The Japan Grand Prix was an annual professional wrestling tournament held by the promotion All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) to determine the number one contender for the promotion's highest achievement, the WWWA World Single Championship. The tournament was held in the summer every year from 1985 to 2004. In 2005, AJW was closed for good, and the WWWA Championship was abandoned.
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The 1985 Japan Grand Prix was a 10-woman round-robin tournament concluding on June 25, 1985.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Lioness Asuka | 7.0 |
Dump Matsumoto | 6.5 |
Chigusa Nagayo | 6.5 |
Devil Masami | 6.0 |
Yukari Omori | 5.0 |
Jumbo Hori | 4.5 |
Noriyo Tateno | 3.5 |
Crane Yu | 2.5 |
Itsuki Yamazaki | 2.0 |
Bull Nakano | 1.5 |
Second-place tie-breaker | Final | ||||||||
1 | Lioness Asuka | ||||||||
2 | Dump Matsumoto | Dump Matsumoto | |||||||
3 | Chigusa Nagayo |
The 1986 Japan Grand Prix was a 12-woman round-robin tournament concluding on June 22, 1986.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Yukari Omori | 9.0 |
Lioness Asuka | 8.5 |
Chigusa Nagayo | 8.5 |
Dump Matsumoto | 8.5 |
Bull Nakano | 6.5 |
Itsuki Yamazaki | 6.5 |
Noriyo Tateno | 5.5 |
? | 4.5 |
? | 3.5 |
? | 2.5 |
? | 2.0 |
Condor Saito | 0.5 |
Finals | ||||
1 | Chigusa Nagayo | Pin | ||
2 | Yukari Omori | 27:21 |
The 1987 Japan Grand Prix was a 13-woman round-robin tournament concluding on June 28, 1987. [1]
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Chigusa Nagayo | 9.0 |
Dump Matsumoto | 9.0 |
Yumiko Hotta | 9.0 |
Lioness Asuka | 7.5 |
? | 7.0 |
? | 7.0 |
? | 6.5 |
Devil Masami | 6.0 |
Bull Nakano | 5.0 |
? | 4.0 |
Condor Saito | 3.0 |
Hisako Uno | 2.0 |
? | 2.0 |
Second-place tie-breaker | Final | ||||||||
1 | Chigusa Nagayo | ||||||||
2 | Yumiko Hotta | Dump Matsumoto | 12:26 | ||||||
3 | Dump Matsumoto | 5:46 |
The 1988 Japan Grand Prix was an 11-woman round-robin tournament concluding on June 26, 1988. [1]
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Bull Nakano | 7.5 |
Yumiko Hotta | 7.5 |
Mitsuko Nishiwaki | 7.5 |
? | 6.0 |
Dynamite Queen | 6.0 |
Hisako Uno | 5.5 |
Mika Suzuki | 5.0 |
Dynamite King | 4.0 |
? | 3.0 |
? | 3.0 |
Dynamite Bar | 0.0 |
Second-place tie-breaker | Final | ||||||||
1 | Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||
2 | Bull Nakano | Bull Nakano | 10:30 | ||||||
3 | Mitsuko Nishiwaki | 10:37 |
The 1989 Japan Grand Prix was a 19-woman single-elimination tournament held from June 25 to August 24, 1989. [1]
First round | Second round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||||||||||
Noriyo Tateno | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta | Yumiko Hotta | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Mika Takahashi | Yumiko Hotta | |||||||||||||||||||||||
? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mima Shimoda | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Madusa Miceli | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kaoru Maeda | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Miori Kamiya | Madusa Miceli | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Erika Shishido | Erika Shishido | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Madusa Miceli | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Madusa Miceli | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mitsuko Nishiwaki | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bull Nakano | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Suzuka Minami | Suzuka Minami | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Etsuko Mita | Bull Nakano | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Akira Hokuto | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Akira Hokuto | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bull Nakano | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mitsuko Nishiwaki | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Sakie Hasegawa | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Toshiyo Yamada | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Toshiyo Yamada | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mitsuko Nishiwaki | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bison Kimura | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Mitsuko Nishiwaki |
The 1990 Japan Grand Prix was a seven-woman single-elimination tournament concluding on June 17, 1990. [1]
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||||||
Akira Hokuto | ||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | ||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | ||||||||||||||
Madusa Miceli | ||||||||||||||
Madusa Miceli | ||||||||||||||
Noriyo Tateno | ||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | ||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||||||||
Grizzly Iwamoto | ||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||||||||
Mitsuko Nishiwaki |
The 1991 Japan Grand Prix was a 16-woman single-elimination tournament held from July 7 to August 18, 1991. [1]
First round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | ||||||||||||
Mima Shimoda | |||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | |||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | |||||||||||||||
Suzuka Minami | |||||||||||||||
Takako Inoue | |||||||||||||||
Suzuka Minami | |||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | |||||||||||||||
Kyoko Inoue | |||||||||||||||
Miori Kamiya | |||||||||||||||
Toshiyo Yamada | |||||||||||||||
Toshiyo Yamada | |||||||||||||||
Kyoko Inoue | |||||||||||||||
Kyoko Inoue | |||||||||||||||
Debbie Malenko | |||||||||||||||
Kyoko Inoue | |||||||||||||||
Bison Kimura | |||||||||||||||
Esther Moreno | |||||||||||||||
Mariko Yoshida | |||||||||||||||
Mariko Yoshida | |||||||||||||||
Aja Kong | |||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta | |||||||||||||||
Aja Kong | |||||||||||||||
Bison Kimura | |||||||||||||||
Aja Kong | |||||||||||||||
Akira Hokuto | |||||||||||||||
Etsuko Mita | |||||||||||||||
Akira Hokuto | |||||||||||||||
Bison Kimura | |||||||||||||||
Bison Kimura | |||||||||||||||
Mika Takahashi |
The 1992 Japan Grand Prix was a round-robin tournament consisting of two 10-woman blocks, held from June 27 to August 30, 1992. [1] [2]
Block A | Block B | ||
---|---|---|---|
Wrestler: | Points: | Wrestler: | Points: |
Manami Toyota | 9.0 | Toshiyo Yamada | 8.0 |
Aja Kong | 8.0 | Mariko Yoshida | 7.0 |
Takako Inoue | 6.0 | Kyoko Inoue | 7.0 |
Suzuka Minami | 5.0 | Akira Hokuto | 4.5 |
Etsuko Mita | 5.0 | Sakie Hasegawa | 4.0 |
Mima Shimoda | 5.0 | Yumiko Hotta | 4.0 |
Bat Yoshinaga | 4.0 | Miori Kamiya | 3.0 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 3.0 | Debbie Malenko | 3.0 |
Cynthia Moreno | 1.0 | Terri Power | 3.0 |
Bison Kimura | 0.0 | Kaoru Ito | 1.5 |
Semifinal | Final | ||||||||
1 | Manami Toyota | ||||||||
2 | Aja Kong | Aja Kong | 13:01 | ||||||
3 | Toshiyo Yamada | 17:07 |
The 1993 Japan Grand Prix was a round-robin tournament consisting of two eight-woman blocks, with the top two finishers from each block advancing to a single-elimination tournament. It was held from May 3 to August 21, 1993.
Block A | Block B | ||
---|---|---|---|
Wrestler: | Points: | Wrestler: | Points: |
Akira Hokuto | 6.0 | Yumiko Hotta | 6.0 |
Harley Saito | 5.0 | Manami Toyota | 5.0 |
Toshiyo Yamada | 4.5 | Bat Yoshinaga | 5.0 |
Suzuka Minami | 3.0 | Hikari Fukuoka | 4.0 |
Sakie Hasegawa | 3.0 | Kyoko Inoue | 3.5 |
Takako Inoue | 3.0 | Mima Shimoda | 2.5 |
Etsuko Mita | 3.0 | Kaoru Ito | 2.0 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 0.5 | Saemi Numata | 0.0 |
Semifinals | Final | ||||||||
A1 | Akira Hokuto | ||||||||
B2 | Manami Toyota | ||||||||
A1 | Akira Hokuto | ||||||||
B1 | Yumiko Hotta | 19:52 | |||||||
B1 | Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||
A2 | Harley Saito |
The 1994 Japan Grand Prix was a 10-woman round-robin tournament held from June 3 to August 28, 1994.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Yumiko Hotta | 13 |
Manami Toyota | 12 |
Sakie Hasegawa | 11 |
Toshiyo Yamada | 10 |
Mima Shimoda | 10 |
Takako Inoue | 10 |
Etsuko Mita | 10 |
Suzuka Minami | 8 |
Kaoru Ito | 6 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 0 |
The 1995 Japan Grand Prix was a 16-woman round-robin tournament, consisting of two eight-woman blocks, concluding on September 3, 1995.
Block A | Block B | ||
---|---|---|---|
Wrestler: | Points: | Wrestler: | Points: |
Manami Toyota | 11 | Yumiko Hotta | 12 |
Bison Kimura | 9 | Takako Inoue | 11 |
Reggie Bennett | 8 | Kyoko Inoue | 9 |
Kaoru Ito | 8 | Mariko Yoshida | 8 |
Mima Shimoda | 8 | Sakie Hasegawa | 6 |
Toshiyo Yamada | 8 | Etsuko Mita | 6 |
Rie Tamada | 2 | Tomoko Watanabe | 4 |
Chaparita Asari | 0 | Kumiko Maekawa | 0 |
Finals | ||||
A1 | Manami Toyota | Pin | ||
B1 | Yumiko Hotta | 23:39 |
The 1996 Japan Grand Prix was a 12-woman round-robin tournament held from July 14 to August 30, 1996.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Aja Kong | 16 |
Reggie Bennett | 14 |
Yumiko Hotta | 14 |
Kyoko Inoue | 14 |
Mima Shimoda | 12 |
Toshiyo Yamada | 12 |
Takako Inoue | 10 |
Kaoru Ito | 10 |
Etsuko Mita | 8 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 8 |
Mariko Yoshida | 8 |
Chaparita Asari | 4 |
The 1997 Japan Grand Prix was a 12-woman round-robin tournament concluding on August 10, 1997.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Kaoru Ito | 18 |
Manami Toyota | 17 |
Kumiko Maekawa | 16 |
Etsuko Mita | 15 |
Mima Shimoda | 15 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 15 |
Rie Tamada | 10 † |
Saya Endo | 7 |
Misae Genki | 5 † |
Tanny Mouse | 4 † |
Yoshiko Tamura | 4 † |
Mariko Yoshida | 2 |
The 1998 Japan Grand Prix was a round-robin tournament consisting of two six-woman blocks, with the top three finishers from the Main League and the top finisher from the Junior League advancing to a single-elimination tournament. It was held from June 14 to August 9, 1998.
Main League | Junior League | ||
---|---|---|---|
Wrestler: | Points: | Wrestler: | Points: |
Manami Toyota | 12 | Miho Wakizawa | 12 |
Zap I | 12 | Emi Motokawa | 12 |
Yumiko Hotta | 12 | Momoe Nakawaki | 12 |
Takako Inoue | 10 | Nanae Takahashi | 11 |
Kumiko Maekeawa | 8 | Noriko Toyoda | 9 |
Zap T | 6 | ZAP Nakahara | 5 |
Semifinals | Final | ||||||||
J1 | Miho Wakizawa | Pin | |||||||
M2 | ZAP I | 13:26 | |||||||
M2 | ZAP I | Pin | |||||||
M1 | Manami Toyota | 23:47 | |||||||
M1 | Manami Toyota | Pin | |||||||
M3 | Yumiko Hotta | 20:31 |
The 1999 Japan Grand Prix was a nine-woman round-robin tournament, with the second, third and fourth finishers advancing to a second round-robin. The winner of the second round-robin advanced to face the first-place finisher from the initial round-robin. The tournament was held from June 6 to August 15, 1999.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Yumiko Hotta | 11 |
Manami Toyota | 9 |
Kaoru Ito | 9 |
Momoe Nakanishi | 9 |
Takako Inoue | 8 |
Kumiko Maekawa | 8 |
Nanae Takahashi | 7 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 6 |
Miho Wakizawa | 5 |
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Manami Toyota | 4 |
Kaoru Ito | 2 |
Momoe Nakanishi | 2 |
Ito | Nakanishi | Toyota | |
Ito | — | Ito (1:32) | Toyota (4:17) |
Nakanishi | Ito (1:32) | — | (1) Nakanishi (10:46) (2) Toyota (2:08) |
Toyota | Toyota (4:17) | (1) Nakanishi (10:46) (2) Toyota (2:08) | — |
Final | ||||
1 | Yumiko Hotta | Pin | ||
2 | Manami Toyota | 18:45 |
The 2000 Japan Grand Prix was a nine-woman single-elimination tournament held from June 11 to August 20, 2000. Also a six-woman Junior Division round-robin tournament was held.
Main league
First round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||||||
Reggie Bennett | |||||||||||||||||||
Kaoru Ito | |||||||||||||||||||
Kaoru Ito | |||||||||||||||||||
Tomoko Watanabe | |||||||||||||||||||
Kumiko Maekawa | |||||||||||||||||||
Tomoko Watanabe | |||||||||||||||||||
Kaoru Ito | |||||||||||||||||||
Etsuko Mita | |||||||||||||||||||
Etsuko Mita | |||||||||||||||||||
Nanae Takahashi | |||||||||||||||||||
Etsuko Mita | |||||||||||||||||||
Mima Shimoda | Yumiko Hotta | ||||||||||||||||||
Manami Toyota | Manami Toyota | ||||||||||||||||||
Yumiko Hotta |
21st Century League
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Nanae Takahashi | 7 |
Momoe Nakanishi | 7 |
Kayoko Haruyama | 5 |
Miho Wakizawa | 5 |
Kayo Noumi | 4 |
Miyuki Fuji | 2 |
Final | ||||
1 | Momoe Nakanishi | |||
2 | Nanae Takahashi | 7:44 |
The 2001 Japan Grand Prix was a 12-woman round-robin tournament held from June 1 to August 17, 2001.
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Momoe Nakanishi | 16 |
Kumiko Maekawa | 16 |
Kaoru Ito | 15 |
Manami Toyota | 13 |
Etsuko Mita | 13 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 12 |
Mima Shimoda | 12 |
Yumiko Hotta | 11 |
Miho Wakizawa | 10 |
Nanae Takahashi | 10 |
Kayo Noumi | 4 |
Miyuki Fuji | 0 |
Final | ||||
1 | Kumiko Maekawa | Pin | ||
2 | Momoe Nakanishi | 12:28 |
The 2002 Japan Grand Prix was a nine-woman round-robin tournament held from May 25 to July 9, 2002. The top four finishers advanced to a single-elimination tournament. [3]
Wrestler: | Points: |
---|---|
Nanae Takahashi | 10 |
Momoe Nakanishi | 10 |
Rie Tamada | 10 |
Kumiko Maekawa | 10 |
Yumiko Hotta | 9 |
Tomoko Watanabe | 9 |
Kayo Noumi | 8 |
Miyuki Gujii | 4 |
Kaoru Ito | 2 |
Semifinals | Final | ||||||||
1 | Nanae Takahashi | Pin | |||||||
4 | Kumiko Maekawa | 6:57 | |||||||
1 | Nanae Takahashi | Sub | |||||||
2 | Momoe Nakanishi | 6:20 | |||||||
2 | Momoe Nakanishi | Pin | |||||||
3 | Yumiko Hotta | 5:53 |
The 2003 Japan Grand Prix was a 10-woman single-elimination tournament held from July 20 to August 3, 2003.
First round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||
Sasori | |||||||||||||||
Kumiko Maekawa | Kumiko Maekawa | ||||||||||||||
Emi Sakura | Sasori | ||||||||||||||
Nanae Takahashi | |||||||||||||||
Kayo Noumi | |||||||||||||||
Nanae Takahashi | |||||||||||||||
Nanae Takahashi | |||||||||||||||
Amazing Kong | |||||||||||||||
Amazing Kong | |||||||||||||||
Amazing Kong | Takako Inoue | ||||||||||||||
Makai Witch #2 | Amazing Kong | ||||||||||||||
ZAP T | |||||||||||||||
Hikaru | |||||||||||||||
Zap T |
The 2004 Japan Grand Prix was a 10-woman single-elimination tournament held on August 1, 2004.
First round | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | ||||||||||||||||
Hikaru | |||||||||||||||||||
Saki Maemura | Sasori | ||||||||||||||||||
Sasori | Hikaru | ||||||||||||||||||
Misae Genki | |||||||||||||||||||
Misae Genki | |||||||||||||||||||
Nanae Takahashi | |||||||||||||||||||
Hikaru | |||||||||||||||||||
Kumiko Maekawa | |||||||||||||||||||
Kumiko Maekawa | |||||||||||||||||||
Amazing Kong | Tomoko Watanabe | ||||||||||||||||||
Kumiko Maekawa | Kumiko Maekawa | ||||||||||||||||||
Takako Inoue | |||||||||||||||||||
Takako Inoue | |||||||||||||||||||
6 | Mayumi Ozaki |
All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling, nicknamed Zenjo was a joshi puroresu promotion established in 1968 by Takashi Matsunaga and his brothers. The group held their first card on June 4 of that year. For close to 33 years it had a TV program on Fuji TV called Women's Professional Wrestling.
Keiko Aoki is a Japanese retired professional wrestler and professional golfer better known as Bull Nakano. She began competing in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) as a teenager under the ring name Bull Nakano. As a wrestler she was a villain, who often teamed with her mentor Dump Matsumoto. In Japan, she held several of AJW's singles and tag team championships. After being phased out by the company in the early 1990s, she traveled to North America, where she first competed in Mexico's Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), becoming its first World Women's Champion. In 1994, she made her way to the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), where she had feuded with Alundra Blayze over the WWF Women's Championship. After holding the title once, she also competed in World Championship Wrestling (WCW). In 1998, Nakano began competing as a professional golfer, and in 2006, she joined a tour with the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA). She was inducted into the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame on 2001 and was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame in 2024.
Erika Shishido is a Japanese professional wrestler better known by her ring name Aja Kong. She is the founder of the Arsion all-women professional wrestling promotion and has won several championships in both singles and tag team divisions throughout her career, primarily while with All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling.
Hisako Sasaki ; is a Japanese retired professional wrestler better known as Akira Hokuto.
The Jumping Bomb Angels were a female Japanese professional wrestling tag team consisting of Noriyo Tateno and Itsuki Yamazaki. They competed primarily for the wrestling promotions AJW and WWF, where they held each company’s main tag team championships. They are considered ground-breaking in their style and approach to wrestling, which includes their high flying attacks and face-paced, hard-hitting action.
Chigusa Nagayo is a Japanese retired professional wrestler best known for her mainstream popularity in the 1980s as a member of the Crush Gals with long-time tag team partner Lioness Asuka. In 1995 she founded GAEA Japan and in 2014 created its successor Marvelous That's Women Pro Wrestling. Nagayo is often regarded as the most popular and one of the greatest and most influential female wrestlers of all time. Wrestling Journalist and historian Dave Meltzer has stated that in the 1980s, the Crush Gals reached a level of popularity in Japan equatable to Hulk Hogan in the United States in the same period, and thereafter Chigusa Nagayo was the most popular woman in wrestling for an extended period until her first retirement in 1989.
Manami Toyota is a Japanese retired professional wrestler, best known for her work with All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW). She is widely considered to be one of the greatest female professional wrestlers of all time.
Toshiyo Yamada is a retired Japanese female professional wrestler. In the 1990s, Yamada wrestled for the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling promotion (AJW).
Kyoko Inoue is a Japanese female professional wrestler currently signed to World Woman Pro-Wrestling Diana. She has held the WWWA World Single Championship three times, and is the first woman to win a men's title in Japan.
Tomoko Kitamura is a Japanese retired professional wrestler better known by her ring name Lioness Asuka. She was one half of the Crush Gals, along with Chigusa Nagayo, who are known for their mainstream popularity in the 1980s, and for being one of the most successful women's tag teams of all time.
Nanae Takahashi is a Japanese professional wrestler and the founder of Seadlinnng, as well as a co-founder of World Wonder Ring Stardom. Shie is currently signed to Dream Star Fighting Marigold. She has wrestled for prominent Japanese promotions All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling and Pro Wrestling Sun, and is a two-time women's world champion in major professional wrestling promotions.
Takako Inoue is a Japanese professional wrestler. She wrestled primarily for the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling promotion, and held several championships, primarily in tag team wrestling. She was well known as one-half of the tag team Double Inoue, which she formed with fellow wrestler Kyoko Inoue.
Masami Yoshida is a Japanese professional wrestler best known for her appearances in All Japan Women's Pro Wrestling, GAEA Japan and JWP Joshi Puroresu under the name Devil Masami. She is a member of the All Japan Women's Pro Wrestling Hall of Fame, being inducted in 1998.
Yumiko Hotta is a Japanese professional wrestler and mixed martial artist. Hotta was trained by and started her career in the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) promotion in June 1985. She worked for the promotion until 2003, becoming a three-time WWWA World Single and WWWA World Tag Team Champion. In June 2003, Hotta took over the Hyper Visual Fighting Arsion promotion and renamed it Major Girl's Fighting AtoZ. Under Hotta's leadership, the promotion lasted only three years, before folding in 2006, after which Hotta became a freelancer. In January 2011, Hotta joined the new Universal Woman's Pro Wrestling Reina promotion, but just sixteen months later she announced that the promotion was folding. Afterwards, she affiliated herself with the World Woman Pro-Wrestling Diana promotion, becoming the leader of the villainous Bousou-gun stable. She resigned from Diana in July 2016 to once again become a freelancer. Since 1995, Hotta has also fought several mixed martial arts matches, mostly at events put together by joshi puroresu promotions.
Momoe Oe, née Nakanishi (中西), born July 7, 1980 is a Japanese retired professional wrestler, better known by her maiden name, Momoe Nakanishi. Nakanishi made her debut for the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) in July 1996 at the age of sixteen and during the next seven years, won all of the promotion's top titles, including the WWWA World Single Championship and the WWWA World Tag Team Championship. In 2003, Nakanishi quit AJW to become a freelancer and went on to win the AtoZ World Championship later that same year and the NEO Single and NWA Women's Pacific Championships in 2004. Nakanishi retired from professional wrestling on January 7, 2005, at the age of just twenty-four. She now works as a trainer at the U.W.F. Snakepit gym.
The Tag League the Best was an annual professional wrestling tag team tournament, founded by All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW), which held it from 1985 to 2004. After the folding of AJW in 2005, the tournament was adopted by its one-time rival and later associate promotion, JWP Joshi Puroresu, which held it annually from 2011 to 2016.
Kaoru Ito is a Japanese professional wrestler and former mixed martial artist currently working as a freelancer and is best known for her tenure with the Japanese promotions All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling and JWP Joshi Puroresu.
Misae Watanabe better known by her ring name Misae Genki is a Japanese retired professional wrestler best known for her tenure with the Japanese promotions NEO Japan Ladies Pro-Wrestling, All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling and JWP Joshi Puroresu.
Tomoko Watanabe is a Japanese professional wrestler currently signed to the Japanese promotion Marvelous That's Women Pro Wrestling. A veteran of the Japanese independent scene, Watanabe is known for her tenures with now-defunct promotions All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling and JWP Joshi Puroresu.