I just reviewed the WWWA Championship in AJW and watched the GAEA Girls documentary, so I feel prepared to run through the AAAW Championship in GAEA Japan. Nagayo formed the company in late ‘94, and they crowned their first champion two years later. As an inversion of AJW’s title, GAEA called their top prize the All Asia Athlete Women’s Championship.
November 2, 1996 – Kallang, Singapore
Chigusa Nagayo def. Devil Masami {AAAW Championship Match}
From We Are GAEA Japan. This was all kicks and powerbombs from both ladies. And that’s exactly how Nagayo won. She hit a kick and finished Masami off with a powerbomb at 7:08 (shown of 14:59). Since half of this was clipped out, I wonder if I didn’t get a full sense of the match. But given that the crowd was rather subdued, I think I may have seen all I needed to see. ***
September 20, 1997 – Kawasaki, Kanagawa
Devil Masami def. Zero {AAAW Championship & WCW World Women’s Championship Match}
From Double Destiny. If you think that Bray Wyatt wrestling as the Fiend under a red light was unique (leaving out whether you thought it was terrible or not), you are dead wrong. The dark heel persona was stolen from anime, but even more closely in proximity it is stolen from joshi. Here, Masami wrestles in her Super Heel character and Nagayo works as Zero. Both of them are dark, face painted versions of their normal characters. Dragon Gate even ran these kind of angles in the interim with Darkside Hulk and Gamma Daio. In the GAEA Girls documentary, Nagayo went on the radio and talked a bit about this Zero gimmick, so it’s cool to see it in play here. What’s less cool are the strobe lights the match is fought under. This match is also for the vacant WCW title, which was a zombie belt by this point (having only really been active when Akira Hokuto was champion and doing a tour in the United States). This was monstrously dumb, as both women slowed their usual styles down considerably to play monsters. Zero was kicking Masami’s ass, but Masami reversed a roll up for the win at 8:41 (shown of 12:31). Doodie match. Masami held the title for 11 months before losing it back to Nagayo, who in turn lost it to Aja Kong after a nine-month run. *¾
January 14, 2001 – Tokyo, Japan
Mayumi Ozaki def. Aja Kong {AAAW Championship Match}
From Wild Times. The match is joined in progress with Ozaki already beaten to a pulp and bleeding all over the place. At first it was feeling like a lazy squash that would probably have a fluke miracle comeback finish. But when all was said and done I was wishing I’d seen the first five minutes of the beating that Ozaki took. That’s because her comeback to win the match was one of the gutsiest, most engaging fights from behind I’ve ever seen. Kong had obviously been obliterating her. But then Ozaki ducked a few spinning backfists and slowly disoriented the champion. She did it first with slaps in the corner, then with a couple of half nelson suplexes. Then, she went from avoiding the backfist to blocking it with shots of her own. And from there she started hitting pimp slaps and spinning backfists until Kong crumpled for good at 10:58 (shown of 15:02). I love when a match I’m skeptical of pulls me in. ****
October 28, 2001 – Nagoya, Oichi
Aja Kong def. Mayumi Ozaki {AAAW Championship Match}
From God Only Knows. Same deal as before, joined in progress with Ozaki already bleeding. This was worse than the last match. Her Himiko stable interfered constantly. That’s the Ozaki I’ve become used to from watching Oz Academy, but it was nice having a reprieve from that in the last match. Kong as the underdog babyface in opposition to Ozaki’s crew was a weird dynamic, but it’s Kong so she made it work. She caught Ozaki with a spinning backfist for the win at 7:28 (shown of 13:12). **¾
December 15, 2001 – Kawasaki, Kanegawa
Meiko Satomura def. Aja Kong {AAAW Championship Match}
From Deep Endless. Hell yes, the match is shown in full. There’s a lull in the middle of the match during a brawl on the floor that means nothing and leads to nothing. But the stuff before that was pretty dope, seeing Satomura stand toe-to-toe with Kong to show her that they’re on the same level. And the stuff after was very dope, seeing Kong bully Satomura to show her that they’re not on the same level. Things really picked up when Kong countered the Scorpion Kick to a Death Valley Driver. Satomura had gotten close to beating Kong with successive DVDs, but they weren’t getting the job done. Kong then fell into the same trap, relying too much on a rear naked choke because it got very close to making Satomura pass out. But a final attempt at one was countered to a DVD, and then Kong fell to one knee and Satomura hit the Scorpion Kick for the win at 26:38. Satomura held the title for six months and then lost it to Chikayo Nagashima. ****
October 20, 2002 – Yokohama, Kanagawa
Manami Toyota def. Chikayo Nagashima {AAAW Championship Match}
From Yokohama Mega Ride. They cut the first few minutes out of this but it didn’t screw up the context of the match in any significant way. Nagashima spent most of the match trying to beat Toyota at her own game, which unsurprisingly came back to bite her over and over again. She had the best results when she’d counter Toyota’s signature moves and go for roll ups and aerial assaults, rather than when she’d do the Toyota thing of absorbing and then trying to move through the damage of a big move. That made for a damn fun match, but not a win strategically for Nagashima. Toyota had trouble putting her down, but three Japanese Ocean Queen Bee Bombs did the trick at 15:19 (shown of 21:29). Toyota lost the title 13 months later to Dynamite Kansai, who then dropped it to Akayo Hamada after only six weeks. ****¼
April 30, 2004 – Tokyo, Japan
Meiko Satomura def. Ayako Hamada {AAAW Championship Match}
From Yoyogi Limit Break. Satomura has grown her hair out and cemented the look she has to this day. Hamada’s title reign filled a very small four-month gap between WWWA Championship runs. That’s some wild synergy. These two tried hard, but a couple of things held this match way back. First, Hamada seemed to be either blown up or knocked a little loopy for a few minutes in the middle. She had trouble lifting Satomura at one point, slowing down a spot in the corner, and she tripped on the ropes going for a dive to the outside. The second problem stemmed from the first, as the goofs lost the crowd’s attention. They never got it back, so the final stretch didn’t have the drama it might have otherwise had. Satomura got the win with the Scorpion Kick at 15:43 (shown of 24:07). ***
April 3, 2005 – Yokohama, Kanegawa
Aja Kong def. Meiko Satomura {AAAW Championship Match}
From Yokohama Final Impact. This was the second to last GAEA show ever. The match took forever to get going and dragged like crazy until the third act, so to speak. I’m not even sure if there was a narrative hook I was supposed to attach my attention to, but if there was I missed it. There were a few counters that I dug, but for the most part we got Kong looking tired and Satomura doing more screaming than kicking ass. Kong hit a flailing spinning backfist for the win at 20:47. ***
The following week, Kong beat Carlos Amano in a non-title match in the midcard while Satomura defeated Nagayo in the main event of the final GAEA show. The title was retired when the company closed. The company wasn’t a failure, but its wrestlers were largely getting older and wanted to either retire (especially Nagayo) or move on to other projects. It’s rare a wrestling story ends this way, but it’s nice. Satomura opened Sendai Girls the following year.