Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Takashi Sasaki

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromTakashi Sasaki (wrestler))
Japanese professional wrestler
Takashi Sasaki
Sasaki in July 2023
Personal information
Born (1975-01-16)January 16, 1975 (age 50)[2]
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Nasty Overtime Worker
Vacuum Mask
Western Tiger
Takashi Sasaki
Nango
Takatoge
Billed height177 cm (5 ft 10 in)[1]
Billed weight90 kg (198 lb)
Debut1996

Takashi Sasaki (佐々木貴,Sasaki Takashi) is aJapaneseprofessional wrestler and the owner ofPro Wrestling Freedoms (Freedoms). A regular on the Japanese independent circuit for over 25 years, Sasaki began his career withIWA Kakutō Shijuku andDramatic Dream Team before transitioning into thedeathmatch wrestling scene in 2005 withApache Pro-Wrestling Army andBig Japan Pro Wrestling. Following the closure of Apache Pro, Sasaki formed Pro Wrestling Freedoms in 2009.

Sasaki has held theKO-D Openweight Championship once, theBJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship twice and theKing of Freedom World Championship once. He is also known for his tag team with Gentaro, the Aka Rangers (アカレンジャーズ,Akarenjāzu), and have held theKO-D Tag Team Championship twice, theWEW Tag Team Championship once and theBJW Tag Team Championship once.

Professional wrestling career

[edit]

Whilst studying media atBunkyo University,[3] Sasaki joined theIWA Kakutō Shijuku dojo and made his professional wrestling debut on September 15, 1996 against Tokai Bushido X.[4] After graduating from university in March 1997, he joinedDramatic Dream Team.

Dramatic Dream Team (1997–2004)

[edit]

Sasaki debuted for Dramatic Dream Team (DDT; now known as DDT Pro-Wrestling) on January 31, 1997, where he teamed up with Yusaku Shimoda in a losing effort toSuper Uchuu Power and Wild Sheik.[5] He joined DDT after graduating from university in March. He was a regular onConsejo Mundial de Lucha Libre (CMLL) tours of Japan in the late 90s[6][7] and made several appearances forWrestle Association-R (WAR) during its dying days.[8] After a few short years, Sasaki had risen to upper mid-card status within DDT, just below wrestlers such asExciting Yoshida,Poison Julie Sawada andSanshiro Takagi. On June 2, 2001, Sasaki andNosawa became the inauguralKO-D Tag Team Champions when they defeated Starman and Vertigo at a CMLL event in Mexico.[9] The first title reign would not last long, however, as they lost the titles toMikami andSuper Uchuu Power on July 5.[9] Sasaki would regain the titles with Mikami on December 12, defeating defending championsGentaro and Yoshiya.[9] The duo made two successful title defences before having the title vacated after Mikami suffered an injury on April 25, 2002.[9]

From July to August, Sasaki teamed with Gentaro to participate in the KO-D Tag League 2002. They won four matches and drew one, giving them 13 points and progressed onto the semi-finals. On August 23, Sasaki and Gentaro won the vacantWEW Tag Team Championship by defeatingHi69 andTaka Michinoku.[10] The following day, they would lose their semi final matchup vs. Mikami andTanomusaku Toba[11] and finished third place in the tournament after defeating Miyuki Maeda and Sanshiro Takagi on August 25.[12] Sasaki and Gentaro, now known as Aka Rangers (アカレンジャーズ,Akarenjāzu), avenged their semi final loss on October 24 when they defeated Mikami and Toba for the KO-D Tag Team Championship.[9] They lost the KO-D titles to Takagi andTomohiko Hashimoto on January 31, 2003[9] and later the WEW titles on March 11 toKintaro Kanemura andTetsuhiro Kuroda.[10] Gentaro would leave DDT in May but Sasaki's success continued. He won the KO-D Tag Team Championship with Tanomusaku Toba from Seiya Morohashi and Shoichi Ichimiya on May 22[13] and followed this up by winning theKO-D Openweight Championship from Mikami on July 17.[14] Riding high, Sasaki entered the KO-D Tag League 2003 with Toba but suffered a tournament loss to Super Uchuu Power and Super Uchuu Power Omega, leading the team to vacate the tag titles.[9] They reached the finals on September 28 but were unable to regain the titles, losing to Seiya Morohashi and Tomohiko Hashimoto. On October 15, Sasaki won theIronman Heavymetalweight Championship.[15] This would be a blessing in disguise, however, as he would be forced to defend both his championships at the upcoming Dead Or Alive event.[16] On October 26, he lost the Ironman Heavymetalweight Championship toDanshoku Dino and the KO-D Openweight Championship to Ichimiya Gintaro.[16]

The Aka Rangers reformed in 2004, winning the KO-D Tag Team Championship for a second time, defeatingHero! andKudo on February 11.[9] They lost the titles toRyuji Ito and Takagi on July 1[9] and soon after resigned from the promotion.

Apache Pro-Wrestling Army (2004–2009)

[edit]

Following from their departure from DDT, the Aka Rangers joinedApache Pro-Wrestling Army (Apache Pro). At the promotions first event, they lost toDaisuke Sekimoto and Ryuji Ito.[17] The split with DDT was amicable and they returned to the promotion to participate in the KO-D Tag League 2004 but were eliminated before the semi-finals. As Apache Pro ran infrequently, Sasaki was free to wrestle for other companies such asKaientai Dojo,Pro Wrestling Zero1 and most notablyBig Japan Pro Wrestling (BJW). On November 28, the Aka Rangers won theBJW Tag Team Championship fromAbdullah Kobayashi andJaki Numazawa.[18] They successfully defended the titles on January 23 against Daisaku Shimoda andTetsuhiro Kuroda but would eventually vacate the titles on September 13 due to lack of title defences.[18]

In 2005, Sasaki began transitioning into adeathmatch wrestler. He teamed with Kintaro Kanemura in his first deathmatch on January 2 in a losing effort against Ryuji Ito andShadow WX.[19] He wrestled in progressively bloody matches which included barbed wire and fluorescent light tubes on his way to challenging for theBJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship. On June 8, he unsuccessfully challenged Ito for the deathmatch title in a 300 Fluorescent Light Tubes Deathmatch.[20] Now established as a deathmatch specialist, he would split his time between Apache Pro and BJW. He formed a tag team with Ito and fought a series of deathmatches vs. 045 Junkies (Jaki Numazawa andJun Kasai) and Muscle & Fat (Abdullah Kobayashi and Daisuke Sekimoto) throughout 2005.[21]

On January 2, 2006, Sasaki turned on Apache Pro when he announced his intention to focus on his team with Ito at the expense of Apache Pro. He went on to form the Takashi Pro-Wrestling Gundam with Ito, Sekimoto, Tomohiko Hashimoto and several others, and became the topheel stable in Apache Pro alongsideNew Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) invaders likeTogi Makabe. On March 31, he won the BJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship from Abdullah Kobayashi in a Fluorescent Light Tubes & Kenzan Deathmatch.[22] On June 4, he defeated Apache Pro ace Kintaro Kanemura.[23] In August, he won a tournament withBadboy Hido to become win the vacant WEW Tag Team Championship; they'd lose the titles on September 24 to Jun Kasai andTomoaki Honma.[10] On September 10, Sasaki lost the BJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship to Ryuji Ito.[24] During the match, however, Ito suffered a serious injury which kept him out for six months, causing the title to become vacant. Sasaki regained the title on December 3 when he defeated Numazawa in a Fluorescent Light Tubes Shrine Deathmatch.[25] On March 14, 2007, Sasaki made his first successful title defence againstYuko Miyamoto in a Scaffold Deathmatch.[26] The match was critically acclaimed among fans and Miyamoto impressed Sasaki enough for him to take Miyamoto under his wing and team together. On July 8, Sasaki defeated the returning Ryuji Ito to retain the BJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship in a 300 Fluorescent Light Tubes Deathmatch.[27] However, Sasaki would fall in his third title defence, losing to Jaki Numazawa on August 26.[28] After Makabe lost the WEW Heavyweight Championship in June, Makabe blamed Sasaki for the loss and defeated him in a hardcore match on September 23.[29] Looking for revenge, on November 24, Sasaki teamed with Shadow WX and debuted for NJPW as part of their Lock Up brand but lost to Makabe andToru Yano.[30] Sasaki was finally able to gain a measure of revenge when he teamed withMammoth Sasaki and defeated Makabe andTomohiro Ishii on December 30.[31] Their feud culminated in an eight mancage match on January 13, 2008, where Makabe's team came out victorious.[32]

In February 2008, Apache Pro was rocked by a sexual harassment scandal involving their top star Kintaro Kanemura. The promotion ceased all activity but returned under Sasaki's leadership on June 13.[33] Having lost fans and sponsors due to the scandal, the promotion struggled to stay afloat and eventually closed down for good after their final event on August 8, 2009.[34]

Pro Wrestling Freedoms (2009–present)

[edit]
Sasaki in June 2015

Soon after Apache Pro's closure in August, Sasaki announced the creation ofPro Wrestling Freedoms (Freedoms) with Gentaro, Jun Kasai, Kumai, Mammoth Sasaki and The Winger. The promotion was formed with the motto “Freedom is in our hands” as Sasaki has opened the promotion to welcome every facet of professional wrestling.[35] Despite this attitude, Freedoms has mainly become known for their deathmatch style. Freedoms held their first event on September 2.[36] As with Apache Pro, Freedoms runs infrequently and wrestlers are free to wrestle for other promotions. Sasaki continued making regular appearances for Big Japan Pro Wrestling, even winning the2011Ikkitousen Deathmatch Survivor,[37] but would pull away from the promotion in 2013 to focus on the running of Freedoms.

Sasaki became the first King of Freedom World Champion on May 2, 2013, after winning a three month knock-out tournament.[38] From January to March 2014, Sasaki teamed withTatsuhito Takaiwa to participate in the tournament to crown the inaugural King of Freedom Tag Team Championship. They made the tournament finals but lost toGreat Kojika and The Winger.[39] After four successful title defences and a year long title reign, Sasaki lost the King of Freedom World Championship toYuji Hino on May 2, 2014.[40] On July 7, 2015, Sasaki and Gentaro won the King of Freedom Tag Team Championship from Kamui and Mammoth Sasaki.[41] Their title reign would be brief, however, losing the titles to Kenji Fukimoto andMinoru Fujita three days later.[42]

On May 5, 2019, Sasaki won theYokohama Shopping Street 6-Man Tag Team Championship with Ryuji Ito and Yuko Miyamoto from Abdullah Kobayashi,Hideki Suzuki & Yoshihisa Uto. On May 30, they lost the titles to the 3rd Generation Chimidoro Brothers (Masaya Takahashi,Takayuki Ueki andToshiyuki Sakuda).[43] On March 20, 2022, atJudgement 2022: DDT 25th Anniversary, he teamed up withGentaro,Poison Sawada Julie, and Suicide Boyz (Mikami andThanomsak Toba), being accompanied to the ring by Naomi Susan, to defeatToru Owashi,Antonio Honda,Kazuki Hirata and Yoshihiko for theKO-D 10-Man Tag Team Championship.[44] After a successful title defence on May 1, they lost the titles toThe37Kamiina (Mao,Shunma Katsumata,Toui Kojima andYuki Ueno) andShinya Aoki on June 25.[45]

Other media

[edit]

Sasaki appears as himself alongside Ryuji Ito, Abdullah Kobayashi, Jaki Numazawa and Daisuke Sekimoto in the 2006 movieDirty Sanchez: The Movie. Sasaki and the other wrestlers perform wrestling moves on the three main cast members.

Championships and accomplishments

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Kreikenbohm, Philip."Takashi Sasaki/Career Data".cagematch.de (in German). RetrievedAugust 30, 2021.
  2. ^Saalbach, Axel."Takashi Sasaki • General Information".wrestlingdata.com. RetrievedAugust 30, 2021.
  3. ^"あやなり|文教大学学園卒業生向けサイト".あやなり|文教大学学園卒業生向けサイト. Retrieved2021-10-23.
  4. ^"FREEDOMS フリーダムズ プロレス".pw-freedoms.co.jp. Retrieved2021-10-02.
  5. ^"DDT 31.01.1997".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 2, 2021.
  6. ^Ochoso, 投稿者."CMLL「CMLLルチャ・ウォーズ'97」開幕戦1997年12月10日 博多スターレーン 試合結果".プロレス試合結果データべース (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-10-23.
  7. ^Ochoso, 投稿者."CMLL「ルチャリブレ・フィエスタ'98」第3戦1998年8月21日 岐阜・大垣城ホール 試合結果".プロレス試合結果データべース (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-10-23.
  8. ^Ochoso, 投稿者."WAR「翔舞'99」第2戦1999年3月1日 後楽園ホール 試合結果".プロレス試合結果データべース (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-10-23.
  9. ^abcdefghij"KO-D (King Of DDT) Tag Team Title". Wrestling-Titles.com. Retrieved2008-01-05.
  10. ^abcd"WEW Tag Team Title [FMW] (Japan)".www.wrestling-titles.com. Retrieved2021-10-23.
  11. ^"DDT THE RING".cagematch.net. RetrievedNovember 13, 2021.
  12. ^"DDT THE RING".cagematch.net. RetrievedNovember 13, 2021.
  13. ^"DDT Non-Fix 5/22".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  14. ^"DDT Audience 2003".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  15. ^ab"Ironman Heavymetalweight Title (Japan)".www.wrestling-titles.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  16. ^ab"DDT Dead Or Alive 2003".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 30, 2021.
  17. ^"Apache Pro 30/08/2004".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  18. ^abWrestling Titles (August 15, 2021)."BJW Tag Team Title".wrestling-titles.com. RetrievedAugust 30, 2021.
  19. ^"'05新春グレートシリーズ開幕戦".Weekly Pro Wrestling (in Japanese). January 2, 2005. RetrievedNovember 13, 2021.
  20. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  21. ^"BJW Open Death Match Series 2005 - Tag 4".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  22. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  23. ^"Apache Pro Season I Final".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  24. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  25. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  26. ^"BJW 14/03/2007".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  27. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  28. ^"BJW Deathmatch Heavyweight Championship title history" (in German). PuroLove.com.Archived from the original on 26 December 2007. Retrieved2007-11-16.
  29. ^"Apache Pro Apache".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  30. ^"LOCK UP – 東京・後楽園ホール".www.njpw.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-11-13.
  31. ^"Apache Pro 30/12/2007".cagematch.net. RetrievedOctober 23, 2021.
  32. ^"LOCK UP – 東京・後楽園ホール1".www.njpw.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-11-13.
  33. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  34. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  35. ^"【日本一過激なプロレス団体FREEDOMS】代表・佐々木貴 独占インタビュー!".www.village-v.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-11-13.
  36. ^"週刊プロレスmobileはプロレスのニュース・試合速報を完全網羅!".wp.bbm-mobile.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  37. ^ab"Death Match Survivor League 2011". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved24 September 2018.
  38. ^Freedoms (May 2, 2013).5.2後楽園ホール大会 2013年05月02日 開始時刻:19時00分.freedoms.lolipop.jp (in Japanese). RetrievedSeptember 15, 2021.
  39. ^"FREEDOMS フリーダムズ プロレス".freedoms.lolipop.jp. Retrieved2021-10-23.
  40. ^Freedoms (May 2, 2014).H26.5.2後楽園ホール大会 2014年05月02日 開始時刻:19時00分.freedoms.lolipop.jp (in Japanese). RetrievedSeptember 15, 2021.
  41. ^"FREEDOMS フリーダムズ プロレス".freedoms.lolipop.jp. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  42. ^"FREEDOMS フリーダムズ プロレス".freedoms.lolipop.jp. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  43. ^"東京・後楽園ホール大会".大日本プロレス official website (in Japanese). Retrieved2022-08-05.
  44. ^DDT Pro Wrestling (March 20, 2022)."DDT ProWrestling"Judgement2022~DDT旗揚げ25周年記念大会~.ddtpro.com (in Japanese). RetrievedMarch 20, 2022.
  45. ^"DDT ProWrestling".DDT ProWrestling. Retrieved2022-08-05.
  46. ^"BJW Death Match Heavyweight Title (Japan)".www.wrestling-titles.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  47. ^"BJW Title (Japan)".www.wrestling-titles.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  48. ^"大日本プロレス official website 横浜ショッピングストリート6人タッグ王座".大日本プロレス official website (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-11-13.
  49. ^"KO-D Open-weight Title (Japan)".www.wrestling-titles.com. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  50. ^"FREEDOMS フリーダムズ プロレス".pw-freedoms.co.jp. Retrieved2021-11-13.
  51. ^"FREEDOMS フリーダムズ プロレス".pw-freedoms.co.jp. Retrieved2021-11-13.

External links

[edit]
Links to related articles
2000s
2010s
2020s
Individual champions
Wrestlers
Non-wrestlers
Collective champions
(teams, groups)
1990s
2000s
2010s
2020s
2010s
2020s
1990s
  • The MOB (Nick Niosi and Ricky O)
2000s
2010s
2020s
2010s
2020s
FMW
(1999–2002)
WEW
(2002–2003)
Apache Army
(2005–2016)
A-Team
(2017–present)
Portals:
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Takashi_Sasaki&oldid=1319402110"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp