Kensuke Sasaki retirement piece. Great power wrestler for a long time, was a "Road Warrior" (Hellraiser) with Hawk for a time, probable bully/murderer, spouse of arguably the greatest female wrestler ever
Kensuke Sasaki’s leading on-paper accomplishment in Japanese pro wrestling is that he is one of only two people, Yoshihiro Takayama being the other, to have held the three major world championships of Japanese wrestling-- the IWGP heavyweight (New Japan), The Triple Crown (All Japan) and the GHC heavyweight (Pro Wrestling NOAH).
But in Japan, Sasaki and wife Hisako Uno, better known as Akira Hokuto, are far better known as afternoon television celebrities as the married wrestling couple.
A number of wrestlers who have distinctive personalities who were stars when wrestling was big in the 90s make regular appearances on Japanese television, as part of the country’s celebrity culture that puts famous people on game shows, talk shows, quiz shows, travel shows, cooking shows and other places of that type.
Because of that, the wrestling stars of that era are far better known to the general public than the pro wrestlers of this era, and have more mainstream recognition than the pro wrestlers of North America. It’s one of the reasons wrestlers from that era are recruited and have been elected to national political offices, and maintained their recognition long after they have left wrestling.
Antonio Inoki, Atsushi Onita, Akira Maeda, Nobuhiko Takada, Naoya Ogawa, Keiji Muto, Masahiro Chono and Yoshiaki Fujiwara are frequently on shows of this type and known far beyond the wrestling, or even the sports audience.
But the celebrity wrestling couple, Sasaki and Hokuto, are the most popular ones today. They are on major network television shows several times a week. The dynamic is Hokuto talks, and is known for having a great sense of humor. Sasaki sits next to her, as the likeable thickly muscled guy who is always smiling and laughing at her jokes.
Sasaki, who was elected to the Wrestling Observer Hall of Fame in November, announced his retirement on 2/13, two days after putting over protege Katsuhiko Nakajima, who he and his wife have raised almost like a son since he was a teenager, clean in the middle at his Diamond Ring promotion show at Korakuen Hall in Tokyo.
While not talked about, when Sasaki, 47, returned last year after major neck surgery due to a herniated disc, he was told that the wrong kind of bump could result in paralysis. It was clear physically that he was not the same, and was doing a lot less in the ring. He kept his retirement a secret, even Minoru Suzuki, one of his best friends and his late night phone buddy, didn’t know about it. And everyone in the industry was surprised to see him put over Nakajima, and then hint about retirement. He just talked about how he had wrestled for 28 years, and has no regrets about anything in his career, and then left the arena.
At his press conference, with his wife by his side, he said that was his final match and there would be no retirement match because he feels there is nothing left for him to accomplish, and that he’s still suffering from neck problems. He noted that his goal now is to raise his two boys, and he can’t risk anything more severe.
Sasaki was one of the biggest stars in Japan of the past 25 years, a career that included holding the IWGP heavyweight title five times, trailing only the six reigns of Tatsumi Fujinami and Hiroshi Tanahashi. For the early part of his career, he was known as the personal protege of Riki Choshu, a member of the 1972 South Korean Olympic wrestling team who became one of the biggest stars in Japanese wrestling. By the time Sasaki started making his mark as a star, Choshu was New Japan’s booker. The three big stars Choshu built around were Shinya Hashimoto, Keiji Muto and Masahiro Chono, during a period when New Japan was the world’s most successful pro wrestling company until the Monday Night Wars propelled the U.S. scene. Sasaki was positioned as just below them, and when they started fading from the scene, he took over. After injuries had crippled Muto, Chono and Hashimoto (who died in 2005 from a brain aneurysm at the age of 40), Sasaki was the last of that generation of the New Japan Tokyo Dome sellout headliners still active in a major way.
Perhaps the match that really established him as the singles superstar of the promotion was one he lost, on October 9, 2000, at the Tokyo Dome. During the 90s, the two big companies in Japan were All Japan Pro Wrestling, run by Shohei “Giant” Baba, and New Japan Pro Wrestling, run by Kanji “Antonio” Inoki. Baba & Inoki were the most famous tag team in Japanese pro wrestling during a golden era in the late 60s, as the two stars with Japanese Pro Wrestling. In those days, Japan had six major television networks, four of which had a weekly pro wrestling show in prime time.
Nippon TV had been established as the home of pro wrestling since the Rikidozan era in the 50s, with the weekly wrestling hour being Friday at 8 p.m. In 1969, NET (now TV-Asahi) started airing a Monday night show from the same Japan Pro Wrestling group, or the Japanese Wrestling Alliance as it was also known. However, when the promotion brokered the deal, NTV insisted on exclusivity of Baba, the biggest star, Seiji Sakaguchi (a national judo champion seen as the next big superstar) as well as the big tournaments. So NET wound up built around Inoki as the top star, which set the stage for the future. There was also a smaller promotion that had national TV on Sundays and matches from the United States would air on Tuesdays.
A series of things happened in 1971, with the end result that Inoki left the promotion and formed his own group, New Japan Pro Wrestling, while Baba left and formed All Japan Pro Wrestling. All Japan aired in those days on NTV on Saturday nights at 7 p.m. starting in 1972, while New Japan had no TV for its first year, but started on NTV on Friday nights at 8 p.m. in 1973.
The two sides were in a bitter business war for most of the next 28 years, with a brief business reconciliation in 1990. But even during that period, the top native Japanese stars from the two groups never wrestled each other in singles matches.
After Baba passed away in 1999, Mitsuharu Misawa, his top star, left the promotion and took all but one major star with him to form Pro Wrestling NOAH. Motoko Baba, the widow of Shohei Baba, then opened up relations with New Japan, which led to a series of major shows with All Japan vs. New Japan matches. Sasaki was the IWGP heavyweight champion, and called on to represent the promotion against Toshiaki Kawada, who was All Japan’s lone remaining top star.
Because he was the champion, walking down the aisle in one of the biggest matches in Japanese history, in front of a sellout of 54,000 fans and one of the biggest gates to date, it established Sasaki at the top level, and he was viewed at that level from that point forward. He was in his second reign as IWGP champion, and had already headlined the Tokyo Dome three times, either challenging for, or defending the title.
The way the story was built, Kawada took the first match. It was a non-title match. but Sasaki, feeling he let the company down, vacated the IWGP title, which was put up in a tournament on the January 4, 2001, show. In one of the best Dome shows ever, Sasaki defeated Satoshi Kojima, Masahiro Chono and Kawada before 52,000 fans to win the championship.
But it was really another match, where he was again on the losing side, in the same building, that established him as a legend. On July 18, 2005, in what would end up being his final Tokyo Dome appearance, he faced Kenta Kobashi, who was something of the Michael Jordan of Japanese pro wrestling at the time. Technically, they weren’t even the main event, as NOAH booked a double dream match lineup that included the first Misawa vs. Kawada match in several years. But it was clear on that night that Kobashi vs. Sasaki was the real main event, and their chop fest became a heavily copied sequence in matches ever since that point, and was the second time his bout was voted by Tokyo Sports as the match of the year.
In 1995, 28-year-old Kensuke Sasaki had risen the ranks in New Japan to become one of its top stars. First known as the junior member of a tag team with former Olympic wrestler Hiroshi Hase, known best for hot main events against teams like The Road Warriors, The Steiners and Muto & Chono, he had gotten even more popular as half of a tag team called The Hell Raisers.
The Road Warriors had become huge hits in Japan in 1985. In 1992, while wrestling in the WWF, Hawk, who had failed a steroid test earlier in the year, got fed up and went AWOL in England for SummerSlam. Animal suffered a back injury and retired, collecting on a Lloyd’s of London disability policy.
With Animal on the shelf, Hawk wanted to create a Japanese version of the Road Warriors. Sasaki, who was really only about 5-foot 7 ½, but weighed 253 pounds and could bench press 450, was taken under his wing in what turned out to be a major career break. He was given face paint, a Road Warriors haircut and the spiked shoulder pads outfit. Christened Power Warrior, the team rarely lost. It was as if a Japanese star had suddenly become part of the most famous pro wrestling tag team of all-time, described as the equivalent in a nation that is extremely nationalistic to be like if there was an authentic Japanese member of a famous rock band and how big a celebrity that person would be. Eventually, Sasaki headlined his first Tokyo Dome show, on January 4, 1995, losing to his big rival both in and out of the ring of that era, Shinya Hashimoto, in an IWGP title match before 52,500 fans.
The two had a unique rivalry. Even though Muto and Hase were legitimately the best shooters in the dojo, Hashimoto, because he was thick, kicked hard and got in more physical matches as opposed to the technical style of Chono or the graceful athletic style of Muto, was viewed by the public as the company’s tough guy. Sasaki, who was the physically strongest of the Japanese wrestlers in the promotion, and built like a powerhouse, not fat like Hashimoto, thought he was more credible in that role. Plus, they were only a year apart age wise.
But it made them strong rivals when Sasaki had moved up and had the credibility to be in the championship picture and sell out the Tokyo Dome. One person noted that if Hashimoto had a barbecue at his house, Sasaki wanted one the next week at his house and it was important to have at least as many people there. Once, when Hashimoto bought an expensive Mercedes Benz, Sasaki then bought an even more expensive car. It was noted that of their generation, Muto, Chono and Hase were all college educated. Muto competed at a high level in judo, and Hase at an even higher level in wrestling. Hashimoto and Sasaki both came from judo, but neither had ever reached the national championship level when they were in high school. Because of that, it was said that both always felt they had to prove themselves more, and in Sasaki’s case, he practically lived in the gym.
As Sasaki was being built for his first IWGP title win, besides his Hell Raisers period, the key booking moves were placing second in the 1994 G-1 Climax tournament to Chono, and winning the Japan & U.S. All-Star tournament from September 19 to September 23, 1996.
That was a major joint event with WCW. New Japan’s best were put in a 16-man tournament with eight stars of WCW, Ric Flair, Lex Luger, Arn Anderson, Scott Norton, Sting, Hugh Morrus, Steve (now William) Regal and Buff Bagwell, in a single elimination tournament. Sasaki scored clean wins over Flair, Luger, Norton and Shiro Koshinaka in the finals. This also led to a period where Sasaki & Koshinaka formed a regular championship tag team.
He followed that by beating Sting for the U.S. title on November 13, 1995, in Tokyo, at Sumo Hall, in the main event of a show that was a box office flop. With a poor advance, they went to heavy papering to get 7,500 fans, New Japan’s smallest crowd in the building in more than 15 years. With Hokuto and Sonny Onno (since the tape was scheduled to air in the U.S.), at ringside, Sasaki won his biggest career match to date using the Northern lights bomb, Hokuto’s finisher. He came to the U.S. working television tapings at Disney as champion.
The plan was to lose the title on a joint New Japan/WCW Starrcade show, on December 27, 1995, in Nashville, back to Sting. But plans changed. Starrcade was built around a World Cup tournament, where each side had won three matches, leading to each side’s big hitter, Sting for WCW and Sasaki for New Japan, in the final match. The storyline was that Sasaki had refused to defend the title against Sting in the United States, so the match had to be non-title. Sting kicked out of the Northern lights bomb (the announcers had no idea it was Sasaki’s big move that beat Sting for the title) and Sting also escaped the Power Strangle (ditto), then used his reverse ipponzei judo hip toss, which Tony Schiavone called an arm drag. Sting also escaped the scorpion deathlock of Sasaki, and came back to win with a scorpion deathlock of his own.
WCW had changed directions. At the time, Rey Misterio Jr., Psicosis and Juventud Guerrera were tearing it up in ECW. Nancy Sullivan, later to become Nancy Benoit, was the wife of Kevin as a manager in ECW. She had also worked as a valet on some AAA shows in both California and Mexico, and told her husband about the guys being some of the best talent in the world.
Konnan was both the co-booker at AAA, and its top star. Sullivan’s feel that in doing business, the key was to put over the big star, so he earmarked Konnan for a U.S. title run, but felt beating Sasaki wasn’t the way to do it. Plus, with Sasaki being such a key player in Japan, beating him wasn’t going to be easy. New Japan would okay a home-and-home win series with Sting, who had appeared in Japan for years as a featured star. Konnan had not worked at that level in Japan. Sullivan didn’t want to put the U.S. title on Sting, because Konnan was supposed to come in as a babyface.
So after Starrcade’s PPV ended, with Flair winning a three-way over Sting and Luger, out came Sasaki and the One Man Gang. Given he had already worked as a heel against Sting, and his storyline was that he wouldn’t defend the title in the United States, it made perfect sense that he came out to defend the title as a babyface. The two had what was reported as the worst match on the show. Gang hit his 747 splash, and Sasaki kicked out. The referee counted to three. Gang grabbed the belt and held it overhead. The ref took the belt from Gang, re-started the match, and Sasaki then pinned Gang. This was the version of events that happened and what was reported in Japan.
For U.S. TV, they only showed Gang getting the three count and holding the belt in the air, so for the sellout crowd in Nashville at Starrcade, they had seen Sasaki score a pin, get announced as the winner, and then saw Gang on TV in the same match having won the title. The Japanese had an issue with Sasaki losing to Gang when the deal was set up for it to be Sting. But more so, the problem was the idea he would lose twice on the same show, including once to someone they didn’t consider as a top star. It was very different then. The major sports newspapers, read by millions, covered this card in Japan, and for the top stars, wins and losses were protected very closely, especially for a rising star.
Sasaki’s first IWGP title win came over Hashimoto on August 31, 1997, before an overflow turn away crowd of 18,000 fans at the Yokohama Arena. The win was symbolic, because it was billed as Riki Choshu night, to honor the booker who was scheduled to retire a few months later (and here he is more than 16 years later still wrestling). In addition, Hashimoto was all over the news because a week earlier, his mother-in-law had died jumping in front of a moving car protecting her two-year-old grandchild (Hashimoto’s daughter) who was about to be run over.
The match was reported as good, with Sasaki winning in 16:54 with a Northern lights bomb.
Sasaki was given the monster push at the time, beating Tenzan to win the G-1 Climax tournament on August 3, and then teaming with Koshinaka to win the tag team titles on August 10 at the Nagoya Dome from Satoshi Kojima & Manabu Nakanishi.
Hisako Uno was born July 13, 1967, making her a year younger then Sasaki. She was a crazy pro wrestling fan growing up, first idolizing the Crush Gals, who were mainstream stars in the mid-80s. Then she became a heel fan, and even headed the Bull Nakano Fan Club. She dropped out of high school at 17, and at 18, she was named Japanese women’s Rookie of the Year. At 19, she and veteran Yukari Omori lost to Chigusa Nagayo of the Crush Gals, and Yumiko Hotta, in the finals of that year’s tag team tournament, in what was voted that year’s Japanese womens’ Match of the Year.
She was clearly a rising star. At the age of 20, Hotta & Uno won the WWWA tag titles, but in a title defense against a team called The Red Typhoons, Kazue Nagahori & Yumi Ogura, she took a tombstone piledriver off the top rope and legitimately suffered a broken neck. She then wrestled the entire third fall while holding her head in place with her hands, did the job, and at the time it was believed her career was over.
She returned in 1989, as Akira Hokuto, with bleached blond hair, naming herself after Akira Maeda, a popular pro wrestler of that era. Despite constantly battling major injuries, over the next few years, Hokuto established herself within wrestling as being viewed as the greatest woman wrestler who ever lived.
That point is debatable, as many see Manami Toyota with her incredible athletic ability, as the best woman of the real golden age of women’s in-ring wrestling. But from knowing many of the wrestlers of the era, there was never a question in anyone within the promotion’s eyes as to who the greatest worker was, as Toyota was viewed as weak from the drama standpoint and couldn’t match Hokuto’s physical toughness.
When All Japan women and their big rivals, the JWP promotion, started working together, the big singles program were Hokuto as the All Japan women’s rep, against former Japanese judo champion and early MMA pioneer Shinobu Kandori, who played the shooter role of the era. Their April 2, 1993, bloodbath was among the greatest matches, men or women of any era. She was always working hurt, nicknamed the mummy because she’d be in the ring with so many different body parts taped up. The injuries shortened her prime and she never captured what was the biggest title belt in women’s wrestling at the time, the WWWA title.
Due to injuries, she stopped working full-time for All Japan women in 1992, and announced she would retire at the end of 1993, a year that featured her two memorable matches with Kandori. She moved to Mexico, got married to a wrestler, and held the CMLL women’s title for two years. Even though she was not a full-timer, when All Japan women ran its only Tokyo Dome event, on November 20, 1994, it was clear the crowd of 32,500 saw her as the biggest star on the show. The event was highlighted by what was called the Five-Star tournament. The best women from several different promotions would compete in an eight-woman tournament, which ended with Hokuto beating Aja Kong.
Even though they were both major pro wrestling stars, Hokuto and Sasaki had at that point never met.
Inoki put together a deal with the government of North Korea to put on two pro wrestling shows. The controversial events, which drew the two largest pro wrestling crowds in history, saw citizens of Pyongyang essentially ordered to attend and the spectators performed in unison at the shows. Virtually nobody knew what pro wrestling was, past the point that Rikidozan, who was actually from North Korea (a closely guarded secret during his lifetime, and still unknown to most in Japan until decades after his death), was known as a North Korean who became the biggest wrestling star ever in Japan. Inoki himself was well known in North Korea as Rikidozan’s protege.
Inoki’s New Japan worked with WCW and All Japan women in producing the shows. On April 28, 1995, before 150,000 fans at Mayday Stadium in Pyongyang, Sasaki and Hokuto worked the same show, meeting for the first time while on the tour. Hokuto teamed with Nakano, the woman whose fan club she once ran, to beat Toyota & Mariko Yoshida in the match that went on second but stole the show. Sasaki beat former Olympian Masa Saito in the semifinal, underneath a Hashimoto vs. Scott Norton main event.
All the wrestling contingent, which stayed at the same hotel, knew by morning that the two had hooked up. In fact, it was the big story the next morning, because the screams from Sasaki’s room could be heard loudly through the walls by everyone on their floor, the floor above and the floor below. By the time they were the talk of the wrestlers at breakfast, the two were already engaged.
That night, they performed in front of 170,000 fans, the largest pro wrestling crowd in history, underneath the main event, the first and only meeting between Inoki and Ric Flair. This time she was second from the top, retaining her CMLL title against Nakano. He teamed with Hase third from the top, reprising the 1991 match of the year, losing to Rick & Scott Steiner.
She was always known for being very smart, and having the ability to get what she wanted. Some of the women wrestlers who had worked with her viewed the engagement after one night as her manipulating him to make herself into a bigger mainstream star, with the gimmick of the husband-and-wife superstars in wrestling, something Japanese wrestling had never had before. But now, nearly 19 years later, the two are married, have two sons, and it’s been more than a decade since anyone has even questioned the situation. They have their own wrestling company where she handles the business and he handles the training, and long after she retired from the ring, she’s remained a major star.
To show how famous they have become, every year, NTV, one of Japan’s major networks, does a 24-hour charity program, running events all over the country to raise money. There are concerts, talk shows, celebrity volleyball tournaments, etc. to raise money for a variety of charities. Only top tier celebrities, movie stars, baseball superstars, etc. are chosen each year to be the main stars. The biggest event is a 24-hour marathon, which airs for three hours as the key prime time show.
On August 25 and August 26, 2012, the celebrities chosen were Sasaki and Hokuto. It was a deal put together months earlier, because they weren’t going to be figureheads, but they were actually going to be runners. The story was that the two of them, along with their two children, Kennosuke, then 13 (he’s now 15), and Shinnosuke, then nine (he’s now ten), would run as a family relay the 120 kilometer (74.56 mile course). The family trained for months building their stamina to each be able to go nearly 20 miles apiece. Making things more difficult, she had told the press that while she hadn’t done anything athletic in years, he, with his pro wrestling body, was in great shape, and was going to do the run without dropping from his wrestling weight of 253 pounds.
The show was going to be huge whether they were on it or not, doing a 20.5 rating over the three hours. But the rating spiked for clips of the four family members, with Kensuke going first, followed by Kennosuke, Shinnosuke and finally Hokuto. When she crossed the finish line, the rating had spiked to a 46.5, meaning roughly 50 million of Japan’s population of 127 million were watching her.
Kensuke Sasaki was born August 4, 1966, in Fukuoka, Japan. In high school, he participated in judo, which was where he got his grip strength, balance, strong base and some of his early moves. During the height of his New Japan singles career, his finishing sequence would be a judo throw followed by his Power Strangle submission.
At 19, he started as the protege of Choshu. Few remember this, but he actually started with All Japan Pro Wrestling, well, actually the offshoot outsider group called Japan Pro Wrestling that housed the Choshu army. Sasaki worked his first year in prelims there. When Choshu left All Japan in 1987 to return to New Japan, he came to New Japan and worked in prelims.
In 1988, he left Japan to get international experience. He went to Puerto Rico, where he held the Caribbean tag team titles with Mr. Pogo as his partner. He also went to Stampede Wrestling in the final days of that promotion, using the name Benkei Sasaki, and held the International tag team titles with Sumo Hara (Tatsumi Kitahara). He also wrestled in Austria and Germany as Kendo Sasaki.
When he returned to Japan in 1990, things had changed, and for him, it was for the better. Inoki had been elected to the Japanese Parliament, meaning all the creative decision making was in the hands of Choshu. Choshu immediately started the push for Muto, Chono and Hashimoto to replace himself, Inoki and Tatsumi Fujinami as the big stars of the promotion. He put Sasaki in a tag team with assistant booker Hase, who was probably the best wrestler in the company at the time, but the decision was made his role would largely be the guy with credibility who would put over the new stars on the way up. At the same time, to keep him strong, he and Sasaki would be a regular tag team. On November 1, 1990, they defeated Muto & Chono in a spectacular match to win the IWGP tag team championships.
Their second title reign ended in an NWA vs. IWGP tag team title match against The Steiner Brothers on March 21, 1991, a show billed as “Starrcade at the Tokyo Dome,” which aired on PPV in the United States. The fast pasced exchanges of amateur wrestling spots and suplexes was a style really not familiar in the U.S., and it was voted 1991 match of the year in the Observer poll.
Outside the ring, Choshu put Hase and Sasaki in charge of training the young talent. In Japan, Sasaki is well known for his success rate when it comes to training wrestlers, including Satoshi Kojima, Hiroyoshi Tenzan, Yuji Nagata, Manabu Nakanishi, Kendo Ka Shin, Shinjiro Otani, Koji Kanemoto, Osamu Nishimura, Tatsuhito Takaiwa, Kazuyuki Fujita, Tadao Yasuda, Togi Makabe, Hiroshi Tanahashi, Katsuhiko Nakajima and Katsuyori Shibata, all of whom became name talent.
However, there were also the tragedies. In 1994, Hase personally recruited Hiromitsu Gompei, who had just won the collegiate national championship, with the idea he’d be a future superstar. On January 26, 1995, Gompei, 22, suffered a serious head injury while training, and died four days later.
Hase had attempted to get answers as to what happened, and frustrated with what happened, left the New Japan promotion, although by that time he had been elected to national office and was only wrestling sparingly. He and Sasaki did make up later. The book “Ring of Hell,” pointed the finger at Sasaki for roughing him up. Sasaki was there and running the classes. Others said that Sasaki does have to take some of the blame because it was under his watch, but have different stories of the circumstances, noting it wasn’t even Sasaki in the ring with Gompei when he was injured. No charges were ever brought against anyone, nor were any lawsuits filed by the family.
Years later, Sasaki was running the dojo for the short-lived World Japan (WJ) promotion, MMA fighter Takayuki Okada, best known as Giant Ochiai who fought for Pride. Okada was the nephew and took the name of one of Japan’s biggest baseball stars ever, Hiromitsu Ochiai (1982, 1985, 1986 Triple Crown winner, 510 career home runs, Hall of Famer and later as a manager led his team into the Japanese Baseball World Series four times between 2004 and 2011), was in training to become a pro wrestler. On July 28, 2003, Okada suffered a head injury while training with Kenzo Suzuki (Kenso in All Japan today), with Sasaki monitoring the training. Okada underwent brain surgery and died on August 8, 2003, at the age of 30. Suzuki was so bothered by what happened that he quit wrestling for a time, and was working in construction.
Choshu’s booking during the 90s was stellar, as shown by all the huge crowds at the Tokyo Dome and other arenas. With the exception of WWE, and one year of WCW, it’s doubtful that any promotion was as financially successful as New Japan in the 90s. But things started declining, and in 2002, Choshu was replaced as booker and left the promotion. Sasaki left shortly after.
They started World Japan Pro Wrestling in 2003. The group only lasted one year. Sasaki had put somewhere between $200,000 and $250,000 of his own money into the promotion, and the Sasakis and Choshu had a falling out and never had anything to do with each other for years.
During this period Sasaki also trained for MMA. In a match that was actually never reported on until years after it happened, but in fact, did happen, Sasaki, on August 19, 2001, defeated Dan Chase at a show called Rumble in the Rockies, in Denver, in 36 seconds with an armbar submission. Chase may have been a professional jobber. He was listed at 0-6 going into that fights, with every loss coming in the first round. He had already lost to a New Japan wrestler, Kazuyuki Fujita (who used the name “Saito” to hide from the Japanese press in case he didn’t do well) a year earlier in Killeen, TX, and finished his career with a listed 0-9 record (record keeping at low level MMA events was spotty at best in that era) , all first round stoppages, only once lasting two minutes.
His only other fight was against San Jose’s Christian Wellisch, on his own show, called X-1, on September 6, 2003, in Yokohama. Sasaki, at the time the top star with World Japan and being 37 years old while holding their world heavyweight title, beat Wellisch, a former junior college national place winner in wrestling, in 2:35 with a guillotine. Wellisch later ended up in UFC, where he went 3-3 as a heavyweight between 2006 and 2009, beating current UFC fighter Anthony Perosh, but being knocked out by Shane Carwin and Cheick Kongo. He then retired and is now a lawyer.
Sasaki worked with former New Japan wrestler and UFC fighter Brian Johnston to put on an MMA show. It was supposed to be the debut of a new organization, but it flopped, drawing only 1,000 fans to the Yokohama Bunka Gym.
Sasaki’s show featured an interesting list of names that would go on to different levels of fame. Among them were Daniel Puder (who a year later would win WWE’s Tough Enough after having no experience with pro wrestling past nearly making the cast of Tough Enough’s third season and once watching the first WWE produced Ric Flair DVD, and was later briefly pushed as an undercard star in Strikeforce), Jon Fitch, Nakajima (then 15 years old, before he had his first pro wrestling match, winning via knockout over Jason Leigh in :25 with a head kick), Bobby Southworth (who two years later would gain some fame in the first season of The Ultimate Fighter and his televised altercation with Chris Leben and problems with Dana White, and would also later be a star with Strikeforce), Brian Pardoe (who was the opponent of Frank Shamrock when he won the WEC light heavyweight title) and 330 pound Daniel Bobish (a former UFC and Pride fighter who was being pushed at the time as the top foreign star of the World Japan Pro Wrestling group).
The story behind this was the main financial backers of World Japan were really into the idea of pro wrestling as real. Choshu, who had already hated the direction of mixing shooting and working, changed his tune to go along with the owners wishes, saying that you have to keep pace with the new generation and what they want. Exactly what was and wasn’t real can be debated given a Japanese group that was attempting to be major league putting its world champion, its top foreign star and a 15-year-old kid in a shooting situation, and Sasaki was inexperienced and older, and Nakajima was a kids star in karate but had never done MMA. The belief at the time was that everything on the show was real, but nobody really knew what was up with Sasaki and Nakajima, although Nakajima really did knock the hell out of Leigh.
After quitting WJ, which quickly folded, Sasaki came back to New Japan as a heel, pushed now as having a shooter rep, battling the new stars of the promotion, many of whom he trained, in 2004 and 2005. He had a transitional role as IWGP champion, beating Tenzan on March 12, 2004, only to drop the title to Bob Sapp on March 28, 2004, when New Japan was going down the road that almost killed them. Sapp was a genuine national celebrity, all over television commercials, and anything he did got huge coverage. The idea of him being IWGP champion is it would get the company mainstream publicity. And it may not have been a bad idea, but there were so many guys brought in from MMA and kickboxing in that era, that the uniqueness that allowed them to have matches legendary as supposed shoots that were works in the 70s and 80s when they were rare, just turned into bad pro wrestling because the gimmick was overdone.
He won the belt for a fifth and final time, beating Fujita on October 9, 2004, in a match heavily criticized because the finish was done to be a complete fluke, like the idea Fujita, by that point better known as a star with Pride and who had left New Japan, was so much stronger they couldn’t do a real finish and have it be believable (or perhaps Pride insisted on it and at the time was so much stronger than New Japan it was dealing from power), so they had to come up with a cheap way to get the belt off him. That title win was so poorly received he had to drop it quickly, which he did on December 12, 2004, in Nagoya, to Tenzan. At that time he was freelancing, and was also working the big All Japan shows, including going to the finals of the Champion Carnival tournament, losing to Muto.
He mainly worked All Japan in 2005, even doing a nostalgia match where he teamed with Road Warrior Animal back as Power Warrior. His highlights included winning that year’s Champion Carnival tournament, beating Kawada in the semifinals and Jamal (who later became Umaga) in the finals.
Sasaki became one of the few people to win both the IWGP and Triple Crown titles on August 26, 2007, when he defeated Minoru Suzuki. He had a solid run as champion. The idea here is that the company was trying to build Suwama, a powerful former college wrestling star, as its in house strongest heavyweight, so beating Sasaki, by this point a legend, for his first title win was considered the crowning of his rise. That took place on August 24, 2008, in Nagoya. While Suwama never became the star hoped for, with the lack of television and not quite having the charisma needed to break out that era, the win over Sasaki did help his credibility as a headliner and aura as a top star, and he remains a headliner today.
His final rung of capturing the three big titles took place two weeks later, on September 6, 2008, when he defeated Takeshi Morishima for the GHC heavyweight title, before 9,000 fans at Budokan Hall. His run ended on March 1, 2009, when he lost to Jun Akiyama, before 14,200 fans, although that crowd was more for Kenta Kobashi doing a comeback on the undercard.
Takayama later won all three titles, but as a champion, it wasn’t as significant since his run only included one time with each, and far less longevity as a top guy, winning the GHC title in 2002, the IWGP title in 2003, and the Triple Crown in 2009.
Sasaki, as the head of the Kensuke Office (now called Diamond Ring), wrestled mostly for NOAH until his neck injury that really ended his career, usually in tag team matches with Nakajima. He was mostly in the role of the legend who would be on the card, and thus, virtually never lost himself.
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KENSUKE SASAKI CAREER TITLE HISTORY
IWGP HEAVYWEIGHT: def. Shinya Hashimoto August 31, 1997 Yokohama; lost to Tatsumi Fujinami April 4, 1998 Tokyo; def. Genichiro Tenryu January 4, 2000 Osaka; Title vacated after losing to Toshiaki Kawada October 9, 2000 Tokyo in a non-title match; def. Toshiaki Kawada in tournament final for vacated title January 4, 2001 Tokyo; def. Hiroyoshi Tenzan Mach 12, 2004 Tokyo; lost to Bob Sapp March 28, 2004 Tokyo; def. Kazuyuki Fujita October 9, 2004 Tokyo; lost to Hiroyoshi Tenzan December 12, 2004 Nagoya ALL JAPAN TRIPLE CROWN: def. Minoru Suzuki August 26, 2007 Tokyo; lost to Suwama April 24, 2008 Nagoya
PRO WRESTLING NOAH GHC HEAVYWEIGHT: def. Takeshi Morishima September 6, 2008 Tokyo; lost to Jun Akiyama March 1, 2009 Tokyo
WCW UNITED STATES HEAVYWEIGHT: def. Sting November 13, 1995 Tokyo; lost to One Man Gang December 27, 1995 Nashville.
IWGP TAG TEAM: w/Hiroshi Hase def. Keiji Muto & Masahiro Chono November 1, 1990 Tokyo; lost to Hiro Saito & Super Strong Machine (Junji Hirata) December 26, 1990 Hamamatsu; w/Hiroshi Hase def. Hiro Saito & Super Strong Machine March 6, 1991 Nagasaki; lost to Rick & Scott Steiner March 21, 1991 Tokyo; as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk def. Scott Norton & Tony Halme December 14, 1992 Tokyo; lost to Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez August 5, 1993 Tokyo; as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk def. Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez January 4, 1994 Tokyo; lost to Hiroshi Hase & Keiji Muto November 25, 1994 Iwate; w/Riki Choshu def. Tatsumi Fujinami & Kengo Kimura April 12, 1997 Tokyo; lost to Manabu Nakanishi & Satoshi Kojima May 3, 1997 Osaka; w/Kazuo Yamazaki def. Manabu Nakanishi & Satoshi Kojima August 10, 1997 Nagoya; lost to Keiji Muto & Masahiro Chono October 19, 1997 Kobe; w/Shiro Koshinaka def. Hiroyoshi Tenzan & Satoshi Kojima March 22, 1999 Amagasaki; lost to Michiyoshi Ohara & Tatsutoshi Goto June 27, 1999 Shizuoka
PRO WRESTLING NOAH GHC TAG TEAM: w/Takeshi Morishima def. Bison Smith & Akitoshi Saito September 21, 2009 Nagoya; lost to Takeshi Rikio & Mohammed Yone December 6, 2009 Tokyo
ALL JAPAN ALL-ASIA TAG: w/Katsuhiko Nakajima def. Shuji Kondo & Yasshi July 26, 2005 Tokyo; Vacated titles October 2006 due to Sasaki being injured
WORLD WRESTLING COUNCIL TAG TEAM: w/Mr. Pogo def. Huracan Castillo & Miguel Perez Jr. December 15, 1988 Bayamon; lost to Mark & Chris Youngblood March 4, 1989 San Juan; w/Mr. Pogo def. Huracan Castillo & Miguel Perez Jr. April 1, 1989 San Juan; lost to Brad & Bart Batten April 2, 1989 Dorado
KO-D TRIOS CHAMPION: w/Danshoku Dino & Makoto Oishi def. Antonio Honda & Hoshtango & Yuji Hino July 21, 2013 Tokyo; lost to Akebono & Toru Owashi & Sanshiro Takagi August 18, 2013 Tokyo
WORLD JAPAN THE GREATEST TITLE: def. Kenzo Suzuki in tournament final July 20, 2003 Tokyo; Vacated title December 2003 when leaving promotion
MICHINOKU PRO TOHOKU TAG TEAM: w/Katsuhiko Nakajima def. Jinsei Shinzaki & Ultimo Dragon September 1, 2004 Tokyo; lost to Jinsei Shinzaki & Gaiana March 5, 2005 Tokushima
STAMPEDE WRESTLING INTERNATIONAL TAG TEAM: as Benkei Sasaki w/Sumo Hara (Tatsumi Kitahara) def. Bulldog Bob Brown & Kerry Brown August 18, 1989 Calgary; lost to The Black Hearts (Tom Nash & David “Gangrel” Heath) September 21, 1989 Calgary
UWA TAG TEAM: as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Animal def. El Terrible & Damian 666 in tournament final for vacant title May 11, 2008 Mexico City; Titles never defended
HAWAIIAN HEAVYWEIGHT: def. Lopaka Kapaniu December 20, 2003 Kaneohi, Hawaii; Title vacated 2005
HAWAIIAN HERITAGE TAG TEAM: w/Kenjiro Katahira def. Ahuna & Kaniela January 17, 2004 Kaneohi, Hawaii; Titles vacated; w/Kenjiro Katahira def. Taiyo Kea & Eddie Fatu July 21, 2004 Kaneohi, Hawaii; Vacated titles 2005
TOURNAMENT HISTORY
1990 Japan/China Friendship tournament: lost to Masahiro Chono in finals
1992 NWA title and G-1 Climax tournament: lost in semifinals to Rick Rude
1992 Super Grade tag team tournament: w/Hiroshi Hase lost to Riki Choshu & Shinya Hashimoto in finals
1993 Super Grade tag team tournament: as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk 5th place
1994 G-1 Climax tournament: as Power Warrior won B block, lost to Masahiro Chono in finals
1994 Super Grade tag team tournament: as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk tied 1st place; lost to Masahiro Chono & Super Strong Machine in playoffs
1995 G-1 Climax tournament : 3rd place B Block
1995 Super Grade tag team tournament: w/Masa Saito 6th place
1996 G-1 Climax tournament: 2nd place A block
1996 Japan/U.S. All-Star tournament: def. Shiro Koshinaka in finals (had defeated Lex Luger, Ric Flair and Scott Norton to reach finals)
1996 Super Grade tag team tournament: w/Riki Choshu 3rd place
1997 G-1 Climax tournament: def. Hiroyoshi Tenzan in finals
1997 Super Grade tag team tournament: w/Kazuo Yamazaki 2nd place, lost in playoffs to Shinya Hashimoto & Manabu Nakanishi
1998 G-1 Climax tournament: lost to Kazuo Yamazaki in quarterfinals
1998 Super Grade tag team tournament: w/Kazuo Yamazaki tied for 1st place; lost to Shinya Hashimoto & Tatsumi Fujinami in playoffs
1998 IWGP tag team title tournament: w/Kazuo Yamazaki lost in semifinals to Masahiro Chono & Hiroyoshi Tenzan
1999 G-1 Climax tournament: 3rd place A block
1999 G-1 Climax tag team tournament: w/Kazuyuki Fujita 9th place
2000 G-1 Climax tournament: def. Manabu Nakanishi in finals
2000 G-1 Climax tag team tournament: w/Shiro Koshinaka 5th place
2001 IWGP heavyweight title tournament: def. Toshiaki Kawada in finals (def. Satoshi Kojima and Masahiro Chono earlier in tournament)
2001 G-1 Climax tag team tournament: w/Dan Devine 2nd place; lost in semifinals to Yuji Nagata & Manabu Nakanishi
2002 IWGP heavyweight title tournament: lost to Rick Steiner in quarterfinals
2002 G-1 Climax tournament: 3rd place A block
2002 IWGP tag team tournament: w/Shiro Koshinaka lost in quarterfinals to Masahiro Chono & Hiroyoshi Tenzan
2003 World Japan championship tournament: def. Kenzo Suzuki in finals (defeated Riki Choshu and Steve Williams in first two rounds)
2004 IWGP heavyweight title tournament: lost to Hiroyoshi Tenzan in quarterfinals
2004 G-1 Climax tournament: lost to Genichiro Tenryu in quarterfinals
2004 Champion Carnival 1st place A block (lost to Keiji Muto in finals)
2004 Real World Tag League w/Katsuhiko Nakajima 3rd B block
2005 Champion Carnival 2nd A block, beat Jamal (Umaga) in finals
2005 Real World Tag League w/Katsuhiko Nakajima 2nd B block
2006 Champion Carnival 3rd A block
2007 Champion Carnival 2nd A block
2007 Real World Tag League w/Toshiaki Kawada 2nd place, lost playoff match to Satoshi Kojima & Suwama
2008 Champion Carnival 2nd B block
2008 Global Tag League w/Katsuhiko Nakajima, 5th place
2009 Global Tag League w/Takeshi Morishima, 2nd place
2010 Global League, 2nd, A block
2010 Global Tag League w/Takeshi Morishima, 2nd place A block2011 Global League, 2nd, B block
2011 Global League, 2nd place B block
2011 Global Tag League w/Kento Miyahara, 7th place
2012 Global Tag League w/Kento Miyahara, 4th place
2013 Global Tag League w/Katsuhiko Nakajima, 1st place B block, lost to KENTA & Yoshihiro Takayama in championship final
TOKYO SPORTS AWARDS
MATCH OF THE YEAR 2000 vs. Toshiaki Kawada October 9, 2000 Tokyo Dome
WRESTLER OF THE YEAR 2004
MATCH OF THE YEAR 2005 vs. Kenta Kobashi July 18, 2005 Tokyo Dome
WRESTLING OBSERVER AWARDS
MATCH OF THE YEAR 2001 w/Hiroshi Hase vs. Rick & Scott Steiner March 21, 2001 Tokyo Dome
TOKYO DOME HISTORY
March 21, 1991 w/Hiroshi Hase (IWGP tag team champions) lost to Rick & Scott Steiner (NWA tag champions) in title vs. title match
January 4, 1993 as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk double count out Rick & Scott Steiner to retain IWGP tag team titles
January 4, 1994 as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk def. Scott Norton & Hercules Hernandez to win IWGP tag team championships
January 4, 1995 lost to IWGP champion Shinya Hashimoto, main event (52,500 sellout)
October 9, 1995 lost to Masahito Kakihara
January 4, 1996 def. Hiroshi Hase
April 29, 1996 as Power Warrior w/Road Warriors def. Rick & Scott Steiner & Scott Norton
January 4, 1997 as Power Warrior def. Great Muta
April 12, 1997 w/Riki Choshu def. Tatsumi Fujinami & Kengo Kimura to win IWGP tag team championship
January 4, 1998 def. Keiji Muto to retain IWGP heavyweight title, main event (55,000 sellout)
April 4, 1998 lost IWGP heavyweight title to Tatsumi Fujinami
January 4, 1999 def. Atsushi Onita via DQ
April 10, 1999 w/Shiro Koshinaka def. Tatsumi Fujinami & Genichiro Tenryu to retain IWGP tag team titles
October 11, 1999 lost to Genichiro Tenryu
January 4, 2000 def. Genichiro Tenryu to win IWGP heavyweight title, main event (53,500 sellout)
April 7, 2000 def. Jushin Liger
October 9, 2000 As IWGP champion lost non-title match to Toshiaki Kawada, main event (54,000 sellout)
January 4, 2001 def. Satoshi Kojima, Masahiro Chono and Toshiaki Kawada, main event finals in one-night tournament for IWGP heavyweight title (52,000 sellout)
January 28, 2001 w/Toshiaki Kawada vs. Genichiro Tenryu & Hiroshi Hase, main event (30,000)
October 8, 2001 lost to Kazuyuki Fujita Vale Tudo rules (worked match)
January 4, 2002 no contest with Naoya Ogawa
May 2, 2002 w/Hiroshi Tanahashi lost to Rick & Scott Steiner
January 4, 2004 lost to Yuji Nagata
May 3, 2004 w/Manabu Nakanishi lost to Yuji Nagata & Kendo Ka Shin
July 18, 2005 lost to Kenta Kobashi, co-main event (52,000 sellout)
OTHER DOME/STADIUM RESULTS
May 3, 1993 Fukuoka Dome as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk def. Masahiro Chono & Shinya Hashimoto to retain IWGP tag team title
May 4, 1994 Fukuoka Dome as Power Warrior w/Road Warrior Hawk def. Rick & Scott Steiner to retain IWGP tag team title
April 28, 1995 Mayday Stadium Pyongyang, North Korea def. Masa Saito
April 29, 1995 Mayday Stadium Pyongyang, North Korea w/Hiroshi Hase lost to Rick & Scott Steiner
May 3, 1995 Fukuoka Dome def. Hiroyoshi Tenzan
May 3, 1997 Osaka Dome w/Riki Choshu lost IWGP tag titles to Satoshi Kojima & Manabu Nakanishi
August 10, 1997 Nagoya Dome w/Shiro Koshinaka def. Satoshi Kojima & Manabu Nakanishi to win IWGP tag titles
November 2, 1997 Fukuoka Dome def. Riki Choshu
May 5, 2000 Fukuoka Dome as Power Warrior def. Great Muta to retain IWGP title, main event (25,000)
April 9, 2001 Osaka Dome lost no rules match to Shinya Hashimoto
November 13, 2004 Osaka Dome def. Minoru Suzuki to retain IWGP title