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| Personal information | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1946-01-11)11 January 1946 |
| Died | 28 November 2016(2016-11-28) (aged 70) |
| Professional wrestling career | |
| Ring name(s) | Great Togo[1] Haruka Eigen |
| Billed height | 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) |
| Billed weight | 110 kg (243 lb) |
| Debut | October 12, 1966 |
| Retired | March 26, 2006 |
Haruka Eigen (永源 遙,Eigen Haruka) (January 11, 1946 – November 28, 2016) was a Japanese professional wrestler. He was an executive director ofPro Wrestling Noah.[2][3]
In July 1961, Haruka Eigen began competing insumo wrestling. He was part of theTatsunami stable. He quit sumo in May 1965, after nearly four years. His highest rank wasmakushita 71.[4]
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Trained by former sumosToyonobori andMr. Hito at theJapan Pro Wrestling Alliance Dojo, Eigen followedAntonio Inoki to formTokyo Pro Wrestling, where he debuted on October 12, 1966, against future rivalMasao Kimura. After a brief interpromotional feud withInternational Wrestling Enterprise, however, Tokyo Pro folded and he followed Inoki to JWA.
Eigen joined JWA in 1967 and was further trained by former judokaSeiji Sakaguchi. After spending six years struggling on the undercard, he finally left JWA in 1973, and the promotion soon folded.
After leaving JWA in 1973, Eigen intended to join Sakaguchi inNew Japan Pro-Wrestling. Beforehand, he went on an excursion in the United States. While there, he wrestled in the Central States area, under the name The Great Togo (not to be confused withKazuo Okamura, who wrestled under the same name), wrestling mainly in Kansas City and St. Louis. In March 1973, he won his first championship, the NWA North American Tag Team Championship, with Tokyo Joe (his mentor, Mr. Hito). They would hold onto the titles for about a month, until the titles were abandoned, making them the last holders of the titles.
Upon returning to Japan full-time with NJPW, Eigen became a solid hand for the undercard and mid-card matches. In 1979, he would bounce back and forth between NJPW and IWE. Teaming withStrong Kobayashi, they won theIWA World Tag Team Championship in June 1980. They would hold onto the titles for over two weeks before losing them toAnimal Hamaguchi andMighty Inoue. Upon returning to NJPW on a full-time basis after a year, he began to feel disenchanted. He rekindled his feud with Rusher Kimura beginning in 1981 when Kimura joined NJPW after IWE closed. In 1983, he joinedRiki Choshu's Ishin Gundan. A year later, he followed Choshu in leaving NJPW, after following Inoki for nearly two decades.
JoiningAll Japan Pro Wrestling in September 1984, he was part of theJapan Pro-Wrestling satellite, until it dissolved in March 1987. He chose to remain alongsideYoshiaki Yatsu and Shinichi Nakano. All the while he feuded with Rusher Kimura; their last singles match happened on April 9, 1987. On May 12, 1989, Kimura and Eigen faced each other within a six-man tag team match, their first undercard six-man bout; Eigen, along withMasanobu Fuchi andMotoshi Okuma lost to Kimura,Giant Baba andAkira Taue.
Since then, he had primarily used in multi-man tag team matches and comedy matches, mostly partnering with Fuchi and opposing Kimura, Baba andMitsuo Momota. He would remain with All Japan until thePro Wrestling Noah exodus in June 2000, ending his nearly sixteen-year run with AJPW.
In August 2000, Eigen joined Pro Wrestling Noah. However, like in AJPW since the dissolution of Japan Pro Wrestling, he was mainly used for multi-man tag team matches and comedy matches. However, in January 2005, he was given a shot at theGHC Openweight Hardcore Championship againstNaomichi Marufuji, but narrowly lost. He wrestled his last match of his career on March 26, 2006, teaming withJun Akiyama, in a loss toAkira Taue andMasao Inoue.
After retiring, Eigen focused on his work as executive director of Pro Wrestling Noah, overseeing sales and marketing. In July 2009, a month afterMitsuharu Misawa's death, he resigned as a director and retired as a counselor for the promotion's board of directors.
In September 2010, Eigen returned as a member of the GHC Championship committee. However, a ticket scandal with the Yakuza forced him to resign from the committee in March 2012 and was demoted into a general employee, as was general manager Ryu Nakata. Eigen and Nakata had ties with the Yakuza between 2003 and 2010.[3]
On November 28, 2016, Eigen died at his home at the age of 70. Originally, it was reported that he suffered a fall in the bathroom, but it was later confirmed that the fall was caused by a heart attack.[citation needed]