Jump to content

Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship
Current belt design
Details
Promotion
Date establishedOctober 28, 1993
Current champion(s)Hikaru Sato
Date wonDecember 27, 2023
Other name(s)
FMW Junior Heavyweight Championship
Statistics
First champion(s)The Great Sasuke
Most reignsTaka Michinoku and Atsushi Maruyama (3 reigns)
Longest reignShiori Asahi (503 days)
Shortest reignYasu Urano (<1 day)
Oldest championYasu Urano (47 years, 101 days)
Heaviest championHideki Hosaka (253 lb (115 kg))
Lightest championAsuka (147 lb (67 kg))

The Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship (Japanese: インディペンデントワールド世界ジュニアヘビー級王座, Hepburn: Indipendento Wārudo Sekai Junia Hebī-kyū Ōza) is a professional wrestling championship that is being defended in various independent promotions in Japan. The title was originally created in 1993 by Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling.

There have been a total of 47 reigns spread over three lineages and shared among 33 different wrestlers. The current champion is Hikaru Sato who is in his first reign.

History

[edit]

The title was created in 1993 by Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW) and it stayed with FMW from its inception to mid-1999, when FMW retired it. In 1998, the title was renamed FMW Junior Heavyweight Championship (FMW認定ジュニアヘビー級王座, FMW-nintei Junia Hebī-kyū Ōza) with the launch of the FMW Unified Organization. It was considered a different title with a new lineage.

On May 31, 1999, Kodo Fuyuki became the FMW commissioner and withdrew the recognition of the title following the introduction of the WEW Single Championship which he awarded to himself on September 24. Yuhi Sano was then recognized as the first Independent World Junior Heavyweight Champion, in continuation of his FMW Junior Heavyweight Championship reign, thus starting a third lineage. Since then, the title has been defended in various Japanese promotions including Big Japan Wrestling, DDT Pro-Wrestling, Kaientai Dojo, Union Pro Wrestling, Osaka Pro Wrestling and Michinoku Pro Wrestling.

Even with the belt being dropped by FMW, the original title belt is still used, which bears the "FMW" name on it. In May 2010, a new championship belt was made, as Tarzan Goto's Super FMW promotion briefly revived the FMW Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship to determine its final champion.

Reigns

[edit]

Original Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship

[edit]
Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
Defenses Number of successful defenses
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days Defenses
1 The Great Sasuke October 28, 1993 Kankuran! Tokyo, Japan 1 [a] 5 Defeated Battle Ranger Z to become the inaugural champion. [1][2]
Vacated October 1994 Sasuke vacated the title to concentrate on a death match against Atsushi Onita. [1]
2 Ricky Fuji December 20, 1994 FMW vs. W*ING Alliance Full War in Nagoya Nagoya, Japan 1 48 1 Defeated The Great Sasuke to win the vacant title. [1][3]
3 Hideki Hosaka February 6, 1995 Japan Nationwide Atsushi Onita Memorial Retirement Tour Last Fight – Final Chapter – February Series Okazaki, Japan 1 52 1 [1][4]
4 Koji Nakagawa March 30, 1995 Japan Nationwide Atsushi Onita Memorial Retirement Tour Last Fight – Final Chapter – March Series Yokohama, Japan 1 [b] 0 [1][5]
Vacated 1995 Vacated due to unknown circumstances. [1]
5 Koji Nakagawa November 20, 1995 Scramble Survivor Fukuoka, Japan 2 167 1 Defeated Ricky Fuji to win the vacant title. [1][6]
6 Taka Michinoku May 5, 1996 FMW 7th Anniversary Show Kawasaki, Japan 1 420 10 [1]
7 El Satánico June 29, 1997 CMLL Domingos de Coliseo Mexico City 1 57 0 This was a best two-out-of-three falls match held at a Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre house show. [1][7]
8 Taka Michinoku August 25, 1997 Live event Puebla, Mexico 2 115 1 [1]
Vacated December 18, 1997 Taka Michinoku vacated the title right after defending against Shoichi Funaki. [1]

FMW Junior Heavyweight Championship

[edit]
Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
Defenses Number of successful defenses
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days Defenses
1 Minoru Tanaka May 5, 1999 FMW Strongest Tag League Yokohama, Japan 1 9 0 Defeated Ricky Fuji to win the vacant title. [8]
2 Yuhi Sano May 14, 1999 Battlarts Live event Sapporo, Japan 1 17[c] 2 FMW no longer recognized the title after May 31, 1999, and continued to be defended in the Battlarts promotion. [8]
Deactivated May 31, 1999 Kodo Fuyuki becomes the FMW commissioner and withdraws the recognition of the title. [8]

New Independent World Junior Heavyweight Championship

[edit]
Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific champion
Days Number of days held
Defenses Number of successful defenses
+ Current reign is changing daily
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days Defenses
Battlarts
1 Yuhi Sano May 31, 1999 Live event Sapporo, Japan 1 244[c] 3 Battlarts recognizes Sano's reign as beginning on May 14, 1999, when he won the FMW Junior Heavyweight Championship. [9]
2 Minoru Tanaka January 30, 2000 Live event Tokyo, Japan 1 102 2 [9]
3 Katsumi Usuda May 11, 2000 Live event Tokyo, Japan 1 38 0 [9]
4 Naoyuki Taira June 18, 2000 Live event Tokyo, Japan 1 161 3 [9]
5 Katsumi Usuda November 26, 2000 Live event Tokyo, Japan 2 373 5 [9]
Vacated December 4, 2001 Vacated after Battlarts became inactive. [9]
Michinoku Pro Wrestling (MPW)
6 Ikuto Hidaka February 17, 2002 Live event Yokohama, Japan 1 87 1 Defeated Kazuya Yuasa in a tournament final to win the vacant title. [9]
Deactivated May 15, 2002 Retired due to FMW closing. [9]
Various indies
7 Kota Ibushi August 26, 2007 Pro-Wrestling Summit In Ariake Tokyo, Japan 1 349 7 Defeated Madoka to revive the title. [9]
Kaientai Dojo (K-Dojo)
8 Madoka August 9, 2008 Super Big Show Chiba Hakkenden Chiba, Japan 1 36 0 [9]
9 Makoto Oishi September 14, 2008 Club-K Super Downtown 2008 Tokyo, Japan 1 374 7 [9]
10 Gentaro September 23, 2009 Club-K Super Downtown 2009 Chiba, Japan 1 191 6 [9]
11 Marines Mask (II) April 2, 2010 Club-K Super Evolution 8 Tokyo, Japan 1 160 2 [9]
12 Tigers Mask September 9, 2010 Club-K Shinkiba #4 Tokyo, Japan 1 17 0 [9]
Osaka Pro Wrestling (OPW)
13 Orochi September 26, 2010 Osaka Pro Sumire September Series Osaka, Japan 1 48 1 [9]
14 Tigers Mask November 13, 2010 Osaka Pro Fuyu Ga Hajimaru Yo Series Osaka, Japan 2 217 3 [9]
Kaientai Dojo (K-Dojo)
15 Daigoro Kashiwa June 18, 2011 Club-K Super Take Tokyo, Japan 1 141 4 [9]
16 Hiroki November 6, 2011 Club-K Super Joke 2011 Tokyo, Japan 1 447 15 [9]
17 Ricky Fuji January 26, 2013 Club-K 3000 Chiba, Japan 1 78 1 [9]
18 Hayato Nanjyo April 14, 2013 CLUB-K SUPER Evolution 11 - K-DOJO 11th Anniversary Tokyo, Japan 1 27 0 [9]
19 Taka Michinoku May 11, 2013 Club-K Tour In Osaka Osaka, Japan 1 483 16 This match was also for Taka Michinoku's UWA World Middleweight Championship. [9]
20 Teppei September 6, 2014 Club-K 3000 Chiba, Japan 3 169 2 Formerly held the title under the name Tigers Mask and began working under the name Atsushi Maruyama during this reign. [9]
21 Hi69 February 22, 2015 Club-K Super In TKP Garden City Osaka, Japan 2 49 0 Formerly held the title under the name Hiroki. [9]
22 Isami Kodaka April 12, 2015 Club-K Super Evolution 13 Tokyo, Japan 1 203 8 [9]
23 Shiori Asahi November 1, 2015 Club-K Super In Korakuen Tokyo, Japan 1 503 11 [9][10]
24 Ken Ohka March 18, 2017 Club-K Super In Blue Field Chiba, Japan 1 190 3 [9][11]
DDT Pro-Wrestling (DDT)
25 Daisuke Sasaki September 24, 2017 Who's Gonna Top? DDT Dramatic General Election 2017 - Last Request Special! Tokyo, Japan 1 87 5 This was a three-way match, where Sasaki defended the DDT Extreme Championship and Konosuke Takeshita defended the KO-D Openweight Championship. [9][12]
(DDT) DDT Pro-Wrestling: Ganbare☆Pro-Wrestling (GanPro)
26 Ken Ohka December 20, 2017 Burning'X'mas 2017 Tokyo, Japan 2 129 0 [9]
27 Keisuke Ishii April 28, 2018 Dreaming I Was Dreaming 2018 Tokyo, Japan 1 253 6 [9]
28 Shuichiro Katsumura January 6, 2019 Do It On Your Own Hands 2019 Tokyo, Japan 1 265 5 [9]
29 Keisuke Ishii September 28, 2019 I Do Not Need A Comic Magazine! 2019 Tokyo, Japan 2 302 7 [9]
30 Hagane Shinno July 26, 2020 Killer Queen 2020 Tokyo, Japan 2 27 0 Formerly held the title under the name Madoka. [9]
31 Asuka August 22, 2020 Heaven's Door 2020 Tokyo, Japan 1 126 2 [9]
32 Shota December 26, 2020 The World 2020 Tokyo, Japan 1 20 2 [9]
Professional Wrestling Just Tap Out (JTO)
33 Arata January 15, 2021 JTO Hatsu Tokyo, Japan 1 310 5 [9]
34 Naoki Tanizaki November 21, 2021 JTO in Osaka Osaka, Japan 1 454 6 [13]
Dove Pro-Wrestling
35 Oji Shiiba February 18, 2023 Live event Kobe, Japan 1 102 1 [14]
36 Yasu Urano May 31, 2023 Indie Junior Festival: We Are All Alive 2 Tokyo, Japan 1 <1 0 [15]
37 Oji Shiiba May 31, 2023 Indie Junior Festival: We Are All Alive 2 Tokyo, Japan 2 91 2 [15]
Vacated August 30, 2023 Oji Shiiba vacated the title when he went into a hiatus in order to treat his injured knee. [16]
Various indies
38 Hikaru Sato December 27, 2023 Taka Michinoku Produce Independent Junior Heavyweight Festival One-Day Tournament Tokyo, Japan 1 319+ 4 Defeated Kota Sekifuda in the finals of a 54-person tournament to win the vacant title. [17]

Combined reigns

[edit]
Taka Michinoku (left) and Atsushi Maruyama (right) are both record three-time champions. Michinoku also holds the record for longest combined reign at 1,018 days.
Shiori Asahi holds the record for the longest individual reign at 503 days.

As of November 10, 2024.

Indicates the current champion
¤ The exact length of at least one title reign is uncertain, so the shortest possible length is used.
Rank [1] Wrestler No. of
reigns
Combined
defenses
Combined
days
1 Taka Michinoku 3 27 1,018
2 Keisuke Ishii 2 13 555
3 Shiori Asahi 1 11 503
4 Hiroki/Hi69 2 15 496
5 Naoki Tanizaki 1 6 454
6 Katsumi Usuda 2 5 411
7 Tigers Mask/Teppei 3 5 403
8 Makoto Oishi 1 7 374
9 Kota Ibushi 1 7 349
10 The Great Sasuke 1 5 338¤
11 Hikaru Sato 1 4 319+
12 Ken Ohka 2 3 319
13 Arata 1 5 310
14 Shuichiro Katsumura 1 5 265
15 Yuhi Sano 1 5 261
16 Oji Shiiba 2 3 193
17 Gentaro 1 6 191
18 Koji Nakagawa 2 1 168¤
19 Naoyuki Taira 1 3 161
20 Marines Mask (II) 1 2 160
21 Daigoro Kashiwa 1 4 141
22 Ricky Fuji 2 2 126
Asuka 1 2 126
24 Minoru Tanaka 2 2 111
25 Ikuto Hidaka 1 1 87
Daisuke Sasaki 1 5 87
27 Madoka/Hagane Shinno 2 0 63
28 El Satánico 1 0 57
29 Hideki Hosaka 1 1 52
30 Orochi 1 1 48
31 Hayato Nanjyo 1 0 27
32 Shota 1 2 20
33 Yasu Urano 1 0 <1

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ The date of at least one of the title changes in this reign is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 338 and 368 days.
  2. ^ The date of at least one of the title changes in this reign is uncertain, which means that the reign lasted between 1 and 235 days.
  3. ^ a b Sano's two separate reigns are generally being counted as one 261 days reign.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k ""Independent World" World Junior Heavyweight Title [FMW] (Japan)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  2. ^ "Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling - "KANKURAN!"". PuroLove.com (in German). Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  3. ^ "Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling Results: 1994 (unvollständig)". PuroLove.com (in German). Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  4. ^ "Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling - "JAPAN NATIONWIDE ATSUSHI ONITA MEMORIAL RETIREMENT TOUR LAST FIGHT ~ FINAL CHAPTER ~ FEBRUARY SERIES"". PuroLove.com (in German). Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  5. ^ "Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling - "JAPAN NATIONWIDE ATSUSHI ONITA MEMORIAL RETIREMENT TOUR LAST FIGHT ~ FINAL CHAPTER ~ MARCH SERIES"". PuroLove.com (in German). Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  6. ^ "Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling - "SCRAMBLE SURVIVOR 1995""". PuroLove.com (in German). Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  7. ^ Kreikenbohm, Philip. "CMLL Domingos De Coliseo". Cagematch.com. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  8. ^ a b c "FMW Junior Heavyweight Title (Japan)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai "Independent World Junior Heavyweight Title (Japan)". Wrestling-Titles.com. Retrieved November 9, 2019.
  10. ^ "CLUB-K SUPER in 後楽園ホール | KAIENTAI DOJO". Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-11-01.
  11. ^ "CLUB-K SUPER in Blue Field | KAIENTAI DOJO". Archived from the original on 2017-03-19. Retrieved 2017-03-18.
  12. ^ "DDT ProWrestling".
  13. ^ Just Tap Out (November 21, 2021). "大会名:(株)村上製作所 プレゼンツ JUST TAP OUT in OSAKA". pwjto.com (in Japanese). Retrieved November 22, 2021.
  14. ^ Saalbach, Axel. "DOVE @ Kobe". Wrestlingdata.com. Retrieved March 10, 2023.
  15. ^ a b Kreikenbohm, Philip (May 31, 2023). "Indie Junior Festival ~ We Are All Alive 2". cagematch.net. Retrieved June 2, 2023.
  16. ^ Shiiba, Oji [@ojishiiba0714] (August 30, 2023). "I have decided to vacate the Independent World Junior belt as previously discussed" 協議中でしたインディペンデントワールド世界ジュニアのベルトですが返上するかたちになりました。 (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved August 31, 2023 – via Twitter.
  17. ^ Kreikenbohm, Philip (December 27, 2023). "TAKA Michinoku Produce Independent Junior Heavyweight Festival One Day Tournament". cagematch.net. Retrieved December 27, 2023.
[edit]