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Shootfighting.
The origin of current shoot-style wrestling can arguably be traced
back to April 10, 1984, when a group of professional wrestlers,
led by Akira Maeda, formed the Japanese group UWF. A couple of
months after that, Satoru Sayama, who had already gained an immense
success as the original Tiger Mask in New Japan Pro Wrestling,
and Kazuo Yamazaki joined UWF. With the later arrival Yoshiaki
Fujiwara and Nobuhiko Takada, the group moved from professional
wrestling into a stiffer, stronger style. The outcomes of the
matches were predetermined, but the bruises and submissions were
real. By the end of 1985, the original UWF had broken up. On September
2nd of that year, Akira Maeda had a match with Satoru Sayama that
went horribly wrong. Maeda threw several intentional kicks to
Sayama's groin, and the match went from shoot-style to a true
shoot, with the two men trying to kill each other. Maeda was fired
from UWF. The UWF had their last show nine days later, at fabled
Korakuen Hall. Many of the wrestlers were unhappy under the selfish
leadership of Sayama, but didn't have the organization to keep
the promotion alive when Sayama left on October 11, 1985. Many
of these shoot-style wrestlers, including Fujiwara, Maeda, Takada,
and Yamazaki, went back to their roots in New Japan Pro Wrestling.
The second incarnation of UWF started on November 27, 1987, when
Akira Maeda (once again) intentionally kicked wrestler Riki Choshu
in the face, breaking three bones. Maeda was suspended, and then
fired in March of 1988. In April, Maeda, Takada, Yamazaki and
others formed the new UWF. The group began to thrive with the
addition of wrestlers Masakatsu Funaki and Minoru Suzuki in April
of 1989. The UWF's peak came with their show "Atlantis"
at Tokyo Dome on October 25, 1990, a show that pitted Akira Maeda
v. Masakatsu Funaki, Nobuhiko Takada v. Yoshiaki Fujiwara,
and featured wrestlers Yoji Anjoh, Naoki Sano, and American Wayne
Shamrock. On December 1st, 1990, UWF president Shinji Jin fired
all of the wrestlers after a show in Nagano, Japan, and disbanded
the promotion. On March 4, 1991, Yoshiaki Fujiwara formed Professional
Wrestling Fujiwaragumi (PWFG) with Funaki, Suzuki, Yusuke Fuke
and American Bart Vale. Shortly after that, the other two major
names in Japanese shoot-style wrestling formed their own promotions.
Nobuhiko Takada formed the Union of Wrestling Forces International
(UWFI), using most of the leftover UWF talent. Akira Maeda created
RINGS, using a lot of sambo players and kickboxers from Europe.
The two Americans made important moves in 1992. One, Bart Vale
captured the PWFG title, a title he would hold for the better
part of three years. Wayne Shamrock left UWFI to join PWFG in
1992 as well, uniting with Funaki, Suzuki, and Yusuke Fuke. These
four men left PWFG and formed Pancrase. Led by Masakatsu Funaki,
they were looking to establish a wrestling organization that had
no predetermined outcomes, the first of its kind since the early
days of pro wrestling in the U.S. Pancrase had their first show
on September 21, 1993, and became a big success, culminating so
far in their first U.S. PPV in April of 1996. With Shamrock becoming
a star through his involvement in the Ultimate Fighting Championships,
Pancrase has developed a lot of momentum for the future. Without
four of their major stars, PWFG started having fewer and fewer
shows. Yoshiaki Fujiwara went back and appeared on professional
wrestling shows for New Japan, in order to help finance PWFG.
They had their "official" final show on November 19,
1995. Bart Vale has had successes with his "Shootfighting"
organization apart from PWFG, and continued establishing his style
with a good performance at the World Combat Championship PPV.
Currently, UWFI is enjoying a strong resurgence after nearly going
out of business early in 1995. They have combined with New Japan
Pro Wrestling, putting on several joint shows, including one in
front of a record 67,000 fans at the Tokyo Dome. Nobuhiko Takada
won the IWGP title, the top belt in the New Japan promotion, and
helped save UWFI, but in the view of some fans, compromising the
UWFI style. With the burgeoning success of Pancrase and UWFI,
the RINGS promotion has had a tough time in the past couple of
years creating its own niche in the shoot-style market. Akira
Maeda is still the icon of the promotion, but none of the Europeans
brought in have been fully embraced by the Japanese fans. It will
be difficult for them to return to prominence without a new, preferably
young, star. With three established shoot-style promotions in
Japan, plus Sayama's "Shooto", Fujiwara's new "BattleArts",
Submission Arts Wrestling, coverage of the Ultimate Fighting Championships
and others, shoot appears to now be firmly entrenched as a true
sport in Japan. Next stop: the United States.
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