Professional wrestling in Japan is commonly known as , this term is usually abbreviated to Puroresu .
Pro-wrestling was introduced to Japan shortly after World War II but failed to get off the ground initially, until Japan saw the advent of its first big star, Rikidozan, who made the sport popular beginning in 1951.
Many Japanese wrestling groups have seen a significant downturn in popularity in the past decade due to a failure to introduce new talent and copying many unpopular ideas from the U.S. The few women's groups that remain are struggling to survive while the men have seen a big drop in their drawing power as Japanese fans are increasingly turning to real mixed martial arts competitions such as K-1 or the PRIDE Fighting Championships, which, ironically, had pro wrestlers as its early exponents. The WWE is also trying to make inroads in Japan by promoting cards on its own instead of through co-promotion as in the past with New Japan and SWS, mostly by featuring some of its wrestlers who once competed for Japanese promotions in the main events.
Puroresu also uses very complex submission maneuvers as well as high-flying aerial attacks. Pro-wrestlers in Japan are also famous for "working stiff," i.e. not pulling their punches and kicks. Puroresu also differs from American pro wrestling in that the wrestlers are treated more like legitimate athletes than sports entertainers. During interviews, puroresu stars tend to speak normally rather than use catchphrases and other mannerisms associated with their gimmicks, much like interviews conducted with boxers, baseball and soccer players. Even the wrestlers with the most fanciful in-ring personalities carry out their interviews in a solemn, calm tone.
Most of the Japanese organizations do not follow the faces and heels style of their Western counterparts. There is no good guy/bad guy structure, it's strictly competition between the wrestlers. This allows every wrestler on the roster to face each other; in America, for instance, two faces or two heels would very rarely be booked to square off in a match, as it generally has to be good guy vs. bad guy. Japan doesn't limit itself like this; for example, it's not uncommon for regular tag team partners to face each other in a singles match, particularly during annual tournaments, where the format is usually round robin and thus it's every man for himself. During the nWo angle in Japan, it was not uncommon to see Keiji Mutoh facing off against allies Masahiro Chono, Marcus Bagwell and Scott Norton during the G-1 Climax tournament, and holding nothing back during the matches. New Japan allows for a few gimmick wrestlers, though. In the 1990s, one of its top stars was Mutoh, who would do double duty, either wrestling under his own name without a gimmick, or would don different tights and face paint and work as the heelish Great Muta. Most Japanese wrestlers can be considered tweeners because, they rely on the fans' admiration, this admiration comes from how much they are realistically into the match. One of the best known tweeners in New Japan is Yuji Nagata.
Other kinds of rings may be specified by individual rules. A ring may have barbed wires instead of ropes, have six sides of ropes instead of four, or may have explosives set on the boundaries, just to name a few. Some small, obscure independent promotions which rarely draw above 100 fans to its cards on average are so devoid of resources that they have to use amateur mats in place of an actual ring. Examples of these are Koki Kitahara's Capture International (shoot style) and Mr. Pogo's WWS (garbage)
Several popular American professional wrestlers in recent memory, including Hulk Hogan, Big Van Vader, Bill Goldberg, Chris Benoit, Mick Foley, and others have wrestled in Japan. The now defunct World Championship Wrestling had a strong talent exchange deal with New Japan Pro Wrestling, that saw (amongst other things) a Japanese version of its popular nWo angle used by that federation. Ken Shamrock was among the first Americans to compete in shoot style competition in Japan, starting out in the UWF and later opened Pancrase with some other Japanese shootfighters.
As a result of the introduction of Lucha Libre into Japan in the early 1990s, major Mexican stars also compete in Japan, although they are less popular than American wrestlers and depend on their masked personas to gain recognition. The most popular Mexican wrestler to compete in Japan is Mil Máscaras.
All Japan Women's Pro Wrestling was the dominant organization in the 1980s and 1990s but the company suffered due to the mismanagement of the four brothers who ran the company. AJW's first major star was Jaguar Yokota in the 1980s, who was as good if not better than most men. The decade would later see the rise of Chigusa Nagayo, who would become a huge idol to millions of Japanese girls, and many of them would follow her lead into pro wrestling. AJW would employ several American wrestlers, who found little work and no respect in the U.S. Like their male counterparts, the women of Japanese wrestling were treated with great respect as athletes, not as eye candy like in the U.S.
Professional wrestling by country | Sports entertainment | Sport in Japan
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