Crush Gals Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/crush-gals/ Reviews and Wrestler Profiles from Joshi Wrestling Sun, 29 Jun 2025 22:44:34 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.7 https://i0.wp.com/joshicity.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/logo.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Crush Gals Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/crush-gals/ 32 32 93679598 Chigusa Nagayo https://joshicity.com/joshi-wrestler-profiles/chigusa-nagayo/ Mon, 15 Feb 2016 20:56:06 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?page_id=2073 Profile for Joshi wrestler Chigusa Nagayo.

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Chigusa Nagayo
Birth: December 8th, 1964
Height: 5’5″
Weight: 180 lbs.
Background: AJW Dojo
Debut: August 8th, 1980 vs. Yukari Omori
Promotions Wrestled For: AJW, JWP, GAEA Japan, and Marvelous
Notable Partners: Lioness Asuka (as The Crush Gals)
Other Identities: Zero

Championships Held: GAEA AAAW Singles Championship, GAEA AAAW Tag Team Championship, AJW Junior Championship, All Pacific Championship, IWA World Championship, WWWA Tag Team Championship, WWWA World Championship, Blast King Tag Team Championship, and the Blast Queen Championship
Tournaments Won: AJW Japan Grand Prix (1987) and the AJW Tag League the Best (1986 and 1987)
Awards Won: Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame (Class of 1997), Tokyo Sports Award Best Tag Team (2014), and AJW Hall of Fame (1998)

Notable Matches:

  • May 15th, 1982 vs. Itsuki Yamazaki
  • January 8th, 1984 vs. Noriyo Tateno  (title win)
  • August 22nd, 1985 vs. Devil Masami  (title challenge)
  • March 16th, 1986 with Lioness Asuka vs. Kai and Mitchell
  • October 10th, 1986 with Lioness Asuka vs. Uno and Omori  (tournament win)
  • November 7th, 1986 vs. Dump Matsumoto  (Hair vs. Hair Match)
  • October 20th, 1987 vs. Yukari Omori  (title defense and title challenge)
  • April 2nd, 1993 vs. Devil Masami
  • September 19th, 1995 vs. Mayumi Ozaki
  • November 2nd, 1996 vs. Devil Masami  (title win)
  • August 23rd, 1998 vs. Devil Masami  (title win)
  • April 4th, 1999 vs. Lioness Asuka
  • April 30th, 2004 with Asuka vs. Nagashima and Sato  (title win)
  • November 3rd, 2017 vs. Nanae Takahashi  (title defense)
  • December 8th, 2019 vs. Takumi Iroha

Signature Moves:

  • Crush Suplex
  • Death Valley Bomb
  • Diving Moonsault
  • Over The Crush (with Lioness Asuka)
  • Running Three
  • Scorpion Deathlock
  • Super Freak
  • Super Freak II

Sample of Matches Reviewed on Joshi City:

In Action:

Over The Crush
Over The Crush
Nagayo Running Three
Running Three
Super Freak
Super Freak

Back to Marvelous Roster

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AJW Classics #5: Lioness Asuka vs. Chigusa Nagayo! https://joshicity.com/ajw-classics-5-lioness-asuka-chigusa-nagayo/ Fri, 22 Jan 2016 04:52:24 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=1141 Tag team partners face off in singles action!

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ajwclassics

Welcome to another review of All Japan Women’s Pro-Wrestling Classics! AJW Classics is a television program that airs on SAMURAI TV in Japan. There are several different series within the AJW Classics name, I will be reviewing the series starting with the “Retro Hour” AJW Classics that first aired on August 7th, 2007.  They are still airing to this day.

AJW Retro Hour Classics #5 features friends (and soon to be former friends) clashing! In a departure from the last few episodes, with the Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix taking place, tag teams are now facing against each other as Gokuaku Domei, Crush Gals, and Dynamite Girls all battle in singles action. Here is the full listing:

  • 4/2/85 – Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix ’85 League: Jumbo Hori vs. Yukari Omori
  • 4/26/85 – Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix ’85 League: Dump Matsumoto vs. Crane Yu
  • 4/6/85 – Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix ’85 League: Lioness Asuka vs. Chigusa Nagayo

This is an interesting event, let’s see how it shapes up.

ajw5-1
Jumbo Hori vs. Yukari Omori

This match is part of the Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix. Hori and Omori at the time of the event were the popular tag team Dynamite Girls and held the WWWA World Tag Team Championship in 1983, but in Japan when a singles tournament comes up all friendships are off. Hori was the older of the two and debuted first, but Omori was on her level by 1985.

aj5-1Omori dropkicks Hori as soon as the bell rings but Hori comes back with a bodyslam. Omori yanks on Hori’s arm and puts Hori in a backbreaker, and Hori rolls to the apron to get her back worked on. Back in, Hori and Omori trade chops but Omori tosses Hori to the mat and drops Hori with a gutbuster. Hori rolls out of the ring to re-group but returns after a moment and stomps on Omori, working on her leg. Omori gets Hori up and slams her stomach-first, but Omori tosses Hori off the top turnbuckle. Back bodydrop by Hori and she covers Omori for a two count. Back up, Hori throws Omori into the corner but she jumps up on the top turnbuckle and hits a diving lariat. Hori then goes up top and hits a diving crossbody, piledriver by Hori but Omori bridges out of the pin. Backdrop suplex hold by Omori, she picks up Hori and she hits another one for the three count! Jumbo Hori wins the match!

The most exciting thing about this is Hori trying to kill Omori at the end with the piledriver and backdrop suplexes, as up to that point not a whole lot of interest was happening. They had oddly little chemistry for two wrestlers that team together, as there were a few missteps in a match that not much was shown of. The last few minutes were great for sure and there were some big hits in this, but as an overall match it just felt too segmented.

ajw5-2
Dump Matsumoto vs. Crane Yu

This match is part of the Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix. Unlike the last match, these two were already starting to show signs of not being on the same page. They had lost the WWWA World Tag Team Championship earlier in the month in controversial fashion, leading to some discord in Gokuaku Domei. Plus there was a younger wrestler waiting in the wings to move up the ranks, a wrestler by the name of Bull Nakano.

aj5-2They shake hands to start but they are pleasant for about six seconds before Matsumoto drags Yu out of the ring and slams her repeatedly into the table. After choking and whipping her around the ring, they back into it and Matsumoto chokes her some more. Matsumoto stabs Yu repeatedly in the head until she starts bleeding all over the place, then Matsumoto stabs her in the head some more. Even Abe finds the violence excessive but Matsumoto swats him away and keeps up the attack. Yu manages to get a chain and chokes Matsumoto with it, she then gets a chair and hits Nakano with it but Nakano hits her back. Matsumoto lariats Yu and hits Abe with a pail, she covers Yu but Yu bridges out. Irish whip by Matsumoto but the two collide, Matsumoto takes Yu to the corner and bites her in the head. Yu is continuing to bleed everywhere as Nakano comes in, as if Matsumoto needs help, and they lariat Yu. Yu is beaten around the ring and slammed into the ring post, the referee finally has enough and calls for the bell, so it is either a Double Countout or Matsumoto was DQed, who knows.

I couldn’t find an exact record, but this was either Crane Yu’s last match before retiring (for the first time) or really close to it, so this was a ‘passing of the torch’ type match more than anything else. Not that Matsumoto needed the torch passed, but more to Nakano, as Nakano was very visible in the match and at the end it was her and Matsumoto standing tall in the ring while Yu was bleeding everywhere. Yu took her beating like a champion, there was no point during this match that it felt she was going to win, it was just a bloodbath brawl. Even Abe, the heel referee, couldn’t get Matsumoto to stop. I thought it did a great job at accomplishing what it was trying to do and it really set the stage for what was coming next. Which we will get to in the next few weeks. A fun brawl but perhaps not for the faint of heart.  Mildly Recommended

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Lioness Asuka vs. Chigusa Nagayo

This match is part of the Fuji TV Cup Japan Grand Prix. A fitting “main event” of this airing, as no two wrestlers in AJW were as popular as Asuka and Nagayo. Still a close tag team (they would remain a team for years after this), Asuka and Nagayo did have to occasionally battle each other as well when tournaments and titles came between them. At close to the same age and with the same level of experience, neither had a clear advantage over the other, and the crowd was red hot to see which Crush Gal was better.

newThey start on the mat as they feel each other out, but neither gets a real clear advantage. This was definitely starts slow as they struggle for the upper hand, Nagayo gets the first real advantage as she goes for the Scorpion Deathlock and she finally gets it locked in. Asuka gets out of it but Nagayo picks her up and drops her with a piledriver. Nagayo goes for Asuka’s arm but Asuka lifts out of it and throws Nagayo to the mat. Now it is Asuka that gets the Scorpion Deathlock applied, she picks up Nagayo and hits a piledriver of her own for a two count. Dropkick by Nagayo but Asuka comes back with a back kick followed by a vertical suplex. Diving body press by Asuka, she gets Nagayo’s waist but Nagayo reverses positions with her and hits a German suplex for a two count. Nagayo applies a stretch hold to Asuka but Asuka gets into the ropes, kicks by Nagayo but Asuka puts her on the turnbuckle and hits an avalanche backdrop suplex. Double underhook by Nagayo and she hits a suplex, Irish whip by Nagayo and she delivers the heel kick for a two count. German suplex hold by Asuka, but Nagayo gets a shoulder up. Giant Swing by Asuka but Nagayo hits a quick backdrop suplex, Asuka grabs Nagayo and drops her with a piledriver. Asuka goes up top and hits a jumping kick to the chest, she picks up Nagayo but Nagayo kicks her in the chest and hits a leg drop. Asuka chops Nagayo in the chest and kicks her in the head, and they trade kicks back and forth. As they count down to the end of the match, each wrestler goes for quick pins but neither can get the three count. The bell rings, and the match is a Draw.

This was a bit more low key than I was expecting. Not the crowd, they were going crazy the entire match, but of the three matches this one felt the most like a tussle between friends than two wrestlers dying to get those points in the Grand Prix. It took awhile to get going, it was about ten minutes in before anything of note happened, and after that it was mostly just them trading moves without much rhyme or reason. The transitions were non-existent, or it was poorly clipped, as they weren’t really selling anything before going back on offense. It was helped a lot by the hot crowd, and the crisp action, but it wasn’t the greatness I was hoping for as it felt like they were just going for the Draw.  Mildly Recommended

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AJW Classics #4: A Bloody Brawl and Nakano goes for Gold! https://joshicity.com/ajw-classics-4-crush-gals-gokuaku-domei/ Wed, 20 Jan 2016 04:20:25 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=1095 Crush Gals and Gokuaku Domei battle for the titles!

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ajwclassics

Welcome to another review of All Japan Women’s Pro-Wrestling Classics! AJW Classics is a television program that airs on SAMURAI TV in Japan. There are several different series within the AJW Classics name, I will be reviewing the series starting with the “Retro Hour” AJW Classics that first aired on August 7th, 2007.  They are still airing to this day.

AJW Retro Hour Classics #4 features more Crush Gals, Bull Nakano going for the All Japan Women Championship, and more! All three matches come from the same date, on February 25th, 1985. Here is the full listing:

  • All Japan Women’s Championship: Itsuki Yamazaki vs. Bull Nakano
  • Jaguar Yokota and Devil Masami vs. Dynamite Girls (Jumbo Hori and Yukari Omori)
  • WWWA World Tag Team Championship: Crush Gals (Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo) vs. Dump Matsumoto and Crane Yu

Only three matches on this one, so I hope they can deliver!


(c) Itsuki Yamazaki vs. Bull Nakano

This match is for the All Japan Women’s Championship. At the time of this match, Bull Nakano was only 17 years old but had already turned to the dark side, teaming with the mega heel faction Gokuaku Domei. Itsuki Yamazaki is better known as half of the Jumping Bomb Angels and had held the championship since beating Lioness Asuka on February 28th, 1984.

ajw4-1They get right into it with the champion dropkicking and slamming the challenger before armdragging Nakano around the ring. Nakano takes over and they roll out of the ring, with Nakano throwing Yamazaki into chairs at ringside. Back in, Nakano bounces Yamazaki around the ring as her friend Matsumoto and Yu come in to help. Which she didn’t need, since Nakano was winning at the time anyway. Nakano bites Yamazaki and she is triple teamed in the corner, Yamazaki goes up top and dropkicks Nakano but she dropkicks the referee too on accident. Chaos briefly ensues but is restored rather quickly, Irish whip by Nakano and she knees Yamazaki in the leg. Yamazaki is thrown out of the ring and assaulted by Matsumoto, she gets back in as Nakano goes for a big slash, but Yamazaki rolls out of the way. Nakano knocks Yamazaki back out of the ring where more cheating commences, and Nakano hits a body block. Vertical suplex by Nakano and she covers Yamazaki for two.  Yamazaki fires back with a crossbody, but soon Gokuaku Domei runs in the ring and stomps on Yamazaki. The heel referee Shiro Abe actually has enough and he calls for the bell much to my surprise. Yamazaki is your winner by DQ.

This wasn’t as good as it could have been. It was nice of the referee to actually DQ someone for a change while normally he just watches, but the match finally felt like it was getting going when it was suddenly over. Nakano was pretty green here but was only 17, it would take her a few years to really get the evil brawling technique down pat. Yamazaki ended up forfeiting the title after the match, so why Nakano couldn’t go ahead and win it I am not sure as DQ endings in title matches is never ideal (even if it was better than the referee continuing to allow the group attack). Some good parts here and there and it is interesting to see a young Nakano, but it just never fully clicked.

ajw4-2
Jaguar Yokota and Devil Masami vs. Dynamite Girls (Jumbo Hori and Yukari Omori)

This is not an official #1 Contendership, but these are the next two teams in line for a shot at the WWWA World Tag Team Championship. Yokota and Masami were not a regular tag team at the time, but since both were not Gokuaku Domei they were on the same side and were both accomplished as singles wrestlers. The Dynamite Girls had already held the WWWA World Tag Team Championship once, and were looking to move back up the ladder to get another shot at the gold.

ajw4-2Yokota goes after Hori to start the match and hits a jumping elbow followed by a dropkick. Masami comes in with Omori and they struggle for position on the mat, Masami elbows Omori but she tags in Hori. Masami gets Hori to the mat and tags in Yokota, dropkicks by Yokota but Hori gets to her corner and tags in Omori. Omori tosses Yokota to the mat and she hits a gutbuster for a two count. Yokota gets back in control and hip attacks Omori before hitting a Jackhammer. I guess it is true that all moves originated in AJW. She tags in Masami, the action spills out of the ring as Yokota and Masami stay in control. Omori and Masami get back in the ring and Omori hits a tilt-a-whirl slam, she gets Masami on her shoulders and Hori dives off the top turnbuckle with a diving crossbody. Alabama Slam by Hori to Masami but Masami comes back with a backdrop suplex. She tags in Yokota and Yokota puts Hori in an Octopus Hold. Hori gets out of it and slams Yokota in front of the corner, reverse splash by Omori and she covers Yokota for two. Dropkicks by Yokota, Masami goes up top and she hits a diving lariat. Omori lands close enough to her corner to tag Hori, but Masami levels her with a lariat. Hori picks up Masami and drops her with a powerbomb, but Masami gets a foot on the ropes. Masami gets Hori on her shoulders and hits an Electric Chair, they both pick up their respective opponents and hit tombstone piledrivers. Yokota gets on Masami’s shoulders and drops down onto Hori, picking up the three count pinfall! Yokota and Masami win the match!

I knew going in that Yokota and Masami were of a higher stature, but I wasn’t expecting them to handle the Dynamite Girls like this. Of course it was clipped so I do not know what was clipped out, but Yokota and Masami controlled the action for sure. The action was very smooth though, I wasn’t expecting Yokota to bust out a Jackhammer (it was a move she did from time to time but I hadn’t seen it yet) but everything here clicked. And it was nice to have a match that was clean and didn’t have crazy interference every five seconds. A solid tag match, only really hurt due to the clipping as I would have liked to have seen more. Mildly Recommended

ajw4-3
(c) Crush Gals (Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo) vs. Dump Matsumoto and Crane Yu

This match is for the WWWA World Tag Team Championship and is a Two out of Three Falls Match. If you have read any of my previous reviews the storyline here should be clear – The Crush Gals are one of the most popular tag teams in all of Japan, while Gokuaku Domei are the heel faction that cheats constantly to try to win matches (or get DQed, as they did in the first match). This is not Matsumoto and Yu’s first match against The Crush Gals, as they also battled back in the fall in the Fuji TV Cup Tag League Final. There is more at stake here however, and with a packed Tokyo Ota-ku Taiikukan watching, the fan favorites will try to hold off Gokuaku Domei once again.

Nagayo is bleeding before the match even started, which is never a good sign. A few minutes of the recording was black so I do not know if they aired what happened to her, but I assume there was a pre-match brawl considering the participants. The first few minutes of this match were carnage, as you’d expect, but Nagayo manages to lock the Scorpion Deathlock on Matsumoto. It gets broken up, Asuka comes in but she is double teamed in the corner. Nagayo is tagged back in and she kicks Yu against the ropes, she applies a submission but Matsumoto breaks it up and drags Nagayo out of the ring. Matsumoto chokes Nagayo on the apron before dragging her back into the ring but Nagayo hits a sunset flip and tags Asuka. Heel kick by Asuka to Matsumoto, but all of Gokuaku Domei jump in the ring to help. Yu stays in the ring and Asuka slams her to the mat, Asuka applies a front headlock, but Yu gets out of it and Matsumoto hits a Banzai Drop. Matsumoto throws Asuka down by her hair, but she gets close enough to the corner to tag Nagayo. Nagayo kicks Matsumoto to the mat and applies a sleeper, but Matsumoto punches her way out of it. Matsumoto bites Nagayo’s already bloody head and stabs her repeatedly with a pair of scissors. Yu gets in the ring with Nagayo slowly following and Yu bites her head before hitting a body block. Another body block by Yu and she tags in Matsumoto. Nagayo avoids Yu’s diving leg drop, but Asuka accidentally lariats Nagayo.

ajw4-3They end up out of the ring again as Nagayo is thrown into the ring post and attacked more with scissors. Yu gets in the ring as Nagayo is counted out, and Gokuaku Domei wins the first fall. It is now 1-0 for Matsumoto and Yu. A even more bloody Nagayo gets back in the ring and she hits a quick German suplex on Yu, a equally bloody Asuka gets up top and hits a missile dropkick. Double kicks by Asuka and Nagayo, and they drop Yu with a spike piledriver for the three count cover! The match is now tied at 1-1. After a moment to re-group, Nagayo kicks Yu in the leg and applies the Scorpion Deathlock with Asuka keeping watch, but Matsumoto comes in with a trash can and hits everyone with it. Asuka knocks her down and puts her in a Scorpion Deathlock, but Bull Nakano and company run in the ring help Matsumoto take back over. Piledriver by Matsumoto to Nagayo, but Nagayo gets a shoulder up. Spike piledriver to Nagayo, but Nagayo bridges out of it. Next she is hit with an assisted leg drop and a Samoan Drop, but Nagayo fires back with a heel kick to Yu. Asuka comes in and hits an avalanche backdrop suplex, but Matsumoto breaks up the cover and the rest of Gokuaku Domei comes in again. Matsumoto gets some scissors and starts cutting Nagayo’s hair (the crowd is going ballistic during this), and Matsumoto lariats Nagayo repeatedly to the mat as referee Shiro Abe gets in the ring (not the original referee but the heel referee). Another lariat by Matsumoto, she covers Nagayo and picks up the three count! Matsumoto and Yu are the new champions!

First the good – I love a good heated bloody brawl and this was certainly that. The crowd was at a fever pitch for much of the match as it just never slowed down, every time it looked like the match was going to turn down a few notches suddenly someone would be stabbed with scissors or dragged out of the ring. Nagayo is beyond amazing, she is such a sympathetic wrestler and has tons of charisma that draws you into everything she does. As for the bad, Shiro Abe was basically Gokuaku Domei’s referee, and I don’t like big title matches ending with these kind of shenanigans. It is just a cop-out to have a different referee come down and count, its not an uncommon one but it is just a tactic that I grew tied of after it was over-used in the 90s. I realize this match came well before that but it still makes the ending feel a bit cheap. Still, that is my only real complaint as it was certainly an exciting and emotional match, definitely worth a watch.  Recommended

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AJW Classics #3: Crush Gals vs. Jumping Bomb Angels https://joshicity.com/ajw-classics-3-crush-gals-vs-jumping-bomb-angels/ Sun, 17 Jan 2016 02:39:21 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=1018 Three title matches with two Crush Gals defenses!

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ajwclassics

Welcome to another review of All Japan Women’s Pro-Wrestling Classics! AJW Classics is a television program that airs on SAMURAI TV in Japan. There are several different series within the AJW Classics name, I will be reviewing the series starting with the “Retro Hour” AJW Classics that first aired on August 7th, 2007.  They are still airing to this day.

AJW Retro Hour Classics #3 features lots of Crush Gals goodness and two matches for the WWWA Tag Team Championship. Here is the full listing:

10/6/84 – WWWA World Tag Team Championship: Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo (Crush Gals) vs La Galactica and Lola Gonzalez
10/6/84 – All Japan Women’s Championship: Itsuki Yamazaki vs Yumi Ogura
1/5/85 – Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo (Crush Gals) vs Dump Matsumoto and Rosy Moreno
1/6/85 – WWWA World Tag Team Championship: Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo (Crush Gals) vs. Noriyo Tateno and Itsuki Yamazaki (Jumping Bomb Angels)

Let’s get rocking.

ajw-1
Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo (Crush Gals) vs La Galactica and Lola Gonzalez

This match is for the WWWA World Tag Team Championship and is a Two out of Three Falls Match. As I am sure most fans of wrestling are aware, the Crush Gals were one of the most popular tag teams of the 1980s in Japan, becoming pop stars on top of being fantastic wrestlers. Galactica had previously held the WWWA World Championship in AJW and was no slouch, and her tag team partner also hails from Mexico with two UWA World Women’s Champions reigns at the time of the match.

The Luchadoras attack as soon as the bell rings, and Gonzalez stays in the ring with Nagayo. This clipped ahead a bit as Nagayo is already getting beaten around the ring by both Galactica and Gonzalez, diving leg drop by Galactica and she applies a headscissors until Nagayo gets into the ropes. Dump and Yu are at ringside and help attack the Crush Gals, as the match breaks down to a significant degree. Asuka helps turn the tide, they return to the ring and Galactica is double teamed. Asuka suplexes Galactica, Nagayo is tagged in and after fighting through Gonzalez she suplexes Galactica, covering her for a three count! The Crush Gals lead the match 1-0. Nagayo goes right back at Galactica but Galactica claws her in the eyes before bringing her to the ropes so that Yu and Dump can help again. Dump ends up coming in the ring to beat Nagayo with a metal rod as the referee has lost control in typical fashion, but Nagayo gets Gonzalez up and hits a tombstone piledriver for a two count. Nagayo tags in Asuka and Asuka hits a diving elbow drop. Scorpion Deathlock by Asuka while Nagayo puts Galactica in a crab hold, but Dump and Yu run in the ring to cause carnage.

ajw3-1Nagayo is dumped out of the ring, Galactica picks up Asuka but Asuka fights off everyone while Nagayo recovers. Asuka goes for a diving lariat but hits Nagayo by accident, the Luchadoras slam Nagayo to the mat and hit a double vertical suplex. Avalanche belly to back slam, cover by Galactica and she gets the three count! The match is tied 1-1. Nagayo and Galactica stay in, but Nagayo gets away and tags Asuka. Piledriver by Asuka, Nagayo goes up top and hits a diving headbutt. Asuka is attacked by both her opponents and the ringside wrestlers while Nagayo is isolated in the ring, the Luchadoras put Nagayo in a submission hold but Nagayo doesn’t submit, so they go and get Asuka. Asuka is bleeding everywhere after being hit with scissors repeatedly, objects are being thrown in the ring as the match further breaks down. Other AJW wrestlers try to help and the ring somehow clears, Asuka tags in Nagayo and they take Gonzalez out of the ring so they can throw her into the ring post. They return to the ring with Gonzalez, punches by Nagayo and she applies the Scorpion Deathlock. Gonzalez gets out of it and goes for a move off the top, but Nagayo rolls out of the way and hits the heel kick. Another heel kick by Nagayo and Asuka runs in to give Gonzalez the giant swing. Full rotation backdrop suplex by Asuka, she covers Gonzalez and she gets the three count! The Crush Gals are still your champions.

My feelings like matches like these, watching them 30 years after they happened, are probably different from how they were viewed at the time. After watching years of nWo, whatever stable HHH is running, etc. I tend to not like matches as much that have constant outside interference. Within the context of this match it worked, the Crush Gals were fan favorites of an epic proportion and the cheating just made the crowd hate the gaijins even more, if that was possible. Then they won in the end so everyone went home happy. I enjoyed it, but just looking back at it from the current day I would have enjoyed it more with less blatant outside interference and constant interruptions in the action.  Mildly Recommended

ajw2-1  ajw2-2
(c) Itsuki Yamazaki vs Yumi Ogura

ajw3-2This match is for the AJW Championship. The AJW Championship was actually the secondary title, not the primary title, even though it is the title that originated in the promotion and is named after it. Yamazaki won the title from Lioness Asuka on February 28th, 1984 against Noriyo Tateno, but she is probably better known by most as one half of the Jumping Bomb Angels. Ogura debuted in 1983 and up to this point had not won any titles, and wrestled much later as Hyper Cat.

Yamazaki is not the hand shaking type and they get right to the point, Ogura goes for a roll-up but Yamazaki catches her arm and applies an armbar. Back up, hard elbows by Yamazaki and she applies a bodyscissors, but Ogura gets out of it and throws her to the mat. Jumping Knee by Yamazaki and she delivers a dropkick for a two count. Armdrags by Yamazaki but Ogura knees her in the midsection and hits a scoop slam. Ogura takes Yamazaki out of the ring and throws her into the chairs before returning to the ring. Yamazaki joins her and hits a dropkick followed by a scoop slam. Yamazaki gets on the second turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick, double arm overhead suplex by Yamazaki and she gets the three count! Yamazaki is still the champion.

This match was basic, I mean really basic. Even Ogura taking Yamazaki outside of the ring felt forced and only lasted about 20 seconds before the match went back to dropkicks and scoop slams. Really not much to it, Yamazaki as a champion (and a three year pro) should have been capable of doing a bit more to make the match seem more like an important title match. Limited redeemable traits, besides that Yamazaki is extremely adorable.

  rosy
Lioness Asuka and Chigusa Nagayo (Crush Gals) vs Dump Matsumoto and Rosy Moreno

This is a Two out of Three Falls Match. If the match from two months prior I just watched is any indication, this will be a bit of a brawl. The Crush Gals we discussed earlier, Matsumoto was the leader in the monster heel stable Gokuaku Domei and was the most hated wrestler in AJW. I couldn’t find much on Moreno except that she is a luchadora and clearly evil since she is teaming with Matsumoto. They appear to have a heel referee or just an extra incompetent one, just to annoy me.

As predicted just moments ago, this match is a brawl from the start as Matsumoto gets a kendo stick and starts whacking both Asuka and Nagayo with it. Asuka gets a strap and fights back with it, but the referee takes it away and Moreno knocks Asuka to the mat. Matsumoto comes in with the kendo stick and hits both Crush Gals with it, Crane Yu comes in the ring and helps Matsumoto with Nagayo. Nagayo hits a heel kick and covers Matsumoto, but the referee doesn’t count it and Nagayo is pulled out of the ring. This process continues as I am sitting here not amused. Nagayo does occasionally get in some moves as the crowd roars, but before long she is cut off by Matsumoto or another random wrestler from ringside.

ajw3-3Things suddenly turn normal for about a minute as Asuka hits Moreno with a diving elbow drop, diving headbutt by Nagayo and the referee counts to three! The Crush Gals are up 1-0. Matsumoto comes in with Nagayo, headbutts by Matsumoto and she hits a lariat followed by a piledriver. Another lariat by Matsumoto and she covers Nagayo for the three count! The score is now tied 1-1. Things get odd as they have a long discussion about something I am not aware of, but soon Matsumoto takes Asuka out of the ring with her and beats her on the floor. Back in the ring, Asuka drops Moreno with a giant swing and covers her for two. Nagayo comes in and dives out of the ring onto Matsumoto, where they grapple into the stands. Asuka goes out with Moreno too, the referee starts the count and counts out both teams, even though Asuka insists she made it back in time. I am guessing the match is a Double Countout.

So I didn’t like this. I don’t like heel referees, I don’t like lots of outside interference in matches, and I don’t like bullshit endings. I like the wrestlers, and the maybe two or three minutes of normal action was all fine as there was a lot of talent in the ring, but the constant stops and restarts just took me out of it. There would be many good Crush Gals vs. Gokuaku Domei matches, this wasn’t one of them.

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(c) Asuka and Nagayo (Crush Gals) vs. Noriyo Tateno and Itsuki Yamazaki (Jumping Bomb Angels)

This match is for the WWWA World Tag Team Championship and is a Two out of Three Falls Match. This will be a nice change of pace from everything else on this airing, as these two will have more of a traditional match. The Crush Gals are well established at this point as being crazy popular and awesome, but this is pretty early in the Jumping Bomb Angel’s successful run as this is the earliest record I could find of them having a title challenge together. Yamazaki is still the AJW Champion at this point (a title she actually won from Tateno) but she is looking here to add another title to her waist.

ajw3-4The crowd is hot for this match and appear to like both teams, although obviously they prefer the Crush Gals. Yamazaki and Nagayo start fast but don’t accomplish much before they both  tag out. We clip ahead to Asuka throwing Yamazaki around the ring before Nagayo hits a kneedrop off the top turnbuckle. Yamazaki fires back with a crossbody but Asuka hits a lariat off the top turnbuckle before slamming her in front of the corner. Yamazaki avoids the diving headbutt by Nagayo however, she kicks Nagayo out of the ring before sailing out onto her with a springboard plancha. Back in, Tateno catapults Yamazaki onto Nagayo, suplex by Yamazaki and she plants Nagayo with a piledriver for the three count! The Jumping Bomb Angels are up 1-0. We re-start with Nagayo and Yamazaki still in the ring, but Nagayo tags in Asuka who promptly suplexes Yamazaki. Tateno is tagged in and she hits a diving kneedrop, but Asuka drops her with a backdrop suplex as well. Club to the chest by Asuka and with Nagayo they hit an assisted diving elbow out of the corner. Heel kick by Nagayo on Tateno, she picks her up and nails a piledriver but Yamazaki breaks up the cover.

Missile dropkick by Asuka and she gives Tateno the giant swing for another two count. Asuka puts Tateno on the top turnbuckle and hits an avalanche backdrop suplex, and she picks up the three count! The score is tied 1-1. Time for the final fall, with both Crush Gals hitting suplexes on their opponents. The action spills to the floor, but the Crush Gals return to the ring and wait for their opponents. The Jumping Bomb Angels sneak in double sunset flips for a two count before throwing the Crush Gals into each other. Missile dropkick by Yamazaki to Asuka, but Asuka bridges out of the pin. Tateno goes up top but the missile dropkick misses, Asuka picks up Yamazaki and with Nagayo they hit a spike piledriver for a two count. Asuka tags Nagayo but Yamazaki throws her to the mat before hitting a suplex. Nagayo hits a quick enzuigiri, package German suplex by Nagayo to Yamazaki and she gets the three count! The Crush Gals retain the championship.

This unfortunately was not as good as I was hoping. The Jumping Bomb Angels had not completely gelled at this point as there were a few issues on that side of the ring, and the clipping didn’t do this match any favors as it made the already shady transitions seem even worse. When the Crush Gals were on offense the match was on point, as they were two of the better wrestlers in AJW at this point, but as a whole it was a step down from most of their ‘normal’ tag matches I have seen. Some good stuff sprinkled throughout, but too lacking in key areas to be a memorable encounter.  Mildly Recommended

The post AJW Classics #3: Crush Gals vs. Jumping Bomb Angels appeared first on Joshi City.

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