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Professional wrestling in Japan is commonly known as Purofesshonaru Resuringu, usually abbreviated to Puroresu. Image File history File links New Japan Pro Wrestling logo from Wrestling Supercards and Tournaments http://www. ...
Image File history File links New Japan Pro Wrestling logo from Wrestling Supercards and Tournaments http://www. ...
New Japan Pro Wrestling (æ°æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ...
For the video game, see Pro Wrestling (video game). ...
The first Japanese to become a professional wrestler in the Western style was former sumo wrestler Sorakichi Matsuda, who went to the United States in the 1880s and was somewhat successful. Attempts by him to popularize the game in his native land, however, fell short and he ended back in America, where he died young. For other uses, see Sumo (disambiguation). ...
Sorakichi Matsuda was a professional wrestler. ...
// Development and commercial production of electric lighting Development and commercial production of gasoline-powered automobile by Karl Benz, Gottlieb Daimler and Maybach First commercial production and sales of phonographs and phonograph recordings. ...
Subsequent attempts before and after World War II failed to get off the ground initially, until Japan saw the advent of its first big star, Rikidozan, who made the sport popular beginning in 1951. Combatants Allied powers: China France Great Britain Soviet Union United States and others Axis powers: Germany Italy Japan and others Commanders Chiang Kai-shek Charles de Gaulle Winston Churchill Joseph Stalin Franklin Roosevelt Adolf Hitler Benito Mussolini Hideki TÅjÅ Casualties Military dead: 17,000,000 Civilian dead: 33,000...
RikidÅzan (Japanese: åéå±±, Korean: ìëì°, November 14, 1924 - December 15, 1963) was a professional wrestler, known as the Father of Puroresu and one of the most influential men in wrestling history. ...
Year 1951 (MCMLI) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Many Japanese wrestling groups have seen a significant downturn in popularity in the past decade due to a failure to introduce new talent and copying many unpopular ideas from the U.S.[citation needed] The few women's groups that remain are struggling to survive while the men have seen a big drop in their drawing power as Japanese fans are increasingly turning to mixed martial arts competitions such as K-1 or the PRIDE Fighting Championships, which had pro wrestlers as its early exponents. WWE is also trying to make inroads in Japan by promoting cards on its own instead of through co-promotion as in the past with New Japan and SWS, mostly by featuring some of its wrestlers who once competed for Japanese promotions in the main events. For the fighting styles that combine different arts, see hybrid martial arts. ...
K. 1 is a designation given to two works of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart in the original Köchel Verzeichnis. ...
PRIDE Fighting Championships (PRIDE or PRIDE FC for short) was a mixed martial arts organization based in Japan. ...
World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. ...
Basic rules
A match can be won by fōru (fall; equivalent to pin fall), nokkauto (knockout; failing to answer a ten count), ringu auto (ring out; equivalent to count out), or gibappu (give up; equivalent to submission). Fōru occurs when the wrestler holds both of his opponent's shoulders against the mat for a count of three. Unlike wrestling in North America, a 20 count is used in Japan when a wrestler leaves the ring instead of a 10 count. Additional rules govern how the outcome of the match is to take place, for example the Japanese UWF and its derived Submission Arts Wrestling promotions do not allow pinfalls, just submissions or knockouts. Disqualifications (due to outside interference or violence on the official), unlike in the U. S., are rarely used in Japan nowadays since the fans are reputed to dislike seeing no clear-cut winners and losers. If there are any multiple beatings of a wrestler by others, they are usually done after the referee has counted a fall/KO/give up and the bell has rung. 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. ...
Styles and gimmicks Throughout the 1990s, three individual styles, shoot style, lucha libre, and "garbage" were the main divisions of independent promotions, but as a result of the "borderless" trend of the 2000s to have interpromotional matches, the line between rules among major-league promotions and independents has for the most part been blurred to standardization. Shootfighting Shoot wrestling is a general term that describes a range of hybrid fighting systems originating in Japan in the late 1970s, in close association with Japanese professional wrestling. ...
One of the most well known Lucha Libre wrestlers (luchadores), Rey Mysterio. ...
Characteristics of Puroresu What makes puroresu different from the lucha libre style in Mexico and the American style is the fact that it is performed in more realistic manner. The Japanese portray it as a legitimate sports struggle. There is no outside interference, run-ins, or referees conveniently looking the other way. Blatant cheating draws boos from the audience, no matter how popular the wrestler. Almost every match ends clean, with no cheating and no disqualification. One of the most well known Lucha Libre wrestlers (luchadores), Rey Mysterio. ...
Puroresu also uses very complex submission maneuvers as well as high-flying aerial attacks. Pro-wrestlers in Japan are also famous for "working stiff," i.e. not pulling their punches and kicks. Puroresu also differs from American pro wrestling in that the wrestlers are treated more like legitimate athletes than sports entertainers. During interviews, puroresu stars tend to speak normally rather than use catchphrases and other mannerisms associated with their gimmicks, much like interviews conducted with boxers, baseball and soccer players. Even the wrestlers with the most fanciful in-ring personalities carry out their interviews in a solemn, calm tone; the only "catchphrases" that they may allow themselves is saying an English word here and there, such as "thank you", "champion", or "I am" (before their surname). Promos are thus rarely used; the major promotions often interview wrestlers after the matches rather than before, where they can be seen (realistically) sweating and tired, as testimony to the match they have been in. Rey Mysterio performing one of many aerial techniques to Dvon Dudley Aerial techniques are used in professional wrestling to show of the speed and agility of a wrestler. ...
In the context of unarmed combat or melee, a punch is a thrusting blow, esp. ...
For other uses, see Kick (disambiguation). ...
In professional wrestling, a gimmick is a wrestlers personality, behavior, attire and/or other distinguishing traits while performing. ...
For other senses of these words, see boxing (disambiguation) or boxer (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the sport. ...
Soccer redirects here. ...
The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
In professional wrestling, a promo is short for promotional interview, a dialogue or monologue used to advance a storyline. ...
Most of the Japanese organizations do not follow the faces and heels style of their Western counterparts. There is no good guy/bad guy structure, it's strictly competition between the wrestlers. This allows every wrestler on the roster to face each other; in America, for instance, two faces or two heels would very rarely be booked to square off in a match, as it generally has to be good guy vs. bad guy. Japan doesn't limit itself like this; for example, it's not uncommon for regular tag team partners to face each other in a singles match, particularly during annual tournaments, where the format is usually round robin and thus it's every man for himself. During the nWo angle in Japan, it was not uncommon to see Keiji Mutoh facing off against allies Masahiro Chono, Marcus Bagwell and Scott Norton during the G-1 Climax tournament, and holding nothing back during the matches. Secondary singles championships, such as the WWE Intercontinental Championship and WWE United States Championship, are unheard of, as promotion of a wrestler to the major singles championships also takes into account tag team victories and championship reigns. Often, if a wrestler is to be pushed as a singles championship contender, a "secondary" championship used is one from an independent promotion or from a promotion from abroad. This pushes the wrestler as a championship contender in his home ring. New Japan allows for a few gimmick wrestlers, though. In the 1990s, one of its top stars was Mutoh, who would do double duty, either wrestling under his own name without a gimmick, or would don different tights and face paint and work as the heelish Great Muta. Most Japanese wrestlers can be considered tweeners because, they rely on the fans' admiration, this admiration comes from how much they are realistically into the match. One of the best known tweeners in New Japan is Yuji Nagata. In professional wrestling, a face or babyface is a character who is portrayed as heroic relative to the heel wrestlers, who are analagous to villains. ...
In professional wrestling, a heel is a villain character. ...
In professional wrestling, a face or babyface is a character who is portrayed as heroic relative to the heel wrestlers, who are analagous to villains. ...
In professional wrestling, a heel is a villain character. ...
The term round-robin describes correspondence authored or signed by numerous individuals to a single addressee. ...
The New World Order was a stable of wrestlers, originally in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and later in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). ...
Keiji Mutoh , born December 23, 1962) is a Japanese professional wrestler who first gained international fame in the National Wrestling Alliance. ...
Masahiro ChÅno (è¶éæ£æ´ ChÅno Masahiro) is a Japanese professional wrestler. ...
Marcus Alexander Mark Bagwell (born January 10, 1970) is an American professional wrestler, better known by his ring name, Buff Bagwell. ...
Scott Michael Norton (born June 15, 1961[1]) is an American professional wrestler who is best known for working for New Japan Pro Wrestling and World Championship Wrestling. ...
Promo for G-1 2005 The G-1 Climax tournament is a weeklong event held each August by the New Japan Pro Wrestling promotion. ...
The World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) Intercontinental Championship is a professional wrestling championship in World Wrestling Entertainment. ...
The World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) United States Championship is a professional wrestling championship in World Wrestling Entertainment. ...
-1...
In professional wrestling, a tweener is a character who is portrayed as being morally neutral or ambiguous (that is, they are between a face and a heel). ...
Yuji Nagata Height: 60 (183cm) Weight: 238lbs (108kg) Date of Birth: 4/24/68 Place of Birth: Togane City, Chiba Debut: September 14th, 1992 (vs. ...
None of the major promotions have their own publications (in contrast to WWE in the U. S.), all major promotions are covered by the mainstream media and have dedicated independent publications that are on par with publications dedicated to baseball, soccer, sumo wrestling, and other specialized sports. The top pro wrestling magazines in Japan are Shukan (Weekly) Puroresu, a division of Baseball Magazine Sha, and Shukan Gong. Both present results up to the week before publication (in contrast to the U. S., where both Pro Wrestling Illustrated and WWE publications publish results and happenings at least two months old), and several mainstream newspapers include wrestling match results alongside boxing and MMA, which are grouped together under the general category Kakutogi (Fighting Sports). Pro Wrestling Illustrated (PWI) is a professional wrestling magazine. ...
For other senses of these words, see boxing (disambiguation) or boxer (disambiguation). ...
Ring A match is fought in a square ringu (ring) surrounded by three ropes, very similar to a boxing ring. Turnbuckles holding the ropes in the corners can be covered either individually (each turnbuckle has its own padding) or collectively (a single padding covering all turnbuckles). Wrestlers often run into the ropes by themselves or throw the opponents against them, employing the ropes' elasticity for his next attack. This full use of the ropes is a unique characteristic of puroresu among other sports which also use boxing rings. Additionally, there are attacks that utilize the squareness of the ring, including climbing onto a corner and jumping off onto the opponent, or pushing the opponent out of the ring from the corner. The boxing ring is the space in which a boxing match occurs. ...
A turnbuckle is a device for adjusting the tension in ropes, cables, and tie rods. ...
Other kinds of rings may be specified by individual rules. A ring may have barbed wires instead of ropes, have six sides of ropes instead of four, or may have explosives set on the boundaries, just to name a few. Some small, obscure independent promotions which rarely draw above 100 fans to its cards on average are so devoid of resources that they have to use amateur mats in place of an actual ring. Examples of these are Koki Kitahara's Capture International (shoot style) and Mr. Pogo's WWS. Typical modern agricultural barbed wire. ...
Andrell Durden (top) and Edward Harris grapple for position during the All-Marine Wrestle Offs. ...
Shootfighting Shoot wrestling is a general term that describes a range of hybrid fighting systems originating in Japan in the late 1970s, in close association with Japanese professional wrestling. ...
Female wrestling Puroresu done by female wrestlers is called joshi puroresu (女子プロレス). Female wrestling in Japan is usually handled by promotions that specialize in joshi puroresu, rather than divisions of otherwise male-dominated promotions as is the case in the United States (the only exception was FMW, a men's promotion which had a small women's division, but even then depended on talent from women's federations to provide competition). However, joshi puroresu promotions usually have agreements with male puroresu promotions such that they recognize each others' titles as legitimate, and may share cards. Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, better known by its initials FMW, was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in the late 1980s by Atsushi Ōnita (often spelled Ohnita). ...
In professional wrestling, the card is the lineup of the matches that will be staged at a given venue for a given perfomance. ...
All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling was the dominant joshi organization from the 1970s to the 1990s but the company suffered due to mismanagement by the four brothers who ran the company. AJW's first major star was Mach Fumiake in 1974, followed in 1975 by the Beauty Pair. The early 1980s saw the fame of Jaguar Yokota, who was as good if not better than most men. That decade would later see the rise of Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka, the Crush Gals, who became huge idols to millions of Japanese girls, many of whom followed their lead into pro wrestling. AJW also employed several American wrestlers, who had found little work and no respect in the U.S. Like their male counterparts, the women of Japanese wrestling are treated with great respect as serious athletes, not as eye candy like in the U.S. All Japan Womens Pro-Wrestling (å
¨æ¥æ¬å¥³åããã¬ã¹, Zennihon Joshi Puroresu), nicknamed Zenjo (å
¨å¥³: å
¨ meaning All, 女 meaning Woman) is a joshi puroresu (womens professional wrestling) promotion established in 1968 by Takashi Matsunaga and his brothers. ...
Rimi Yokota is a Japanese professional wrestler and later wrestling trainer, who wrestled under the name Jaguar Yokota. ...
Chigusa Nagayo(é·ä¸å種) is a female Professional Wrestler best known for her popularity in the 1980s for her tag team The Crush Gals with partner Lioness Asuka. ...
Lioness Asuka is a Japanese professional wrestler. ...
Puroresu on television Since its beginning, Japanese professional wrestling depended on television to reach a wide audience. Rikidozan's matches in the 1950s, televised by Nippon TV, often attracted huge crowds to Tokyo giant screens. Eventually TV Asahi also gained the right to broadcast JWA, but eventually the two major broadcasters agreed to split the talent, centering about Rikidozan's top two students: NTV for Giant Baba and his group, and Asahi for Antonio Inoki and his group. This arrangement continued after the JWA split into today's major promotions, New Japan and All Japan, led by Inoki and Baba respectively. In 2000, following the Pro Wrestling NOAH split, NTV decided to follow the new venture rather than staying with All Japan. Nowadays, however, mirroring the decline that professional wrestling in the U.S. had in the 1970s and early 1980s, NOAH's Power Hour and New Japan's World Pro Wrestling have been largely relegated to the midnight hours by their broadcasters. Nippon Television Network Corporation (abbreviation: NTV, Japanese: 日本テレビ放送網株式会社, Nihon Terebi Hōsōmō Kabushiki Gaisha) is a television and radio network at Shiodome in Tokyo, Japan owned by the Yomiuri Shimbun. ...
TV Asahi Corporation ) (TYO: 9409 ), also known as EX and Tele-Asa ), is a television network headquartered in Roppongi, Minato, Tokyo, Japan. ...
Shohei Baba (Baba ShÅhei, 1938â1999) was a professional wrestler and co-founder of All Japan Pro Wrestling. ...
Antonio Inoki (ã¢ã³ãããªçªæ¨), real name Kanji Inoki (çªæ¨å¯è³ Inoki Kanji, born February 20, 1943) is a retired Japanese professional wrestler and mixed martial artist who now resides in New York City. ...
The advent of cable television and pay per view also enabled independents such as RINGS to rise. WOWOW had a working agreement with Akira Maeda that paid millions to RINGS when he was featured, but eventually was scrapped with Maeda's retirement and the subsequent RINGS collapse. Coaxial cable is often used to transmit cable television into the house. ...
This does not cite its references or sources. ...
WOWOW was the first private satellite broadcasting and pay TV station in Japan. ...
Foreign wrestlers in Japan Since its establishment professional wrestling in Japan has depended on foreigners, particularly North Americans, to get its own stars over. Rikidozan's JWA and its successor promotions All Japan Pro Wrestling and New Japan Pro Wrestling were members of the American-based National Wrestling Alliance at various points, and used these connections to bring North American stars. International Pro Wrestling was the first Japanese promotion to link in to European circuits. It was through IWE that Frenchman André the Giant got his international reputation for the first time. The characters for Gaikokujin, lit: Outside country person. Gaikokujin (å¤å½äºº Foreigner lit: Outside country person) is a Japanese word used to refer to foreigners or people not of Japanese nationality. ...
All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) (å
¨æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, zen nihon puroresu) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1972. ...
New Japan Pro Wrestling (æ°æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ...
The National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) is the largest governing body for a group of independent professional wrestling promotions and sanctions various NWA championships. ...
International Pro-Wrestling (å½éããã¬ã¹èè¡;, Kokusai Puroresu Kogyo, International Wrestling Enterprise) was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1967 to 1981. ...
For other uses, see Europe (disambiguation). ...
André René Roussimoff (May 19, 1946 â January 27, 1993), best known as André the Giant, was a French professional wrestler and actor. ...
Several popular North American professional wrestlers in recent years, including Americans Hulk Hogan, Big Van Vader, and Mick Foley, Canadian Chris Benoit, and others have wrestled in Japan. The now defunct World Championship Wrestling had a strong talent exchange deal with New Japan Pro Wrestling, that saw (amongst other things) a Japanese version of its popular nWo angle used by that federation. Ken Shamrock was among the first Americans to compete in shoot style competition in Japan, starting out in the UWF and later opened Pancrase with some other Japanese shootfighters. Terrence Gene Bollea (born on August 11, 1953) is an American actor and semi-retired professional wrestler better known by his ring name Hulk Hogan. ...
For the football player of the same name see Leon White (football player). ...
Michael Francis Mick Foley, Sr. ...
Christopher Michael Benoit (IPA: ) (May 21, 1967 â June 24, 2007) was a Canadian professional wrestler who wrestled for Extreme Championship Wrestling, World Championship Wrestling, and World Wrestling Entertainment. ...
For the Australian professional wrestling promotion, see World Championship Wrestling (Australia). ...
New Japan Pro Wrestling (æ°æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ...
The New World Order was a stable of wrestlers, originally in World Championship Wrestling (WCW) and later in the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). ...
In professional wrestling, an angle is a fictional storyline. ...
Ken Shamrock (born Kenneth Wayne Kilpatrick on February 11, 1964 in Macon, Georgia) is an American mixed martial arts fighter. ...
Shootfighting Shoot wrestling is a general term that describes a range of hybrid fighting systems originating in Japan in the late 1970s, in close association with Japanese professional wrestling. ...
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. ...
Pancrase Hybrid Wrestling is a mixed martial arts organization founded in Japan in 1993 by Masakatsu Funaki and Minoru Suzuki. ...
As a result of the introduction of Lucha Libre into Japan in the early 1990s, major Mexican stars also compete in Japan, although they are less popular than American wrestlers and depend on their masked personas to gain recognition. The most popular Mexican wrestler to compete in Japan is Mil Máscaras. One of the most well known Lucha Libre wrestlers (luchadores), Rey Mysterio. ...
For other uses, see Mask (disambiguation). ...
Aaron RodrÃguez Arellano (born July 15, 1942), best known as Mil Máscaras (meaning One Thousand Masks in Spanish), is a Mexican professional wrestler. ...
Federations Male All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) (å
¨æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, zen nihon puroresu) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1972. ...
BattlARTS (æ ¼éæ¢åµå£ããã©ã¼ã, KakutÅ Tentei-dan BatorÄtsu, Fighting Investigation Team Battlarts) is a professional wrestling promotion based in Koshigaya, Saitama, Japan. ...
Big Japan Pro Wrestling (BJW) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1995. ...
Please wikify (format) this article or section as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style. ...
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. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
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. ...
Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, better known by its initials FMW, was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 1989 by Atsushi Ånita (often spelled Ohnita). ...
Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Group (Purofesshonaru-resuringu Fujiwara-Gumi, ãããã§ãã·ã§ãã«ã¬ã¹ãªã³ã°è¤åçµ) was a shoot style professional wrestling promotion based in Japan, operating from 1991 to 1995. ...
HUSTLE is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion managed by Nobuhiko Takada. ...
Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) is a professional wrestling promotion in Japan founded by Antonio Inoki in 2007. ...
International Pro-Wrestling (å½éããã¬ã¹èè¡;, Kokusai Puroresu Kogyo, International Wrestling Enterprise) was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1967 to 1981. ...
International Wrestling Association of Japan, more commonly known as IWA Japan, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion operating since 1994. ...
Nihon Puroresu KyÅkai (æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹åä¼, Japan Pro Wrestling Alliance or Japan[ese] Wrestling Association) was the first professional wrestling promotion to be based in Japan. ...
Kaientai Dojo (or K-DOJO for short) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion and training facility owned and promoted by Taka Michinoku. ...
This article or section is incomplete and may require expansion and/or cleanup. ...
Michinoku Pro Wrestling (also known as North Eastern Wrestling) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded by The Great Sasuke in 1993. ...
New Japan Pro Wrestling (æ°æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ...
Osaka Pro Wrestling is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded in 1998 by Super Delfin. ...
Pancrase Hybrid Wrestling is a mixed martial arts organization founded in Japan in 1993 by Masakatsu Funaki and Minoru Suzuki. ...
Pro Wrestling NOAH is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded in 2000. ...
Pro Wrestling U-STYLE is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion run by Kiyoshi Tamura. ...
Pro Wrestling ZERO1-MAX, formerly known as Pro Wrestling ZERO-ONE, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 2001. ...
A ring is usually anything resembling a circle, or a noise that cycles rapidly. ...
Super World of Sports, more commonly known as SWS, was a Japanese professional wrestling promotion from 1990 to 1992. ...
The original Tokyo Pro Wrestling was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1966 to 1967. ...
Tokyo Pro Wrestling is the name of two unrelated Japanese professional wrestling promotions. ...
To meet Wikipedias quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
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. ...
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. ...
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. ...
Wrestling And Romance, and later Wrestle Association R, was a professional wrestling promotion founded and run by Genichiro Tenryu as the successor to Super World of Sports, and which lasted from 1992 to 2000. ...
Female All Japan Womens Pro-Wrestling (å
¨æ¥æ¬å¥³åããã¬ã¹, Zennihon Joshi Puroresu), nicknamed Zenjo (å
¨å¥³: å
¨ meaning All, 女 meaning Woman) is a joshi puroresu (womens professional wrestling) promotion established in 1968 by Takashi Matsunaga and his brothers. ...
GAEA Japan is a Japenese Professional Wrestling Promotion for women. ...
JDStar, or Jd, is a womens wrestling promotion based in Tokyo, Japan. ...
SENDAI Girls Pro Wrestling (SGPW), often called Senjo, is a Japanese womens professional wrestling promotion. ...
See also 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. ...
External links | v • d • e Puroresu
| | Major promotions Men: New Japan Pro Wrestling | All Japan Pro Wrestling | Pro Wrestling NOAH | UWF Japan Pro Wrestling Alliance | International Pro Wrestling | Super World of Sports | UWFI Women: All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling | GAEA Japan Image File history File links Flag_of_Japan. ...
New Japan Pro Wrestling (æ°æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, shin nihon puroresu) is a major professional wrestling federation in Japan, founded by Antonio Inoki in 1972. ...
All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) (å
¨æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹, zen nihon puroresu) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1972. ...
Pro Wrestling NOAH is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded in 2000. ...
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. ...
Nihon Puroresu KyÅkai (æ¥æ¬ããã¬ã¹åä¼, Japan Pro Wrestling Alliance or Japan[ese] Wrestling Association) was the first professional wrestling promotion to be based in Japan. ...
International Pro-Wrestling (å½éããã¬ã¹èè¡;, 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. ...
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. ...
All Japan Womens Pro-Wrestling (å
¨æ¥æ¬å¥³åããã¬ã¹, Zennihon Joshi Puroresu), nicknamed Zenjo (å
¨å¥³: å
¨ meaning All, 女 meaning Woman) is a joshi puroresu (womens professional wrestling) promotion established in 1968 by Takashi Matsunaga and his brothers. ...
GAEA Japan is a Japenese Professional Wrestling Promotion for women. ...
| | Independent promotions Men: Tokyo Pro Wrestling | Pioneer Senshi | Fujiwara Gumi | RINGS | FMW | WAR | SPWF | Big Japan Pro Wrestling | Universal Lucha Libre | Michinoku Pro Wrestling | HUSTLE | Osaka Pro Wrestling | W*ING | IWA Japan | Kingdom | Pro Wrestling ZERO1-MAX | World Japan | Dragon Gate | DDT | Kaientai Dojo | El Dorado Wrestling | Big Mouth Loud | Kensuke Office | IGF Women: Japan Women's Pro Wrestling | JWP Project | LLPW | ARSION | AtoZ | NEO | JDStar | SENDAI Girls' Pro Wrestling The original Tokyo Pro Wrestling was a professional wrestling promotion in Japan from 1966 to 1967. ...
Pioneer Senshi was the first-ever independent promotion in Japanese wrestling history. ...
Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Group (Purofesshonaru-resuringu Fujiwara-Gumi, ãããã§ãã·ã§ãã«ã¬ã¹ãªã³ã°è¤åçµ) 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. ...
Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling, better known by its initials FMW, was a revolutionary Japanese professional wrestling promotion founded in 1989 by Atsushi Ånita (often spelled Ohnita). ...
Wrestling And Romance, and later Wrestle Association R, was a professional wrestling promotion founded and run by Genichiro Tenryu as the successor to Super World of Sports, and which lasted from 1992 to 2000. ...
Big Japan Pro Wrestling (BJW) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion established in 1995. ...
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 (also known as North Eastern Wrestling) is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded by The Great Sasuke in 1993. ...
HUSTLE is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion managed by Nobuhiko Takada. ...
Osaka Pro Wrestling is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion, founded in 1998 by Super Delfin. ...
International Wrestling Association of Japan, more commonly known as IWA Japan, is a Japanese professional wrestling promotion operating since 1994. ...
This article or section is incomplete and may require expansion and/or 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. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
Please wikify (format) this article or section as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style. ...
Inoki Genome Federation (IGF) is a professional wrestling promotion in Japan founded by Antonio Inoki in 2007. ...
JDStar, or Jd, is a womens wrestling promotion based in Tokyo, Japan. ...
SENDAI Girls Pro Wrestling (SGPW), often called Senjo, is a Japanese womens professional wrestling promotion. ...
| | Global Professional Wrestling Alliance | |