Let’s jump back into JWP and see how that Hailey Hatred title reign wrapped up. As a reminder, the company at this point is drawing one-tenth the crowds they were at their peak. I guess you could say they’ve been nonacontamated (because screw Meriram-Webster, some of us have standards. I’m curious to see how they ride this out to the bitter end.
December 23, 2011 – Tokyo, Japan
Tsubasa Kuragaki def. Hailey Hatred {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Climax ~ Kaori Yoneyama FINAL. This was a solid big lady battle. It was fun to watch them toss each other around the ring. One problem with a big lady battle vs. a big boy battle is that sometimes, like this time, the big ladies aren’t actually strong enough to bat 1000 and get each other up all the way every time. So there was a bit of slop but for the most part it was a fun little spectacle. Kuragaki pinned Hatred with a Falcoln Arrow to win the title at 11:00 (shown of 17:20). Hayabusa looked on approvingly, though I don’t know the context of that or what his connection to her might be. My understanding is that she was trained in JWP and never worked FMW. ***
April 22, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Kayako Harumaya def. Tsubasa Kuragaki {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the eighth Mania-X. This was in celebration of JWP’s 20th anniversary, and they’d managed to sell half the building out. That’s pretty good compared to their efforts the year before. This was the baseine good JWP main event with constant action and interesting offense from both wrestlers, but without much in the way of a compelling story or drama. Lots to like, but not lots to store in the memory bank. Harumaya hit two diving Rough Ryders and a diving legdrop for the win at 19:34. Six months later, Emi Sakura beat Harumaya for the title, and that’s that final JWP match I wasn’t able to find. ***¼
December 24, 2012 – Tokyo, Japan
Arisa Nakajima def. Emi Sakura {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the eighth annual Climax. Sakura was also the EVE Champion here, a title I didn’t know existed and a title I now want to review. I guess it’s like the British SHIMMER. I should probably review the SHIMMER title first. For her part, Nakajima rolled into this match with the JWP and Daily Sports tag belts, which I guess have pretty much been defended together since the latter became a thing. Sakura hammed it up here, cutting a promo mid match and being a total dick when brutalizing Nakajima’s back. Nakajima fought from behind the entire match, which I liked a lot. She hit a few nasty headbutts to daze Sakura and then caught her with a dragon suplex for the win at 21:05. ***½
August 18, 2013 – Tokyo, Japan
Kana def. Arisa Nakajima {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Pure Slam. Kana is Asuka, duh. Though Nakajima had also won the Reina Women’s Championship during her time as JWP champ, that title was not on the line here. This was kind of a weird one. They spent almost the entire match on the mat. It wasn’t boring, but I kept expecting that to evolve into something else. It never really did. The finish was cool regardless. Kana hit a bunch of spinning backfists, rebounded from a blocked kick to hit a roundhouse kick, and then locked in the Asuka Lock (I don’t know what she called it pre-WWE) for the win at 13:56. ***¼
December 15, 2013 – Tokyo, Japan
Arisa Nakajima def. Kana {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the ninth annual Climax. I think Kana is done up like Kefka from Final Fantasy here. Though there’s so much anime I don’t know about so it could easily be something else. This match had a way better ratio of matwork to upright action. I guess the last match really was just missing like half of the match. I love that when Kana tried to crawl away from the scrum, Nakajima caught her with a German suplex. I want to see people trying to escape getting caught with German suplexes every time. Don’t turn your back on your opponent! I loved Nakajima’s desperation in the second half of this match, breaking out the rapid fire headbutts and biting to escape the Asuka Lock. You could kind of tell that Kana was screwed in the final third of the match, as she couldn’t maintain control and kept running out of energy when she was on top. Nakajima put her down with a dragon suplex and a half nelson suplex at 28:35. ****¼
April 5, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan
Kayako Harumaya def. Arisa Nakajima {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the 11th Mania-X. Okay, in one of my Ice Ribbon reviews I complained about Tsukushi dropkicking Tsukasa Fujimoto from every corner of the ring because Fujimoto had to get up and walk into place to take each dropkick. Nakajima does the same thing to Harumaya here, but a great touch that was missing from the Ice Ribbon match is that Harumaya doesn’t always get to her feet before Nakajima dropkicks her. It helps me to suspend my disbelief when it feels like Harumaya is assaulting Nakajima with dropkicks rather than feeling like both wrestlers are working together to perform a stunt. The funniest part of that to me is this match happened a year before the Ice Ribbon one, so there was a prominent example that Tsukushi could have taken from. There were other very cool things in this match, like wild reversals done in midair coming off of the top turnbuckle. But I can’t gush as much as I’d like to because the finish took me out of it a bit. I understand that Nakajima at this point is JWP’s golden goose (as much as you can call someone only filling half the building in the main event of the company’s flagship event a golden goose). But Harumaya was the much larger competitor and she still had to hit the champion with a string of close to ten finishers to get the job done. It just got to the point where the near falls stopped being exciting and started feeling silly. Harumaya finished Nakajima off with a pair of diving legdrops at 24:20. ***¾
July 11, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan
Command Bolshoi def. Kayako Harumaya {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Crunchy Hurricane in Shinjuku. Okay, I’ll start with what I liked, which was Bolshoi winning in the middle of getting her ass kicked by hitting a quick hurricanrana. I haven’t seen a lot of that in these JWP title changes. What I didn’t like was that Bolshoi basically didn’t sell at all. She’d get rocked by something from Harumaya and then pop right up to either get rocked again or to hit one of her high flying deals. I’m told she’s quite good, but I didn’t get that from her here. She shocked Harumaya at 17:23 to win the title. ***
August 16, 2015 – Tokyo, Japan
Mayumi Ozaki def. Command Bolshoi {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Pure Plum. Ozaki is wrestling in a t-shirt and this isn’t a Street Fight. That’s a pet peeve of mine. That said, Ozaki does use weapons as much as she can and her entourage attacks Bolshoi with impunity. Why isn’t this a Street Fight if they’re going to allow all that? So on the one hand, this was a change of pace from the typical JWP title match and I appreciate the variety. On the other hand, as I’m coming at this with no prior knowledge of the feud of Ozaki’s crew, it was hard for me to get invested in the chaos. It mostly felt like Bolshoi’s supporters just waited for Ozaki’s to clear the ring before they came in to even the odds. It felt very choreographed and thus it /never felt like there was any drama to the conflict. Ozaki was in the Wrestling Observer’s match of the year 12 years earlier, but I’d never have guessed that from watching this crash TV match. Ozaki countered a hurricanrana to a pin for the win at 18:07. **½
April 3, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Arisa Nakajima def. Mayumi Ozaki {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the 12th Mania-X. This is also not a Street Fight, but Ozaki uses the belt to bust Nakajima open immediately. I’d make peace with disqualifications just not being a thing in JWP except that I know an upcoming title change happens during what is branded as a Street Fight. That said, there were a few things about this that I really enjoyed. For one, this was a brawl that didn’t pretend to be anything else. There weren’t a lot of flashy moves, but there was a lot of blood and a lot of punching and kicking. That’s a change of pace and consistency within the match that I can get behind. I also really liked the finish, which saw Ozaki abuse the referee with her chain, only for that to bite her in the ass when she bumped into the dazed referee and then stumbled into a huge punch from Nakajima. That got Nakajima the win at 15:36. ***½
October 9, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Kyoko Kimura def. Arisa Nakajima {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From Fly High In The 25th Anniversary. Kimura has a sort of Mohammad Yone thing going. I did not care for this. The whole match was Nakajima working the leg and Kimura doing things to half heartedly get her to not work on the leg. I guess Kimiura also sometimes went after Nakajima’s arm but not in a particularly noticeable way. And then after getting rolled for twenty minutes, Kimura put on a cross armbreaker for the win at 23:02. This was boring and didn’t work. **
November 3, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Arisa Nakajima def. Kyoko Kimura {JWP Openweight Championship Street Fight}
From Pure Dream. At Korakuen Hall they drew under 400 fans for this show. They were circling the drain. I guess Kimura was generally a hardcore wrestler, so this was more her speed. Though as we’ve seen there didn’t seem to be anything stopping her from using weapons in their last match. So I’m not sure why she worked it clean. Whatever, she won anyway. So first, my complaints. The brawling on the floor lasted too long and was boring and meaningless. There was also a spot in which Nakajima put Kimura through a barbed wire board coming off the top rope, but then Kimura got to her feet just as quickly as Nakajima did. That’s backyard wrestling trash. Those two bits aside, this at least felt like a competitive match where they built around whether or not Nakajima would be able to hit the half nelson suplex. After teasing it a bunch, she hit it for the win at 29:34. ***
December 28, 2016 – Tokyo, Japan
Hanako Nakamori def. Arisa Nakajima {JWP Openweight Championship Match}
From the 12th annual and final Climax. This was the final title change in the company’s history. This had its ups and downs. Nakamori’s selling was pretty good, making it hard for her to gain momentum without her leg giving out on her. But then some of her fighting spirit pop ups near the end felt very manufactured. Whatever, I applaud the effort. She hit Nakajima with the Amaryllis, which is a friggin’ horrifying reverse Michinoku Driver, for the win at 15:29. ***¼
Two months later, JWP announced that they’d be folding in April after their 25th Anniversary event. Bolshoi announced a spiritual successor to JWP in PURE-J that she’d be opening, so I suppose I’ll be reviewing that title lineage pretty soon.