History of the Sendai Girls’ Championship

Meiko Satomura and Jinsei Shinzaki launched Sendai Girls’ Pro Wrestling in 2005. This came after Satomura got her start in GAEA, which had closed just before.  After a decade of running shows, they introduced their top title in 2015 at Satomura’s 20th Anniversary Show. I’d like to say that this was always going to be the next title lineage that I reviewed, but I actually came upon it while I was scrounging for Joshi title changes. Outside of Stardom and TJPW, it’s not so easy to find consistent footage of Joshi companies. I did manage to find what I thought was a string of Sareee title changes, but it turned out to be this one Diana match and then the entirety of the Sendai Girls’ World Championship lineage. But I’ve since learned about Joshi City, which is an awesome resource if you’re curious to check out the matches reviewed here. 

October 11, 2015 – Sendai, Miyagi

Meiko Satomura def. Ayako Hamada {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Joshi Puroresu Big Show in Sendai – Meiko Satomura 20th Anniversary Show. This would turn out to be one of the very rare matches involving a title change that didn’t include Chihiro Hashimoto. Actually I think it’s the only one. Man, I hope I like Hashimoto. They packed almost 3,000 people in for this show, which is pretty impressive given most wrestling fans I know have never heard of Sendai Girls. These two beat the boogers out of each other. The flow left a bit to be desired, as the match never built to a fever pitch. But by the end, when Satomura hit three Death Valley Drivers to beat Hamada at 20:32, I was starting to get pretty engaged. Too bad there weren’t a few more minutes of that energy. Things would get better for Hamada later and then immediately they’d get way, way worse. ***½ 

October 16, 2016 – Sendai, Miyagi

Chihiro Hashimoto def. Meiko Satomura {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Joshi Puroresu Big Show in Sendai. The last chunk of this match broke my brain. Up until that point, I was enjoying what I was seeing but wasn’t super drawn in because it felt like Hashimoto didn’t stand a chance. Then, she got this string of offense in including a short-run spear that made me sit up in my seat. Satomura retook control because of course she did, but Hashimoto caught her with one of the most painful-looking German suplexes I’ve ever seen. Satomura popped right up, but it was a final scream because Hashimoto hit her with another German suplex immediately for the win at 16:26. Wow, that was crazy. ****

January 8, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan

Aja Kong def. Chihiro Hashimoto {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Sendai Girls on Niconico. Let’s see how Hashimoto does against a different, perhaps more broken down legend. Everything in this match was so deliberate that I found myself popping for a single leg takedown from Hashimoto in the first couple minutes. This was kind of like watching the Viper vs. the Mountain. Kong came in big, mean, and arrogant, doing mostly whatever she wanted to Hashimoto. That included chair shots. But then she got a little spooked by Hashimoto’s strength and went for a move off of the turnbuckle too early. Hashimoto caught her with a powerbomb out of the corner and then gained more and more confidence as she found herself able to toss Kong around almost at will. But this was still Kong, so Hashimoto ate a kick to the face and from there the writing was on the wall. She was never able to maintain a sustained period on offense, and a spinning back fist put her down at 15:32. The ending was pretty deflating, but I’m hoping it sets up a nice redemption story for Hashimoto in the next match. ***½ 

April 6, 2017 – Tokyo, Japan

Chihiro Hashimoto def. Aja Kong {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Sendai Girls on Samurai TV. This did everything the last match did, often in the same order, but had a few things going for it than Kong’s title win lacked. One thing was the babyface overcoming the odds, which always makes you feel good. Another was stronger production value and a louder crowd. In the last match, Kong’s abuse on the floor was obscured by fans in the way of the hard camera. This time we had floor cameras as well as better lighting in general, so I didn’t get bored when the fight spilled to the floor. Finally, this had a great final comeback from Hashimoto, as she weathered the backfist and didn’t allow Kong to go for a pin from it. Then she slugged Kong in the face and hit her with the German suplex she’d been building to in both matches for the win at 19:17. These two matches would be a great initiation for someone who has never seen wrestling before. ****

June 10, 2017 – Sapporo, Hokkaido

Hiroyo Matsumoto def. Chihiro Hashimoto {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Sendai GIrls on Niconico. The fun thing about the way I’m watching this title lineage is that it’s more or less structured in anime arcs with Hashimoto as our protagonist. Here we start the Matsumoto arc. This is another hard cam only broadcast. While I appreciate that these two hit each other hard and I appreciate that Hashimoto sold her DDT-abused neck quite well, the production and lack of nearfalls before the final few minutes made this one a bit of a come down. Matsumoto got the win with a side suplex at 18:55 after Hashimoto was no longer able to hold bridges with her injured neck. ***¼ 

July 15, 2017 – Niigata, Niigata

Chihiro Hashimoto def. Hiroyo Matsumoto {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Joshi Puroresu Big Show 2017 In Niigata. Matsumoto was also the Oz Academy champ at the time and brough that belt to the ring with her. Hopefully I’ll be able to review that lineage as well. This one had fewer weird DDTs and fewer instances of stuff happening on the floor that I couldn’t really see. But more importantly, it amped up the drama in a way that really only a rematch can do. Hashimoto looked to be in trouble for basically the entire second half of the match, but she came back with insane offense to win her title back. It took two massive lariats, a giant powerbomb, and two German suplexes to get the win at 19:29. And thus we move on from the Mae Young Classic participant arc and into Sendai Girls’ most controversial stretch of history. ***½ 

April 19, 2018 – Tokyo, Japan

Ayako Hamada def. Chihiro Hashimoto {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Sendai Girls on Samurai TV. I liked this more than Hamada’s match against Satomura to decide the first champion. She wrestled like a real asshole and it was a lot of fun to watch. A lot of that was because when it frustrated Hashimoto, the champ unleashed a barrage of offense that perked me right up. Hashimoto came back with some wild kicks and a Michinoku Driver to win the title at 19:52. I’m impressed at how much heat they were able to get from a crowd that had just seen a barnburner between Satomura and Io Shirai right before this. Unfortunately this was the last time she was ever seen in the promotion, as a month later she was arrested for meth possession. Drug crime is very taboo in Japan, and she was stripped of the title and retired from wrestling in the country. A year later she popped up in Mexico where she still works to this day, but a return to working in her home country seems unlikely. ***¾ 

June 24, 2018 – Sendai, Miyagi

Chihiro Hashimoto def. DASH Chisako {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
From Jinsei Shinzaki’s 25th Anniversary Show, presented by Michinoku Pro. This got semi-main event treatment, which is pretty good given that Shinzaki himself went third from the top and the only thing above it was a match for MPro’s main title. For the vacant Senjo title. There was no tournament but Hashimoto was the most recent champion and Chisako had recently pinned her in a singles match. This was a high-energy match with great pacing. The finish was especially cool, as Hashimoto countered a la magistral attempt that had almost worked for Chisako earlier to a pair of her Albright style suplexes and then hit a German suplex for the win at 15:05. ***¾ 

June 8, 2019 – Niigata, Niigata

Sareee def. Chihiro Hashimoto {Sendai Girls’ World Championship vs. World Woman Pro-Wrestling Diana World Championship Match}
From Joshi Puroresu Big Show In Niigata. Hashimoto tried to put Sareee in her place early here, taking her to the mat with a strangle hold right off the bat. Sareee came back like an animal, stomping and kicking Hashimoto from every angle. Hashimoto grew frustrated, powerbombing Sareee on the floor. Things went back and forth in that fashion for a while, until Sareee started catching on to Hashimoto’s power move sequences and countering them. Eventually, she finished Hashimoto with a wrist clutch suplex at 18:06. This was an amazing power vs. tenacity match that had the crowd on fire thanks to hard work and big stakes. ****

October 13, 2019 – Sendai, Miyagi

Chihiro Hashimoto def. Saree {Sendai Girls’ World Championship Match}
FromJoshi Puroresu Big Show In Sendai. Sareee’s Diana title is not on the line. This was an awesome extension of their last match. Hashimoto again tried to keep Sareee on the mat and when she no longer could, the champion unleashed with insane speed. But this time, Hashimoto was able to kick out of the wrist clutch suplex, counter a roundhouse kick to a suplex, and then hit a German suplex for the win at 17:03. Just a terrific pair of matches here. ****

A few months later, the pandemic hit and Senjo went on hiatus for a few months. They started running shows again in August of 2020, but as of May 2021 it’s been over a year since Hashimoto has defended her title. I don’t know what that’s about, but I’d like to see more from her.