History of the Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship

Volcano and Dante’s Peak, Armageddon and Deep Impact, Camp Nowhere and Heavyweights, Gordy and Babe, Showgirls and Striptease, Antz and A Bug’s Life, the Truman Show and Ed TV. Similar pairs of movies that came out around the same time, probably because someone ripped off someone else in Hollywood. These movies are used as examples of the phenomenon all the time. I submit that the wrestling version is the FMW Independant Junior Heavyweight Championship and the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Championship. They were both started by smaller Japanese companies in the mid-’90s, they both outlived the companies that created them, they’ve both been claimed by multiple companies since, and they both exist to this day. I started reviewing the International title because Tenryu Project is currently treating it as their top prize. The Independent title just finished a stint as the top prize of a company, so I’m going to take a look at that stint. 

The title was a midcard belt in FMW from 1993 until 1999. From there, the title spent two and a half years in Battlearts, then a few months in Michinoku Pro before it was retired. It showed up again on the independent circuit in 2007 and then became a midcard title in Kaientai Dojo for almost nine years, with a brief stint in Osaka Pro during that time. Then in 2017, DDT took over and used it as the top prize in their Ganbare☆Pro offshoot. 

According to Dramatic DDT, “Ganbare☆Pro Wrestling is an attempt to recapture the spark of mid 90s cult feds like FMW and IWA Japan with the ultimate goal of growing into a major wrestling promotion.” I reviewed the Union Max title from a time when BASARA was also a DDT offshoot “indie,” so I’m sort of familiar with the territory. 

September 24, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan   

Daisuke Sasaki def. Ken Ohka and Konosuke Takeshita {Independent Junior Heavyweight Championship vs. KO-D Openweight Championship vs. DDT Extreme Championship Triple Threat Match}
From DDT Who’s Gonna Top? Dramatic General Election 2017: Last Request Special! Ohka, the brain behind the Ganbare brand, had won the title in K-DOJO, while Takeshita came in as KO-D champ and Sasaki as the Extreme champ. The referee and ring announcer hold up all three belts at the top of the match, but the ref hides the Junior belt behind the KO-D title. I wonder if that was an error or an insult. The crowd was heavily invested in Ohka. That didn’t exactly speak well of DDT’s champion, but Takeshita has managed to stay on top for the last five years so it’s not like this cratered him or anything. I am very upset that Ohka’s entrance music is muted for copyright reasons because the crowd probably went nuts singing along with it. I haven’t seen a lot of triple threat matches in Japan, and this one was pretty impressive. There wasn’t a lot of nuance, but there were a lot of wild moves and cool reversals. That’s a big draw for me. It also had a wild crowd that really wanted to see Ohka take home one of the DDT belts. That was not meant to be, as Sasaki caught him in a crossface and he tapped at 21:46 just before Takeshita was able to make the save. Winner of the fall takes the belt from the loser of the fall, which makes Sasaki the new Independent Junior champ. ****

December 20, 2017 – Tokyo, Kapan 

Ken Ohka def. Daisuke Sasaki {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Ganbare Burning’X’Mas. Sasaki defended the title a couple times each in DDT and K-DOJO, but this was his first defense on a Ganbare show. All of the title changes from here on are in Ganbare so I’m going to stop calling that out. This was twenty minutes of Ohka getting his ass absolutely handed to him, barely surviving through Sasaki’s cheating and weapon shots. Things took a turn in Ohka’s favor when Sasaki fell off of the turnbuckle and Ohka hit him with an insane brainbuster on the apron. That couldn’t put Sasaki down, but a few lucky spears did the trick at 23:48. ***½ 

April 28, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan 

Keisuke Ishii def. Ken Ohka {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Dreaming I Was Dreaming. Is it surprising that Okha is over as the top guy of his own brand? Not at all. Does the way the crowd sings along with his music make Judas and Kaze Ni Nare seem dorky as hell by comparison? Absolutely. This match didn’t do much for me. Ohka was on offense for a lot of it, and it’s clear that his matches are more compelling when he’s fighting from behind. Ishii came back at the end with a quick flurry of offense that culminated in the Kneel Kick for the win at 14:27. **¾ 

January 6, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shuichiro Katsumura def. Keisuke Ishii {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Do It On Your Own Hands. I don’t believe I’ve ever before seen someone attempt a schoolboy and then from that position lift up their opponent into a gutwrench powerbomb, but basically throw them sideways across the ring. Ishii did that to Katsumura here and it was neat. Katsumura, unsurprisingly, brought a lot of striking offense to this match. Watching him try strikes from every angle reminded me of that clip going around of Paul McCartney tinkering with his guitar until eventually his random jamming turns into what would become the song Get Back. That might sound like lofty praise, but I bring it up more to point out how a lot of Katsumura’s offense came off as half-cocked, and Ishii selling it looked silly. For example, a spinning heel kick where little more than Katsumura’s butt collided with Ishii looked bad. Anyway, the match moved along briskly given its length, so it wasn’t all bizarre. Katsumura caught Ishii with the Ninja Choke for the win at 23:43. ***

September 28, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan 

Keisuke Ishii def. Shuichiro Katsumura {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From I Do Not Need a Comic Magazine! I had a really hard time focusing on this match, probably because I wasn’t blown away by their match in January. The last few minutes of this were pretty wild, and wrapped up with Ishii hitting the arm-capture Michinoku Driver and the Kneel Kick for the win at 18:56. I guess it was on par with their first match, mostly because it was shorter and more to the point. *** 

July 26, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan 

Hagane Shinnou def. Keisuke Ishii {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Killer Queen. I think I’m good on Ishii for a while. This is not who I would have booked this title around. And I am sorry but I have very little to say about this because it wasn’t so much different from his last two title change matches. I kind of remember Shinnou from when he was Madoka and worked the King of Gate tournament once, but he didn’t make much of an impression then. I suppose Shinnou brought more of a high flyer vibe to the proceedings and none of the MMA inspired stuff that Katsumura displayed, but once again the match was based around Ishii looking for his weird Michinoku Driver, that not getting the win, and then his opponent winning with something rather surprising. In this case it was like a spike legsweep that he calls the Ranhei, which he hit for the win at 16:37. **¾ 

August 22, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan 

ASUKA def. Hagane Shinnou {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Heaven’s Door. I don’t know if I’m rating this on a sliding scale because I was so happy to watch something different, but I had a good time with this match. ASUKA was able to look like she was on Shinnou’s level mostly because the champ is about as waifish as she is. The match won me over completely when Shinnou went for one of those double stomps onto ASUKA while she was in the Tree of Woe, but he had the decency to lift her up by her hair before hitting it, rather than what everyone else does which is just have the person taking the move do a sit up for no reason. ASUKA strung together a bunch of German suplexes, and moonsault, and a Northern Lights Bomb for the win at 16:17. ***¼ 

December 26, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan 

Shota def. ASUKA {Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship Match}
From The World. Shota came into this wearing one of the KO-D Six Man Championship belts. This was pretty good too. I don’t know anything about Shota, but it was interesting to see him wrestle as the underdog here against ASUKA. He spent most of the match getting beat up, but a gnarly super jump put him back in contention. From there, he became ultra focused on pinning ASUKA with a V9 Clutch, and eventually got the win with one at 17:04. ***

Shota defended the title in Ganbare a couple times before losing it in humiliating fashion to Arata in JTO (Michinoku’s new company). Arata held it until recently, when Naoki Tanizaki beat him for the title. But JTO doesn’t treat it as its top title, much like FMW, M-Pro, and K-DOJO never did. And in the time that I was writing this retrospective, Ganbare filled the void left by this title with the Spirit of Ganbare World Openweight Championship. So I’ll be covering that belt going forward instead.