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Bull Nakano vs The Fabulous Moolah: Who's the Greater Champion?

Tale of the tape from tracked title-lineage data. The Index gives it to The Fabulous Moolah, 78–44. Screenshot it, share it, argue with it.

[WrestleIndex] // GOAT INDEX
HEAD-TO-HEAD
Bull Nakano
CMLL · WWE · 1992–1995
VS
The Fabulous Moolah
WWE · NWA · 1956–1999
2
World Title Reigns
8
416 d
Days as World Champ
20,703 d
282 d
Longest Reign
10,170 d
41%
Era Share
100%
0
Major Honors
0
0
Flagship Main Events
0
2
Promotions Held In
2
GOAT
SCORE
44◂ ▸78
EDGE: THE FABULOUS MOOLAH +34
Settle it. Or start it.
wrestleindex.com/goat/bull-nakano-vs-the-fabulous-moolah/

The case for Bull Nakano

2 world title reigns across CMLL, WWE, totalling 416 days at the top. Longest run: 282 days as CMLL World Women's Championship. From 1992 to 1995, 41% of the days in that championship span were spent as a world champion. Full Bull Nakano title record →

The case for The Fabulous Moolah

8 world title reigns across WWE, NWA, totalling 20,703 days at the top. Longest run: 10,170 days as WWE Women's Championship (1956–2010). From 1956 to 1999, 100% of the days in that championship span were spent as a world champion. Full The Fabulous Moolah title record →

How the GOAT Score works

Every number is derived from dated reigns in the tracked title lineages — no projections, no vibes. The score is capped at 99 and built from six published components:

Volume0–32 · log-scaled total days as a world champion
Reigns0–18 · 2.0 points per world title reign
Peak0–12 · longest single reign, maxing at 1,400 days
Era Share0–12 · world-title days ÷ days in the wrestler's championship span — the inflation adjustment that lets the territory era and the modern era share one chart
Scope0–5 · promotions where they won a world title
Span0–3 · years between first and last world title reign
Honors0–9 · annual honors beyond the belts: Wrestler of the Year — Observer (3) and PWI reader vote (2), PWI Woman of the Year (3), PWI 500 and PWI Women's No. 1 (2.5), G1 Climax (2.5), Royal Rumble win (2), Champion Carnival and Continental Classic (1.5), King/Queen of the Ring, Money in the Bank and the Owen Hart Cup (1.25). One winner per year by construction — every era competes on equal footing, no decay required
Big Match0–8 · log-scaled, tier-weighted flagship main events. Every promotion's marquee counts, weighted by its tier: WrestleMania and Starrcade carry full weight, SummerSlam 0.85 as a Tier 1 second flagship, Wrestle Kingdom and All In 0.8 as Tier 2 flagships, with Tier 3 and 4 flagships at 0.6 and 0.4 as their rows land. Four full-weight main events earn about five points, ten earn about seven and a half, capped at eight. In the books now: every WrestleMania, SummerSlam, Starrcade, Wrestle Kingdom, All In, Bound for Glory and November to Remember main event, WCW's July summer flagship (the Great American Bash, then Bash at the Beach), and AEW's Double or Nothing flagship era. TripleMania, the CMLL Aniversario, the full Final Battle list, Stand & Deliver, the modern Final Battle era, AWA SuperClash and the pre-2007 January 4 Dome shows are in; TripleManía's verified lineage, the first Aniversario rows, NOAH's The New Year (complete), AWA SuperClash and NWA Hard Times are in; the remaining TripleManía multi-man years and Regia shows, the Aniversario backfill, Final Battle 2004–2021 and Hard Times 6 are queued; All Japan's marquee is carried by the Champion Carnival honor rather than an event series

Careers are unified across ring names (Danielson/Bryan, Moxley/Ambrose, Savage's billing variants). Scores reflect recognized, tracked lineages — including the territory era's marathon reigns, which is exactly the kind of thing worth arguing about. Disagree with a weight? Good. That's the point.

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