When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. BJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BJW_Deathmatch_Heavyweight...

    Tokyo, Japan: 1 167: 4 This was a deathmatch. [34] 49 Mad Man Pondo: December 30, 2023: BJW Tokyo, Japan: 1 5: 0 This was a fluorescent lighttubes & Illinois street fight deathmatch. [35] 50 Yuki Ishikawa: January 4, 2024: BJW Deathmatch King Death Tokyo, Japan: 2 101: 1 This was a lighttube deathmatch. [36] 51 Hideyoshi Kamitani: April 14, 2024

  3. Big Japan Pro Wrestling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Japan_Pro_Wrestling

    Big Japan Pro Wrestling was founded in March 1995 by former AJPW wrestlers Shinya Kojika and Kendo Nagasaki, during the boom period for Deathmatch wrestling in Japan. Kendo Nagasaki left in 1999; Shinya Kojika is still president of the company to date.

  4. List of Big Japan Pro Wrestling tournaments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Big_Japan_Pro...

    The 2000 World Extreme Cup was a round-robin tournament contested under deathmatch variations. The tournament consisted of three blocks with each block consisting of four wrestlers and a total of twelve participants in the tournament.

  5. Mitsuhiro Matsunaga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitsuhiro_Matsunaga

    Mitsuhiro Matsunaga (松永 光広, Matsunaga Mitsuhiro, born March 24, 1966) is a Japanese retired professional wrestler best known for his deathmatch wrestling style, having competed in memorable deathmatches in Big Japan Pro Wrestling (BJW), Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW) and Wrestling International New Generations (W*ING).

  6. Atsushi Onita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atsushi_Onita

    Atsushi Onita (大仁田 厚, Ōnita Atsushi, born October 25, 1957) [1] is a Japanese actor, politician, and semi-retired professional wrestler.He is best known for his work in Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW) and is credited with introducing the deathmatch style of professional wrestling to Japan.

  7. IWA Kawasaki Dream - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IWA_Kawasaki_Dream

    The event was a huge success for the promotion drawing a crowd of 28,757 attendants, the largest crowd for an IWA Japan show and it was the most successful and biggest show of the promotion. The key highlight of Kawasaki Dream was the 1995 King of the Deathmatch Tournament , an eight-man single elimination tournament , which featured various ...

  8. International Wrestling Association of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Wrestling...

    It was formed by Víctor Quiñones as a successor to the W*ING promotion, which was folding as a rival to Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW), the pioneer of deathmatch wrestling in Japan and the only deathmatch promotion in Japan at the time. Most of the wrestlers jumped ship to Quiñones' new IWA Japan group.

  9. Ikkitousen Deathmatch Survivor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ikkitousen_Deathmatch_Survivor

    The 2013 Ikkitousen Deathmatch Survivor was held between March 4 and April 10, 2013. The tournament final between Ryuji Ito and Isami Kodaka was a two out of three falls match, with the first fall being a Tables, Ladders and Chairs Death match, the second fall was a Fluorescent Lighttubes and Block Death Match and the third fall was a Nail Board, TLC, Fluorescent Lighttubes and Block Death match.