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  2. Category:Japanese female professional wrestlers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Japanese_female...

    Pages in category "Japanese female professional wrestlers" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 271 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .

  3. Yuzuki Aikawa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuzuki_Aikawa

    Yuzuki Aikawa (愛川 ゆず季, Aikawa Yuzuki, born May 16, 1983) [2] is a Japanese gravure idol and retired professional wrestler.Starting her modeling career in 2003, Aikawa went on to become one of Japan's top gravure idols, earning the nickname "The Gravure Queen of the Next Generation" by appearing in various men's magazines, advertising campaigns, films, television programs and video games.

  4. All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Japan_Women's_Pro...

    Bull Nakano Aja Kong. The All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling Corporation, established in 1968, was the successor to the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling Association, which had been formed in August 1955, to oversee the plethora of women's wrestling promotions that had sprung up in Japan following a tour in November, 1954, by Mildred Burke and her World Women's Wrestling Association (WWWA).

  5. World Woman Pro-Wrestling Diana Tag Team Championship

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Woman_Pro-Wrestling...

    The World Woman Pro-Wrestling Diana Tag Team Championship is the primary tag team title in the Japanese professional wrestling promotion World Woman Pro-Wrestling Diana. The title was introduced in 2013. There have been a total of twenty-one reigns shared between eighteen different teams consisting of twenty-six distinctive champions and three ...

  6. Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_Women's_Pro-Wrestling

    All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling was the only women's professional wrestling promotion prior to 1986. All Japan Women's was experiencing a boom period due to the Crush Gals of Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo as was Onyanko Club, a Japanese idol music group. Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling was imagined to be a wrestling version of Onyanko Club. [3]

  7. Crush Gals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crush_Gals

    The Crush Gals were a professional wrestling tag team consisting of Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo.Formed in 1983 in the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) promotion, the Crush Gals would become an extremely popular and influential unit throughout the 1980s, helping to propel both themselves and AJW into mainstream popularity in Japan.

  8. Jumping Bomb Angels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumping_Bomb_Angels

    They would even have a singles match a piece, Yamzaki beating Judy Martin and Toteno defeating Leilani Kai. The Jumping Bomb Angels returned to Japan with their home promotion of All Japan Women’s Pro Wrestling. It was there that they lost the WWF Ladies Tag Team Championship, back to the Glamour Girls via countout on June 8, 1988.

  9. World Wonder Ring Stardom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Wonder_Ring_Stardom

    World Wonder Ring Stardom (スターダム 女子プロレス, Sutādamu Joshi Puroresu), often referred to simply as Stardom (stylized as ST★RDOM), [3] is a Japanese joshi puroresu or women's professional wrestling promotion based in Nakano, Tokyo, Japan.