Iron man match
An Iron Man match is a professional wrestling match contested under a predetermined time limit, typically 60 minutes, in which the winner is determined by the wrestler who accumulates the most falls—achieved through pinfall, submission, countout, or disqualification—by the conclusion of the allotted period.[1] In the event of a tie at the expiration of time, the match may end in a draw or proceed to sudden-death overtime for a final fall, particularly in championship contests.[2] This stipulation emphasizes endurance, technical skill, and strategic pacing, distinguishing it from standard singles matches by allowing multiple falls without interruption.[3] The Iron Man match format first appeared in house shows for the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) in 1989, such as between The Rockers and The Fabulous Rougeaus, but gained wider recognition in the early 1990s within World Championship Wrestling (WCW), with its first documented pay-per-view occurrence at Beach Blast on June 20, 1992, where Ricky Steamboat defeated Rick Rude 4-3 in a 30-minute contest for the WCW United States Championship.[4][5] It gained widespread prominence in the World Wrestling Federation (now WWE) through the iconic 60-minute Iron Man match between Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels at WrestleMania XII on March 31, 1996, for the WWF Championship, which ended in a 1-1 tie and was decided by sudden-death overtime, with Michaels securing victory after 61 minutes and 52 seconds.[6] This bout, refereed by Michaels' future rival Earl Hebner, is often regarded as a benchmark for the stipulation due to its athletic intensity and narrative drama.[7] Subsequent Iron Man matches have appeared across promotions, including WWE, All Elite Wrestling (AEW), Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), and Ring of Honor, often for championships to highlight top competitors' stamina.[2] Notable examples include the first women's Iron Man match in WWE history between Bayley and Sasha Banks on October 7, 2015, at NXT TakeOver: Respect, where Bayley won 3-2 after 30 minutes to retain the NXT Women's Championship;[8] Brock Lesnar versus Kurt Angle on September 18, 2003, in a 60-minute WWE Championship defense that ended 5-4 for Lesnar;[1] and AEW's inaugural 60-minute variant between MJF and Bryan Danielson at Revolution on March 5, 2023.[1] More recently, at TNA Emergence on August 30, 2024, Nic Nemeth defeated Josh Alexander 3-2 in a 60-minute Iron Man match to retain the TNA World Championship.[9] Variations may include multi-competitor formats, such as the four-way Iron Man match for the NXT Championship involving Finn Bálor, Tommaso Ciampa, Adam Cole, and Johnny Gargano on September 1, 2020.[10] Despite its rarity—owing to the physical demands—the Iron Man match remains a prestigious test of wrestling prowess, occasionally adapted for shorter durations like 30 minutes in non-main event scenarios.[11]Overview
Definition
An Iron Man match is a stipulation in professional wrestling in which competitors aim to score the most falls—achieved via pinfalls, submissions, count-outs, or disqualifications—over a predetermined time limit, with the wrestler accumulating the highest number of falls declared the winner at the conclusion.[11][2][12] Unlike standard one-fall matches, where the bout ends immediately upon the first successful fall, or two-out-of-three falls matches that typically pause and reset after each fall, the Iron Man match proceeds continuously without interruption, enabling ongoing accumulation of points throughout the duration.[12][13] The term "Iron Man" derives from the extraordinary stamina and endurance required of participants, symbolizing a test of physical and mental fortitude akin to an unyielding "iron man," rather than any involvement of literal iron materials.[13][14]Basic rules
An Iron Man match commences with the traditional ringing of the bell, initiating a continuous contest typically between two competitors that proceeds without intermissions, aside from momentary pauses for referee-mandated counts or essential medical checks to ensure participant safety.[11] The bout emphasizes endurance, as wrestlers engage in ongoing action to accumulate falls, which serve as the primary scoring mechanism akin to those in standard singles matches.[1] Falls are awarded through conventional methods: a pinfall requires the referee to count to three while both of an opponent's shoulders remain pinned to the mat; a submission occurs via an opponent's tap-out or verbal concession to a hold; a count-out results from failure to return to the ring within a ten-count after exiting; and a disqualification is enforced for rule violations such as illegal strikes, excessive violence, or unauthorized interference.[1][11] The referee diligently monitors and records each fall, often updating the official tally and announcing scores at intervals to inform competitors and spectators, ensuring transparency throughout the duration.[11] No formal breaks separate individual falls unless explicitly stipulated otherwise, maintaining the match's relentless pace.[11] The contest terminates precisely upon the bell signaling the predetermined time limit, with the wrestler securing the most falls proclaimed the winner; in the event of a tie, outcomes may proceed to overtime under specific conditions, though this is addressed separately.[15][1] Beyond scoring, the referee upholds temporal integrity by vigilantly curbing stalling—such as deliberate delays beyond the ring—through verbal admonishments, faster counts, or disqualifications to promote fair competition and prevent tactical abuse of the clock.[11][1]Variations
Time limits and durations
In professional wrestling, Iron Man matches commonly employ time limits of 30 minutes for mid-card singles bouts or tag team contests, which allow competitors to accumulate falls at a brisk pace while maintaining viewer engagement over a contained period.[11] These durations suit non-headline events, such as television episodes or undercard pay-per-view segments, where the emphasis is on rapid exchanges and strategic risk-taking to secure early advantages. For tag team variations, 15-minute limits have been used to accelerate action and prevent overly extended multi-wrestler sequences.[16] Main event singles Iron Man matches, particularly in promotions like WWE, standardly run for 60 minutes, fostering narratives centered on physical and mental endurance as wrestlers pace themselves to avoid early exhaustion.[12] This extended timeframe heightens drama by enabling story arcs involving fatigue, tactical comebacks, and late surges, where competitors exploit opponents' waning stamina for decisive falls. The choice of duration significantly influences match dynamics: briefer times encourage aggressive, offense-heavy styles to rack up points swiftly, while prolonged ones promote layered psychology, including feigned vulnerabilities and calculated defenses to conserve energy for climactic moments. Over time, time selections have evolved from the 30-minute PPV standards popularized by WCW in the early 1990s, which balanced excitement with broadcast constraints, to the 60-minute spectacles emblematic of WWE's high-stakes productions starting in the mid-1990s.[2] This progression reflects adaptations to audience expectations for epic confrontations, though rare extensions beyond 60 minutes—typically via overtime—remain non-standard to preserve the format's structured intensity.[12]Multi-competitor formats
Iron Man matches can involve more than two competitors, adapting the format for multi-person contests such as three- or four-way bouts. In these variations, falls are typically scored against individual opponents, with the wrestler accumulating the most falls declared the winner at the time limit. This setup increases chaos and strategic alliances while testing endurance in a group setting. A notable example is the four-way Iron Man match for the NXT Championship on September 8, 2020, involving Finn Bálor, Tommaso Ciampa, Adam Cole, and Johnny Gargano, which lasted 30 minutes.[10]Scoring and fall types
In Iron Man matches, competitors accumulate points by securing falls, with the wrestler or team achieving the most points at the end of the stipulated time declared the winner. The core fall types include pinfalls, where an opponent's shoulders are held to the mat for a three-count; submissions, achieved by forcing an opponent to tap out or verbally concede; count-outs, resulting from an opponent failing to return to the ring within a 20-count; and disqualifications, imposed for illegal maneuvers or rule violations. Each of these fall types is typically awarded one point, maintaining parity in scoring to emphasize endurance and strategy over any single method.[1][11] Modifications to these standard fall criteria occur in certain variations to heighten in-ring action and prevent stalling tactics. For instance, some Iron Man matches exclude count-outs and disqualifications from scoring, limiting points to pinfalls and submissions only, which compels wrestlers to remain engaged within the ring boundaries. No holds barred stipulations further alter this by eliminating disqualifications entirely, allowing unrestricted offense while still counting pinfalls and submissions toward the score. These adjustments ensure the match's focus on technical prowess and aggression rather than external escapes.[1][11] In tag team Iron Man matches, the format adapts to team dynamics, where falls are attributed to the opposing team rather than individuals, promoting coordinated efforts and strategic tagging. Partners may tag in and out during the bout, similar to standard tag team rules, enabling fresh competitors to pursue falls and maintain momentum across the time limit. This collective scoring reinforces teamwork while preserving the match's emphasis on accumulating decisive victories.[11] The scoring system inherent to Iron Man matches fosters a unique psychological intensity, as wrestlers must balance immediate opportunities for falls with long-term stamina management, often leading to heightened risk-taking and relentless pacing to build or protect leads throughout the duration.[1]Tiebreakers and overtime
In Iron Man matches, if the competitors are tied in falls at the expiration of the time limit, the standard tiebreaker is sudden death overtime, where the bout continues until one wrestler secures the next fall via pinfall or submission.[11] This overtime period is typically signaled immediately by the referee upon the bell ringing at the time limit, and it proceeds without a predetermined duration, allowing the match to extend indefinitely until a decisive fall occurs.[11] Draws are possible if no overtime is invoked, particularly when wrestlers or officials decline to extend the contest, though such outcomes are rare due to the preference for conclusive results.[1] In championship bouts ending in a draw, the title is retained by the defending champion, adhering to standard professional wrestling conventions for inconclusive title defenses.[17] Overtime has been employed in high-profile Iron Man matches to guarantee a winner and heighten dramatic tension, ensuring the event concludes with a clear victor rather than ambiguity.[11] Ultimately, the implementation of tiebreakers falls under promoter discretion, with rules often pre-announced—such as mandating a draw in non-pay-per-view events or stipulating automatic overtime for major spectacles—to align with storyline needs and audience expectations.[1]History
Origins and early examples
The concept of the Iron Man match evolved from the two-out-of-three falls format prevalent in National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) territories during the 1950s and 1970s, where championship contests often featured multiple falls to ensure a decisive outcome and highlight wrestlers' endurance without relying on a single pinfall. These matches, common in regional promotions, could extend indefinitely until two falls were secured, drawing from wrestling's carnival origins in endurance-based challenges that tested participants' stamina against challengers.[18] By the late 1970s, time limits began appearing in some bouts to manage event schedules, laying groundwork for the structured timing central to Iron Man matches. The first documented Iron Man matches in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) emerged in 1989 as tag team encounters between The Rockers (Shawn Michaels and Marty Jannetty) and The Fabulous Rougeaus (Jacques and Raymond Rougeau), contested under 60-minute limits on house shows and television tapings.[19] On August 6, 1989, in Ottawa, Ontario, The Rockers defeated the Rougeaus in a best-of-five-falls format within the time limit, marking an early adaptation of the multi-fall concept for WWF programming.[20] These bouts, repeated through October 1989 at various venues, served as experimental vehicles to showcase athleticism and rivalries in extended formats suitable for broadcast pacing. Early singles Iron Man matches followed in the WWF, with Bret Hart facing Ric Flair for the WWF Championship on January 9, 1993, at the Boston Garden in a 60-minute contest that Hart won 3 falls to 2 via an inside cradle in the final moments.[21] In 1994, Hart and his brother Owen Hart engaged in multiple Iron Man-style matches amid their family feud, including four 20-minute encounters on television and house shows that emphasized quick falls and sudden-death overtimes for dramatic resolution.[22] A notable 60-minute WWF Championship defense occurred on July 29, 1994, at the Great Western Forum, where Bret retained the title 3-2 against Owen after overtime.[23] This period marked a conceptual shift from non-timed, multi-fall matches to rigidly timed Iron Man bouts, enabling tighter storytelling and commercial breaks on TV while preserving the endurance theme through accumulated falls.[2]In World Championship Wrestling (WCW)
World Championship Wrestling (WCW) featured the Iron Man match stipulation in two pay-per-view events during the early 1990s, marking the promotion's pioneering use of the format on premium broadcasts. The first such bout occurred at Beach Blast 1992, where the 30-minute time limit was adopted to align with television scheduling constraints, setting a precedent for shorter iterations of the match type in professional wrestling. This approach emphasized endurance and strategic pacing within a condensed timeframe, influencing subsequent variations across promotions.[24] The inaugural WCW Iron Man match pitted Ricky Steamboat against Rick Rude on June 20, 1992, at the Mobile Civic Center in Mobile, Alabama. Although not contested for Rude's WCW United States Heavyweight Championship—as Rude was the reigning champion—the non-title encounter showcased intense back-and-forth action, with Steamboat securing victory by a score of 4 falls to 3 in the final seconds. The match highlighted technical prowess and resilience, as both competitors exchanged pins through a mix of suplexes, submissions, and high-impact maneuvers, culminating in Steamboat's decisive roll-up after Rude's missed top-rope attempt.[25][26] The following year, WCW revisited the stipulation at Beach Blast 1993 on July 18, 1993, at the Ocean Center in Daytona Beach, Florida, this time for the vacant WCW United States Heavyweight Championship. Dustin Rhodes challenged Rick Rude in another 30-minute Iron Man match, resulting in a 1-1 draw when time expired, leaving the title unclaimed and necessitating further competition to crown a champion. Rhodes scored first via a lariat and bulldog combination, while Rude equalized with his signature Rude Awakening neckbreaker; the bout's stalemate underscored the format's potential for dramatic tension without a clear resolution.[27][28] Beyond these PPV showcases, WCW did not prominently feature additional Iron Man matches, limiting the stipulation to these high-profile singles contests rather than exploring tag team or multi-man variants on weekly programming like Monday Nitro. The promotion's emphasis on 30-minute durations facilitated broadcast-friendly pacing, allowing for multiple falls while maintaining viewer engagement during prime slots.| Participants | Duration | Score | Event/Date/Location | Arena |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ricky Steamboat def. Rick Rude (non-title) | 30 minutes | 4-3 | Beach Blast / June 20, 1992 / Mobile, AL | Mobile Civic Center |
| Dustin Rhodes vs. Rick Rude (for vacant WCW US Title) | 30 minutes | 1-1 (draw) | Beach Blast / July 18, 1993 / Daytona Beach, FL | Ocean Center |
In World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE)
World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE), formerly the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), has extensively utilized the Iron Man match since the mid-1990s, establishing it as a high-stakes endurance test that often headlines major events and advances key rivalries. The stipulation's popularity in WWE stems from its ability to blend athleticism, strategy, and drama, with falls accumulating over a fixed time limit to determine the victor. WWE's implementation frequently features the standard 60-minute duration for championship bouts, emphasizing long-term storytelling, such as the intense personal feud between Bret Hart and Shawn Michaels that culminated in a defining encounter. A landmark example is the 60-minute Iron Man match for the WWF Championship at WrestleMania XII on March 31, 1996, in Anaheim, California, where Shawn Michaels overcame Bret Hart in sudden-death overtime after the regulation time ended in a 1-1 tie, with Michaels securing a pinfall victory at 61:52 to claim the title. This match not only set a benchmark for the format's intensity but also highlighted WWE's innovation of overtime to resolve deadlocks, adding layers of suspense that integrated seamlessly with ongoing narratives like the Hart Foundation's internal conflicts. Over time, WWE evolved the Iron Man match from rare television appearances in the 1990s—such as early tag team variants—to prominent pay-per-view main events, incorporating tag team dynamics to showcase faction rivalries and expanding to women's divisions for broader representation. WWE has produced at least 14 Iron Man matches as of 2025, spanning singles, tag team, and multi-person formats, often tied to championships and featuring varied durations from 15 to 60 minutes. The following table lists all known instances, focusing on key details for context:| No. | Participants | Duration | Score | Title (if any) | Event | Date | Location | Arena |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shawn Michaels def. Bret Hart (c) | 61:52 | 1-0 (overtime) | WWF Championship | WrestleMania XII | March 31, 1996 | Anaheim, CA | Arrowhead Pond |
| 2 | Triple H def. The Rock (c) | 60:00 | 6-5 | WWF Championship | Judgment Day | May 21, 2000 | Louisville, KY | Freedom Hall |
| 3 | Chris Benoit def. Kurt Angle | 31:51 | 4-3 (overtime submission) | None | Backlash | April 29, 2001 | Rosemont, IL | Allstate Arena |
| 4 | Brock Lesnar def. Kurt Angle (c) | 60:00 | 5-4 | WWE Championship | SmackDown (live) | September 18, 2003 | Raleigh, NC | Entertainment and Sports Arena |
| 5 | Chris Benoit def. Triple H | 60:00 | 4-3 | None | Raw (live) | July 26, 2004 | Pittsburgh, PA | Civic Arena |
| 6 | MNM (Joey Mercury & Johnny Nitro) def. Charlie Haas & Hardcore Holly (c) | 15:00 | 2-1 | WWE Tag Team Championship | SmackDown | June 2, 2005 | Edmonton, AB, Canada | Rexall Place |
| 7 | Kurt Angle vs. Shawn Michaels (no contest) | 30:00 | 2-2 | None | Raw | October 3, 2005 | Dallas, TX | American Airlines Center |
| 8 | The Miz & John Morrison def. Jimmy Wang Yang & Shannon Moore | 15:00 | 1-0 | WWE Tag Team Championship | ECW on Sci Fi | January 8, 2008 | Philadelphia, PA | Hammerstein Ballroom |
| 9 | John Cena def. Randy Orton (c) | 60:00 | 6-5 | WWE Championship | Bragging Rights | October 25, 2009 | Pittsburgh, PA | Mellon Arena |
| 10 | Bayley (c) def. Sasha Banks | 30:00 | 3-2 | NXT Women's Championship | NXT TakeOver: Respect | October 7, 2015 | Winter Park, FL | Full Sail University |
| 11 | Charlotte Flair def. Sasha Banks (c) | 34:45 | 3-2 (overtime) | Raw Women's Championship | Roadblock: End of the Line | December 18, 2016 | Pittsburgh, PA | PPG Paints Arena |
| 12 | Cesaro & Sheamus def. The Hardy Boyz (Jeff & Matt Hardy) | 30:00 | 4-3 | Raw Tag Team Championship | Great Balls of Fire | July 9, 2017 | Dallas, TX | Toyota Center |
| 13 | Seth Rollins def. Dolph Ziggler (c) | 30:10 | 5-4 | Intercontinental Championship | Extreme Rules | July 15, 2018 | Pittsburgh, PA | PPG Paints Arena |
| 14 | A-Kid def. Jordan Devlin | 30:00 | 2-1 | None | NXT UK | August 5, 2021 | Cardiff, Wales | WWE Performance Center |
In Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA)/Impact Wrestling
Total Nonstop Action Wrestling (TNA), later rebranded as Impact Wrestling, adapted the Iron Man match format starting in the mid-2000s to showcase high-flying athleticism, particularly within the X Division, where matches emphasized speed and technical prowess over brute force.[31] These bouts typically ran for 30 minutes, allowing for multiple falls via pinfall or submission, with occasional allowances for weapons in certain falls to incorporate TNA's hardcore elements while maintaining focus on endurance.[32] The stipulation became a hallmark of TNA's innovative booking during its peak popularity in the 2000s, contrasting WWE's more power-oriented narratives by prioritizing agile, fast-paced exchanges.[2] Prominent examples include two landmark 30-minute Iron Man matches for the X Division Championship between AJ Styles and Christopher Daniels in 2005, which exemplified the division's athletic style and drew critical acclaim for their intensity and storytelling. In the first, at Against All Odds on February 13, 2005, in Orlando, Florida, the competitors were tied 2-2 at the time limit, leading to a five-minute overtime period where Styles secured the deciding fall with the Styles Clash for a 3-2 victory, retaining the title.[31] Their rematch at Bound for Glory on October 23, 2005, in Johnson City, Tennessee, saw Styles defend successfully in regulation time with a single fall via the Styles Clash, ending 1-0.[33] Other notable male contests included a 30-minute Iron Man between Kurt Angle and Samoa Joe at Final Resolution on January 14, 2007, in Tampa, Florida, to determine the number one contender to the TNA World Heavyweight Championship, which Joe won 2-1 with submissions emphasizing his striking and grappling.[34]| Winner (Falls) | Loser (Falls) | Event | Date | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AJ Styles (3) | Christopher Daniels (2) | Against All Odds | February 13, 2005 | Orlando, FL |
| AJ Styles (1) | Christopher Daniels (0) | Bound for Glory | October 23, 2005 | Johnson City, TN |
| Samoa Joe (2) | Kurt Angle (1) | Final Resolution | January 14, 2007 | Tampa, FL |
| Bobby Roode (c) (3) | AJ Styles (3) | Final Resolution | December 11, 2011 | Orlando, FL |
| Bobby Lashley (3) | Eddie Edwards (c) (2) | Impact Wrestling | January 26, 2017 | Orlando, FL |
| Josh Alexander (c) (2) | TJP (1) | Impact Wrestling | June 3, 2021 | Nashville, TN |
| Nic Nemeth (c) (3) | Josh Alexander (2) | Emergence | August 30, 2024 | Louisville, KY |
| Winner (Falls) | Loser (Falls) | Event | Date | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deonna Purrazzo (c) (1) | Jordynne Grace (0) | Emergence | August 25, 2020 | Hartford, CT |
In All Elite Wrestling (AEW)
All Elite Wrestling (AEW) introduced Iron Man matches to its programming shortly after its inception in 2019, using the stipulation to showcase high-stakes endurance bouts featuring top international talent. The promotion's approach emphasizes technical precision and athleticism, often extending matches into overtime to ensure a clear winner rather than allowing draws, aligning with AEW's focus on decisive storytelling in its weekly shows and pay-per-views.[38][39] The flagship Iron Man match in AEW history occurred at Revolution on March 5, 2023, where champion MJF defended the AEW World Championship against Bryan Danielson in a 60-minute contest that ended 3-3, proceeding to sudden-death overtime. MJF secured the victory with a fourth fall via low blow and Salt of the Earth submission, retaining the title after 65 minutes and 2 seconds in one of the promotion's most critically acclaimed bouts. This match highlighted AEW's integration of the format into major events, drawing praise for its pacing and physical intensity.[38][40] AEW's first Iron Man match took place earlier on Dynamite, pitting Kenny Omega against PAC in a 30-minute non-title affair on February 26, 2020, at the Royal Farms Arena in Baltimore, Maryland. The bout concluded 1-1 at the time limit, with Omega winning 2-1 in overtime via One Winged Angel pinfall after 31 minutes and 1 second. This televised encounter set a precedent for using the stipulation on weekly programming to elevate ongoing feuds.[41][42] As of November 2025, AEW has featured only these two Iron Man matches, reflecting a selective use of the format to build prestige around its core roster. However, the promotion's expansion into streaming platforms like MAX suggests potential for additional variants, including tag team iterations, in future Dynamite episodes to capitalize on the stipulation's dramatic appeal.[40][43]| Match | Length | Title on the Line | Score | Event/Date/Location | Arena |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kenny Omega vs. PAC | 31:01 (30 min + overtime) | None | Omega 2, PAC 1 | Dynamite / February 26, 2020 / Baltimore, MD | Royal Farms Arena |
| MJF (c) vs. Bryan Danielson | 1:05:02 (60 min + overtime) | AEW World Championship | MJF 4, Danielson 3 | Revolution / March 5, 2023 / San Francisco, CA | Chase Center |
In other promotions
Iron Man matches have appeared sporadically in promotions outside the major American leagues, often as special attractions in tournaments or title defenses to emphasize endurance and storytelling over high-impact spots. In Ring of Honor (ROH), the format was used early in its history to crown its inaugural world champion, with Low Ki defeating Christopher Daniels, Doug Williams, and Spanky in a 60-minute four-way Iron Man match on July 27, 2002, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where Low Ki secured the win with three falls to the others' combined two. Later, ROH World Champion Jay Lethal defended his title against Jonathan Gresham in a 30-minute Iron Man match on the September 11, 2018, episode of ROH Wrestling, taped in Baltimore, Maryland, ending in a 2-1 sudden-death overtime victory for Lethal after a 1-1 tie.[44] Revolution Pro Wrestling (RevPro), a prominent UK promotion, introduced its first 60-minute Iron Man match at Uprising on December 21, 2024, in York Hall, Bethnal Green, London, pitting rising stars Leon Slater against Zozaya, with Zozaya emerging victorious 3-2 in sudden-death overtime following a grueling 63:02 bout. In New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), the stipulation highlighted international rivalries at Windy City Riot on April 11, 2025, in Chicago, Illinois, where Tomohiro Ishii upset NJPW STRONG Openweight Champion Gabe Kidd in a 30-minute Iron Man match, winning 2-1 to claim the title.[45][46] Independent promotions have experimented with shorter or extended variants to suit their high-energy style. Pro Wrestling Guerrilla (PWG) featured a 60-minute Iron Man match for the PWG World Championship at Twenty: Mystery Vortex on August 13, 2023, in Los Angeles, California, where Jon Moxley defeated Roderick Strong 6-5 in sudden-death overtime after a 5-5 deadlock. Game Changer Wrestling (GCW) pushed boundaries with an unprecedented two-hour Iron Man match between Jordan Oliver and Tony Deppen at Fight Forever: Ironman Challenge on January 30, 2021, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, crowdfunded as a endurance showcase that drew significant online attention for its length and intensity.[47][48] These examples illustrate the format's global spread, with adaptations in European and North American indies, though such matches remain rare—fewer than a dozen documented instances across these promotions since 2000—typically reserved for milestone events to highlight technical prowess and narrative depth.| Match | Length | Title/Stipulation | Score/Winner | Event/Date/Location | Arena |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Ki vs. Christopher Daniels, Doug Williams & Spanky | 60 minutes | Inaugural ROH World Championship (4-way) | Low Ki (3-2) | ROH The First Defense / July 27, 2002 / Philadelphia, PA | 2300 Arena |
| Jay Lethal (c) vs. Jonathan Gresham | 30 minutes | ROH World Championship | Lethal (2-1 OT) | ROH Wrestling (TV taping) / September 4, 2018 / Baltimore, MD | Maryland State Fairgrounds |
| Leon Slater vs. Zozaya | 60 minutes | Non-title | Zozaya (3-2 OT) | RevPro Uprising / December 21, 2024 / London, UK | York Hall |
| Tomohiro Ishii vs. Gabe Kidd (c) | 30 minutes | NJPW STRONG Openweight Championship | Ishii (2-1) | NJPW Windy City Riot / April 11, 2025 / Chicago, IL | Wintrust Arena |
| Jon Moxley vs. Roderick Strong | 60 minutes | PWG World Championship | Moxley (6-5 OT) | PWG Twenty: Mystery Vortex / August 13, 2023 / Los Angeles, CA | American Legion Post #244 |
| Jordan Oliver vs. Tony Deppen | 120 minutes | Non-title showcase | Oliver (7-6) | GCW Fight Forever: Ironman Challenge / January 30, 2021 / Philadelphia, PA | Voltage Lounge |