Showing posts with label wrestling news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wrestling news. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

When Will Ayako Hamada Show Up In TNA?



Now I am really wondering when Ayako Hamada will show up in TNA.
Her signing with them was reported almost a month ago, and I'm wondering if TNA will pull a Sarah Stock and wait months before we see her in the ring.
(Watch, as soon as I post this she'll show up)
I checked TNA's homepage, and neither Sarah nor Ayako are listed there.
I'm also thinking that Sarah and Ayako would make an awesome tag team.
Lucha Libre and Joshi Puroresu together.
Just be glad the WWE didn't sign them, or they'd both debut as valets.

Monday, January 26, 2009

DASH Chisako, Hiren and Ryo Mizunami


DASH Chisako (Chisako Kanari) was born on August 24th, 1988 in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture, Japan.
She made her pro wrestling debut against Dynamite Kansai on July 9th, 2006.
DASH wrestles for the SENDAI GIRLS wrestling promotion in Japan.
Here is a wrestling video of Dash Chisako going up against Kaoru Ito from a Sendai versus Ito Dojo Show.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOBK8PIgZmE


Hiren (Yurie Kaneko) was born on January 16th, 1986 in Katsushika City, Tokyo, Japan.
She made her pro wrestling debut on July 9th, 2006, wrestling Mariko Yoshida.
Hiren also wrestles for the SENDAI GIRLS wrestling promotion in Japan.
Her is a video of Hiren wrestling Commando Bolshoi at a JWP versus Sendai show in Japan.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nHOQVt06_T0


Ryo Mizunami (Ayane Mizumura) was born on March 24th, 1988 in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, Japan.
She made her pro wrestling debut on November 3rd, 2004 against Carlos Amano.
Ryo has wrestled for GAEA and SENDAI GIRLS in Japan.
This is a video of Ryo Mizunami wrestling Hiroyo Matsumoto at the Jaja Uma Tournament Finals in Japan.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=18MDBFCXB_s

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Kyoko Kimura



The young lady with the 'fro is Japanese female wrestler Kyoko Kimura.
She made her pro wrestling debut on July 20th, 2003.
Kyoko has wrestled for the BJW, JD Star, NEO, BattlARTS and IBUKI promotions in Japan.
She held the NEO Tag Team Wrestling Championships twice. Once with TNA star Awesome Kong and again with Emi Sakura.
Kyoko seems to have a growing fanbase in the US.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Japanese women wrestlers face same results as in Athens

Kyoko Hamaguchi

BEIJING, Aug. 17 (Xinhua) -- At the Beijing Olympics over the weekend,Japanese "Fantastic Four" wrestlers got same result as they did in Athens, with Kaori Icho winning women's freestyle 63kg title and Kyoko Hamaguchi ending with a bronze in the 72kg category on Sunday, and Adding Saori Yoshida's 55kg gold and Chiharu Icho's silver in 48kg on Saturday.
Icho, 24, retained her Olympic title by defeating Alena Kartashova of Russia by winning each of two bouts in overtime. The victory made Icho the second woman to successfully defend the Olympic title after Yoshida won the trophy in 55kg. Both Icho and Yoshida are Athens gold medalists.
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-08/17/content_9444994.htm

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Mariko Yoshida - Japanese Women Wrestling


Mariko Yoshida was born on February 15th, 1970 in Onomichi, Hiroshima, Japan.
She is a female professional wrestler best known for her work in the ARSION wrestling promotion, where she also served as the head trainer.

Mariko made her wrestling debut in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW / Zenjo) on October 10, 1988 at Tokyo's Korakuen Hall in a match against Keiko Waki.
She was one of the best young stars in AJW, often using Lucha Libre inspired aerial maneuvers to go along with her extremely good mat work skills.


Mariko left AJW in 1997 and joined Aja Kong's ARSION promotion, becoming their head trainer.
In ARSION, she became known as a technical wrestling master, and got a push as a major star.
Mariko was nicknamed "ARSION no Shinjutsu", or "ARSION True Heart".
Giving up the high-flying techniques of her run in Zenjo (because of a neck injury in 1992), her style in ARSION was ground work and submission wrestling moves.

In 2006, Yoshida was presented with the Cauliflower Alley Club's Future Legend Award, becoming only the second female (Cheerleader Melissa was the first), to win this award.


Mariko in action:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6stpJEP7Yk&mode=related&search=

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdE4rGmyO5E


Monday, May 7, 2007

Apple - Female Japanese Wrestlers

Apple - Female Japanese WrestlersApple is a womens Japanese wrestler.
She is another member of K-Dojo and has had an on again off again feud with Ofune for years.
Apple - Female Japanese Wrestlers
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Sunday, May 6, 2007

Tomoka Nakagawa - Asian Female Wrestlers

Tomoka Nakagawa - Asian Female Wrestlers
Tomoka Nakagawa is a womens Japanese wrestler.
At one time she wrestled for K-Dojo( a Japanese professional wrestling promotion and training facility owned and promoted by Taka Michinoku.) in the GET divison.

A particular aspect of K-DOJO is that it's one of the few inter-gender wrestling promotions. Women can wrestle in the same ring as men, either during mixed tag matches or even singles matches. Also, they can challenge for championship belts, something that would be unheard of in most wrestling promotions.

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Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Mariko Yoshida - Japanese Female Wrestling

Mariko Yoshida - Japanese Female Wrestling
Mariko Yoshida , (born February 15, 1970 in Onomichi, Hiroshima) is a professional wrestler best known for her work with the ARSION wrestling promotion, where she was also head trainer.

Yoshida debuted for All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW or Zenjo) on October 10, 1988 at Tokyo's Korakuen Hall in a match against Keiko Waki. Before her neck injury in late 1992 - which would cause her to miss two years of ring time - Yoshida was easily one of the best young stars in AJW, often showcasing beautiful Lucha Libre inspired aerial maneuvers to go along with her very good matwork skills.

In 1997, she left AJW to join Aja Kong's ARSION promotion, becoming their head trainer. There she was repackaged as a technical wrestling master, and was pushed as a major star. She has been nicknamed ARSION no Shinjutsu, or "ARSION True Heart". Forgoing the high-flying techniques of her run in Zenjo, her style in ARSION was centered around mat wrestling and submission holds derived from shoot wrestling, along with more elaborate lucha-inspired submissions.

In 2006, Yoshida was presented with the Cauliflower Alley Club's Future Legend Award, becoming only the second female after Cheerleader Melissa, to win this award.

All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling
AJW Champion (1 time)
AJW Tag Team Champion (3 times) - with Takako Inoue (2), and Rie Tamada (1)

Consejo Mundial de Lucha LibreCMLL World Women's Champion (1 time)

ARSIONQueen of ARSION (2 times)
Twin Star of ARSION (2 times) - with Aja Kong (1), and Lioness Asuka (1)

2006 Cauliflower Alley Club Future Legend Award


Winner of ChickFight 2 and 3 Tournaments in Hayward, California
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Saturday, April 28, 2007

Toshiyo Yamada - Female Japanese Wrestlers


Height: 168 cm
Weight: 70 kg
Birthday: February 27, 1970
Hometown: Saitama, Saitama
Trained by: Jaguar Yokota
Wrestling Debut: July 27, 1987

Toshiyo Yamada (born February 27, 1970) is a Japanese female professional wrestler. She was trained by Jaguar Yokota. In the 1990s, Yamada wrestled for the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling promotion (AJW).

A year after her professional wrestling debut in 1987, Toshiyo Yamada was awarded the All Japan Junior Championship. She then formed the tag team Dream Orca with Etsuko Mita. The team won the All Japan Tag Team Championship in June, 1989, but was forced to vacate the titles in March, 1990, when Yamada she injured her neck. She was told she would never wrestle again, but she worked hard and was able to revive her career.

After her return, she toured Mexico with Kyoko Inoue, and later won the WWWA World Tag Team Wrestling Championship twice with Manami Toyota. In the mid-1990s, she left All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling for the new promotion GAEA Japan.

As of 2006, she is semi-retired.

Titles:
All Japan Women's Pro-WrestlingWWWA World Tag Team Wrestling Champion (2 times) - with Manami Toyota (2)
All Japan Tag Team Wrestling Championship (1 time) - with Etsuko Mita
All Japan Junior Championship (1 time)


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Friday, April 27, 2007

Manami Toyota - Female Japanese Wrestlers

Manami Toyota - Female Japanese Wrestlers
Ring name(s) Manami Toyota
Billed height 167 cm (5 ft 6 in)
Billed weight 68 kg (150 lb)
Born March 2, 1971,Masuda, Shimane, Japan
Trained by Jaguar Yokota
Wrestling Debut August 5, 1987, against Sachiko Nakamura

Manami Toyota is a professional wrestler best known for her work with the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) wrestling promotion. Following AJW's closure she has continued to work in other joshi promotions such as GAEA and NEO. Toyota is a member of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame.

Manami Toyota made her professional wrestling debut on August 5, 1987, in a singles match against Sachiko Nakamura. Her big break came in her second year, on the first Wrestlemarinpiad show from Yokohama Arena, on May 6, 1989. Teamed with Mima Shimoda, she defeated Etsuko Mita and Toshiyo Yamada in a lightning-paced match that nearly stole the card from the more established veterans. The bout had all the basic ingredients that made Toyota a star, including flashy moves, fast and frequent tags, double-team moves, and a long series of dramatic near falls. When the bout was released as part of a four-hour commercial tape, Toyota became recognized as a wrestler to watch.

Toyota won her first title on November 18, 1989 in Matsuda, when she defeated Mika Takahashi for the AJW Championship. She defended the title three times, including one defense against her future rival Kyoko Inoue (on August 1, 1990), before vacating it on September 1, 1990. The following month (October 7 in Tokyo) she challenged Bison Kimura for the All Pacific Championship and emerged victorious. However she only managed to defend the title once before losing to Suzuka Minami on March 17, 1991.

Parallel to this success ran Toyota’s famous feud with future tag-team partner Toshiyo Yamada. Initially, following Toyota’s success teaming up with Shimoda, the AJW braintrust felt they could well be the new Beauty Pair or Crush Gals, but that was not to be. Toyota's real chemistry came not with Shimoda but with Yamada, whose style was unlike Toyota's and provided more of a contrast. Yamada was a slightly built, short-haired, kicking specialist, who idolized both Chigusa Nagayo and Akira Maeda. Unlike other wrestlers who rely on kicks and submissions, Yamada could also work the rapid-paced matches, and was accomplished at building to near-falls with repeated kick-outs at the last possible moment.

To begin with, however, Toyota and Yamada were opponents rather than partners. Between 1989 and 1991 they wrestled many times, producing bouts that rivaled the quality of the main events that AJW's champions were presenting. At the start of 1992, the two won their first tag team championship when they defeated KAORU and Lady Apache in Tokyo on January 19 for the UWA titles.

However, their singles feud was not yet over, and it reached a climax on August 15, 1992 at Korakuen Hall in a Hair vs. Hair match. The bout was a dramatic one, not least due to what occurred after the match was over. Toyota, even though she had won the match, did not want Yamada to get her head shaved, and had to be forcefully restrained by four prelim girls, who eventually forced her back to the mat. In respect of the match conditions Yamada wanted her head shaved and went ahead with the stipulation.

Soon after this match the two stars once again teamed up to win their first WWWA World Tag Team Championship in March 1992, defeating the evil Jungle Jack (Aja Kong & Bison Kimura) in Tokyo. On November 26, at AJW’s Dreamrush show Toyota and Yamada defended their WWWA Tag Team titles against Dynamite Kansai and Mayumi Ozaki in a legendary 2/3 Falls match, considered one of the best wrestling matches ever, and rated 5 Stars by Dave Meltzer of Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

In April of that year Toyota furthered her singles career by defeating rival Kyoko Inoue on April 25 in Yokohama for the IWA Singles Championship. Toyota defended that title eight times over the course of three years, before losing it to Reggie Bennett on May 15, 1995.

At Dreamslam II, on April 11, 1993 Toyota and Yamada fought a rematch against JWP Project's Kansai and Ozaki in yet another highly-rated 2/3 Falls encounter. This time, however, Toyota and Yamada were on the losing side, and Kansai and Ozaki got their revenge. The feud concluded at AJW’s St. Battle Final event, on December 6, 1993, where Toyota and Yamada regained their tag titles.

On August 24, 1994 Toyota once again squared off against Kyoko Inoue, and defeated her to unify the IWA and All Pacific Singles Championships. Toyota’s run with the two titles was not to last long. On October 9, 1994, Inoue gained a measure of revenge against Toyota, as Kyoko and her partner Takako Inoue (no relation) won the WWWA Tag Team Championship from Toyota and Yamada. Toyota then vacated her All Pacific Championship, prior to her first WWWA Heavyweight Championship match against the monstrous Aja Kong at AJW’s Queendom III show, on March 26, 1995. The match saw Toyota reach the summit of AJW when she won and became the 39th WWWA Champion.

On May 7, Toyota defended her crown against arch-rival Kyoko Inoue at the Korakuen Hall, where the two fought to a 60 minute time limit draw. Despite piledrivers on the floor, German suplexes off the top rope, and multiple finishers, neither combatant was able to secure outright victory. Nonetheless, Toyota retained, and the match was voted Match of the Year for 1995 in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

The following month, Toyota lost the WWWA Championship to former champion Aja Kong, on June 27.

Toyota soon recovered from the loss. In 1995, she won the AJW Grand Prix tournament, securing her position as the number one contender for the WWWA Championship. Before she received her title opportunity, she faced the legendary Akira Hokuto at AJW's Destiny show on September 2, 1995. On December 4, she finally received her title shot, and defeated then-champion Dynamite Kansai to become a two-time world champion.

Over the next 12 months Toyota made three successful defenses of her WWWA title. In December of 1996 she came up against long term rival Kyoko Inoue and lost in a match that saw the All Pacific and IWA Women's World titles unified with the WWWA Title.




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Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Hiroko - Former WWE Diva




Ring name(s) Hiroko
Billed height 5'2"
Billed weight 110 lb
Born 1975,Aichi, Japan
Debut June 10, 2004 (WWE)

Hiroko Niizuma Suzuki is the manager and wife of professional wrestler Kenzo Suzuki. They got married while he was still with New Japan Pro Wrestling.

On June 10, 2004, Hiroko made her debut as Kenzo Suzuki's geisha valet and translator on World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE)'s SmackDown! brand.

In November 2004, Hiroko began feuding with Torrie Wilson and numerous catfights took place between the two divas. On an episode of SmackDown! airing February 10, 2005, Torrie defeated Hiroko in a kimono match.

Hiroko and Kenzo were traded to the RAW brand on June 30, 2005 at the end of the 2005 Draft Lottery. However, they were both released by the WWE on July 6, 2005 without ever appearing on RAW. The move was seen as cost-cutting (her contract was a reported 275,000 USD per year which was higher than a bulk of the actual wrestling talent) since several other wrestlers were released at the same time, as well as over the course of several weeks. Although there were reports that she has hinted that she would like to return to WWE or sign with TNA

In late 2005, Hiroko Suzuki became the General Manager for Japan's HUSTLE promotion.
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Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Jackie Sato - Female Japanese Wrestlers


Naoko Sato, better known as Jackie Sato (October 30, 1957 - August 9, 1999) was a professional wrestler from Yokohama, Japan. In the 1970s, while wrestling for All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW), she formed the tag team, the Beauty Pair, with Maki Ueda. Following in the steps of Mach Fumiake, The Beauty Pair was part of an important shift in the culture of Japanese women's wrestling, attracting more female fans by becoming pop icons. In their mainstream success, Sato and Ueda paved the way for the even more popular team, the Crush Gals, of the 1980s.

Though she had played basketball in high school, Jackie Sato became a professional wrestler after graduation. She joined AJW in 1975, and had her debut match against her future tag team partner, Maki Ueda, on April 27 of that year. On February 24, 1976 the Beauty Pair was formed, and they won the WWWA World Tag Team Championship that night. During their championship reign throughout most of 1976, the Pair created excitement by using their top ten hit single to announce their entrance, and were regularly feted by their adoring fans who threw confetti and streamers into the ring.

Sato also had success as a singles wrestler. She won the WWWA World Heavyweight Championship on November 1, 1977 from Maki Ueda in a Beauty Pair showdown, and held it twice more during the late 1970s, defeating Monster Ripper and Nancy Kumi. She lost the title the final time to the younger Jaguar Yokota on February 25, 1981. On February 27, 1979, Sato defeated her former partner, Ueda, in a "loser retires" match. Sato's own retirement ceremony was held on May 21, 1981.

On August 17, 1986, inspired by the current boom in interest in women's wrestling in Japan due to the success of the Crush Gals, Sato, along with wrestler Nancy Kumi, boxer Rumi Kazama, and others, formed the first women's promotion to compete against the AJW monopoly, Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (JWP). Sato herself returned to active wrestling and competed for nearly two years before retiring a second and final time on March 20, 1988. Under Sato's influence, JWP did not offer the "mandatory retirement" policy common in AJW, allowing female wrestlers to compete until they wished to retire, rather than until the promoters ordered them to retire. AJW eventually dropped the mandatory retirement policy in the 1990s.

Sato attended the AJW thirtieth anniversary show in 1998. She died on August 9, 1999 due to stomach cancer.



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Sunday, April 22, 2007

Mayumi Ozaki - Female Japanese Wrestlers



Ring name(s) Mayumi Ozaki,Pure Wild,Queen Of The Street Fight
Billed height 156cm (5'3")
Billed weight 54kg (119lbs)
Born October 28, 1968
Wrestling Debut August 17, 1986 with Esther Moreno Vs. Maiko Tsurugi & Reina Gallegos

Mayumi Ozaki is a Japanese female professional wrestler.

Ozaki debuted in a tag match in August, 1986. In her career, she held the WWWA tag titles with Dynamite Kansai from April 11, 1993 to December 6, 1993 (both winning from and losing to Manami Toyota and Toshiyo Yamada of All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW). She also held the UWA Junior and JWP Junior titles between 1988 and 1991, and teamed with Cuty Suzuki and Hikari Fukuoka to win the JWP Tag Titles a number of times between 1992 and 1995. Most recently, she held the AAAW Tag title with Aja Kong, beating GAEA's Sugar Sato and Chikayo Nagashima on August 23, 1998 in Tokyo.

Until recently, Ozaki usually wrestled in JWP (Japan Women's Project), but was also the leader of her own heel stable called the Oz Academy, which freelanced in other women's promotions in Japan, such as AJW and GAEA. In 1998 Ozaki became a true free agent, and began to promote her own shows using her Oz Academy wrestlers, looking for a niche in the fragmented women's puroresu scene.

Ozaki has a talent for setting up and working with the psychology of a match. She is able to work any style from mat wrestling to "street fighting," is able to look credible dominating larger wrestlers, such as former partner Dynamite Kansai, and she is especially good at settling down young or erratic workers and making a match flow smoothly. Her own moves are crisp and intense, with no wasted motion; and every movement has meaning.










Saturday, April 21, 2007

Candy Okutsu - Female Japanese Wrestlers


Candy Okutsu ( born Tomoko Okutsu January 16, 1975 in Japan) was a female professional wrestler. She made her professional wrestling debut on August 4, 1992. She worked for the JWP Project promotion from then until 1997, when she retired due to an injury. She made her comeback on February 18, 1998 when she had joined the ARSION promotion. She became the first female version of Tiger Mask when she worked a few times as Tiger Dream. Candy Okutsu retired from professional wrestling on January 5, 2001.

Friday, April 20, 2007

Bull Nakano - Female Japanese Wrestlers


Ring name(s) Bull Nakano,Keiko Nakano,(kanji) bù rù naka no
Billed height 168 cm (5 ft 07 in)
Billed weight 95 kg (209 lb)
Born January 8, 1968,Kawaguchi, Saitama
Resides Orlando, Florida
Trained by All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling
Wrestling Debut 1983
Retired from wrestling 1997



Bull Nakano (born January 8, 1968 as Keiko Nakano) is a former professional wrestler.

At the age of 15, Keiko Nakano began her career as a professional wrestler in her homeland of Japan. She trained and performed with the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling organization (AJW), and quickly became one of the greatest heels in the history of Japanese women's pro wrestling.

After winning the AJW Junior Championship under her real name, her identity was changed to Bull Nakano and she teamed with the legendary Dump Matsumoto to feud with the popular Crush Gals (Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka). With Matsumoto as her partner, Nakano won the WWWA Tag Team championship. She would win the title a second time with Condor Saito as her partner.

Nakano briefly wrestled for the World Wrestling Federation in 1986 teaming again with Dump Matsumoto known as the Devils of Japan.

In 1990, Nakano won a tournament to win the vacant WWWA World Heavyweight Championship, and would go on to hold the title for nearly three years, before dropping it to Aja Kong.

Nakano also travelled to Mexico where she captured the CMLL Women's title, becoming the first person to hold that belt. She then made her way to the United States and competed for the World Wrestling Federation. Brought in by Luna Vachon, Nakano dominated the WWF Women's champion, Alundra Blayze, in a series of matches and won the WWF Women's Championship on November 20, 1994 in Tokyo, Japan. Thus, Bull Nakano is the only person to have held both the WWWA World Heavyweight Chamionship and the WWF Women's Championship, both of which have a historic lineage, dating back to 1937 and 1956 respectively. Consequently, she is also the first female of Asian descent to win the WWF/WWE Women's Championship.

Nakano held the title for five months, until losing the title back to Blayze on April 3, 1995 in Poughkeepsie, New York. The WWF had planned on bringing in Bertha Faye to feud with Nakano while Blayze got a nose and breast job, but Nakano was found in possession of cocaine and quickly fired from the company.

Nakano returned to Japan, where she continued to compete in AJW, then went back to the United States in 1996 to feud with Blayze, now going by her original ring name, Madusa, in World Championship Wrestling.

That was the last time Bull Nakano was seen on North American television. She continued to wrestle in Japan, but retired in 1997 to pursue a career in professional golf.

In the years following her retirement, Nakano began to diet and gradually lose much of the weight she had to maintain to stay in her role as one of AJW's monster heels, going from a peak of 250 pounds down to 143 pounds. In 1998, Nakano released a book about her weight loss called Bull Nakano no Diet Nikki: 19-gou Size no Watashi ga 9-gou Size ni (Translated: Bull Nakano's Diet Journal: How I went from a Size 19 to a Size 9).

In January 2006, Nakano, still pursuing her pro golf career, joined the Duramed Futures Tour on the Ladies Professional Golf Assocation. She is currently based in Orlando, Florida, USA.


technorati tags: wrestling ,pro wrestling,wrestling news,woman wrestling,female wrestling,japanese wrestling

Thursday, April 12, 2007

Dynamite Kansai - Japanese Women Wrestling

Dynamite Kansai - Japanese Women Wrestling
Height: 173 cm
Weight: 93 kg
Date of birth: December 4, 1969
Wrestling Debut: August 17, 1986 in Korakuen Hall, Tokyo vs. Cookie Zula

Chieko Suzuki was born on December 4, 1969, and was raised in Kyoto, Japan. In 1986 she auditioned for All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW), but was unsuccessful, and instead became a member of the first rookie class of Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling. She debuted on August 17, 1986 under the ring name Miss A. When Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling broke apart, Suzuki chose to be part of the JWP Project. She changed her ring name to Dynamite Kansai in 1991.

In the mid-1990s, after leaving JWP, Kansai joined the new promotion, GAEA Japan. In 2006, she worked for Mayumi Ozaki's promotion, OZ Academy.



technorati tags: wrestling ,pro wrestling,wrestling news,woman wrestling,female wrestling,japanese wrestling

Monday, April 9, 2007

The WWWA Wrestling Title, part 6






















Manami Toyota won the WWWA wrestling title from Hotta on January 4, 2000 in Tokyo.
Kaoru Ito then beat her on September 17, 2000 in Tokyo
Manami Toyota won it back on February 24, 2002 in Yokohama, Kanagawa, and Ito took it back again on July 6, 2002 in Tokyo.
Momoe Nakanishi won the belt on October 20, 2002 in Kawasaki, Kanagawa.
Ayako Hamada defeated her on May 11, 2003 in Yokohama, Kanagawa .
Amazing Kong took it on January 4, 2004 in Tokyo and Ayako took it back on 2 May 2, 2004 in Tokyo.
Nanae Takahashi defeated Hamada for the title on December 12, 2004 in Kawasaki, Kanagawa.
The title went vacant on December 29, 2004 when Takahashi was injured.
On January 3, 2005 in Tokyo, Kumiko Maekawa defeated Ayako Hamada. All Japan Women closed in April 2005.
Nanae Takahashi won the title on March 26, 2006 in Tokyo. This was Maekawa's retirement match.
The Title was retired March 26, 2006. Takahashi returned the title belt to former All Japan Women's chairman Takashi Matsunaga and abandoned the title.
technorati tags: wrestling ,pro wrestling,wrestling news,woman wrestling,female wrestling,japanese wrestling

Sunday, April 8, 2007

The WWWA Wrestling Title, part 5





Kyoko Inoue was unsatisfied after a match against Kaoru Ito ended in a 60-minute time limit draw, and she vacated the title.
Something you never see in wrestling here.
On June 17, 1997 in Sapporo,Hokkaido, Kyoko defeated Kaoru Ito to honorably claim the WWWA Wrestling Title.
Yumiko Hotta defeated Kyoko on August 20, 1997 Tokyo.
Then Shinobu Kandori defeated Kyoko on March 21, 1998 in Tokyo.
Yumiko Hotta defeated Shinobu on March 10, 1999 in Tokyo, then she and Kyoko traded the title back and forth till October 22, 1999 in Fukuoka, when Hotta finally came out on top with the WWWA wrestling title.

technorati tags: wrestling ,pro wrestling,wrestling news,woman wrestling,female wrestling,japanese wrestling

Saturday, April 7, 2007

The WWWA Wrestling Title, part 4







Devil Masami defeated Dump Matsumoto on December 12, 1985 in Tokyo to win the WWWA World Heavyweight Wrestling Championship.
Then Yukari Omori won the belt on August 23, 1986 in Kawasaki, Kanagawa.
Chigusa Nagayo defeated Yukari on October 20, 1987 in Tokyo.
Lioness Asuka 1 August 25, 1988 Kawasaki, Kanagawa won when Nagayo was injured during the match.
The title went vacant when Asuka refused the title.
On January 29, 1989 in Tokyo Asuka defeated Chigusa Nagayo; also recognized as the Unified Global Champion after defeating American representative Madusa Miceli on May 6, 1989 in Yokohama, Kanagawa.
The title was declared vacant on July 19, 1989 when Asuka retired.
Bull Nakano won the title on January 4, 1990 in Tokyo, when she defeated Mitsuko Nishiwaki in the tournament final.
Aja Kong defeated Bull on November 26, 1992 in Kawasaki, Kanagawa.
Manami Toyota defeated Aja on March 26, 1995 in Yokohama, Kanagawa
Then Aja Kong won it back on June 27, 1995 in Sapporo, Hokkaido
Dynamite Kansai defeated Aja on August 30, 1995 in Osaka.
Kansai was defeated by Manami Toyota on December 4, 1995 in Tokyo.
Kyoko Inoue won the title on December 8, 1996 in Tokyo. That unified the All Pacific and IWA World Women's titles, defeating Takako Inoue on January 20, 1997 in Tokyo.

technorati tags: wrestling ,pro wrestling,wrestling news,woman wrestling,female wrestling,japanese wrestling

Thursday, April 5, 2007

The WWWA Wrestling Title, part 2







Aiko Kyo took the WWWA wrestling title back again in May 24, 1972 at Fukuoka, Fukuoka.
Then Sarah Lee won the belt on July 1, 1972 in Tokyo, only to lose it on July 26, 1972 to Miyoko Hoshino in Kasugabe.
Hoshino lost the belt to Sandy Parker on May 15, 1973 in Choshi, Chiba.Hoshino won the belt back on July 10, 1973 in Kasama, Ibaraki.
Jumbo Miyamoto defeated Hoshino on September 11, 1973 in Tokyo.
Then Bambi Ball defeated Jumbo on March 2, 1974 in Kawasaki, Kanagawa.
The title went vacant March 1974 when Ball was injured.
Jumbo Miyamoto won the title again on March 6, 1974, in Maehashi when she defeated Jane O'Brien.
Jackie West defeated Jumbo on April 1, 1974 in Kobe, Hyogo.
Jumbo Miyamoto won it back, lost it to Mach Fumiake ( Mach was 16 at the time!) , won it back, lost it to Mariko Akagi, won it back and finally lost it for good to Maki Ueda, June 8, 1976 in Tottori, Tottori.

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