Mexican National Championships
The Mexican National Championships is a group of Lucha libre professional wrestling championships that
are sanctioned by Comisión de Box y Lucha Libre Mexico D.F.. While the Commission sanctions the championships, it does not promote the events in which the championships are defended. Being professional wrestling championships, they are not won legitimately; they are instead won via a scripted ending to a match or awarded to a wrestler or wrestlers as a result of a storyline. The earliest Mexican National Championship, the Mexican National Heavyweight Championship, was created as far back as 1926. The Mexican National Welterweight Championship crowned its first champion on June 17, 1934, making it the oldest, still active, professional wrestling championship. Eléctrico, the current Lightweight champion, is the longest reigning Mexican National Championship, having won the title on August 13, 2013. Atlantis, the reigning Light Heavyweight Champion, has the shortest active reign of any champion, having defeated Mephisto for the championship on August 25, 2015.
Over the years the Commission has created a total of 13 different championships, seven of which for various weight divisions in Mexico. Three of the championships are for various forms of male tag teams. They also created two championships for Women's professional wrestling, a singles championship and a tag team championship. From 1993 through 2006 the commission sanctioned the Mexican National Mini-Estrella Championship, exclusively for the Mini-Estrella championship. Since 2008 the Mexican National Lightweight Championship has been modified to be for Mini-Estrellas division. The Commission's most recent championship addition was in 1996 when they created the Mexican National Atómicos Championship, contested for by teams of four. Of the 13 championships, only five remain active. The individual promotions have the promotional control of the championship while the Commission only serves to approve the champions and supervise championship matches. The Commission normally approve all champions but has on occasion decided to a championship if the promotions did not follow the Commissions' guidelines. One instance was in 1957 when Mishima Ota won the Lightweight championship, deeming him ineligible because he was a Japanese citizen. Originally the Commission also stated that championships could not be defended in anything other than normal matches, stripping Psicosis II of the championship for defending the Mexican National Middleweight Championship in a hardcore match. At a later point they allowed the Heavyweight Championship to be defended in a Steel cage match.
The Mexican National Championships have been promoted by a number of Mexican-based wrestling promotions over the years. Founded in 1933 Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre, has promoted Mexican National Championships since its inception and currently promotes five of the championships, the Lightweight, Light Heavyweight, Welterweight, Women's, and Trios championships. Over the years CMLL has promoted every single Mexican National Championship except the Atómicos, Featherweight and Cruiserweight Championship. In 1992 Asistencia Asesoría y Administración, later known simply as "AAA", was formed when a number of CMLL wrestlers broke away to create a new company. Several of the wrestlers that left were reigning Mexican National Champions and the Mexico City Boxing and Wrestling commission allowed AAA to take promotional control of those championships at that point. Of the championships. In 2008 AAA abandoned all Mexican National Championships, ending the Middleweight, Atómicos and Tag Team Championship. In 2006 then Mini-Estrellas champion Mascarita Sagrada left AAA while still holding the championship, there was no subsequent announcement that the title was vacated, rendering it inactive from that point on. The Commission recognized the Mexican National Women's Tag Team Championship for just under 7 years, creating it for CMLL's Women's division and abandoning it when CMLL practically stopped promoting women's wrestling in 1997.
Championship overview
;KeySymbol | Meaning |
† | Indicates that the championship is not active |
Title is still active |
Championship | Champion | Won | Division | Created | Abandoned | Notes | |
Featherweight Championship † | Rayo de Oro | Promoted on the Mexican Independent circuit. | |||||
Lightweight Championship | Eléctrico | — | Promoted by CMLL. Is now exclusively for the Mini-Estrella division. | ||||
Welterweight Championship | Rey Cometa | — | Promoted by CMLL | ||||
Middleweight Championship † | Octagón | AAA abandoned all Mexican National Championship | |||||
Light Heavyweight Championship | Atlantis | — | Promoted by CMLL | ||||
Cruiserweight Championship † | AAA abandoned all Mexican National Championship | ||||||
Heavyweight Championship | Over | — | Title originally abandoned in 2013 after then champion Hector Garza died while being champion. It eventually returned in October 2017 under control of CMLL. | ||||
Tag Team Championship | Vacant | Two man tag teams | — | Promoted by CMLL | |||
Trios Championship | Three man tag teams | — | Promoted by CMLL | ||||
Atómicos Championship † | Chessman and Los Psycho Circus | Four man tag teams | AAA abandoned all Mexican National Championship | ||||
Women's Championship | La Metálica | Women | — | Promoted by CMLL | |||
Women's Tag Championship | Vacant | Female tag teams | — | Promoted by CMLL | |||
Mini-Estrella Championship † | Mascarita Sagrada | Mini-Estrellas | Championship abandoned when Mascarita Sagrada left AAA |