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{{Championship
 
{{Championship
 
| image = Iwgpic.jpg
 
| image = Iwgpic.jpg
| current = [[Tetsuya Naito]]
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| current =
| imagec = Naitoic2.jpg
+
| imagec =
| caption = The current belt repaired by NJPW
+
| caption =
| date = January 4, 2020
+
| date =
 
| promotion = [[New Japan Pro Wrestling]]<br>Ring of Honor (ROH)
 
| promotion = [[New Japan Pro Wrestling]]<br>Ring of Honor (ROH)
 
| established = January 5, 2011
 
| established = January 5, 2011
| retired =
+
| retired = March 4, 2021
 
| firstchamp = [[MVP]]
 
| firstchamp = [[MVP]]
 
| finalchamp= [[Kota Ibushi]]
| mostreigns = [[Shinsuke Nakamura]] and [[Tetusya Naito]] (5 reigns)
+
| mostreigns = [[Tetsuya Naito]] (6 reigns)
 
| longestreign = [[Shinsuke Nakamura]] (313 days)
 
| longestreign = [[Shinsuke Nakamura]] (313 days)
 
| shortestreign = [[Tetsuya Naito]] (41 days)
 
| shortestreign = [[Tetsuya Naito]] (41 days)
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| pastnames =
 
| pastnames =
 
}}
 
}}
The {{nihongo|'''IWGP Intercontinental Championship'''|IWGPインターコンチネンタル王座|IWGP Intākonchinentaru Ōza}} is a secondary singles championship in [[New Japan Pro Wrestling]] (NJPW) promotion. "IWGP" is the acronym of NJPW's governing body, the International Wrestling Grand Prix. On October 3, 2010, American promotion Jersey All Pro Wrestling announced that it had reached an agreement with NJPW for the promotion to run its first shows in the United States. NJPW officially announced the tour, titled ''NJPW Invasion Tour 2011: Attack on East Coast'', on January 4, 2011, during the Wrestle Kingdom V in Tokyo Dome event, announcing events for May 13 in Rahway, New Jersey, May 14 in New York City and May 15 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was also announced that during the tour, New Japan would introduce a new "IWGP Intercontinental Championship", which would become the promotion's fifth active title. The title is considered part of the "New Japan Triple Crown" (新日本トリプルクラウン Shin Nihon Toripuru Kuraun) along with the [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship|IWGP Heavyweight]] and [[NEVER Openweight Championship]]s.
+
The {{nihongo|'''IWGP Intercontinental Championship'''|IWGPインターコンチネンタル王座|IWGP Intākonchinentaru Ōza}} was a secondary singles championship in [[New Japan Pro Wrestling]] (NJPW) promotion. "IWGP" is the acronym of NJPW's governing body, the International Wrestling Grand Prix.
  +
  +
On October 3, 2010, American promotion Jersey All Pro Wrestling announced that it had reached an agreement with NJPW for the promotion to run its first shows in the United States. NJPW officially announced the tour, titled ''[[NJPW Invasion Tour 2011|NJPW Invasion Tour 2011: Attack on East Coast]]'', on January 4, 2011, during the [[Wrestle Kingdom V in Tokyo Dome]] event, announcing events for May 13 in Rahway, New Jersey, May 14 in New York City and May 15 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
  +
  +
It was also announced that during the tour, New Japan would introduce a new "IWGP [https://customchampionshipbelts.com/ Intercontinental Championship]", which would become the promotion's fifth active title. The title was considered part of the "New Japan Triple Crown" (新日本トリプルクラウン Shin Nihon Toripuru Kuraun) along with the [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship|IWGP Heavyweight]] and [[NEVER Openweight Championship]]s.
  +
  +
The IWGP Intercontinental Championship was retired at NJPW's 49th anniversary event on March 4, 2021, when it was unified with the IWGP Heavyweight Championship into the [[IWGP World Heavyweight Championship]]. [[MVP]] was the inaugural IWGP Intercontinetal Champion, with [[Kota Ibushi]] being the last.
   
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
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From 2012 to 2016, Nakamura held the IWGP Intercontinental Championship for a record five times and defended it at four consecutive Wrestle Kingdom events. The title was also associated with Nakamura as it was he who personally introduced the current title belt design shortly into his first reign in August 2012. He was outspokenly disapproving of the first belt design with bronze plates on a black strap for its resemblance to a 10 yen coin and saw it as a mockery of the IWGP. The new design featured gold plates on a white strap. The white strap was unprecedented for the IWGP and symbolized a clean slate for its holder to add to and define.
 
From 2012 to 2016, Nakamura held the IWGP Intercontinental Championship for a record five times and defended it at four consecutive Wrestle Kingdom events. The title was also associated with Nakamura as it was he who personally introduced the current title belt design shortly into his first reign in August 2012. He was outspokenly disapproving of the first belt design with bronze plates on a black strap for its resemblance to a 10 yen coin and saw it as a mockery of the IWGP. The new design featured gold plates on a white strap. The white strap was unprecedented for the IWGP and symbolized a clean slate for its holder to add to and define.
   
===Naito and Double Gold Dash===
+
===Naito and Unification===
Over the years, the title belt's physical condition got progressively worse. During [[Tetsuya Naito]]'s first reign as champion, he began systematically destroying the belt, others like [[Jushin Thunder Liger]] and [[Hiroshi Tanahashi]] voiced their displeasure over Naito's treatment of the championship belt, throwing and kicking it around, forcing NJPW to have it repaired in June 2017. In April 2018, Naito won the IWGP Intercontinental Championship for second time, and began showing a sympathetic attitude towards the championship belt, leading him to win the IWGP Intercontinental Championship three more times until June 2019.
+
After Nakamura's departure from NJPW in 2016, the title was most associated with [[Tetsuya Naito]], who held the title for a record six times. Over the years, the title belt's physical condition got progressively worse. During [[Tetsuya Naito]]'s first reign as champion, he began systematically destroying the belt, forcing NJPW to have it repaired in June 2017. Unlike Nakamura, Naito firmly saw the IWGP Heavyweight Championship as the NJPW's premier title, and had no desire to held the IWGP Intercontinental Championship when he first won it. However, following his second reign in April 2018, Naito began showing a sympathetic attitude towards the championship belt, leading him to win the IWGP Intercontinental Championship three more times until June 2019.
   
During this time, in March, Naito had the desire to hold both IWGP Intercontinental and [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship]]s simultaneously. In August, after [[Kota Ibushi]] won the [[G1 Climax#2019|2019 G1 Climax]], he announced his intentions of challenging for the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships in both nights of [[Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome]]. Naito's desire was derailed by [[Jay White]], who also wanted to main event the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14 and become the first-ever double champion in history, leading Naito to lose the championship belt to White on September 22 at [[Destruction (2019)|Destruction in Kobe]]. On November 3 at [[Power Struggle (2019)|Power Struggle]], Naito challenged White to a rematch for the IWGP Intercontinental Championship. Afterwards, Kota Ibushi and [[Kazuchika Okada]] would come to the ring, with Okada suggesting a fan vote to determine whether the main event of the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14. The dual championship match for the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships won the vote, resulting in Naito receiving his championship rematch at the event. In the build-up to the event, the dual championship match being billed as "Double Gold Dash". On January 4, 2020 in the first night of [[Wrestle Kingdom 14|Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome]], Naito defeated White to win the IWGP Intercontinental Championship, tying Shinsuke Nakamura record of most reigns as champion with five reigns. Later that night, Okada defeated Ibushi to retain the IWGP Heavyweight Championship. The following day, in the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14, Naito successfully defended the IWGP Intercontinental Championship and won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, after defeating Okada, to become the first double champion in NJPW history.
+
During this time, in March, Naito had the desire to hold both IWGP Intercontinental and [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship]]s simultaneously. In August, after [[Kota Ibushi]] won the [[G1 Climax#2019|2019 G1 Climax]], he announced his intentions of challenging for the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships in both nights of [[Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome]]. Naito's desire was derailed by [[Jay White]], who also wanted to main event the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14 and become the first-ever double champion in history, leading Naito to lose the championship belt to him on September 22 at [[Destruction (2019)|Destruction in Kobe]]. On November 3 at [[Power Struggle (2019)|Power Struggle]], Naito challenged White to a rematch for the IWGP Intercontinental Championship. Afterwards, Kota Ibushi and [[Kazuchika Okada]] would come to the ring, with Okada suggesting a fan vote to determine whether the main event of the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14. The dual championship match for the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships won the vote, resulting in Naito receiving his championship rematch at the event. In the build-up to the event, the dual championship match being billed as "Double Gold Dash". On January 4, 2020 in the first night of [[Wrestle Kingdom 14|Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome]], Naito defeated White to win the IWGP Intercontinental Championship, tying Shinsuke Nakamura record of most reigns as champion with five reigns. The following day, in the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14, Naito successfully defended the IWGP Intercontinental Championship and won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, after defeating Okada, to become the first double champion in NJPW history. Subsequently, the both championships began billed as {{nihongo|"IWGP Heavyweight/IWGP Intercontinental Double Championship"|IWGPヘビー級・IWGPインターコンチネンタル ダブル王座}}.
  +
  +
Afterwards, the IWGP Intercontinental Championship began being defended alongside the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, with Naito breaking Nakamura's reigns as champion following his sixth reign on August 29, 2020, after regaining the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships from [[EVIL]]. Upon winning the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships at [[Wrestle Kingdom 15]], Kota Ibushi announced his ambitions of unifying both titles. Following a successfull title defense of the IWGP Intercontinental Championship against Testuya Naito, who was against the unification of both titles, on March 1, NJPW announced that both titles would be unified into the [[IWGP World Heavyweight Championship]], with the last title defense of both titles being on March 4 at NJPW's 49th anniversary event, where Kota Ibushi retained the title against [[El Desperado]].
   
 
==Title history==
 
==Title history==
  +
Overall, there have been twenty-seven reigns shared among fourteen wrestlers with one vacancy. MVP, [[La Sombra]], [[Bad Luck Fale]], [[Kenny Omega]], [[Michael Elgin]], [[Chris Jericho]] and [[Jay White]] were the seven non-Japanese wrestlers to have held the title. Kota Ibushi was the final champion, after unifying the title with the [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship]] to form the [[IWGP World Heavyweight Championship]].
  +
  +
The inaugural champion was [[MVP]], who defeated [[Toru Yano]] on May 15, 2011, in a tournament final. [[Tetsuya Naito]] hled the record for most reigns, with six. At 313 days, Shinsuke Nakamura's first reign was the longest in the title's history. Nakamura had the most successful defenses in that reign with 8 and with a combined five reigns, and also held the record for most days as champion at 901. Tetsuya Naito's second reign holds the record for shortest reign at 41 days. Over his three reigns, Tanahashi successfully defended the title 28 times, the most of any champion. With eight, Shinsuke Nakamura's first reigns, with four, Tetsuya Naito's first reigns, Kota Ibushi's second reign, with three Shinsuke Nakamura's second and fourth with two MVP's only reign, [[Masato Tanaka]]'s only reign, [[Hirooki Goto]]'s first reign, with one La Sombra's only reign, Nakamura's third reign, Hirooki Goto's second reign, [[Kenny Omega]]'s only reign, [[Minoru Suzuki]]'s only reign, [[Chris Jericho]]'s only reign, Tetsuya Naito's thrid and sixt reign, Kota Ibushi's first reign [[Jay White]]'s only reign and [[EVIL]]'s only reign were all tied for least successful defenses.
   
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; width=100%;"
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center; width=100%;"
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|1
 
|1
 
|May 15, 2011
 
|May 15, 2011
|Philadelphia, United States
+
|Philadelphia
 
|148 Days
 
|148 Days
 
|2
 
|2
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|1
 
|1
 
|October 10, 2011
 
|October 10, 2011
|Tokyo, Japan
+
|Tokyo
 
|125 Days
 
|125 Days
 
|3
 
|3
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|1
 
|1
 
|February 12, 2012
 
|February 12, 2012
|Osaka, Japan
+
|Osaka
 
|161 Days
 
|161 Days
 
|2
 
|2
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|1
 
|1
 
|July 22, 2012
 
|July 22, 2012
|Yamagata, Japan
+
|Yamagata
 
|313 Days
 
|313 Days
 
|8
 
|8
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|2
 
|2
 
|July 20, 2013
 
|July 20, 2013
|Akita, Japan
+
|Akita
 
|168 Days
 
|168 Days
 
|3
 
|3
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|1
 
|1
 
|January 4, 2014
 
|January 4, 2014
|Tokyo, Japan
+
|Tokyo
 
|92 Days
 
|92 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|3
 
|3
 
|April 6, 2014
 
|April 6, 2014
|Tokyo, Japan
+
|Tokyo
 
|76 Days
 
|76 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|1
 
|1
 
|June 21, 2014
 
|June 21, 2014
|Osaka, Japan
+
|Osaka
 
|92 Days
 
|92 Days
 
|0
 
|0
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|4
 
|4
 
|September 21, 2014
 
|September 21, 2014
|Kobe, Japan
+
|Kobe
 
|224 Days
 
|224 Days
 
|3
 
|3
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|2
 
|2
 
|May 3, 2015
 
|May 3, 2015
|Fukuoka, Japan
+
|Fukuoka
 
|147 Days
 
|147 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|5
 
|5
 
|September 27, 2015
 
|September 27, 2015
|Kobe, Japan
+
|Kobe
 
|120 Days
 
|120 Days
 
|2
 
|2
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|&#8212;
 
|&#8212;
 
|January 25, 2016
 
|January 25, 2016
|Tokyo, Japan
+
|Tokyo
 
|&#8212;
 
|&#8212;
 
|&#8212;
 
|&#8212;
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|1
 
|1
 
|February 14, 2016
 
|February 14, 2016
|Nagaoka, Japan
+
|Nagaoka
 
|126 Days
 
|126 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|1
 
|1
 
|June 19, 2016
 
|June 19, 2016
|Osaka, Japan
+
|Osaka
 
|98 Days
 
|98 Days
 
|0
 
|0
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|1
 
|1
 
|September 25, 2016
 
|September 25, 2016
|Kobe, Japan
+
|Kobe
 
|259 Days
 
|259 Days
 
|4
 
|4
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|2
 
|2
 
|June 11, 2017
 
|June 11, 2017
|Osaka, Japan
+
|Osaka
 
|230 Days
 
|230 Days
 
|4
 
|4
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|1
 
|1
 
|January 27, 2018
 
|January 27, 2018
|Sapporo, Japan
+
|Sapporo
 
|92 Days
 
|92 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|2
 
|2
 
|April 29, 2018
 
|April 29, 2018
|Kumamoto, Japan
+
|Kumamoto
 
|41 Days
 
|41 Days
 
|0
 
|0
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|1
 
|1
 
|June 9, 2018
 
|June 9, 2018
|Osaka, Japan
+
|Osaka
 
|209 Days
 
|209 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|3
 
|3
 
|January 4, 2019
 
|January 4, 2019
|Tokyo, Japan
+
|Tokyo
 
|93 Days
 
|93 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|-
 
|-
 
|21
 
|21
|Kota Ibushi
+
|[[Kota Ibushi]]
 
|1
 
|1
 
|April 6, 2019
 
|April 6, 2019
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|4
 
|4
 
|June 9, 2019
 
|June 9, 2019
|Osaka, Japan
+
|Osaka
 
|105 Days
 
|105 Days
 
|0
 
|0
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|1
 
|1
 
|September 22, 2019
 
|September 22, 2019
|Kobe, Japan
+
|Kobe
 
|104 Days
 
|104 Days
 
|1
 
|1
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|5
 
|5
 
|January 4, 2020
 
|January 4, 2020
|Tokyo, Japan
+
|Tokyo
  +
|190
|{{age in days|2020|1|4}}+
 
  +
Days
 
|2
  +
|<small>This match was part of the "Double Gold Dash" also for the [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship]].<small> </small></small>
 
|-
  +
|25
  +
|[[EVIL]]
 
|1
 
|1
  +
|July 12, 2020
|
 
  +
|Osaka
  +
|48 Days
 
|1
  +
|rowspan="3" align="left" |<small>This match was also for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship.<small> </small></small>
 
|-
  +
|26
  +
|Tetsuya Naito
 
|6
  +
|August 29, 2020
  +
|Tokyo
  +
|128 Days
 
|1
  +
|-
  +
|27
  +
|Kota Ibushi
  +
|2
  +
|January 4, 2021
  +
|Tokyo
  +
|59 Days
  +
|4
  +
|-
  +
|&#8212;
  +
|Unified
  +
|&#8212;
  +
|March 4, 2021
  +
|Tokyo
  +
|&#8212;
  +
|&#8212;
  +
| align="left" |<small>Unified with the [[IWGP Heavyweight Championship]] to form the [[IWGP World Heavyweight Championship]].<small> </small></small>
 
|}
 
|}
   
 
==Combined reigns==
 
==Combined reigns==
{| class="wikitable"
 
|-
 
! style="background-color:#ffdead;" |†
 
|Indicates the current champion
 
|}
 
 
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center"
 
{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align: center"
 
!Rank
 
!Rank
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!Combined<br />days
 
!Combined<br />days
 
|-
 
|-
  +
!1
!{{sort|01|1}}
 
 
|{{sort|Nakamura|[[Shinsuke Nakamura]]}}
 
|{{sort|Nakamura|[[Shinsuke Nakamura]]}}
| rowspan="2" |{{sort|05|5}}
+
|{{sort|05|5}}
 
|{{sort|17|17}}
 
|{{sort|17|17}}
 
|{{sort|901|901}}
 
|{{sort|901|901}}
 
|-
 
|-
 
!2
 
!2
| style="background-color:#FFE6BD" |{{sort|Naito|[[Tetsuya Naito]]}}
+
|{{sort|Naito|[[Tetsuya Naito]]}}
  +
|6
|{{sort|05|5}}
 
  +
|7
|{{age in days|2018|8|24}}+
 
  +
|816
 
|-
 
|-
 
!3
 
!3
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!5
 
!5
 
|{{sort|Jericho|[[Chris Jericho]]}}
 
|{{sort|Jericho|[[Chris Jericho]]}}
| rowspan="12" |{{sort|01|1}}
+
| rowspan="4" |{{sort|01|1}}
 
|1
 
|1
 
|209
 
|209
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|-
 
|-
 
!9
 
!9
  +
|{{sort|Ibushi|[[Kota Ibushi]]}}
  +
|2
  +
|5
  +
|123
  +
|-
  +
!10
 
|{{sort|White|[[Jay White]]}}
 
|{{sort|White|[[Jay White]]}}
  +
| rowspan="6" |1
|1
 
  +
| rowspan="2" |1
 
|104
 
|104
 
|-
 
|-
!10
+
!11
 
|{{sort|Elgin|[[Michael Elgin]]}}
 
|{{sort|Elgin|[[Michael Elgin]]}}
|{{sort|01|1}}
 
 
|{{sort|098|98}}
 
|{{sort|098|98}}
 
|-
 
|-
! rowspan="2" |11
+
! rowspan="2" |12
 
|{{sort|Bad Luck|[[Bad Luck Fale]]}}
 
|{{sort|Bad Luck|[[Bad Luck Fale]]}}
 
|{{sort|00|0}}
 
|{{sort|00|0}}
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|-
 
|-
 
|{{sort|Suzuki|[[Minoru Suzuki]]}}
 
|{{sort|Suzuki|[[Minoru Suzuki]]}}
  +
| rowspan="3" |1
|{{sort|01|1}}
 
|-
 
!12
 
|{{sort|Ibushi|[[Kota Ibushi]]}}
 
|1
 
|64
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
!13
 
!13
 
|{{sort|Sombra|[[La Sombra]]}}
 
|{{sort|Sombra|[[La Sombra]]}}
|{{sort|01|1}}
 
 
|{{sort|050|50}}
 
|{{sort|050|50}}
  +
|-
  +
!14
  +
|[[EVIL]]
  +
|48
 
|}
 
|}
   
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<gallery hidxbutton="true" widths="150" bordercolor="transparent" captionalign="left" bordersize="none">
 
<gallery hidxbutton="true" widths="150" bordercolor="transparent" captionalign="left" bordersize="none">
 
IWGPicold.jpg|Original belt design
 
IWGPicold.jpg|Original belt design
Icbroken.jpg|The IWGP Intercontinental title belt destroyed after Tetsuya Naito throwed the belt into the ring post and steel steps
+
Icbroken.jpg|The IWGP Intercontinental title belt destroyed after Tetsuya Naito threw the belt into the ring post and steel steps
 
Iwgpic (1).jpg|IWGP Intercontinental Championship after being repaired by Hiroshi Tanahashi
 
Iwgpic (1).jpg|IWGP Intercontinental Championship after being repaired by Hiroshi Tanahashi
  +
</gallery>
 
|-|
 
|-|
 
Champions=
 
Champions=
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omegaic.jpg|Kenny Omega
 
omegaic.jpg|Kenny Omega
 
elginic.jpg|Micheal Elgin
 
elginic.jpg|Micheal Elgin
Naitoic2.jpg|Tetsuya Naito
+
Naito2belts.jpg|Tetsuya Naito
 
Suzukiic.jpg|Minoru Suzuki
 
Suzukiic.jpg|Minoru Suzuki
 
Jerichoic2.jpg|Chris Jericho
 
Jerichoic2.jpg|Chris Jericho
IbushiIC.jpg|Kota Ibushi
+
Ibushidoublechamp2.jpg|Kota Ibushi
 
Whiteic.jpg|Jay White
 
Whiteic.jpg|Jay White
  +
EVILICIH.jpg|EVIL
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
 
</center>
 
</center>
<nowiki></tabber>
+
</tabber>
 
[[Category:Championships]]
 
[[Category:Championships]]
 
[[Category:NJPW Championships]]
 
[[Category:NJPW Championships]]

Latest revision as of 03:13, 31 March 2024


The IWGP Intercontinental Championship (IWGPインターコンチネンタル王座, IWGP Intākonchinentaru Ōza) was a secondary singles championship in New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) promotion. "IWGP" is the acronym of NJPW's governing body, the International Wrestling Grand Prix.

On October 3, 2010, American promotion Jersey All Pro Wrestling announced that it had reached an agreement with NJPW for the promotion to run its first shows in the United States. NJPW officially announced the tour, titled NJPW Invasion Tour 2011: Attack on East Coast, on January 4, 2011, during the Wrestle Kingdom V in Tokyo Dome event, announcing events for May 13 in Rahway, New Jersey, May 14 in New York City and May 15 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

It was also announced that during the tour, New Japan would introduce a new "IWGP Intercontinental Championship", which would become the promotion's fifth active title. The title was considered part of the "New Japan Triple Crown" (新日本トリプルクラウン Shin Nihon Toripuru Kuraun) along with the IWGP Heavyweight and NEVER Openweight Championships.

The IWGP Intercontinental Championship was retired at NJPW's 49th anniversary event on March 4, 2021, when it was unified with the IWGP Heavyweight Championship into the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship. MVP was the inaugural IWGP Intercontinetal Champion, with Kota Ibushi being the last.

Overview[]

Championship tournament[]

On April 8, 2011, NJPW announced the participants in the tournament to crown the first IWGP Intercontinental Champion. The list of participants included former World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) performer MVP, who had signed a contract with NJPW in January 2011, Kazuchika Okada, who had been on a learning excursion to American promotion Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA) since February 2010, Hideo Saito, who had been on a similar tour of Puerto Rican World Wrestling Council since September 2010, former IWGP Tag Team and IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champions Tetsuya Naito and Yujiro Takahashi of No Limit, NJPW regulars Tama Tonga and Toru Yano and American independent worker Dan Maff, who made his first appearance for NJPW during the tour. On May 6 it was announced that Tonga had suffered an injury, which would force him out of the tournament. He would be replaced by former TNA and Ring of Honor performer Josh Daniels. On May 15, MVP defeated Yano in the finals of the tournament to become the inaugural champion.

Tournament bracket
  Round One
(May 13)
Semifinals
(May 14)
Final
(May 15)
                           
   MVP Sub  
 Kazuchika Okada 12:45  
   MVP Sub  
   Tetsuya Naito 10:57  
 Josh Daniels Pin
   Tetsuya Naito 12:28  
     MVP Sub
   Toru Yano 09:27
   Dan Maff Pin  
 Toru Yano 10:38  
   Toru Yano Pin
   Yujiro Takahashi 07:47  
 Hideo Saito Pin
   Yujiro Takahashi 08:28  


Nakamura and elevation[]

Through MVP's inaugural reign and the subsequent reigns of Masato Tanaka and Hirooki Goto, the IWGP Intercontinental Championship was largely a midcard title, remaining firmly behind the IWGP Heavyweight Championship and IWGP Tag Team Championship in importance. However, after Shinsuke Nakamura captured the title from Goto on July 22, 2012, Nakamura was already a former three-time IWGP Heavyweight Champion and, with his first reign of 313 days, the title began gaining importance. Nakamura also made the title international again, defending it in both the United States and Mexico. On May 31, 2013, while on tour with Mexican promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre, with whom NJPW has a working relationship, Nakamura lost the title to La Sombra. This marked the first time the title had changed hands outside of NJPW. Nakamura regained the title back in NJPW two months later on July 20, and in the process became the first two-time holder of the title. Nakamura continued elevating the IWGP Intercontinental Championship, culminating with the IWGP Intercontinental Championship match receiving top billing over the IWGP Heavyweight Championship match at NJPW's biggest annual event, Wrestle Kingdom 8 in Tokyo Dome on January 4, 2014, where former multi-time IWGP Heavyweight Champion Hiroshi Tanahashi became the new champion.

Afterwards, Tokyo Sports wrote that the Intercontinental and Heavyweight Championships were now equals, while Dave Meltzer wrote that Nakamura and Tanahashi made the Intercontinental Championship feel like "the real world title belt". Nakamura regained the title from Tanahashi in another main event match on April 6 at Invasion Attack 2014 and Nakamura's association with the championship continued to 2016, when he successfully defended it against former IWGP Heavyweight Champion AJ Styles at Wrestle Kingdom 10 in Tokyo Dome. On January 25, 2016, Nakamura was stripped of the title due to his departure from the promotion at the end of the month.

From 2012 to 2016, Nakamura held the IWGP Intercontinental Championship for a record five times and defended it at four consecutive Wrestle Kingdom events. The title was also associated with Nakamura as it was he who personally introduced the current title belt design shortly into his first reign in August 2012. He was outspokenly disapproving of the first belt design with bronze plates on a black strap for its resemblance to a 10 yen coin and saw it as a mockery of the IWGP. The new design featured gold plates on a white strap. The white strap was unprecedented for the IWGP and symbolized a clean slate for its holder to add to and define.

Naito and Unification[]

After Nakamura's departure from NJPW in 2016, the title was most associated with Tetsuya Naito, who held the title for a record six times. Over the years, the title belt's physical condition got progressively worse. During Tetsuya Naito's first reign as champion, he began systematically destroying the belt, forcing NJPW to have it repaired in June 2017. Unlike Nakamura, Naito firmly saw the IWGP Heavyweight Championship as the NJPW's premier title, and had no desire to held the IWGP Intercontinental Championship when he first won it. However, following his second reign in April 2018, Naito began showing a sympathetic attitude towards the championship belt, leading him to win the IWGP Intercontinental Championship three more times until June 2019.

During this time, in March, Naito had the desire to hold both IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships simultaneously. In August, after Kota Ibushi won the 2019 G1 Climax, he announced his intentions of challenging for the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships in both nights of Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome. Naito's desire was derailed by Jay White, who also wanted to main event the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14 and become the first-ever double champion in history, leading Naito to lose the championship belt to him on September 22 at Destruction in Kobe. On November 3 at Power Struggle, Naito challenged White to a rematch for the IWGP Intercontinental Championship. Afterwards, Kota Ibushi and Kazuchika Okada would come to the ring, with Okada suggesting a fan vote to determine whether the main event of the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14. The dual championship match for the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships won the vote, resulting in Naito receiving his championship rematch at the event. In the build-up to the event, the dual championship match being billed as "Double Gold Dash". On January 4, 2020 in the first night of Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome, Naito defeated White to win the IWGP Intercontinental Championship, tying Shinsuke Nakamura record of most reigns as champion with five reigns. The following day, in the second night of Wrestle Kingdom 14, Naito successfully defended the IWGP Intercontinental Championship and won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, after defeating Okada, to become the first double champion in NJPW history. Subsequently, the both championships began billed as "IWGP Heavyweight/IWGP Intercontinental Double Championship" (IWGPヘビー級・IWGPインターコンチネンタル ダブル王座).

Afterwards, the IWGP Intercontinental Championship began being defended alongside the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, with Naito breaking Nakamura's reigns as champion following his sixth reign on August 29, 2020, after regaining the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships from EVIL. Upon winning the IWGP Intercontinental and IWGP Heavyweight Championships at Wrestle Kingdom 15, Kota Ibushi announced his ambitions of unifying both titles. Following a successfull title defense of the IWGP Intercontinental Championship against Testuya Naito, who was against the unification of both titles, on March 1, NJPW announced that both titles would be unified into the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship, with the last title defense of both titles being on March 4 at NJPW's 49th anniversary event, where Kota Ibushi retained the title against El Desperado.

Title history[]

Overall, there have been twenty-seven reigns shared among fourteen wrestlers with one vacancy. MVP, La Sombra, Bad Luck Fale, Kenny Omega, Michael Elgin, Chris Jericho and Jay White were the seven non-Japanese wrestlers to have held the title. Kota Ibushi was the final champion, after unifying the title with the IWGP Heavyweight Championship to form the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship.

The inaugural champion was MVP, who defeated Toru Yano on May 15, 2011, in a tournament final. Tetsuya Naito hled the record for most reigns, with six. At 313 days, Shinsuke Nakamura's first reign was the longest in the title's history. Nakamura had the most successful defenses in that reign with 8 and with a combined five reigns, and also held the record for most days as champion at 901. Tetsuya Naito's second reign holds the record for shortest reign at 41 days. Over his three reigns, Tanahashi successfully defended the title 28 times, the most of any champion. With eight, Shinsuke Nakamura's first reigns, with four, Tetsuya Naito's first reigns, Kota Ibushi's second reign, with three Shinsuke Nakamura's second and fourth with two MVP's only reign, Masato Tanaka's only reign, Hirooki Goto's first reign, with one La Sombra's only reign, Nakamura's third reign, Hirooki Goto's second reign, Kenny Omega's only reign, Minoru Suzuki's only reign, Chris Jericho's only reign, Tetsuya Naito's thrid and sixt reign, Kota Ibushi's first reign Jay White's only reign and EVIL's only reign were all tied for least successful defenses.

# Wrestler Reign Date Location Length Defenses Notes
1 MVP 1 May 15, 2011 Philadelphia 148 Days 2 Defeated Toru Yano in an eight–man tournament final to become the inaugural champion.
2 Masato Tanaka 1 October 10, 2011 Tokyo 125 Days 3
3 Hirooki Goto 1 February 12, 2012 Osaka 161 Days 2
4 Shinsuke Nakamura 1 July 22, 2012 Yamagata 313 Days 8
5 La Sombra 1 May 31, 2013 Mexico City, Mexico 50 Days 1 This was a two out of three falls match.
6 Shinsuke Nakamura 2 July 20, 2013 Akita 168 Days 3
7 Hiroshi Tanahashi 1 January 4, 2014 Tokyo 92 Days 1
8 Shinsuke Nakamura 3 April 6, 2014 Tokyo 76 Days 1
9 Bad Luck Fale 1 June 21, 2014 Osaka 92 Days 0
10 Shinsuke Nakamura 4 September 21, 2014 Kobe 224 Days 3
11 Hirooki Goto 2 May 3, 2015 Fukuoka 147 Days 1
12 Shinsuke Nakamura 5 September 27, 2015 Kobe 120 Days 2
Vacated January 25, 2016 Tokyo Vacated due to Nakamura leaving NJPW.
13 Kenny Omega 1 February 14, 2016 Nagaoka 126 Days 1 Defeated Hiroshi Tanahashi to win the vacant title.
14 Michael Elgin 1 June 19, 2016 Osaka 98 Days 0 This was a ladder match.
15 Tetsuya Naito 1 September 25, 2016 Kobe 259 Days 4
16 Hiroshi Tanahashi 2 June 11, 2017 Osaka 230 Days 4
17 Minoru Suzuki 1 January 27, 2018 Sapporo 92 Days 1 Suzuki won the title after the referee was forced to stop the match, due to Tanahashi's leg injury.
18 Tetsuya Naito 2 April 29, 2018 Kumamoto 41 Days 0
19 Chris Jericho 1 June 9, 2018 Osaka 209 Days 1
20 Tetsuya Naito 3 January 4, 2019 Tokyo 93 Days 1
21 Kota Ibushi 1 April 6, 2019 New York, United States 64 Days 1
22 Tetsuya Naito 4 June 9, 2019 Osaka 105 Days 0
23 Jay White 1 September 22, 2019 Kobe 104 Days 1
24 Tetsuya Naito 5 January 4, 2020 Tokyo 190

Days

2 This match was part of the "Double Gold Dash" also for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship.
25 EVIL 1 July 12, 2020 Osaka 48 Days 1 This match was also for the IWGP Heavyweight Championship.
26 Tetsuya Naito 6 August 29, 2020 Tokyo 128 Days 1
27 Kota Ibushi 2 January 4, 2021 Tokyo 59 Days 4
Unified March 4, 2021 Tokyo Unified with the IWGP Heavyweight Championship to form the IWGP World Heavyweight Championship.

Combined reigns[]

Rank Wrestler No. of
reigns
Combined
defenses
Combined
days
1 Shinsuke Nakamura 5 17 901
2 Tetsuya Naito 6 7 816
3 Hiroshi Tanahashi 2 5 322
4 Hirooki Goto 3 308
5 Chris Jericho 1 1 209
6 MVP 2 148
7 Kenny Omega 1 126
8 Masato Tanaka 3 125
9 Kota Ibushi 2 5 123
10 Jay White 1 1 104
11 Michael Elgin 98
12 Bad Luck Fale 0 92
Minoru Suzuki 1
13 La Sombra 50
14 EVIL 48

Gallery[]