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UWF Newborn


Control21

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Sorry for falling so far behind.  I continue to enjoy your shows mostly because I learn so much each time.  

A couple of questions... first, I enjoy the idea of pinfalls being added but why would the announcement come in a baseball magazine?

Also, I enjoyed the match with the accidental palm strike between Raus and Takada.  I guess I am really unsure of how scripted the UWF really was.  Was any of it real shoot wrestling or was it just more realistic looking then our USA wrestling.

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10 hours ago, kevinmcfl said:

  

A couple of questions... first, I enjoy the idea of pinfalls being added but why would the announcement come in a baseball magazine?

I can actually answer this one. The Japanese magazine named Baseball actually covered wrestling. I don't know why but I learned this from Mick Foley's first book.

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10 hours ago, kevinmcfl said:

Sorry for falling so far behind.  I continue to enjoy your shows mostly because I learn so much each time.  

A couple of questions... first, I enjoy the idea of pinfalls being added but why would the announcement come in a baseball magazine?

Also, I enjoyed the match with the accidental palm strike between Raus and Takada.  I guess I am really unsure of how scripted the UWF really was.  Was any of it real shoot wrestling or was it just more realistic looking then our USA wrestling.

Yeah, like Rain said, Baseball Magazine actually covered wrestling. I've been using the names of real magazines like Tokyo Sports and Weekly Pro. 

As for the Ruas/Takada palm strike, incidents like that were not uncommon in shoot style. Maeda and Yamazaki had a match end in a similar fashion in 1989. The matches were worked, but guys were encouraged to hit each other pretty hard. They weren't trying to knock each other out of course, but the strikes were supposed to be stiffer than usual. When the first UWF was launched in 1984-1985, wrestlers had to be reminded to protect themselves 

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Wrestling "News and Notes" Newsletter

May 23rd, 1989

UWF Newborn

  • The main event for UWF's upcoming show on May 31st at Hakata Starlanes in Fukuoka has been confirmed to be Akira Maeda vs Bob Backlund. Backlund has been on a winning streak, and has promised the Japanese press that he will beat Maeda clean. Maeda has said that Backlund will be a tough challenge, and praised his opponent's dedication to improving himself in the UWF style of wrestling.
  • Other matches confirmed for the Fukuoka event include Nikolai Zouev vs Dennis Koslowski, Yoshiaki Fujiwara vs David Gobejishvili, and Marco Russ vs Bad News Allen.
  • Tickets went on sale this week for UWF's anniversary show at the Osaka Baseball Stadium. Tickets have been flying as expected, and it is expected it will be a confirmed sellout within the next few days. This would be a remarkable achievement for the promotion, even if it has proven itself as a top draw over the past year. The stadium has a capacity of roughly 28,000 seats, and this could allow it to break the all-time gate record in Japan once again, beating out last year's show at the Ariake Coliseum. Of course, with the Tokyo Dome show in December, UWF could very well take that record even further. Tickets are expected to go on sale for the Tokyo Dome event sometime this summer. 
  • It is expected that the next event will be Bad News Allen's last appearance for the UWF, at least for the time being. He will be reporting back to the WWF, and sources have said that UWF's treatment of Bad News Allen has allowed a relationship to blossom between UWF and the WWF, with Chris Benoit's appearance at the last UWF event serving as another example. Bad News Allen could return later for the anniversary event, but nothing has been confirmed as of press time.

(OOC: A more "digest" version of my usual update, but I just wanted to keep the hype train going while I am on vacation/traveling.)

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"It is expected that the next event will be Bad News Allen's last appearance for the UWF, at least for the time being. He will be reporting back to the WWF, and sources have said that UWF's treatment of Bad News Allen has allowed a relationship to blossom between UWF and the WWF, with Chris Benoit's appearance at the last UWF event serving as another example. Bad News Allen could return later for the anniversary event, but nothing has been confirmed as of press time."

 

One of the more frutiful loans I have had in these types of games. It is something to have guys like Bad News go and show their grit and build up that reputation or in his case... rebuild it... as they come back to the states and sports entertainment.

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UWF Newborn – “Fighting Base Fukuoka”

May 31st, 1989

Fukuoka, Japan

Hakata Starlanes

Attendance: 4,000 (sold out)

Broadcast: WOWOW (taped)

Yusuke Fuke vs Kiyoshi Tamura

With both competitors eager to demonstrate their improvement in front of the crowd at Hakata Starlanes, the groundwork for an exciting match was laid early on. Tamura seemed to be quicker than Fuke at first glance and out-grappled his opponent consistently in the opening minutes. Tamura impressed the crowd further with a nice flying armbar, and almost got an early victory but Yusuke fought to the ropes to break the cross-armbreaker attempt that came afterward.  Yusuke regained his footing and managed to slow down his firey opponent just enough to regain some momentum in the match. Fuke showed off some of his striking skills and knocked down Tamura with a combo of palm strikes. Tamura got up quickly though, and the two continued to trade points through rope breaks and another knockdown from Fuke. With the match tied 3-3 going towards the 15:00 time limit, Tamura got Fuke off his feet with a snap German suplex, followed by a rear-naked choke. Fuke tried to reach the ropes, but this time he could not muster enough strength and tapped out, giving Tamura the submission victory. Tamura defeats Fuke via submission (rear-naked choke), 14:11

Marty Jones & Mark Rocco vs Yoji Anjo & Shigeo Miyato

This match offered an interesting contrast for the crowd, with the team of Marty Jones and Mark Rocco combining classical British catch wrestling with more modern techniques. Anjo and Miyato had a solid background in catch wrestling as well and relied on their submission and grappling skills to try and control the tempo of the bout. Jones and Rocco sought to push things and often tried to use some clever techniques to get Anjo and Miyato off their feet. Their strategy paid off as Anjo and Miyato had to exhaust some early rope breaks. Marty Jones in particular appeared to be very comfortable in the ring and gave both Anjo and Miyato fits with some of his grappling abilities. The Billy Robinson-trained Jones had no problem winning the crowd over again. Rocco’s unorthodox offense was also a challenge for both of his opponents, utilizing speed and movement to create openings for his submission skills, which were nothing to laugh at. Miyato was able to re-establish some momentum eventually and finally was able to slow down Rocco in particular, challenging him on the canvas and showing off his own abilities in catch-as-catch-can wrestling. Both Miyato and Anjo earned back some points over the next few minutes, and Miyato finally was able to send Rocco out of the match with a nicely-timed heel hook. Marty Jones managed to eliminate Anjo with a Manjigatame. Jones and Miyato squared off for the rest of the match, and after another great display of catch wrestling, Jones secured the victory for his team after catching Miyato with a double wristlock. Jones & Rocco defeat Anjo & Miyato, 20:11

Wayne Shamrock& Joe Malenko vs Masakatsu Funaki & Naoki Sano

The team of Wayne Shamrock and Joe Malenko combined experience with raw talent, but one could argue Shamrock’s raw talent has been refined at a quick pace since his debut in UWF Newborn. They proved to be a tough matchup for Masakatsu Funaki and Naoki Sano, which was a solid duo that was brimming with talent and potential as well. Funaki was a handful for both Malenko and Shamrock, giving both wrestlers all they could handle while arguably keeping himself and Sano in the match. Sano wasn’t useless, but his relative lack of experience did not allow him to outwrestle Shamrock or Malenko. Malenko’s strategy was to control the tempo of the match, keeping the two Japanese young guns relatively grounded and giving Shamrock a chance to take advantage of the openings to score more damage. Sano was vulnerable to this strategy and was the first to be eliminated. Sano wasn’t completely washed out of the match, but it was clear he was behind his two opponents. Malenko managed to score the elimination after dragging Sano down for a Fujiwara armbar in the middle of the ring, forcing Sano to tap. Funaki kept himself in the match though, and snagged a heel hook on Shamrock after the American was perhaps a bit too eager to lock up with Funaki to get one up over a potential rival. Funaki and Malenko had a great closing stretch, and their grappling skills were on full display for the crowd. Malenko was just a little bit better tonight though, and wore down Funaki enough to allow a Bridging German suplex, which kept Malenko’s opponent down on the canvas long enough for the pinfall victory. Malenko & Shamrock defeat Funaki & Sano, 17:44

Minoru Suzuki vs Mark Fleming

Mark Fleming had the experience and knowledge from training with Lou Thesz, but Minoru Suzuki had the youth and eagerness to get back in the win column. Fleming’s strategy wasn’t anything unique. He attempted to control the pace of the match by using his grappling skills to slow down and limit Suzuki’s offense. This appeared to work at first, with Fleming presenting all sorts of trouble for Suzuki on the canvas. Suzuki attempted to use his speedy transitions to counter Fleming’s offense on the mat, but Fleming was able to prevent most of these attempts from working through his craft. In particular, Fleming focused on the arms of Suzuki to throw his opponent off his game. Fleming built up a 2-0 lead on points through several rope breaks, and the crowd grew more desperate for the young Suzuki to launch a comeback. With a second wind behind him, Suzuki battled back and used some unorthodox moves like dropkicks and running forearms before resorting back to his grappling, which has been improving over the past few months. Suzuki’s mixture of both pro-style and shoot-style offense allowed him to quicken the pace of the match, and Fleming struggled to deal with a more focused Suzuki as he picked up points through rope breaks and eventually settled things at 2-2 after a double-underhook suplex forced Fleming to take his time to get back on his feet. Suzuki finished things off with a side suplex followed by a Gotch-style piledriver, which allowed the younger wrestler to pick up a well-deserved win over Fleming via pinfall. Suzuki defeats Fleming via pinfall, 15:28

Nikolai Zouev vs Dennis Koslowski

Zouev and Koslowski were well-matched opponents for each other, with both relying on skilled grappling finesse, albeit influenced by different backgrounds with Koslowski relying on American freestyle wrestling while Zouev utilized his background in SAMBO. The crowd was very impressed by the technical display, and both refused to go for rope breaks in the first several minutes as they preferred to rely on their knowledge to get out of difficult situations. Koslowski mixed up submission attempts with creative pinfalls, but Zouev came prepared and found his way out of both attempts to end the match in Koslowski’s favor. Zouev seemed more focused on going for the submission win, and Koslowski had to contend with creative leg entries that threw him off balance and allowed the Soviet specialist to go for various leg hooks. The stalemate broke around the 7:00 mark when Zouev finally forced Koslowski to go for a rope break after a smooth transition into a kneebar. The American continued a mixed strategy of going for both pinfall and submission attempts and used his pinfall attempts to open up avenues to attack the limbs of his Soviet opponent. They traded rope breaks until both were tied at 1-1 by the 12:00 mark. Koslowski finally managed to get Zouev with a nice freestyle pinning maneuver, and Ryogaku Wada seemed ready to commence the count, but the Soviet sambist somehow found a way to reverse Koslowski’s hold into a great leg lock of his own and locked in pretzel-like kneebar hold that forced Koslowski to tap, giving Zouev the surprising victory. Zouev defeats Koslowski via submission (kneebar), 14:55

Yoshiaki Fujiwara vs David Gobejishvili

A clash of styles was apparent here, with David Gobejishvili using his background in Chidaoba and freestyle wrestling to try and overpower Fujiwara with a combination of strength and technique. Fujiwara wasn’t intimidated though, and relied on his extensive background in catch wrestling to control the pace of the match when needed. David had the size advantage, but Fujiwara found a way to limit this by snatching onto the Georgian’s long limbs whenever an opportunity arose, either via wristlocks or standing leglocks. David quickly found out why Fujiwara has a well-deserved reputation as a defensive wrestler and struggled to establish early momentum with his creative offense. Whenever he tried to get Fujiwara off his feet with a clever throw attempt, Fujiwara turned it into some sort of hook as he managed to get the 6’7 Georgian to the canvas. The crowd at Hakata Starlanes was thoroughly impressed and rallied behind Fujiwara for the entire match. David found himself using several rope breaks as Fujiwara enjoyed a good amount of control over the match, and his opponent established a solid 2-0 lead on points by the 8:00 mark. David was a sound professional though, and never quite gave up hope as he finally found ways to break through Fujiwara’s defense and get him off his feet with a huge fireman’s carry throw. David quickly established control on the canvas and worked for a shoulder lock as Fujiwara, now a bit fatigued, struggled to get the huge frame of the Georgian off him. Fujiwara was forced to go for his first rope break, and more followed as David settled into the match and found his flow, seizing upon the openings that were now opening up with Fujiwara on the back foot. David continued to combine his Chidaoba and freestyle wrestling and was able to grapple Fujiwara to the canvas more often. After landing a belly-to-belly suplex, Fujiwara had to take his time to get back up and David got a point on the board at 2-1. After beating the ten count, Fujiwara fought back furiously and tricked David into the receiving end of several headbutts. This allowed Fujiwara to get David back on the canvas for a Fujiwara armbar. The Georgian did his best to escape but submitted to the inevitable. Fujiwara defeats Gobejishvili via submission (Fujiwara armbar), 14:29

Bad News Allen vs Casemiro “Rei Zulu” Martins

When one of the toughest men in wrestling goes up against one of the toughest men in Brazilian Vale Tudo, sparks, of course, are going to fly. Almost immediately, Casemiro and Allen traded palm strikes and body punches as they attempted to score an early knockdown. Allen appeared to get some good hits on Casemiro, but Casemiro fought through the contact and managed to clinch with Allen, and fought some attempts from his opponent to get him off his feet. This allowed Casemiro to land several knee strikes and score the first knockdown after Allen dropped to his knee to recover from the sudden surge of sharp pain from Casemiro’s powerful knees. Allen didn’t take much time to beat the count and quickly got back into the match. This time, Allen opted to grapple with Casemiro and use his Judo techniques to get back at Ruas. Casemiro’s grappling background clashed against this, and the two had an extended grappling exchange with neither willing to allow their opponent to get control of the match. Allen managed to get Casemiro off his feet with some spectacular throwing maneuvers, but Casemiro proved his worth on the canvas, defending Allen’s attempts to score a submission. With Allen attempting to go for a cross-armbreaker, Casemiro managed to reverse their respective positions and got Allen on his back while keeping control of his opponent’s legs. Allen had to desperately fight off a kneebar attempt from Casemiro and went for the ropes to break the hold. Allen returned the favor a few minutes later with a beautiful sweeping takedown, which allowed him to finally lock in a cross-armbreaker. Of course, Casemiro went for the ropes as well. After a series of knockdowns and rope breaks via grappling exchanges, Casemiro held a 3-2 lead on points. Allen exhausted everything he had in his tank but still looked determined. After another clinch, Casemiro left himself open to an armdrag takedown from Allen who immediately applied another cross-armbreaker attempt. This time, Casemiro felt the squeeze and decided to tap, handing Bad News Allen a parting victory as the crowd at Hakata Starlanes applauded Bad News Allen for his contributions to UWF Newborn over the past few months. Bad News Allen defeats Martins via submission (cross-armbreaker), 15:11

Satoru Sayama vs Yorinaga Nakamura

In a rematch from their previous encounter where Yorinaga got a shot victory over his former instructor, Sayama was determined not to have a repeat performance and did well to slow down Yorinaga’s offense in the opening minutes of the match. Yorinaga let the sparks fly and unleashed a flurry of strikes, but Sayama dodged and countered most of them, landing some clean hits of his own. Sayama was able to get Yorinaga down to the canvas, where both displayed slick grappling maneuvers. Sayama seemed just a bit quicker, allowing him to establish control in the opening phase. It seemed Sayama surprised Yorinaga by going for one or two pinfall attempts, but Yorinaga quickly got out of each. In response, Yorinaga was almost able to get a rear-naked choke locked in, but Sayama quickly went for the ropes to break the hold. Back in the stand-up, Sayama was flashy with his jumping kicks and spinning backfists, which caught Yorinaga off-guard at one point, resulting in a knockdown. Sayama’s Shooto co-instructor was quick to get back up but the crowd was solidly behind his opponent. Nakamura attempted to land some more strikes, but Sayama made things difficult and took down his opponent once again to the mat. Things were a little more even this time, with Nakamura managing to get Sayama into some difficult positions at times. Sayama was just a little bit better though, and established a 2-1 lead on points after an ankle lock attempt led to another break from Nakamura. Sayama had more tricks up his sleeve and lured Nakamura into a sudden European Clutch attempt. Nakamura was a bit shellshocked, and could not kick out in time as Sayama secured the three count. Sayama celebrated his victory while Nakamura came to terms with how he could be caught off guard by a move like that. Sayama defeats Nakamura via pinfall, 14:55

Nobuhiko Takada vs Norman Smiley

Smiley has certainly earned his top 10 ranking in UWF so far, and the talented Gotch-trained wrestler had another chance to defeat Takada, with their first meeting last year ending in a victory for Takada. Takada came out to a very warm greeting from the fans at Hakata Starlanes, and Smiley was greeted by an enthusiastic bunch as well. In the opening stages, Smiley appeared to have the advantage as he used smart limbwork and counterwork to hold off Takada’s offense, particularly his striking. Takada found himself on the canvas several times, trying to hold off Smiley as he looked for his openings patiently. The crowd watched intently as Smiley and Takada continued to test each other on the canvas before both rolled to the ropes for a clean break. Over the next few minutes, Takada finally started to get some clean hits on Smiley, using his trademark kicks to soften up his opponent and get the crowd more vocally involved. Smiley was able to check some of Takada’s strikes, but Takada clearly had his opponent on the back foot and the crowd sensed it. Takada continued to stalk his opponent and scored an early knockdown after connecting a combo of palm strikes and kicks aimed at Smiley’s abdomen. Smiley was able to beat the ten count and quickly recovered as he took Takada back to the canvas and immediately started working for a kneebar. Takada put up a struggle, but Smiley was determined to get the hold and forced Takada to go for the ropes to break the hold. The match developed into a bit of a stalemate, with Takada and Smiley exchanging rope breaks on the canvas, although Takada scored another knockdown towards the end after connecting with another combo. Takada built himself a 3-1 lead on points and was in control of the match. The decisive moment came when Smiley clinched with Takada, allowing Smiley’s opponent to snag him for a huge side suplex followed by a double wristlock. Smiley did his best to escape the hold and nearly reached the ropes, but Takada held on tight and finally scored the submission victory when Smiley relented and tapped. Takada defeats Smiley via submission (double wristlock), 16:22

Akira Maeda vs Bob Backlund

Maeda made his way to the ring, marching to the tune of Camel’s “Captured” as Hakata Starlanes made it clear who they were backing. Backlund followed next, and a normal wrestler perhaps would have felt the intimidation of following up on such a big act as Akira Maeda, but Backlund was no normal wrestler. Coming out to Dvorak’s Symphony Number 9, Movement 4, Backlund walked confidently to the ring to meet his long-awaited opponent face-to-face. With Masami Soranaka breaking down the rules for both, the bell soon followed and the match got underway. The crowd launched into their “Ma-e-da! Ma-e-da!” chants right away, and Maeda immediately got to work with a series of low kicks aimed to deal some early damage. Backlund felt some of them, and vocally made it known, perhaps as a way to tease his opponent. Backlund got into his trademark stance as he looked to clinch with Maeda, and Maeda was happy to oblige. Maeda seemed to be in control at first, with Backlund mainly defending himself from Maeda’s calculated but formidable grappling skills. Backlund was weary of being pinned and did his best to stay off his back as he tried to incorporate some tricky counterwork to try and catch Maeda off guard. Maeda remained in control though, and earned himself an early rope break after getting a single-leg Boston crab on the American. The match continued as a mostly grappling affair, with Maeda picking his spots to soften up Backlund with a variety of strikes. Backlund was able to land a few body punches in return but chose to keep the match on the canvas as often as he could to wear down his opponent. As the match progressed, Backlund was able to get Maeda in increasingly difficult positions, and his amateur wrestling background became beneficial with the methodical pace that had set the tone. While Maeda was no slouch when it came to grappling, his catch wrestling skills weren’t as refined as his striking abilities. Backlund evened the match at 1-1 on points after catching Maeda with a straight armlock, with the simple hold doing enough to make Maeda think about breaking the hold. Chants for Maeda broke out again, with the crowd sensing that Maeda had a lot on his hands with Backlund. Maeda found himself dealing with an increasingly confident Backlund and the former WWF and PCW star was able to get Maeda up in the air for a German suplex, which he attempted to bridge into for the pinfall. Maeda was able to kick out at the 2 count though, and the crowd applauded with some relief.

Maeda answered back with a series of kicks, and Backlund was caught off his feet for Maeda’s first knockdown of the match. Backlund gathered himself relatively quickly and beat Soranaka’s ten count with some time to spare. Maeda continued his assault intending to keep Backlund on the backfoot. After about a minute, Backlund got knocked down again, giving Maeda a 3-1 lead points. Backlund appeared a bit frustrated as he got back on his feet in time to beat the ten count again. Backlund came storming back, landing a few body punches and palm strikes on Maeda before lifting him into the air again for a belly-to-belly suplex. Backlund immediately went for side control on the ground and attempted to lock in a cross-armbreaker before Maeda went to the ropes to break the hold, preventing Backlund from putting him in any further danger. With both back up on their feet, Backlund went for an ankle pick on Maeda, but Maeda calmly held his ground and managed to stay even with Backlund as they went to the canvas again. Maeda managed to hold his ground this time, and worked his to a seated armbar position, with Backlund doing his best to break the hold or reverse it. Maeda eventually got it locked in, and Backlund shouted “woooah!” “woooah!” as Maeda leveraged his arm more and more. Backlund finally had to scramble to the ropes to break the hold, giving Maeda another rope break and putting him closer to a commanding 4-1 lead on points. The closing moments of the match came soon afterward when Maeda and Backlund were both exchanging strikes on their feet. Maeda appeared to be close to another knockdown, but Backlund caught him in the clinch and lifted him for a sudden but strong Olympic slam. Backlund attempted to lock in the Chicken Wing Crossface but had to settle for a double wristlock as Maeda did his best to fight his way out. Backlund changed his plans as Maeda stalled his attempt to get the hold locked in, and transitioned to a crucifix pin instead, using his amateur wrestling skills to get Maeda on his shoulders. Maeda found himself in a difficult spot and did his best to kick out, but the moment came and went in an instant. Soranaka counted the 1-2-3, giving Backlund the victory. Backlund jumped into the air like an excited schoolboy as the stunned silence of Hakata Starlanes overcame the chants for Maeda that were erupting just minutes earlier. Backlund climbed the nearest turnbuckle to celebrate his victory as Nobuyuki Furuta made the result official. Backlund defeats Maeda via pinfall, 18:09

After the match, Maeda does not look very pleased and confronts Backlund as the American continues to celebrate. Backlund and Maeda have a staredown before Maeda slaps Backlund across the face! Things look like they are about to explode until several other UWF wrestlers rush the ring to keep the two separated. Maeda points at Backlund, but Backlund just stares and laughs. Things calm down a bit, and Maeda exits the ring, but he's still clearly pissed off about something. Backlund applauds the fans before leaving himself, and the WOWOW commentary crew recaps the evening for the TV audience. They discuss Backlund's upset over Maeda and the kerfuffle afterward. They seem perplexed, saying Backlund got the victory clean. Perhaps Maeda felt disrespected by Backlund? The show closes with highlights set to Queen's "We Are The Champions."

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Tamura comes on strong at the very end to win an evenly fought match up. 

Fun booking with the British going up against the Japanese. This International match seemed to have won the crowd over. Jones put on an incredible performance. 

Shamrock and Malenko worked well together. Props to Funaki for hanging tough. Malenko shines in the end. 

Fleming starts off strong but that closing finish by Suzuki was stronger. 

Zouev defeats Koslowski after one heck of a match. Both guys brought their A game tonight. 

Fujiwara definitely had a game plan against the 6'7" Gobejishvili. 

Allen leaves the UWF on a high note. Lowblow is right, this reestablishes Allen as Bad News when he comes back to the states. 

Sayama uses his experience to even things up with Nakamura. 

Smiley gave it his all but it seems Takada just has his number. 

Maeda sure had things going his way, but Backlund's amateur wrestling background sealed the deal in the end. I'm very curious on what Maeda was upset about. I liked the drama and looking forward to the aftermath. 

 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Enjoyed catching up on the UWF.  

Very interested to see if Maeda's anger at the end of the Backlund match was real or just part of the show.  I never know in the UWF.  It could be one of Backlund's moves was too stiff.  It could have been the way Backlund celebrated which then could be real anger or again part of the show.  Or could have been Maeda should have won and something went wrong.  Whatever it was, this was interesting.

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June 21st, 1989

One of the most talked about topics with regards to UWF over the past few weeks has been the finish to the match between Akira Maeda and Bob Backlund on May 31st, which ended with a very surprising victory for Backlund. Maeda appeared very upset after the match and slapped Backlund across the face. At first, many thought that something very bad had happened and that Backlund went into business for himself. Over the past few weeks though, it has become apparent that this was an angle of some sort, with various magazines in Japan leaning very heavily into it. Most notably, Tokyo Sports (which is famous for pushing worked angles), featured an interview with Akira Maeda who claimed that Backlund was endangering the spirit of the UWF with his antics and that he was considering raising Backlund’s contractual status with Shinji Jin. Of course, this didn’t happen. Backlund later was interviewed by the same publication and claimed that the UWF was afraid of him beating all the top talent and proving that an American was superior at “real wrestling” than native talent. It is becoming evident that UWF sees Backlund as a top talent, and his victories so far over the likes of Takada and Maeda signal that he will play a huge role in the promotion over the coming months. If it isn’t obvious by now, Backlund will likely continue to appear at UWF events going forward.

In other news, Satoru Sayama has been promoting an upcoming event at Korakuen Hall on July 12th which will be a Shooto-branded show under the UWF banner. Sayama said that this will be a smaller, more intimate show with a different ruleset to showcase the Shooto approach to combat sports. The main event is being advertised as Satoru Sayama vs Maurice Smith, with Yorinaga Nakamura vs Andy Hug as the semi-main event. Sayama has also promised to introduce new talent as well. The feeling is that UWF will continue to do these Shooto-branded shows as smaller events on a semi-monthly basis and that Sayama has been wanting to do these events since joining UWF last year. There’s been some discussion among sources in Japan about whether or not Sayama is starting to wield more political influence with Shinji Jin and other UWF executives, but others have suggested that this was the plan all along.

UWF’s next event will be taking place June 30th at the newly opened Yokohama Arena. There’s a lot of excitement over this show as the new facility has been praised as a modern venue with best-of-class facilities. The show sold out almost instantly when tickets went on sale, and that is a great sign for UWF’s July event at the Osaka Baseball Stadium. Speaking of Bob Backlund and Satoru Sayama, both are scheduled to face off against each other at the Yokohama show, which will be very interesting considering the current developments. Akira Maeda will face off against Salman Hashimikov in the main event and will seek to get back on track with the big end-of-year tournament looming on the horizon. Nobuhiko Takada will be facing off against a new Soviet wrestler named Vladimir Berkovich, who is apparently a mountain of a man and has a Greco-Roman background. Other matches scheduled for the card include Volk Han vs Maurice Smith and Aleksandr Karelin vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara.

 

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1 hour ago, Control21 said:

In other news, Satoru Sayama has been promoting an upcoming event at Korakuen Hall on July 12th which will be a Shooto-branded show under the UWF banner. Sayama said that this will be a smaller, more intimate show with a different ruleset to showcase the Shooto approach to combat sports. The main event is being advertised as Satoru Sayama vs Maurice Smith, with Yorinaga Nakamura vs Andy Hug as the semi-main event. Sayama has also promised to introduce new talent as well. The feeling is that UWF will continue to do these Shooto-branded shows as smaller events on a semi-monthly basis and that Sayama has been wanting to do these events since joining UWF last year. There’s been some discussion among sources in Japan about whether or not is starting to wield more political influence with Shinji Jin and other UWF executives, but others have suggested that this was the plan all along.

I am not sure - I just got like warped into our game when reading this part and being intrigued about this show and how it could be similar/different from the other UWF stuff. Awesome work.

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UWF Newborn – “Fighting Base Yokohama”

June 30th, 1989

Yokohama, Japan

Yokohama Arena

Attendance: 17,000 (sold out)

Broadcast: WOWOW (live)

The jam-packed Yokohama Arena is buzzing with excitement as the WOWOW commentary crew welcomes the viewing audience to tonight's programming. They hype up tonight's matches while clips of Akira Maeda, Nobuhiko Takada, Bob Backlund, Aleksandr Karelin, and a few others are shown with them backstage getting ready. We get the opening parade of wrestlers as usual, with loud receptions coming from the Yokohama crowd. Akira Maeda thanks the fans for coming and selling out the new arena, and he promises a victory tonight to move on from last month. Nobuhiko Takada and Satoru Sayama speak as well. Bob Backlund is showing eyeing Sayama while he speaks. Soon, the event is ready to get underway with the opening match.

Manabu Yamada vs Kiyoshi Tamura

The opening bout saw an entertaining and highly energetic affair between two talented rookies, with Tamura looking to secure a second straight win and cement himself as the top student in the first class of UWF “young lions.” Yamada had something to say though and gave Tamura some trouble as he made for a tough opponent on the mat. Tamura appeared to struggle with Yamada’s counter-grappling and transitional work, despite his own quickness and agility. The opening few minutes went in Yamada’s favor, with Tamura having to exhaust two rope breaks due to Yamada’s sound grappling abilities. As one would expect though, Tamura grew into the match and started to make things even as he demonstrated his striking skills were nothing to sneeze at either. Yamada got caught by several palm strikes, allowing Tamura to establish momentum and control his opponent on the canvas as they found themselves there more often than not. Soon it was Yamada’s turn to exhaust a few rope breaks in consecutive order, and the two young lions decided to start throwing more strikes as they both desperately wanted to score a more decisive blow. Despite the swings in momentum throughout the match, the two young wrestlers were evenly matched and the match ended in a fitting draw, with both taking something out of it despite being disappointed in not winning. 15:00 draw

Shigeo Miyato vs Masahito Kakihara

Kakihara, another talented rookie, had his hands full with Miyato, who was aware of Kakihara’s promising striking skills and did his best to keep the feisty young lion on the mat. Kakihara struggled with Miyato’s ability to control the pace of the match on the canvas, and couldn’t get much going early on with Miyato finding openings for early submission attempts, particularly with the cross-armbreaker. Whenever the two found themselves on their feet, Kakihara attempted to land his strikes on Miyato, but Miyato did well to defend and get his opponent back down to the canvas. Despite Kakihara’s best efforts, this match was all Miyato as he took the young lion to “school” on the art of grappling and how to control a match in UWF. Kakihara just could not get anything going despite his best efforts, and the eventual 3-0 deficit on points demonstrated that. Shortly after the 9:00 mark, Kakihara had a low kick caught by Miyato, who quickly turned it into a heel hook for the submission victory. Miyato defeats Kakihara via submission (heel hook), 9:09

Minoru Suzuki & Wayne Shamrock vs Masakatsu Funaki & Yoji Anjo

An interesting matchup on paper turned out to be a very good one in practice as the two teams meshed with their partners well and tested their opponents significantly. Suzuki and Shamrock were on similar wavelengths and both aggressively took their opponents down to the canvas at every opportunity. Funaki did well to defend though, and Anjo was showing improvement in that part of his craft as well. Shamrock scored the first point of the match when he forced Funaki to go for a rope break after a well-timed double-leg takedown followed by a quick kneebar attempt. Both teams were applauded early for their smooth wrestling, and the team of Suzuki and Shamrock continued to enjoy the early momentum. Shamrock was impressive and looked very well-conditioned and Suzuki seemed like he had something to prove, especially when he went up against Funaki. Funaki had his hands full and exhausted another rope break, this time coming from a chokehold attempt from Suzuki. Anjo started to fight back after being tagged in and landed several hard strikes on Suzuki who had no choice but to play defense against the fired-up Anjo. Anjo’s efforts enabled him to score the first point of the match for his team, with a flurry of palm strikes sending Suzuki down to the canvas for a ten count. Suzuki wasted no time in getting back up and took the match back to Anjo. Shamrock evened the match at 1-1 after getting another rope break from Funaki, who was visibly frustrated as he felt his opponents had his number. The match saw the expected swings in momentum, but it appeared quite even and the fans were torn on who to root for. 15 minutes into the match no one had been eliminated, despite both Suzuki and Funaki being pushed to their last point each. In this case, it was fitting that the two were in the ring when a decisive moment came from Suzuki’s double-underhook suplex on Funaki, who was immediately smothered by a determined Suzuki. With a sense of urgency, Suzuki locked in a very tight double wristlock on Funaki and forced him to submit, leaving Anjo on his own. Anjo did his best to defend against Suzuki and Shamrock and picked his spots to get some offense in. Shamrock and Suzuki were too good though, and Shamrock put away Anjo after a belly-to-belly suplex led to a ten count, which Anjo did not beat. Shamrock & Suzuki defeat Funaki & Anjo, 17:18

Mark Rocco & Marty Jones vs Andrei Kopylov & Nikolai Zouev

The style contrast in this match made for a unique tag team bout, with the high-level SAMBO skills of Zouev and Kopylov clashing against the classical catch wrestling skills of Marty Jones and Mark Rocco, who incorporated more pro-style offense at times as well. Rocco and Jones were a little unorthodox out of the gate, hoping to catch their dangerous opponents off their feet. Using moves like shoulder tackles, or arm drag takedowns, they both were able to fluster their Russian foes early in the match. Rocco, in particular, was a fly in their ointment and seemed to get the better of Zouev, even on the canvas. It was only a matter of time though before Zouev and Kopylov grew into the match and adjusted to their opponents. They were just too skilled. The British wrestlers were able to hold their ground and did get some nice moments on the mat against their skilled opponents, proving that catch wrestling skills were useful against SAMBO practitioners. Jones in particular confused Kopylov at times with some nice limbwork and controlled the tempo while exerting some painful looking holds. Rocco had the misfortune of finding himself on the canvas with Zouev for an extended period, and despite his efforts to contend with the Soviet grappler, Rocco found himself eliminated after Zouev locked in a painful-looking ‘banana split’ leg submission. This meant Marty Jones was by himself just past the 10:00 mark, and Kopylov did the honors of securing the match in his team’s favor after scoring a single-leg takedown and followed through with a knee crusher. Kopylov & Zouev defeat Jones & Rocco, 11:32

Maurice Smith vs Volk Han

As someone would expect from a striker vs grappler matchup with competitors gifted in their respective fields, this was a wildly entertaining bout. Maurice Smith knew what he had to do to get Volk Han on the backfoot and scouted his opponent well. In particular, Maurice Smith knew the gut shot was Volk Han’s weakness and aimed for that area early in the match. Within a few minutes, Maurice Smith landed a sharp thrust kick to Volk Han’s stomach and the Soviet SAMBO wizard immediately fell to his knees for an early ten count. The American kickboxer gained a lot of confidence from this and picked up where he left off after Volk beat the ten count with some time to spare. Volk Han appeared flustered and was in danger of being knocked down a second time. Of course, this naturally meant that Volk needed to conjure some sort of SAMBO sorcery, and that’s exactly what he did. Volk Han gained control of Smith’s wrist after he blocked a flurry of palm strikes, and tossed his opponent around, using his exposed joints to manipulate him. Smith was helpless on the canvas and Volk Han went for a cross-armbreaker soon after, forcing Smith to go for the ropes to break the hold and get out of the bad predicament. The crowd was very pleased by Volk Han’s wizardry and seemed to get behind him as the match continued. For the next few minutes, Volk Han managed to keep Smith mostly to the canvas and frustrated his opponent with his grappling and submission skills, forcing a few more rope breaks from his opponent and earning himself a 2-1 lead on points. The fans were quite enjoying themselves by this point, and Volk Han seemed inevitable. Smith was able to launch a comeback though and found a way through Volk Han’s defense while delivering a variety of kicks and knee strikes. First, Smith caught Volk with a high kick after feinting another attempt at a gutshot. The Soviet grappler beat another ten count, but quickly found himself in a clinch from Smith who delivered a series of sharp knees to Volk’s stomach afterward. The quick succession of knockdowns seemingly put Smith within moments of victory, but Volk managed to beat the third ten count just in the nick of time. Volk came swinging back with a spinning backfist, which Smith had to dodge quickly. Volk spent a few moments grappling with Smith and trying to bring him back down to the mat. Volk finally managed to score a quick kani-basami on Smith, and quickly locked in a cross heel-hook. Smith did his best to reach for the ropes, but Volk held on tight for the submission victory. Han defeats Smith via submission (cross heel-hook), 13:08

Atsushi Onita vs Andy Hug

Both wrestlers had their hands full here. Onita, of course, was his usual self - a confident young man who felt he had something to prove as he continued to try and climb the ranks of the promotion. Hug was the dangerous star Karateka who wanted to put his opponent in his place. The two started off the match quite strong respectively. Hug was clinical with his strikes and managed to land quite a few attempts despite Onita’s defensive approach.  Onita responded with a few palm strikes but struggled to land any, and attempted to clinch with Hug using a single-leg hook, but Hug was able to grapple through the clinch and reverse it in his favor, and landed a few knee strikes for good measure. Onita did well to stay on his feet and lured his opponent to throw more kicks as he caught one of them and turned it into a takedown, bringing Hug to the canvas as he quickly went on the offensive.  Hug was quite cautious and did his best to turtle up from multiple angles as Onita’s Luta Livre background posed quite a threat to him in the current situation. Onita worked diligently to secure a hook and fought through Hug’s makeshift defense, securing a straight arm lock from side control. Hug quickly fought his way to the nearest ropes for the first rope break of the match, and Onita had a slight smile on his face afterward. Hug stuck to his gameplan, and continued to pick his spots at the right opportunity. Onita felt the force of Hug’s kicks and seemed visibly bothered by them each time they landed. Hug landed the first knockdown of the match after connecting with more high kicks, which sent Onita tumbling down. Onita took his time to get up and seemed a bit shell-shocked. Hug had the confidence to continue his assault, and Onita looked to be in deep trouble after Hug scored a second consecutive knockdown to build a 2-0 lead on points. Onita gritted his teeth and beat another ten count, and immediately grappled with Hug to close the distance and get his opponent back down to the canvas. Onita settled things down a bit and managed to keep Hug on the canvas for the next few minutes. Hug was forced to use a second rope break and Onita got a point back. The match developed into a bit of a back-and-forth, and both were quite determined to get a more decisive moment. At around the 12:00 mark, Onita got Hug to the canvas again with a leg sweep takedown and managed to secure his patented knee scissors for the submission victory. Onita defeats Hug via submission (knee scissors), 12:04

Aleksandr Karelin vs Yoshiaki Fujiwara

Karelin has been quite impressive in UWF so far, and this was perhaps his first real test against an established star in the promotion. Fujiwara knew he had his hands full, and wrestled quite defensively against the much larger Karelin. The crowd watched intently as the two felt each other out, with Karelin figuring out the best way to attack his opponent while Fujiwara tried to lure Karelin into some traps. Of course, Karelin knew he had the size advantage and closed the distance when it suited him. Fujiwara struggled against Karelin’s strength as the Soviet gold medalist easily wrestled Fujiwara down to the canvas. Here, Fujiwara’s expertise helped him a little bit as he was able to slow things down a little as he took various defensive postures to shut down Karelin’s still-maturing submission skills. Karelin had to rely on his Greco-Roman background to keep Fujiwara busy. Fujiwara continued to defend from underneath for a brief time, before Karelin finally managed to get a simple but effective straight armlock from side control, forcing Fujiwara to go for a quick rope break. Fujiwara presented some trouble for Karelin and used some clever grappling to get Karelin briefly on his back, but again, the size of Karelin presented trouble for Fujiwara as he struggled to get any other offense going. Karelin continued to grow into the match and utilized his powerful throwing techniques more and more as Fujiwara’s defense softened up a bit. The crowd was behind Fujiwara but they were also amazed by Karelin’s show of strength.

The two continued to mix in mat wrestling and while Karelin got most of the rope breaks, Fujiwara got a few in as well as he went for some quick but basic holds as ankle locks or armbar attempts. Karelin earned himself a 3-1 lead on points after a powerful belly-to-belly suplex knocked Fujiwara off his feet for a ten count. Fujiwara managed to beat it, but Karelin was a force of nature and was to some degree inevitable. The two fought on the canvas again after Karelin wrestled Fujiwara down again with another Greco-Roman hold. Karelin locked in a gutwrench and Fujiwara fought desperately to escape, but Karelin lifted his opponent for a powerful Karelin Lift and Fujiwara felt the full force of Karelin’s strength as he impacted the mat. Karelin took the opportunity to pin Fujiwara on his back….1…2…3! Karelin earned himself another impressive victory against one of the best UWF had to offer. Karelin defeats Fujiwara via pinfall, 17:10

Bob Backlund vs Satoru Sayama

Backlund was on a roll and had earned himself a bit of a buzz after his previous match with Akira Maeda. The American was seemingly gaining more and more fans each time he made his entrance. Sayama would have his hands full, and Backlund quickly proved this as the match commenced. Moving like a well-oiled machine, Backlund’s amateur wrestling background was on full display as he quickly dodged Sayama’s striking attempts and managed to get a variety of takedowns on his opponent. Sayama’s Shooto background did present a challenge for Backlund on the canvas though, and the American found himself going for a few rope breaks early. Sayama established a 1-0 lead on points and seemed confident despite Backlund continuing to present some problems with his smooth takedowns. The two spent a lot of time on the mat over the next few minutes, with Backlund earning some rope breaks back after he went for some submissions of his own, including a Boston crab. With the match now tied at 1-1, Sayama changed things up and focused on his striking, being more tactical in how he approached things. Backlund got caught out a few times and was finally knocked down by a jumping roundhouse. Backlund beat the ten count from Motoyuki Kitazawa and got back up with a smile on his face. He lured Sayama into a grappling exchange and tried to surprise his opponent with some quick pinning maneuvers but to no avail. The match progressed with Sayama continuing to land his sharp strikes when he needed and got a few combos in as well. When Backlund did manage to dodge Sayama’s strikes, he was quite vocal about it and seemed to taunt Sayama at times. Backlund focused on the ground game and did his best to keep Sayama on the mat whenever he had the chance, and this resulted in a mostly grappling-focused match mixed in some spurts of Sayama attempting to change things up with his strikes.  By the 15:00 mark, the match was tied at 3-3 on points and Backlund seemed to be getting most of the rope breaks. The decisive moment came when Sayama attempted another jumping roundhouse, but Backlund dodged and managed to secure Sayama’s back as he finished his movement. Sayama struggled but Backlund executed a near-perfect bridging German suplex and Kitazawa counted as Backlund kept Sayama’s shoulders pinned. 1..2…3! Backlund had pulled off another major win and Sayama was visibly frustrated with himself as his opponent celebrated. Backlund defeats Sayama via pinfall, 16:33

Nobuhiko Takada vs Vladimir Berkovich

Takada had his hands full with a new opponent in Vladimir Berkovich. The 6’2 350+ pound Greco-Roman grappler presented quite a bit of challenge for Takada at first, who really had no choice but to throw some tentative strikes early to try and soften him up. Whenever Berkovich got his hands on Takada, he was clearly the stronger man and got him down to the canvas easily. Takada managed to keep those moments to a minimum though, and Berkovich’s relatively simple submission skills did not pose much of a threat. Where Takada did find trouble though was when Berkovich was able to execute a variety of suplexes on him, and this gave Berkovich moments where he appeared to be in control of the match. Takada landed on his head quite hard after a massive belly-to-belly suplex from Berkovich, and the fans were audibly concerned. As Takada usually does though, he fought back and landed a series of high kicks on his Soviet opponent. After a brief grappling struggle, Takada managed to give Berkovich a well-executed side suplex, thumping his large opponent against the mat. This allowed Takada to knock down Berkovich twice consecutively with a flurry of powerful strikes. Berkovich kept coming back and beat each ten count, but Takada finally managed to put away his foe with a powerfully connected high kick. This time, Berkovich didn’t get up in time and Takada celebrated his victory with a joyful audience. Takada defeats Berkovich via KO, 9:18

Akira Maeda vs Salman Hashimikov

After his shock defeat to Bob Backlund last month, Maeda was looking for redemption here. Salman Hashimikov provided a good opportunity for Maeda to achieve just that. Hashimikov has already cemented himself as a respectable foe in UWF and has won quite a few fans over with his wrestling skills. From the start. Hashimikov pressured Maeda by closing the distance as quickly as he could to avoid Maeda’s hard kicks. Things seemed a bit troubling for the crowd favorite at first, with Hashimikov being able to wrestle Maeda down to the canvas several times and had the dominant position. Maeda had to defend diligently while Hashimikov worked for a shoulder lock or a straight armlock. The fact Maeda had to exhaust an early rope break after Hashimikov seemed to be overpowering him did not help matters much either. After the break, Maeda gained a bit more confidence as he managed to land some sharp kicks on Hashimikov, forcing him on the back foot. Maeda’s fans rallied as well and Maeda was in clear command, with Hashimikov not being able to close the distance as much as he could a few minutes earlier. Maeda scored the first point of the match after knocking down Hashimikov with a combination of palm strikes. It didn’t take long for Hashimikov to shake things off and beat the ten count from Masami Soranaka, but Maeda was immediately on the offensive again. The decorated Soviet athlete took the opportunity to stay close to Maeda while weathering another striking storm and managed to execute a high-angle German suplex on the crowd favorite. Maeda landed pretty hard and had to kick out immediately out of a pinfall attempt, and Hashimikov kept his grip to avoid letting Maeda establish some distance between them. Hashimikov continued his offense and landed a couple more suplexes on Maeda, with the last one causing another ten count, this time for Maeda. Maeda gathered himself calmly though, and the match continued.

By the 13:00 mark, the match was tied 2-2 on points after Hashimikov got a few more rope breaks out of Maeda during an extended stretch of grappling on the canvas. Maeda stuck to his strategy of using his strikes to soften up Hashimikov while keeping himself in the match. But perhaps Hashimikov’s weakness was his willingness to get close with Maeda. Maeda took advantage of Hashimikov’s fatigue and locked in a Capture Suplex, which sent the Yokohama crowd into a frenzy. Maeda immediately applied a cross-armbreaker and that was enough to cause the Soviet wrestler to tap, handing Maeda the well-deserved victory. Maeda defeats Hashimikov via submission (cross-armbreaker), 14:22

Maeda celebrates his win with the ecastic Yokohama crowd while they chant "Ma-e-da!" in cadence to Camel's "Captured." Hashimikov has earned some respect from Maeda though, and he shakes hands with him before the Soviet wrestler departs. The WOWOW commentary team recap the events from the evening and promote the upcoming events for July, including Sayama's Shooto event at Korakuen Hall on July 10th, and next month's anniversary show coming to you live from Osaka Baseball Stadium on July 27th! They announce the anniversary show will be sold out with an expected audience of over 23,000. Akira Maeda and Nobuhiko Takada will face off once again in the main event! We also get a surprise announcement that in August, UWF will be holding its first event in the Soviet Union! The first-ever "Moscow Martial Arts Festival"  at Luzhniki Stadium on August 24th will be broadcast on WOWOW on tape delay. Much to look forward to! We get the rolling credits as usual set to Queen's "We Are The Champions" with highlights from tonight's matches.

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25 minutes ago, rainmakerrtv said:

I've been watching a lot of Volk Han lately, and the match with Smith on this card was quite the exciting dream match. 

Volk Han and Maurice Smith were a pair that would have been cool to see in RINGS, so it naturally came to mind here. I always enjoyed the grappler vs striker matches Volk Han had, especially against Dick Vrij. Volk Han is one of the best to ever do it IMO.

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The night kicks off with two hungry young lions going the distance. 

Miyato put on a clinic and I think Kakihara learned a lot. 

Shamrock and Suzuki get the win after a valiant effort from Anjo and Funaki. 

The Brits had a good game plan going, but the Russians adapted and finished things up nicely. 

Volk is one tough guy, coming back from those knockdowns. Tough loss, but Smith impressed. 

Onita endured some heavy shots to make a comeback and get the win. 

Karelin looked sharp tonight and that finish was quite the visual. 

Reading this reminds me how much of a wrestling genius Backlund is. 

Takada gets the win but Vladimir showed off some strength in those suplexes. 

Maeda rebounds from his Backlund loss in a big way. The fans went home happy tonight. 

The UWF has a lot of huge events coming this summer. They're riding this momentum all the way! 

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UWF Newborn – “Shooto Super League I”

July 5th, 1989

Tokyo, Japan

Korakuen Hall

Attendance: 2,005 (sold out)

Broadcast: WOWOW (taped)

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The fans at Korakuen Hall are greeted by Sayama before the show starts. The Shooto ruleset is explained to them with a demonstration from two students in the Shooto gym. The key rules are the following: All competitors will use lightweight gloves and long athletic tights, there will be three five-minute rounds in each match, and fighters can only win via knockout, submission, or TKO. If all three rounds pass without a decisive winner, the match will go to a panel of three judges. No low blows, eye pokes, ground-and-pound, etc. The last two matches will take place under regular UWF rules with a 15:00 time limit. After the demonstration concludes and the competitors are introduced, the evening gets underway! (See videos linked below to get a better visual)

Kenji Kawaguchi vs Yuichi Watanabe

A highly technical contest that went all three rounds. Both put on great displays of submission grappling but neither could find a breakthrough. Kawaguchi got the better moments though, and was in control for most of round three. This swung the contest in his favor as the ringside judges ruled in his favor via unanimous decision. Kawaguchi defeats Watanabe via decision (unanimous)

Naoyuki Taira vs Naoki Sakurada

It was evident that both Taira and Sakurada were extremely talented in all facets of striking and grappling, which was why they were both highly touted as up-and-coming prospects from the Shooto gym. Taira and Sakurada pushed each other to round three, but Taira got the decisive moment when he scored a hard high kick. Sakurada couldn’t beat the ten count. Regardless, the crowd was seemingly very impressed by the talent on display from both.  Taira defeats Sakurada via TKO, R2 of 3 (3:04)

Yasuto Sekishima vs Erik Paulson

Paulson seemed very much in control here, and Sekishima never threatened that much as Paulson smothered his opponent with high-level grappling. Paulson made quick work of Sekishima and submitted his opponent with a smother choke 4:37 into round one.  Paulson defeats Sekishima via submission (smother choke), R1 of 3 (4:37)

Kazuo Yamazaki vs Naoki Sano

Yamazaki’s status as Sayama’s first student probably allowed him to be more comfortable than Sano in the Shooto ruleset. Sano seemed to struggle on the grappling side, especially as he adjusted to the use of the lightweight gloves. Yamazaki mainly relied on his striking skills but was able to outmatch Sano when the two found themselves testing each other on the mat. About a minute into round two, Yamazaki was able to break Sano’s turtle defense and quickly locked in a cross-armbreaker for the submission victory.  Yamazaki defeats Sano via submission (cross-armbreaker), R2 of 3 (1:16)

Yorinaga Nakamura vs Andy Hug

Nakamura and Hug tested each other quite well, and Andy Hug was determined to get a win here. Hug scored two early knockdowns and seemed very much in control, but Nakamura steadily fought back and racked up some rope breaks from Hug over time. Hug was a dangerous striker and the audience seemed to be growing fond of his charismatic approach to Karate-based striking, but Nakamura was just a little bit better. By the 12:00 mark, the match was tied 2-2 on points and Nakamura found a breakthrough when he caught one of Hug’s high kicks for a single-leg takedown that turned into a kneebar. Nakamura defeats Hug via submission (kneebar), 12:32

Satoru Sayama vs Maurice Smith

The main event delivered as expected and Sayama and Smith treated the fans to a great display of striking which slowly turned into a grappling contest, and that favored Sayama. Sayama and Smith traded early knockdowns, but Sayama scored the rope breaks when he needed to and earned himself a 3-2 lead on points heading into the late part of the match. Smith fought valiantly and was quite clinical with his strikes at times. Sayama seemed to have a bit of trouble but adjusted accordingly. This was his night. Sayama delivered a powerful Tiger suplex and followed it up with a full Boston crab for the submission victory. Sayama defeats Smith via submission (Boston crab), 13:28

Sayama celebrates his victory after shaking hands with Maurice Smith, who earns a solid applause from the fans in attendance. Sayama thanks the fans for coming and promises to bring more Shooto events to them in the future! The WOWOW commentary crew recap the matches and seem quite excited by what Sayama has been developing behind the scenes at his gym. They do their usual sign-off with the rolling credits concluding the broadcast.

 

 

 

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"Sayama celebrates his victory after shaking hands with Maurice Smith, who earns a solid applause from the fans in attendance. Sayama thanks the fans for coming and promises to bring more Shooto events to them in the future! The WOWOW commentary crew recap the matches and seem quite excited by what Sayama has been developing behind the scenes at his gym. They do their usual sign-off with the rolling credits concluding the broadcast."

This is a very fun part of the story to follow. Sayama has success here... can he grow that success? We'll see.

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