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NEVER Openweight Championship | |||||||||||||||||||
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Details | |||||||||||||||||||
Promotion | New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) | ||||||||||||||||||
Date established | November 19, 2012[1][2] | ||||||||||||||||||
Current champion(s) | Shingo Takagi | ||||||||||||||||||
Date won | September 29, 2024 | ||||||||||||||||||
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The NEVER Openweight Championship (NEVER無差別級王座, NEVER musabetsu-kyū ōza) is a professional wrestling championship owned by the New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) promotion. NEVER is an acronym of the terms "New Blood", "Evolution", "Valiantly", "Eternal", and "Radical" and was an NJPW-promoted series of events, which featured younger up-and-coming talent and outside wrestlers not signed to the promotion.[1][8] The project was officially announced on July 12, 2010,[8] and held its first event on August 24, 2010.[9] On October 5, 2012, NJPW announced that NEVER was going to get its own championship, the NEVER Openweight Championship.[1][2] The current champion is Shingo Takagi, who is in his fifth reign. He defeated Henare at Destruction in Kobe on September 29 in Kobe, Japan.
The title was originally scheduled to be defended exclusively at NEVER events, but this plan was quickly changed and since its foundation, the title has been defended on the undercards of NJPW events.[2][10] The original concept of having younger workers wrestle for the title has also not been realized with the first seven holders of the title having been in their thirties or forties.[11][12] Instead, through the likes of Katsuyori Shibata, Togi Makabe, and Tomohiro Ishii, the NEVER Openweight Championship became known for its "gritty" title matches and "hard hitting" style.[13][14] Though named an "openweight" championship, NJPW has also categorized the title as a heavyweight title.[15][16] The title forms what has unofficially been called 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 and the IWGP Intercontinental Championship.[17] The title's openweight nature means that both heavyweight and junior heavyweight wrestlers are eligible to challenge for it.[18]
On October 5, 2012, over two years after the founding of NEVER, New Japan Pro-Wrestling announced the creation of the project's first championship, the NEVER Openweight Championship.[1][2][19] The title was originally created with the idea of using it to "elevate younger wrestlers".[20]
The first champion was to be determined in a sixteen-man single-elimination tournament, which was set to take place November 15 and 19, 2012.[21][22] The title and the tournament were announced by New Japan president Naoki Sugabayashi and NEVER regular Tetsuya Naito,[2][19] who was scheduled to enter the tournament, but was forced to pull out after suffering a knee injury.[10] Much like regular NEVER events, the tournament also featured wrestlers not signed to New Japan; freelancer Daisuke Sasaki, Hiro Tonai, Kengo Mashimo, Ryuichi Sekine, Shiori Asahi and Taishi Takizawa from Kaientai Dojo, and Masato Tanaka from Pro Wrestling Zero1.[21][22] In the final of the tournament, Tanaka, the 39-year-old, who, despite officially being affiliated with Pro Wrestling Zero1, had worked for NJPW regularly since August 2009, defeated Karl Anderson to become the inaugural NEVER Openweight Champion.[3][23][24][25] Though the title was originally designed to be defended at NEVER events, NJPW has not held a single NEVER event since the championship tournament.[20]
First round (November 15)[26][27] | Second round (November 19)[23] | Semifinals (November 19)[23] | Final (November 19) | ||||||||||||
Karl Anderson | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Yujiro Takahashi | 11:12[26] | ||||||||||||||
Karl Anderson | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Shiori Asahi | 03:59[3] | ||||||||||||||
Hiromu Takahashi | 06:14[26] | ||||||||||||||
Shiori Asahi | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Karl Anderson | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Kengo Mashimo | 06:14[3] | ||||||||||||||
Ryusuke Taguchi | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Hiro Tonai | 08:19[26] | ||||||||||||||
Ryusuke Taguchi | 07:54[3] | ||||||||||||||
Kengo Mashimo | Sub | ||||||||||||||
Bushi | 08:02[26] | ||||||||||||||
Kengo Mashimo | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Karl Anderson | 15:12[3] | ||||||||||||||
Masato Tanaka | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Kushida | 13:02[26] | ||||||||||||||
Masato Tanaka | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Masato Tanaka | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Taishi Takizawa | 04:28[3] | ||||||||||||||
Captain New Japan | 07:22[26] | ||||||||||||||
Taishi Takizawa | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Masato Tanaka | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Tomohiro Ishii | 10:47[3] | ||||||||||||||
Tomohiro Ishii | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Daisuke Sasaki | 08:39[26] | ||||||||||||||
Tomohiro Ishii | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Yoshi-Hashi | 06:57[3] | ||||||||||||||
Yoshi-Hashi | Pin | ||||||||||||||
Ryuichi Sekine | 07:14[26] |
There have been 45 reigns shared among 22 wrestlers with one vacancy. Masato Tanaka was the first champion in the title's history. He also holds the record for the longest reign at 314 days during his only reign. Tomohiro Ishii has the most reigns with six. Michael Elgin's only reign of 8 days is the shortest in the title's history. Minoru Suzuki is the oldest champion when he won it at 52 years old, while Will Ospreay is the youngest champion at 25 years old.
The current champion is Shingo Takagi, who is in his fifth reign. He defeated Henare at Destruction in Kobe on September 29, 2024 in Kobe, Japan to win the title.