Tokyo Joshi Pro Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/tokyo-joshi-pro/ Reviews and Wrestler Profiles from Joshi Wrestling Tue, 24 Aug 2021 05:59:06 +0000 en hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.6 https://i0.wp.com/joshicity.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/logo.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Tokyo Joshi Pro Archives - Joshi City https://joshicity.com/tag/tokyo-joshi-pro/ 32 32 93679598 Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2021” Review https://joshicity.com/tokyo-joshi-pro-tokyo-princess-cup-2021-review/ Sat, 24 Jul 2021 20:44:41 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=19006 Time for the annual Tokyo Princess Cup!

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2021” Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Tokyo Princess Cup 2021 Brackets

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2021”
Dates: July 22nd to August 15th, 2021
Broadcast: Streamed on Wrestle Universe

Just about every major promotion in Japan has a marquee tournament that takes place each year and Tokyo Joshi Pro is no different. Every year, generally in late Spring to Summer, the Tokyo Princess Cup takes place with the top wrestlers (or in the case of this year, almost every wrestler) in the promotion taking part. The Tokyo Princess Cup uses the “Knockout” system, meaning it is a single elimination tournament. This year is the biggest year yet, with 23 participants! As that is clearly an odd number, some wrestlers received an automatic bye into the second round if they drew a lucky number. The bracket can be found above, here are all the participants:

You can click on the wrestler’s name above to go to their profile on Joshi City, I will be updating their profiles as well over the next month. The only TJPW wrestlers missing are Yuka Sakazaki and Sakisama, so its a pretty complete showing. Instead of reviewing the full events that contained tournament matches, I will strictly be reviewing the tournament matches themselves and then will evaluate the tournament as a whole once it completes on August 15th. Let’s get started!

First Round


Date: July 22nd, 2021

Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 142

Here are the tournament matches on this event:

  • Round 1: Arisu Endo vs. Mahiro Kiryu
  • Round 1: Moka Miyamoto vs. Raku
  • Round 1: Mirai Maiumi vs. Pom Harajuku
  • Round 1: Miyu Yamashita vs. Nao Kakuta

Arisu Endo vs. Mahiro Kiryu
Arisu Endo vs. Mahiro Kiryu

We kick off the tournament with two of the lower ranking wrestlers in Tokyo Joshi Pro. Mahiro debuted in early 2019 but has struggled to move up the card, as she has yet to win any titles or have any notable successes. Arisu Endo debuted in early 2021 and is five years younger than Mahiro, so even though Mahiro hasn’t escaped the middle tier she still clearly ranks above Arisu. This will give Mahiro a chance to show something in the second round, unless she suffers an upset.

They trade holds to start and trade wristlocks, they end up on the mat but quickly reach a stalemate and return to their feet. Headlock by Arisu but Mahiro Irish whips out of it, elbows by Arisu and she delivers a dropkick for two. Arisu goes for a sleeper but Mahiro elbows out of it, stomps by Mahiro and she throws Arisu into the corner. Irish whip by Mahiro and she hits a running elbow in the corner before covering Arisu for two. Stomps by Mahiro and she goes for a slam, but Arisu blocks it and hits an elbow. Mahiro delivers the scoop slam on her next attempt, sleeper by Mahiro but Arisu gets to the ropes for the break. Irish whip by Mahiro but Arisu dropkicks her, more dropkicks by Arisu and she elbows Mahiro into the corner. Dropkick by Arisu and she drives Mahiro’s head into the mat with her knee for a two count. Arisu goes off the ropes but Mahiro avoids her kneedrop, dropkick by Mahiro and she puts Arisu in a crab hold. Arisu gets to the ropes again, Mahiro picks her up but Arisu elbows her and the two trade blows. Knee by Mahiro but Arisu boots her back and hits a missile dropkick off the second turnbuckle for two. Camel Clutch by Arisu but Mahiro gets the break, kneedrop by Arisu and she covers Mahiro for a two count. Elbows by Arisu but Mahiro catches her with a backbreaker, but Arisu avoids the elbow drop attempt and puts Mahiro back in the Camel Clutch. Mahiro gets out of the hold and hits an elbow drop, Irish whip by Mahiro and she delivers a spinebuster for the three count! Mahiro Kiryu wins and advances in the tournament.

This was ok but a little clunky at times. Arisu of course I’ll give a pass for having some moves that didn’t look very crisp, she’s still new, but Mahiro two years into her career wasn’t as fluid as one may hope. She wasn’t bad (nor was Arisu), and they both seem to have the basics down, but the elbows and dropkicks didn’t have a lot of impact so it came across as a very “rookie” style match. Maybe Mahiro turns it on against higher ranking opponents, hopefully we’ll find out in the next round or two. Not a bad match but nothing memorable.

Raku vs. Moka Miyamoto
Moka Miyamoto vs. Raku

Next we have two more young wrestlers still looking to leave their mark in Tokyo Joshi Pro. Both of them have unique wrestling attires so I am not 100% sure what I am getting myself into, I know that Raku has some comedic elements to her matches but I am not familar enough with Moka to know her style. I’m not going into this one with any expectations, so hopefully they put together something fun.

They tie-up to start before getting into a fast exchange, Raku gets Moka to the mat and steps over her a few times before sitting on her chest for a two count. Raku picks up Moka but Moka throws her into the corner and hits a series of elbows. Raku avoids her charge and hits an elbow of her own before taking her around the ring and slamming her into each turnbuckle. Snapmare by Raku and she stands on Moka near the ropes, Raku hopes on Moka’s back and cradles her for a two count cover. Irish whip attempt by Raku but Moka blocks it, she finally gets Moka going but Moka catches her with a scoop slam. Elbows by Moka and she chops Raku in the chest, she throws Raku into the corner and hits a running elbow. Scoop slam by Moka and she covers Raku for two. Moka goes for another slam but Raku slides away and delivers a Side Russian Leg Sweep for a two count. Sleeper by Raku, but Moka drives her into the corner to break up the hold. Running elbow by Moka but Raku chops her in the throat before slamming her head into the mat. Raku gets on the second turnbuckle but Moka blocks her chop and clubs her in the back of the head. Moka applies a stretch hold but Raku gets out of it, Irish whip by Moka and she delivers a dropkick for two. Moka picks up Raku but Raku pushes her off and hits a Sling Blade. Raku waits for Moka to get up and connects with the Dr. Yellow (running neckbreaker), and she picks up the three count! Raku wins and advances in the tournament.

This was wrestled as a straight match, which is good, but I can’t see a lot of long-term potential for either of these two down the road. Nothing here was awkward or messed up but a lot of little things didn’t really connect well – the dropkicks were lackluster, the strikes didn’t pop, and even Raku’s finisher didn’t look like a finisher. Moka has been wrestling for a year now but nothing about her really jumps out, I’m sure she functions well as the “fall wrestler” in a tag match but she still seems a good ways away from getting a push of her own. A step down from the last match, it wasn’t unwatchable but it was utterly skippable.

Pom Harajuku vs. Mirai Maiumi
Mirai Maiumi vs. Pom Harajuku

The wrestlers are getting slightly more advanced as the show continues as these two are pretty solidly in the midcard of Tokyo Joshi Pro. Mirai and Pom both haven’t won any titles yet in their careers but both have 2+ years of experience so they know their way around the ring. Mirai is more of a power wrestler while Pom can lean into the comedic side of wrestling, this is just their second singles match against each other. I would assume the power wrestler would win this one, but in a tournament settings anything can happen.

Pom immediately rolls up Mirai for two as the bell rings, she bites Mirai’s arm before kicking her in the shin. Snapmare by Pom and she clubs on Mirai’s chest, quick cover but it gets two. Irish whip by Pom but Mirai reverses it, Pom goes into a roll into a headscissors but Mirai blocks it. Pom manages to apply the spinning headscissors anyway, kick by Pom and she hits an armdrag out of the corner. Pom goes for Mirai’s leg but Mirai quickly gets to the ropes, Pom tries to kick Mirai’s legs but Mirai climbs the turnbuckle to get away. That doesn’t work as Pom punches her anyway and flings her to the mat before applying a leg submission hold. Mirai gets to the ropes for the break, Pom picks her up but Mirai blocks the Irish whip. Scoop slam by Mirai, she picks up Pom and gets her to the mat before hitting a series of shoulderblocks.

Mirai clubs on Pom’s chest and stomps her, she throws Pom into the corner and hits a running elbow. Mirai charges Pom but Pom ducks out of the way, she goes off the ropes but Mirai levels her with a shoulderblock. Mirai picks up Pom and hits a scoop slam, another slam by Mirai and she covers Pom for two. Back up, the two trade strikes until Pom kicks Mirai in the lower leg. Leg drop to the leg by Pom, she goes off the ropes and dropkicks Mirai in the chest. Pom waits for Mirai to get up and knocks her into the corner, she gets on the second turnbuckle but Mirai elbows her before she can jump off. Mirai grabs Pom but Pom gets away, boot by Pom but Mirai connects with a back elbow. Running lariat by Mirai and she hits a short-range one for a two count. Mirai picks up Pom but Pom wiggles away and cradles her for two. Mirai applies the Miramare (modified armlock), Pom struggles for a moment but has to submit! Mirai Maiumi is the winner and advances in the tournament.

Even though this match was pretty basic, at least it had a story and Mirai is the most impressive wrestler we have seen so far. Mirai’s offense was really simple, lots of scoop slams and shoulderblocks, but at least she looked convincing while doing them. Pom’s lower leg based offense seemed silly at first but she was so persistent with it that I have to respect it. The match felt like it ended too suddenly as Mirai hadn’t really done anything of note to weaken the arm, I’d rather the match ended on one of her strong lariats then on a submission hold that wasn’t built up to. Still, a solid match that just could have used a little more time and an ending that fit the match.  Mildly Recommended

Miyu Yamashita vs. Nao Kakuta
Miyu Yamashita vs. Nao Kakuta

For the main event we get one of the top wrestlers in the tournament against one of the newer wrestlers to Tokyo Joshi Pro. Miyu is a Tokyo Joshi Pro OG, as she debuted on their first event in 2013. Since that time, she has won the Princess of Princess Championship three times and is one of the most dominate wrestlers in the promotion. She comes into the tournament the champion, but in her career she has never won the Tokyo Princess Cup so she is looking to finally win it in 2021. She is against Mao Kakuta, a wrestler that started in Actwres girl’Z but moved over to Tokyo Joshi Pro in late 2020. Even though she has been wrestling for six year and is 34 years old, she hasn’t really found her place yet, so getting a shocking upset win in the first round would do a lot to jump start her rise to the top.

Nao elbows Miyu during the opening handshake and the fight is on, Nao attacks Miyu in the corner and rakes her face against the top rope. Curb stomp by Nao and she covers Miyu for a one count. Nao goes for a kick but Miyu catches her boot and kicks Nao in the leg. Knee to the ribs by Miyu and she stomps Nao, Irish whip by Miyu and she kicks Nao to the mat. Knee to the midsection by Miyu and she applies an armbar, but Nao gets to the ropes for the break. Knee by Miyu and she throws Nao into the corner, but Nao kicks her back when she charges in and applies a hanging necklock over the top rope. She lets go after a moment and tries to snap Miyu’s neck on the top rope, but Miyu knocks her onto the apron and kicks her down to the floor. Nao returns after a moment but is greeted with a kick, Nao fights back with elbows but Miyu kicks her in the chest for a two count. Irish whip by Miyu but Nao reverses it, knee by Miyu and she hits a jumping lariat for two.

Miyu charges Nao in the corner but Nao moves, she slides out to the apron and pulls Miyu’s neck on the top rope before snapping her head over it. Sliding kick by Nao and she applies the Cobra Clutch, but Miyu eventually gets into the ropes for the break. Nao delivers a running boot to Miyu and she nails a modified Complete Shot, but Miyu kicks out of the cover. Nao gets Miyu on her shoulders but Miyu knees out of it, release German by Miyu and she boots Nao into the corner. High kick by Miyu and she knees Nao in the midsection, high kick by Miyu but Nao blocks Miyu’s attempt to put Nao on her shoulders. DDT by Nao and she kicks Miyu in the back of the head, slow cover by Nao but it gets a two count. Nao gets Miyu on her shoulders but Miyu blocks the TKO and delivers a Buzzsaw Kick. Crash Rabbit Heat by Miyu, and she picks up the three count! Miyu Yamashita wins the match and advances in the tournament.

It is hard for Miyu to have a bad match as her strikes are just so much fun to watch. The knees, the kicks, everything she does is on-point and she carries herself as a dominate wrestler even though she is the same size as her opponents. Nao tried to keep up but isn’t on Miyu’s level, it just felt like a Miyu match with a little Nao sprinkled in so that it wouldn’t be a short and lopsided match (although eleven minutes is rather short anyway for a main event). Nao had some decent nearfalls but none felt likely to work, and most of her runs were quickly cut off by the TJPW champion. I enjoyed it because I enjoy Miyu, but I wouldn’t say it was one of her better matches this year as it never felt like she was in serious trouble. The right result anyway, and a decent way to end the show.  Mildly Recommended

Date: July 23rd, 2021
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 142

Here are the tournament matches on this event:

  • Round 1: Kaya Toribami vs. Miu Watanabe
  • Round 1: Yuki Aino vs. Yuki Arai
  • Round 1: Marika Kobashi vs. Nodoka Tenma
  • Round 1: Hikari Noa vs. Rika Tatsumi

Miu Watanabe vs. Kaya Toribami
Kaya Toribami vs. Miu Watanabe

Day 2 begins with a match between the young Miu Watanabe vs. the rookie Kaya Toribami. Even at 21 years old, Miu has had some success early in her career as she had a long run with the Princess Tag Team Championship last year and challenged for the Princess of Princess Championship earlier this year. Kaya just debuted in June, she showed some potential in her first match so I am looking forward to seeing her again. Kaya has little chance of winning here but I’m sure she will be given a chance to impress.

Kaya and Miu trade holds to start, a battle that Kaya wins with an armdrag. Irish whip by Kaya but Miu hits a hard shoulderblock, Kaya rolls over Miu’s back and chops her in the chest. Scoop slam by Miu and she picks up Kaya, throwing her into the corner. Hard elbows by Miu to Kaya’s back, she throws Kaya to the mat and covers her for two. Miu presses Kaya’s back over her knee, Kaya returns to her feet but Miu slams her again. Miu goes off the ropes but Kaya catches her with an overhead armdrag, Kaya elbows Miu into the corner and delivers a dropkick. Irish whip by Kaya, Miu reverses it but Kaya flips over her and hits a step-up kick for two. Kaya picks up Miu and hits a fireman’s carry slam, she goes to do a springboard move but Miu grabs her and hits a gutbuster. Jumping back kick by Kaya and she hits another step-up kick, she goes to the ropes and hits a… springboard elbow drop for a two count. She goes off the ropes again and hits a springboard senton (probably what she was going for the first time) but that gets a two count as well. Irish whip by Kaya but Miu avoids the kick and chops Kaya in the chest. Giant Swing by Miu, she picks up Kaya but Kaya cradles her for two. Back kick by Kaya, she goes off the ropes but Miu slaps her in the chest. Teardrop by Miu, and she covers Kaya for the three count! Miu Watanabe wins and advances in the tournament.

Miu is a stealth beast and I love her for it, she doesn’t look imposing but she is strong and doesn’t mind tossing people around. Kaya is still a work in progress – she has some flash but isn’t crisp yet. Maybe she is a little overly ambitious but practice makes perfect and I don’t really mind wrestlers pushing the boundaries as long as they keep improving (like Saya Kamitani did). I like Miu’s offense and I appreciate Kaya’s attempts at being entertaining, the pieces aren’t all there yet for Kaya but I think Miu is the real deal and could make a big push in this tournament.

Yuki Aino vs. Yuki Arai
Yuki Aino vs. Yuki Arai

In a battle between two wrestlers with similar names, next in the tournament is Aino vs. Arai. Aino has been in Tokyo Joshi Pro since 2018 and has mostly had success in the tag division teaming with Nodoka Tenma. Arai is a newcomer to Tokyo Joshi Pro but is getting some extra attention due to also being an Idol (although from my 15 seconds of research, not a high level Idol). Aino has a significant experience edge so she should be winning here unless Arai is getting a big push due to her background.

They tie-up to start and trade wristlocks, takedown by Aino but Arai gets away and they return to their feet. Waistlock by Aino and she spins Arai back to the mat, but Arai reverses things into an armbar. Arai breaks the hold and goes off the ropes, but Aino greets her with a hard shoulderblock. Arai gets back up and the two trade elbows, Aino elbows Arai into the corner and hits a running back elbow. Snapmare by Aino and she covers Arai for two. Aino applies a chinlock but Arai gets to the ropes for the break. Aino kicks and stomps Arai and goes for a scoop slam, but Arai blocks it and applies a flash pin for two. Aino gets up angry but Arai knocks her down with a back elbow, elbows by Arai but Aino elbows her back and kicks her in the midsection.

Scoop slam by Aino and she covers Arai for a two count. Arai fights back and knocks down Aino with a back elbow, but she collapses to the mat instead of making a cover. She gets back up but Aino hits her with a shoulderblock, running senton by Aino and she applies the full nelson. Arai makes it to the ropes to force the break, Aino gets on the second turnbuckle but Arai avoids her dive and applies a sleeper. Aino attempts to elbow out of it but Arai locks it in deeper, Aino gets to her feet however and slams Arai backwards into the corner to force the break. Full nelson slam by Arai, but Aino kicks out. Aino avoids the heel drop and hits a gutwrench suplex, she applies the full nelson and Arai has to give up! Yuki Aino wins and advances in the tournament.

This is probably the first match of the tournament I’d lean more towards calling it “bad” and not just unpolished. Which it was that as well. Arai doesn’t have a lot of matches under her belt so a competitive singles match may just be too much for her right now, and Aino wasn’t able to lead her into something good. Arai’s selling was bizarre, just randomly falling to the mat to act hurt, and the offense by both was very repetitive and not interesting. I’m looking forward to seeing what Aino can do in the next round, as this wasn’t a great showing by either.

Nodoka Tenma vs. Marika Kobashi
Marika Kobashi vs. Nodoka Tenma

Moving along in the tournament, this is an interesting match. At one point a couple years ago, Nodoka looked like a rising star in the promotion when she wrestled as Nodoka-Oneesan, but after a name and image change so did her fortunes. She still is doing ok, and had a tag title run, but she hasn’t been able to break through as she continues to struggle against the top tier of Tokyo Joshi Pro. Marika Kobashi took a long break in 2019 to 2020 but returned in November and is still looking to regain her footing in the promotion. Both of these wrestlers would be helped by going further in this tournament, not sure what direction they will go.

After a quick exchange, armdrag and dropkick by Marika but Nodoka knocks her over with a hard shoulderblock. Irish whip by Nodoka and she applies a side headlock, Marika Irish whips out of it but Nodoka shoulderblocks her again for a two count. Nodoka picks up Marika and throws her into the corner, stomps by Nodoka and she knees Marika. Irish whip by Nodoka to the other corner and she hits a back elbow, scoop slam by Nodoka and she covers Marika for two. Headscissors by Nodoka but Marika gets to the ropes for the break. Irish whip by Nodoka, reversed, and Marika hits a neckbreaker followed by a dropkick. Elbows by Marika and she hits another dropkick, covering Nodoka for two. Leg drop by Marika, she picks up Nodoka and applies a front necklock.

Nodoka quickly gets out of it and hits a shoulderblock, she charges Marika in the corner but Marika moves and applies a sunset flip for two. Marika charges Nodoka but Nodoka catches her with a fallaway slam. Nodoka picks up Marika but Marika elbows her off and the two trade blows. Dropkick by Marika but Nodoka fires back with a shoulderblock, Nodoka goes for a submission but Marika quickly gets into the ropes before she can lock anything in. Elbows by Nodoka and she hits a backbreaker, she goes to the second turnbuckle and delivers a diving body press for two. Nodoka puts Marika in a chicken wing submission but Marika muscles out of it, leg lariat by Marika and she hits a tornado bulldog out of the corner. Nodoka isn’t phased and hits a Samoan Drop, Marika quickly puts her in a front necklock and keeps the hold on while rolling her back to the middle of the ring. Nodoka struggles for a moment but eventually goes unconscious and the referee calls for the bell! Marika Kobashi wins and advances in the tournament.

As a casual TJPW viewer, this feels like an upset and I’m surprised they had Nodoka lose in such a convincing fashion. Nodoka controlled much of the match, and looked good in the process as she is a really solid wrestler. Marika got in her spots but right up until the end it still felt like Nodoka’s match to win until the front necklock was locked in. The placement wasn’t great as Nodoka could have easily reached the ropes, but at least Marika rolled her back to the middle of the ring. It could have used a few more minutes as it felt like they had more to give, all the tournament matches have been on the short side. I enjoyed what they did, I’m a fan of Nodoka and they kept the match entertaining from bell to bell even if I wouldn’t have minded if they gave them more time. Mildly Recommended

Rika Tatsumi vs. Hikari Noa
Hikari Noa vs. Rika Tatsumi

Time for the main event of Day 2, and this one should be a doozy. Rika Tatsumi is a former Princess of Princess Champion and Tag Team Champion, and in her 7th year in Tokyo Joshi Pro she is among the top wrestlers in the promotion. She is against Hikari Noa of the Up Up Girls, she comes into the match the current International Princess Champion and has been gaining steam. Rika out-ranks Hikari but in a tournament there are always a few surprises and Hikari won’t go down easy.

Rika and Hikari trade waistlocks before Rika gets Hikari to the mat, they jockey for position until Hikari knocks over Rika with a dropkick. Irish whip to the corner by Hikari, reversed, Hikari flips Rika out to the apron and gives her a hard elbow. Rika falls to the mat but Hikari goes out after her, hitting an ax handle from the apron. Hikari attacks Rika around the ring and hits a scoop slam on the floor, Hikari grabs Rika and whips her into the ring post. Hikari finally slides Rika back in the ring, cover by Hikari but it gets two. Hikari grabs Rika by the hair but Rika breaks free, dropkick to the knee by Rika and she throws Hikari into the corner. Rika keeps on the knee as she stands on it in the corner before hitting a dropkick to it. Cover by Rika, but it gets two. Kicks to the leg by Rika as she stays focused on it, putting Hikari in a submission hold. Hikari crawls to the ropes to force the break, Hikari tries to fight back but Rika kicks her in the leg and hits a kneebreaker. Rika picks up Hikari but Hikari blocks the dragon screw, she goes for a dropkick but Rika swats her away. She connects however on her second dropkick attempt, another dropkick by Hikari and she quickly hits a few more. Hikari goes up top and hits a missile dropkick, cover by Hikari but it gets two.

Hikari picks up Rika and applies a Cobra Twist, she cradles Rika to the mat but it only gets a two count. Hikari goes off the ropes but Rika avoids the dropkick, she twists Hikari’s leg in the rope and hits a dragon screw. Back in the ring, another dragon screw by Rika and she applies a figure four leglock. Hikari gets to the ropes, Rika picks her up but Hikari avoids the cutter and applies a jackknife cover for two. Rika picks up Hikari, elbow by Hikari and the two trade blows. Hikari knocks Rika to her knees and goes off the ropes, but Rika catches her with a swinging backbreaker. Sleeper by Rika but Hikari gets out of it with a suplex, Hikari puts Rika in the Blue Racer but Rika gets to the ropes for the break. Back up, Rika catches Hikari’s kick and hits a dragon screw, but Hikari grabs her legs and sneaks in a cover for two. Hip attack by Rika, she picks up Hikari and hits the Dragon Twist of Fate for a two count cover. Rika goes to the top turnbuckle but Hikari recovers and joins her, Rika pushes her off but Hikari avoids the Missile Hip. Jumping lariat by Hikari, she picks up Rika and delivers a Blizzard Suplex Hold but Rika lands in the ropes and is able to break up the pin. Superkick by Hikari and she kicks Rika again, Rika avoids the next one however and kicks Hikari in the head. Dragon Twist of Fate by Rika, she goes up to the top turnbuckle and nails the Missile Hip for the three count pinfall! Rika Tatsumi wins and advances in the tournament.

Really enjoyed this match, Hikari has been killing it and is putting everything together nicely. They actually gave this match the time it needed and they used the time well, with Rika focusing on the leg while Hikari went for submissions and suplexes. The Blizzard Suplex Hold was a good nearfall with smart placement near the ropes to give Rika an easy way out, and her varied offense kept the match interesting. Rika is good as well, I think she was out-done by Hikari but she still did her part and her leg work was well varied (plus I love a good dragon screw). The best match of the tournament so far by a noticeable margin and a quality main event.  Recommended

Second Round


Date: July 24th, 2021

Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 142

With the unusual tournament structure that saw a handful of wrestlers get a bye, we are onto the second round! Here are the tournament matches on this event:

  • Round 2: Haruna Neko vs. Yuki Aino
  • Round 2: Mirai Maiumi vs. Mizuki
  • Round 2: Miyu Yamashita vs. Yuki Kamifuku

Yuki Aino vs. Haruna Neko
Yuki Aino vs. Haruna Neko

Round 2 begins with a wrestler we saw win yesterday in Yuki Aino against a wrestler that got the lucky draw into the second round. Even with my limited TJPW knowledge I am not really excited for this match as I’m not sure who is going to guide this one. Aino we just saw is a competent wrestler but can struggle if she has to take the lead, and Neko isn’t known for her in-ring prowess. Sometimes a competent wrestler and a character wrestler can pull one out that is entertaining even despite the odds, hopefully this is one of those times.

They trade hammerlocks to start, side headlock takedown by Aino but Haruna gets out of it as they trade holds on the mat. They end up back on their feet again, Haruna does the cat thing for a bit until she applies a wristlock. Aino gets out of it and hits a shoulderblock, elbows by Aino and she kicks Haruna into the corner. Back elbow by Aino and she snapmares Haruna before covering her for two. Chinlock by Aino but Haruna wiggles to the ropes to force the break, she goes for a slam but Haruna blocks it. Elbow by Aino and she hits another shoulderblock, she goes for a senton but Haruna rolls out of the way and rakes her in the eyes. Jumping neckdrop by Haruna, she throws Aino into the corner and chops her in the throat. Cat scratches follow, snapmare by Haruna and she jumps down on Aino for a two count. Irish whip by Haruna but Aino hits a jumping shoulderblock, senton by Aino and she hits a diving shoulderblock off the second turnbuckle for two. Gutwrench suplex by Aino, she picks up Haruna but Haruna spins away and schoolboys Aino for two. Handstand into a hurricanrana by Haruna, but that gets a two as well. Hard elbow by Aino but Haruna delivers a Codebreaker, front roll by Haruna but Aino kicks her back. Diving neckdrop by Haruna, but Aino kicks out of the cover. Haruna waits for Aino to get up and does a front roll into a Codebreaker attempt, but Aino catches her and slams Haruna to the mat. Bulldog by Aino, she picks up Haruna and drops her with the Venus DDT for the three count! Yuki Aino wins and advances in the tournament.

They put together a well structured match and kept the action moving, which I think is all we could have hoped for. Haruna is going to do cat things, no way around that, but most of it stayed pretty focused on the action and Haruna has a good variety of offense when she gets down to it. Both aren’t what I’d consider natural athletes, some of the movements weren’t very fluid, but overall a watchable match that didn’t do any harm.

Mizuki vs. Mirai Maiumi
Mirai Maiumi vs. Mizuki

At the 10th match of the tournament, we finally get to the Tokyo Princess Cup Legend – Mizuki. Mizuki has won this tournament the last two years so its hard not to label her as the wrestler to beat. She hasn’t had a lot of recent success outside of this tournament, but when it is Tokyo Princess Cup time, she turns it up a few notches. She is against the young Mirai Maiumi, who defeated Pom Harajuku in the 1st Round. Mirai has an uphill battle here if she wants to advance to the Quarterfinals.

Mirai gets Mizuki to the mat first but Mizuki gets better position as they go back and forth. On their feet again, wristlock by Mizuki but Mirai reverses it and applies a headlock. Mizuki drives Mirai into the corner but Mirai gets free and delivers a hard shoulderblock. Scoop slam by Mirai and she hits another one, a third scoop slam by Mirai but Mizuki bridges out of the pin and hits a dropkick. Mizuki stops on Mirai’s hand before clubbing her in the side of the head, Mizuki stomps down Mirai in the corner and mushes her with her boot. Mizuki applies a stretch hold, she releases it after a moment only to stretch Mirai’s back some more. Mirai gets to the ropes this time but Mizuki stomps on her hand, dropkick by Mizuki and Mirai falls out of the ring. Mizuki goes out to the apron and jumps off with a double footstomp. Mizuki slides Mirai back in, elbow by Mizuki but Mirai gets her back. Mizuki tries to flip away but Mirai slams her to the mat, she goes off the ropes and hits a shoulderblock. Two more shoulderblocks by Mirai, she picks up Mizuki and hits a running elbow in the corner followed by a shoulderblock for a two count.

Mirai picks up Mizuki but Mizuki blocks the suplex attempt, kick by Mirai but Mizuki swats away her dropkick and applies a crossface. Mirai gets out of it, kicks by Mizuki and she drop toeholds Mirai onto the second drop. Dropkick by Mizuki and she hits a quick footstomp, she goes to the turnbuckles but Mirai avoids the diving footstomp and drops Mizuki with a powerslam. Mirai goes for Mizuki’s arm but Mizuki quickly gets to the ropes, she picks up Mizuki and the two trade elbows. Mirai applies a modified hammerlock but Mizuki slides out of it and applies the crossface. Mirai crawls to the ropes and makes it for the break, Mizuki charges Mirai and nails the Murder Dropkick. Mizuki goes to the top turnbuckle but Mirai has recovered and elbows her, Mizuki elbows her back and goes for a diving crossbody, but Mirai moves out of the way. Miramare by Mirai but Mizuki is too close to the ropes and makes it for the break. Hard lariat by Mirai and she hits an elbow followed by a short range lariat for a two count. Mirai goes off the ropes but Mizuki catches her with a dropkick, cradle by Mizuki and she hits a footstomp for two. Mizuki grabs Mirai and hits the Cutie Special, and she picks up the three count! Mizuki wins and advances in the tournament.

I like Mirai as I enjoy hard hitting action, but two years into her career I wouldn’t mind a more varied moveset as while effective the shoulderblock isn’t the most exciting move. Love her lariats though. This felt like a real battle as between Mirai’s power and Mizuki’s speed they meshed well to put on a smart match. I actually found myself rooting for the upset, which I am not sure was the intention but Mirai fought with a lot of fire. The ending felt a little sudden as Mirai was in control shortly before the Cutie Special, but the Cutie Special is a quality move so I’ll let it slide. I wish Mirai’s power offense had a wider range and the end stretch was a little longer but an entertaining match.  Mildly Recommended

Miyu Yamashita vs. Yuki Kamifuku
Miyu Yamashita vs. Yuki Kamifuku

For the second time in this tournament, an event ends with Miyu Yamashita. Which makes sense, with Yuka Sakazaki not participating in the tournament, Miyu is their biggest draw (and the current champion). Yuki got a pass into the second round but she didn’t exactly get an easy path, as now she has to face one of the top wrestlers in the tournament. Yuki is no slouch as she is a former International Princess Champion, but she is going to have to dig deep to overcome Miyu Yamashita.

They tie-up to start, Yuki works a headlock but Miyu reverses it. Yuki pushes Miyu into the ropes but gives a clean break, kicks to the chest by Miyu and she covers Yuki for two. Miyu picks up Yuki and kicks her in the midsection, leg kick by Miyu and she finishes with a spinning kick for a two count cover. Miyu applies a Fujiwara Armbar but Yuki gets to the ropes for the break, Miyu picks up Yuki but Yuki elbows her. Handstand by Yuki but Miyu blocks her move attempt and hits a double knee gutbuster. Bodyscissors by Miyu but she lets go so she can kick Yuki in the back, another cover but again it gets two. More kicks by Miyu and she clubs Yuki in the back, knee by Miyu but Yuki kicks her away and boots Miyu in the face. Yuki sits Miyu on the top turnbuckle and boots her, Yuki charges Miyu and dropkicks her off the top turnbuckle down to the floor.

Miyu slowly gets back on the apron but Yuki promptly dropkicks her back to the floor again, Miyu returns again and Yuki quickly puts her in an Octopus Hold. Miyu gets out of it and drops Yuki to the mat, Yuki slowly returns to her feet and the two trade elbows. Miyu sends Yuki to the mat with a hard kick to the chest, knee to the stomach by Miyu but Yuki kicks her in the head. Miyu regains the advantage and delivers a head kick out of the corner, she gets Yuki on her shoulders but Yuki rakes her face and puts Miyu back in the Octopus Hold. She lets go after a moment to hit the Fameasser, she goes off the ropes but Miyu avoids her kick. Chop to the chest by Yuki and she hits a dropkick for a two count. Yuki re-applies the Octopus Hold but Miyu gets to the ropes, kick combination by Miyu but Yuki chops her. Miyu sends Yuki crashing to the mat with a head kick, cover by Miyu but Yuki barely kicks out. Miyu waits for Yuki to get up and nails the Skull Kick, cover by Miyu and she picks up the three count! Miyu Yamashita advances in the tournament.

Yuki Kamifuku is a limited wrestler, but I thought they worked well within her limitations here and put on a good show. Miyu bumped like a mad woman to make Yuki’s offense look as good as possible, and of course her kicks were on point. The repeated use of the Octopus Hold was a little excessive, and Yuki’s strikes aren’t too convincing, but everything else was well put together and the match felt like it went the right amount of time considering the structure of it. Not quite as good as the last match but still solid, as Miyu showed why she is one of the best on the Joshi scene.  Mildly Recommended

Date: July 25th, 2021
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 142

The completion of the second round! Here are the tournament matches on this event:

  • Round 2: Mahiro Kiryu vs. Suzume
  • Round 2: Maki Itoh vs. Raku
  • Round 2: Marika Kobashi vs. Shoko Nakajima
  • Round 2: Hyper Misao vs. Rika Tatsumi

Mahiro Kiryu vs. Suzume
Mahiro Kiryu vs. Suzume

Suzume has finally entered the tournament, as she was one of the wrestlers that get a bye into the second round. The popular young wrestler faces Mahiro Kiryu, who defeated Arisu Endo in the First Round. Suzume has the slight experience edge over Mahiro, but they are close enough in ranking that either wrestler could pick up the win here.

Side headlock by Mahiro but Suzume takes her to the mat, they jockey for position but end up in a stalemate. Irish whip by Suzume but Mahiro shoulderblocks her down, both wrestlers go off the ropes and Suzume delivers a dropkick. Suzume throws Mahiro into the corner and elbows her, but Mahiro switches positions with her and returns the favor. Running elbow by Mahiro in the corner and she hits a scoop slam, elbow drop by Mahiro and she covers Suzume for two. Armbar by Mahiro but Suzume gets into the ropes for the break, double knee to Suzume’s back and Mahiro covers her for a two count. Mahiro picks up Suzume but Suzume quickly schoolboys her, Mahiro goes off the ropes but Suzume connects with a running elbow. More elbows by Suzume and she hits a dropkick, Suzume throws Mahiro into the corner but Mahiro avoids her charge.

Suzume boots Mahiro back, sleeper by Suzume but Mahiro drives her into the corner to break it up. Suzume goes to the top turnbuckle but Mahiro elbows her before she can jump off, Suzume ends up hanging off the turnbuckles and Mahiro dropkicks her in the back. Crab hold by Mahiro but Suzume crawls to the ropes to force the break, Mahiro picks her up but Suzume pushes her off and hits a headscissors. Face crusher by Suzume out of the corner, she waits for Mahiro to get up but Mahiro avoids the cutter attempt and hits a sidewalk slam. Mahiro picks up Suzume but Suzume blocks the slam attempt and applies a few flash pins for two counts. Suzume pushes Mahiro to create some space and charges in, delivering the Ring a Bell (modified cutter) for the three count! Suzume wins and advances in the tournament.

These two didn’t break any new ground with this match but it will still pretty well worked with a good flow to it. I’ve mentioned match length a few times in this review but this one being short was fine – they are less experienced wrestlers still honing their craft so putting on a tight eight minute match was a smart way to go. Suzume shows a lot of potential, she is small but connects well with the crowd and has solid execution. Too basic to get excited about but a good way to kick off the tournament portion of the event.

Maki Itoh vs. Raku
Maki Itoh vs. Raku

Maki Itoh also got a bye into the second round, she faces off against Raku from the Up Up Girls. I can’t fathom a scenario that Itoh would lose here, as she is one of the most popular wrestlers in Tokyo Joshi Pro and Raku is a mediocre midcarder with limited long-term upside. So even though I am all for upsets, a swerve just for the sake of a swerve is generally a bad idea so an Itoh win here is a pretty safe bet.

Raku applies a waistlock but Itoh easily gets out of it and they trade wristlocks until Raku gets Itoh to the mat. Itoh gets out of her grasp and they return to their feet, Itoh starts acting a little crazy which confuses Raku, giving Itoh a chance to club her to the mat. Itoh throws Raku into the corner and shoulder tackles her in the back, Irish whip by Itoh and she scoop slams Raku for a two count. Itoh puts Raku in the ropes and stretches her, running elbow by Itoh and she covers Raku for another two. Chinlock by Itoh and she switches it to a single leg crab hold, but Raku gets to the ropes for the break. Itoh goes for an Irish whip but Raku blocks it, back elbow by Raku and she hits a few more before dropkicking Itoh off her feet. Raku runs over Itoh and rolls over top of her for a two count. Raku goes off the ropes but Itoh catches her with a sleeper and hits a backbreaker.

Raku elbows Itoh but Itoh elbows her back and the two trade blows. Raku wins the battle but Itoh blocks the leg sweep, face crusher by Raku and she hits a jumping neckdrop. Raku charges Itoh but Itoh moves and delivers an elevated DDT. Raku quickly applies a few flash pins but Itoh kicks out of each, sleeper by Raku but Itoh drives her back into the corner to break it up. Raku gets on the second turnbuckle and tries to chop Itoh in the head, but Itoh’s head is too hard. Raku chops Itoh in the face but Itoh headbutts her and hits a DDT for a two count. Itoh grabs Raku and puts her in the crab hold, Raku almost makes it to the ropes but Itoh pulls her back to the middle of the ring and applies the Itoh Punish (elevated crab hold). Raku struggles for a moment but submits! Maki Itoh wins and advances in the tournament.

Itoh is certainly a character. She isn’t a high-end technician but she makes up for it by being unique, although not everyone appreciates her uniqueness. I like her fine, although I can understand those that don’t as she definitely blurs the line between comedy and serious wrestling within the same match. She gets away with it as she is charismatic, but I am not sure if she’ll ever reach the top level of Tokyo Joshi Pro. Raku hung in there which is all you can hope for, and generally the match was good (although not great). The right result and a decent watch all things considered.  Mildly Recommended

Shoko Nakajima vs. Marika Kobashi
Marika Kobashi vs. Shoko Nakajima

As far as experience goes, Shoko Nakajima has the clear advantage in this match-up. Shoko debuted for Tokyo Joshi Pro very early in their existence, back in mid-2013, and in 2019 she had a run as the Princess of Princess Championship. She is against the young Marika Kobashi, who defeated Nodoka Tenma to get here but ranks quite a bit below Shoko in the pecking order. If Marika is going to win here, its going to take another upset like she had in the first round of the tournament.

Marika dropkicks Shoko before the match starts, small packages by Marika but each gets a two count. Marika applies a grounded necklock but Shoko muscles out of it with a suplex for a two count cover. Shoko puts Marika in the ropes and hits a 619, Shoko applies a submission but Marika gets a foot on the ropes for the break. Dropkick by Shoko, she picks up Marika but Marika avoids her dropkick attempt and hits a leg lariat. Shoko recovers first but Marika elbows her, hurricanrana by Shoko but Marika reverses the cover into her own two count before quickly applying the grounded necklock. Shoko slams her into the corner to get out of it, strikes by Marika but Shoko hits a back bodydrop. Shoko goes off the ropes but Marika applies the grounded necklock once again until Shoko shakes her off. Shoko drapes Marika over the second rope and hits a DDT, Shoko puts Marika in the ropes but Marika avoids the 619 and hits a dropkick. Marika applies the…. you guessed it, grounded necklock but Shoko wiggles to the ropes and gets there for the break. Marika picks up Shoko but Shoko pushes her off, DDT by Shoko and she delivers the Northern Lights Suplex Hold for the three count! Shoko Nakajima is the winner and advances in the tournament.

I’m a big fan of Shoko but there wasn’t much to this one. While I respect that Marika obviously felt the grounded necklock was her only path to victory, as a fan I would have liked a little more variety to her offense. Something to weaken up Shoko so it wasn’t the same submission move four times in a five minute match. Shoko put away Marika pretty easily when she got back in control, which is fine, but if a match is this short I’d prefer it be more of a sprint. Perfectly watchable but nothing memorable and the match layout wasn’t my favorite.

Hyper Misao vs. Rika Tatsumi
Hyper Misao vs. Rika Tatsumi

Time for the main event and the final match of Round 2! Rika Tatsumi is a former Princess of Princess Champion (she lost the title in May) and has really improved over the last year as she has fought to the top tier of the promotion. Hyper Misao has had a very interesting career as she is mostly a midcarder but has moments of being in major storylines. She has comedy elements to her character but can put on quality in-ring matches as well, so she has a lot going on. Rika Tatsumi is one of the favorites to win the tournament but Hyper Misao is the type of wrestler that can pull of a big upset at any time.

They get right into it as they trade holds, Rika gets the early advantage but Misao evens things out and they end up back on their feet. They trade waistlocks, Rika starts on Misao’s leg, Misao returns to her feet however and hits a footstomp onto Rika’s back. DDT by Misao and she applies an elevated armbar, but Rika gets into the ropes for the break. Stomps by Misao, she throws Rika into the corner and yanks on her arm. Arm snaps by Misao and she throws Rika to the other corner, but Rika avoids her charge and drops her onto the apron. Misao snaps Rika’s arm over the top rope a few times before elbowing her in the back, she whips Rika to the mat and twists her arm before hitting a leg drop on it. Rika fights back with elbows but Misao catches her when she runs in and drops her onto her knee. Charging back elbow by Misao, and she covers Rika for two. Misao stays in control on the mat but Rika snapmares her and hits a quick hip attack. Irish whip by Rika to the corner and she hits a running hip attack, she goes to the second turnbuckle and delivers a diving one for a two count. She goes for the figure four, Misao pushes her off but Rika levels her with a sliding hip attack.

This gives her time to apply the figure four leglock, but Misao is able to get to the ropes for the break. Rika wraps Misao’s leg in the ropes but Misao avoids her dropkick attempt, Misao charges Rika and knees her hard in the back. This sends Rika out of the ring, Misao kicks Rika through the ropes and follows with a diving crossbody off the second rope down to the floor. Misao slides Rika back in but Rika grabs her leg and hits a dragon screw through the ropes. Rika goes back to the apron with Misao but Misao blocks the Dragon Twist of Fate, they trade elbows until Misao Irish whips Rika into the ring post. Misao picks up Rika and goes back into the ring, applying a front necklock before hitting a hanging Final Cut for a two count. Misao goes to the top turnbuckle but Rika recovers and elbows her before she can jump off. Dragon Twist of Fate by Rika, she picks up Misao but Misao puts her in a headlock. Misao goes for the crossface chickenwing and gets it locked in, but Rika breaks free and applies the Dragon Sleeper. Rika rips off Misao’s mask as Misao manages to get to the ropes, she puts it back on and then blocks Rika’s kick before applying La Magistral for two. Sliding back elbow by Misao but Rika fires back with a hip attack, jumping head kick by Rika but Misao avoids the Dragon Twist of Fate. She goes for a flash pin but Rika quickly applies a Japanese Leg Roll Clutch Hold for the three count! Rika Tatsumi wins and advances in the tournament.

I think this match was a small step below Hikari Noa vs. Rika Tatsumi, but still was damn entertaining. Misao is a stealthy really good (maybe even great) wrestler, everything she did here was on point. If anything I think her super hero gimmick holds her back a bit as its not a Champion Gimmick, but it wasn’t the focus of this match as they went right at it. Even her mask coming off didn’t come across as a big deal, she has been mask-less before, so I don’t see that as a big focal point of the match. Both had good strategies with the limb work and had a wide variety of ways to attack said limbs so it never got boring. There were some transition issues that very slightly irked me, such as Rika going right back on offense after Misao’s dive out of the ring and after her Final Cut, as I think big moves should get a little time to breath and be meaningful. And while the limb work was good I wouldn’t have minded if it impacted the ending in some way. But overall it was a fun match with solid action from bell to bell, a really good effort by both to end the second round.  Recommended

Quarter Finals


Date: July 31st, 2021

Location: Shinjuku FACE in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 226

Regular tournament setup from here on out, no more byes. Onto the Quarter Finals! Here are the tournament matches on this event:

  • Quarter Final: Maki Itoh vs. Suzume
  • Quarter Final: Miu Watanabe vs. Yuki Aino
  • Quarter Final: Rika Tatsumi vs. Shoko Nakajima
  • Quarter Final: Miyu Yamashita vs. Mizuki

Maki Itoh vs. Suzume
Maki Itoh vs. Suzume

We kick off the Quarter Finals with this interesting match. Suzume and Yuki Aino are probably the least likely to win the tournament of the wrestlers left, so Maki Itoh got a lucky draw here as she does come in the favorite. Suzume is only 22 and is not quite two years into her career, so even getting this far is an accomplishment. Should be the usual Maki mixture of goofy, funny, hard hitting, and serious that we have grown to know and love.

Suzume dropkicks Maki before the match starts while she is doing her singing, establishing herself as the heel in the match. Another dropkick by Suzume and she quickly covers Maki for a two count. She goes for a third but Maki avoids it, she goes for a slam but Suzume lands on her feet and dropkicks Maki out of the ring. Suzume goes out after her and clubs her in the back, Suzume rolls Maki back in but Maki kicks Suzume as she gets on the apron. Back out to the floor, ax handle by Maki and she throws Suzume into the ring post. DDT by Maki on the floor, Maki gets back in the ring with Suzume slowly following. Stomps by Maki and she covers Suzume for two. Scoop slam by Maki and she hits a second one followed by a third, cover by Maki but it gets a two count. Suzume tries to fight back but Maki puts her in a sleeper, she pulls back on Suzume’s neck but Suzume makes it to the ropes for the break. Maki picks up Suzume but Suzume blocks the Irish whip, elbows by Maki but Suzume elbows her back and hits a running back elbow. More elbows by Suzume and she covers Maki for a two count. Suzume picks up Maki and throws her into the corner, running elbow by Suzume and she goes up to the top turnbuckle. Maki avoids her diving body press however, she goes for Suzume’s legs but Suzume pushes her away and hits a headscissors.

Maki falls out of the ring, Suzume goes up top and dives out with a crossbody down to the floor. Suzume slides Maki back in, cover by Suzume but it gets two. Suzume applies a sleeper, Maki struggles but eventually makes it to the ropes for the break. Suzume charges Maki but Maki holds down the top rope, sending Suzume out to the apron. Maki immediately grabs her and drapes her legs over the second rope, delivering a DDT back into the ring. Maki throws Suzume into the corner and sits on the turnbuckles, elbow by Maki and she hits a headbutt. Maki dives off the turnbuckles but Suzume catches her with a cutter, they trade elbows as they return to their feet until Suzume gets Maki back down to the mat. Suzume picks up Maki but Maki headbutts her and snaps off a DDT. Maki goes to the top turnbuckle but Suzume avoids the diving headbutt, face crusher off the ropes by Suzume and she covers Maki for a two count. Suzume waits for Maki to get up but Maki avoids the Ring a Bell, Suzume goes for a few flash pins but each gets a two count. Dropkick by Suzume, she waits for Maki to get up but Maki blocks the Ring a Bell again. Maki rolls Suzume to the mat and puts her in the crab hold, she drags Suzume to the middle of the ring and applies the Itoh Punish. Suzume struggles for a moment but has to tap out! Maki Itoh wins and advances in the tournament.

They certainly tried to bring the drama since it was a tournament match, but at the end of the day it really had the setup of any veteran vs. young underdog match. Suzume got in most of the offense and looked good, she has quite a spark to her, but Itoh winning with a modified crab hold while doing little to set it up just made Suzume look way out of her league. Which maybe she is, but for a big Quarter Finals match I wouldn’t have minded a little more drama at the end instead of Maki Itoh getting the quick win. That being said, there was no comedy here as Itoh was focused on the win, which did make the match feel important and showed that she saw Suzume as a threat. An enjoyable match, I just wish that the ending was a little more flushed out instead of going straight to the submission win.  Mildly Recommended

Miu Watanabe vs. Yuki Aino
Miu Watanabe vs. Yuki Aino

This the only Quarter Finals match that doesn’t have a former (or current) singles champion involved. Miu seems to be on the cusp of breaking out, she lost in a close title match against Rika Tatsumi earlier this year and had a long run with the tag team titles in 2020. Yuki Aino has also had tag team success but doesn’t have the in-ring talents that Miu does, so to most she’d be considered the underdog here. Still, with two rising stars its hard to know what direction the promotion will go, should be a close match.

Miu gets Yuki to the mat early in an armbar, Yuki Irish whips out of it but Miu hits an armdrag followed by a hard shoulderblock. Elbows by Miu in the corner and she stretches Yuki over her knee, focusing her offense on the back. Yuki pushes Miu away and knocks her to the mat, she kicks Miu into the corner before hitting a running elbow. Yuki turns Miu around and delivers a running elbow to her lower back, snapmare by Yuki and she covers Miu for two. Chinlock by Yuki but Miu gets into the ropes for the break, snapmare by Yuki and she applies a stretch hold. Miu gets to the ropes again, running senton by Yuki and she covers Miu for two. Yuki picks up Miu and hits a scoop slam, elbow by Yuki but Miu picks her up and hits a backbreaker. Miu gets Yuki on her shoulder but Yuki slides away, armdrag by Miu and she hits a body avalanche in the corner. Hard shoulderblock by Miu, she goes for Yuki’s legs but Yuki flips her and hits a senton.

Yuki gets on the second rope and hits a reverse splash, but Miu kicks out of the cover. Yuki picks up Miu but Miu blocks a suplex attempt, Yuki gets the Full Nelson locked in but Miu gets into the ropes for the break. Miu gets away from Yuki and throws her into the corner, but Yuki elbows her when she charges in. Yuki gets on the second turnbuckle but Miu grabs her, bringing her back into the ring and giving her the Giant Swing. Miu picks up Yuki and hits a backbreaker over her shoulder, cover by Miu but Yuki barely kicks out. Miu grabs Yuki but Yuki applies a headlock before dropping Miu with a bulldog. Yuki pulls Miu out to the apron and nails a reverse DDT, she pulls Miu back into the ring and goes for another one but Miu snapmares out of it. Gutwrench suplex by Yuki, she picks up Miu but Miu blocks the double underhook. Hard shoulderblock by Yuki but Miu hits a series of hammer blows, Tear Drop by Miu and she covers Yuki for the three count! Miu Watanabe wins and advances in the tournament.

My thoughts on the match may be a little biased as Miu is the type of wrestler I tend to naturally like, but this was a quality match. Miu is a mini-hoss, she isn’t very tall but she has a lot of power and uses it to implement a wide variety of back-focused offense. Yuki did her part as well, even if it felt like Miu stayed in control and Yuki was just doing her best to keep up. The reverse DDT on the apron probably wasn’t necessary as Miu recovered pretty quickly, but it did give the fans a moment to think maybe Yuki could pick up the upset. The ending felt a little sudden as Yuki had finally strung a few moves together, but Miu had done enough offense up to that point that it wasn’t completely out of thin air. Pretty entertaining and I am glad to see Miu continue in the tournament.  Recommended

Shoko Nakajima vs. Rika Tatsumi
Rika Tatsumi vs. Shoko Nakajima

The next match is a big one, as two former champions collide. Rika Tatsumi held the Princess of Princess Championship for four months earlier in 2021, and prior to that was a tag team champion. Shoko held the Princess of Princess Championship back in 2019 for six months, but since then she has not gotten another match for the title. Winning this tournament would be the easiest way to finally get herself another title shot, as she has fallen in the pecking order a bit since then. Rika is always a threat however and also did not get a re-match when she lost the title, so both have an argument for getting another chance at the gold.

Tie-up to start, they trade holds until Shoko gets Rika to the mat but Rika gets away and both wrestlers return to their feet. Side headlock by Shoko but Rika reverses it, Irish whip by Shoko but Rika hits a hard shoulderblock. Both wrestlers go off the ropes until Shoko hits an armdrag followed by a dropkick. Shoko throws Rika into the corner but Rika reverses the Irish whip, Rika trips up Shoko in the corner and starts working on the leg. Shoko gets into the ropes to get a break, Rika picks her up and throws her back into the corner. Rika twists Shoko’s leg in the middle rope but after she lets go, Shoko switches positions with her and hits a series of elbows. Shoko charges Rika but Rika moves and immediately goes back to Shoko’s leg. Rika pulls Shoko’s leg around the post and slams her knee into it, she then gets on the apron and dropkicks Shoko’s leg into the ring post. Rika slides Shoko back in but Shoko dropkicks her as she enters and sails out onto Rika with a tope suicida. Shoko slides Rika back into the ring and goes to the top turnbuckle, but Rika recovers and elbows her. Dragon screw by Rika while Shoko is sitting on the top turnbuckle, she then grabs Shoko’s leg and twists it again before applying the figure four leglock.

Shoko quickly gets to the ropes to force the break, but Rika stays on Shoko and gets the hold re-applied. Shoko manages to reverse the hold so Rika grabs the rope to break it up, 619 by Shoko but Rika elbows her and the two trade blows. Rika charges Shoko but Shoko hits a dropkick, bulldog by Shoko but Rika puts her on the top turnbuckle and applies a Dragon Sleeper. She lets go after a moment and hits a hanging reverse Dragon Twist of Fate, she goes for a regular Dragon Twist of Fate but Shoko blocks it and applies a Northern Lights Suplex Hold for two. Shoko flips Rika into the ropes and hits the 619 again, she goes for another suplex but Rika blocks it and hits a backbreaker. Sleeper by Rika but Shoko blocks it when she goes for the Dragon Sleeper and hits a neckbreaker. Shoko sits Rika on the top turnbuckle and joins her, but Rika pushes her back and hits a diving hip attack. Rika goes back up top but Shoko avoids the Missile Hip and schoolboys Rika for two. Hurricanrana by Shoko but Rika nails her with a hip attack, jumping head kick by Rika and she applies the sleeper. Dragon Sleeper by Rika but Shoko rolls out of it and hits a suplex. Double arm DDT by Shoko, she goes to the top turnbuckle and nails the Diving Senton for the three count! Shoko Nakajima is the winner and advances in the tournament!

One common theme during this tournament is the wrestler having limb work done on them makes no effort whatsoever to acknowledge it at any point. I don’t know if its a Tokyo Joshi Pro thing or due to the time constraints in the tournament, but they really take it to the next level. Generally I am pretty forgiving about such things, I don’t expect wrestlers to sell every move for the rest of the match, but here it was the focus of Rika’s offense. Even after dropkicking Shoko’s leg into the ring post, which is a pretty notable move, literally ten seconds later Shoko was running around the ring to hit a tope suicida and at no point after did she sell her leg unless it was actively in a move. Just an unforced error that is easily fixed with an occasional leg shake or leg holding. Anyway, if I put that rant aside, this was a pretty good match otherwise. Both wrestlers have fun offense and everything felt like it was done with a purpose as there was no wasted effort. The action was smooth and Shoko looked great as always when in control (not as great with limb selling), maybe she will win this tournament and finally get her rematch. A solid match that was just hurt by Rika’s leg work not being more respected.  Mildly Recommended

Miyu Yamashita vs. Mizuki
Miyu Yamashita vs. Mizuki

Time for the main event, as the Princess of Princess Champion faces off against Ms. Princess Cup. Mizuki has never held the top title in Tokyo Joshi Pro but she has won the last two Tokyo Princess Cups, so until someone knocks her off she remains the favorite as far as I am concerned. Miyu Yamashita is the Ace of Tokyo Joshi Pro, a three time Princess of Princess Champion and the current champion going into the match. On paper, Miyu outranks Mizuki in the promotion but tournament settings are different than the real world. This is the biggest match of the tournament so far, as something has to give.

Snapmare by Miyu to start but Mizuki hits one of her own, she goes for a quick cradle but Miyu kicks out. Dropkick by Mizuki and Miyu rolls out of the ring, Mizuki goes to the top turnbuckle but Miyu jumps up to the apron and grabs Mizuki. Mizuki slides away but Miyu throws her into the ring post, sending Mizuki down to the floor. Jumping knee by Miyu off the apron to the floor, she gets back in the ring with Mizuki slowly following. Double knee gutbuster by Miyu and she applies a bodyscissors, she switches it to a sleeper but lets go so she can knee Mizuki in the stomach. Mizuki gets back to her feet but Miyu knocks her back to the mat and hits a tornado kneedrop for two. Mizuki goes off the ropes but Miyu drops her with a gutbuster, but Mizuki bridges out of the pin and hits a missile dropkick. Miyu ends up against the ropes so Mizuki nails the Murder Dropkick, Mizuki goes to the top turnbuckle but Miyu avoids her crossbody attempt. Corner springboard kick by Miyu out of the corner, but her cover gets two. Miyu picks up Mizuki and hits a neckbreaker, she puts Mizuki in the Anaconda Vice but Mizuki gets out of it and applies a crossface. Miyu struggles back to her feet but Mizuki gets her back down, Miyu inches to the ropes and eventually makes it to force the break.

Mizuki goes to the top turnbuckle but Miyu kicks her before she can jump off, Miyu joins Mizuki and tries to get her on her shoulders but Mizuki blocks it and elbows Miyu into the Tree of Woe. Miyu gets back up but Mizuki elbows her down again and delivers a diving footstomp to her chest. Miyu ends up on the apron but Mizuki grabs her from inside the ring and hits a crossbody through the ropes, sending Miyu to the floor. Mizuki then gets on the top turnbuckle and nails a diving footstomp down to the floor, Mizuki slides Miyu back in and covers her for two. Mizuki picks up Miyu but Miyu delivers a head kick, more kicks by Miyu but Mizuki elbows her back as they trade blows. Miyu goes off the ropes but Mizuki elbows her, Mizuki goes for a cradle but Miyu blocks it and hits a German suplex hold for two. Head kick by Miyu, she goes to get a running start but Mizuki grabs her leg to stop her. Miyu kicks her off and boots her into the corner, jumping knee by Miyu and she delivers an Attitude Adjustment for two. Miyu goes for a head kick but Mizuki ducks it, cradle by Mizuki and she hits a footstomp for two. Suplex by Mizuki, she goes to the top turnbuckle and delivers the diving footstomp. Cutie Special by Mizuki, and she holds down Miyu for the three count! Mizuki wins and advances in the tournament!

One benefit of the styles of these two is we didn’t have to worry about ignored limb work as Miyu is all about kicks and gutbusters while Mizuki enjoys suplexes and footstomps. Much easier to manage. This match was enjoyable but it felt like they needed a few more minutes, as it was still a pretty back-and-forth match when it ended and it didn’t have a hot ending segment that you’d expect from the main event between wrestlers of their skill levels. The action was really solid though, Miyu is great and Mizuki rises to the occasion when needed. Her offense is more “soft” than Miyu but the diving footstomp is hurt-y no matter who is doing it, so I was glad she stepped it up a bit so she didn’t seem out-gunned. The champion going out this early is a surprise but that’s what happens when you run into Mizuki early, with Mizuki’s past success it looks like she is destined for at the least the Finals. Overall an enjoyable and hard hitting match, only thing holding it back was just the fact it felt a little incomplete for a match of this caliber.  Recommended

Semi Finals

Date: August 14th, 2021
Location: Tokyo Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 437

Time for the Semi Finals! Here are the tournament matches on this event:

  • Semi Final: Miu Watanabe vs. Shoko Nakajima
  • Semi Final: Maki Itoh vs. Mizuki

Shoko Nakajima vs. Miu Watanabe
Miu Watanabe vs. Shoko Nakajima

Even though this is not the big match of the Semi Finals, hence why it is going first, I am still excited for it. Miu is only 21 years old but is a talented mini hoss and is my favorite young wrestler in the promotion. Getting this far in the tournament is a success for her, and while I give her little chance of winning here she should still put on a fight. Shoko is a former Princess of Princess Champion and is attempting to win the tournament to finally get her rematch for the title which she never got after losing it two years ago.

Shoko works a headlock to start but Miu Irish whips out of it, they go through a fast exchange until Miu drops Shoko with a hard shoulderblock. Miu puts Shoko in the corner and elbows her repeatedly in the back, backbreaker by Miu and she presses Shoko down over her knee. Miu applies a waistlock but Shoko jumps through the ropes to get out of the hold and snaps Miu over the second rope. Shoko clubs Miu and puts her in a headscissors before slamming Miu’s head into the mat. Miu gets into the ropes for the break, Shoko throws Miu into the corner and delivers a dropkick. Shoko catapults Miu up into the bottom rope, cover by Shoko but it gets a two count. Shoko knees Miu in the back of the head a few times before applying a stretch hold, but Miu muscles out of it. Miu picks up Shoko but Shoko elbows away and hits a quick suplex, she re-applies the hold as she twists up Miu. Miu gets into the ropes again for the break, she goes for the Northern Lights Suplex but Miu blocks it and slams Shoko to the mat. Hard shoulderblock by Miu and she hits a body avalanche in the corner, which she follows with another shoulderblock. Miu goes to pick up Shoko but Shoko kicks her back, Shoko grabs Miu but Miu elbows her off.

Shoko returns fire as the two trade blows, dropkick by Shoko but Miu doesn’t go down and hits a powerslam. Miu picks up Shoko and gets her on her shoulder, but Shoko slides away and hits a Northern Lights Suplex. Shoko goes to the top turnbuckle but Miu avoids the diving senton attempt, she goes for a hurricanrana but Miu catches her. Shoko applies a front guillotine but Miu gets out of it and swings Shoko around in the Giant Swing. Miu picks up Shoko but Shoko pushes her off and drops Miu on the second rope. She goes for the 619 but Miu moves and clubs Shoko in the chest, she then muscles Shoko up and hits a single shoulder backbreaker for a two count. Miu gets Shoko back up again in a backbreaker, Shoko flips out of it but Miu clubs her in the chest for a two count. Miu picks up Shoko but Shoko hits a back bodydrop, Miu clubs Shoko but Shoko snaps off a hurricanrana. Locomotion-Style Northern Light Suplex Hold by Shoko, and she picks up the three count! Shoko Nakajima wins and advances to the Finals.

Even though I never doubted the winner here, I still came out of it impressed by Miu. I wouldn’t say this was the most cohesive match as at times it came across as random offense with iffy transitions, but Miu’s work on Shoko’s back was solid and she has a nice variety of offense. It really felt more like a Miu match than a Shoko match, as her offense and comeback spots were more interesting (and that’s coming from someone that likes Shoko as well). The action was very smooth through with no miscommunications, and they kept it interesting from bell to bell. I wouldn’t have minded if Shoko had a bit more of a clear game plan but still an enjoyable and easy watch.  Mildly Recommended

Mizuki vs. Maki Itoh
Maki Itoh vs. Mizuki

For the main event of the show, the popular Maki Itoh goes against the unstoppable Mizuki. As I have mentioned a few times, Mizuki has won the tournament the last two years so even though she has never held the top title in the promotion, she is the one to beat. Maki Itoh hasn’t held the top championship in Tokyo Joshi Pro either but has a slew of fans that would love to see her reach the Finals. Mizuki is likely still the favorite, but neither of these two would be a bad choice to go for the tournament win tomorrow.

They tie-up to start, Maki pushes Mizuki into the ropes and elbows her instead of giving a clean break. Mizuki returns the favor and the two trade blows, Maki grabs Mizuki and tosses her out of the ring. Maki goes out after her and shoulder tackles her into the apron, she then removes part of the mat on the floor. She goes to slam Mizuki on the exposed floor but Mizuki blocks it, so Maki throws her into the guardrail instead. Maki slides Mizuki back into the ring, cover by Maki but it gets a two count. Maki twists up Mizuki in the ropes and elbows her in the back, cover by Maki but Mizuki bridges out of it and hits a footstomp to her back. Mizuki applies a stretch hold, she lets go after a moment but Maki drops her with a face crusher. Maki goes to the second turnbuckle but Mizuki avoids her diving headbutt, which hurt Maki even more than usual as she came into the match with a previously broken face. Mizuki comes out after Maki and slides her back in, cover by Mizuki but it gets a two count. Mizuki picks up Maki and throws her face-first into the corner, running boot by Mizuki and she dropkicks Maki in the back. Diving footstomp by Mizuki, and she covers Maki for a two count. Mizuki stands up Maki on the apron, she then gets a running start in the ring and hits a crossbody between the ropes. Mizuki goes for a diving footstomp off the apron but Maki moves, they both trade slam attempts until Maki successfully slams Mizuki on the previously exposed floor.

Maki slides Mizuki back in, Mizuki pushes Maki into the corner but Maki grabs her and delivers a Tornado DDT. Cover by Maki, but it gets a two count. Maki goes to pick up Mizuki but Mizuki cradles her, Mizuki goes for a few more flash pins but Maki won’t stay down. Murder Dropkick by Mizuki, Maki lands outside the ring, Mizuki goes to the top turnbuckle but Maki recovers and gets back on the apron. Maki grabs Mizuki and DDTs her onto the apron, Maki puts Mizuki in the crab hold but Mizuki gets to the ropes for the break. Maki goes to the top turnbuckle but Mizuki joins her, hitting a superplex to the mat. Cover by Mizuki, but it gets a two count. Mizuki puts Maki across the ropes in the corner and hits a double footstomp, she goes back to the top turnbuckle but Maki avoids the diving footstomp. Tornado DDT by Maki, she goes to the top turnbuckle and nails the Diving Kokeshi to Mizuki’s back. Cover by Maki, but Mizuki gets a shoulder up. Maki grabs Mizuki and puts her in the Itoh Punish, but Mizuki makes it to the ropes for the break. Maki grabs Mizuki by the wrist and elbows her in the face, but Mizuki fights back and the two trade elbows. Maki headbutts one of Mizuki’s elbow strikes, but Mizuki quickly hits a Cutie Special for a two count. Mizuki picks up Maki but Maki headbutts her, Maki puts Mizuki in the Itoh Deluxe and Mizuki has no choice but to submit! Maki Itoh wins and advances to the Finals!

I think I am finally starting to understand Maki Itoh. Sometimes you have to watch a wrestler within a well told story to get what they are all about, and this tournament has helped me appreciate Itoh and what she brings to the table. She isn’t the best in-ring wrestler, nor has the most “potential,” nor shows off the flashiest moves, but her determination to win just jumps off the screen and she has the ability to pull you into her matches. Sure, maybe her matches in AEW weren’t able to show that off but those were spot matches, they weren’t really telling her story. Here, she came in with a face that was already (legitimately) injured, she is against a wrestler unbeatable in tournaments, and she gave every ounce of what she had to pull off the win. She sold her face extremely well so each time she used it anyway as a weapon, it resonated with the viewer how much she wanted to win. The focus on the back was well done and then led directly to the ending, with one of the most painful looking submissions I’ve ever seen. Mizuki did her part as well, she’s talented and is entertaining, but this match was all about Itoh’s story and it was perfectly told. A gripping and intense match, and easily the best we’ve seen in the tournament thus far. A must-see for Joshi fans or for anyone that doesn’t understand why Maki Itoh has legions of fans around the world.  Highly Recommended

Finals

Date: August 15th, 2021
Location: Tokyo Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 567

Time for the Finals! Naturally, only one tournament match on this event:

  • Final: Maki Itoh vs. Shoko Nakajima

Shoko Nakajima vs. Maki Itoh
Maki Itoh vs. Shoko Nakajima

After the longest review in Joshi City history, it is finally time for the main event! At this point, no big leadup is necessary, as Shoko’s drive to re-gain the Princess of Princess Championship goes up against Maki Itoh’s desire to move up the ranks and get her title shot as well. Arguments could be made to support either wrestler winning the tournament, so this should be a close match between two of Tokyo Joshi Pro’s more entertaining wrestlers.

They tie-up to start before trading holds, Maki gets Shoko in a headlock but Shoko reverses it. They end up back on their feet as they lock knuckles, Maki gets the better of it and she applies a stretch hold. Shoko gets out of it and hits a side headlock takedown, Maki struggles back up and Irish whips out of it but Shoko hits a springboard armdrag followed by a dropkick. Maki throws Shoko into the corner but Shoko flips herself out to the apron, she gets on the top turnbuckle but Maki elbows her before she can jump off. Maki goes out to the apron and hits a hanging DDT on Shoko, scoop slam by Maki on the floor and she drives Shoko back-first into the guard rail. Maki slides Shoko back into the ring and goes in after her, but Shoko dropkicks her as she gets on the apron. Shoko gets a running start in the ring and sails out onto Maki with a tope suicida, Shoko snaps Maki’s neck on the second rope and hits a 619 to Maki’s back. Cover by Shoko, but it gets a two count. Shoko throws Maki into the corner and hits a dropkick, neckbreaker by Shoko and she gets another two. Shoko picks up Maki and elbows her in the back of the head, stomps by Shoko and she starts working on Maki’s leg.

Maki gets into the ropes to force the break, but Shoko catapults Maki neck-first into the bottom rope. She does it a second time before dragging Maki back into the ring for a two count. Elbows to the back of the head by Shoko and she knees Maki a few times in the throat before applying a reverse chinlock. Snapmare by Shoko and she hits a running neckbreaker, but Maki kicks out of the cover. Shoko puts Maki in a submission hold but Maki gets out of it, elbows by Maki and she hits a DDT. Maki gets Shoko up but gets too close to the ropes, allowing Shoko to get away and apply a submission in the ropes. She lets go and goes to the top turnbuckle, but Maki catches her as she dives off and applies a crab hold. Shoko gets to the ropes for the break, running elbow by Maki in the corner and she hits a face crusher. Maki picks up Shoko but Shoko throws her into the corner, she charges Maki but Maki kicks her back and hits a Tornado DDT for a two count. Maki goes for the Ito Punish but Shoko slides away and bulldogs Maki into the turnbuckles. Shoko goes to the top turnbuckle and hits a missile dropkick, cover by Shoko but it gets a two count. Shoko gets the Mujin Zairaisen applied but Maki wiggles to the ropes and makes it for the break.

Shoko picks up Maki and slams her head-first into the mat, she goes for the Northern Lights Suplex but Maki blocks it and hits a Tornado DDT off the ropes. Maki puts Shoko in a crab hold but Shoko kicks her off and hits a hurricanrana for two. Northern Lights Suplex by Shoko, but her cover gets another two count. Shoko goes up to the top turnbuckle but Maki avoids the diving senton, jumping DDT by Maki and she goes to the top turnbuckle. Shoko recovers and she joins her, delivering a Frankensteiner back down to the mat. Both wrestlers slowly get to their knees as they trade elbows, Maki delivers a series of elbows but Shoko elbows her down to the mat. Headbutt by Maki and she hits a DDT, she goes to the top turnbuckle but Shoko avoids the Diving Kokeshi. Double Arm DDT by Shoko, and she hits a Northern Suplex Hold on Maki for a two count. Shoko drags up Maki but Maki flips her off, hard elbow by Shoko but Maki blocks the Northern Lights Suplex and puts Shoko in the Itoh Punish. Shoko crawls to the ropes and makes it for the break, quick hurricanrana by Shoko but Maki catches her 619 attempt and puts Shoko in the Itoh Deluxe. Shoko struggles for a moment but has no choice but to tap out! Maki Itoh wins the match and the Princess Cup!

While I don’t think it reached the emotional high of Maki Itoh’s last match, this was still pretty damn good. Shoko works better when she isn’t supposed to be selling a body part in particular, as we’ve seen in the tournament, so the random carnage that both were bringing fit in well with her strengths. There wasn’t a ton of structure, besides Maki’s usual back work, but they were throwing big moves and hard strikes at each other pretty consistently for over twenty minutes. Maki didn’t hit a many of her big moves but she made the ones she did hit count, and her bag of tricks ended up being deep enough to win as no one is getting out of the Itoh Deluxe. Since it was so back-and-forth, the match ending on a move counter leading to the finish fit in well with everything that came before it. Well paced and entertaining throughout, a fitting Finale for Tokyo Joshi Pro’s premiere annual tournament.  Recommended

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2021” Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
19006
Where to Watch Joshi Wrestling Online – July 2021 Edition https://joshicity.com/where-to-watch-joshi-wrestling-online-july-2021-edition/ Fri, 09 Jul 2021 12:49:41 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=18914 A look at more Joshi streaming options available!

The post Where to Watch Joshi Wrestling Online – July 2021 Edition appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Joshi Evaluation April 2021

When COVID hit in 2020, one of the side effects was wrestling companies having to figure out new ways to stay in business. Without live crowds, the lack of gate clearly impacted profits, which led to promotions looking for other ways to bring in money. Different promotions went in different directions, but almost all found new ways to make their events available to fans to watch at home since they couldn’t go to the arena. With that in mind, I wanted to quickly give a run down of where you can watch Joshi wrestling this month.

First, I am going to start with the regular streaming services, either on Youtube or via a platform with a flat monthly fee. These were further covered in my recap from April 2021, so check that column out for a lot more details.

Joshi Wrestling Non-PPV Streaming Services

Promotion: PURE-J
Streaming Service:
Filmuy
Cost: 1,040 yen
Website: https://filmuy.com/pure-j

Promotion: Actwres girl’Z
Service:
 Actwres girl’Z Nets
Cost: 1,000 yen
Website: https://actwresgirlz.net/app

Promotion: YMZ
Service:
Filmuy
Cost: 999 yen
Website: https://filmuy.com/ymz

Promotion: Marvelous
Service:
 NicoNico
Cost: 990 yen
Website: https://ch.nicovideo.jp/marvelouspro

Promotion: Stardom
Service:
 Stardom World
Cost: 920 yen
Website: https://www.stardom-world.com

Promotion: Tokyo Joshi Pro
Service:
 Wrestle Universe
Cost: 900 yen
Website: https://www.ddtpro.com/universe

Promotion: Various
Service:
 NicoPro NicoNico
Cost: 550 yen
Website: https://ch.nicovideo.jp/nicopro

Promotion: Ice Ribbon
Service:
NicoNico
Cost: 550 yen
Website: https://ch.nicovideo.jp/iceribbon

Promotion: Diana
Service:
Youtube
Cost: Free
Website: https://www.youtube.com/c/dianaofficial/

Promotion: Gatoh Move
Service:
Youtube
Cost: Free
Website: https://www.youtube.com/c/GatohMove

Promotion: Sendai Girls’ 
Service:
Youtube
Cost: Free
Website: https://www.youtube.com/user/sendaigirls

So those are all the services that fans are pretty familiar with, as they have been around for awhile. Now we will dive into which promotions are using the PPV model, and where their PPVs are airing as there are a lot of different options. Most of these services should be available to International fans and most I have used successfully, but it may depend on your credit card settings. Also, some services do have an easier process than others for Western fans.

Joshi Wrestling PPV Options

Promotion: SEAdLINNNG
Service:
SEAdLINNNG LIVE
Cost (may vary): 3000 Yen
Website: https://seadlinnnglive.com
Upcoming or Available Event(s): July 11th

SEAdLINNNG gets a special mention as the only one with a dedicated website of their own for their PPVs. Just makes it easier to find what you are looking for. SEAdLINNNG offers a live streaming option for their PPVs, and the events are archived afterwards if you missed it live (or want to watch it again). The event will remain available to watch an unlimited number of time for seven days. They don’t have every event available as a PPV but offer one fairly regularly, so if you are a fan of SEAdLINNNG you don’t have to miss their shows. They tend to announce upcoming events on their Twitter account, @SLinnng, in English to make sure International fans are in the loop.

Promotion: Stardom
Service:
Pia
Cost (may vary): 4400 Yen
Website: https://w.pia.jp/t/stardom-pls
Upcoming or Available Event(s): None

Stardom, like a couple other promotions we will get to, have both a monthly streaming service and also offer events on live PPV. Every show Stardom provides as a live PPV will be added later to Stardom World, you don’t have to buy their PPVs to watch the show. So if you can’t watch it live, may as well wait a few days and watch it on Stardom World as they only archive the PPV for a couple days after it airs on Pia. Stardom also recently started having English Commentary for their live PPVs, so we’ll see if that trend continues. The easiest way to find out when an event will be on PPV and to get the link to purchase is to follow their twitter account, @we_are_stardom.

Promotion: Ice Ribbon
Service:
NicoNico
Cost (may vary): 1000 Yen to 3000 Yen
Website:
https://ch.nicovideo.jp/iceribbon
Upcoming or Available Event(s): 10th, 14th, 21st, and 28th
*I haven’t personally tested this service yet but I assume it works for International fans*

Ice Ribbon is the first promotion we’ll discuss that airs PPVs on NicoNico (or affiliated website). This is not to be confused with their regular streaming service, even though its the same channel. Their PPVs have two prices, one for those that are members of their monthly streaming service and one for those that aren’t, generally a 500 yen price difference.  They do have PPVs very regularly, so if you are anxious to watch a certain match and don’t want to wait a month for the event to appear on their regular streaming service, its worth keeping an eye on. The easiest way to find out when an event will be on PPV and to get the link to purchase is to follow their English twitter account, @IceRibbon_eng.

Promotion: Actwres girl’Z
Service:
KIPz (also NicoPro)
Cost (may vary): 2000 Yen
Website: https://kipz.fun
Upcoming or Available Event(s): June 30th (event is still available for purchase at the time of posting)

Actwres girl’Z also pulls double duty, as they have a monthly flat fee streaming service plus sometimes air PPVs. These also air on NicoNico but for Western fans, I would recommend using KIPz. KIPz is more friendly to foreign fans and is better quality. Events are available for around two weeks if purchased through KIPz after the event has aired, so there is plenty of time to watch if you miss it live. Actwres girl’Z events are randomly shown on PPV, and I wouldn’t consider it a regular occurrence. The easiest way to find out when an event will be on PPV and to get the link to purchase is to follow the NicoPro English twitter account, @nicopro_english.

Promotion: Diana
Service:
KIPz (also NicoPro)
Cost (may vary): 2000 Yen
Website: https://kipz.fun
Upcoming or Available Event(s): July 4th
(event is still available for purchase at the time of posting)

Diana is another promotion that very occasionally utilizes KIPz to show PPVs, even though the bulk of their events available to watch online are put on Youtube for free. This is far from a regular occurrence and like AgZ, the easiest way to know when one is coming up is to keep an eye on the NicoPro English twitter account, @nicopro_english.

Promotion: Pro Wrestling WAVE
Service:
Confetti Web
Cost (may vary): 2500 Yen to 3500 Yen
Website: https://www.confetti-web.com
Upcoming or Available Event(s): None

I recently learned about this one as I don’t keep an eye on WAVE very closely. WAVE airs PPVs on a service called Confetti Web. They also sell tickets to go see WAVE in-person on this site, so its important to only purchase events that list the venue as “Confetti Streaming Theater.” At the moment they don’t have any upcoming events, but most (if not all) of the Catch The WAVE events did air as single events on PPV. Typically, events are available for one week after their live streaming date. Confetti Web is a little more tricky to sign up for as it requires a Japanese address, however my US credit card was accepted as payment. I’m not sure the easiest way to know when things are coming to the Confetti Streaming Theater, although WAVE’s twitter would probably be the best place to watch, @p_w_wave.

Promotion: Marvelous
Service:
Passmarket
Cost (may vary): 3000 Yen
Website: https://passmarket.yahoo.co.jp
Upcoming or Available Event(s): July 19th and August 8th

Marvelous has been using Passmarket sporadically over the last year, so it seems to be their preferred PPV provider. They have two upcoming events that online tickets are available for, including KAORU’s retirement show. Unknown if these shows will also be added to their NicoNico channel, and if so how much of a delay there will be. Events are available for one week after their air if you miss the live viewing. Again I am going to recommend Twitter as the easiest way to know about upcoming events (if you don’t have Twitter, just make an account to follow Joshi promotions and of course me), their English Twitter account @marvelousinter sends out information on what events are coming and they provide a link to order.

Promotion: OZ Academy
Service:
Mahocast
Cost (may vary): 3000 Yen
Website: https://www.mahocast.com/at/live/1149
Upcoming or Available Event(s): July 11th

OZ Academy streams a fair number of their events on Mahocast. Since OZ Academy doesn’t have a monthly streaming service and doesn’t air as often as other promotions, this is the best way to keep up with their product if you are a fan. The events are available for two weeks after they air, so if you miss it live you can come back and watch it later. Their social media game is a little lackluster so I’d recommend just bookmarking the link I have above as that is the landing page for all their events.

Promotion: Sendai Girls’
Service:
Zaiko
Cost (may vary): 3500 Yen
Website: https://sendaigirlspro.zaiko.io
Upcoming or Available Event(s): July 11th
*I haven’t personally tested this service yet but I assume it works for International fans*

Finally, Sendai Girls’ has another method of streaming their shows, this one called Zaiko. Sendai Girls’ has tried a lot of different streaming options in the last few years, so no promises that this one will stick, however they have been using this service for PPVs since last November. Events are available for three days after purchase, so if you miss it live, don’t dilly dally in watching it or you may lose access. Sendai Girls’ appear to have abandoned their English Twitter account, but they do mention upcoming events on their regular Twitter account, @senjo2006.

The post Where to Watch Joshi Wrestling Online – July 2021 Edition appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
18914
Tokyo Joshi Pro “Inspiration” on 4/1/21 Review https://joshicity.com/tokyo-joshi-pro-inspiration-april-1-2021-review/ Sat, 03 Apr 2021 21:37:05 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=18495 Hikari Noa has her first hardcore match!

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro “Inspiration” on 4/1/21 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Tokyo Joshi Pro Inspiration Review

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Inspiration”
Date: April 1st, 2021
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 142
Broadcast Information: Streamed on WRESTLE UNIVERSE

As part of my project to review as many events as possible in April that are available to Western fans via an official streaming service, we start with Tokyo Joshi Pro! This event was added to Wrestle Universe the same day it was filmed, giving us an immediate chance to watch the show. This is a smaller event from Tokyo Joshi Pro, as they are planning to potentially do a series of “Inspiration” events that are shorter but give opportunities for new wrestlers to shine. No Yuka Sakazaki, Maki Itoh, or Miyu Yamashita on this event, but we do get Hikari Noa’s first hardcore match! So that is exciting. All three wrestlers in the Up Up Girls have a singles match, here is the full card:

All wrestlers have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their names above to go straight to it. All matches were streamed in full by Tokyo Joshi Pro.

MIZUKI vs. Miu Watanabe
Miu Watanabe vs. Mizuki

We kick off this shorter event with two wrestlers looking to improve their standing in Tokyo Joshi Pro. Mizuki is the veteran here as she debuted in 2012, joining Tokyo Joshi Pro in 2017. While she has had a couple shots at the Princess of Princess Championship, she hasn’t won the top title in the promotion yet, so she is looking to keep picking up wins until she gets another chance. Miu is younger and less experienced, as she debuted in 2018. She has had tag team success though and has really grown as a wrestler, making this an interesting match as its their first singles match against each other since 2018.

They circle each other to start before locking up, but they break cleanly. Tie-up and they trade waistlocks, Miu gets Mizuki to the mat first but Mizuki quickly reverses positions with her and they jockey for position. Back on their feet, Miu goes off the ropes but Mizuki catches her with an elbow, Miu fires back with two shoulderblocks but Mizuki avoids her charge in the corner and slides out of the ring to re-group. Miu goes out after her but Mizuki quickly slides back in and elbows Miu as she gets on the apron. Miu outsmarts Mizuki as Mizuki ends up back on the apron before Miu knocks her to the floor. Miu slides Mizuki back in, cover by Miu but it gets a two count. Miu throws Mizuki into the corner and elbows her in the back repeatedly, Miu stretches Mizuki over her knee before covering her for two again. Miu picks up Mizuki but Mizuki trips her and hits a footstomp on her back. Facelock by Mizuki but Miu gets into the ropes for the break, Mizuki drags Miu onto the apron and hits a double footstomp. Miu flops to the floor, Mizuki goes out to the apron and jumps down onto Miu with a double footstomp. Mizuki slides Miu back in and covers her, but Miu kicks out. Mizuki throws Miu into the corner, Miu tries to fight back but gets hammered with elbows for her trouble.

Diving crossbody by Mizuki but Miu catches her and slams her to the mat. Mizuki kicks Miu away and dropkicks her in the back while she is against the ropes, footstomp by Mizuki and she hits another footstomp off the second rope for a two count cover. Miu gets back up but Mizuki avoids her strikes, Mizuki goes off the ropes but Miu clubs her to the mat. Shoulderblocks by Miu, she picks up Mizuki but Mizuki slides off. Armdrag by Miu and she hits a scoop slam, cover by Miu but it gets two. Mizuki goes off the ropes but Miu catches her with a shoulder powerslam, Giant Swing by Miu but she is too dizzy/hurt to make a cover after it, Mizuki ends up in the corner and Miu connects with a body avalanche. Hard shoulderblock by Miu, and she covers Mizuki for two. Miu picks up Mizuki but Mizuki grabs the bottom rope to stop whatever Miu planned on doing, Miu charges Mizuki but Mizuki ducks her attack and hits a Backstabber. Back up they trade elbows, Mizuki slides around Miu’s back and applies an armtrap crossface but Miu gets to the ropes. Mizuki goes to the top turnbuckle but Miu recovers and clubs her in the chest, sending Mizuki to the apron. Miu grabs her from inside the ring and drags her back in, hitting a shoulder breaker for two. Slap to the chest by Miu but Mizuki cradles her to the mat and hits a footstomp. Mizuki goes off the ropes and nails the Whirling Candy, but Miu barely kicks out. Mizuki positions Miu and goes to the top turnbuckle, she nails the diving footstomp and picks up the three count. Mizuki wins!

This was good. Not great, not particularly special, but solid wrestling. Mizuki is smooth and I like her style of offense – the more footstomps the better and the Whirling Candy is an A+ move. Miu kept up for the most part but their chemistry was iffy at times and I never really got the feeling that Miu was close to winning or had a plan on how to win. There were no realistic nearfalls for Miu even though she controlled a pretty good portion of the match, which is unusual when a match goes almost 15 minutes. It is on the bubble of what I’d recommend but Mizuki put it barely over the edge, not a bad opener but I was hoping for a bit more since they had the time to tell whatever story they wanted.  Mildly Recommended

Raku vs. Rika Tatsumi
Raku vs. Rika Tatsumi

For the second match, we get Raku from the Up Up Girls against the Princess of Princess Champion, Rika Tatsumi! This is a non-title match of course as Raku isn’t on that level yet, Raku has only had one title challenge in her career and that was for the tag titles in the summer of 2020. So while they are on different levels, this is their first singles match since 2018 so its a fresh pairing that will give Raku a chance to impress.

Rika comes down to the ring but Raku is nowhere to be found, leaving the champion confused. She looks around for her without any luck, eventually she gets back in the ring but Raku sneaks up and attacks her from behind. Raku gets Rika to the mat and tapes a pillow to her butt (it makes sense in a moment), Rika gets back up and goes for a hip attack but it doesn’t hurt Raku due to the pillow. She gets the pillow off but Raku runs over and schoolboys her for a two count. Inside cradle by Raku, but that gets a two as well. Raku goes off the ropes and runs over Rika, senton by Raku but it gets a two count. Raku charges Rika but Rika knocks her back and dropkicks Raku in the knee, kneelock by Rika but Raku gets to the ropes for the break. Rika drags her back to the middle of the ring and gets the hold re-applied, but Raku quickly gets to the ropes again. Rika throws Raku into the corner and kicks her repeatedly in the knee, dropkick to the knee by Rika and she snapmares Raku to the mat. Cover by Rika, but it gets a two count. Elbows by Rika and she hits another snapmare, she goes back to the knee but Raku kicks her away. Irish whip by Rika, reversed, but Raku avoids the hip attack and hits a running elbow.

Raku elbows Rika against the ropes and hits a brain chop, dropkick by Raku and she covers Rika for two. Raku gets Rika’s back and cradles her to the mat, but it gets a two count. Raku gets on the second turnbuckle but Rika elbows her before she can do anything, dragon screw by Rika and she applies a figure four leglock. Raku manages to get to the ropes for the break, Rika charges Raku but Raku holds down the top rope and Rika tumbles out of the ring. Rika gets back on the apron but Raku slams her face into the mat, diving brain chop by Raku and she covers Rika for two. Sleeper by Raku but Rika drives her back into the corner to break it up, running elbow by Rika and she puts Raku in the Tree of Woe. Running hip attack by Rika and she covers Raku, but Raku barely kicks out. Rika picks up Raku but Raku pushes her off and hits the Sling Blade. Raku charges Rika but Rika moves and catches her with a swinging slam. Sleeper by Rika but Raku snapmares out of it and applies a sleeper of her own. Rika gets out of the hold and hits a cutter, she goes to the top turnbuckle and nails the Missile Hip for the three count! Rika Tatsumi is the winner!

Raku is a unique wrestler. Unorthodox, if you will. For me, the basic fundamentals aren’t really there as I prefer wrestlers with a comedy slant to be able to ‘turn it on’ when needed and Raku didn’t really have that second gear. Doesn’t mean she isn’t mildly entertaining, she is, but a high end wrestler she is not. Going slightly goofy though will probably help her career longevity but I don’t see any major titles in her future. Rika seemed thrown off by Raku as she is a pretty good wrestler but her leg work fell a bit flat since Raku was doing nothing to sell it and not all of the transitions for who was on offense were very smooth. Not a bad match as there were some entertaining moments, but a step down from the last match.

Hikari Noa vs. Rina Yamashita
Hikari Noa vs. Rina Yamashita

For the main event, Hikari Noa wrestles in her first hardcore match! As the story goes, Hikari is a fan of Big Japan Pro Wrestling and wanted to do a hardcore match, so Tokyo Joshi Pro brought in one of the most highly thought of hardcore wrestlers on the Joshi scene – Rina Yamashita! This is Rina’s first match in Tokyo Joshi Pro, so its a special occasion for sure. Rina has a long list of accolades with multiple title reigns, and comes into the match with two titles (PURE-J Tag Team Championship and the King of FREEDOM Tag Team Championship). Hikari in her two year career hasn’t won any titles, but she is only 23 and clearly has aspirations to be special. This is a big opportunity for Hikari, even on a small show, to show she has what it takes to hang with one of the best.

There are various weapons around the ring, including a giant board, ladder, and lots of chairs. Rina pushes Hikari into the ropes to start the match but gives a clean break, Hikari asks for a knucklelock but Rina kicks her in the stomach instead and they trade wristlocks. Hikari works a headlock but Rina reverses it, Rina gets Hikari to the mat but Hikari quickly gets away and they return to their feet. Dropkicks by Hikari, she picks up a box and dumps the contents all over the ring. Looks like CDs and glowsticks. Rolling cradle by Hikari, but Rina kicks out at two. Hikari grabs Rina but Rina blocks the slam and hits one of her own onto the CDs. Rina takes out one of the CDs and crushes it in her hands, which I didn’t know was possible, she grabs another one and crushes it in the direction of Hikari. Lariat by Rina in the corner but Hikari blocks it when Rina tries to throw her into the board. Rina charges Hikari but Hikari moves, sending Rina crashing into the board propped in the corner. Hikari gets the ladder and puts it over her head, she spins around and around but Rina grabs a chair and hits the ladder to stop Hikari in her tracks. Rina throws Hikari out of the ring and goes out after her, removing the mat at ringside.

Rina picks up Hikari and slams her onto the exposed floor, Rina reaches under the ring and pulls out a table. She sets it up on the floor and puts Hikari onto the table before going up to the apron, but Hikari recovers and hops off the table to the apron as well. Elbows by Hikari and she tries to pick up Rina, but Rina blocks it and knocks her back. More elbows by Hikari and she again goes for a slam off the apron, but Rina elbows out of the hold and hits a headbutt. Rina gets Hikari up on her shoulder and jumps off the apron through the table with a Fire Thunder Driver! Rina gets an object from under the ring and jabs it into Hikari, looks like the tool used to tighten the ropes, before sliding Hikari back into the ring. Rina works a headlock before putting her in the ropes and jabbing her in the head with the sharp part of the tool. Rina lays the ladder in the middle of the ring and slams Hikari onto it, cover by Rina but it gets a two count. As Rina goes to get some chairs, Hikari starts chucking CDs at her (that are still everywhere in the ring) but Rina shrugs it off and stacks chairs onto Hikari’s back. Rina then hits Hikari’s back with another chair, Hikari fights back with elbows but Rina knocks her to the mat.

Rina picks up a chair but Hikari dropkicks it back into her, Hikari goes to the top turnbuckle but Rina recovers and joins her. Superplex by Rina but Hikari fires up and the two trade elbows. Release German by Rina and she nails a lariat but the cover barely gets two. Rina gets a chair and hits Hikari with it, she piles up a bunch of chairs in the middle of the ring but Hikari slides away when she goes for a powerbomb. Rina grabs a chair and hands it to Hikari, she goes off the ropes but Hikari throws the chair at her head. Hikari superkicks a chair into Rina but she is too hurt to capitalize. Both slowly get up with chairs, superkick by Hikari and she drops Rina with a backdrop suplex. Hikari goes out of the ring  and slides in a piece of the broken table, hitting Rina repeatedly in the head with it. Hikari goes to the top turnbuckle and hits the Pearl Harbor Splash, but Rina kicks out of the cover. Rina picks up Hikari but Rina elbows her back and hits a backdrop suplex. Short range lariat by Rina, and she covers Hikari for a two count. Rina picks up Hikari and delivers a lariat, cover by Rina but Hikari barely kicks out. Rina re-piles the chairs in the middle of the ring, she picks up Hikari and nails the Splash Mountain onto the chairs for the three count! Rina Yamashita is the winner.

Even though this was pretty one-sided and the winner was never in doubt, it was still damn fun to watch. Hardcore matches have their pros and cons – they can hid a wrestler’s deficiencies but at the same time its easy to get into tropes and not do enough to elevate the match. Rina is a great wrestler and won’t let the latter happen, as there was very little downtime in the match and any “spots” that were set up were set up quickly. Rina didn’t hold back on Hikari and put her through the hardcore ropes, without doing anything really next level that may make some fans squirm (piercing spots, getting blood, etc.). It was definitely still a hardcore match, but had the right amount of violence without going overboard. Hikari looked comfortable in the situation and hit all her spots smoothly (both giving and taking), if this checked her career “hardcore match” box I’m happy she got the chance to it. Overall an entertaining match and a solid way to close out a smaller event, even with a clear winner they put on a good show.  Recommended

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro “Inspiration” on 4/1/21 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
18495
MagiRabi in WONDERLAND Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook Review https://joshicity.com/magirabi-in-wonderland-tokyo-joshi-pro-photobook-review/ Sat, 02 Jan 2021 01:38:59 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=17995 Featuring Yuka Sakazaki and Mizuki!

The post MagiRabi in WONDERLAND Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook Cover

To kick off 2021, we are going to take a look at one of the best Joshi photobooks of 2020. Released in November, MagiRabi in WONDERLAND features Tokyo Joshi Pro wrestlers Yuka Sakazaki and Mizuki. You can read reviews for more magazine and photobooks on the Joshi Photobook Reviews page.

Full Details

Title: MagiRabi in WONDERLAND
Release: November 2020
Pages: 80
Size: A4
Cost: ¥4,000
Where to Buy: Tokyo Joshi Pro Online Shop

Tokyo Joshi Pro doesn’t put out as many photobooks as Stardom, but when they do, they are always quality. This photobook is no exception, with a great spread featuring the team of Yuka Sakazaki and Mizuki, often referred to by their tag team name – MagiRabi.

There are several things that make this photobook unique and memorable, but my favorite is that they really went “all in” with the Alice in Wonderland inspired photoshoot. This was not some half-ass shoot using items from the local thrift shop. They had multiple outfits, a full set with props, and everything needed to really recreate the scenes. As far as wrestling photoshoots that take inspiration from something else, I can’t think of any examples that went as far into it as Tokyo Joshi Pro did and it made for an amazing set of pictures.

If Alice in Wonderland isn’t your vibe, that’s fine as Tokyo Joshi Pro didn’t forget about you either. In addition to the cosplay photo set, they also photographed Mizuki and Yuka Sakazaki in casual clothing and yes – lingerie as well just to make sure every fan went home happy. This includes both pictures together and separately. One of the advantages of the photobook being 80 pages is they had plenty of room to ensure there is something in the photobook for everyone. For myself, I really enjoy the variety. It would have been fine if they put out a lingerie photobook, or a more casual photobook, or a cosplay photobook, but instead they went all out and did all three in one large presentation. In a lot of ways its the perfect photobook, and the chemistry that Yuka and Mizuki have helps everything appear authentic and not forced.

Overall, an A+ photobook and one I can easily recommend. Here is a sample of pictures from the photobook:

MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook #1 MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook #2 MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook #3 MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook #4 MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook #5 MagiRabi Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook #6

The post MagiRabi in WONDERLAND Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
17995
Tokyo Joshi Pro Back Stage Pass Vol. 1 Photobook Review https://joshicity.com/tokyo-joshi-pro-back-stage-pass-vol-1-photobook-review/ Thu, 04 Jun 2020 02:01:50 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=16743 Featuring Yuka Sakazaki, Suzume, and Mina Shirakawa!

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro Back Stage Pass Vol. 1 Photobook Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 Cover

Tokyo Joshi Pro Back Stage Pass Vol. 1 is a photobook featuring Yuka Sakazaki, Suzume, and Mina Shirakawa released in 2020 by Tokyo Joshi Pro. You can read reviews for more photobooks on the Joshi Photobook Reviews page.

Tokyo Joshi Pro Back Stage Pass Vol. 1 Photobook Details:

Title: Tokyo Joshi Pro Back Stage Pass Vol. 1
Release: Spring 2020
Cost: ¥2,750
Where to Buy: DDT Shop

While Tokyo Joshi Pro is no stranger to photobooks, with Back Stage Pass Vol. 1 the promotion went in a different direction than your typical photobook. As the name implies, the bulk of the book takes fans backstage to what goes on before and after the matches, from setting up the ring, training, getting ready to go to the ring, and what happens once they return backstage. For this photobook they focused on three wrestlers: Yuka Sakazaki, Suzume, and Mina Shirakawa. Its a unique and welcomed combination, as while Yuka and Mina are popular, Suzume is still looking to find her place in the promotion so giving her a bit of the spotlight can only help her short term visibility with fans.

Beyond the backstage pictures, the photobook does include some posed pictures in both the wrestler’s wrestling gear as well as in casual attire. I don’t think it breaks the theme of the photobook as these pictures could very well be taken backstage also, and it provides fans some ‘normal’ photobook pictures to give the book some variety. Since the name implies there will be more of these released in the future, and they certainly have the roster for it, hopefully this will be the start of a new series for Tokyo Joshi Pro. Here is a sample of pictures from the photobook:

TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 #1 TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 #2 TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 #3 TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 #4 TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 #5 TJPW Backstage Pass Vol. 1 #6

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro Back Stage Pass Vol. 1 Photobook Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
16743
TJPW Tokyo Joshi Pro 2020 on 1/4/20 Review https://joshicity.com/tjpw-tokyo-joshi-pro-january-4-2020-review/ Wed, 15 Jan 2020 02:02:27 +0000 https://joshicity.com/?p=14880 Tokyo Joshi Pro starts the year with a bang!

The post TJPW Tokyo Joshi Pro 2020 on 1/4/20 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Tokyo Joshi Pro 2020 Cover

Event: TJPW Tokyo Joshi Pro 2020
Date: January 4th, 2020
Location: Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 1,467

Starting the year with something new – Tokyo Joshi Pro! Not a new promotion of course, but one that I didn’t watch much (if at all) in 2019 as their general style doesn’t always line up with my interests. This is one of their biggest shows of the year however, and the card is really stacked with four title matches and a special singles match between Natsumi Maki and Sareee. Here is the full card:

As Tokyo Joshi Pro is not a promotion I watch very often, I may miss some of the smaller nuances on what is going on but I’ll do my best. All wrestlers have profiles on the site, you can click on their name above to go straight to it.

Haruna Neko & Suzume vs. Mahiro Kiryu & Sena Shiori
Haruna Neko and Suzume vs. Kiryu and Sena Shiori

We kick off the show with a tag match, featuring a wrestler making her debut. None of these wrestlers have much experience, with Haruna being the “veteran” of the group as she debuted in November of 2018. Clearly in the year or so since they started, none have had much luck moving up the card. Sena is making her debut in this match, while I am not too familiar with any of these four I am interested to see if any stand out as having a potential future more than the others.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #1Suzume and Sena start, they trade holds on their feet before Suzume takes Sena down to the mat. Sena switches positions and applies a leglock but it gets quickly reversed, they jockey for position but end up in a stalemate. Back up, Suzume backs into her corner to tag in Haruna, while Mahiro is also tagged in. Haruna gets the first strike on Mahiro and tries to knock her over, but Mahiro stays up and applies a side headlock. Haruna Irish whips out of it but Mahiro hits a hard shoulderblock, she applies a front necklock as she tags in Sena. Sena tries to throw Haruna into the corner but it gets reversed, seated senton by Haruna to Sena and she covers her for two. Haruna tags in Suzume, Sena is thrown into the corner and she eats running strikes from both her opponents. Cover by Suzume, but it gets two. Suzume picks up Sena but Sena elbows her and the two trade blows, Sena tags in Suzume but Mahiro catches her with a scoop slam. Mahiro slams Suzume into the corner but Suzume connects with a dropkick and tags Haruna. Haruna goes for a slam but it gets blocked, Mahiro goes for a slam but Haruna gets out of it and hits a lariat. Cover by Haruna, but it gets a two count. Haruna tags Suzume, Suzume goes up top and she hits a diving crossbody for two. Suzume elbows Mahiro in the chest but Mahiro connects with a hard elbow and tags in Sena. Dropkick by Sena and she applies a single leg crab hold, but Haruna breaks it up. Mahiro throws Haruna out of the ring, Irish whip by Sena to Suzume but Suzume reverses it. Sena avoids Suzume’s dropkick and re-applies the crab hold, but Suzume wiggles to the ropes and gets the break. Elbows by Sena but Suzume elbows her back, schoolboy attempt by Suzume but Sena rolls through it. Dropkick by Suzume and she puts Sena in a sleeper hold, Sena struggles to escape but taps out! Haruna Neko and Suzume are the winners.

Even for a rookie/young wrestler match, the ending here was pretty sudden as there wasn’t really any foreshadowing that a sleeper finisher was in play. I was really impressed by Mahiro, her poise and mannerisms are great for a rookie and I could see her becoming a force down the line. I was less impressed by Haruna and Suzume, however I concede this was a really small sample size. Sena looked fine for a debut, seemed to be confident and didn’t mess up anything. Not a bad way to start, although a slightly longer end stretch would have been nice.

Shoko Nakajima vs. Hyper Misao
Hyper Misao vs. Shoko Nakajima

Time for one of our wacky matches of the evening. From best I can tell, the winner of this match gets to re-name the loser for one month. They are also both allowed to bring one ‘weapon’ to the ring with them. The naming rights are hung from the ceiling in a giant pinata, so basically its a ladder match with an odd stipulation. This was also billed as Hyper Misao’s return match, as Misao has left Sakisama and has returned to her Super Hero ways. Anyway, even with the goofiness this may still be good as Shoko is great and Hyper Misao has some comedic timing to her.

For their respective weapons, Shoko brought with her a giant bag of kaiju action figures while Misao will use…. Tokyo Joshi Pro producer Tetsuya Koda, who is in no way a wrestler. But he does distract Shoko off the start which allows Misao to attack her from behind, Rocking Cradle by Misao while Koda puts a sheet down on the mat. They roll up Shoko in the sheet, Misao gets the ladder and starts climbing up, but the still-cocooned Shoko knocks it over. Koda and Misao grab the ladder but Shoko dropkicks it away from them and gets the sheet off, she puts the ladder on her shoulders and spins it into Misao. Misao falls out of the ring but Shoko dives out onto her, she goes back in the ring to get some of her action figures and starts throwing them at Misao. Misao crawls under the ring to get away, Shoko goes out to try to find her but Misao sneaks up from behind and sprays her from a spray can. Back in the ring, Irish whip by Misao and she hits a crossbody, she sets up the ladder but Shoko pulls her off. They fight over the ladder until Misao smashes Shoko’s hands between the rungs and then throws the ladder at Shoko. Shoko recovers and hits a bulldog into the turnbuckle, she goes up top and delivers a missile dropkick.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #2Shoko charges Misao but Misao hiptosses her onto the ladder, Misao sets up the ladder but Shoko takes it back down and drives Misao into the corner with it. Shoko puts the ladder across the ropes in the corner, trapping Misao in, and sets up her toys in the middle of the ring. Misao gets free and charges her, Shoko puts Misao on the top turnbuckle and joins her, hitting a Frankensteiner. Shoko gathers the toys again into a pile, Shoko scoop slams Misao onto the toys before going up top, but Koda runs in and protects Misao. Shoko dives off with a senton attempt but Koda helps Misao get out of the way (maybe?), Misao sets up the ladder and climbs it, but Shoko pulls her off. They trade punches until Misao back bodydrops Shoko onto the toys, but Shoko spins away from her and they both start to climb the ladder. They elbow each other at the top of it, Shoko knocks Misao off the ladder and breaks open the pinata, pulling out the banner! Misao runs up and tries to get it from her but its too late, as Shoko puts it on. Shoko Nakajima is the winner!

These types of matches always annoy me, as just based on skill they could have had a pretty fun ten minute ladder match but in the end it was just about the silly gimmick tied to it. There were a few really nice/painful bumps hidden in here, and when they just got a chance to wrestle this was fine, but when it was about the Hello! Project concert and Koda and toys everything came to a halt. I am sure this match is for someone out there in the world, just not really for me. I want to see destruction in ladder matches, not sub-par comedy.

Saki Akai vs. Yuki Kamifuku
(c) Saki Akai vs. Yuki Kamifuku
DDT Iron Man Heavymetalweight Championship

I’m not sure if this is going to end up being a comedy match, so I guess we will find out. The DDT Iron Man Heavymetalweight Championship is frequently played for laughs but this appears to just be a straight one vs. one match, with Akai just winning the title the day before. Yuki may be best known to most Western fans for her… amusing tweets but she is a two year veteran who has won this title once before. I’m trying to keep an open mind, let’s see how this goes.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #3Saki starts with a side headlock, Yuki reverses it and takes Saki to the mat but it only lasts a moment as they return to their feet. Yuki stomps on Saki’s feet and trips her, Saki is thrown into the corner and Yuki elbows her. Saki switches positions with her but Yuki avoids the boot, Yuki charges Saki but Saki kicks her in the stomach. Saki stomps Yuki and chokes her in the corner, kick to the back by Saki and she covers Yuki for two. Saki picks up Yuki and hits a drop toehold into a headscissors, Yuki inches to the ropes and makes it there for the break. Saki goes off the ropes and boots Yuki in the head, cover by Saki but it gets another two. Yuki returns to her feet but Saki kicks her back down again, Saki throws Yuki into the corner and delivers a big boot. Saki goes for a suplex but Yuki lands on her feet and hits a handstand face crusher.

Yuki tosses Saki into the corner and slams her into the turnbuckle repeatedly, boot by Yuki and she covers Saki for two. Yuki picks up Saki but Saki kicks her arm away and the two trade blows, with Saki finally knocking down Yuki with a big boot but Yuki quickly gets up and delivers a “dropkick.” Yuki throws Saki into the corner but Saki knocks her back, head kick by Saki and she goes to the top turnbuckle, but Yuki dropkicks her as she jumps off. Scissors Kick by Yuki, but Saki is too close to the ropes and using them to break up the count. Yuki goes after Saki, Saki quickly puts her in a Triangle Choke but Yuki gets to the ropes. Schoolboy by Yuki, but it gets two. Yuki goes for a dropkick but Saki swats it away and hits a PK for a two count. Saki goes up top again and this time hits a diving crossbody, but Yuki kicks out of the cover. Kick to the chest by Saki and she hits the Pendulum Knee Strike, Quetzalcoatl by Saki and she picks up the three count! Saki Akai wins and is still the champion.

I hate to go back on what I said about nine minutes ago, but this match really needed some comedy elements. Or something. No one has ever accused Saki of being a super worker (I assume, if they have they are wrong), but she can work a good match if put in the right situation. Going up against someone of the same type of wrestler, but worse, was not the right situation. This was awkward, uncoordinated, and poorly laid out. I am not sure why they would do this to Saki and Yuki. Make it a wacky tag match or a five way match or something, give them some protection. The rookies in the opening match put on a better performance, including Sena. Skip this one.

Aja Kong, Pom Harajuku & Raku vs. Mina Shirakawa, Mirai Maiumi & Yuna Manase
Aja Kong, Harajuku, and Raku vs. Shirakawa, Maiumi, and Manase

Moving along now. On first skim this would appear to be a normal looking Tokyo Joshi Pro midcard match, until you notice Aja Kong is in it. It should be noted that Aja Kong came out with the DDT Iron Man Heavymetalweight Championship which is a 24/7 title, so she won it from Saki Akai since the match that just took place (in fact, she won it from her while Akai was doing her backstage post-match interview). Anyway, aside from Kong this is mostly the younger and/or less experienced wrestlers of Tokyo Joshi Pro getting a match on the card, but a few of these are popular with fans (particularly Harajuku) so getting them a match is important. Not sure what to expect but since Aja Kong is proudly showing off the title I have a feeling her recent win may come into play at some point.

Mirai and Pom kick things off and trade wristlocks, they end up on the mat but Mirai locks in a side headlock as they get back up. Mirai drives Pom back and tags in Yuna, while Kong tags in as well. They lock up, Kong pushes Yuna into the ropes and she gives a clean break. Yuna elbows Kong and goes off the ropes, but she fails in her attempts to shoulderblock Kong over. Kong slaps Yuna against the ropes, Irish whip by Yuna and she hits a double chop to the chest. Kong goes for the elbow drop but Yuna moves and kicks Kong in the back, she quickly tags in Mina and Mina goes for the Romero Special, but Kong ignores her and rolls over to break it up. Kong kicks Mina in the leg and tags Raku, Raku runs over Mina’s midsection but Mina moves when she tries to sit down on her. Pom comes in to help get Mina back to the mat, they invite Kong in but she stays on the apron. Raku tries to sit on Mina again but once again she moves, Mina is knocked down and finally Kong agrees to come in. All three take turns running over Mina’s midsection with Kong sitting on Mina to end the spot, cover by Raku but it gets a two count. Mina scoop slams Raku and puts her in the Romero Special, she lets go after a moment and tags in Mirai. Scoop slam by Mirai and she elbows Raku in the corner, Yuna is tagged back in but Raku greets her with elbows to the chest. Yuna avoids Raku’s lariat and hits a hard shoulderblock, she goes for a kick but Raku catches it and hits a face crusher. She makes the tag to Pom, swinging headscissors by Pom to Yuna and she rolls over Yuna for a two count.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #4Pom kicks Yuna in the leg but Yuna delivers a big boot in the corner, shoulderblock by Yuna and she tags Mina. Diving double chops by Mina but Pom trips her and delivers a dropkick for two. Pom picks up Mina but Mina blocks the scoop slam, Lou Thesz Press by Mina and she covers Pom for two. Pom ducks the backfist and kicks Mina in the shin, giving her time to tag Kong while Mirai is also tagged in. Mirai tries to knock over Kong with no luck, Mirai goes for a scoop slam but Kong doesn’t budge. Scoop slam by Kong, she gets on the second turnbuckle but Mirai pulls her off from behind. Kong quickly comes back with a punch to the face, Mina runs in to try to help and she hits a backfist on Kong. Yuna also gets in the ring and shoulderblocks Kong over, lariat by Mirai to Kong but Kong kicks out at two. Mirai picks up Kong and goes for a backdrop suplex, but Kong blocks it. Elbows by Mirai and she goes off the ropes, but Pom catches her with a forearm. Mina runs in and DDTs Pom, but Raku hits a diving chop to Mina. Yuna boots Raku, she goes to Kong and tries to help Mirai hit a double vertical suplex, but it gets reversed. Kong waits for Mirai to get up and hits a hard lariat, cover by Kong but Mirai bridges out of the pin. Kong looks annoyed, she picks up Mirai and plants her with a backdrop suplex, but the cover is broken up. Kong positions Mirai and gets on the second turnbuckle, falling back elbow drop by Kong and she picks up the three count! Aja Kong, Raku, and Pom Harajuku are the winners.

Post match, they try to trick Aja Kong and pin her to win the DDT Iron Man Heavymetalweight Championship, but Kong is too smart and bails.

For a midcard match, this was perfectly fine. Not everyone here is a great wrestler so hiding them in a six wrestler tag was a good idea, as it was really about Aja Kong either playing along with some silliness or the younger wrestlers trying to knock her over. Not an original theme but an effective one that I can appreciate. I thought Mirai looked good here, showed a lot of fire and the offense she did connected pretty well which I can’t say for everyone involved. Not critical viewing but decent enough for what it was going for.

Sareee vs. Natsumi Maki
Natsumi Maki vs. Sareee

Finally getting to the main reason I am watching this show (although I am sure some of the latter matches will be a lot of fun too). This is Natsumi Maki’s return match after missing the last three months due to injury, and she is coming back with a bang. Natsumi had a pretty good year in Tokyo Joshi Pro after joining the promotion in early 2019, and she fit in the promotion well as she can do a little comedy, is cute, and can kick your ass while wearing a smile. Sareee is a wrestler based in Diana but known also for her work in Sendai Girls’ and other promotions, she was one of the top Joshi wrestlers in 2019 but is making her first appearance in Tokyo Joshi Pro. These two can both go, and midcard or not I suspect they will deliver.

Natsumi dropkicks Sareee right as the match starts, another dropkick by Natsumi but Sareee blocks the crossbody and slams Natsumi. Natsumi bridges out of the pin, armdrag by Natsumi but Sareee armdrags her back and they reach a stalemate after a few trips. Tie-up, Natsumi gets Sareee into the ropes and slaps her as she gives the break. Sareee slaps her back, she throws Natsumi into the corner and tosses her down by the hair. Natsumi returns the favor but Sareee whips her down again, elbows by Natsumi but Sareee elbows her hard to the mat. Stomps by Sareee and she hits a scoop slam, modified Muta Lock by Sareee but she lets go after a moment to kick Natsumi in the leg. Crab hold by Sareee but Natsumi inches to the ropes and makes it there for the break. Sareee jumps down on Natsumi’s back, Irish whip by Sareee but Natsumi connects with a dropkick for two. Natsumi quickly goes for the cross armbreaker and gets it locked in, but Sareee wiggles to the ropes to force the break. Dropkicks by Natsumi before Sareee can get back up, Natsumi goes off the ropes and dropkicks Sareee in the face. Sareee falls out of the ring, Natsumi goes to the top turnbuckle and dives out onto Sareee with a plancha suicida.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #5Natsumi slides Sareee back in, she goes up top again and hits a diving crossbody for two. Natsumi applies a waistlock but Sareee reverses it and hits a wheelbarrow German suplex. Sareee picks up Natsumi, Natsumi elbows her but Sareee elbows her right back, sending Natsumi off her feet. They trade elbows back and forth with Sareee generally getting the better of it, dropkick by Natsumi but Sareee dropkicks her back. Running dropkick by Sareee, she picks up Natsumi and hits a fisherman suplex hold for two. Sareee goes for the uranage but Natsumi blocks it, Irish whip by Sareee but Natsumi ducks the lariat and schoolboys Sareee for two. Natsumi goes off the ropes, Sareee goes for a uranage but Natsumi blocks it and cradles Sareee for two. Natsumi picks up Sareee, kick to the head by Natsumi and she goes off the ropes, hitting the Backlash for a two count. Back up, Sareee blocks the suplex attempt and drops Natsumi with a German suplex hold, but Natsumi gets a shoulder up. Sareee goes towards the turnbuckles but Natsumi grabs her leg, Natsumi slaps Sareee but Sareee elbows her and kicks her in the jaw with a back kick. Uranage by Sareee, and she covers Natsumi for the three count! Sareee is the winner!

Even though Natsumi (in experience) isn’t on Sareee’s level, she sure did try to match her move for move. Sareee tried submissions, Natsumi did too, Sareee threw elbows, Natsuki returned fire, almost as if she was trying to prove she could do anything Sareee can. But in the end that was her undoing – her elbows weren’t as hard, her dropkicks weren’t as on point, and her submissions weren’t as effective. It wasn’t a complex story but it was a smart one, realistically Natsumi wasn’t winning this but she wanted to show the fans that she wasn’t intimidated or backing down to The Sun God. Sareee has gotten so good in the last few years, she doesn’t look intimidating but she hits harder than anyone and her suplexes are beautifully executed. While I wish they had gotten more time, they were able to tell the story they wanted to, and overall I really enjoyed it and look forward to where Natsumi goes from here in Tokyo Joshi Pro.  Recommended

Mizuki vs. Thunder Rosa
Mizuki vs. Thunder Rosa

Time for a special attraction match, although there is some method to this madness. Thunder Rosa has been in Tokyo Joshi Pro before, and in her last appearance she challenged (unsuccessfully) for the Princess of Princess Championship. On this tour, the next night she will challenge Maki Itoh for the International Princess Championship, so her wrestling Mizuki first is a bit of a warm-up. Obviously that foreshadows that Thunder Rosa is winning this match, as she isn’t going into a title match with a loss, but this will introduce her to any new fans and give her a chance to maybe work out some jitters before her big match coming up.

Mizuki offers her hand to start the match, Thunder Rosa goes to shake it but Mizuki tries to kick her. Thunder Rosa catches the kick and throws Mizuki to the mat. Mizuki is up quickly and hits a tilt-a-whirl armdrag, dropkick by Mizuki but Thunder Rosa throws her into the corner. Mizuki kicks Thunder Rosa back when she charges and goes for a diving crossbody, but Thunder Rosa catches her and hits a backbreaker. Front slam by Thunder Rosa and she covers Mizuki for a two count. Stomps by Thunder Rosa, she picks up Mizuki and slams her again. Thunder Rosa puts Mizuki in the Tree of Woe and dropkicks her in the leg, she picks up Mizuki and hits a scoop slam for two. Single leg crab hold by Thunder Rosa into the rocking cradle, she picks up Mizuki and chops her against the ropes. Mizuki goes for a quick cradle but Thunder Rosa kicks out and boots her in the head, she rakes at Mizuki’s face before slamming her into the mat. Thunder Rosa puts Mizuki in the ropes and chops her in the chest, Irish whip by Thunder Rosa but Mizuki ducks the lariat and connects with a dropkick. Mizuki charges Thunder Rosa and hits a crossbody, sending Thunder Rosa off the apron to the floor.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #6Mizuki goes up to the top turnbuckle and dives out of the ring with a plancha suicida, she slides Thunder Rosa back into the ring and goes up top again, hitting a diving crossbody for two. Mizuki picks up Thunder Rosa but Thunder Rosa knees her in the head, she picks up Mizuki but Mizuki slides down her back and delivers a Backstabber. Armtrap crossface by Mizuki but Thunder Rosa muscles out of it, she gets Mizuki on her shoulders and drives her into the turnbuckles before hitting a Death Valley Bomb. Cover by Thunder Rosa, but Mizuki barely bridges out. Stomps by Thunder Rosa, she gets on the top turnbuckle but Mizuki recovers and joins her. Superplex by Mizuki and both wrestlers are down, they slowly get to their feet as they trade strikes. Chops by Thunder Rosa but Mizuki goes off the ropes and hits a tilt-a-whirl crossbody for two. Mizuki charges Thunder Rosa, Thunder Rosa tries to kick her back but Mizuki slides her legs onto the second ropes and hits a reverse double kneedrop. Mizuki goes up top but Thunder Rosa avoids her dive, running kick by Thunder Rosa and she drops Mizuki with the Thunder Driver for the three count! Thunder Rosa wins!

I guess the best way to describe this match would be fundamentally sound. It was pretty basic but solid, the two worked together pretty well and they kept it short enough that it never felt like it was pushing its time. The beginning was a bit clunky as I didn’t buy Mizuki has being able to out-strike Thunder Rosa, but once she got more to her high flying moves everything they were doing started to sync up. One of the better matches on the show so far, which I mostly credit to the veteran Thunder Rosa, but Mizuki held her own once they got to the meat of the match. Not a bad showing by either.  Mildly Recommended

Miu Watanabe & Rika Tatsumi (c) vs. Nodoka Tenma & Yuki Aino
(c) Maki Itoh vs. Hikari Noa
International Princess Championship

The International Princess Championship is a relatively new title in Tokyo Joshi Pro, as Natsumi Maki became the first champion after beating Gisele Shaw in mid-2019. Maki Itoh is already the third champion since that time, however she has had some success with the belt as this is already her third defense. Hikari Noa is one of the Up Up Girls (Pro Wrestling), she has had a few title matches in her short career however has come up short each time. This is her first shot at a singles title however, as she looks to climb up the ladder in Tokyo Joshi Pro.

They circle each other to start, Hikari trips Maki and goes for her ankle, Maki reverses it and the two go back and forth. Maki applies a side headlock and takes Hikari down, but Hikari quickly gets out of it and dropkicks Maki out of the ring. Hikari goes out after her and they trade blows, scoop slam attempt by Maki on the floor but Hikari blocks it. Maki drags Hikari around the ring and this time manages to hit the scoop slam, she tells the crowd to move and she hits Hikari down in a chair. Maki stands over Hikari but Hikari slides between her legs and hits her in the back with a chair, she slams Maki into the ring apron and then into the ring post. Back in the ring, cover by Hikari but it gets a two count. Elbows by Hikari and she Irish whips Maki, but Maki reverses it and hits a scoop slam. Maki picks up Hikari but Hikari throws her into the corner, Maki avoids Hikari’s charge and smacks her in the midsection. Maki stands over Hikari in the corner and delivers rapid fire punches, she tosses Hikari back to the middle of the ring but Hikari quickly cradles her for two. Maki goes for a strike, Hikari bridges down to avoid it but Maki hits a falling headbutt. She goes for a submission but Hikari quickly gets out of it, rolling cradle by Hikari and she holds down Maki for two.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #7Hikari gets on the top turnbuckle but Maki recovers and joins her, headbutt by Maki and she tosses Hikari back to the middle of the ring. Itoh Special by Maki to Hikari, but Hikari crawls to the ropes and makes it for the break. Maki stomps at Hikari, Irish whip by Maki but Hikari blocks it and applies a grounded cobra twist. Hikari drags up Maki and hits a short-range lariat, cover by Hikari but it gets a two count. Hikari tries a few more quick pins with no luck, she goes for a lariat but Maki blocks it. Maki goes for a DDT but Hikari pushes her off and hits a dropkick, but Maki kicks out of the cover. Hikari goes for a suplex but Maki blocks it, she goes off the ropes but Maki plants her with a DDT. Maki goes to the top turnbuckle and delivers the diving headbutt, but Hikari barely gets a shoulder up. Maki picks up Hikari but Hikari avoids the headbutt and suplexes Maki to the mat. Hikari elbows Maki as they start to get up, but Maki elbows her back. They trade blows as they get up, dropkick by Hikari but Maki isn’t phased and she goes after Hikari’s injured leg as she puts her in the Itoh Deluxe (Elevated Texas Cloverleaf). Hikari struggles for a moment but is forced to submit! Maki Itoh wins the match and retains the championship.

While the ending felt a bit sudden, I still enjoyed this one. Maki has gotten better since the last time I saw her, I still wouldn’t call her a high-end wrestler but she connects well with the crowd and her offense was both smart and effective. Hikari still wrestles a simple style but it works at this level, my main complaint is that Maki did great work on Hikari’s leg but she never really showed any signs it was hurting her until the very end with the dropkick. I appreciate some quality limb work, but a little limp can go a long way. Still a pretty well structured and executed match, Maki could have just done a bit more to foreshadow the end with the submissions finally wearing her down to the point of having to submit. Mildly Recommended

Maki Itoh vs. Hikari Noa
(c) Miu Watanabe and Rika Tatsumi vs. Nodoka Tenma and Yuki Aino
Princess Tag Team Championship

Daydream (Miu and Rika) have been teaming off and on since the Spring and won the Princess Tag Championship from Misao and Sakisama on November 3rd, 2019. This is their first defense of the title and its not an easy one, as they take on the Bakuretsu Sisters. Unlike Miu and Rika, the Bakuretsu Sisters have been teaming since 2018 and are very familiar with each other. This is their third shot at the tag team championship, so it may be now or never for the long term team with not as much success on their records as they would probably prefer.

Miu and Yuki start the match, they both try to shoulderblock each other over until Yuki sends Miu to the mat. Nodoka tags in as does Rika, Rika takes Nodoka to the mat but Nodoka reverses positions with her and the two trade holds. Rika goes off the ropes but Nodoka knocks her down with a shoulderblock, she tags Yuki back in and they double team Rika. Yuki picks up Rika and throws her into the corner but Rika kicks her back when she charges in and tags Miu. Miu elbows Yuki in the corner, elbows to the back by Miu and she hits a running elbow. Miu puts Yuki in a bear hug before throwing her in the corner, she tags Rika and they double team Yuki. Rika puts Yuki in a waistlock but Yuki gets a foot on the ropes for the break. Rika picks up Yuki but Yuki elbows her back, she knocks over Rika and makes the tag to Nodoka. Shoulderblocks by Nodoka to both her opponents and she hits a scoop slam on Rika, crossbody by Nodoka and she gets a two count. Rika throws Nodoka into the corner, she puts her leg over the second rope and dropkicks her in the leg. Rika slams Nodoka’s leg into the ring post a couple times before dropkicking it into the post, cover by Rika but it gets two. Rika hits a dragon screw on Nodoka and follows with a hip attack, Nodoka gets Rika around the waist and picks her up, but her knee gives out.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #8She tries again and this time hits a Samoan Drop, She crawls to her corner but Rika tags in Miu and Miu cuts off Nodoka, body avalanche by Miu in the corner and she hits a hard shoulderblock. Giant Swing by Miu, she picks up Nodoka but Nodoka slides away and applies a side headlock. Nodoka picks up Miu and hits a fallaway slam, she gets to her corner and tags in Yuki. Yuki boots Miu and Nodoka jumps off her back with a crossbody. Cover by Yuki, but it gets two. Yuki elbows Miu and hits a running elbow in the corner, she gets on the second turnbuckle but Miu avoids her dive. Bulldog by Yuki but Rika comes in and rescues her, Nodoka also comes in however and Rika eats a double shoulderblock. Yuki gets on her shoulders as Nodoka goes up to to give her the Bakuretsu Bulldog, but Miu gets away and Rika hip attacks Nodoka off the top turnbuckle. Miu and Rika drop Yuki with an assisted Dragon Twist of Fate, cover by Miu but Nodoka breaks up the pin. Nodoka goes for the Unprettier on Rika but Rika blocks it and hip attacks Nodoka out of the ring, Miu picks up Yuki and she hits a shoulder backbreaker for two. Miu goes for a punch but Yuki ducks it and hits a gutwrench suplex, Yuki applies a full nelson but Miu snapmares out of it. Punch by Miu, she picks up Yuki and nails the Tear Drop for the three count! Daydream win and retain the tag team championship.

Another solid match. From an outsider’s perspective, the Bakuretsu Sisters appear to be done as threats, as if after two years together all you have are three failed title challenges, maybe its time to move on to something else. Miu and Nodoka were my favorite two here, both of their segments on offense were entertaining and they have a variety of ways to hurt people. The leg work was quickly forgotten but it wasn’t enough of a focus to hurt the match, and the end stretch was really good. Rika and Aino didn’t do anything wrong in the match but it just felt like they were kinda ‘present’ rather than doing anything overly memorable, but Tokyo Joshi Pro is full of wrestlers without a lot of experience and not all wrestlers are going to make a difference in every match. Pretty short for a semi-main title match, but an ease to watch with good pacing and a satisfying ending.  Mildly Recommended

Yuka Sakazaki vs. Miyu Yamashita
(c) Yuka Sakazaki vs. Miyu Yamashita
Princess of Princess Championship

After a long show, time for the main event! Miyu Yamashita held the Princess of Princess Championship for over 475 days but lost the title in May of 2019 to Shoko Nakajima. Shoko then lost the title to Yuka Sakazaki in November, and this is Yuka’s first defense of the title. Miyu Yamashita never got a rematch against Shoko so this is her first shot at the title since losing it eight months ago, so needless to say she is anxious for a chance to get it back. This is Yuka’s second reign with the belt but she is far more experienced now than she was during her first run in 2017, so she has no intention of losing the championship at the biggest show of the year in her first defense.

They begin trading wristlocks and headlocks but reach an early stalemate, Yuka sends Miyu to the mat but Miyu reverses positions with her as they jockey for control. Yuka bails out of the ring to regroup but Miyu goes after her, Yuka strikes Miyu as she leaves the ring and kicks her from the apron. Yuka clubs on Miyu’s back and takes her up into the bleachers before throwing her into a wall. Yuka takes Miyu up further into the crowd and scoop slams her on the floor, she gets a table and gets it ready at the top of the stairs to use as a sled. Yuka sits Miyu on the table and pushes her down the stairs, but security is in the way so she only gets about halfway down. Yuka runs down and pushes her the rest of the way, sending Miyu crashing down to the floor at the bottom. They make their way back to ringside and Yuka throws Miyu into the ring post, Yuka props a table up against the post but Miyu fights back with elbows. Yuka elbows her back and scoop slams Miyu into the table (which obviously doesn’t break), Yuka picks Miyu up and slams her into the table again (it kinda breaks this time, Yuka seems satisfied). Yuka brings Miyu up onto the apron but Miyu gets Yuka on her shoulders and slams her onto the apron.

Tokyo Joshi Pro 1/4 GIF #9Miyu throws Yuka back into the ring finally, cover by Miyu but it gets a two count. Snapmare by Miyu and she kicks Yuka in the back, Yuka returns to her feet but Miyu knocks her to the mat again. Running knee by Miyu and she hits a gutbuster, kick combination by Miyu and she puts Yuka in a chinlock, but Yuka gets out of it and pushes Miyu out of the ring. Miyu kicks Yuka from the apron as she returns but Yuka catches her with a diving double chop. Running hurricanrana by Yuka and she hits a jumping forearm, missile dropkick by Yuka but Miyu avoids the Sliding D. Yuka connects on her second try, cover by Yuka but it gets two. High kick by Miyu and she nails a rebound high kick out of the corner, running kick by Miyu and Yuka collapses to the mat. Yuka recovers but Miyu kicks her in the back of the head, cover by Miyu but it gets two. Yuka gets back up and elbows Miyu, Miyu elbows her back but Yuka catches her with a vertical suplex. Rolling vertical suplexes by Yuka, she goes up top but Miyu recovers and joins her.

Yuka pushes Miyu off the top turnbuckle to the floor, she gets on the apron and hits a diving hurricanrana. Yuka puts Miyu up on the apron with her head hanging over and goes to the top turnbuckle, delivering a diving body press. Yuka rolls Miyu back in, cover by Yuka but it gets a two count. Swandive body press attempt by Yuka, but Miyu gets her knees up. Kicks to the chest by Miyu but Yuka slaps on a leg submission hold, Miyu inches to the ropes and makes it for the break. Yuka puts Miyu on the top turnbuckle and joins her, hitting a reverse STO down to the mat. Yuka goes out to the apron and gets on the ropes, but Miyu kicks her in the head before she can jump off. Another head kick by Miyu, she goes out to the apron and dives off the ropes with an elbow to Yuka. Cover by Miyu, but it gets two. More kicks by Miyu but Yuka ducks one and cradles Miyu for two. Rolling elbow by Miyu but Miyu gets her back and hits a German suplex hold for two. Miyu kicks Yuka in the head some more, she goes off the ropes but Yuka catches her with a hammerlock suplex. Miyu goes out to the apron and nails the Magical Magical Girl Splash, cover by Yuka and she picks up the three count! Yuka Sakazaki wins and retains the championship.

I had heard going in that this match was sloppy, and while there were one or two moves that didn’t hit well I wouldn’t consider that overly unusual in a 20 minute match. Maybe the type of thing that keeps a match from being a true MOTYC, but nothing that impacted my overall enjoyment of the match. My main complaint is the ‘outside the ring’ portion felt too long and wasn’t completely satisfying since the sled spot didn’t appear to go as planned, so it felt more like wasting time than contributing to the match. Once they got back into the ring though, business really picked up and both wrestlers are so much fun to watch. Miyu’s kicks are killer, and she can hit them from anywhere as she can deliver a kick to someone that is well over her own head (which she did several times). A classic flyer vs. strikes match, I wouldn’t have minded if the end stretch was longer so Yuka could get in some more offense, but still a fitting main event as they both went all out. I appreciate the effort and desire to create something amazing and memorable even if not everything landed as smooth as they had planned, hopefully next time things will sync better and they will create a true epic.  Recommended

The post TJPW Tokyo Joshi Pro 2020 on 1/4/20 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
14880
Weekly Joshi Recap and Results for April 15th, 2019 https://joshicity.com/weekly-joshi-recap-results-april-15-2019/ Mon, 15 Apr 2019 08:26:18 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=12789 Results from a dozen events over the past week!

The post Weekly Joshi Recap and Results for April 15th, 2019 appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>

A big week in Joshi Wrestling, lets jump right into the weekly Joshi Recap!

Stardom

Event: Stardom “Glory Stars Day 1”
Date: April 13th, 2019
Location: Radiant Hall in Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
Announced Attendance: 230
Where to Watch: Event will be uploaded to Stardom World

  • Hanan, Rina, and Hana defeat Kaori Yoneyama, Leo Onozaki, and Saya Iida (4:48)
  • Saki Kashima defeats Starlight Kid (7:19)
  • Three Way Match: Bea Priestley defeats Hana Kimura and Rebel Kel (8:05)
  • Mayu Iwatani and Tam Nakano defeats Jungle Kyona and Natsuko Tora (11:44)
  • Two out of Three Match: Momo Watanabe, Konami, and AZM defeat Kagetsu, Hazuki, and Natsu Sumire (18:06)
    • Kagetsu defeats Momo Watanabe (10:38)
    • AZM defeats Natsu Sumire (2:15)
    • Momo Watanabe defeats Kagetsu (5:13)

The main event had a unique stipulation – with Queen’s Quest putting up their masks and Oedo Tai putting up their pre-match dancing. Whichever team lost would no longer be allowed to do their pre-match ritual. With Queen’s Quest winning, Oedo Tai will no longer dance before matches for all events going forward.

Event: Stardom “Glory Stars Day 2”
Date:  April 14th, 2019
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 401
Where to Watch: Event will be uploaded to Stardom World

  • Rina defeats Hina (4:43)
  • Three Way Match: Tam Nakano defeats Hanan and Rebel Kel (5:52)
  • Hazuki, Andras Miyagi, and Natsu Sumire defeats Natsuko Tora, Leo Onozaki, and Saya Iida (10:28)
  • Arisa Hoshiki, Saki Kashima, and Starlight Kid defeats Bea Priestley, Konami, and AZM (12:25)
  • 5 Way Draft Nomination Order Determination Match with Hana Kimura, Jungle Kyona, Kagetsu, Mayu Iwatani, and Momo Watanabe
    • Mayu wins first pick by throwing Kagetsu over the top rope
    • Momo wins second pick by throwing Kagetsu over the top rope
    • Kagetsu wins third pick by throwing Hana over the top rope
    • Hana wins fourth pick by throwing Jungle Kyona over the top rope
    • Kyona loses and her faction is forced to disband

For the second year, Stardom had a draft for their factions. For the main event, the five faction leaders took part to determine the picking order for the draft. The big catch this year is that whichever wrestler was left at the end, their group would have to disband as only four factions would continue in Stardom. Jungle Kyona was the last wrestler remaining, forcing her faction Jungle Assault Nation to disband, with Jungle Kyona becoming a draftable wrestler. Here are the results from the draft that took place after the main event:

STARS Queen’s Quest Oedo Tai Hana Kimura’s Army
Mayu Iwatani
Starlight Kid
Arisa Hoshiki
Tam Nakano
Saki Kashima
Hanan
Xia Brookside
Saya Iida
Momo Watanabe
AZM
Utami Hayashishita
Bea Priestley
Viper
Chardonnay
Leo Onozaki
Hina
Kagetsu
Hazuki
Andras Miyagi
Natsuko Tora
Jamie Hayter
Session Moth Martina
Natsu Sumire
Hana Kimura
Jungle Kyona
Konami
Mary Apache
Natsumi
Rebel Kel
Bobbi Tyler
Rina

Ice Ribbon

Event: Ice Ribbon “New Ice Ribbon #954 in SKIP City”
Date: April 14th, 2019
Location: SKIP City Multipurpose Hall in Saitama, Japan
Announced Attendance: 225
Where to Watch: Airs on Nico Nico on 4/22/19

  • Suzu Suzuki and Tsukushi defeat Asahi and Ibuki Hoshi (8:02)
  • Tae Honma defeats Matsuya Uno (9:43)
  • Tequila Saya defeats Satsuki Totoro (6:19)
  • Kyuri, Maika Ozaki, and Tsukasa Fujimoto defeat Akane Fujita, Hiragi Kurumi, and Mochi Miyagi (15:13)
  • Rina Yamashita defeats Giulia (15:03)
  • International Ribbon Tag Team Championship: Maya Yukihi and Risa Sera (c) defeat Makoto and Miyako Matsumoto (15:20)

PURE-J

Event: PURE-J Bolshoi Final Series
Date: April 10th, 2019
Location: Asakusa Hanayashiki in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 90
Where to Watch: Not televised, likely DVD release

  • Rydeen Hagane defeats Himeka Arita (12:04)
  • KAZUKI defeats Momo Tani (8:59)
  • Manami Katsu defeats Yako Fujigasaki (12:59)
  • Command Bolshoi defeats Mari Manji (5:45)
  • Rematch: Command Bolshoi defeats Mari Manji (4:50)
  • Rematch: Command Bolshoi defeats Mari Manji (0:59)
  • Leon and Moeka Haruhi defeat Hanako Nakamori and Makoto (17:38)

Event: PURE-J Bolshoi Final Series
Date: April 14th, 2019
Location: Itabashi Green Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 117
Where to Watch: Not televised, likely DVD release

  • SAKI defeats Mari Manji (10:15)
  • KAZUKI defeats Yako Fujigasaki (10:17)
  • Command Bolshoi defeats AKARI (9:36)
  • Kaori Yoneyama and Leon defeat Mei Suruga and Riho (12:29)
  • Chikayo Nagashima and Hanako Nakamori defeat Manami Katsu and Rydeen Hagane (17:49)

Tokyo Joshi Pro

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Spring Tour ’19 ~ Ready Set, Go!”
Date: April 13th, 2019
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 250
Where to Watch: DDT Universe

  • Rika Tatsumi and Haruna Neko defeated Pom Harajuku and Mahiro Kiryu (8:57)
  • Reika Saiki defeated YUMI (7:20)
  • Natsumi Maki and Hikari Noa defeated Yuki Kamifuku and Mina Shirakawa (7:41)
  • Yuka Sakazaki and Mizuki defeated Yuna Manase and Himawari Unagi (12:02)
  • Sakisama and Misao defeated Miu Watanabe and Raku (14:09)
  • Miyu Yamashita, Shoko Nakajima, and Marika Kobashi defeated Maki Itoh, Nodoka Tenma, and Yuki Aino (14:46)

SEAdLINNNG

Event: SEAdLINNNG Shin-Kiba 11th NIGHT
Date: April 12th, 2019
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 238
Where to Watch: No announced release

  • Kaori Yoneyama defeats Sae (6:02)
  • Mei Hoshizuki and Mei Suruga defeat ASUKA and Maria (7:51)
  • Hiroyo Matsumoto, Makoto and Yoshiko defeat Himeka Arita, Miyuki Takase, and Saori Anou (13:45)
  • Amazon and Takumi Iroha vs. Nanae Takahashi and Ryo Mizunami – Time Limit Draw (20:00)
  • Arisa Nakajima defeats Command Bolshoi (19:50)

OZ Academy

Event: OZ Academy “It Is The Dawn Of The Era”
Date: April 14th, 2019
Location: Korakuen Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 883
Where to Watch: Airs on GAORA TV on 4/30/19

  • Maya Yukihi and Yumi Ohka defeat Aoki Itsuki and Yoshiko (12:41)
  • Tsubasa Kuragaki defeats Cherry (8:19)
  • Aja Kong and Gabai Ji-chan defeat Command Bolshoi and Kyusei Hirota Command Bolshoi (Sakura Hirota) (9:51)
  • Sonoko Kato defeats Ryo Mizunami (14:51)
  • OZ Academy Tag Team Championship: Hiroyo Matsumoto and Kaori Yoneyama (c) defeat AKINO and Kakeru Sekiguchi (18:56)
  • OZ Academy Openweight Championship: Mayumi Ozaki defeats Hikaru Shida (c) (19:03) – TITLE CHANGE

With it being announced that Hikaru Shida signed with AEW, Mayumi Ozaki wasted no time in getting the belt back to the promotion as she defeats Shida to reclaim the title.

Sendai Girls’

Event: Sendai Girls’
Date: April 13th, 2019
Location: Osaka World Pavilion in Osaka, Japan
Announced Attendance: 195
Where to Watch: No announced release

  • Mika Iwata defeats Mikoto Shindo (6:00)
  • Three Way Match: Manami defeats KAORU and Sakura Hirota (7:27)
  • DASH Chisako and Hiroyo Matsumoto defeat Alex Lee and Hikaru Shida (9:36)
  • Meiko Satomura defeats Millie McKenzie (11:54)
  • Jordynne Grace and Sareee defeat Chihiro Hashimoto and Killer Kelly (12:49)

Gatoh Move

Event: Gatoh Move Japan Tour #420
Date: April 13th, 2019
Location: Ichigaya Chocolate Hiroba in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 56
Where to Watch: No announced release

  • Tetsuya Izuchi defeats IMABAYASHI (6:19)
  • Baliyan Akki and SAKI defeat Mei Suruga and TAMURA (9:50)
  • Riho and Yuna Mizumori defeat Mitsuru Konno and Sawasdee Kamen (12:38)

Diana

Event: Diana
Date: April 14th, 2019
Location: Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan
Announced Attendance: 70
Where to Watch: No announced release

  • Jaguar Yokota defeats Haruka Umesaki (11:15)
  • Ayako Sato and Kyoko Inoue vs. Kaoru Ito and Sareee – Time Limit Draw (20:00)

Yumiko Hotta Produce

Event: Yumiko Hotta Produce Runaway Rally ~ Spring Wind
Date: April 14th, 2019
Location: Itabashi Green Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 230
Where to Watch: No announced release

  • Leon defeats Kakeru Sekiguchi (7:04)
  • Pretty Ota defeats Mr. Buddhaman (0:46)
  • Pretty Ota defeats Mr. Buddhaman (2:40)
  • Pretty Ota defeats Mr. Buddhaman (1:11)
  • Arisa Nakajima and Manami Katsu defeat Mari and SAKI (21:56)
  • Nanae Takahashi defeats Miyuki Takase (12:22)
  • Saori Anou and Yumiko Hotta defeat Himeka Arita and Yoshiko (12:27)


Special thanks to Cagematch, Wrestlingdata, DramaticDDT, Stardom, PURE-J, Ice Ribbon, OZ Academy, SEAdLINNNG, Gatoh Move, and Diana for assistance gathering information.

The post Weekly Joshi Recap and Results for April 15th, 2019 appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
12789
Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Review https://joshicity.com/tokyo-joshi-pro-tokyo-princess-cup-2018-review/ Wed, 08 Aug 2018 03:21:07 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=11450 A review of the 5th Tokyo Princess Cup!

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Since I am behind in my Tokyo Joshi Pro viewing, I figured the best way to check in would be to review the Tokyo Princess Cup in its entirety. The Tokyo Princess Cup is an annual tournament in Tokyo Joshi Pro and is a single elimination tournament. When originally announced, the tournament contained 16 wrestlers, here is the bracket:

The final spot in the tournament will be determined in a qualifying match between Hikari and Miu on June 3rd. The winner of the tournament will receive a title shot at a later event. If you are new to Tokyo Joshi Pro I highly recommend you check out Heerokun’s Introduction to Tokyo Joshi Pro guide as it does a far better job of explaining things than I’d ever be able to. Let’s get straight to the first show on June 3rd!

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Day 1
Dates: June 3rd, 2018
Location: Shinjuku Village Studio C 106 in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 384

We have five matches on the first night, with the qualifying match for the 16th spot as well as half of the 1st Round matches taking place. Here are tonight’s matches:

All wrestlers above have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name to go straight to it. As this event aired on DDT Universe, all matches are unclipped.


Hikari vs. Miu

Hikari and Miu are both popular young wrestlers affiliated with the Up Up Girls, and both have been wrestling for less than a year. They don’t really interact with the idol group that shares their name however as they are a separate unit, focused more on wrestling than singing (although they do that too). While the winner may not go far in the tournament, it will still be good experience for whichever rookie wins the match.

They grapple to start, shoulderblock by Miu but Hikari returns the favor and starts on Miu’s leg. Hikari throws Miu in the corner and hits a jumping elbow, cover by Hikari but it gets two. Back up they trade elbows until Miu clubs Hikari in the chest and puts Hikari in a crab hold, but Hikari gets into the ropes. Backbreaker by Miu, she picks up Hikari and throws her into the corner before hitting a body avalanche. Miu tosses Hikari to the mat, cover by Miu but it gets a two. Hikari fire back with a dropkick, Miu goes off the ropes and muscles Hikari up onto her shoulder but Hikari slides away and hits a dropkick. Hikari picks up Miu but Miu hits a scoop slam, Hikari slides away again however and puts Miu in an Cobra Twist. Cradle by Hikari, but Miu gets a shoulder up. Miu clubs Hikari in the chest with a Polish Hammer, she picks up Hikari and gets her onto her shoulder, but Hikari breaks the hold and cradles Miu for two. Hikari dropkicks Miu from behind, Leg Roll Clutch by Hikari and she gets the three count! Hikari wins and is now in the Tokyo Princess Cup!

While it is clear these two are still rookies based on their skill level, they still made an attempt to tell a story. Even with no real knowledge going in, it was clear that Miu kept going for the same move that would have gotten her the victory, but Hikari kept avoiding it and eventually was able to defeat Miu as she had a bigger bag of tricks. Basic but fine enough, I don’t know if either will have a long career in wrestling but for this style of match I have no real complaints.


Nodoka-oneesan vs. Yuna Manase

Nodoka is a very popular young wrestler in Tokyo Joshi Pro, her rise within the promotion was gradual but she has started to pick up bigger wins in 2018 and appears posed to make a run to the top of the promotion. Yuna Manase debuted four years ago for Stardom and since then has had quite a journey, as she stopped by several promotions after leaving Stardom before ending up in Tokyo Joshi Pro in 2017. Yuna challenged for the Tokyo Princess of Princess Championship in February against Miyu Yamashita but came up short, so she’ll need to win this tournament if she wants another shot anytime soon.

They begin the match trading wristlocks until Nodoka slaps on a headlock, Yuna gets out of it but Nodoka drops her with a shoulderblock. Nodoka goes off the ropes but Yuna returns the favor with her own shoulderblock, Yuna slams Nodoka’s knee into the mat before flinging her down by the hair. Irish whip by Yuna out of the corner but Nodoka reverses it and hits a running elbow, body press by Nodoka but it only gets a two count. Nodoka goes off the ropes but Yuna plants her with a big boot, snapmare by Yuna and she kicks Nodoka in the back before hitting a seated senton for two. Mounted elbows by Yuna and she puts Nodoka in a headlock, but Nodoka gets a foot on the ropes to force the break. Scoop slam by Yuna, she picks up Nodoka but Nodoka elbows her off and hits a scoop slam. Nodoka tries to get Yuna on her shoulders but Yuna blocks it, body block by Yuna and she hits an over-the-shoulder slam. Running chest bump by Yuna, she covers Nodoka but Nodoka barely gets a shoulder up. Yuna goes for a kick but Nodoka avoids it, diving bulldog by Nodoka but Yuna floors her again with a big boot. Nodoka dropkicks Yuna into the corner but Nodoka quickly hits a Back Flip (Samoan Driver) for a quick three count cover! Nodoka continues in the tournament.

Nodoka is fiery, I like her quite a bit, but Yuna still doesn’t do a lot for me. There is a reason that Yuna has bounced around so much early in her career, she does the fundamentals well but doesn’t really bring anything special to the table. She did a good enough job as just being a foil for Nodoka but for two wrestlers that know each other well the chemistry wasn’t really there with some of the transitions. The match also felt like it ended really quickly as Yuna didn’t feel worn down at all and the Back Flip isn’t a killer move. A decent enough mid-card match but nothing more than that.


Hyper Misao vs. Saki-sama

I have a feeling this will be a “more style than substance” type of match. Hyper Misao is an interesting character as she is basically a super hero that claims to be good but actually cheats much of the time or tries to win by underhanded means. She still is fairly popular though as her shenanigans are usually more funny than mean spirited/heelish, but she hasn’t really gotten out of the midcard. Saki is the main heel in Tokyo Joshi Pro and leads a group called NEO Biishikigun, the main heel faction in the promotion. She has held the Tokyo Princess Tag Team Championship this year but has yet to ever challenge for the Princess of Princess Championship so winning this tournament would get her a chance for the big belt.

Even before the match starts, Misao is already being shady as she tells Saki she has stolen some of her stuff and unless she forfeits the match, she won’t get it back. Saki has none of this and boots Misao hard in the face, cover by Saki but Misao kicks out and bails out of the ring. Saki goes out after her but Misao knocks her down and runs away, she disguises someone at ringside in her attire and hides before Saki recovers. Saki sees the impostor but realizes it is not the real Misao, Saki finds her but Misao bails again and runs up the stairwell near ringside. Saki follows her but Misao throws the curtain at her, she then busts out some tape and tapes Saki’s hand to the guardrail. Misao runs back into the ring as the referee’s count continues, but Saki slips out of her glove to get loose and makes it back before the 20 count. Running elbow by Misao and she rams Saki’s head into her knee, Misao exits the ring and comes back with a chair, but the referee stops her from using it. By now Saki has recovered and she boots Misao in the chest, Saki whips at Misao before kicking her in the back of the head for a two count. Saki applies a headscissors but Misao makes it to the ropes, Saki goes off the ropes and she boots Misao out of the ring. Saki gets on the apron and goes to kick Misao, but Misao throws a chair at her leg.

Misao tapes up Saki’s legs and tries to return to the ring but Saki grabs her, and Saki returns the favor by taping up Misao’s legs. They both roll back into the ring, taped up legs and all, and Misao gets her chair. Misao hops over to Saki but the referee tries to take the chair from her, he fails however and goes flying backwards and out of the ring. Misao hops again over to Saki but Saki knocks her back, roll-up by Misao but the referee isn’t around to count it. Saki and Misao both free their legs, Misao goes to find the referee but Saki kicks her from behind. Saki applies a figure four headlock but lets go since there is no referee still, she goes and collects the referee but Misao promptly accidentally elbows him in the corner. Big boot by Saki in the corner but Misao comes back with a crossbody, she crawls to the corner and gets the tape again, but Azusa Christie runs down to help Saki. Azusa frees Saki with scissors, Misao comes back with some type of spray and sprays it into both Saki and Azusa’s eyes. Misao tosses the bottle to Saki as she goes to wake up the referee, and then takes off her own mask and puts it into Saki’s hands as well. As the referee finally recovers, Misao tells him that Saki cheated and stole her mask, and the referee disqualifies Saki! Hyper Misao wins and advances in the tournament.

While I can see that this shtick may get old if it happens repeatedly, to me it is still fresh so I liked it. The lengths of which Misao went through to win was truly impressive, she wasn’t trying the same thing over and over but had a big bag of tricks. Not all worked but the effort was there. Also for comedy-type matches I tend to listen to the crowd more and they really enjoyed it, so clearly they know their audience. An amusing match, I don’t know how Misao is as a traditional wrestler but her gimmickry is on-point.  Mildly Recommended


Maki Itoh vs. Miyu Yamashita

I am not going to be able to do the Maki Itoh Craze justice in this short intro, but Maki is a very popular wrestler in Tokyo Joshi Pro that just started wrestling in 2016. While her in-ring technique is still improving, her promos/charisma/general attitude are top notch and have gained her quite a following in the last six months. She has an uphill battle here however, as in the first round she drew current Princess of Princess Champion who has not lost a singles match since August of 2017. Maki will have to pull off a big upset to continue her run in the Tokyo Princess Cup.

The match starts with wristlocks, headlock by Miyu but Maki elbows out of it. Miyu charges Maki but Maki moves, Maki goes for mounted punches in the corner but Miyu slides away and hits Maki from behind. Miyu goes off the ropes but Maki greets her with a hard elbow, shoulder tackles by Maki in the corner and she finally hits her mounted punches. Maki goes off the ropes but Miyu avoids her attack, stomps by Miyu and she kicks Maki in the back for a two count. Miyu clubs Maki in the back and applies a headscissors, but Maki wiggles to the ropes to force a break. Miyu goes off the ropes and dropkicks Maki in the back, Irish whip by Miyu which is reversed by Maki, but Maki misses a dropkick. Back up they trade strikes, Miyu goes off the ropes but Maki catches her with a dropkick. Scoop slam by Maki and she covers Miyu for a two count. Elbows by Maki but Miyu knees her in the stomach, battering ram by Maki and she hits a falling headbutt for two. Maki headbutts Miyu but Miyu gets her back, elbows by Maki but Miyu returns fire. Miyu goes for a high kick but Maki catches it, headbutts by Maki and she finally knocks Miyu to the mat. Maki puts Miyu in a crab hold but Miyu inches to the ropes for a break. Maki gets on the second turnbuckle but Miyu avoids her body press, now Miyu goes up top and hits a missile dropkick for two. Miyu picks up Maki but Maki slides away, knee by Miyu but Maki elbows her back. High kick by Miyu, she picks up Maki but again Miyu slides off and hits a DDT. Miyu puts Maki in a deep clutch Boston Crab but Miyu is able to make it to the ropes, Maki picks up Miyu and she hits a long series of headbutts. Maki goes off the ropes but Miyu catches her with a pair of high kicks, Attitude Adjustment by Miyu and she picks up the three count! Miyu Yamashita wins and advances in the tournament.

I can see the appeal with Maki, but I wouldn’t say this match ever really went beyond just the ‘good’ level. Course, this is an early round non-main event match so there are some limitations outside of their control, but it all just felt a bit rushed. Maki had a good run at the end to try to put down the clearly more powerful Miyu, but Miyu seemed to shrug it all off a bit too easily to go straight into her home stretch. With a few extra minutes they probably could have wrapped things up a bit better. Miyu’s strikes were on point as always and she has always been one of my favorites in Tokyo Joshi Pro, so I am looking forward to her having longer and more even matches as the tournament progresses.  Mildly Recommended


Reika Saiki vs. Yuu

This is a pretty big match as it pits two former Princess of Princess Champions against each other, with Reika holding the title more recently as she lost it earlier in 2018. Reika is technically a Freelancer but spends a lot of time in Tokyo Joshi Pro, she comes into the match holding half of the Princess Tag Team Championships and has improved dramatically since debuting just two years ago. Yuu is Tokyo Joshi Pro’s strongest wrestler and is tough to beat, she also debuted in 2016 so experience-wise it is a very even match.

The match begins with a test of strength, naturally, which Yuu initially wins but Reika gets in top position. Yuu gets back in control but Reika gets into the ropes for the break, headlock by Yuu but Reika gets out of it and they collide with neither wrestler going down. Reika gets Yuu to the mat and kicks her in the back, she picks up Yuu and dropkicks her before hitting a hip toss for a two count. Reika throws Yuu into the corner but Yuu elbows her, Reika returns with an elbow of her own and she puts Yuu in a camel clutch. Yuu gets to the ropes for the break, Reika goes off the ropes but Yuu catches her with a spinning side slam. Reika quickly comes back with a backdrop suplex, Reika picks up Yuu and goes for the Tower Bridge, but Yuu slides away and hits the Oklahoma Stampede. Yuu picks up Reika, Reika goes for a leapfrog but Yuu catches her and slams Yuu to the mat. Senton by Yuu, but Reika kicks out of the cover.

Back up they trade strikes until Yuu chops Reika to the mat, Yuu picks up Reika but Reika knocks her back and the battle continues. Irish whip by Yuu and she chops Reika to the mat again, cover by Yuu but it gets a two count. Yuu picks up Reika, Reika goes off the ropes but Yuu drops her with a judo throw. Yuu applies a cobra clutch but Reika quickly gets into the ropes, Yuu charges Reika but Reika leapfrogs over her and dropkicks Yuu into the corner. Reika grabs Yuu and puts her in the Tower Bridge, but quickly tosses her back down and stomps on Yuu’s back. Missile dropkick by Reika, she waits for Yuu to get up but Yuu ducks her kick and re-applies the Cobra Clutch. Reika gets out of the hold and goes for the Shining Wizard, but Yuu catches her and hits a buckle bomb. Last Ride attempt by Yuu but Reika slides away and hits a Shining Wizard to the back of Yuu’s head. Head kick by Reika, she picks up Yuu and goes for the Jackhammer, but Yuu blocks it and hits a hard elbows. John Woo by Yuu, she drags up Reika and she nails a Last Ride for the three count pinfall! Yuu picks up the win and advances in the tournament.

It took a few minutes to get going, but once it did I got the hoss battle that I was hoping for. The only thing holding back Yuu is she isn’t very charismatic so she has to work a bit harder to get the crowd into what she is doing. But she has the skill which is a big component of that, if she sticks with it and improves some in crowd engagement she could be a big star. I really enjoyed when they were trading bombs in the match as that is both wrestler’s style, a few of the spots were repeated and the strike battle may have been a bit too long in a shorter match, but its hard to get mad at two strong wrestlers tossing each other around. For a main event it didn’t seem quite as ‘special’ as one would hope but they packed a lot of content into it, an entertaining match even though it had its flaws.  Mildly Recommended

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Day 2
Dates: June 9th, 2018
Location: Shin-Kiba 1st RING in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 302

On paper, the second night of the first round should have had four matches, but sadly that turned out not to be the case. Marika Kobashi was forced out of the tournament due to a poorly timed injury, and Maho Kurone forfeited her match as at the time she was taking a leave of absence from TJPW (sadly, since that time it has been announced that she is not returning). So instead of four matches, we get two matches, as a couple wrestlers get automatic byes. Here is the line-up for the event as we conclude the 1st Round:

All wrestlers above have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name to go straight to it. As this event aired on DDT Universe, all matches are unclipped.


Azusa Christie vs. Rika Tatsumi

As I mentioned above, the first two matches of the tournament had forfeits, so we jump straight to the semi-main on the event to have our first tournament match. Azusa Christie is part of NEO Biishikigun, the heel stable run by Saki-sama. Since joining with Saki, Azusa has found a lot more success as she left her old Idol life be Saki’s devoted helper. Rika Tatsumi has been feuding with NEO Biishikigun for much of 2018, she was in a popular tag team with Maho Kahone but without her friend around she is on her own to battle one of her biggest enemies.

They jockey for position in the ropes as the match begins, Irish whip by Rika but she can’t shoulderblock Azusa over. Azusa throws down Rika by the hair and into the corner, kicks by Azusa and she knocks Rika out of the ring. Azusa goes out after her and rams Rika into the apron, Azusa whacks Rika with a weapon before rolling her back into the ring. Rika greets Azusa with boots and hits a face crusher, hip attack by Rika and she hits an elbow drop for a two count. Rika kicks Azusa in the leg and applies a cross kneelock, she picks her up after a moment and drops Azusa with a dragon screw leg whip. Kneebreaker by Rika, but Azusa kicks out of the cover. Irish whip by Rika but it is reversed, Azusa knocks Rika to the mat but Rika recovers and the two trade strikes until Azusa applies a crucifix into a cover for two. Azusa keeps hold of her arms and applies a double armbar, she lets go and picks up Rika, but Rika gets Azusa in the corner and dropkicks her in the leg. Dragon screw by Rika and she quickly puts Azusa in the figure four, but Azusa makes it to the ropes for the break. Rika picks up Azusa but Azusa blocks the cutter and hits a Codebreaker, running forearm by Azusa but her cover gets two. Azusa and Rika trade elbows, hip attack by Rika and she twists on Azusa’s leg before hitting another quick hip attack for two. Cutter by Rika, she goes up top but Azusa avoids the diving hip attack and hits a running facecrusher. Azusa kicks Rika twice in the chest but Rika hits a backbreaker, sleeper by Rika and she reverts it into a Dragon Sleeper. Azusa struggles for a moment but eventually has to tap out! Rika Tatsumi wins and advances in the tournament.

Not an overly exciting match but pretty well executed. Rika has a lot of fire and I like her offense, but her offense doesn’t really fit together as she was focusing on different parts of Azusa throughout the match. The potential is there, she just needs to tie it all together. Azusa was a bit clunkier, but the bigger issue is that I never really saw her as winning the match. Even without any backstories, just as a casual viewer it always felt like it was Rika’s match to win. Decent enough but it still feels like everyone is holding back a bit for the later rounds of the tournament.


Mizuki vs. Yuka Sakazaki

Yuka Sakazaki is one of the most accomplished wrestlers in Tokyo Joshi Pro, as she has had both a Princess of Princess and a Princess Tag Team Championship run in the last year. She is also one of the most exciting wrestlers they have as she has flashy offense and is a crowd favorite. Mizuki is the veteran of the tournament as she has been wrestling since 2012, she started in LLPW-X but left the promotion in 2017 to become a Freelancer. Since being a Freelancer, Tokyo Joshi Pro has been one of her main homes as she has been a regular there in 2018. With her experience it is hard not to respect Mizuki, even though Yuka is one of the top wrestlers in the promotion.

Mizuki quickly goes for flash pins but Yuka kicks out of each one, she returns the favor with a few flash pins of her own but she can’t get the three count either. Eventually both wrestlers roll out of the ring exhausted from the flash pin sequence, but they return after a moment with Yuka taking control. Yuka works over Mizuki on the mat and then in the corner, elbows by Yuka and she covers Mizuki for a two count. Yuka’s methodical offense on Mizuki continues until Mizuki flings Yuka out of the ring, Mizuki goes up top but Yuka quickly rolls back in and twists Mizuki’s leg in the top rope. Snapmare by Yuka down to the mat and she covers Mizuki for two. Yuka picks up Mizuki and throws her into the corner, running elbow by Yuka and she delivers a high kick for another two count. Yuka knocks Mizuki into the corner again but this time Mizuki scores with five straight dropkicks, hard elbow by Mizuki and she connects with a tilt-a-whirl headscissors which sends Yuka out of the ring. Mizuki goes up top and dives out onto Yuka with a crossbody, she gets Yuka back into the ring and puts her in a leg submission. Stretch hold by Mizuki, she lets go after a moment and hits a cartwheel into a body press for two. A leg scissors roll-up also gets two, she goes for a wheelbarrow but Yuka catches her and slams Mizuki to the mat. Yuka gets on the second turnbuckle but Mizuki dropkicks her as she jumps off, Mizuki throws Yuka into the corner but Yuka elbows her as she charges in and hits a dropkick of her own.

Mizuki falls out of the ring, Yuka charges the ropes and dives out onto her with a springboard plancha. Yuka slides Mizuki back in, Yuka slams Mizuki and puts her in an armbar, but Mizuki rolls to the ropes for the break. Rolling snapmare by Yuka and she delivers a sliding lariat, Yuka goes up top but Mizuki gets her knees up on the diving body press attempt. Both wrestlers are slow to get up and they trade elbows as they do so, running elbow by Yuka and she kicks Mizuki in the stomach, but Mizuki drop toeholds her into the ropes and dropkicks Yuka in the back. Mizuki gets on the second rope and hits a diving footstomp, cover by Mizuki but it gets two. Crossface by Mizuki but Yuka quickly counters it, ankle hold by Yuka but Mizuki crawls to the ropes for the break. Yuka rolls Mizuki to the mat but Mizuki catches her sliding lariat attempt and applies a crossface, she lets go after a moment and applies a stretch hold but Yuka gets into the ropes. Back up, enzuigiri by Yuka and she goes off the ropes, but Mizuki catches her with the Cutie Special. Mizuki goes up top and delivers the diving footstomp, but Yuka kicks out of the cover. Elbows by Mizuki and she cradles Yuka, but Yuka reverses it for her own two count. Discus elbow by Yuka and she delivers the Merry Go Round, she goes out to the apron and nails the Magical Magical Girl Splash for the three count! Yuka Sakazaki wins and advances!

Even with a bit of time-stretching, I enjoyed this match quite a bit. Mizuki was very spunky, while I think everyone assumed that Yuka Sakazaki was winning they made it a pretty even affair with Mizuki getting plenty of chances to shine. Yuka is so smooth in the ring and she has grown a lot in the last few years from being mostly just cool spots to putting together a full offensive game. It never really reached that next level but it was a well-executed and entertaining match.  Recommended

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Day 3
Dates: June 17th, 2018
Location: Narimasu Act Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 326

And we are onto the second round! All the second round matches take place on the same day and everyone survived the first round healthy so no issue with forfeits. The Tokyo Princess Cup matches were the last four matches on the event, here are the pairings:

All wrestlers above have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name to go straight to it. As this event aired on DDT Universe, all matches are unclipped. Since I already gave a brief summary for the wrestlers before their first round matches, from now on we will just get straight to the matches.


Hikari vs. Yuka Sakazaki

After some introductory hold trading, Yuka gets Hikari on the mat and starts working on her leg. Hikari gets out of it and they return to their feet, Yuka goes off the ropes and hits an armdrag but Hikari returns the favor and hits a dropkick. Yuka rolls out of the ring to re-group, Hikari goes out after her but Yuka quickly returns to the ring. Yuka kicks Hikari as she comes through the ropes, leg drop by Yuka and she puts Hikari in a chinlock. Snapmare by Yuka, she picks up Hikari and throws her into the corner before stomping Hikari through the ropes. Yuka gets on the second turnbuckle and applies a headscissors over the top rope, she lets go after a moment and covers Hikari for a two count. Back up, elbows by Hikari but Yuka hits a drop toehold and puts Hikari in a STF. Hikari gets to the ropes for the break, Irish whip by Yuka to the corner and she hits a running elbow. Hikari comes back with a dropkick, more dropkicks by Hikari but Yuka catches her with a dropkick of her own. Hikari puts Yuka in a cobra twist, rolling cradle by Hikari but Yuka gets a shoulder up. Yuka hits a hard elbow but Hikari elbows her back, roll-up by Hikari but it gets two. Enzuigiri by Yuka and she drives Hikari’s head into the mat, Yuka goes off the ropes and hits Hikari with a sliding lariat. Yuka goes up top but Hikari tosses her off, Hikari then goes up top and she hits a missile dropkick for a two count. Hikari applies a sleeper, she rolls it into a Japanese Clutch but Yuka kicks out. Hikari picks up Yuka but Yuka gets away from her and pushes her to the mat, Yuka rolls Hikari to the middle and puts her in the Omoplata, and Hikari has to submit! Yuka Sakazaki advances to the Semi Finals!

I love Yuka Sakazaki but there wasn’t much to this one. Hikari is too green to really hang with Yuka and so it was a very toned down more mat-based match. They gave Hikari a few hope spots, which was polite but none were particularly convincing and then the match suddenly ended with a slow developing submission hold. Definitely the most skippable match of the tournament thus far, course Hikari advancing in the first place likely wasn’t the plan so they had to do the best they could with the cards they were dealt.


Miyu Yamashita vs. Nodoka-oneesan

Like the last match, this one begins methodically as they both grapple for the upper hand. Irish whip by Miyu, she kicks Nodoka but Nodoka fires back with a hard shoulderblock. Nodoka picks up Miyu and hits a snapmare before delivering a body press. Nodoka kicks Miyu into the corner but Miyu switches positions with her and hits a series of elbows. Kick to the back by Miyu and she applies a chinlock, but Nodoka gets to the ropes for the break. Irish whip by Miyu and she knees Nodoka in the gut, sliding kick by Miyu and she covers Nodoka for two. Another kick to the back by Miyu and she goes for Nodoka’s arm, but Nodoka rolls her up for two. Knee by Miyu and she picks up Nodoka, but Nodoka slides away and hits a backbreaker. Nodoka goes off the ropes but Miyu catches her with a knee to the stomach, another knee by Miyu but Nodoka elbows her in the back of the leg and hits a low crossbody for a two count. Nodoka chokes Miyu with her leg but Miyu quickly gets into the ropes, Irish whip by Nodoka and she hits a back elbow, running body press by Nodoka but Miyu kicks out.

Nodoka gets on the second turnbuckle but Miyu gets her knees up when she jumps off, push kick by Miyu and she hits a second one, kick combination by Miyu but Nodoka catches one and elbows Miyu in the leg. Miyu comes right back with a hard high kick, she knocks Nodoka into the corner and delivers a jumping knee. Miyu picks up Nodoka but Nodoka gets away and hits a shoulderblock, Nodoka picks up Miyu and she hits a scoop slam. Nodoka gets on the second turnbuckle and hits a diving body press, she applies the WAR Special but Miyu gets out of it and hits a lariat. Back up, elbows by Nodoka but Miyu kicks her in the back of the head. Another kick by Miyu, she goes off the ropes and she kicks Nodoka in the head. Miyu picks up Nodoka and nails the Attitude Adjustment, but Nodoka gets a shoulder up at two. Miyu goes up top but Nodoka recovers and joins her, she gets Miyu on her shoulders and delivers an Avalanche Back Flip. Cover by Nodoka, but Miyu barely kicks out. Miyu is up first, she picks up Nodoka but Nodoka elbows her. Miyu returns with a kick, another head kick by Miyu but when she goes off the ropes she eats a hard Nodoka elbow. Backflip by Nodoka, and she picks up the three count! Nodoka wins the match and advances in the tournament.

This is by far the biggest upset in the tournament up to this point, as Miyu Yamashita is one of the top wrestlers in Tokyo Joshi Pro while Nodoka is popular but didn’t have a big singles win yet in her career. Even though I still am not impressed with the Back Flip as a finisher, at least she also hit an avalanche version in this match so it didn’t feel like Miyu went down too easy. Miyu’s kicks in this match were crazy, I’m not sure how Nodoka was even still standing at times, she really is one of the top Joshi strikers in the business. Not a long match but an action packed one, my favorite of the tournament so far.  Recommended


Hyper Misao vs. Yuu

If you think that Hyper Misao would have too much respect to try her shenanigans against the serious Yuu, you would be incorrect. Yuu tosses Misao around but Misao escapes and asks for a handshake. Yuu shakes her hand as everything is still going well, they trade wristlocks  and trips on the mat but neither can get the advantage. Another handshake but this time Misao slaps on an inside cradle for two, she goes for a couple more flash pins but Yuu kicks out each time. Misao bails out of the ring with Yuu chasing after her, Misao goes under the ring but Yuu waits for her to emerge and chops Misao against the apron. Yuu slides Misao back in, chops by Yuu and she covers Misao for two. Misao goes off the ropes but Yuu catches her with a shoulderblock, she now goes off the ropes and hits a second shoulderblock on Misao. Misao jumps out of the ring again and goes under the ring, Yuu goes under the ring after her but Misao shows up first and attacks Yuu as she gets back to the floor. Yuu recovers and tosses Misao into the apron and then into the wall, but Misao throws Yuu into the ring post and gets some duct tape. Misao tapes Yuu to the wall (slightly off camera), but the plan doesn’t really work and Yuu breaks free to return to the ring before the 20 count. Misao begs off Yuu but Yuu approaches her anyway, Misao throws Yuu into the corner but Yuu catches her attack and slams her to the mat. John Woo by Yuu and she hits a running elbow, another elbow by Yuu and she covers Misao for two.

Yuu elbows Misao in the corner, Irish whip attempt by Yuu but Misao reverses it and “accidentally” throws Yuu into the referee. While the referee is out, Misao sprays Yuu in the eyes with cold air spray before taking off her own mask and handing it to Yuu. The referee recovers, but Misao forgot to give Yuu the cold air spray so she still has it in her hand. She tries to play it off by spraying herself but the referee isn’t having it, as he appears to finally be getting wise to Misao’s tricks. Misao gets her mask back on, Misao shakes Yuu’s hand again but Yuu catches her kick and hits a double chop. More chops by Yuu, Irish whip and she hits a spinning sidewalk slam for two. Yuu grabs Misao, Misao slides away but Yuu scoops her up and goes for the Oklahoma Stampede. Misao blocks it and applies a chickenwing, but Yuu gets to the ropes. Misao goes for the Final Cut but Yuu blocks it, Misao goes off the ropes but Yuu catches her with a powerslam. Misao avoids Yuu’s senton and applies La Magistral, but Yuu kicks out. Misao rams Yuu’s head into his knee, she gets on the second turnbuckle and delivers a diving crossbody for two. Misao knocks Yuu into the corner but Yuu catches her with a Judo Toss when she charges in. Yuu grabs Misao and puts her in a One Wing Twist, and Misao taps out! Yuu wins and advances in the tournament.

This was a pretty good contrast to the last Misao match, as here her schemes just didn’t work and she was forced to wrestle Yuu. What was interesting is when she was concentrating on wrestling, she almost was able to go toe to toe with Yuu and got in some notable offense. Maybe there is an underlying story here of Misao not really needing the tricks to win as even though she lost, after her last trick failed it was a pretty even match until Yuu just overpowered her. I enjoyed it, Misao offers something different and its a nice change of pace.  Mildly Recommended


Rika Tatsumi vs. Shoko Nakajima

Finally I get to see Shoko, since she had a bye in the first round this is our first look at the former Princess Tag Team Champion. They end up on the mat to start and jockey for position, back on their feet Rika takes control until Shoko flings her to the mat and scores a quick cover. They trade pins with neither having any luck, Rika shakes Shoko off and knocks her down with a dropkick. Shoko headscissors Rika over the top rope to the floor, Rika rolls back in but Shoko avoids her charge and applies a stretch hold in the ropes. Shoko goes off the ropes and dropkicks Rika in the head, cover by Shoko but it gets two. Shoko picks up Rika and knees her in the back but Rika hits a scoop slam, Rika elbows Shoko in the leg and applies a submission, she lets go after a moment but only to ram Shoko’s leg in the apron before twisting her leg in the ring post. Rika gets back on the apron and dropkicks Shoko’s leg while it is against the post, cover by Rika but it gets two. Irish whip by Rika but Shoko reverses it, Shoko goes for a kick but Rika hip attacks her in the leg. Kneebreaker by Rika, she picks up Shoko and tosses her out of the corner, but Shoko flips her out to the apron and dropkicks Rika to the floor. Shoko goes off the ropes and dives out onto Rika with a tope suicida, they both return to the ring and Shoko throws Rika into the corner before hitting a running elbow and bulldogging Rika into the turnbuckles. Missile dropkick by Shoko and she covers Rika for two. Shoko picks up Rika and she hits a butterfly suplex, dropkick by Shoko but Rika blocks the Tiger Feint Kick and hits a dragon screw in the ropes.

Dropkick to the leg by Rika and she hits a couple hip attacks, elbow drop by Rika and she covers Shoko for two. Rika picks up Shoko but Shoko rolls it into a grounded headlock, cradle by Shoko but Rika blocks it and applies the figure four leglock. Shoko gets to the ropes for the break, Rika picks up Shoko but Shoko cradles her for two. Hurricanrana by Shoko, but that gets a two as well as does the Northern Lights Suplex. Shoko elbows Rika but Rika elbows her back as they trade blows, hip attack by Rika but Shoko comes back with a dropkick. Rika ducks the first Tiger Feint Kick attempt but Shoko hits it over the bottom rope instead, she goes up top but Rika avoids the diving senton. Rika picks up Shoko and hits a modified cutter, she hip attacks Shoko in the head and covers her for two. Rika goes up top but Shoko elbows her before she jumps off, Shoko joins her and hits a Frankensteiner but is too hurt to make a cover. She finally gets an arm on Rika, but Rika gets a shoulder up. Shoko picks up Rika and delivers the double arm DDT, she goes for another Northern Lights Suplex but Rika blocks it and hits a cutter. Rika puts Shoko in the sleeper, she tries to revert it into a Dragon Sleeper but Shoko rolls her up for two. Shoko goes off the ropes but Rika catches her with a backbreaker, she gets the sleeper applied again and this time successfully switches it to the Dragon Sleeper. Shoko struggles but Rika grapevines her and Shoko has to tap out! Rika Tatsumi wins and advances!

Another quality match, Day 3 easily eclipsed the first two events of the tournament. I love Shoko, her offense feels fresh and since it was her first match of the tournament it gave us something different to watch. I still don’t really understand Rika’s leg-based offense being a lead-in for the Dragon Sleeper, I have nothing against limb work but the hip attacks would seem to be a better setup for her finisher. Still, the match had a little bit of everything (submissions, strikes, high risk moves) and was an enjoyable 15 minutes. A fitting main event and probably my new favorite match we have seen thus far.  Recommended

Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Final
Dates: July 8th, 2018
Location: KFC Hall in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 404

Tonight the tournament will conclude, as both the Semi Finals and Finals will take place on the same event. The show opens with the two Semi Final matches and finishes with the Finals, here are the tournament matches on the card:

Per usual, all wrestlers above have profiles on Joshi City, you can click on their name to go straight to it. As this event aired on DDT Universe, all matches are unclipped.


Nodoka-oneesan vs. Yuu

They circle each other to start, they both try to knock each other over until Yuu sends Nodoka to the mat first. Nodoka gets back up but Yuu elbows her, snapmare by Yuu and she chops Nodoka repeatedly in the chest for a two count. Back up, chop by Yuu but Nodoka shoulderblocks her down for a two count. Body press by Nodoka, she throws Yuu into the corner and hits a running elbow. Low crossbody by Nodoka, but Yuu kicks out. Yuu recovers and chops Nodoka in the chest but Nodoka elbows her back and the two trade blows. Nodoka elbows Yuu into the corner, Irish whip by Nodoka but Yuu catches her and flings Nodoka to the mat. John Woo by Yuu followed by a running elbow strike, cover by Yuu but Nodoka gets a shoulder up. Yuu scoops up Nodoka but Nodoka slides away, kick by Nodoka but Yuu grabs her and hits a spinning sidewalk slam. Running senton by Yuu, but it only gets two. Yuu picks up Nodoka but Nodoka reverses the Last Ride attempt with a back bodydrop. Yuu throws Nodoka into the corner but Nodoka boots her as she charges in, diving bulldog by Nodoka and she hits a backbreaker. Nodoka gets on the second turnbuckle and hits a diving body press, but it only gets two. Nodoka goes all the way up but Yuu recovers and joins her, Nodoka kicks her back off however and hits the diving body press for a two count. Nodoka puts Yuu in the WAR Special but Yuu muscles out of it and hits a monkey flip. Nodoka snaps off a Back Flip, but Yuu gets a shoulder up at two. Judo toss by Yuu, but Nodoka quickly rolls up Yuu for two. Nodoka goes off the ropes but Yuu hits another judo toss, she puts Nodoka in the Katahajime and Nodoka goes unconscious. The referee calls for the bell, awarding the match to Yuu by referee stoppage! Yuu advances to the Finals of the Tokyo Princess Cup.

A little on the short side but a fun match. Nodoka is the ultimate underdog, as she is undersized but had the crowd behind her as she tried to take down the stronger and more experienced Yuu. And Nodoka certainly got in her spots, including hitting the Back Flip, but she isn’t ready yet to overcome someone of Yuu’s stature. A solid start to the final night of the tournament.  Mildly Recommended


Rika Tatsumi vs. Yuka Sakazaki

Rika acts like she wants to shake Yuka’s hand but Rika slaps her and goes for the cutter. Yuka pushes her off but Rika cradles her for two, a few more flash pin attempts by Rika but Yuka kicks out each time. Yuka bails from the ring to re-group, Rika goes out after her but Yuka beats her down before sliding her back into the ring. Yuka elbows Rika in the back while she hangs over the bottom rope, she gets back in the ring herself and covers Rika for two. Yuka armdrags Rika and dropkicks her, but Rika pushes Yuka back and dropkicks her in the knee. Rika keeps on Yuka’s leg and applies a kneelock, she twists Yuka’s leg in the ropes and snaps it as she jumps out of the ring. Cover by Rika, but Yuka kicks out. Rika continues attacking the leg but Yuka rolls out of the way of the elbow drop and keeps rolling right out of the ring. Rika goes after her as Yuka tries to crawl back into the ring and drops her onto the apron. Rika puts Yuka’s leg around the ring post and slams it into it before delivering a dropkick. Rika rolls Yuka back in and throws her into the corner, Yuka goes off the ropes but Rika kicks her in the stomach. Running elbow by Yuka, she rolls Rika to the mat and delivers the sliding lariat.

Yuka springs up to the top turnbuckle and hits the missile dropkick, but Rika rolls out of the ring. Yuka goes off the ropes and springboards down onto Rika, Yuka gets Rika into the ring and covers her for a two count. Yuka slams Rika into the mat and goes for a submission, but Rika quickly grabs the ropes. Sliding lariat by Yuka, she goes up top but Rika recovers and hits a dragon screw off the top turnbuckle to the mat. Grounded dragons crew by Rika and she hits the short-range hip attack for two. Figure Four by Rika, but Yuka inches to the ropes and forces the break. Back up they trade elbows, running elbow by Yuka but Rika hits a hip attack. Yuka returns with a kick of her own and both wrestlers fall to the mat, they trade elbows as they get back up, with Yuka winning the battle with a discus elbow smash. Yuka goes to do a springboard move but Rika stops her and hits a cutter, Rika goes up top and nails a diving hip attack for a two count. Rika puts Yuka in a Dragon Sleeper but Yuka pushes Rika’s shoulders to the mat so she has to break the hold. Rika goes for a backdrop suplex but Yuka lands on her feet and hits an enzuigiri, Yuka picks up Rika and nails the Merry Go Round. Yuka goes to the apron and delivers the Magical Magical Girl Splash, and she picks up the three count! Yuka Sakazaki wins and advances to the Finals!

Someone that follows TJPW is going to get mad at me for calling out Rika for doing great limb work but winning with Dragon Sleepers, the issue here though is the lengths at which Yuka went to blow off all said leg work. Its not that all leg work has to be sold forever but Rika did such a good job with it that it was disappointing that it just got immediately forgotten in the last few minutes of the match. Aside from that issue I enjoyed it but I do wish Yuka would hit the Magical Magical Girl Splash with a bit more urgency as she forces her opponents to not move for a long time. Rika showed me a lot here and I am leaving this review as a big fan of hers, if she just can tie together better the two halves of her offense she’d really be the total package. An entertaining match due to the general action and pacing but not without its flaws.  Recommended


Yuka Sakazaki vs. Yuu
Tokyo Princess Cup Final

Yuu won’t shake Yuka’s hand before the match, as she is all business. They quickly end up on the mat as they grapple for position, but they eventually end up back on their feet as Yuu applies a wristlock. Yuka reverses it and dropkicks Yuu, she knocks Yuu into the corner and hits a monkey flip, but Yuka quickly gets into the ropes. Yuka goes off the ropes and hits a Sliding Lariat, she goes for a swandive move but Yuu moves and Yuka crashes to the mat. John Woo by Yuu but Yuka avoids her running elbow, Yuka knocks Yuu back to the middle of the ring and goes up top, but Yuu catches her dive. Yuka slides away and hits the Complete Shot, she goes off the ropes and goes for a lariat, but Yuu catches her and slams Yuka to the mat. Yuu applies a choke but Yuka gets out of it and applies an armbar, but Yuu gets into the ropes for the break. Yuka goes off the ropes and delivers a sliding lariat, Yuka goes to the apron and goes for another swandive move, but Yuu catches her and hits a Buckle Bomb. Cover by Yuu, but Yuka kicks out. Yuu picks up Yuka and she nails the Last Ride, and she picks up the three count! Yuu wins the match and the Tokyo Princess Cup!

A more condensed match than one would hope for as a tournament final (under ten minutes), but at least what they did was decent. My main issue is that Yuka never felt like she was about to win, both times she went to the apron Yuu was up before Yuka could even think about doing a move, and Yuu was constantly cutting her off each time it looked like Yuka was getting the upper-hand. If the idea here was to make Yuu look really strong, they did that, but for the long journey I just went on it didn’t feel like that big climax that I was hoping for. It felt more like two quality wrestlers having a fun midcard match than the finals of a promotion’s biggest tournament of the year. Not a bad watch but overall disappointing since it was the finals and not on the level I was expecting.

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro “Tokyo Princess Cup 2018” Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
11450
Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook はじけちゃえ! Review https://joshicity.com/tokyo-joshi-pro-photobook-%e3%81%af%e3%81%98%e3%81%91%e3%81%a1%e3%82%83%e3%81%88%ef%bc%81-review/ Sat, 16 Sep 2017 20:47:37 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=9129 Photobook featuring Tokyo Joshi Pro Wrestlers!

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook はじけちゃえ! Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Title: 東京女子プロレスファースト写真集「はじけちゃえ!」(Tokyo Joshi Pro First Photobook Hajime!)
Release: August 2017
Total Pages: 108
Cost: ¥3,000
Where to Buy: DDT Shop

This is the first ever photobook release from Joshi promotion Tokyo Joshi Pro. TJP is under the DDT umbrella, so some fans may recognize the wrestlers as they also take part on the bigger DDT events. For their first photobook, TJP focused on four wrestlers: Miyu Yamashita, Mizuki, Rika Tatsumi, and Yuka Sakazaki.

As far as photobooks go, this offering by TJP is one of the higher quality ones I have seen. It is 108 pages, full sized, and is strictly photos with no text. It has a lot of weight to it as the pages are of high quality stock, and was very professionally created. Each of the four wrestlers has pictures in each setting and most settings also have group pictures with multiple wrestlers as well. The settings are as follows: beach attire, formal attire, topless (still tastefully done of course), and casual attire. Miyu Yamashita is focused on the most, however all four wrestlers get a fair representation. Below is a sample of the pictures included:

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro Photobook はじけちゃえ! Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
9129
Tokyo Joshi Pro Girl’s Fight Out #5 on 6/24/17 Review https://joshicity.com/tokyo-joshi-pro-girls-fight-out-5-june-24-2017-review/ Thu, 06 Jul 2017 19:42:31 +0000 http://joshicity.com/?p=8303 Yuka Sakazaki and Reika Saiki team up!

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro Girl’s Fight Out #5 on 6/24/17 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
Event: Tokyo Joshi Pro “Girl’s Fight Out #5”
Date: June 24th, 2017
Location: Shinjuku FACE in Tokyo, Japan
Announced Attendance: 450

It has been awhile since we visited Tokyo Joshi Pro, but I had to watch my favorite underground indie wrestler Yuka Sakazaki. Tokyo Joshi Pro is a brand of DDT, and as the name implies it is their Joshi brand with mostly very young wrestlers that don’t venture outside of the DDT umbrella. So they don’t get a ton of exposure, but they have a handful of quality wrestlers. This is a small event for the promotion, however it was shown on DDT’s streaming service DDTUniverse.com. Here is the full card:

You can click on the names above to go to the wrestler’s profile on Joshi City. A really short show with no really big matches, but Yuka and Reika teaming in the main event should be fun.

tjp6-24-1
Marika Kobashi vs. Syoko Nakajima

Syoko is one of my favorite wrestlers in the promotion so I’m a bit disappointed to see her in the opener, but what can ya do. Syoko is an upper midcarder in Tokyo Joshi Pro normally, she has twice had the opportunity to win the Princess of Princess Championship but has failed both times. Marika is only 16 years old and just recently made her return after missing about six months of action, she doesn’t have any singles wins in the promotion and is still working her way up the card.

tjp6-24-1They circle each other to start before locking up, Syoko pushes Marika to the mat and locks knuckles with her, but Marika reverses the hold. They end up at a stalemate, waistlock by Marika but Syoko drives her back into the corner. Marika leaps over Syoko and hits an elbow, chops by Marika but Syoko clubs her to the mat. Punches by Syoko and she starts working on Marika’s arm, Syoko puts Marika into the Tarantula before covering her for two. Kicks by Syoko in the corner and she goes back to the arm, but Marika gets into the ropes for the break. Marika slides away from Syoko and hits a dropkick, scoop slam by Marika and she puts Syoko in a single leg crab hold. Syoko gets to the ropes to get out of the hold, Marika goes up top but Syoko punches her in the stomach as she jumps down. Running elbow by Syoko in the corner, she goes for a Tiger Feint Kick but Marika ducks it and rolls her up for two. Marika tries a few more flash pins with no luck, neck drop by Marika and she hits a diving ax handle. Syoko comes back with a dropkick and drives Marika’s face into the mat, Northern Lights Suplex by Syoko and she gets the three count! Syoko Nakajima is the winner.

A really simply laid out and executed match, but probably necessary since Marika is only 16 and just returned to wrestling. Nothing was actively bad about it, just basic and not particularly memorable. Not unwatchable but nothing much to it.

tjp6-24-2
Azusa Takigawa vs. Maho Kurone vs. Mizuki

A solid collection of TJP midcarders. Mizuki just recently joined Tokyo Joshi Pro, she was previously affiliated with LLPW-X, which very rarely runs their own events. Maho Kurone is vampire-like, while Azusa is obsessed with weddings. I have low expectations but hopefully it will have some fun moments.

tjp6-24-2Maho chases after Mizuki as the match starts, trying to eat her, but Mizuki hides behind Azusa. Maho only wants Mizuki and pays Azusa no mind, Mizuki and Azusa shakes hands before both going after Maho. They both take turns attacking Maho in the corner until Azusa quickly schoolboys Mizuki for a two count. Azusa stands on Mizuki’s hair and continues the beatdown while Maho is still MIA, she comes back just as Mizuki gets an advantage but Azusa tosses Mizuki out of the ring again. Azusa puts on her veil while standing on the second turnbuckle, but Mizuki hits her before she can jump down and throws her to the mat. Crab hold by Mizuki but Azusa gets the microphone slid to her and talks a bit while struggling to get to the ropes. Mizuki lets go, Azusa then goes out to the apron and continues cutting a promo mid-match. She finally stops talking and gets back into the ring, Maho returns too and scoop slams Azusa for a two count. Maho and Mizuki take turns trying to pin Azusa, Mizuki goes off the ropes but Maho puts her in a sleeper. She tries to bite her neck but Mizuki blocks it. Maho and Mizuki trade blows until Mizuki sneaks in a backslide for two, dropkick by Mizuki and she hits a diving footstomp on Maho from the second turnbuckle. Elbows by Mizuki but Maho grabs her and bites her neck, swinging neckbreaker by Maho but Azusa schoolboys her from behind for two. Azusa pulls down the ropes when Maho charges her, sending Maho out of the ring, before hitting Mizuki with a Codebreaker. Azusa gets on the second turnbuckle but Mizuki blocks her dive and applies a backslide for two. Cutie Special by Mizuki, and she picks up the three count! Mizuki is your winner.

This is the type of match that makes me not want to watch smaller indie shows. Maho is a fun gimmick but she isn’t a very good wrestler, making a lot of her sections look a bit awkward. Azusa is pure gimmick, and probably is more funny if I understood Japanese (which I don’t), while Mizuki is a solid wrestler but not one that can pull other wrestlers up. So mostly a clunky ‘take turns’ type three way match and not particularly entertaining.

tjp6-24-3
Rika Tatsumi and Nonoko vs. Yuu and Yuna Manase

Yuu is one of the most successful wrestlers in Tokyo Joshi Pro history and just lost the Princess of Princess Championship to Yuka Sakazaki a few weeks prior, here she is teaming with one of TJP’s newest wrestlers – Yuna Manase. Yuna has been feuding with Nonoko since debuting in the promotion, they used to be gravure models together but now are not on the same page and frequently insult each other. Rika is a midcarder and has had a shot at the title in the past, but these days is mostly stuck in matches like this.

Rika and Yuna start the match, Rika gets Yuna to the mat but Yuna gets out of it and they trade wristlocks. Rika tags in Nonoko so Yuna tags Yuu, Nonoko pulls out a magazine and gives it to Yuu but Yuu throws it to the ground and stomps on Nonoko. Armbar by Yuu and she tags in Yuna, Yuna knocks Nonoko into the corner but Nonoko shoulderblocks Yuna and puts her in a stretch hold. Nonoko tags Rika, Rika starts working on Yuna’s leg before dropping her with a face crusher. Rika hits a running elbow drop but it only gets a two count cover so she tags Nonoko back in. Elbows by Nonoko to Yuna and she hits a double arm DDT into her chest, but Yuna delivers a mid kick and makes the tag to Yuu. Yuu shoulderblocks both Nonoko and Rika, double chop to the chest by Yuu and she covers Nonoko for two. Yuu works on Nonoko’s arm before chopping her to the mat, but Nonoko rams her head into her chest and delivers a Lou Thesz Press. Nonoko tags in Rika, Rika jumps at Yuu but Yuu catches her and slams Rika to the mat. Powerslam by Yuu, she throws Rika into the corner but Rika reverses her Irish whip and dropkicks Yuu in the leg. Dragon screw by Rika and she hits a couple hip attacks for two.

tjp6-24-3Rika goes for a cutter but Yuu pushes her off and hits a judo throw, giving her time to tag in Yuna. Yuna jumps down onto Rika and kicks her in the back, running boot by Yuna and she covers Rika for two. Yuna goes off the ropes but Rika catches her with a hip attack, she gets on the second turnbuckle and hits the diving hip attack for a two count cover. Backbreaker by Rika and she applies the dragon sleeper, but Yuu breaks it up. Rika tags Nonoko, they both throw Yuna into the corner and deliver running strikes. Nonoko picks up Yuna and nails the Boinmaker, she puts her magazine in her shirt before hitting a body press but Yuna kicks out of the cover. Nonoko gives Yuna the magazine to read, Yuna tries to put it on the mat so that Nonoko would trip over it, but Nonoko notices and slams on the breaks. Yuu pushes Nonoko from the apron and Nonoko slips on it anyway, but Rika breaks up Yuna’s cover. Yuu takes care of Rika, Yuna delivers the Kakato Drop (heel drop) to Nonoko and she picks up the three count! Yuu and Yuna Manase win!

The primary issue here is, again, general wrestler quality. TJP does have some really good wrestlers, but they were too spread out here. Yuna is on her third promotion in her short career probably for a reason – she’s a sub-par wrestler. Rika and Yuu are both good, but didn’t do much here to stand out. Nonoko is mostly gimmick, its a quality gimmick but she isn’t going to wow you with in-ring skills (nor is she trying to). So what you end up with is a pretty average match, it had some good sections but it was just inconsistent as Nonoko and Yuna wanted to do their comedy bits while Yuu and Rika were generally more serious. I wouldn’t say it was bad, but it was nothing anyone needs to go find to watch.

tjp6-24-4
Miyu Yamashita and Nodoka-oneesan vs. Yuka Sakazaki and Reika Saiki

TJP definitely saved the best for last, hope they can deliver. Miyu is a former Princess of Princess Champion and has a fun kick-based offense, she is only 22 but has shown a lot of early ability. Her partner has been wrestling for over a year but hasn’t had any big wins yet, she is the lowest ranked wrestler in the match. Reika debuted in 2016, she is a powerhouse that is also a model. Finally, Yuka Sakazaki comes into the match as the Princess of Princess Champion and is one of the most entertaining wrestlers in the promotion, she spent about six months wrestling as “Mil Clown” which as everyone knows I loved. This match didn’t get a ton of time but I still have high hopes for it just due to having Miyu, Yuka, and Reika in the same ring.

Nodoka and Reika start the match for their teams, they trade headlocks and headscissors but end up back on their feet. Reika puts Nodoka in a front headlock and tags in Yuka, but Nodoka gets away and tags in Miyu. Miyu and Yuka go back and forth until Yuka hits a dropkick, but Miyu gets back up and stomps Yuka to the mat. Miyu tags Nodoka, Nodoka puts Yuka in a headlock before elbowing her in the back of the head. Miyu tags back in, snapmare by Miyu and she puts Yuka in a chinlock. Yuka gets to the ropes to force the break, kick by Miyu and she tags in Nodoka. Irish whip by Nodoka to the corner and she hits an elbow, stretch hold by Nodoka but Yuka gets to the ropes. Miyu returns and dropkicks Yuka in the back, cover by Miyu but it gets two. Miyu goes for a backbreaker but Yuka gets away, knee to the stomach by Miyu but Yuka hits a running elbow. She makes the hot tag to Reika, shoulderblock by Reika and she hits an armdrag. Kicks by Reika but Miyu catches one and kicks her back, giving her time to tag Nodoka. Shoulderblock by Nodoka and she hits a crossbody for two. Big kick by Reika and she hits the PK, she picks up Nodoka and bodyslams her to the mat.

tjp6-24-4Nodoka gets back up and they trade strikes until Reika hits a dropkick, she tags in Yuka and Yuka comes in the ring with a swandive stomp for a two count. Jumping elbow by Yuka in the corner but Nodoka hits a scoop slam and tags Miyu. Kick to the chest by Miyu, she waits for Yuka to get up and delivers a strike combination. Miyu charges Yuka but Yuka avoids the knee, she gets on the second turnbuckle and hits the diving hurricanrana. Enzuigiri by Yuka and she delivers a sliding lariat for a two count. Elbows by Yuka but Miyu ducks one and hits a lariat, she lands near her corner and tags Nodoka. Yuka takes Nodoka to the mat and applies a STF, Reika runs in to cut off Miyu but Nodoka makes it to the ropes. Neckbreaker by Yuka, she goes out to the apron and hits the swandive body press, but Miyu breaks up the cover. Reika picks up Miyu and holds her, Yuka walks the ropes and hits a dropkick to Miyu. Yuka goes back to Nodoka but Nodoka hits a quick Samoan Drop for a two count. She hits a second one for another two as Reika breaks it up, Irish whip by Nodoka to the corner but Yuka reverses it and hits a roaring elbow. Reverse STO by Yuka, she goes to the apron and nails the Magical Girl Splash for the three count! Yuka Sakazaki and Reika Saiki win the match.

While a more subdued main event than I would like, it was still pretty solid. Miyu and Yuka are so much fun to watch since they have such unique offenses, and Nodoka was mostly able to keep up with just a few small issues. Reika is capable of more but she didn’t get much of a chance to shine, which is generally an issue with matches that don’t get a lot of time. I did laugh when Yuka accidentally dropkicked Reika in the face when she was holding up Nodoka, she drilled her, but that and the finish were probably the only two really memorable spots in the match. Generally enjoyable but I know they are capable of a lot more.  Mildly Recommended

The post Tokyo Joshi Pro Girl’s Fight Out #5 on 6/24/17 Review appeared first on Joshi City.

]]>
8303