By this point I’ve covered the major championship titles of most of Japan’s most well-known companies. I wanted to tackle the Pro Wrestling Zero1 Championship (especially in light of its weird connection to AWA), the WRESTLE-1 Championship (especially in light of its less weird connection to AJPW), Michinoku Pro’s Tokoku Junior Heavyweight Championship (as it’s the only strictly Junior Heavyweight Championship I know of that is the flagship title for a company), and the K-DOJO Strongest K Championship (because I think it’s hilarious that the company and the title ended because TAKA Michinoku had a long-lasting extramarital affair that just wasn’t tolerated by Japanese society). But I couldn’t do any of those titles because the matches are not very easy to find.
Big Japan Pro Wrestling is relatively popular with hardcore wrestling fans (meaning both intense wrestling fans and fans of hardcore wrestling) in the United States. And while I also had a hard time finding a chunk of their title changes, I found enough to feel like I got a sense for the history of the title. The title I’m referring to is the BJW Strong Heavyweight Championship. As I mentioned, Big Japan is a company that’s popular in large part because of its deathmatch wrestling, and their Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship predates the Strong title by about 14 years. But I can’t stomach deathmatch wrestling, and the Strong title is pretty popular, so that’s my compromise.
May 5, 2012 – Yokohama, Kanagawa
Yoshihito Sasaki def Big Van Walter {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the second Endless Survivor. Sasaki had won the annual BJW Strong Climb tournament and demanded that a non-deathmatch championship be established. Walter was the wXw Champion at the time, and since was cross branded with wXw and CZW, this was made the decision match. It’s funny, because after the first two matches for the title, wXw and CZW stopped being associated with the belt entirely. This was like watching WALTER vs. Ilja Dragunov in 2020, only this version of Walter is fatter and slower, and Sasaki’s comebacks just aren’t believable. Walter dominated the whole match, to the point that I didn’t buy most of Sasaki’s kick outs near the end. The action was certainly brutal and stiff, but it didn’t come together in the same way as WALTER’s classics. Sasaki managed to hit a Burning Hammer out of nowhere to turn the tide and then won a minute later with a bunch of lariats at 16:02. ***½
January 2, 2013 – Tokyo, Japan
Manabu Soya def. Yoshihito Sasaki {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Wrestling Wars. Soya was visiting from All Japan. This was a step down from the title decision match. While it had bombs to spare from two big, muscly dudes, it just didn’t take me on the roller coaster I wanted it to. Don’t get me wrong, I dig this clubbing style. I could watch matches like this all day and never get bored. But I’d never get stirred either. I did grind my teeth when Sasaki and Soya traded headbutts on the turnbuckle in what I can only describe as a written invitation to CTE. That busted Sasaki open, and Soya finished him off with a Death Valley Driver and a lariat at 12:26. ***
Then I hit a stretch of title changes that I couldn’t find. BJW’s streaming service is missing a ton of stuff from before 2017, and despite that fact that I found a porn site on which a Russian BJW fan has uploaded a lot of BJW matches, these don’t seem to be there either. Daisuke Sekimoto beat Soya two months after Soya won the title. Sekimoto got injured, so Shinya Ishikawa beat Ryuichi Kawakami for the vacant title. Shinya retired, so Kawakami got another shot at the vacant title, but lost to Shuji Ishikawa. And then a healed up Sekimoto beat Ishikawa for the title in March of ‘15, two years after he’d won it the first time.
July 20, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan
Yuji Okabayashi def. Daisuke Sekimoto {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the inaugural Ryogokutan. Okabayashi gets a bloody nose from the opening lock up. This was everything I wanted in a BJW Strong title match. More than just two big strong tuna cans beating each other up, this felt like a belligerent, gladiatorial showcase of violence. Full disclosure, I watched and reviewed this match long after I posted this review, as I couldn’t find the match when I was writing this post originally. And I’m upset that that’s the case, because I liked this more than any other BJW Strong title change I’ve seen. I think it would have changed how I feel about the title’s run as a whole. Sekimoto put up a fantastic fight, but at times looked shocked by Okabayashi’s strength. There’s a fantastic bit where Okabayashi easily escapes Sekimoto’s Argentine Backbreaker because he uses that move too, and then puts the move on Sekimoto. Sekimoto struggles to escape, and then Okabayashi easily and forcefully backs him into the corner. That’s a very nice microcosm of the whole match. Eventually, Okabayashi goes on a tear that ends with the Golem Splash and the most insane powerbomb you’ll ever see at 21:24. ****¼
July 24, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Hideyoshi Kamitani def. Yuji Okabayashi {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the second Ryogokutan. This was gnarly. Okabayashi went for Kamitani’s leg, making it hard for the smaller challenger to get the champ off of his feet. But Kamitani fought from behind, taking Okabayashi’s massive chops and lariats and coming back for more again and again. Kamitani’s lariats, slaps, and counters eventually began to wear the big man down. A powerbomb reversal dropped Okabayashi on his head, and Kamitani followed that with a lariat and two backdrop drivers for the win at 26:53. ****
December 18, 2016 – Yokohama, Kanagawa
Daisuke Sekimoto def. Hideyoshi Kamitani {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the seventh Death Vegas. This was alright, but nothing near the match that Kamitani had with Okabayashi. They kept it grounded for a good long stretch before anything resembling excitement occurred. At one point, Sekimoto climbed the turnbuckle and just waited for Kamitani to bring the fight to him up there. Why? Stuff like that wrecks my suspension of disbelief, and Sekimoto does it kind of frequently. He hit a Burning Hammer for the win at 18:36. Three months later, Hideki Suzuki beat Sekimoto for the title in a match I can’t find. ***
December 17, 2017 – Yokohama, Kanagawa
Daichi Hashimoto def. Hideki Suzuki {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the eighth Death Vegas. This had a real midcard vibe to it. The first half of the match was pretty slow, but then they started picking up the pace in fits and starts. But the crowd never got invested and the match never fully took off as a result. The whole thing, in my opinion, made the Strong title feel very much an afterthought to the death match division, which given its placement on the card it probably is. Hashimoto made a comeback out of nowhere and hit a wild brainbuster for the win at 14:45. ***¼
April 15, 2018 – Sapporo, Hokkaido
Hideki Suzuki def. Daichi Hashimoto {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Sapporo 2 Days. This was also the finals of the Ikkitousen Strong Climb Tournament. Despite there being more on the line here, this was less compelling than their match from December. They kept this at a very deliberate pace for the entire run. Suzuki blocked the brainbuster in the most mundane way and hit a butterfly suplex for the win at 16:02. I don’t understand what happened here, as the match had solid hype and was actually given the main event slot. Pretty disappointing. **¾
November 11, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan
Daisuke Sekimoto def. Hideki Suzuki {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the fourth Ryogokutan. When I fired up this match, I did not expect to see a pair of tuna cans putting on an homage to Billy Robinson. Well, I knew what they looked like so I expected the tuna cans, but the British wrestling match was a very pleasant surprise. They worked the style snugly, giving it a strong style flavor without ever getting into gratuitous strikes for the sake of them. There were a few stiff strikes near the end, but not enough to abandon the motif. My only complaint was that the match ended rather abruptly when Sekimoto hit a German suplex for the win at 15:40. This needed at least five more minutes. ***¾
May 5, 2019 – Yokohama, Kanagawa
Yuji Okabayashi def. Daisuke Sekimoto {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the eighth Endless Survivor. I can’t help but feel a little disappointed in this one. Both guys have really impressed me in the past, and their 2015 title change was mind-blowing, but here it felt like they were taking it slow. A lot of the match felt logical for fellas of their height-to-girth ratio, but then they’d do annoying things like Sekimoto climbing the turnbuckle and just waiting for Okabayashi to follow him up for a superplex. Nothing fun about that. Okabayashi hit the Golem Splash for the win at 18:24. **¾
August 25, 2019 – Nagoya, Aichi
Kohei Sato def. Yuji Okabayashi {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Death Mania VII. This was pretty slow, but at least the story was sound and the action was snug. Okabayashi screwed up his winning strategy by repeatedly failing to connect with the Golem Splash. Each time he tried, Sato either dodged or blocked and took control for brief periods. One of those periods was enough to give him the win and the title with a German suplex at 16:28. Maybe Okabayashi is just too slow to be engaging nowadays. ***¼
November 4, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan
Daichi Hashimoto def. Kohei Sato {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the fifth Ryogokutan. This made me feel nothing at all. It was faster-paced than the two Okabayashi matches that I just watched, but it had no soul whatsoever. Hashimoto’s shouting did little to get me behind him, and Sato’s calm demeanor was no more engaging than it was in the previous match. This was all Sato, with little spurts of fire from Hashimoto. That’s normally a recipe for a fun comeback story. It wasn’t here. Sato won with a brainbuster at 19:40. ***
October 31, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan
Yuji Okabayashi def. Daichi Hashimoto {BJW Strong World Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Death Match, Strong & Junior 3 Major Title Matches. What a name for a show. This was a lot more fun than the last few title changes. Okabayashi was all fired up, chopping and shouting his way through the first half of the match. I was worried that was going to be the whole thing, but then it got a bit more nuanced in the second half. Hashimoto kind of reminds me of Taku Iwasa, but bigger and with less charisma. Maybe it’s just the hair. Either way, I enjoyed this quite a bit. Okabayashi proved that the Golem Splash is very effective when it hits, winning with it at 23:09. ***½
I feel a little bamboozled here. This is clearly a midcard title for the company, well below the Death Match Championship in terms of importance, draw, and fan interest. Western wrestling fans seem to be trying to will it to more prominence, but it’s just not what BJW is selling itself on.