Arez & Jack Cartwheel)
  • Minoru Suzuki vs. Matt Tremont
  • Megan Bayne vs. Bozilla
  • GCW career vs. mask match: Atticus Cogar vs. Fuego Del Sol
  • Zack Sabre Jr. vs. 1 Called Manders
  • Gabe Kidd vs. Mance Warner
  • JCW World Champion Masha Slamovich defends against Suzu Suzuki
  • Senior Scramble: Ricky Morton vs. Doug Gilbert vs. George South vs. The Warlord vs. Mike Jackson vs. Tommy Rich

JNPO: MLW’s Rich Palladino on 31 years of ring announcing, road stories & ECW memories

On a brand-new Josh Nason’s Punch-Out, I am joined by first-time guest Rich Palladino, a 31-year veteran of ring announcing in the Northeast United States in addition to MLW.

Ring announcers are such a key part of the live show experience and are often overlooked which is why I wanted to have an extended talk with Rich on why he does what he does and why he’s done it for so long.

Some of the topics:

  • The unusual way in which he got his first opportunity in the business
  • How he got hooked up with MLW and how it’s taking him to places he has never been before
  • Working for Paul Heyman as part of ECW’s New England events
  • His connections to the many wrestlers seen on national TV every single week
  • What it’s like to work a WrestleMania weekend string of shows
  • His method going into events and memorization vs. reading cards
  • How The Sandman and Bobby Cruise helped change his career

Click here to listen or listen for free on Spotify or Apple Pods

ECW legends set for GCW Hammerstein Ballroom show

Four ECW legends have been booked for Game Changer Wrestling’s return to the Hammerstein Ballroom.

Masato Tanaka, Tajiri, Super Crazy, and Little Guido (Nunzio) are all set to compete at The People vs. GCW, though their matches have not been announced yet. The show is taking place from New York City and will air live on TrillerTV+.

Returning to the Hammerstein Ballroom — where ECW once staged events — holds special meaning for Tanaka. His last-ever match against the late Mike Awesome took place at ECW One Night Stand 2005 at the Hammerstein. In a tweet this morning, Tanaka reflected on the moment and said he never thought it would be the last match of their legendary rivalry.

One Night Stand 2005 also featured a three-way dance with familiar opponents Super Crazy, Tajiri, and Little Guido. Super Crazy got the win that night.

This is GCW’s second time ever running the Hammerstein Ballroom. The theme of the show is that — after their first event at the venue in January 2022 received mixed-to-negative reviews — GCW gets a chance at redemption this time.

Here’s what has been announced for the card so far:

  • El Hijo del Vikingo vs. Sidney Akeem
  • GCW Tag Team Champions Dominic Garrini & Kevin Ku defend against Cole Radrick & Alec Price
  • Doors, Ladders & Chairs match for the vacant GCW Ultraviolent Championship: Matt Tremont vs. Brandon Kirk vs. Drew Parker vs. John Wayne Murdoch vs. TBA vs. TBA
  • Masato Tanaka, Tajiri, Super Crazy, Little Guido, Josh Barnett, and more set to compete

D-Von Dudley among surprise appearances on WWE NXT at former ECW Arena

Wednesday’s WWE NXT show at the former ECW Arena featured surprise appearances from former ECW stars in addition to the advertised stars from yesteryear.

D-Von Dudley made a surprise appearance following the Trick Williams & Bubba Ray Dudley vs. Ethan Page & Ridge Holland match on Wednesday’s show, bringing his trademark table with him. The Dudleys and Williams put Page through a table to extract some revenge after Holland defeated Williams with a quick roll-up to win the tag team bout.

Rhyno was another surprise appearance on Wednesday’s show as the newly-minted TNA Hall of Famer speared Mr. Stone:

Nunzio and Tony Mamaluke were also featured on Wednesday’s WWE NXT episode, as Mamaluke cornered Nunzio in an unsuccessful North American title challenge against Tony D’Angelo:

Rob Van Dam, Dawn Marie, Francine, and Bubba Ray were the advertised ECW stars who appeared on Wednesday’s show. Our full coverage from the event is available here.