History of the JWP Championship | Part 1 | Pure Heart

I’m to the point now that I’ve watched a considerable amount of modern joshi, primarily as it concerns singles title lineages. So I wanted to go back and check out some joshi history. The problem is that I don’t feel comfortable going all the way back (which in joshi terms is mid-20th century) because I don’t have access to enough All Japan Women’s matches that I could do a proper set of reviews. What I do have access to is just about every title change in the JWP Project organization, which takes us back to the early ‘90s. 

JWP formed as an offshoot of Japan Women’s Pro-Wrestling (keeping the initials), which itself was a splinter group formed by former AJW wrestlers who didn’t like or couldn’t abide by AJW’s strict no drinking, no smoking, no boys, retire at 25-years-old rules. When the original JWP folded, the JWP in focus here formed alongside Ladies Legend Pro-Wrestling. JWP was the sports entertainment-focused group, while LLPW tried the whole worked-shoot thing. As wrestling history has taught us, the ‘90s was no place for MMA-inspired wrestling and thus JWP was more successful and long-lasting. 

December 1, 1992 – Tokyo, Japan

Dynamite Kansai def. Cutie Suzuki {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From I don’t even know what show; I can’t even find a match listing for the event where this match took place. Oh, but there’s a listing for this event on Cagematch you say? Yeah, I put it there based solely on the information I got from watching this match. In fact, show results for most of JWP’s inaugural year are hard to find. This was the finals of a tournament to crown the first champion, but I also can’t find a listing for the tournament so I can’t confirm it actually happened. Well, that’s not totally true because before this match there are clips from what I assume is a semifinal match between Kansai and Candy Okutsu on the same night. What I can confirm is that this photo from JWP’s founding is the most ‘90s thing I’ve ever seen. This match started off quite ferociously, with Suzuki going after Kansai before the bell and Kansai responding as offended as anyone would. Then things slowed down for a while; for too long considering this was only a 12-minute match. The pace picked back up in a big way for the final few minutes. Kansai threw her bombs, which made Suzuki mostly ineffective in keeping her on the mat after hitting bombs of her own. Kansai hit a pair of side suplexes and a Splash Mountain for the win at 11:58. ***¼ 

September 18, 1994 – Yokohama, Kanegawa

Devil Masami def. Dynamite Kansai {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
Kansai only defended the title successfully three times in her 655-day reign as champion. That’s a pretty weak inaugural reign. Aesthetically, this was like watching Max Moon vs. the Undertaker. Action-wise, it was more like Hulk Hogan vs. Brock Lesnar, where the dominant mainstay is bloodied and beaten badly. A good chunk of this match was boring brawling on the floor, but at least it had a point because it led to Kansai getting busted open. The match wasn’t thrilling, and given that half of the match they cut was probably the less good half I can’t imagine feeling more positive about it had I seen the whole thing. Masami hit an avalanche Rough Ryder for the win at 12:52 (shown of 24:10). Masami defended the title once and then got injured and then vacated it for reasons I can’t figure out as she didn’t take any time off. **½ 

October 15, 1995 – Tokyo, Japan

Dynamite Kansai def. Cutie Suzuki {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the Red Belt Commemoration / Openweight Title New Champion Decision Series. This was the finals of a tournament to get the vacant title onto someone after a full ass year without a champion. I liked this more than their first title match because this dumped the rest hold lull and stuck to Suzuki doing anything and everything she could to keep the pressure on Kansai. It didn’t matter though because Kansai gutted it out and came back with the Splash Mountain for the win at 11:07. ***½ 

April 8, 1997 – Tokyo, Japan

Hikari Fukuoka def. Dynamite Kansai {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From a Life in the Battle. That’s a dope show name. Once again, Kansai held the belt for well over a year and defended it few enough times you could count the matches on one hand with fingers to spare. I don’t understand what the role of the title was in JWP, to be frank. I’m watching these matches on championship compilation, so someone at some point felt that this title was important. Kansai has added a little bit of glittery black to her green power ranger getup, which helps me take her seriously. Her big boots also do that. Fukuoka was pretty impressive too. More of a high flyer, she repeatedly hit a so-called Rider Kick, which was more of a somersault dropkick off the top. I’m shocked I’ve never seen someone do that stateside. A move she did that I am not surprised has not gotten popular in the west is her moonsault stomp finisher, which she hit twice to win at 15:56 (shown of 20:26). I can’t imagine anyone in their right mind volunteering to take that move. With her win here she became the first JWP homegrown wrestler to be champion. ****

February 28, 1999 – Tokyo, Japan

Azumi Hyuga def. Hikari Fukuoka {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
Fukuoka held the title for nearly two years and actually defended it with some regularity. Not regularity as we’re used to it, but more frequently than Kansai did by quite a bit. During her reign, Fukuoka started wearing the gold title belt that the company used throughout the rest of its history, ditching the silver belt seen above. You know all those finisher spam matches that people complain about? Well this match was legitimately all finishers for the second half and it totally worked. Why did this engage (and not kill anyone’s finisher) while the more modern versions of this template failed? Because even though just about every move was a finisher, the kick outs were still sparing and the despair on both women’s face after every near-fall was incredibly emotional. There were no looks of shock, just looks of deep sadness that the suffering of the match wasn’t over. In the end, Hyuga connected with a Spider Suplex that she’d been looking for and hit a Michinoku Driver (which had failed for various reasons four previous times in the match) for the win at 19:16. ****

December 23, 1999 – Tokyo, Japan

Ran Yu-Yu def. Azumi Hyuga {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Solid Slider. I love a solid slider, especially when the bun has a nice steamed onion flavor and the meat is smashed just right. What a weird name for a show. This is heavily and somewhat clumsily clipped. I know it’s not meant to be related to naziism and I know the history of the symbol, but as a Jew I’ll never feel comfortable seeing a swastika like the one on Yu-Yu’s gear. I don’t really know how to rate this, so I think I won’t. The mat work in some of the clips looked quite good, but on the other hand the crowd was pretty quiet which makes me think the stuff edited out might not have been great. Either way, I only saw a third of the match and it wasn’t contiguous footage, so I’m opting out. Yu-Yu hit a hurricanrana for the win at 8:10 (shown of 24:22). N/A

August 6, 2000 – Tokyo, Japan

Command Bolshoi def. Ran YuYu {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
The swastika is gone but the clipping remains. Oh, no, the swastika is still there just moved from the chest to the shoulder. This at least showed mostly contiguous footage, so I got a sense of what the last third of the match felt like. The fight on the floor was fun, which is exceedingly rare in wrestling. Bolshoi has some sick moves too, so that was fun. She hit a dragon suplex for the win at 7:30 (shown of 23:16). N/A

February 18, 2001 – Tokyo, Japan

Azumi Hyuga def. Command Bolshoi {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
Here’s another one clipped all to shreds. I would really like to see a Bolshoi match in full at some point. I know she sticks around and starts JWP’s daughter promotion, so the odds are good. Hyuga hits a Michinoku Driver for the win at 4:20 (shown of 19:48). Hyuga held the title for 21 months before vacating it for reasons I can’t figure out. The forfeit came after a successful tag title defense at the JWP 10th Anniversary show. Regardless, the belt remained vacant for two full, thick years before they did another tournament. N/A

November 28, 2004 – Tokyo, Japan

Azumi Hyuga def. Kayako Haruyama {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
And now Hyuga is just the champion again. This was the finals of a tournament to crown a new champion. In the semifinals, Hyuga beat Yuki Miyazaki while Harumaya fought to a time limit draw with Tsubasa Kuragaki and had to beat her in a subsequent match right after. I suppose then that it’s not surprising that Hyuga won here. She hit two Michinoku Drivers for the win at 3:32 (shown of 26:50). N/A

September 18, 2005 – Tokyo, Japan

Tsubasa Kuragaki def. Azumi Hyuga {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Pure Slam. Kuragaki won with a 450 Splash at 3:44 (shown of 23:40). This one, even just from the few clips they showed, looked like it might have been a lot of fun and it’s making me very frustrated to not have more footage of these matches. It also makes me wonder, is it better to have no footage at all or to have a few measly minutes to whet my appetite and then deny me more? N/A

May 28, 2006 – Tokyo, Japan

Manami Toyota def. Tsubasa Kuragaki {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the second Mania-X. I’ve been watching these on a compilation and was starting to wonder if maybe more full version of these rather hard to find older matches existed. I figured Toyota is a big enough name that if this match was on the internet in full I could find it. Well, I did find the original broadcast of this match from Samurai TV… and it’s still clipped. But rather than being clipped down to three minutes it’s clipped down to 13 minutes so I can actually review it. And it was pretty good. I really enjoyed Kuragaki’s clubbing, almost clumsy striking. Toyota controlled a lot of this though, and won by pulling Kuragaki off the top rope and hitting a Japanese Ocean Queen Bee Bomb for the win at 13:39 (shown of 29:57). ***½ 

September 18, 2006 – Tokyo, Japan

Azumi Hyuga def. Manami Toyota {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Pure Slam. I finally found a full version of a JWP title match! This is in large part to JWP beginning to do these title changes at marquee shows that people actually saved on video. Toyota’s ability to get her opponent into position for her various Japanese Ocean moves is very cool. Hyuga’s counter to the Japanese Ocean Queen Bee Bomb was also very cool. This one gets a lot of love, but I don’t think it was all that much more compelling than Toyota’s title win. Yeah, they did really cool moves and I appreciated and was entertained by that. But as with a lot of joshi there just isn’t enough in the way of selling for me to get drawn into a match over 15 minutes. Hyuga hit a diving knee strike for the win at 23:11. ***½ 

April 29, 2008 – Tokyo, Japan

Kayoko Haruyama def. Azumi Hyuga {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the fourth Mania-X. It turns out the reason so many matches on the comp I have are so heavily clipped is because there was a 60-minute draw between Hyuga and Yoshiko and Tamura (for the JWP title and Yoshiko’s NWA Women’s Pacific/NEO Single Championship) that’s shown in full on it. That happened in December of 2006, and Hyuga held onto the title for over a year after that. During that reign she beat Awesome Kong in what looked like a dope match. But I only review title changes so I’ll have to skip both of those matches for now. Anyway, this match blew my mind. It had the requisite plethora of big moves hit from every angle you can think of, but it also had a compelling story and a really dramatic performance from Hyuga. When the finishers started flying, Hyuga missed the flying kick that won her the title and jacked her leg up in the process. Harumaya went to town on it, even hitting a diving legdrop onto it. Hyuga tried to gut it out, even doing a one-legged bridge to escape a pin, but once Harumaya zeroed in for the kill it was over and she hit the Keene Hammer for the win at 23:51. ****½ 

April 18, 2010 – Tokyo, Japan

Nanae Takahashi def. Kayako Haruyama {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the sixth Mania-X. This is joined in progress deep into the match. All we get is Takahashi kicking out of a bunch of Harumaya’s big stuff and then hitting the Nanaracka☆100, which I guess is the avalanche version of the Nana Racka II, at 1:57 (shown of 24:47). N/A

July 18, 2010 – Tokyo, Japan

Kaori Yoneyama def. Nanae Takahashi {JWP Openweight Championship vs. Hair Match}
From Pure Slam. This was joined in progress too. They didn’t show a lot, but what they did show at the end was a lot of fun. The crowd got all foamed up for Yonemama, hoping she’d beat the champ. And beat her she did with an avalanche Yone-ZOU, which is basically a Code Red. It was pretty dope, and it happened at 4:40 (shown of 20:54). And it’s a good thing Yoneyama saved her hair, because it was quite a mane and it would have been a shame for it to go. N/A

April 3, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan

Leon def. Kaori Yoneyama {JWP Openweight Championship vs. NEO High Speed Championship Match}
From the seventh Mania-X. This is a weird blip in joshi history. NEO was on the verge of going under, but their champion wins the JWP title here and seemingly unifies the belts. But then the belts were only ever defended separately. Most peculiar was during the J-1 Grand Prix Tournament a couple months after this, where throughout the tournament she defended the High Speed title but then in the finals of the tournament she defended (and lost) only the JWP title. I’ll get to that match in just a second. Here, Leon beat Yoneyama with the Captured Buster at 6:13 (shown of 21:50). Seemed fun, but not so fun that I’m upset I didn’t see all of it. The High Speed title became a Stardom belt and I believe still is. N/A

June 25, 2011 – Osaka, Osaka

Hailey Hatred def. Leon {JWP Openweight Championship vs. TLW Women’s Championship Match}
From the Road To 20th Anniversary – Osaka Carnival! The TLW was a vanity title of Hatred’s that originated in an American indie that closed years before this match. The match may also have been for Hatred’s IMW Hybrid Fighting Championship, but I don’t think that title ever really meant anything or was defended in any frequency. Hatred was probably pretty solid by American indie standards at the time (and definitely for American television standards at the time given that Kelly Kelly vs. Brie Bella was a title match on PPV a month after this), but she looked very awkward compared to the JWP wrestlers. Hatred hit a running powerbomb for the win at 4:17 (shown of 21:30). Hatred never lost the TLW title, in fact she retired with it. Sure, fine, whatever, that’s kind of a funny quirk in the history of women’s wrestling. N/A

Putting Hatred on top, the constant desperate title vs. title matches, and the fact that JWP was drawing a tenth the amount of fans to their shows as they were when they began gives you a sense of the overall health of the company. These so-called unification matches seem like as good a place as any to stop for today, so we’ll come back next time and see if JWP could dig themselves out of this hole. Spoiler alert, the company doesn’t exist anymore.