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Encyclopedia > Big Japan Pro Wrestling
Big Japan Pro Wrestling
Details
Acronym BJW
Established 1995
Style Deathmatch
Location Japan
Founder(s) Shin’ya Kojika
Owner(s) Shin’ya Kojika

Big Japan Pro Wrestling (BJW) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1995. It is most famous for its deathmatch style contests. Image File history File links Bjwlogo. ... New Japan Pro Wrestling is the most popular professional wrestling promotions in Japan. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article may require cleanup. ... Hardcore wrestling (also known as garbage wrestling) is a form of professional wrestling that eschews traditional concepts of match rules in favor of matches that take place in unusual environments, using foreign objects that are not normally permitted. ...

Contents

History

Beginnings

The classic BJW logo
The classic BJW logo

Big Japan Pro Wrestling was founded in March 1995 by Shin’ya Kojika, during the boom period for Deathmatch wrestling in Japan. Shin’ya Kojika is still president of the company to date. Image File history File links Bjwoldlogo. ... Image File history File links Bjwoldlogo. ...


Style

It followed in the footsteps of organisations such as Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW) and the International Wrestling Association of Japan (IWA Japan), who helped popularise a hard-hitting, violent and bloody style of wrestling known as the Deathmatch. Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, better known by its initials FMW, was a revolutionary Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 1989 by Atsushi ÅŒnita (often spelled Ohnita). ... International Wrestling Association of Japan, more commonly known as IWA Japan, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion operating since 1994. ...


These matches are usually weapon filled, using both “conventional” weapons (such as chairs and tables), as well as “extreme” weapons not usually seen in main-stream wrestling, and previously unused in wrestling at all. These weapons include, but are by no means limited to, nails, thumbtacks, fire and fluorescent light tubes. Barbed wire is also often used liberally in these matches, sometimes wrapped around other weapons, laid on the floor surrounding the ring, wrapped around the ring ropes or even replacing the ropes altogether.


Early BJW Deathmatch Innovations

In it early years, BJW was unable to directly compete with the budgets of its competition. This lead to the innovation of a number of unique gimmick matches, many of which helped hide its monetary shortcomings. These include:

  • Circus Deathmatch- above the ring is a scaffold and under that scaffold there is a type of circus net made of barbed wire. When a wrestler falls off of the scaffold the barbed wire spider net is there to “catch” the wrestlers. After a wrestler, or a team of wrestlers, have been thrown into the net it is cut down and the match continues to a pin fall.
  • Piranha Deathmatch- Barbed wire boards are placed in the corners. In the middle of the ring, there is a tank full of Piranhas. To win you must hold your opponent in the tank for ten seconds.
  • Scorpion Deathmatch- This match is similar to the Piranha Deathmatch. However, instead of barbed wire boards, there are two cacti. And instead of Piranhas, there is a tank full of scorpions.
  • Crocodile Deathmatch- Two wrestlers compete in a nonspecific death match. The loser of the match must then go on to wrestle a crocodile.
  • Fire Stone Deathmatch- Both the inside and outsides of the ring are lined with electrified space heaters wrapped in barbed wire. The match is won by pin fall.
  • Big Japan W*ING Crisis Big Born Deathmatch- Barbed-wire-board, thumbtacks, bed-of-nails, circus-style-scaffold into a barbed-wire-trampoline, tub of scorpions, cactus plants, light bulbs, Fire Stones, Dry Ice, barbed-wire-bat, drills, swords, knives, buzz saws Street Fight Tornado Death Match.

Inter-promotional feuds

Big Japan has feuded with both New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) and Combat Zone Wrestling (CZW). These were both kayfabe feuds that were done in order to generate more income for both companies. New Japan Pro Wrestling (新日本プロレス, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ... This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... In professional wrestling, kayfabe (pronounced KAY-fayb; IPA: ) refers to the portrayal of events within the industry as real, that is the portrayal of professional wrestling as not staged or worked. ...


During late 1996 and early 1997, Big Japan entered into an agreement with New Japan. Being a relatively new promotion, BJW was in need of mainstream publicity. NJPW agreed to a feud, which would allow Big Japan wrestlers to appear in their company and use New Japan’s popularity to give exposure to their company. In return, Big Japan agreed to lose the feud and the majority of the inter-promotional matches, therefore strengthening the New Japan brand. The situation provided an interesting clash of wrestling styles, as NJPW often favoured a strong style of competition. The biggest show featuring both companies occurred at the Tokyo Dome on 4th January 1997.


In the late 1990’s and into the 2000’s, Big Japan competed against Combat Zone Wrestling. CZW was a relatively new American promotion at the time, and also largely focused on an extreme style of wrestling. Wrestlers feuded in both companies having matches in the United States and Japan.


During the CZW feud top star Tomoaki Honma departed the company to become a freelancer. He would later sign with All Japan Pro Wrestling Tomoaki Honma Tomoaki Honma is a Japanese professional wrestler who currently works for All Japan Pro Wrestling. ... All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) (全日本プロレス, zen nihon puroresu) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1972. ...


Other

Away from the Deathmatches, BJW also has had well-established normal wrestling titles. On February 3, 1998, Yoshihiro Tajiri won a one night only 8 man tournament in Tokyo to crown BJW’s first Junior heavyweight. This match showed a distinct departure from the violent matches BJW is known for. The company also has had a Heavyweight championship, Women’s championship, Tag Team championship, and 4-Man tag team shuffle championship. Although the Tag titles and Deathmatch titles are the only ones still active. Yoshihiro Tajiri (born September 29, 1970 in Yokohama), better known simply as Tajiri, is a Japanese professional wrestler, best known for his appearances in the United States of America with Extreme Championship Wrestling and World Wrestling Entertainment. ...


Fighters

Current Roster

  • Takashi Sasaki
  • Ryuji Ito
  • Abdullah Kobayashi
  • Jaki Numazawa
  • Daisuke Sekimoto
  • Jun Kasai
  • MEN's Teioh
  • Kintaro Kanemura
  • Tetsuhiro Kuroda
  • Shadow WX
  • BADBOY Hido
  • Mammoth Sasaki
  • Katsumasa Inoue
  • Hiroyuki Kondo
  • Daikokubo Benkei
  • Yuichi Taniguchi
  • MIYAWAKI
  • GENTARO
  • Hyoma
  • Asian Cougar
  • Saburo Inematsu
  • MASADA
  • Mad Man Pondo
  • Necro Butcher
  • Jason Ray

Takeo Otsuka, also known as Mens Teioh or Terry Boy, is a Japanese professional wrestler. ... Masada is a professional wrestler. ... Kevin Canady (born June 24th, 1969) is an American Professional Wrestler better known as Mad Man Pondo. ... Dylan Keith Summers (Born July 13, 1974 in Morgantown, West Virginia) is best known as American professional wrestler Necro Butcher. ...

Past Wrestlers

Larry Shreve (Born Lawrence Shreve on November 2, 1936), best known as Abdullah the Butcher, and also at times the Madman from Sudan, is a professional wrestler. ... Yoshihiro Tajiri (born September 29, 1970 in Yokohama), better known simply as Tajiri, is a Japanese professional wrestler, best known for his appearances in the United States of America with Extreme Championship Wrestling and World Wrestling Entertainment. ... Tomoaki Honma Tomoaki Honma is a Japanese professional wrestler who currently works for All Japan Pro Wrestling. ... Nelson Rodriguez Erazo (born in Brooklyn, New York, New York) is an American professional wrestler of Puerto Rican ethnicity, better known by his ring name, Homicide. ...

Current Champions

  • BJW Death Match Champion: Takashi Sasaki
  • BJW Tag Team Champions: Daisuke Sekimoto & Yoshito Sasaki

External links

  • Official site in Japanese
  • BJW title history
  • More information on Deathmatches and BJW innovations.
Puroresu
v  d  e
Global Professional Wrestling Alliance

Major promotions
Men: New Japan Pro Wrestling | All Japan Pro Wrestling | Pro Wrestling NOAH
Japan Pro Wrestling Alliance (defunct) | International Pro Wrestling (defunct) | Super World of Sports (defunct)
Women: All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (defunct) New Japan Pro Wrestling is the most popular professional wrestling promotions in Japan. ... Image File history File links Flag_of_Japan_(bordered). ... The logo of the Global Professional Wrestling Alliance The Global Professional Wrestling Alliance (GPWA) are a group of professional wrestling promotions and wrestlers from around the world who have come together to cooperate. ... New Japan Pro Wrestling (新日本プロレス, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ... All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) (全日本プロレス, zen nihon puroresu) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1972. ... Pro Wrestling NOAH is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded in 2000. ... Nihon Puroresu Kyōkai (日本プロレス協会, Japan Pro Wrestling Alliance or Japan[ese] Wrestling Association) was the first professional wrestling promotion to be based in Japan. ... International Pro-Wrestling (国際プロレス興行;, Kokusai Puroresu Kogyo, International Wrestling Enterprise) was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1967 to 1981. ... Super World of Sports, more commonly known as SWS, was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion from 1990 to 1992. ... All Japan Womens Pro-Wrestling (全日本女子プロレス, Zennihon Joshi Puroresu), nicknamed Zenjo (全女: 全 meaning All, 女 meaning Woman) is a joshi puroresu (womens professional wrestling) promotion established in 1968 by Takashi Matsunaga and his brothers. ...

Independent promotions
Men: Tokyo Pro Wrestling | UWF | Pioneer Senshi | UWFI | Fujiwara Gumi | RINGS | WAR | SPWF | Big Japan Pro Wrestling | Universal Lucha Libre | Michinoku Pro Wrestling | HUSTLE | Osaka Pro Wrestling | FMW | W*ING | IWA Japan | Kingdom | UFO | Pro Wrestling ZERO1-MAX | World Japan | Dragon Gate | DDT | Kaientai Dojo | El Dorado Wrestling
Women: Japan Women's Pro Wrestling | JWP Project | LLPW | ARSION | AtoZ | NEO | GAEA Japan The original Tokyo Pro Wrestling was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1966 to 1967. ... The original Japanese-based Universal Wrestling Federation (UWF) was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion from 1984 to 1986, formed by wrestlers who had left New Japan Pro Wrestling. ... Pioneer Senshi was the first-ever independent promotion in Japanese wrestling history. ... Union of Wrestling Forces International, better known as UWF International or simply UWFi, was a stiff-style|shoot-style professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1991 to 1996. ... Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Group (Purofesshonaru-resuringu Fujiwara-Gumi, プロフェッショナルレスリング藤原組) was a shoot style professional wrestling promotion based in Japan, operating from 1991 to 1995. ... RINGS was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion from 1991 to 2002. ... Wrestling And Romance, and later Wrestle Association R, was a professional wrestling promotion founded and ran by Genichiro Tenryu as the successor to Super World of Sports, and which lasted from 1992 to 2000. ... Universal Lucha Libre (Universal Pro-Wrestling until 1991; Federación Universal de Lucha Libre afterwards) was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1990 to 1995. ... Michinoku Pro Wrestling is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded by Masanori Murakawa (The Great Sasuke) in 1993. ... Hustle is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion managed by Nobuhiko Takada and produced by Dream Stage Entertainment. ... Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, better known by its initials FMW, was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 1989 by Atsushi Ōnita (often spelled Ohnita). ... International Wrestling Association of Japan, more commonly known as IWA Japan, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion operating since 1994. ... Kingdom, was a professional wrestling company in Japan from 1997 to 1998. ... To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ... Pro Wrestling ZERO1-MAX, formerly known as Pro Wrestling ZERO-ONE, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 2001. ... Fighting World of Japan Pro-Wrestling, frequently shortened to World Japan or WJ, and also known as Riki Pro, is a professional wrestling promotion formed in Japan in 2003. ... Dragon Gate is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion formerly known as Toryumon Japan. ... Dramatic Dream Team, better known by its initials DDT or its logo reading D2T, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 1997 by Sanshiro Takagi. ... Kaientai Dojo (or K-DOJO for short) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion and training facility owned and promoted by Taka Michinoku. ... El Dorado is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion that is seen as the evolution of dragondoor. ... GAEA Japan is a Japenese Professional Wrestling Promotion for women. ...



 

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