History of the Triple Crown Championship | Part 2 | Miraculous Violence

When we last left off, Hansen had collected the PWF World Heavyweight Championship and the NWA United National Championship while Jumbo Tsuruta was the NWA International Heavyweight Champion. They’d tried to unify the belts and birth the Triple Crown Championship but fought to a no contest. Two days later, nothing would stop them from getting it done. 

April 18, 1989 – Tokyo Japan

Jumbo Tsuruta def. Stan Hansen {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the Champion Carnival. This was kind of a sloppy mess. They were clearly teasing that this one would end without a winner too, but that didn’t make for the most compelling match. By the end, Tsuruta was bleeding (that dude loved to bleed) and things settled into a more familiar and easy to follow brawl. Tsuruta took a beating, but ducked a lariat and quickly rolled Hansen up for the win to become the first Triple Crown Champion at 17:53. Hansen beat the crap out of him after the match, which seems like such a weird choice to me as Tsuruta wouldn’t have another title match against Hansen with a definitive win for (literally) years. I guess they were known for playing the long game in All Japan. **¾ 

June 5, 1989 – Tokyo, Japan

Genichiro Tenryu def. Jumbo Tsuruta {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the Super Power Series. Tsuruta cemented his title reign two days after winning it by pinning Tenryu with a disgusting powerbomb. Over the next month, Tenryu squashed Dan Spivey in a singles match and won a six-man tag match against a team featuring Tsuruta and got this title shot. First Toshiaki Kawada sighting, in Tenryu’s corner as part of his Revolution stable. This match is crazy famous, so let’s see if it holds up. They start out firing at each other like crazy, which goes well for Tenryu. Because of that, Tsuruta takes every opportunity to get a little distance and then slow things down with headlocks. It’s really terrific how quickly Tenryu picks up on what’s working and tries every time he gets an opening to pick up the pace. Then we got 15 minutes of Tsuruta beating Tenryu up so badly that I got uncomfortable. Tenryu slowly started gaining momentum back, fighting through lariats that knocked the sweat off of both guys. In the end he won with a pair of powerbombs for a bit of poetic justice at 24:05. Hansen running in to congratulate him was cute. Tsuruta tried to shake his hand, but Tenryu wasn’t having it. So there you have it, the first title change in the style that All Japan in the ‘90s is really known for. ****½ 

October 11, 1989 – Yokohama, Kanagawa

Jumbo Tsuruta def. Genichiro Tenryu {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the October Giant Series. They really played up how dominant Tenryu had been with the powerbomb, having pinned Yoshiaki Yaku and Terry Gordy with it. This didn’t quite have the magic their last match had. It told largely the same story, though the lull in the middle which was very brief in their June match was quite a bit longer here. Tenryu was more bold in this match, cheating a bit and shoving Tsuruta from the turnbuckle to the floor. Tsuruta was just as big a bully as before though. It’s still a pretty dope match, with brutal strikes and negative feelings oozing out of both guys. Tsuruta counters the powerbomb to a hurricanrana for the win at 22:38. ***¾ 

Tsuruta defended the title against Barry Windham, and then again against Tenryu a really dope match that was his final one in All Japan for a decade. After that, Tenryu started Super World of Sport. He took a handful of the roster with him, though only himself and Yoshiaki Yatsu were really relevant to the main event scene. Still, the departure of those two let the door open for Mitsuharu Misawa to walk into the title picture. More on that in a bit. More immediately it caused AJPW to fall back on their main event gaijin, which led to some pretty middling results in my opinion. 

June 5, 1990 – Chiba, Chiba

Terry Gordy def. Jumbo Tsuruta {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the Super Power Series. In something I’ve never seen before in Japanese wrestling, this match is not only joined in progress but they also cut away from the action to show Misawa being interviewed. I don’t know how much I bought this one. For most of the match Gordy didn’t feel at all like a threat. Then all of a sudden he hit’s a couple lariats and a DDT and gets the win at 11:43 (shown of 16:51). The commentators absolutely flipped out so I feel like it has to be considered something of a fluke. Steve Williams runs in to celebrate with his Miracle Violence Connection partner. Watching Japanese fans wave a Confederate flag in the stands is super weird. ***

June 8, 1990 – Tokyo, Japan

Stan Hansen def. Terry Gordy {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the same tour. A three-day reign shows that it indeed was meant to seem like a fluke that Gordy won. This wasn’t even the main event of the show, as a much lauded Misawa vs. Tsuruta match headlined. Hansen had attacked Tenryu right before his final title shot because he wanted the belt from Tsuruta. Well he got it here from his countryman and former tag team partner. The whole first two-thirds of the match is cut from the broadcast. What’s left in isn’t much of anything. Gordy’s time in control is spent plodding around, and the rest of the match is lariats and a failed DDT. Hansen hits his lariat for the win at 6:22 (shown of 21:33). Williams & Gordy attacked Hansen after the match. **½ 

July 17, 1990 – Kanazawa, Ishikawa

Terry Gordy def. Stan Hansen {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the Summer Action Series. Williams, Gordy, and Johnny Ace won every match they were involved in on the tour leading up to this match, including one against Hansen, Spivey, and Joel Deaton. They show the full match this time. This was crazy boring and the finish was lame. Hansen worked over Gordy’s arm in the most boring way possible the whole match. Then Williams ran out to tape Gordy’s arm and give him a (possibly loaded?) elbow pad. Then Williams tripped Gordy so he’d avoid Hansen’s lariat, and then Gordy hit a lariat for the win at 21:04. I wonder how long Gordy’s reign was meant to be, as he was stripped of the title when he couldn’t make it to a show ten days later for medical (drug) reasons. By the looks of things he was set to face Misawa next. I don’t think another title match will be this bad until the NOAH exodus. **¼ 

July 27, 1990 – Chiba, Chiba

Stan Hansen def. Mitsuharu Misawa {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From later in the tour to decide who will hold the vacant titles. Misawa was fresh off of winning a huge match against Tsuruta (that I think hasn’t aged particularly well) and Hansen was doing what I’ve been writing about. The Misawa vs. Tsuruta match has an interesting urban legend attached to it, wherein Tsuruta was originally booked to win. As he often did, Giant Baba sat by the merch stand that day and saw the fans gobble up Misawa merch and was inspired to change the finish. As for this match, it was a frustrating hang. Misawa worked over Hansen’s arm for half the match, but Hansen just arbitrarily decided to ignore that after a while. I wonder if AJ fans were frustrated with this stall in Misawa’s momentum, as he basically got rolled here. Hansen won with the lariat at 16:16. **¾ 

January 19, 1991 – Matsumoto, Nagano

Jumbo Tsuruta def. Stan Hansen {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the New Year Giant Series. Well look at that, Hansen still had some fire in him after all. This was a good, stiff match  in which both guys showed a lot of guts. Tsuruta won with the neckbreaker drop at 15:49, but made the mistake of attacking Hansen more after the bell. That went poorly for him. Tsuruta held the belts for a year after this, defending against young guns Misawa and Toshiaki Kawada and also Steve Williams. ***½ 

January 28, 1992 – Chiba, Chiba

Stan Hansen def. Jumbo Tsuruta {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the New Year Giant Series. At this point I’ve seen so many people work over Hansen’s arm in the same way that it’s lost its luster. On the bright side, Hansen avoided a lot of the offense that Tsuruta caught him with a year earlier in true All Japan fashion. Tsuruta did kick out of a lariat, so the arm work wasn’t totally for naught, but then Hansen came back with another for the win at 16:41. Not on the level of their match before, but the last third was pretty exciting. After the match, Hansen makes fun of Tsuruta waiting a year to give him a rematch and says that he loves beating him so much he’ll give him a return match any time. Jumbo never got that rematch, or another match for the title ever as he began to wind down his career. But Hansen did make successful defenses against Misawa, Kawada, and Akira Taue before coming up on Misawa a third time. ***

August 22, 1992 – Tokyo, Japan

Mitsuharu Misawa def. Stan Hansen {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From Summer Action Series II. Historically speaking, this match was hugely significant. Even at the time it was clear there’d been a ton of build to this, as Misawa was considered a big shot in waiting for years and had already had a few close calls with the Triple Crown. The crowd was crazy for him and Hansen was booed out of the building  (by Japanese standards) during his entrance. The match couldn’t live up to the pre-match, as Misawa weirdly controlled much of the first half with headlocks. Why would you have the babyface slow down the match like that? Things picked up in the last few minutes, and capped with Misawa hitting an elbow out of nowhere for the win at 24:24. ***

July 28, 1994 – Tokyo, Japan

Steve Williams def. Mitsuharu Misawa {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the Summer Action Series. Misawa held the title for two years before this, defending against Kawada three times, Hansen twice, Taue once, and Williams once before this. The gimmick here was that the tour featured Williams and Ace defending their tag titles against Misawa and Kenta Kobashi. Misawa won the tag match a few nights before this and as you can see, Williams got him back for it here. I don’t think this match is quite the masterpiece that some make it out to be, but there are some brilliant moments early on and the last eight or so minutes are completely bananas. Williams hit a backdrop driver for the win at 27:39. ****

October 22, 1994 – Tokyo, Japan

Toshiaki Kawada def. Steve Williams {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the October Giant Series. Williams had just once successful title defense during his reign, a win over Kenta Kobashi (which I haven’t seen) in a rematch from their number one contender match a year earlier (which I have seen and was crazy good). This match is the start in earnest of a shift away from the southern American main eventers and toward the Four Pillars of All Japan (Misawa, Kawada, Kobashi, Taue). I know his nickname is Dangerous K, but it really sounds like they’re calling Kawada “Dangerous Cake.” There was some really cool stuff in here, like Kawada chasing Williams down with a sleeper hold to keep him from getting momentum, Williams’ leg selling came in at interesting moments. The finish was dope too, as Kawada strung together a series of kicks and clotheslines to keep Williams down at 37:58. The problem is it was about 15 pounds of goods in a 40-pound bag. It just didn’t have the weight it needed to go that long. ***½ 

March 4, 1995 – Tokyo, Japan

Stan Hansen def. Toshiaki Kawada {Triple Crown Heavyweight Championship Match}
From the Excite Series. Kawada’s only successful defense during his four-month reign was an overrated sixty-minute draw against Kobashi. Hansen looked old in this one. He was 46 and looked 56, though to be fair when he was in his 20s he looked like he was in his 40s already. Is that being fair or is it being mean on top of being mean? This was not good. There was just so much laying around and very little action. Thirty minutes of this was actually quite painful. Hansen hit a kneedrop, laid down for a while, then hit a lariat, laid down a bit longer, then got up to get the pin at 31:26. Woof. **¼

Hansen held the title for almost three months before dropping it to Misawa and then never getting it back again. Next time, the Four Pillar era is in full swing.