History of the PURE-J Openweight Championship

Holy crap this title moves around a lot. I don’t know why I have been putting this one off for so long since I finished its predecessor. You can check out my JWP title reviews here. After JWP folded in 2016, Command Bolshoi announced this spiritual successor.

October 9, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan

Hanako Nakamori def. Manami Katsu {PURE-J Openweight Championship Match}
From Go! Go! PURE-J!!! This was the finals of a big ol’ tournament to crown the first champion that took place over two months. Having the first PURE-J Champion be the final JWP Champion certainly sends a same old same old message. I think it would have been more effective to have DASH Chisako beat Nakamori here rather than two months later. Katsu did a move in this match where she pulled both of Nakamori’s arms behind her back as if she was about to handcuff her and then hit a German superplex. That was stupid dangerous. What does one call that move? Handcuff Suplex? Double Hammerlock Suplex? Whatever it’s called, it was the only thing that slowed Nakamori down, but once she got her wits about her she hit a Fisherman’s Suplex and the Requiem Driver for the win at 21:55. It didn’t really pick up until the end and there was a lot of leg work that went nowhere, but once it picked up it was pretty wild. ***

December 17, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan

DASH Chisako def. Hanako Nakamori {PURE-J Openweight Championship Match}
From the 13th Climax, or the first under the PURE-J banner. I guess given that JWP failed it’s good that Bolshoi called her company something different, but then why use the same event names? This was also a hair vs. hair match. Woof, that title belt is ugly. I have no idea why this happened, but early on when the ladies brawled on the floor a speed metal song played over the building’s speakers. Okay, it happened again later on, so I guess it’s just a gimmick for whenever Chisako is outside of the ring. Overall, this was chaotic but not quite cohesive. Things happened quickly but nothing seemed connected to anything that followed. Even the finish was odd. Nakamori drove her head backwards into Chisako’s to block a German suplex only to be rolled up and lose the title seconds later at 21:24. Eh, at least it wasn’t boring. Nakamori won the title back two months later with much shorter hair. **¾ 

February 17, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

Command Bolshoi def. Hanako Nakamori {PURE-J Openweight Championship Match}
From Bolshoi Final Series Vol. 3. PURE-J has relocated to a much smaller venue. I’ve seen enough Nakamori at this point to determine that she’s just not my cup of tea. While she’s solid enough in the ring that her more interesting opponents are able to shine while fighting her, she’s not bringing anything engaging to the matches on her own. That was true of the last two matches, it was true of her JWP title win, and it’s true here. Bolshoi was flying all over the ring trying to get the crowd into this, and it worked, but Nakamori was little more than a base for Bolshoi’s flight. Bolshoi got the win at 18:28 with the Piko Knee Smash. A month and a half later, Leon defeated Bolshoi for the title. ***¼ 

April 21, 2019 – Tokyo, Japan

Hanako Nakamori def. Leon {PURE-J Openweight Championship Match}
From Bolshoi Retirement ~ Thank You!! Ah I see, all these Bolshoi titled shows were part of her retirement tour. I also see that this title is a Nakamori vanity title and that bums me out. For this show they were able to upgrade from whatever conference room they were in to Korakuen Hall, and they packed quite a few people in there. This was the same as any Nakamori match, with Leon doing most of the exciting bits and Nakamori mostly just standing around and kicking a bunch. She got the win with the Hatenko, a half nelson slam, at 15:32. ***

July 26, 2020 – Tokyo, Japan

Leon def. Hanako Nakamori {PURE-J Openweight Championship Match}
From PURE-J Fight Together! Vol. 3. Kind of crazy that at the highest height of the 2020 pandemic there were fans in attendance here. After all the medium Nakamori I’d just watched, I viewed the first half of this match drowning in despondent detachment. But this turned into a beautiful final shriek for Nakamori as her final title reign came to an end. The desperation she showed as the match wore on and nothing she did could keep Leon down was more interesting than anything else I’ve seen from her. She was the star. All Leon had to do was survive and keep kicking out, because it was Nakamori’s anguished cries that pulled me in. She hit two Requiem Drivers and Leon kicked out. She hit a diving legdrop and Leon kicked out. Leon countered a Requiem Driver to a stunner. Leon blocked an inverted Requiem Driver, which I’m sure has a crazy name of its own. If Leon had won the match with something more dramatic than an Air Raid Crash, which she used to pin Nakamori at 20:32, I’d go even higher. ****

That last match totally bailed out my declining feelings about PURE-J. Leon held the title through the remainder of the year, though 2021 would see the belt move hands a lot and visit other promotions.