The Skydiving-J

Last updated
The Skydiving-J
Promotion New Japan Pro-Wrestling
DateJune 17, 1996
City Tokyo, Japan
Venue Nippon Budokan
Attendance13,500 [1]

The Skydiving-J was a professional wrestling event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). [2] The event took place on June 17, 1996 at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, Japan. The event was notable for revolutionizing junior heavyweight wrestling in NJPW and Japanese wrestling history. The event aired on television on TV Asahi on July 6, 1996. [3] All of the matches contested at the event were junior heavyweight championship matches from different promotions from Japan. This was a very significant event in the revolution of junior heavyweight wrestling as title defences from various promotions at the event would result in the unification of various junior heavyweight championships to create the J-Crown. [4]

Contents

Eight professional wrestling matches were contested at the event and all of the matches were contested for various junior heavyweight championships from all over Japan. In the main event, The Great Sasuke successfully defended the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against Black Tiger. Six of the titles were retained at the event while two championships changed hands at the event as Jushin Thunder Liger defeated Dick Togo to capture the British Commonwealth Junior Heavyweight Championship while Shinjiro Otani defeated Kazushi Sakuraba for the vacant UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship. [5]

Background

NJPW had previously held an annual round-robin tournament called Best of the Super Juniors but the tournament was not of much significance for the junior heavyweight division. In 1994, Jushin Thunder Liger conceptualized a junior heavyweight tournament to determine the best junior heavyweights from all over the world called Super J-Cup. The tournament was an enormous success and it led to a second tournament being held the following year in 1995.

Event

Other on-screen personnel
Role:Name:
Commentators Masa Saito
Yoshinari Tsuji
Soichi Shibata
Yuichi Tabata
Yu Manabe
Jushin Thunder Liger

Preliminary matches

In the opening match, the team of Lance Storm and Yuji Yasuraoka defended the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship against the team of El Samurai and Norio Honaga. Storm pinned Honaga following a hurricanrana to retain the titles.

Next, Masayoshi Motegi defended the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship against Shiryu. In the end, Motegi delivered a top rope gutwrench suplex to Shiryu to retain the title.

Next, Gran Hamada defended the WWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship against Tatsuhito Takaiwa. In the end, Hamada executed a tornado DDT on Takaiwa to win the match and retain the title.

The Great Sasuke defended the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against Black Tiger in the main event. Great Sasuke 3.jpg
The Great Sasuke defended the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against Black Tiger in the main event.

The next match was contested for the vacant UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship between Kazushi Sakuraba and Shinjiro Otani. In the end, Otani applied a chickenwing facelock on Sakuraba and made him submit to the hold to win the title.

Next, Super Delfin defended the CMLL World Welterweight Championship against Taka Michinoku. In the end, Delfin performed a double chickenwing suplex to Michinoku to retain the title.

Later, Último Dragón defended the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Championship against Gran Naniwa. Dragón pinned Naniwa with a crucifix to retain the title.

In the penultimate match, Dick Togo defended the British Commonwealth Junior Heavyweight Championship against Jushin Thunder Liger. In the end, Liger delivered a Shotei to Togo to win the title.

Main event match

In the main event, The Great Sasuke defended the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship against Black Tiger. Sasuke executed a top rope frankensteiner to Tiger to retain the title.

Aftermath

The all-junior heavyweight card featuring junior heavyweight championship matches of all major Japanese promotions led to Jushin Thunder Liger conceptualizing the idea of a tournament to unify all the junior heavyweight singles championships. He challenged all the champions and a tournament took place to create the J-Crown, the unifier of various singles junior heavyweight championships. The tournament took place on August 5, 1996, with The Great Sasuke winning the tournament to become the first champion. [4]

Results

No.ResultsStipulationsTimes
1 Lance Storm and Yuji Yasuraoka (c) defeated El Samurai and Norio Honaga Tag team match for the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Championship 13:28
2 Masayoshi Motegi (c) defeated Shiryu Singles match for the NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship 11:51
3 Gran Hamada (c) defeated Tatsuhito Takaiwa Singles match for the WWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship 12:05
4 Shinjiro Otani defeated Kazushi Sakuraba Singles match for the vacant UWA World Junior Light Heavyweight Championship 8:15
5 Super Delfin (c) defeated Taka Michinoku Singles match for the CMLL World Welterweight Championship 16:09
6 Último Dragón (c) defeated Gran Naniwa Singles match for the WAR International Junior Heavyweight Championship 13:58
7 Jushin Liger defeated Dick Togo (c)Singles match for the British Commonwealth Junior Heavyweight Championship 15:56
8 The Great Sasuke (c) defeated Black Tiger Singles match for the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship 16:54
(c) – the champion(s) heading into the match

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jushin Liger</span> Japanese professional wrestler

Keiichi Yamada, better known as Jushin Liger and later Jushin Thunder Liger, is a Japanese retired professional wrestler and mixed martial artist, currently signed to New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). He is the longest-tenured member of the NJPW roster, having wrestled for the company since his debut in 1984 until his retirement in January 2020. Throughout his career, which spanned three-and-a-half decades, he wrestled over 4,000 matches and performed in major events for various promotions across the globe.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The Great Sasuke</span> Japanese professional wrestler

Masanori Murakawa, best known under his ring name The Great Sasuke, is a Japanese professional wrestler, professional wrestling promoter and politician. He is the founder of Michinoku Pro Wrestling (MPW). Aside from professional wrestling, he is also a former Iwate Prefectural Assembly legislator. He has wrestled in Japan and in the United States in various professional wrestling promotions. He is said to have an incredible tolerance for pain, mainly in reference to the injuries he has had including a cracked skull on two occasions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shinjiro Otani</span> Japanese professional wrestler (born 1972)

Shinjiro Otani is a semi-retired Japanese professional wrestler and the current acting president of Pro Wrestling Zero1 (Zero1). He is currently inactive from pro-wrestling competition due to a cervical spine injury sustained in April 2022. A product of the New Japan Pro Wrestling (NJPW) dojo, Otani is best known for his longtime association with Zero1, a promotion he founded in 2001 along with Shinya Hashimoto.

The NWA World Junior Heavyweight Championship is a professional wrestling world championship in the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA). Created in 1943, the title is competed for by junior heavyweight wrestlers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tiger Mask IV</span> Japanese professional wrestler

Yoshihiro Yamazaki is a Japanese professional wrestler, best known for being the fourth man to portray Tiger Mask. He currently works for New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) where he is a former 6-time IWGP Junior Heavyweight Champion and 2-time IWGP Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion. Having competed as Tiger Mask since 1995, he is the longest tenured incarnation of the character.

Osamu Matsuda is a Japanese professional wrestler who is best known for his work in New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), and is better known by his stage name El Samurai.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tatsuhito Takaiwa</span> Zainichi Korean wrestler (born 1972)

Tatsuhito Takaiwa is a Zainichi-Korean professional wrestler. Takaiwa is one of the more well-traveled junior heavyweights in Japan, having wrestled for New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), and Pro Wrestling Zero1, as well as making special appearances in All Japan Pro Wrestling (AJPW) and Pro Wrestling Noah.

Naoki Sano is a retired Japanese professional wrestler and former mixed martial artist most notable for being the generational rival of legendary Japanese pro wrestler Jushin Liger. During the last years of his career he went by the name Takuma Sano.

The J-Crown, also known as the J-Crown Octuple Unified Championship, was a professional wrestling championship promoted by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), formed via the unification of eight junior heavyweight and other other lower-weight class titles from several different organizations. The J-Crown Tournament that crowned the inaugural champion was held in August 1996.

Norio Honaga is a retired Japanese professional wrestler and referee.

Yuji Yasuraoka is a retired Japanese professional wrestler. He is best known for his work in Wrestle Association R, where he became a one-time Tenry Project International Junior Heavyweight Champion and a four-time Tenryu Project International Junior Heavyweight Tag Team Champion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Super J-Cup (1994)</span> Thats the point

Super J-Cup: 1st Stage was the first Super J-Cup professional wrestling tournament hosted by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). The event took place on April 16, 1994, at Sumo Hall in Tokyo, Japan. The tournament featured fourteen junior heavyweight wrestlers and was created by Jushin Thunder Liger and was the first NJPW event to feature only junior heavyweight wrestlers. The event received critical acclaim and commercial success, leading to Japanese promotions hosting more editions of the tournament, leading to the event being renamed the Super J-Cup: 1st Stage in later years.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Super J-Cup (1995)</span>

Super J-Cup: 2nd Stage was the second Super J-Cup professional wrestling tournament, it was hosted by Wrestle Association R and produced by WAR wrestler Último Dragón. The tournament was held to determine the top junior heavyweight of the world for that year. The event took place on December 13, 1995, at the Sumo Hall in Tokyo, Japan. Like the previous year, the 1995 event brought in wrestlers from the promotions from all over the world including previous year's host New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW), Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL), Lucha Libre AAA Worldwide (AAA), Social Progressive Wrestling Federation (SPWF), Wrestle Association R (WAR) and Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Super J-Cup (2000)</span>

Super J-Cup: 3rd Stage was the third Super J-Cup professional wrestling tournament, it was hosted by Michinoku Pro Wrestling (MPW). The tournament was a single-elimination tournament of four rounds and was a two-night event featuring junior heavyweights from various Japanese promotions. The first round of the event was held on April 1, 2000 at Sendai City Gymnasium in Sendai, Japan and the final three rounds were held on April 9, 2000 at Sumo Hall in Tokyo, Japan, which had been the site for the previous two tournaments. This event marked the first time that the Super J-Cup was held at an additional venue rather than Sumo Hall.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wrestle Kingdom 14</span> 2020 New Japan Pro-Wrestling event

Wrestle Kingdom 14 in Tokyo Dome was a two-night professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). The event took place on January 4 and 5, 2020, at the Tokyo Dome, in Tokyo, Japan. It was the 29th January 4 Tokyo Dome Show and the 14th promoted under the Wrestle Kingdom name; it was also the first time the event was held over two days, instead of taking place solely on January 4.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">NJPW Jingu Climax</span> 1999 New Japan Pro-Wrestling event

Jingu Climax: Battle of Last Summer was a major professional wrestling event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). It took place on August 28, 1999, at the Meiji Jingu Stadium in Tokyo, Japan and was televised live on TV Asahi.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">NJPW Final Dome</span> 1999 New Japan Pro-Wrestling event

Final Dome was a major professional wrestling event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). It took place on October 12, 1999 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan and was televised live on TV Asahi.

The 1996 Battle Formation was the first Battle Formation event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling. The event was held on April 29, 1996 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan. It was a major success with a crowd of estimated 60,000 people and an approximate revenue of $5,700,000 from ticket sales. The event featured competitors from various promotions including Michinoku Pro Wrestling, New Japan Pro-Wrestling, Union of Wrestling Forces International, World Championship Wrestling and Wrestle Association R.

The 1997 Battle Formation was the second and final Battle Formation event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling, which took place on April 12, 1997 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan. It was a massive success, drawing a crowd of about 60,000 fans and the revenue generated from ticket sales amounted to $5,000,000.

Strong Style Evolution was a professional wrestling event produced by New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW). It took place on May 3, 1997 at the Osaka Dome in Osaka, Japan.

References

  1. "Skydiving J". Pro Wrestling History. June 17, 1996. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  2. "THE SKYDIVING-J June 17, 1996 Nippon Budokan UWA World Light Heavyweight Championship match Shinjiro Otani vs. Kazushi Sakuraba" THE SKYDIVING-J 1996年6月17日 日本武道館 UWA世界ライト・ヘビー級王座決定戦 大谷晋二郎 VS 桜庭和志. NJPW World (in Japanese). Archived from the original on June 16, 2021. Retrieved December 7, 2023.
  3. "NJPW Skydiving J". Cagematch. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  4. 1 2 Moe Lakser. "Skydiving J". Puroresu Central. Retrieved 1 October 2018.
  5. "New Japan Pro-Wrestling Results: 1996". PuroLove. Retrieved 31 January 2019.