Chris Jericho

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Chris Jericho
Jerichomeetngreet.jpg
Chris Jericho on tour in 2007.
Ring name(s) Chris Jericho (Y2J)[1]
Corazón de León[2]
León de Oro[3]
Lion Do[4]
The Lion Heart[4]
Super Liger[4]
Billed height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[1]
Billed weight 227 lb (103 kg)[1]
Born (1970-11-09) November 9, 1970 (age 42)[2]
Manhasset, New York[2]
Resides Tampa, Florida[4]
Billed from Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Trained by Ed Langley
Katsuji Adachi
Debut October 2, 1990[4]
Website chrisjericho.com

Christopher Keith Irvine (born November 9, 1970),[2] best known by his ring name, Chris Jericho, is an American-born Canadian professional wrestler, musician, media personality, actor, author, and businessman. He is currently signed to WWE, and is also well known for his time in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW), and internationally in Canadian, Mexican and Japanese promotions. Jericho is known for his over-the-top, rock star persona – and for a contrasting run as an aloof villain from the late 2000s to the early 2010s.[5]

Jericho has won 30 championships between WWF/E, WCW, and ECW – the three most prominent American promotions in the 1990s and early 2000s. He is credited as being the first Undisputed WWF Champion, having unified the WWF Championship and the World Championship (formerly the WCW Championship) by defeating The Rock and Stone Cold Steve Austin on the same night in 2001.[1]

Jericho has been a challenger to major world championships since the mid-1990s.[6] In WWE, is a six-time world champion, having won the WWF Championship once, the WCW/World Championship twice and the World Heavyweight Championship three times. He is also a record nine-time Intercontinental Champion, and the fourth WWE Grand Slam Champion.[1] Jericho has headlined many major pay-per-views for WWE in the 2000s and 2010s, including the 18th edition of the company's premier event, WrestleMania, in 2002.[7]

Outside of wrestling, Jericho formed the band Fozzy, in 1999, as their lead vocalist. Their eponymous debut album (2000) and Happenstance (2002) consist of cover songs and original music; All That Remains (2005), Chasing the Grail (2010) and Sin and Bones (2012) feature all-original music. He also competed in the 2011 series of Dancing With the Stars, lasting until the sixth week. Prior to this, he hosted the ABC game show, Downfall and the Revolver Golden Gods Awards.[8]

Contents

Professional wrestling career [edit]

Early career (1990–1996) [edit]

At age 19, Irvine entered the Hart Brothers School of Wrestling where, on his first day, he met Lance Storm. Two months later, he was ready to start wrestling on independent shows, making his debut as "Cowboy" Chris Jerico, on October 2, 1990, in a 10-minute time limit draw against Storm. The pair then worked as a tag team, initially called "Sudden Impact". He took the name "Jericho" from an album, Walls of Jericho, by German power metal band, Helloween.[9] Jericho and Storm worked for Tony Condello in the tours of Northern Manitoba with Adam Copeland (Edge), Jason Reso (Christian), and Terry Gerin (Rhino).[2] The pair also wrestled in Calgary's Canadian National Wrestling Alliance (CNWA) and Canadian Rocky Mountain Wrestling (CRMW). In 1991, Jericho and Storm started touring in Japan for Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, where he befriended Ricky Fuji, who also trained under Stu Hart.

In the winter of 1992, he travelled to Mexico and competed under the name Leon D'Oro, and later Corazón de León, where he wrestled for several small wrestling companies, as well as the largest in the country, Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL). In CMLL, Jericho took on Silver King, Negro Casas, and Último Dragón en route to an 11 month reign as the NWA Middleweight Champion that began in December 1993. After leaving Mexico, Jericho wrestled in Hamburg, Germany for six weeks as part of a tournament run by Rene Lasartesse.[2] His burgeoning wrestling skills also took him to Japan in 1994, where he competed for Genichiro Tenryu's Wrestling and Romance (later known as Wrestle Association "R") (WAR) promotion, facing the likes of Gedo and Último Dragón, to whom he lost the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Championship. He also became a member of the heel stable Fuyuki-Gun (also known as Team No Respect) with Gedo, Jado, and Hiromichi Fuyuki under the name Lion Do, and went on to team with Gedo to become the first WAR International Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champions. 1994 also saw Jericho reunited with his former team-mate from CRMW, Storm, as the Thrillseekers in Jim Cornette's Smoky Mountain Wrestling (SMW) promotion, where they feuded with the likes of Well Dunn, The Rock 'n' Roll Express, and The Heavenly Bodies. In December 1995, Jericho competed in the second Super J Cup Tournament, hosted by WAR, losing to Wild Pegasus (Chris Benoit).[2]

Extreme Championship Wrestling (1996) [edit]

In 1996, thanks in part to recommendations by Benoit and Perry Saturn, to promoter Paul Heyman, and after Mick Foley saw Jericho's match against Último Dragón for the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Championship in July 1995 and gave a tape of the match to Heyman, Jericho began wrestling for the Philadelphia-based Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) promotion, winning the ECW World Television Championship from Pitbull #2 in June 1996. While in ECW, Jericho wrestled Taz, Sabu, Rob Van Dam, Foley (as Cactus Jack), Shane Douglas, and 2 Cold Scorpio. It was during this time that he drew the attention of World Championship Wrestling (WCW).

World Championship Wrestling [edit]

Cruiserweight Champion (1996–1998) [edit]

When Y2J worked at the WCW

On August 26, 1996, Jericho made his first appearance with WCW, and on September 15, he appeared at his first pay-per-view show in a match against Chris Benoit at Fall Brawl.[10] In January 1997, Jericho made his debut for New Japan Pro Wrestling, who had a working agreement with WCW, as Super Liger, the masked arch nemesis of Jushin "Thunder" Liger. According to Jericho, Super Liger's first match against Koji Kanemoto at Wrestling World 1997 was so poorly received that the gimmick was dropped instantly. Jericho complained that he had a difficult time seeing through the mask and botched several moves during the match. The following six months, Jericho worked for New Japan unmasked, before being called back by WCW. On June 28, 1997, Jericho defeated Syxx in Los Angeles, California to win the Cruiserweight Championship for the first time. He won the title again on August 12, 1997, by defeating Alex Wright.

Jericho began his heel run when he won the title a third time by defeating Rey Mysterio, Jr. at Souled Out by forcing him to submit to the Liontamer. After the match, Jericho assaulted Mysterio's knee with a toolbox.[11] In the storyline, Mysterio needed six months of recovery before he could return to the ring. Jericho then had a short feud with Juventud Guerrera in which Guerrera repeatedly requested a shot at Jericho's Cruiserweight Championship, but Jericho constantly rebuffed him. The feud culminated in a Title vs. Mask match at SuperBrawl VIII. Guerrera lost the match and was forced to remove his mask.[12] Following this match, Jericho began his ongoing gimmick of collecting and wearing to the ring trophy items from his defeated opponents, such as Guerrera's mask, Prince Iaukea's Hawaiian dress, and a headband from Disco Inferno.

Jericho after a taping of WCW Monday Nitro in 1998.
Y2J as WCW Cruiseweight champion

Jericho then began a long feud with Dean Malenko, in which Jericho repeatedly claimed he was a better wrestler than Malenko, but refused to wrestle him. Because of his mastery of technical wrestling, Malenko was known as "The Man of 1,000 Holds," so Jericho claimed to be "The Man of 1,004 Holds." During the March 30, 1998 episode of WCW Monday Nitro, after defeating Marty Jannetty, Jericho pulled out a long pile of paper that listed each of the 1,004 holds he knew and recited them to the audience. Many of the "holds" were fictional, and nearly every other hold was an armbar. On the March 12, 1998 episode of WCW Thunder, Malenko defeated a wrestler wearing Juventud Guerrera's mask who appeared to be Jericho. However, the masked wrestler was actually Lenny Lane, who Jericho bribed to appear in the match. This started a minor feud between Lane and Jericho after Jericho refused to pay Lane. At Uncensored Jericho finally wrestled Malenko and defeated him, after which Malenko took a leave of absence from wrestling.[13] Jericho then proceeded to bring with him to the ring a portrait of Malenko that he insulted and demeaned. Just prior to Slamboree, J.J. Dillon (referred to by Jericho as "Jo Jo") scheduled a cruiserweight Battle Royal, of which the winner would immediately have a shot at Jericho's Cruiserweight Championship. Jericho accepted on the grounds that whoever he faced would be too tired to win a second match. At Slamboree, Jericho came out to announce the competitors in an insulting fashion before the match started and then went backstage for coffee. An individual who appeared to be Ciclope won the battle royal after Juventud Guerrera shook his hand then eliminated himself. However, the winner was not Ciclope, but instead a returning Malenko in disguise. Malenko proceeded to defeat Jericho for the championship.[14] Jericho claiming he was the victim of a carefully planned conspiracy to get the belt off of him. He at first blamed the WCW locker room, then added Dillon, Ted Turner, and finally in a vignette, he walked around Washington, D.C. with the sign "conspiracy victim" and accused President Bill Clinton of being one of the conspirators after being rejected from a meeting. Eventually, Malenko vacated the title. Jericho ended up defeating Malenko at The Great American Bash to win the vacant title after Malenko was disqualified after hitting Jericho with a chair.[15] The next night, Malenko was suspended for his actions.

At Bash at the Beach, the recently returned Rey Mysterio, Jr. (who had recovered from his knee injury) defeated Jericho in a No Disqualification match after the still-suspended Malenko interfered.[16] Jericho regained the Cruiserweight Championship from Mysterio the next night after he interrupted J.J. Dillon while Dillon was giving the championship to Mysterio. Jericho was again awarded the championship.[17] Eventually, Jericho decisively lost the title to Juventud Guerrera in a match at Road Wild with Malenko as special referee.[18]

World Television Champion (1998–1999) [edit]

When Y2J was the detentor of the WCW TV Championship

On August 10, Jericho defeated Stevie Ray to win the World Television Championship (Stevie Ray substituting for the champion Booker T).[19] Soon afterward, Jericho repeatedly called out World Heavyweight Champion Goldberg, in an attempt to begin a feud with him, but never actually wrestled him.[2] Jericho cites Eric Bischoff, Goldberg, and Hulk Hogan's refusal to book Jericho in a pay-per-view squash match loss against Goldberg, which Jericho felt would be a big draw, as a major reason for leaving the company.

On November 30, Jericho lost the Television Championship to Konnan.[20] In early 1999, Jericho began a feud with Perry Saturn. The feud saw Jericho and Saturn instigating bizarre stipulation matches, such as at Souled Out, where Jericho defeated Saturn in a "loser must wear a dress" match.[21] At SuperBrawl IX Jericho and Saturn wrestled in a "dress" match in which Jericho once again defeated Saturn. Saturn finally defeated Jericho at Uncensored in a Dog Collar match.[22] Jericho's final WCW match came during a Peoria, Illinois house show July 21, where he and Eddie Guerrero lost a tag team match to Billy Kidman and Rey Mysterio, Jr.

World Wrestling Federation / Entertainment [edit]

The Y2J Problem and Intercontinental Champion (1999–2000) [edit]

Jericho on SmackDown! with Mr. Hughes, his enforcer during his rivalry with Ken Shamrock.

Jericho alternated between WCW and a number of Japanese tours before he signed a contract with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) on June 30.[23]

While The Rock was going to release a promo against Big Show, Y2J interrupted the People's Champ

In the weeks before Jericho's debut, a clock labelled "countdown to the new millennium" appeared on WWF programming. On the home video, Break Down the Walls, Jericho states he was inspired to do this as his entrance when he saw a similar clock in a post office. Vince McMahon gave him the green light to use it as his intro to the WWF. The clock finally ran down on the August 9, 1999 episode of Raw, in Chicago, Illinois. Whilst The Rock was in the ring cutting a promo on the Big Show, Jericho entered the arena and proclaimed "Raw is Jericho" and that he had "come to save the World Wrestling Federation", referring to himself as "Y2J" (a play on the Y2K bug). The Rock proceeded to verbally mock him for his interruption.[24] Later that month, Jericho made his in-ring debut on August 26, 1999, losing by disqualification in a match against Road Dogg on the inaugural episode of SmackDown! after powerbombing Road Dogg through a table.[25]

Jericho powerbombing Road Dogg through a table

Jericho's first long-term feud was with Chyna, for the Intercontinental Championship. After losing to Chyna at the Survivor Series,[26] Jericho won his first Intercontinental title at Armageddon.[27] This feud included a controversial decision during a rematch in which two separate referees declared each one of them the winner of a match for the title.[28] As a result, they became co-owners of the title until Jericho attained sole ownership at the Royal Rumble.[29] Jericho's subsequent alliance with Chyna, coupled with growing enthusiasm for his ring work and mic skills, effectively turned him into a face.

Feuding and teaming with Chris Benoit (2000–2001) [edit]

Jericho lost his title to the European Champion Kurt Angle at No Way Out.[30] On April 2, Jericho competed in a Triple Threat match against Chris Benoit and Angle at WrestleMania 2000 in a two-falls contest with both of Angle's titles at stake. Jericho won the European Championship by pinning Benoit, who in turn pinned Jericho to take the Intercontinental Championship.[31]

Chris Jericho performing the Walls of Jericho on Kurt Angle

This was the first of six pay-per-view matches between the pair within twelve months. Jericho lost the title the next day to Eddie Guerrero on Raw after Chyna turned heel to side with Guerrero. On the April 17 episode of Raw, Jericho upset Triple H in a WWF Championship match. Referee Earl Hebner made a fast count when Jericho pinned Triple H, causing Jericho to win the title.[32] Hebner later reversed the decision due to pressure from Triple H, and WWE does not recognize Jericho's reign as champion. On the May 4 episode of SmackDown!, Jericho defeated Benoit to become Intercontinental Champion for the third time,[33] but lost the title to Benoit four days later on Raw.[34] Meanwhile, Jericho's feud with Triple H climaxed at Fully Loaded, when they competed in a Last Man Standing match. Jericho lost the match to Triple H only by one second, despite the repeated assistance Triple H's wife, Stephanie, provided him in the match.[35]

Chris Jericho wins the IC for the third time

At the 2001 Royal Rumble, Jericho defeated Chris Benoit in a Ladder match to win the Intercontinental Championship for the fourth time.[36] At WrestleMania X-Seven, he successfully defended his title in a match against William Regal,[37] only to lose it four days later to Triple H.

At Judgment Day, Jericho and Benoit won a Tag Team Turmoil match[38] and earned a shot at Stone Cold Steve Austin and Triple H for their WWF Tag Team Championship on Raw the next night. Benoit and Jericho won the match, in which Triple H legitimately tore his quadriceps, spending the rest of the year injured. Benoit and Jericho each became a WWF Tag Team Champion for the first time.[1] The team defended their title in the first Fatal Four-Way Tables, Ladders, and Chairs match where Benoit sustained a year-long injury doing a diving headbutt through a table. Though Benoit was carried out on a stretcher, he returned to the match to climb the ladder and retain the championship. The duo lost the title one month later to the Dudley Boyz on June 19, 2001.[39] That month at King of the Ring, both Benoit and Jericho were named challengers for Austin's WWF Championship in which Booker T interfered as the catalyst for The Invasion angle.

Undisputed WWF Champion (2001–2002) [edit]

Chris Jericho as undisputed champion

In the following months, Jericho became a major force in The Invasion storyline in which WCW and ECW joined forces to overtake the WWF. Jericho remained on the side of the WWF despite previously competing in WCW and ECW. However, Jericho began to show jealousy toward fellow WWF member The Rock. They faced each other in a match at No Mercy for the WCW Championship after Jericho defeated Rob Van Dam in a number one contenders match. Jericho won the WCW Championship when he pinned The Rock after debuting a new finisher, the Breakdown.[40] One night later, the two put their differences aside and won the WWF Tag Team title from the Dudley Boyz.[39] After they lost the title to Test and Booker T,[39] they continued their feud. On the November 5 episode of Raw, The Rock defeated Jericho to regain the WCW Championship. Following the match, Jericho attacked The Rock with a steel chair. At the Survivor Series, Jericho almost cost The Rock, and the WWF, victory in their elimination matchup by attacking The Rock again, turning heel once again.[41] On December 9, at Vengeance, Jericho defeated both The Rock for the WCW Championship (unbranded and only referred to as the World Championship following Survivor Series) and Stone Cold Steve Austin for his WWF Championship on the same night to become the first wrestler to hold both championships at the same time, which made him the first Undisputed WWF Champion.[1] He fought both of the men he defeated at Vengeance on separate occasions and retained his title at the next two pay-per-views, Royal Rumble (vs. The Rock)[42] and No Way Out (vs. Stone Cold).[43] Jericho later lost the title to Triple H in the main event of WrestleMania X8.[1] After his title loss, Jericho became a member of the SmackDown! roster and continued his feud with Triple H.[44] The rivalry culminated at Judgment Day when Triple H defeated Jericho in a Hell in a Cell match.[45]

Teaming and feuding with Christian (2002–2004) [edit]

Jericho's ring entrance during Raw.

Jericho was later drafted to Raw, where he won the Intercontinental Championship from Rob Van Dam (RVD) for the fifth time. He then later formed a tag team with Christian, with whom he won the World Tag Team Championship, on October 14, 2002. Christian and Jericho lost the title in a fatal four-way elimination match, involving the teams of The Dudley Boyz, Booker T and Goldust, and William Regal and Lance Storm, on December 15, 2002 at Armageddon.

Chris Jericho and Shawn Michaels after their match at WrestleMania XIX in March 2003

On January 13, 2003, Jericho won an over-the-top-rope challenge against Kane, RVD, and Batista to select his entry number for the Royal Rumble match. He chose number two in order to start the match with Shawn Michaels, who had challenged Jericho to prove his claims that he was better than Michaels.[clarification needed] After Michaels' entrance, Jericho entered as the second participant. Christian, in Jericho's attire, appeared while the real Jericho attacked Shawn from behind. He eliminated Michaels shortly afterward, but Michaels got his revenge later in the match by causing Test to eliminate Jericho. Jericho spent the most time of any other wrestler in that same Royal Rumble. Jericho simultaneously feuded with Test, Michaels, and Jeff Hardy.[46] Jericho and Michaels fought again at WrestleMania XIX. In the end, Michaels scored the victory. Jericho, however, hit Michaels with a low blow after the match following an embrace.[47]

After this match, Jericho entered a rivalry with Goldberg, which was fueled by Goldberg's refusal to fight Jericho in WCW. During Jericho's first episode of the Highlight Reel, an interview show, where Goldberg was the guest, he complained that no-one wanted Goldberg in WWE and continued to insult him in the following weeks. On May 12 on Raw, a mystery assailant attempted to run over Goldberg with a limousine. A week later, Co-Raw General Manager, Stone Cold Steve Austin, interrogated several Raw superstars to find out who was driving the car. One of the interrogates was Lance Storm, who admitted that he was the assailant. Austin forced Storm into a match with Goldberg, who defeated Storm. After the match, Goldberg forced Storm to admit that Jericho was the superstar who conspired Storm into running him over. On May 26, Goldberg was once again a guest on the Highlight Reel. Jericho expressed jealousy towards Goldberg's success in WCW and felt that since joining WWE, he had achieved everything he had ever wanted in his career and all that was left was to defeat Goldberg and challenged him to a match. At Bad Blood, Goldberg settled the score with Jericho and defeated him.[48]

Later in 2003, Jericho began a romance with Trish Stratus while his tag team partner Christian began one with Lita. This, however, turned out to be a bet over who could sleep with their respective paramour first, with a Canadian dollar at stake. Stratus overheard this and ended her relationship with Jericho, who seemingly felt bad for using Stratus. After he saved her from an attack by Kane, Stratus agreed that the two of them could just be "friends", thus making Jericho a face. After Christian put Stratus in the Walls of Jericho while competing against her in a match, Jericho sought revenge on Christian, which led to a match at WrestleMania XX. Christian defeated Jericho after Stratus ran down and "inadvertently" struck Jericho (thinking it was Christian) and Christian got the roll-up.[49] After the match, Stratus turned on Jericho and revealed that she and Christian were a couple. This revelation led to a handicap match at Backlash that Jericho won.[50] Jericho won his seventh Intercontinental Championship at that year's Unforgiven in a ladder match against Christian.[51] Jericho's seventh reign was short lived, as he lost it at Taboo Tuesday to Shelton Benjamin.[52]

Championship pursuits and departure (2004–2005) [edit]

Jericho teamed up with Randy Orton, Chris Benoit, and Maven to take on Triple H, Batista, Edge, and Snitsky at Survivor Series. The match stipulated that each member of the winning team would be the General Manager of Raw over the next four weeks. Jericho's team won, and took turns as General Manager.[53] During Jericho's turn as General Manager, he stripped Triple H of his World Heavyweight Championship because a Triple Threat match for the title a week earlier ended in a draw. At New Year's Revolution, Jericho competed in the Elimination Chamber against Triple H, Chris Benoit, Batista, Randy Orton, and Edge for the vacated World Heavyweight Championship. Jericho began the match with Benoit but Batista ultimately eliminated Jericho.[54] At WrestleMania 21, Jericho participated in the first ever Money in the Bank ladder match. Jericho suggested the match concept, and he competed in the match against Benjamin, Benoit, Kane, Christian, and Edge. Jericho lost the match when Edge claimed the briefcase. At Backlash, Jericho challenging Shelton Benjamin for the Intercontinental Championship, but lost the match. On June 12, 2005, Jericho wrestled in his first match of the ECW One Night Stand pay-per-view event against his former rival, Lance Storm. Jericho used his old 'Lionheart' gimmick, instead of his more well known 'Y2J' gimmick. However, Jericho lost the match, after Jason and Justin Credible hit Jericho's head with a Singapore Cane, which allowed Storm to win the match.

Later that June, Jericho turned on WWE Champion John Cena, turned heel once again. Jericho lost a Triple Threat match for the WWE Championship at Vengeance which also involved Christian and Cena.[55] The feud continued throughout the summer and Jericho lost to Cena in a WWE Championship match at SummerSlam.[56] His last appearance in WWE on the next night on the August 22 episode of Raw, Jericho faced Cena again in a rematch, this time in a "You're fired" match.[1] Cena won again, and Jericho was fired by Raw General Manager Eric Bischoff, after the match, Jericho turned on Bischoff. However, Jericho was carried out of the arena by security, Kurt Angle attacked Cena.[57] WWE announced that Jericho's WWE contract had expired on August 25, 2005.

Return to WWE [edit]

Championship reigns (2007–2009) [edit]

Jericho celebrates after winning his eighth Intercontinental Championship.

After a two-year hiatus, WWE promoted Jericho's return starting September 24, 2007 with a viral marketing campaign using a series of 15-second cryptic binary code videos, similar to the matrix digital rain featured in The Matrix series. The videos contained hidden messages and biblical links related to Jericho.[58][59] Jericho made his return to WWE television as a face on the November 19, 2007 episode of Raw when he interrupted Randy Orton during Orton's orchestrated passing of the torch ceremony. Jericho revealed his intentions to reclaim the WWE Championship in order to "save" WWE fans from Orton.[59] On the November 26 episode of Raw, Jericho defeated Santino Marella and debuted a new finishing maneuver called the Codebreaker.[60] At Armageddon, he competed in a WWE title match against Orton, defeating him by disqualification when SmackDown's color commentator John "Bradshaw" Layfield interfered in the match, but Orton retained the title.[61] He began a feud with JBL and met him at the Royal Rumble. Jericho was disqualified after hitting JBL with a steel chair.[62] On the March 10 episode of Raw, Jericho captured the Intercontinental Championship for a record eighth time when he defeated Jeff Hardy.[63]

In April 2008, Jericho became involved in the ongoing feud between Shawn Michaels and Batista when he suggested that Michaels enjoyed retiring Ric Flair, causing Michaels to superkick him. Jericho thus asked to be inserted into Batista's and Michaels' match at Backlash, but instead, he was appointed as the special guest referee.[64] During the match at Backlash, Michaels feigned a knee injury so that Jericho would give him time to recover and suckered Batista in for a superkick for the win.[65] After Backlash, Jericho accused Michaels of cheating, but Michaels continued to play up an injury.[66] When Jericho was finally convinced and he apologized to Michaels for not believing him, Michaels then admitted to Jericho that he had faked his injury and he superkicked Jericho.[67] Michaels then defeated Jericho at Judgment Day, with Jericho initiating a handshake after the match.[68]

On the June 9 episode of Raw, Jericho hosted his talk show segment, The Highlight Reel, interviewing Michaels. Jericho pointed out that Michaels was still cheered by the fans despite Michaels' deceit and attack on Jericho during the previous months, whereas Jericho was booed when he tried to do the right thing. Jericho then assaulted Michaels with a low blow and sent Michaels through the "Jeritron 6000" television, damaging Michaels' eye, thus Jericho turned heel for the first time since 2005.[69] This began what was named by both Pro Wrestling Illustrated and the Wrestling Observer Newsletter the "Feud of the Year".[70] At Night of Champions, Jericho lost the Intercontinental Title to Kofi Kingston after a distraction by Michaels.[71][72] In June, Jericho also took on Lance Cade as a protegé.[73]

Jericho attacking Shawn Michaels' injured eye at The Great American Bash during their Feud of the Year rivalry.

Afterward, Jericho developed a suit-wearing "self righteous honest man" gimmick inspired by Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) from the film No Country for Old Men.[74][75][76] In doing so, Jericho purposely shed many of the trademarks associated with the "Y2J" character, taking "every characteristic that made him popular, and strip[ping] those traits away from himself."[77] Jericho and Michaels met at The Great American Bash, which Jericho won after attacking the cut on Michaels's eye.[78] Michaels later announced that his eye damage would force him to retire, but insulted Jericho by saying he would never achieve Michaels' success. Jericho tried to attack Michaels, but Michaels ducked, so Jericho punched Michaels' wife, Rebecca, instead.[79] As a result, they met in an Unsanctioned match at Unforgiven which Jericho lost. In the main event of Unforgiven, Jericho entered the Championship Scramble as a replacement for the defending champion CM Punk and subsequently won the World Heavyweight Championship.[80] Jericho then successfully defended his title against Michaels at No Mercy in a ladder match after Lance Cade interfered. At Cyber Sunday, Jericho lost the title to Batista in a regular match. Eight days later, Jericho defeated Batista to win back the title in a steel cage match.[81] Jericho ended his feud with Michaels by beating Michaels in a Last Man Standing match on the November 10 episode of Raw after interference from John "Bradshaw" Layfield.[82] Jericho's reign as World Champion lasted until the 2008 Survivor Series, where Jericho lost to the returning John Cena.

On the January 12, 2009 episode of Raw, WWE Executive Vice President Stephanie McMahon fired Jericho, but he was rehired the following week after making a forced apology.[83][84] On February 15 at No Way Out, he was eliminated by his former rival Rey Mysterio, while Mysterio was defeated by Edge to become new World Heavyweight Champion.

Jericho had an on-screen feud with The Wrestler film star Mickey Rourke and with four WWE Hall of Famers. He challenged and attacked Ric Flair, Roddy Piper, Jimmy Snuka, and Ricky Steamboat on various episodes of Raw leading to WrestleMania XXV. At the event he won an elimination match against Snuka, Steamboat and Piper. After this, Jericho challenged Rourke who was at ringside for the event. As part of the storyline, Rourke knocked Jericho out after a left hook to the jaw.[85]

On the April 13 episode of Raw, Jericho was drafted to the SmackDown brand as part of the 2009 WWE Draft.[86] Ricky Steamboat interrupted Jericho's Raw farewell address, which led to the two facing off at Backlash where Jericho came out victorious.[87] In his SmackDown return, Jericho participated in a fatal-four-way elimination match against Kane, Jeff Hardy, and Rey Mysterio. Mysterio executed a 619 on Jericho and then attempted to pin him with a seated senton. Jericho retaliated by throwing a chair at Mysterio and was disqualified. This sparked a feud between the two.[88] Mysterio pinned Jericho after a 619 at Judgment Day to retain the Intercontinental Championship.[89] Jericho defeated Mysterio in a No Holds Barred Match at Extreme Rules to win his ninth Intercontinental Championship, breaking his own record again.[90] At The Bash Jericho lost the Intercontinental title to Mysterio.

Jeri-Show (2009–2010) [edit]

Later in the same pay-per-view, Jericho and his partner Edge won the Unified Tag Team Championship as surprise entrants in a tag team match.[91] Shortly thereafter Edge suffered an injury and Jericho announced that he had a clause in his contract to allow Edge to be replaced and Jericho's reign to continue uninterrupted.[92] At Night of Champions, Jericho revealed Big Show as his new tag team partner and Jeri-Show defeated Cody Rhodes and Ted DiBiase to retain the championship.[93] Jeri-Show successfully defended their titles against Cryme Tyme at SummerSlam, MVP and Mark Henry at Breaking Point and also Rey Mysterio and Batista at Hell in a Cell.[94][95][96] At Survivor Series, both Jericho and Big Show took part in a triple threat match for the World Heavyweight Championship, but The Undertaker successfully retained his title.[97]

The 140 day reign of Jeri-Show as Unified Tag Team Champions came to an end at the TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs pay-per-view at the hands of D-Generation X (DX).[98] As a member of the SmackDown roster, Jericho could only appear on Raw as a champion and so DX intentionally disqualified themselves in a rematch to force Jericho off the show.[99] Eventually the teams had a match with a definitive finish, though DX still won, signalling the end of Jeri-Show.[100]

Various feuds and second departure (2010) [edit]

At the 2010 Royal Rumble Jericho was eliminated by the returning Edge, his former tag team partner, who went on to win the match. At Elimination Chamber, Jericho won the World Heavyweight Championship in an Elimination Chamber match, defeating The Undertaker following interference from Shawn Michaels. The next night on Raw, Edge announced that he would be using his Royal Rumble win to challenge Jericho for the World Heavyweight Championship at WrestleMania XXVI. Jericho defeated Edge, but on the April 2 episode of SmackDown!, Jack Swagger cashed in his Money in the Bank contract and pinned Jericho for the championship, after he had been speared by Edge. Swagger retained the championship in a match against Jericho and Edge soon after. Edge defeated Jericho in a steel cage match at Extreme Rules to end the feud.[101]

Jericho was drafted back to Raw in May's 2010 WWE Draft.[102] He formed a brief tag team with The Miz and unsuccessfully challenged The Hart Dynasty for the Unified Tag Team Championship at Over the Limit[103] A month later, Jericho lost to Evan Bourne at WWE Fatal 4-Way, and the following night won a rematch where he put his career on the line.[104] On the July 19 episode of Raw, after being assaulted by The Nexus, Jericho began showing signs of a face turn when he teamed with rivals Edge, John Morrison, R-Truth, The Great Khali and Bret Hart in a team led by John Cena to face The Nexus at SummerSlam.[105] Jericho and Cena bickered over leadership of the team,[106][107] which led to him and Edge attacking Cena during the SummerSlam match that they won.

Jericho was punished for not showing solidarity against Nexus, when he was removed from a Six-Pack Challenge for Sheamus' WWE Championship at WWE Night of Champions.[108][109][110] Although he re-earned his place in the match[111] he was the first man eliminated. Following an unscripted backstage interview, Jericho burst into tears and fled from the arena.[112] On the September 27 episode of Raw, Jericho faced Randy Orton who punted him in the head. This was used to explain Jericho's departure from the company.[113]

Second return to WWE [edit]

World Championship pursuits (2011–2012) [edit]

Beginning in November 2011, WWE aired six cryptic vignettes that implied that someone would be returning to the company on the January 2, 2012 episode of Raw. Jericho returned on the January 2 episode of Raw as a tweener in a similar manner to his two previous WWE introductions; however, after physically hyping the crowd and relishing their cheers for a prolonged period, a smiling Jericho left without verbally addressing his return and did so the following week.[114][115] On the January 16 episode of Raw, Jericho made his in-ring return in a six-man tag team match, although Jericho had no physical involvement in the match; he hyped the crowd upon tagging in, before tagging out and abandoning the match.[116] Jericho finally spoke the following week to say, "This Sunday at the Royal Rumble, it is going to be the end of the world as you know it",[117] but in the Royal Rumble match, he was eliminated last, by Sheamus.[118]

Chris Jericho prior to his match against CM Punk at WrestleMania XXVIII.

On the January 30 episode of Raw, Jericho interfered in a match between WWE Champion CM Punk and World Heavyweight Champion Daniel Bryan, causing a disqualification victory for Bryan and then attacking Punk following the ruling.[119] The following week, Jericho began returning to his 1999–2001 Y2J character as an anti-hero/tweener when he explained his actions by claiming all the other wrestlers in WWE were imitations of himself, referring to many main-eventers and naming CM Punk as the worst offender by calling himself the "Best in the World".[1][120] Jericho was placed in an Elimination Chamber match for the WWE Championship and won a Six-Pack Challenge against the other competitors to be the final entrant into the Elimination Chamber match.[121] At the Elimination Chamber event, Jericho eliminated Dolph Ziggler and Kofi Kingston but was kicked out of the Chamber by Punk, which gave him a head injury and removed him from the match without being eliminated.[122] The following night on Raw, Jericho won a ten-man Battle Royal making him the number one contender for CM Punk's WWE Championship at Wrestlemania XXVIII.[123] In a bid to psychologically unsettle Punk before their WrestleMania match, Jericho revealed that Punk's father was an alcoholic and Punk's sister was a drug addict which led Punk to his straight edge philosophy; Jericho also vowed to make Punk turn to alcohol by winning Punk's title from him.[124] At WrestleMania, a stipulation was added that Punk would lose his WWE Championship if he was disqualified. During the match, Jericho unsuccessfully tried to taunt Punk into disqualifying himself, and Punk won the match.[125] On the April 2 and 9 editions of Raw, Jericho continued his feud with Punk by attacking and dousing him with alcohol after his matches with Mark Henry.[126][127] At Extreme Rules, Jericho failed again to capture the WWE Championship from Punk in a Chicago Street Fight.[128]

On the May 7 episode of Raw SuperShow, Jericho pinned World Heavyweight Champion Sheamus during his tag team match with Alberto Del Rio against Sheamus and Randy Orton. After the match, Jericho, Orton, and Del Rio demanded a match for Sheamus' title at the Over the Limit, which they were granted;[129] Sheamus pinned Jericho at the event to retain the title.[130]

On May 24, at a WWE live event in Brazil, Jericho wrestled a match against CM Punk, during which Jericho crumpled up and kicked a Brazilian flag. Local police then intervened, threatening Jericho with arrest. Jericho issued an apology to the audience later on in the match, enabling the event to resume. The following day, WWE suspended Jericho indefinitely for denigrating the Brazilian flag while also issuing an apology to the Brazilian government and people. Later that day, WWE amended Jericho's suspension to 30 days.[131][132]

On the June 25 episode of Raw Supershow Jericho made his return to Raw, interrupting John Cena, announcing himself as the third man in the WWE Championship Money in the Bank match alongside Cena and the Big Show, and then losing to Cena via disqualification due to interference from Show. Jericho's absence was explained by a European tour with his band Fozzy, which happened to coincide with his suspension.[133] At Money in the Bank, he was unsuccessful as the match was won by Cena.[134]

Various storylines (2012–present) [edit]

The following night on Raw, Jericho confronted newly crowned Mr. Money in the Bank, Dolph Ziggler. Ziggler interrupted him and claimed that he had lost his touch. Jericho then hit Ziggler with a Codebreaker, turning him face for the first time since 2008.[135] The following week, on Raw 1000, Jericho teamed with Ziggler and Alberto Del Rio against Sheamus, Sin Cara, and Rey Mysterio; Jericho was pinned by Sheamus after Ziggler punched Jericho off the apron.[136] Four days later on SmackDown, Jericho further cemented his face turn by attacking Ziggler whilst wearing Ziggler's signature shirt.[137] Three days later on Raw, he solidified his turn by teaming up with Christian in a winning effort against Ziggler and The Miz. After the match, Ziggler hit Jericho with his Money in the Bank briefcase.[138] On the August 6 episode of Raw, Jericho cost Ziggler his match against Alex Riley after Jericho distracted on commentary.[139] Four days later on Smackdown, Jericho hosted the Highlight Reel with Vickie Guerrero as guest, where he returned to his Y2J gimmick before being attacked by Ziggler.[140] At SummerSlam, Jericho defeated Ziggler in a singles match by locking him in the Walls of Jericho.[141] The following night on Raw, Ziggler defeated Jericho in a rematch; as a result, Ziggler retained his Money in the Bank contract and Jericho's WWE contract was terminated as per a the pre match stipulation put in place by Raw general manager, AJ Lee. After the match, Jericho attacked Ziggler with his own briefcase and hit a Codebreaker before leaving the arena.[142] This was used to write him off so he could tour with Fozzy for the remainder of the year.[143] Right after these events, Jericho's WWE profile was moved to the 'Alumni' section of their website. [144]

On January 27, 2013, Jericho returned after a six-month hiatus entering the Royal Rumble match as the second entrant. Jericho lasted over 47 minutes before being eliminated by Dolph Ziggler.[145] The following night on Raw, Jericho later revealed to Ziggler that due to a managerial change on Raw, he had been rehired by Vickie Guerrero, resuming his feud with Ziggler. Guerrero then placed the two in a "Strange Bedfellows" match against WWE Tag Team Champions Team Hell No (Daniel Bryan and Kane). The match ended with Ziggler being chokeslammed and pinned by Kane after Jericho framed him for pushing Kane.[146] The following week on Raw, Jericho won a poll to face CM Punk in a Wrestlemania rematch, but was defeated.[147] On the February 11 episode of Raw, Jericho defeated Daniel Bryan to qualify for a spot in the number one contender Elimination Chamber match for the World Heavyweight Championship.[148] Six days later at the Elimination Chamber pay-per-view, Jericho was the fourth man eliminated from the match by Randy Orton.[149] The following night on Raw, Jericho teamed with Ryback and Sheamus to face their rivals The Shield (Dean Ambrose, Roman Reigns, and Seth Rollins), but were defeated after Ambrose pinned Jericho for the win.[150] On the March 11 episode of Raw, Jericho faced The Miz in a number one contenders match for Wade Barrett for his Intercontinental Championship, but the match was ruled a no contest after Barrett interfered and attacked both men.[151] As a result, both men were entered into the title match the following week on Raw, where Barrett retained his title.[152] Earlier in the episode, Jericho had a run-in with Fandango which led to Fandango costing him his match with Jack Swagger and attacking him four days later on SmackDown.[152][153] On the next episode of Raw, Jericho attacked Fandango and then immediately defeated old rival Dolph Ziggler via submission. Afterwards, Jericho was attacked by both Ziggler's ally Big E. Langston and Fandango.[154] On April 7 at Wrestlemania 29, Jericho was defeated by Fandango in a singles match.[155] On the April 12 episode of Smackdown, Jericho was defeated by old rival and now World Heavyweight Champion Dolph Ziggler in a non-title match, after which, Ziggler, Langston and eventually Fandango hit their finishers on Jericho.[156] Three days later on Raw, Jericho was again defeated by Ziggler after Fandango's theme song played and allowed Ziggler to capitalize on the distraction. Later that night, Jericho attacked Fandango following a match and proceeded to dance with Fandango's dancer. At Extreme Rules, Jericho defeated Fandango. On May 27th edition of Raw on the Highlight Reel, Jericho had Paul Heyman as a guest on his show. He questioned Heyman about the return of his client CM Punk . Jericho then challenged Punk at the next PPV Payback in which Heyman accepted on Punk's behalf.[157]

Music career [edit]

Chris Jericho
Chris Jericho Fozzy.JPG
Chris Jericho live with Fozzy at the Kleine Klub (Saarbrücken)
Background information
Birth name Christopher Keith Irvine
Also known as Moongoose McQueen
Born (1970-11-09) November 9, 1970 (age 42)
Manhasset, New York
Genres Heavy metal, hard rock, glam metal
Occupations Musician, songwriter, actor
Instruments Vocals, bass, piano
Years active 1999–present
Labels Megaforce, ASH, Riot Entertainment, Century Media
Associated acts Fozzy
Website chrisjericho.com

Jericho is also the lead singer for the rock band, Fozzy. Since their debut album in 2000, Fozzy have released five studio albums; Fozzy, Happenstance, All That Remains, Chasing the Grail, Sin and Bones, and one live album, Remains Alive.

In 2005, Jericho performed vocals on a cover of "The Evil That Men Do" on the Iron Maiden tribute album, Numbers from the Beast. He made a guest appearance on Dream Theater's album, Systematic Chaos on the song "Repentance", as one of several musical guests recorded apologizing to important people in their lives for wrongdoings in the past.

In the mid-1990s, Jericho wrote a monthly column for Metal Edge magazine focused on the heavy metal scene. The column only ran for about a year.[158] He started his own weekly XM Satellite Radio show in March 2005 called The Rock of Jericho, which aired Sunday nights on XM 41 The Boneyard.

Discography [edit]

Albums with Fozzy
Live albums

Other media [edit]

Chris Jericho
Born Christopher Keith Irvine
(1970-11-09) November 9, 1970 (age 42)
Manhasset, New York
Nationality Canadian
Education Creative Communications
Alma mater Red River Community College
Genres Autobiography
Notable work(s) A Lion's Tale: Around the World in Spandex
Undisputed: How to Become World Champion in 1,372 Easy Steps
Spouse(s) Jessica Lee Lockhart (m. 2000–present)
Children Ash Edward Irvine (b. 2003)
Sierra Loretta Irvine (b. 2006)
Cheyenne Lee Irvine (b. 2006)
Relative(s) Edward Amos Irvine (father)
Loretta Vivian Irvine (mother)

Signature

www.chrisjericho.com

Film, theatre, comedy, and writing [edit]

In 2000, a VHS tape documenting Jericho's career titled Break Down the Walls was released.[159]

On June 24, 2006 Jericho premiered in his first Sci-Fi Channel movie Android Apocalypse alongside Scott Bairstow and Joey Lawrence.

Jericho debuted as a stage actor in a comedy play Opening Night, which premiered at the Toronto Centre for the Arts during July 20–22, 2006 in Toronto. During his stay in Toronto, Jericho hosted the sketch comedy show Sunday Night Live with sketch troupe The Sketchersons at The Brunswick House.[160]

Jericho was also the first wrestler attached and interviewed for the wrestling documentary, Bloodstained Memoirs. The interview was recorded in the UK during a Fozzy tour in 2006.[161]

Jericho wrote his autobiography, A Lion's Tale: Around the World in Spandex, which was released in 2007 and became a New York Times bestseller. It covers Jericho's life and wrestling career up to his debut in the WWE. Jericho's second autobiography Undisputed: How to Become the World Champion in 1,372 Easy Steps, was released in February 2011, and covers his wrestling career since his WWE debut. Jericho has stated that a third book will be released through Penguin Publishing and should be available in 2013.[162]

Jericho appeared in the 2009 film Albino Farm.[163]

In the film MacGruber, released May 21, 2010, he briefly appeared as Frank Korver,[164] a former military teammate of the eponymous Green Beret, Navy Seal, and Army Ranger.

Television [edit]

Jericho is a contributor to the VH1 pop culture shows Best Week Ever, I Love the '80s, and VH1's top 100 artists.[1]

Jericho also hosted the five-part, five-hour VH1 special "100 Most Shocking Music Moments", an update of the original special "100 Most Shocking Moments In Rock N' Roll" first hosted by Mark McGrath of Sugar Ray.

On July 12, 2006, he made an appearance on G4's Attack of the Show!; he made a second appearance on August 21, 2009. In May 2006, Jericho appeared on VH1's 40 Greatest Metal Songs and Heavy: The Story of Metal as a commentator.

He was one of eight celebrities in the 2006 Fox Television singing reality show Celebrity Duets, executive-produced by Simon Cowell, and was the first contestant eliminated.[165] TMZ.com featured Jericho working at a McDonald's to show off his skills while prepping for the show.[166]

Jericho also appeared on Larry King Live on July 9, 2007, to discuss Chris Benoit and the murder of his wife and his child. Jericho later reappeared on Larry King Live to further a storyline feud with actor Mickey Rourke.

Jericho hosted his own reality show in 2008 titled Redemption Song, in which 11 women tried their hand at getting into the music scene. It was shown on Fuse TV.[167]

He guest starred as Billy "The Body Bag" Cobb in Xero Control, an episode of the Disney XD 2009 original series Aaron Stone.[168]

He hosted VH1's 100 Most Shocking Music Moments, which began airing in December 2009.

In June 2010, Jericho was named the host of the ABC prime-time game show Downfall.[169]

On March 1, 2011, Chris Jericho was named one of the contestants on the 2011 lineup of Dancing with the Stars.[170] His partner was two-time champion Cheryl Burke. This led to a wave of publicity, including an interview with Jay Leno.[171] On April 26, Jericho was the fifth contestant eliminated on the show.[172]

On May 5, Jericho made his third appearance as a featured guest on Attack of the Show! where he depicted Thor.[173] He promoted Undisputed and announced he would host the Golden Gods awards on May 28 on VH1 Classic.[174] On January 17, 2012, Jericho made his fourth appearance in a segment called "Twitter Twister" where he portrayed a character called "The Twistercutioner" and read tweets off their Twitter wall as instructions for a game of Twister between Kevin and Candace.

On February 26, 2013, Jericho began hosting a new robot combat competition program on SyFy titled Robot Combat League.

Dancing with the Stars [edit]

Week # Dance/Song/Musician(s) Judges' score Result
Inaba Goodman Tonioli
1 Cha-Cha-Cha/"Should I Stay or Should I Go" 7 6 6 No Elimination
2 Quickstep/"I Got Rhythm" 8 7 8 Safe
3 Rumba/"Let It Be" 7 7 7 Last To Be Called Safe
4 Paso Doble/"In the Hall of the Mountain King" 8 7 8 Safe
5 Viennese Waltz/"America The Beautiful" 9 8 9 Last To Be Called Safe
6 Tango/"Don't Stop Believin" 7 8 7 Eliminated


Filmography [edit]

Film
Year Title Role Notes
2006 Android Apocalypse TeeDee TV film
2009 Albino Farm Levi Direct-to-video film
2009 Bloodstained Memoirs Himself Documentary
2010 MacGruber Frank Korver Theatrical film
Television
Year Title Role Notes
2008 Redemption Song Himself Reality series; host
2009 Aaron Stone Billy Cobb "Xero Control" (season 1: episode 11)
2009 Z Rock Himself "Z Wrestler" (season 2: episode 6)
2010 Downfall Himself Host; 5 episodes
2011 Dancing with the Stars Himself Reality series; season 12 contestant
2011 Cubed Himself
2013 Robot Combat League Himself Host

Personal life [edit]

Jericho signing autographs.

His father, Ted Irvine is a former National Hockey League (NHL) player.[1] Though he was born in the prominent Long Island neighborhood of Manhasset, New York, Irvine was raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba[175] Vince McMahon felt that by introducing him as "born in Manhasset, New York", American fans would more easily get behind him.[176]

Irvine has three children with his wife Jessica – a son named Ash Edward Irvine, who was born on September 24, 2003 and twin daughters, Sierra Loretta Irvine and Cheyenne Lee Irvine, born on July 18, 2006.[177][178] Irvine has four tattoos, two of which are on his left hand. The first is his wife, Jessica's name, which is tattooed on his ring finger. The second, is the letter 'F' (representing Fozzy) on the back of his hand, which Irvine had tattooed in June 2011. On September 12, 2012, Irvine got his third tattoo, the album artwork of Fozzy's fifth studio album, Sin and Bones, on his left arm.[179] Irvine had his fourth tattoo, a Jack-o'-lantern, done on September 28, 2012. Avenged Sevenfold vocalist M. Shadows, who collaborated with Fozzy on the track, "Sandpaper", from the Sin and Bones album, also got a matching tattoo.[180]

Irvine is a Christian.[181] On July 5, 2004, Irvine was awarded Manitoba's The Order of the Buffalo Hunt, for his achievements in wrestling and his commitment to working with underprivileged children.[182] The award has previously been given to Pope John Paul II, former Chicago mayor Richard J. Daley, Jimmy Carter, Desmond Tutu, and Mother Teresa.[182][183]

On February 7, 2009, Irvine apparently punched a fan after she spat at him with fans outside Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre in Victoria, British Columbia after a live event. Video footage, however, clearly showed he did not make contact with the woman. As a result of the incident, police detained them, but released them without charge.[184] Police later announced that they would not press charges against anyone in the brawl as it was "hard to determine who provoked who".[185]

On January 27, 2010, Irvine and fellow wrestler Gregory Helms were arrested in Fort Mitchell, Kentucky after leaving a bar. A police report stated that Helms punched Irvine and the other passengers in the cab.[186]

In January 2012, it was announced that Irvine (along with New York Jets quarterback Tim Tebow and Atlanta Braves third baseman Chipper Jones) became co-owners of a sports training facility in Tampa, Florida called D1 Sports Training and Therapy.[187]

In wrestling [edit]

Jericho performing the Walls of Jericho on CM Punk at WrestleMania 28.
Jericho performing the Codebreaker on Batista.
Jericho performing the Lionsault on Kurt Angle at King of the Ring.
Jericho performing an enzuigiri on Randy Orton at Tribute to the Troops.
Jericho performing a flying forearm smash on Umaga.
Jericho performing a one-handed bulldog.
Jericho performing a triangle drop kick.
  • Nicknames
    • "Lionheart"[3]
    • "The Man of 1,004 Holds"[3]
    • "Y2J"[3][4]
    • "The Ayatollah of Rock 'n' Rolla"[1]
    • "The King of the World"[3]
    • "The Best in the World at What He Does"[209]


Y2J complaining with the referee

Championships and accomplishments [edit]

Jericho as the World Heavyweight Champion in November 2008.
Jericho as Intercontinental Champion in June 2009. His nine reigns are a WWE record.
  • Canadian Rocky Mountain Wrestling
    • CRMW Heavyweight Championship (1 time)[4]
    • CRMW North American Tag Team Championship (2 times) – with Lance Storm[4]

1 ^ Despite still using the NWA initials, Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre is no longer a member of the National Wrestling Alliance. As a result, the NWA doesn't recognize or sanction this championship.
2 ^ Both reigns were won during and right after The Invasion with the second WCW Championship reign being the unification with the WWF Championship and becoming the first ever Undisputed WWF Champion.[1]
3 ^ Jericho held the championship jointly with Chyna during his second reign.
4 ^ After Edge suffered an injury, Jericho chose Big Show as a replacement partner to hold the championships with. WWE recognizes this occurrence as two separate reigns for Jericho.
5 ^ Jericho's reign occurred after unifying the WCW Championship and the WWF Championship, making him the first ever Undisputed WWF Champion.

Bet matches record [edit]

Record: 3–2

Wager Winner Loser Location Date Notes
Hair Corazón de León Cro-Magnon Mexico City, Mexico May 30, 1993
Mask Chris Jericho Juventud Guerrera Daly City, California 01998-02-22February 22, 1998 Mask vs. Title match at SuperBrawl VIII[12]
Hair Chris Jericho Kevin Nash Grand Rapids, Michigan August 18, 2003 Hair vs. Hair match at Raw
Mask Rey Mysterio Chris Jericho Sacramento, California June 28, 2009 Mask vs. Title match at The Bash
Career Dolph Ziggler Chris Jericho Fresno, California August 20, 2012 Money in the Bank Contract vs. WWE Contract

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "Chris Jericho profile". WWE. Retrieved 2012-04-02. 
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h John, Milner; Richarad Kamen. "'s bio". SLAM Wrestling. Canadian Online Explorer. Retrieved 2009-07-21. 
  3. ^ a b c d e "Cagematch profile". 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae "Chris Jericho Bio". Online World Of Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-12-27. 
  5. ^ "Top 50 villains in wrestling history: #15 Chris Jericho". WWE. Retrieved 2013-05-24. 
  6. ^ ECW Allentown Show (May '96). The Internet Wrestling Database. Retrieved April 25, 2013.
  7. ^ "Full WrestleMania X8 results". WWE. Retrieved 2013-02-15. 
  8. ^ http://www.wrestlezone.com/news/267443-chris-jericho-to-host-golden-gods-awards-show
  9. ^ (Jericho 2007, pp. 65, 171)
  10. ^ "Fall Brawl 1996 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  11. ^ "Souled Out 1998 Results". PWWEW.net. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  12. ^ a b "SuperBrawl 1998 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  13. ^ "Uncensored 1998 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  14. ^ "1998 WCW Slamboree – Battle Royal & Jericho vs. Malenko". Youtube.com. 2011-10-14. Retrieved 2012-08-08. 
  15. ^ "The Great American Bash 1998 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  16. ^ "Bash at the Beach 1998 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  17. ^ "WCW Nitro results – July 13, 1998". PWWEW.net. 1998-07-13. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  18. ^ "Road Wild 1998 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  19. ^ "WCW Nitro results – August 10, 1998". PWWEW.net. 1998-08-10. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  20. ^ "WCW Television Champions". PWWEW.net. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  21. ^ "WCW/nWo Souled Out 1999". PWWEW.net. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  22. ^ "SuperBrawl 1999 Results". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  23. ^ Reynolds, R.D.; Alvarez, Bryan (2004). The Death of WCW: WrestleCrap and Figure Four Weekly Present... (Kindle Edition). ECW Press. p. 205. 
  24. ^ "Raw is War results – August 9, 1999". PWWEW.net. 1999-08-09. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  25. ^ "WWF SmackDown – 1999 Results". onlineworldofwrestling.com. Retrieved 2009-11-23. 
  26. ^ "Survivor Series 1999". World Wrestling Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-11-23. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  27. ^ "WWF Armageddon 1999 Results". Hoffco. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  28. ^ "Raw is War results – January 3, 2000". PWWEW.net. 2000-01-03. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  29. ^ "Royal Rumble 2000". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  30. ^ "No Way Out 2000 results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-12-13. Retrieved 2012-09-03. 
  31. ^ "WrestleMania 2000". World Wrestling Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-12-01. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  32. ^ "Raw is War results – April 17, 2000". PWWEW.net. 2000-04-17. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  33. ^ "WWF SmackDown results – May 4, 2000". PWWEW.net. 2000-05-04. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  34. ^ "Raw is War results – May 8, 2000". PWWEW.net. 2000-05-08. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  35. ^ "WWF Fully Loaded 2000 Results". Hoffco. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  36. ^ "Royal Rumble 2001". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  37. ^ "WrestleMania X-Seven". World Wrestling Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-11-19. Retrieved 2012-09-03. 
  38. ^ "WWF Judgment Day 2001 Results". Hoffco. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  39. ^ a b c "World Tag Team". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  40. ^ "WWF No Mercy 2001 Results". Hoffco. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
  41. ^ "Elimination Match WWE vs. The Alliance". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. [dead link]
  42. ^ "Royal Rumble 2002". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  43. ^ "No Way Out 2002 results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. [dead link]
  44. ^ "Backlash 2002 Results". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-11-20. 
  45. ^ "Judgment Day 2002 Results". Online World of Wrestling. Retrieved 2007-11-20. 
  46. ^ "Royal Rumble". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-21. 
  47. ^ "WrestleMania XIX". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 
  48. ^ Jones, Neal (2007-12-07). "Interview Recap – Chris Jericho". In Your Head Wrestling Radio. Retrieved 2009-08-21. "Chris says everything you heard about the Goldberg story was true, he took him down twice with a front face lock." 
  49. ^ "WrestleMania XX". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-24. [dead link]
  50. ^ "Backlash 2004 results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-24. [dead link]
  51. ^ "Unforgiven 2004 results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-24. [dead link]
  52. ^ "Taboo Tuesday 2004". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-24. 
  53. ^ "RAW Elimination Match". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-24. [dead link]
  54. ^ "New Year's Revolution 2005 Results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-20. [dead link]
  55. ^ "Vengeance 2005 results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-11-14. Retrieved 2007-11-20. 
  56. ^ "SummerSlam 2005". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-20. [dead link]
  57. ^ "Jericho fired; Angle No. 1 contender". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2007-11-20. 
  58. ^ "Breaking the Code". World Wrestling Entertainment. 2007-11-19. Archived from the original on 2009-04-17. Retrieved 2009-03-04. 
  59. ^ a b Clayton, Corey (2007-11-19). "Orton burned by the second coming of Chris Jericho". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2009-03-04. 
  60. ^ "Chris Jericho return match results". World Wrestling Entertainment. Retrieved 2009-03-04. 
  61. ^ "WWE Armageddon 2007". PWWEW.net. Retrieved 2008-06-15. 
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References [edit]

External links [edit]