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Shinya Hashimoto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese professional wrestler (1965–2005)
Shinya Hashimoto
Hashimoto in 2004
Personal information
Born(1965-07-03)July 3, 1965
DiedJuly 11, 2005(2005-07-11) (aged 40)[3]
Cause of deathBrain hemorrhage
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Hashif Khan
Shinya Hashimoto
Shogun
Billed height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)[1]
Billed weight130 kg (287 lb)[1]
Trained byAntonio Inoki
Stu Hart
Tokyo Joe[2]
DebutSeptember 1, 1984
RetiredSeptember 2, 2004

Shinya Hashimoto (橋本 真也,Hashimoto Shin'ya; July 3, 1965 – July 11, 2005) was a Japaneseprofessional wrestler, promoter and actor. Along withMasahiro Chono andKeiji Mutoh, Hashimoto was dubbed one of the "Three Musketeers" that began competing inNew Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) in the mid-1980s and dominated the promotion in the 1990s.

He is one of three wrestlers (the others being Keiji Mutoh andSatoshi Kojima) that have held theNWA World Heavyweight Championship, theTriple Crown Heavyweight Championship and theIWGP Heavyweight Championship and is an overall five-timeworld champion.

Professional wrestling career

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Early years (1984–1988)

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Hashimoto grew up in Toki City in Gifu and began training injudo andkarate in his late teens. His training helped him in his transition to professional wrestling, as he joined theNJPW Dojo in April 1984. He made his debut for NJPW in September 1984 at the age of 19, wrestling againstTatsutoshi Goto. Hashimoto worked on becoming a skilled wrestler over the next few years, traveling whenever necessary to gain more seasoning, such as over in the United States (Continental Wrestling Association), Canada (Stampede Wrestling), and Puerto Rico (World Wrestling Council).

It was in Puerto Rico in 1988 that Hashimoto formedThe Three Musketeers withMasahiro Chono andKeiji Mutoh.

New Japan Pro-Wrestling (1988–2000)

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Upon Hashimoto's return to New Japan in July 1988, he started to climb his way up the NJPW ladder. By this time, he introduced amartial artistgimmick based on his background, which he represented by wearing ahachimaki during his ring entrances and utilizing a wrestling style based on shoot kicks, karate strikes, and submission holds. In April 1989, he took part in theIWGP Heavyweight Championship tournament at New Japan's first show in theTokyo Dome,Battle Satellite in Tokyo Dome he defeatedRiki Choshu andVictor Zangiev, before losing toBig Van Vader in the finals. In September 1989, Hashimoto teamed with Masa Saito to win his first gold, theIWGP Tag Team Championship, beating Choshu andTakayuki Iizuka. The two held the belts until the next year, losing in April 1990 to two other up-and-comers:Masahiro Chono andKeiji Mutoh.

In August 1991, Hashimoto, Chono, and Mutoh cemented their status as the aces of NJPW during theG1 Climax, surpassing longtime acesAntonio Inoki,Tatsumi Fujinami, and Riki Choshu. In July 1992, he replaced an eye injuredAkira Nogami (where it turns out, it was a kick by Hashimoto that caused the injury on June 20) to team withHiroshi Hase to participate in theNWA World Tag Team Championship tournament held byWorld Championship Wrestling and they defeatedThe Fabulous Freebirds in the quarterfinals, before losing toDustin Rhodes andBarry Windham in the semi-finals. Hashimoto finally hit the big time in 1993, as he won the IWGP Heavyweight Championship from the Great Muta in September. Hashimoto held the biggest belt in NJPW for the next seven months before being taken down by the legendary Tatsumi Fujinami. Hashimoto regained the gold only a month later, in May 1994. For the next year, Hashimoto stayed a dominating force in New Japan, defeating challenger after challenger. Hashimoto reigned as the IWGP Heavyweight Champion for over a year, losing the belt to Mutoh only two days after celebrating the milestone.

A few months after losing the gold, Hashimoto teamed up withJunji Hirata in July 1995 to face and defeatScott Norton andMike Enos to win the vacated IWGP Tag Team Championship, making Hashimoto atwo-time champion in both divisions. Soon, Hashimoto enjoyed another lengthy championship run, as he and Hirata remained the champions for almost another year. Hashimoto also became a double champion, as he defeatedNobuhiko Takada to regain the IWGP Heavyweight Title on April 29, 1996. Hashimoto and Hirata lost the tag title in June 1996, when they fell toTakashi Iizuka andKazuo Yamazaki. Hashimoto soldiered on to focus solely on the singles gold, as he worked on another lengthy run. In 1997, he was presented with a new championship belt (the second-generation IWGP Heavyweight Championship). On August 31, 1997, Hashimoto lost the title to Kensuke Sasaki, after reigning as a champion for a record-breaking 489 days (the record has since been broken byKazuchika Okada in 2017). Hashimoto continued to work for NJPW for the next few years, earning another great honor by winning the G1 Climax in1998.

Hashimoto launched into a brutal rivalry against Judo championNaoya Ogawa in 1997, leading to Hashimoto vowing to retire from NJPW if he lost again, which happened in April 2000. He stayed at New Japan for the New Japan/All Japan "Do Judge!" card on October 9, where he defeated Tatsumi Fujinami by submission, and also appeared at theGreat Voyage 2000 event forPro Wrestling Noah on December 23, where he defeatedTakao Omori, but he later left NJPW as promised.

Different Style Fights (1990–1998)

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Between 1990 and 1998, Hashimoto took part in various workedmixed martial arts-like worked bouts in NJPW, called "Different Style Fights", where he defeated the likes ofTony Halme, Ramzan Shibiev, and Dennis Lane. Most of the bouts lasted from 3 to 14 minutes and usually ended via submission or knockout.

Due to his success at this field, Hashimoto was scouted byK-1 executiveKazuyoshi Ishii to compete in their '93 GP tournament, but he declined. He was also invited to a 1994 all-starshoot wrestling tournament inUnion of Wrestling Forces International, NJPW's rival promotion, in which the winner would receive a hundred million yen prize, but he refused again.[4]

Pro Wrestling Zero-One (2001–2005)

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Hashimoto registered thePro Wrestling Zero-One name on November 13, 2000, after being fired from New Japan Pro-Wrestling, and the promotion had its first show on March 2, 2001. Hashimoto challengedSteve Corino for theNWA World Heavyweight Championship in October 2001. The match ended in controversy, leading to the belt being vacated. In December 2001, Hashimoto faced off against Corino andGary Steele in aTriple Threat Match, winning the vacated NWA World Heavyweight Title. Hashimoto's NWA World Title reign would come to an end in March 2002 through duplicitous means, as a crooked referee gave a fast count, allowingDan Severn to win the title. Hashimoto then went back to concentrating on Zero-One, where he was an active competitor. In October 2002, Hashimoto teamed with his old rival, Naoya Ogawa, to win the NWA Intercontinental Tag-Team Title (which were usually defended in Zero-One) fromJohn Heidenreich andNathan Jones. The two defended the championship for the next few months, before falling toMatt Ghaffari andTom Howard in December 2002. The two teams feuded on and off over the next few months, even as Hashimoto looked to another organization for a major accomplishment.

Hashimoto in January 2004

On February 23, 2003, Hashimoto defeated the Great Muta to win All Japan Pro Wrestling'sTriple Crown Heavyweight Championship; as a result, Hashimoto became only the second man to have held the NJPW, AJPW, and NWA World Titles (as Keiji Mutoh was the first).[1] Hashimoto and Ogawa won back the NWA Intercontinental Tag Team Title from Ghaffari and Howard in April 2003. However, due to Ogaya having thrown Ghaffari over the top rope at one point in the match, NWA President Richard Arpin stripped them of the championship a few days later, as throwing an opponent over the top rope is against the rules in the NWA. Hashimoto's Triple Crown would face a similar fate, as Hashimoto suffered a shoulder injury in July 2003 and had to vacate the belt.

Despite the build-up of several injuries, Hashimoto continued to wrestle on and off in Zero-One, including teaming with Yoshiaki Fujiwara to get the NWA Intercontinental Tag-Team Titles for a third time, defeating Takao Omori and Shiro Koshinaka in June 2004. The two remained the champions until before Omori found a new partner in Shinjiro Otani to win the championship in August 2004. Going into 2005, Hashimoto left Zero-One and placed Otani in charge, citing financial problems as the reason for his departure.

Personal life

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Hashimoto has a son,Daichi Hashimoto, who made his pro wrestling debut for the Zero1 promotion at their 10th Anniversary Show on March 6, 2011, facing Masahiro Chono in a losing effort.[5] He also left behind two young daughters.

Death

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Hashimoto suddenly died of abrain aneurysm on July 11, 2005; he was pronounced dead at 10:36 a.m. while en route to the hospital.[3] Hashimoto's sister Masanari claimed that Hashimoto had been complaining about chest pains and thought that his heart was beating too fast a week prior to his death, but refused to contact his doctor about the conditions. Hashimoto had a heart problem in 2004 and was put on medicine, but he had to stop taking it after having shoulder surgery. Hashimoto's doctor claimed that high blood pressure was the most likely cause for his brain hemorrhage and proposed that other stress over the years led to these problems.

Tributes

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In the years following Hashimoto's death, numerous wrestlers and promotions have paid tribute to him. Immediately following his death, New Japan retired the second IWGP Heavyweight Championship belt as Hashimoto was the first to wear it. A third IWGP Title belt was created and debuted in October 2005, but New Japan lost it in July 2006 whenBrock Lesnar left New Japan and took the belt with him which forced New Japan to bring the second belt back. After regaining the third belt in February 2008 and the creation of the fourth IWGP Title belt, the second was retired once again. On March 2, 2008, then IWGP Heavyweight Champion:Shinsuke Nakamura visited ZERO1 for their anniversary show where he defeatedKohei Sato. After the match, he gave the second IWGP Title belt to Hashimoto's son,Daichi.[6]

In August 2005, Masahiro Chono used Hashimoto's Bakusho Sengen theme during the final match of the 2005 G1 Climax. AtPRIDE Shockwave 2005, Naoya Ogawa wore Hashimoto's signature headband and came out to Bakusho Sengen for his fight againstHidehiko Yoshida. In late 2005, Hashimoto was posthumously awarded an achievement award byTokyo Sports.[7] AtWrestle Kingdom in Tokyo Dome on January 4, 2007, Chono and Mutoh paid tribute after defeatingTencozy as they wore Hashimoto's headbands while his theme song played. On September 21, 2009, ZERO1 held theShinya Hashimoto 25th Anniversary Destructive King Legend In Korakuen Hall show which celebrated Hashimoto's would be 25th anniversary.[8] In 2010, Hashimoto was inducted into both New Japan'sGreatest Wrestlers Hall of Fame[9] and theNWA Hall of Fame.

Championships and accomplishments

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Filmography

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YearTitleRole
1998Ultraman Gaia - Episode 34[17]Himself
2002Muscle Heat[3]Wrestler
2003Kimi wa Petto - Episode 7Himself
2004RikidozanAzumanami
2004Oh! My Zombie Mermaid (A! Ikkenya Puroresu)Kota Shishio
2005Sakigake!! Kuromati Kōkō: The MovieHimself

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcde"Pro Wrestling illustrated 500 – 2004 :47 Shinya Hashimoto".Pro Wrestling Illustrated. Blue Bell,Pennsylvania,United States: Sports and Entertainment publications LLC. October 2004. p. 25. December 2004.
  2. ^Meltzer, Dave (2017-11-05)."'Tokyo' Joe Daigo passes away at 75 years old".Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Retrieved2017-11-05.
  3. ^abcdefgh"Shinya Hashimoto dies suddenly". SLAM Wrestling. July 11, 2005. Archived fromthe original on October 27, 2016. RetrievedJuly 11, 2025.
  4. ^Pride: The Secret Files (in Japanese). Kamipro. 2008.
  5. ^"Pro Wrestling ZERO1 News". Pro Wrestling ZERO1 USA. Archived fromthe original on 2010-07-23. Retrieved2010-11-09.
  6. ^"Pro Wrestling ZERO1 USA - the official Pro Wrestling ZERO1 English Language Website - News from 02/26/08 to 03/02/08". Archived fromthe original on 2011-07-01. Retrieved2011-04-18.
  7. ^"Puroresu Awards: 2000s".puroresu.com. Retrieved2 April 2018.
  8. ^"PUROLOVE.com".www.purolove.com. Retrieved2 April 2018.
  9. ^ab"NJPW Greatest Wrestlers".New Japan Pro-Wrestling. Archived fromthe original on 23 August 2014. Retrieved23 August 2014.
  10. ^Royal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). "Japan: New Japan G-1 (Grade-1) Climax Tournament Champions".Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 375.ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  11. ^abRoyal Duncan & Gary Will (2000). "Japan: New Japan G-1 (Grade-1) Climax Tag Tournament Champions".Wrestling Title Histories. Archeus Communications. p. 374.ISBN 0-9698161-5-4.
  12. ^"Nikkan Sports Awards - 1996".wrestlingscout. February 9, 2016. Archived fromthe original on December 1, 2022. RetrievedAugust 1, 2018.
  13. ^"Puroresu Awards 2000s".
  14. ^"Puroresu Awards 1990s".
  15. ^"Puroresu Awards 1980s".
  16. ^"Puroresu Awards 1990s".
  17. ^"Ultraman Gaia".Crunchyroll. Retrieved2018-10-01.

External links

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