History of the Beyond the Sea Championship

As I mentioned in my Stardom Championship lineage review, SEAdLINNNG was founded by Nanae Takahashi after she and Yoshiko left Stardom. During a title defense against Act Yasukawa, Yoshiko started shooting and severely injured her Yasukawa. Yasukawa eventually returned to the ring, but long-term damage from the attack forced her to retire the following year. Yoshiko was stripped of the belt and forced into retirement, but Takahashi stayed loyal to her, quit Stardom, started SEAdLINNNG, and hired Yoshiko. 

November 1, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Nanae Takahashi def. Arisa Nakajima {Beyond the Sea Championship Match}
From Go Beyond! This is the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion. Earlier in the night, Takahashi defeated Takuma Iroha while Nakajima beat Hanako Nakamori. Takashi was the arch villain in every ‘80s action movie here, no-selling completely and stiffing Nakajima like an asshole for the first five minutes straight. Then, Nakajima hit a facebuster on the apron and started going after Takahashi’s knee. That slowed Takahashi down but never really put her in grave danger, so when she won with the One Second EX at 18:02 it wasn’t a huge surprise. That said, some of the reversals in this match broke my brain in a way that I’m incredibly thankful for. This was a real treat and a statement illustrating what this championship could be. Takahashi has now made herself the first champion of two separate companies that she’s started, so that kind of thing happens globally and across genders. ****¼ 

May 29, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

Takumi Iroha def. Nanae Takahashi {Beyond the Sea Championship Match}
From Stay Tune. Iroha is the embodiment of Rufio (the character) in wrestler form. A lot of people seem to be really into her because of her fast kickin’ style, but I found her most compelling when she was getting her offense cut off and when she was fighting from behind. The parts of the match where she was firmly in control and kicking away at Takahashi felt cartoonish to me. Luckily, most of the match saw her getting her ass kicked. She took those beatings amazingly and made me very excited for her creative comebacks near the end. She hit a powerbomb, the Bochi Bomb, and a Liger Bomb for the win at 21:21. ****

September 18, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

Arisa Nakajima def. Takumi Iroha {Beyond the Sea Championship Match}
From Endless Summer. Iroha was also the Regina de WAVE Champion (a title I might find my way to reviewing soon, we’ll see) here, though only the SEAdLINNNG belt is on the line. On the one hand, Iroha did a lot of cool tweaking of typical wrestling tropes as a strategy to stay in control. Unfortunately, right after a few of those tweaks she wasn’t strong enough to lift up Nakajima for a spot, and when she tried to repeat it and failed again the whole match fell apart for a bit. They got their groove back and then some in the run up to the finish, it’s just a shame that a clunky middle held this back from being a classic. Nakajima hit Iroha with what was essentially a German suplex while holding a hammerlock but with Iroha’s leg instead of her arm, and then a half nelson suplex for the win at 24:28. ***¾ 

July 13, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan

Yoshiko def. Arisa Nakajima {Beyond the Sea Championship Match}
From Close to You. After taking three months off because of the pandemic, SEAdLINNNG came back with two empty arena shows. Then they did this show, which had fans. Close to You would be the most trollish name for a pandemic show with fans if the people running it were native English speakers. As it is I have no idea if they were trolling. But the fact that Yoshiko won the title on this show makes me think they might have been? I don’t have a pulse on how Japanese fans felt about her at this point. The fans are masked and socially distanced. These two certainly worked hard, but I have more than a few gripes with this match. First and foremost, Yoshiko’s arm was between Nakajima’s shoulder and the mat during the finishing count, and the camera got a good, super closeup shot of it. A bigger problem was that the match had no peaks. Plenty of stuff happened, but very little of it felt like it was an extension of anything that had come before. Early on, Nakajima punched Yoshiko’s leg and it seemed like they might build something from that, but after a minute it was forgotten. It’s okay to move on from attacking a limb, but if all you have beyond that is disparate spots then you might as well stick with a story. This really didn’t do it for me. Yoshiko hit a pair of sentons for the win at 26:02. ***¼ 

Yoshiko remained champion through the pandemic until she racked up enough injuries that she was forced to take time off and vacate the title. It’s pretty lame that this person who a lot of folks would probably pay to see get her comeuppance didn’t lose her championship because someone pinned her. I guess I’ll have to watch her Oz Academy title loss to get that satisfaction myself.