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〔 | oldest = Virus (42 years, 180 days) | youngest = Dragon Lee (19 years, 325 days) | heaviest = Tommy Williams () | lightest = Dragon Lee () | pastnames = CMLL Japan Super Lightweight Championship (1999 - 2000) CMLL World Super Lightweight Championship (2003 - 2012) }} The CMLL World Lightweight Championship (''Campeonato Mundial de Peso Ligero del CMLL'' in Spanish) is a professional wrestling world championship promoted by the Mexican Lucha Libre wrestling-based promotion Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL). Originally CMLL promoted the "Super Lightweight" division as part of their expansion into Japan from 1999 until 2000 and later reintroduced the division in 2003 as the CMLL World Super Lightweight Championship was used by CMLL in Mexico. During Virus reign with the title between 2011 and 2015 the name was changed to be the CMLL Lightweight Championship instead. Like all professional wrestling championships, its holders are determined by promoters or promotions, not by athletic competition. The championship was originally a "Super Lightweight" championship, which in ''lucha libre'' is between and ; later on it was modified to be for the Lightweight division, which is between and . CMLL has at times ignored the weight limit, promoting champions such as Dragon Lee who was billed as weighing when he won the championship. In 1999 CMLL began to tour Japan, promoting a series of wrestling shows under the name "CMLL Japan", featuring shows that were a mixture of CMLL wrestlers and native Japanese wrestlers on their shows. On February 27, 1999 they held a one night tournament to determine who would be the first ever CMLL Japan Super Lightweigtht Championship, making the first time in the history of CMLL that they had a championship specifically for that weight class. The tournament finale saw the Japanese Masatu Yakushiji defeat CMLL wrestler Rencor Latino to become the first ever champion.〔 Over the following year CMLL promoted additional shows in Japan and had CMLL wrestler Virus win the championshop from Yakushiji. Subsequently Virus and Mexican Ricky Marvin, who worked for a number of Japanese promotions at the time, exchanged the title over the fall of 2000, the last title change taking place in Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico after the final CMLL Japan tour had ended.〔 The championship was abandoned by the end of 2000 as CMLL abandoned future plans to promote shows in Japan.〔 In 2003 CMLL reinstated the Super Lightweight division after a series of very well-received matches between the Southern California team of the Havana Brothers (Havana Brother I, Havana Brother II and Havana Brother I) and the CMLL team of Ricky Marvin, Virus and Volador, Jr.. CMLL announced that they were establishing the CMLL World Super Lightweight Championship, elevating the division from a regional to an "World" level championship. CMLL held a ''torneo cibernetico'' elimination match, which included the Havana Brothers, Sangre Azteca, Ricky Marvin, Virus, Volador, Jr. Super Comando, Loco Max, Tigre Blanco, Neutro and Sombra de Plata. Havana Brother I (a masked Rocky Romero) the match and the tournament by eliminating Volador, Jr.〔 A few months later Virus defeated Romero for the title, after which the Havana Brothers stopped working for CMLL on a regular baiss.〔 For the following year the title was not defended, nor hardly promoted by CMLL until Rocky Romero returned to the promotion. This time Romero worked unmasked, but CMLL acknowledged his previous title reign as part of a buildup to a championship rematch between Romero and Virus.〔 Romero became a two time champion on December 10, 2004 but stopped working for CMLL shortly after the match.〔 CMLL made no attempts to regain the title and Romero would on occasion work on the Southern California independent circuit as the Super Lightweight Champion.〔 In 2005 he lost the championship to Tommy Williams in a match that received no main stream coverage and the title change was only made public as they promoted a rematch between Williams and Romero.〔 Romero regained the title from Tommy Williams but never defended it afterwards, nor did he work for CMLL in 2006 or 2007.〔 When Romero did return to CMLL in 2008 it was an ''enmascarado'', or masked character called "Grey Shadow" with no public acknowledgment of his past with CMLL. The championship was not officially declared vacant until Romero left CMLL to work for their rival Asistencia Asesoria y Administracion (AAA) and quickly announced a tournament to crown a new champion.〔 On April 7, 2009 Máscara Dorada won a ''torneo cibernetico'' elimination match to win the Super Lightweight championship.〔 In 2011 Dorada vacated the championship as he was moving up to the Middleweight division instead.〔 Virus became a four time Super Lightweight Champion on June 7, 2011 by defeating Guerrero Maya Jr. in a tournament final.〔 During Virus' run as champion the belt was reclassified from "Super Lightweight" to "Lightweight". Dragon Lee is the current champion in his first reign, after defeating Virus on April 5, 2015, to win the title.〔 Seven different wrestlers have held the championship for 13 reigns in total. Virus holds the record for most reigns, 4; two in Japan and two in Mexico. His four reigns combine to 2,046 days, more than any other champion and his fourth reign lasted a total of 1,398 days the longest individual reign. Ricky Marvin has the shortest individual reign, lasting somewhere between 1 day and days.〔 ==Title history== ;Key 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「CMLL World Lightweight Championship」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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