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Oriental Wrestling Entertainment

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chinese professional wrestling promotion
Oriental Wrestling Entertainment
Company typePrivate
IndustryProfessional wrestling
Sports entertainment
Founded2017; 8 years ago (2017) inShanghai,China
FounderFu Huayang
DefunctMarch 12, 2021; 4 years ago (2021-03-12)[1]
Headquarters
Shanghai
,
China
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Fu Huayang (CEO)
  • Cima (President)
  • Michael Nee (Vice President)
Products
  • Television
  • Films
  • Merchandise
  • Live events
ServicesLicensing
OwnerFu Huayang
Websitewww.orientalwrestlingentertainment.comEdit this at Wikidata
Oriental Wrestling Entertainment
Traditional Chinese東方職業摔角
Simplified Chinese东方职业摔角
Literal meaningeastern professionalshuai jiao
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyindōngfāng zhíyè shuāijiǎo

Oriental Wrestling Entertainment (OWE) (Chinese:东方职业摔角) was a Chinese-basedprofessional wrestling promotion founded in 2017. OWE shows normally combined wrestling with musical performances by theC-pop all-girls groupSNH48. The promotion promoted onechampionship as part of their events. OWE had working relationships with the U.S.-basedAll Elite Wrestling (AEW), Future Stars of Wrestling, and MexicanThe Crash Lucha Libre promotions. In 2019, OWE ceased operations in China, and after unsuccessfully tried to relocate toCambodia, ceased all operations in 2021.

History

[edit]

While the concept of professional wrestling has been well established in Europe and North America since the 19th century,[2] and in Japan since the end of World War II, China had no exposure to professional wrestling prior to the turn of the millennium. The first Chinese professional wrestling promotion, China Wrestling Entertainment, was created in 2004, promoting traditional professional wrestling events, but struggled to stay profitable. In 2017, Chinese film director Fu Huayang created Oriental Wrestling Entertainment, based out of Shanghai, starting a talent search amongst over 200,000 applicants that all had a martial arts background, selecting a group of 50 people to be trained for professional wrestling.[3]

In early 2018, OWE started a working relationship withDragon Gate, featuring trainees from OWE working at Dragon Gate events and Dragon Gate main-stayCima training them,[4] helping OWE to promote its first official show, "The Legend of the Dragon" held on February 2, in Shanghai, featuring the Dragon Gate wrestlers and OWE's roster.[5] On May 7, Cima announced that he,T-Hawk,El Lindaman and Takehiro Yamamura were all leaving Dragon Gate, relocating from Japan to China to be involved with OWE. Cima was announced as the head coach and the President for OWE and began training the rookies.[3][6]

OWE later began a partnership with Las Vegas, Nevada based Future Stars of Wrestling, sending CIMA and three trainees to FSW shows as well as several members of the FSW roster traveling to China. Cima and several OWE students also appeared for other promotions, such as theAustralasian Wrestling Federation (AWF),[7]Wrestle-1,[8] andDDT Pro-Wrestling shows.[9]

On January 8, 2019 the newly createdAll Elite Wrestling (AEW) U.S.-based promotion announced that they had reached a partnership agreement with Oriental Wrestling Entertainment that would include OWE wrestlers working for AEW and vice versa.[10][11] In January 2019, Mexican basedThe Crash Lucha Libre promotion announced that they had reached a deal with OWE to collaborate on wrestling events in the future.[12] On March 26, OWE signed a video-on-demand television deal with Nothing Else On TV to distribute their content in theUnited Kingdom and Worldwide, becoming the first "Sino-British" wrestling agreement in professional wrestling.[13] On March 31, OWE announced their first activechampionship, theDragon's Legend Championship,[14] with the inaugural champion to be crowned during the promotion's OWE First Time Japan shows inOsaka andTokyo on April 18 and 20, while also becoming the first Chinese professional wrestling promotion to promote a show in Japan, which both sold out.[15] The first night of the show was broadcast by Japanesetelevision networkFighting TV Samurai and featured wrestlers fromWrestle-1, whom OWE as a working relationship.[16] On April 23, OWE announced a television deal withJiangsu Television, which would see the company's programming brought to one billionChinese viewers.[17]

On June 26, 2019 OWE announced a plan to expand their product in theUnited Kingdom in September, while also announcing the establish of UK-based brand and new titles.[18] The plans would be due to disagreements between OWE and NEO TV owner Sean McMahon, while also claiming that OWE made broken promises and made misconduct towards him with OWE later offering refunds to attendees of the tour.,[19] OWE folded in 2021.[1]

Style and cultural influences

[edit]

Oriental Wrestling Entertainment presents shows and in-ring performances to the culture of mainland China, adjusting the professional wrestling concept to their audience. Chinese wrestlerHo Ho Lun described the difference between OWE and other companies who have promoted wrestling as "OWE is putting wrestling into Kung Fu, whereas people such as The Slam have strived to put Kung Fu into wrestling".[20] Most of OWE's Chinese roster have a martial arts, especiallyShaolin Kung Fu, background with the style and concepts of the martial arts influencing the in-ring product and presentation.[21]

Part of OWE's presentation focuses on educating spectators on the details of professional wrestling, such as videos prior to matches explaining that matches can be won by a 3-fall pinfall. During events the commentary is broadcast over the public address system in the arena, helping guide the fans on whom to cheer for and so on.[20] In Asian culture it is generally considered disrespectful for people to be loud or boo, which in turn leads to the fans either remaining quiet and politely clapping during matches, or generally cheering the action without booing any of the in-ring competitors.[22] Most of theheels (the "bad guys") have been foreigners.[20] OWE shows have been described asvariety shows, combining martial arts exhibits by the OWE roster, musical performances fromC-pop acts such asSNH48 and wrestling matches.[3]

Another aspect of their presentation is the impact of the Chinese government rules and standards for entertainment events. OWE Vice President Michael Nee explained that "Typical wrestling can be a little too violent. If we try to copy the Japanese way and put that into the Chinese market, our product will be killed by the government".[3] As a result of the cultural restrictions and in an effort to present a more "Chinese" product OWE focuses on the culture of Chinese martial arts and spreading awareness on a global scale, presenting wrestling angles, storylines and in ring characters very differently and more sedate compared to western companies such asWWE.[3]

Due to this,governmental control and censorship of theChinese Communist Party in addition to increasing economic issues in the marketplace and uncertainty facing the country, in late 2019 it was reported that the promotion would cease all operations in China, leave the country and relaunch and incorporate inCambodia.,[23][24] it eventually went defunct in 2021,[1] with most of the japanese wrestlers likeCima andT-Hawk moving to a new promotion inGleat.

OWE Openweight Championship

[edit]
OWE Openweight Championship
Details
PromotionOriental Wrestling Entertainment
Date established2019
Current championShigehiro Irie
Date wonNovember 24, 2019
Statistics
First championZhao Junjie
Most reignsAll titleholders (1 reign)
Longest reignShigehiro Irie (2,190+ days)
Shortest reignZhao Junjie
Oldest championShigehiro Irie (31 years, 241 days)
Youngest championZhao Junjie
Heaviest championShigehiro Irie (253 lb)
Lightest championZhao Junjie
Key
No.Overall reign number
ReignReign number for the specific champion
DaysNumber of days held
<1Reign lasted less than a day
+Current reign is changing daily
No.ChampionChampionship changeReign statisticsNotesRef.
DateEventLocationReignDays
1Zhao Junjie2019N/AN/A1N/AThe exact length of this reign is uncertain.
2Shigehiro IrieNovember 24, 2019OWE Stronghearts vs OWEFukuoka, Japan12,190+[25]

Broadcasters

[edit]

Domestic:

  • Jiangsu Television (2019–present, currently broadcasting weekly highlights showBaichang Daren)

International:

Worldwide:

  • Nothing Else On TV (2019, online linear television service, live-streaming episodes)
  • FITE TV (2020–present, internet streaming service, live-streaming episodes)

Roster

[edit]
OWE head coachCima

OWE has a permanent roster of 35 Chinese wrestlers[Note 1] who are all under a 10-year contract and are provided training facilities and accommodations in the same vein as C-pop groups backed by record labels.[3] OWE also has four Japanese wrestlers under full-time contracts and usually brings in foreign wrestlers on a show-by-show basis.[20]

Male roster
Ring nameReal nameNotesRef(s).
Captain Achilles BenUncertainMember of "Team E", originally billed as "A-Ben:[5][26]
Sugar BrownUncertainFSW representative, member of "Real Money Brothers"[27]
Jake CafeUncertainFSW representative[27]
Sun ChaoUncertainMember of "Team E"[5]
Mao ChenxiangUncertainMember of "Team W"[5]
CimaNobuhiko OshimaHead trainer, President[22]
The CommandoDuan Yingnan [26]
Duan DihangUncertainMember of "Team W"[5]
Damian DrakeUncertainFSW representative, member of "Midnight Marvels"[27]
The GeneralUncertain [26]
Yang HaoUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Fan HeweiUncertainMember of "Team E"[5]
Tang HuaqiUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Minor Gregory JadeUncertainFSW representative[27]
Wang JinUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Gao JingjiaUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Zhao JunjieUncertainMember of "Team W"[5]
Clutch KuceraUncertainFSW representative, member of "Real Money Brothers"[27]
El LindamanYuga HayashiJapanese[28]
Mario BugattiUnknown [29]
CheChe ToveyChristopher Tovey 克里斯托弗 台湾虎Uxbridge Unicorns"[citation needed]
Remy MarcelUncertainFSW representative, part of "WG"[5]
Fan QiuyangUncertainMember of "Team E"[5]
Spyder WarriorUncertainFSW representative, member of "Midnight Marvels"[27]
BuffaUncertain[27]
TitanUncertain [26]
T HawkTakuya OnoderaJapanese[5]
WuljijimurenUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Chen XiangkeUncertainMember of "Team W"[5]
Cui XiangmengUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Liu XinxiUncertainMember of "Team E"[5]
Takehiro YamamuraTakehiro YamamuraJapanese[28]
Lu YeUncertainMember of "Team O"[5]
Duan YingnanUncertainMember of "Team W"[5]
General GuanZhao YilongMember of "Team W"[5]
Ren YuhangUncertainMember of "Team E"[5]
Xiong ZhiyuUncertainMember of "Team E"[5]
Female
Ring nameReal nameNotesRef(s).
MazzeratiUnknown [30]
Zeda ZhangJulia Ho [22]
Backstage personnel
Ring nameReal nameNotesRef(s).
SkaydeJorge Rivera SorianoTrainer[22]
Michael NeeMichael NeeVice president, commentator[21]


Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^Some from the group are still only training.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"Oriental Wrestling Entertainment (OWE) « Promotions Database « CAGEMATCH - The Internet Wrestling Database".www.cagematch.net. Retrieved2025-08-30.
  2. ^Anon."Roots and history of Olympic wrestling".International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles. FILA. Archived fromthe original on October 11, 2011. RetrievedAugust 2, 2013.
  3. ^abcdefAtkin, Nicolas (May 30, 2018)."Turning Shaolin monks into entertainers: Shanghai wrestlers tell the world about Chinese martial arts in the ring".South China Morning Post. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.
  4. ^"What Gates May Come: Dragon Gate's Turbulent Year". July 21, 2018.
  5. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvw"OWE The Legend of the Dragon".CageMatch (in German). February 2, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.
  6. ^Solowrestling (May 8, 2018)."Cambios en la presidencia de Dragon Gate y apertura de la división internacional en China".www.solowrestling.com.
  7. ^"AWF Wrestling Supercard Brisbane".CageMatch. May 20, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.CIMA & Fan Logan defeat Bushido & Cyprien
  8. ^"W-1 WRESTLE-1 Tour 2018 Outbreak – Tag 4".CageMatch. June 22, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.Strong Hearts (El Lindaman, Gao Jingjia & T-Hawk) defeat Andy Wu, Manabu Soya & Shuji Kondo
  9. ^"DDT Live! Maji Manji #18 ~ Shibuya Stream Opening Commemoration Pro-Wrestling Kokera Otoshi Special".CageMatch. September 25, 2018. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.Strong Hearts (CIMA, Duan Yingnan, El Lindaman & T-Hawk) defeat ALL OUT (Akito, Konosuke Takeshita, Shunma Katsumata & Yuki Ino)
  10. ^Crosby, Jack (January 1, 2019)."New promotion All Elite Wrestling announced along with AEW Double or Nothing event".CBS Sports. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2019.
  11. ^Satin, Ryan (January 8, 2019)."WATCH: All Elite Wrestling Rally Outside of TIAA Bank Field".Pro Wrestling Sheet. RetrievedJanuary 9, 2019.
  12. ^Dark Angelita (January 18, 2019)."The Crash anuncia alianza con OWE, ¿Vendrán Strong Hearts?" [The Crash announces alliance with OWE. will the Strong Hearts come].Súper Luchas (in Spanish). RetrievedFebruary 8, 2019.
  13. ^"OWE Reaching Global Audiences".Oriental Wrestling Entertainment. March 26, 2019. RetrievedMarch 26, 2019.
  14. ^"OWE's first championship contest!".Oriental Wrestling Entertainment. March 31, 2019. RetrievedMarch 31, 2019.
  15. ^"OWE Sell's out in Japan".Oriental Wrestling Entertainment. April 16, 2019. RetrievedApril 16, 2019.
  16. ^"W-1 WRESTLE-1 Tour 2018 Outbreak – Tag 4".CageMatch. April 18, 2019. RetrievedApril 20, 2019.OWE First Time Japan - Tag 1
  17. ^"Reaching Billions!".Oriental Wrestling Entertainment. April 23, 2019. RetrievedApril 23, 2019.
  18. ^httpsl://www.fightful.com/wrestling/oriental-wrestling-entertainment-announces-uk-division-will-launch-september
  19. ^"OWE UK Postpones Events Amidst Resignations and Social Media Drama". September 4, 2019.
  20. ^abcdSnelgrove, James (June 1, 2018)."Oriental Wrestling Entertainment: Truly Chinese Pro Wrestling".Voices of Wrestling. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.
  21. ^abAtkin, Nicolas (January 13, 2019)."All Elite Wrestling collaboration 'can be huge' says OWE ahead of talks with Cody Rhodes, Young Bucks".South China Morning Post. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.
  22. ^abcdAtkin, Nicolas (January 13, 2019)."Former WWE star and model Zeda Zhang shines spotlight on Chinese wrestling scene with OWE".South China Morning Post. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.
  23. ^Lee, Joseph (11 October 2019)."OWE Reportedly Done in China and Moving To Cambodia".411Mania.
  24. ^"OWE Done in China, Moving to Cambodia". October 12, 2019.
  25. ^"OWE Openweight Championship » Title Reigns".CageMatch.
  26. ^abcdOriental Wrestling Entertainment (January 25, 2019)."#OWE TALENTS: ACHILLES BEN, TITAN, GENERAL GUAN, THE COMMANDO".Twitter. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.
  27. ^abcdefg"OWE".CageMatch. March 30, 2019.
  28. ^ab"Oriental Wrestling Entertainment (OWE) >> Roster". RetrievedFebruary 11, 2019.
  29. ^Oriental Wrestling Entertainment (December 27, 2018)."Women's Angle-wrestling Balloon Competition,Owe Oriental Professional Wrestling Alliance".YouTube. RetrievedFebruary 11, 2019.
  30. ^Oriental Wrestling Entertainment (December 27, 2018)."#OWE #prowrestling the balloon match between @TheZedaZhang and OWE Maserati".Twitter. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2019.

External links

[edit]
Roster
Partnerships
Championships
  • OWE Openweight Championship
Broadcast
Programming
Pay-per-view events
Television
Former
Championships
Men's
Women's
Former
Accomplishments
Personnel
Affiliates/partnerships
Sister promotion
Current partners
Former partners
See also
Portal:
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Oriental_Wrestling_Entertainment&oldid=1308673762"
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