Thank you for fighting the system and getting these documentaries up kim! Theres a serious demand for old school puroresu content and you fill that gap! Thank you!!
One of the most amusing things I've seen was that beer was guaranteed to be provided for AJPW talent inside their contracts. Considering how much a lot of wrestlers like to drink, that was probably a nice bonus lol.
A wild and young Haku without a beard! Anyway, it's sad that AJPW is now an Indy fed rather than a major promotion and Giant Baba is very missed by people who endear him.
I wouldn’t call it independent because it has a corporate structure and talent contracts, and frankly I don’t think there’s much of a gap between AJPW and NOAH currently But yes the top three promotions in Japan are probably NJPW, Stardom, and DDT
@joeyjoejoe1394 If I were a pro wrestler, I would want to train all over the world including Japan as I want to combine all styles into one as my ring name will be Antonino Garea (named after Argentina Rocca's first name and Anthony Gareljich's last name of his professional persona). I'll try to have a strong style in New Japan while going to DDT to be part of the shit and giggles of the Ironman Heavyweight Championship division! Obviously I can't go to Stardom because I'm not a cute but tough female wrestler, but I want to see their matches because World Wonder Ring Stardom and NJPW are owned by Bushiroad.
I've been waiting for English-language vids summarizing this era. Good to finally see a good one. [Edit] NOAH exodus was my #1 topic, but the rise and fall of Inoki-ism would be my #2
As a Noah fan, this reminds me of the hazy green summertime that was Noah’s early days. We’re on better footing now, we have indeed returned to the Dome, but it’ll never be the same as it was over 20 years ago. I also lived in Japan for a few years. When the topic came up, older people I worked with still called him simply, “Baba-san.” That’s how revered he still is.
@@zafarafay it’s a pretty long and complicated story. But in short, Noah habitually don’t pull the trigger on up and coming talents enough. They also don’t seem to be well-run, financially. The wrestling is almost always good, but they need personalities that they haven’t had much since Kobashi retired. Now we’ve got some good talent leaving, chief among them Katsuhiko Nakajima. He’s always been around the top of the card, but hasn’t had a truly big run with the GHC Heavyweight belt since 2016, when he was a bland babyface. There’s a lot that needs fixing with Noah’s business practices, and a lot wrong with the book, hence why Noah will never be what they were from 2000-09.
@@SoftBank47 well that's saddening to hear. I find NJPW booking to be stale and repetitive hence why I started watching NOAH. Also the production is really good of NOAH and I'm sure you know they ran the Dome as well this year. You don't think they can run the Dome every year? And what could be the reason behind Nakajima's sudden departure? He was a star for NOAH as you said. Do you think it has to do with the booking? Many NOAH fans are criticizing Nosawa. I might come across as naive here but is there actually a chance NOAH surpasses NJPW? With CyberAgent is there any hope?
@@zafarafay not a chance NOAH surpasses NJPW. The latter has too much of an international appeal and presence. NOAH got back to the Dome on the replaced knees of old-ass Mutoh, so returning to the Dome is a pipe dream at best.
@@SoftBank47 so the impression I'm getting is NOAH can't really do much apart from improving their booking and creating more younger stars. I was told CyberAgent has really good finances so they might be able to offer lucrative contracts to attract better talents. But they can only do so much to improve the international appeal. It's down to booking after all. I firmly believe NOAH can turn things around and be a solid competition to NJPW. But it's going to be a very slow and long process.
It's awesome to see someone doing in depth looks at All Japan/NOAH. I think it's one of the most fascinating eras in wrestling and there are so many things to talk about. I don't think Giant Baba gets as much credit for booking and general promotion as he deserves. The stability he brought to his promotion and the ability to create stars in Tenryu, Tsuruta, Misawa, Kawada, Kobashi, and others over the years is hard to beat, and his ability to book the Champion Carnival to not only protect the top stars, but also help make new ones is probably only rivaled by Gedo's G1 booking in recent years. Although All Japan by the 90's was the most conservative of the major wrestling promotions, it's important to remember that some of the production choices made by Baba with the introduction of entrance music and lighting for wrestling shows was, at the time, revolutionary. All Japan also pioneered the merchandising of wrestling in the 70's with T-shirts, music, and other souvenirs. I think it's a shame that Motoko and Misawa weren't able to work together because the split probably damaged the popularity of wrestling long term. Motoko probably gets more criticism because she was not well liked by the locker room or in the media but she was somewhat justified in wanting to keep things the way they were. Sure house show business wasn't doing great, but the Tokyo-centric All Japan was still selling out the big Budokan shows which were really the big money makers, the TV ratings were excellent given the poor time slot the promotion had, and the promotion was overall still very profitable. In the end I don't blame Misawa and Co for leaving though since she apparently was unwilling to negotiate at all.
Over all I absolutely love this but one thing you got wrong here is that Tenryu did win the Triple Crown in his first run in the company. June 5th 1989.
Giant Baba is the complete Anti-Thesis of Antonio Inoki. While the latter was known for being the most strict mentor, Giant Baba was well-known for being the most wholesome. He had eye for young talents and was known to be the prime example of Veteran Sympathy in wrestling history. As he would go through great lengths to cultivate future generations of wrestlers in his stable, like a father to his sons. This was one of the reasons why Giant Baba was well-loved by Japan itself. Because when he died, they didn't just lost a legend, they lost a father figure they've always looked up to.
I think Baba’s only major downsides were his King’s Road style ultimately proving to dangerous for a wrestler’s long term health The other would be the slow burn to the top which upon being handled after his passing caused part of Noah’s creation. That being lack of pushing younger and healthier talent The last one would be his handling of a juniors division would be comparable to how lacking WWF’s was compared to WCW with NJPW. That being mentioned quite a few times in by Kim in other videos like the M Pro video for These Days
This is a wonderful video. I got into Puroresu in 2005 and then kind of dropped out of following wrestling altogether in about 2013 but NOAH (whose first UK show I went to in 2008) and 1990s AJPW were by far my favourite promotions. I do have a few points to add: -I've read (and it could be wrong) that part of the reason Kawada didn't get pushed as hard was due to the fact he upset Baba by criticising the fact he wouldn't work with other promotions at a time when NJPW was raking in tons of money with the UWFi feed. This apparently landed him in the doghouse and is the reason Taue won the Triple Crown in 1996 off Misawa when the original plan was for Kawada to win it. Being in the Doghouse would probably explain some of the baffling booking decisions they made even as late as 1998 when they had Kawada drop the title right after winning it in that huge Tokyo Dome match from Misawa! (Funnily enough, the UWFi ran a show at Jingu Stadium in September 1996 which Kawada did work on, facing Takayama so Baba must have given him the OK to do that?) -There's a website called Quebrada (dot net) which has an AJPW news archive (as well as news archives for other Japanese promotions) going from late 1999 to mid 2001. Some of the links don't seem to work properly so you have to type the address in manually but it's interesting with hindsight seeing a Western fan criticising some of Misawa's booking decisions in AJPW at that time and pointing out how the company was struggling to draw outside of Tokyo. Here's a paragraph the site owner wrote in December of 1999 when the cards had been announced for the then upcoming "New Years Giant Series 00" tour: "Someone was asking whether '00 Giant Series is going to draw due to the new/different matches. Obviously it's very important for AJ to improve upon the poor (for a major company) business, aside from Tokyo, that they did in 1999. However, that can't happen based on the way they are continuing to 1) roll out matches left and right for no logical reason and 2) book all the guys that have come from other promotions (meaning outsiders and guys like Hase, Kakihara, etc. that were already stars with other Japanese promotions prior to coming to All Japan) except Vader into oblivion. When you look at their lineups, you just have to shake your head. It's the same old problems 1) lack of continiuty 2) only a few guys with a meaningful "role" 3) the same old results 4) new things becoming old immediately because the same guys always win, killing off any potential business the new blood could do. In the end, business will not improve in the foreseeable future because they more new things they try to do on each tour, the less new things are available in the future. Don't get me wrong, doing new things is good, but it has to open new doors that could have a pot of gold behind them rather than slam them in the faces of anyone that could potentially move into their small elite group." -In the latter part of the video, you mention Tenryu didn't have the chance to win the Triple Crown during his first time round in AJPW. He was actually the second man to hold it, defeating Jumbo on June 5th 1989 before losing it back to him in October that year. Funnily enough, Tenryu's last match in AJPW before leaving for SWS was a Triple Crown match against Jumbo in April 1990 after which Stan Hansen came out and attacked Jumbo to switch the focus away from Tenryu leaving (at least I think I read that somewhere many moons ago). Keep up the great work!
For your second point, it really isn’t hard to see why Misawa booked NOAH into a corner and led it into a downturn. I can’t exactly remember where I saw this, but apparently Kawada publicly criticised Misawa’s booking at some point and suggested Masanobu Fuchi as booker instead, on the basis that he was the one who assembled the absolute masterpieces of 6 man tag matches between Super Generation Army vs Tsuruta-gun.
It makes one wonder if Triple H and Stephanie haven’t contemplated this in the later 2010s and do their own Exodus with everything Vince has done with his allies in Bruce and Dunn. Though with everything that came upon the changing of the last few years any POSSIBLE thoughts were likely dashed: Nick Khan’s hiring and later promotion, selling of The Network, Triple H losing control of NXT, Covid, Triple H’s heart issues and forced in-ring retirement, Stephanie’s retirement, Vince’s legal issues and retirement, Stephanie’s return, Triple H and Stephanie taking over, all the rehirings, Vince’s return after several months, Stephanie leaving again, and finally the selling of WWE to UFC …it’s insane to think all that and quite a bit more has happened in just that ONE company in the span of nearly just 5 years
I've always believed that if Motoko hadn't been so stubborn by clinging onto her husband's philosophy of wrestling, then maybe the NOAH exodus would've never happened and All Japan wouldn't have damn near capitulated the way it did. I'm not saying Misawa was completely faultless, but all he wanted was to start pushing younger talent and help take better care of the wrestlers and Motoko wouldn't listen to anything.
we need a video on Misawa from this time frame, from the Heir Apparent, denied his destiny in All Japan. to the Emerald Dynasty that he built brick by brick at the Differ Ariake.
Still blows my mind that All Japan Pro Wrestling and Pro Wrestling NOAH are still in business, they are both in their own way, the Impact Wrestling of Japan, lol. Seriously and not joking, both brands have survived incidents that ended much smaller brands, see the death of David Von Erich and World Class Championship Wrestling as an example. To be frank, I think what occurred to Pride and other Japanese MMA brands in the early 2010's, helped Pro Wrestling in Japan.
Great video. This period of wrestling was crazy to me, as I was just starting to get onto the internet. Learning and loosely following it was such a time. With everything going on with WWF, WCW, and ECW, it lined up perfectly with the madness happening in AJPW. What a time. Curious to see if there's a video made of Keiji Muto's AJPW era. The tape trading/early IWC hated so much of it, but it was easy to transition over to if you were a WWE fan.
This is an awesome video and hearing Toryumon (what would later become Dragon Gate) and Michinoku Pro being mentioned makes me want to see a video about those two fairly obscure promotions. (at the time) Out of curiosity, does anyone know the sort of old school country song playing in the last portion of the video when talking about Makato Baba? It's also really cool seeing Fuchi get the credit he deserves.
My Brother and I went to The Dragon Gate USA Shows in Philadelphia in 2009 and 2010. That's where we first saw Pac, Jon Moxley Brodie Lee and many others some of whom we see in NJPW, AEW and other Professional Wrestling Promotions.
Im glad you said it , Hard Luck Kawada is one of my tippy top favorite wrestlers too ! And yes he was a brilliant sell artist , striker , wrestler and helped produce in ring drama in some of my favorite matches ever ! Legend . Once again thanks for the great content . I truly appreciate it .
Giant Baba set the stage for MANY Japanese talents getting recognized in the states. Especially, with his working relationship with Fritz Von Erich and his Texas territory. The same can be said for the Funk's with Terry & Dory Jr. These two families were VERY influential in the Japanese/American exchange of talent. Japanese Puroresu as a whole in my opinion is probably THE BEST pro wrestling in the world. It is a little bit of amateur wrestling, martial arts, all mixed together. Many of these talents working for NOAH, All Japan, New Japan, etc...Have extensive amateur backgrounds from high school/college. And of course martial arts backgrounds. That's why it's often difficult for gaijin talent to assimilate over there. It's a completely different style of wrestling. Extremely stiff and very competitive. And they have stuck with those roots to this day. Unlike American companies which have swayed more towards entertainment. Which is sad in my candid opinion.
Hey Kim, love the channel, i was wonder if you ever considered doing a video about World Wrestling All stars? It was a company from Australia. I only remember them because a friend of mine ordered a ppv (from 2002) that had sabu on it. That company seemed very erratic to say the least...... anyways thank you for all the wrestling content. And LONG LIVE MISAWA!!!!
Awesome documentary 💯 I'm a big fan of AJPW & Noah and this time of the Exodus and the formation of a new competition has always interested me I hope you keep doing more videos on All Japan during the 2000s 💪
A tremendous video Kim. I enjoy all of your videos but I think this one is the best you've done. Also loved the one about my favorite wrestler of all time Kenta Kobashi:s GHC title reign. I have read a couple of books on this particular subject and this video is a great companion piece. Keep up the good work my man.
Jun Akiyama makes me think of Hangman Page more than Roman Reigns, since the latter's gimmick nearly always had go-away heat as a babyface. I think it is more that the chase for Gold wasn't handled properly, overbooked, which is why it doesn't pay-off once they actually carry a world title. Both Adam Page and Jun Akiyama had tepid runs with a world title because there was no idea where to go once either guy had it.
As late as this is a response I wanted to still bring it up anyways While I can agree your comparison fits well, I do believe the one with Roman is still applicable In the case of Page he was acknowledged from the onset to be the initial project, but probably realizing it be to soon had him lose to Jericho and then take the long road to his title win involving numerous storylines to get there With Roman it became obvious from the start as well he was Vince’s big project made even more so when he kept ALL the SHIELD stuff sans the lyrics for the entrance music once the group splintered From there he got everything without much to his character being changed from SHIELD Roman to Next Big Face Roman Akiyama had initial development and interactions with the 4 Pillars and others like Hansen and Vader Roman had slightly similar with the SHIELD vs Evolution feud But ultimate he was the one getting major show matches like MitB, Royal Rumble, and fights with long established stars solo (Triple H, Orton, Cena, Bryan, Undertaker, and Brock) and unlike Seth who had heel cheap wins Or Moxley who got shaky wins or just total loses Reigns got numerous wins or success in loses Jun got slotted right in the main event from the word go not to dissimilar to Roman post SHIELD breakup And to add to your title reign point, most recall Roman’s early wins as either short or bogged down by terrible matches (Mania match with Triple H did him no favors) and even his most prominent and best reign recently as Tribal Chief took MONTHS to really get there since it involved some really bad booking and matches (his title defense against Demon Finn with the constant music, heart restart nonsense, and ridiculous turnbuckle collapse bit)
I know next to little or nothing about Japanese wrestling. Especially not the history or backstage goings on. I know a little bit more now. Fantastic video and thank you for the information. Keep up the good work 👍
Kawada’s run post split is incredible. His matches against Sasaki, especially the first where Kawada gets the pin, is THE most underrated run in wrestling history
Insane to think we're going on almost 25 years and All Japan isn't even in the top 3 let alone 4, it's like a super indie the size of ROH at its mid 2010s days. It even had to change names as a company and keep the AJPW name as a sort of mask to hide the fact they moved office and priesidents after Muto's own exodus of talent to form Wrestle-1 and finally the recent humiliation of having one of there top heels leave for Noah in the form of Jake Lee who's name and stock has gone drastically up all the way to the upper card.
That was amazing: Thank you for this piece of nostalgia magic. AJPW of the 90’s is my favorite wrestling era/promotion of all time. Still re watching to this day the matches people upload on YT. I wish wrestling was still like this but sadly wrestling’s just dead to me. And I wasn’t aware of all the shenanigans power struggle stuff you mentionned even though I’ve been watching AJPW more than 20 years ago. Thank you for this fine mini documentary. 🤜🏽💥🤛🏽
From what I read back in the day, initially Misawa wasn't interested in having any foreigners in NOAH. I'm guessing influence from NTV persuaded him otherwise.
In the US at least, Mrs. Baba would have had a strong argument that Misawa breached his fiduciary duty to AJPW by working against it while still president.
I thought the same thing. It's bizarre to me that he remained company president while doing all that. He should have resigned his position and just held onto the book and had matches.
On a side note, I too like Kawada. I can totally identify with him as a success in life, but often overlooked to the point that each of us was thought of as "The Other Guy". As for other favorites in Pro Res include Tatsumi Fujinami, Keiji Muto in the 1990s, the other three Pillars, Jumbo, the Funks, and Vader.
Kawada’s overall character arc is this, he refuses to be overshadowed by Misawa and he’ll do whatever it takes to become the ace of All Japan, even if it means whooping Misawa and take everything that he holds dear in his heart.
14:56 Johnny Ace (John Laurinaitis) always one of a sad case to me. Very talented wrestler in Japan, But always ended up as a joke in American Wrestling scene both as wrestler and backstage roles. And ended up screwing himself in WWE. Still wondered why he choose to back to America instead of staying in Japan.
From what’s available on the internet it looks like he left after the ajpw/Noah split. He probably realized ajpw was in trouble, probably also had a list of injuries over the years and then also probably got a sweet deal from WcW before they went belly up to be a behind the scene guy and not have to wrestle. Just my goofball theory though so who knows
As somebody who was late to Japanese wrestling. Admittedly, not getting involved and watching regularly until the Ricochete - Osprey match from 2015 that went viral. A few mo mn😮iiths later I watches Omega v Okada 1 and my goodness I was hooked on NJPW. I fell off around the pandemic. I was so disappointed that Naito finally got another run towards the main title and that it was going to happen during the pandemic and thereby in an empty arena. Just a huge letdown. Naito had 2 majorly dissapointing title wins. Bummer
Very few promoters and bookers can say they have built multiple young generations of mega stars. Giant Baba and Vince McMahon can say they did and that makes them the greatest in the history of the business.
I have to ask if anyone knows where I could watch, or if need be buy, Departure I’ve hardly seen much of early NOAH and REALLY wanna see these first shows So any suggestions would be great
Its interesting in Japan it seems the top wrestlers have more power then the office while in the United States the office has all the power and the wrestlers could be left in the streets with no say.
It depends on the company really. AEW still has wrestlers as executive VPs after all. In terms of the wrestler contracts itself I don't know if they become actual employees of the company when they sign or are classified as independent contractors like they are in the US. Given the US influence on Japanese business I'd guess it's the later.
The one thing I didn't like about this video is how it presented New Japan's feuds with other promotions as them killing the other fed. It was them being in the mud so badly that forced them to beg at NJPW for some relevancy as the ultimate desperate measure. UWFi was going under no matter what, it wasn't the NJPW feud that killed it, if anything it bought the company time to try to stay alive. Same with any other promotion they partnered with, the reason why NJPW won all the feuds is because they were so clearly superior any other result would not have been accepted by the public, either due to failings of the opponents or them not ever being in the same league in the first place. There's a reason why it's always seen as a last resort to do these interpromotional feuds. The modern feud with NOAH the mid 2010s was the exact same, a company in the mud needing help to draw anything practically begging to be helped by the much healthier promotion who had much less to gain from facing opponents seen as inferior by their audience. Interpromotional feuds with the major promotions are the signs of either one promotion doing terribly (UWFi, AJPW in 2000, NOAH in 2015), simply being much smaller and needing help (WAR) or the entire scene being in the mud (the 2000s general state with all the big matchups, especially from the mid 2000s onwards until Bushiroad bought NJPW basically, and the current pandemic era of general industry wide crisis). As soon as NJPW gets on its feet all these deals are going in the bin too, except the Stardom one since it benefits a sister company and maybe AJPW since they are so below them and might need the help a lot. Actually the NOAH one may continue since it seems to be an ABEMA operation and both of their tv partners are in on it, but reduced to a once a year thing.
Wasn't another component of the locker room turning was Misawa discovering that Baba kept their licensing money and used it as a slush fund for a decade?
While Baba was very generous with his gaijin talent, he underpaid his native workers. The highest paid native (Misawa) was making the same money per annum ($250k) as the NJPW Jr. Heavyweight Koji "Tiger Mask III" Kanemoto. The natives were so impoverished that many of them had take out loans from Baba. One of the many reasons Kawada stayed loyal was because he was heavily financially indebted to Baba's estate.
@@blitzerblazinoah6838$250K in the late 90s is actually really good pay for a wrestler, especially considering AJPW's revenues mostly came from ticket sales. That's $456000 in 2024 dollars.
Thank you for fighting the system and getting these documentaries up kim! Theres a serious demand for old school puroresu content and you fill that gap! Thank you!!
...especially from those of us who didn't have access to tapes in that era.
Not only old school Puroresu content, but actually *good* puro related content. And thankfully Kim delivers
I couldn't agree more. And Kim's documentary making is fantastic
Fight the system. Good advice. Lol.
RIP Misawa and Baba. You're both missed greatly
Baba was one of the few promoters, that the wrestlers seem to have a lot of respect for.
One of the most amusing things I've seen was that beer was guaranteed to be provided for AJPW talent inside their contracts. Considering how much a lot of wrestlers like to drink, that was probably a nice bonus lol.
@@drinfernodds Too bad the Iron Sheik didn't go to AJPW full time, he would've loved that hehe.
He built that company from the ground up
And a general manager almost every wrestler loathes. Matoko Baba.
@@drinfernodds you familiar with Asian glow?
A wild and young Haku without a beard! Anyway, it's sad that AJPW is now an Indy fed rather than a major promotion and Giant Baba is very missed by people who endear him.
Dont sad over it. Be glad that AJPW still there, and still awesome!
Haku was a overrated bum.
@@Tormund_Giantsbrain I hope he doesn't see the comment.
I wouldn’t call it independent because it has a corporate structure and talent contracts, and frankly I don’t think there’s much of a gap between AJPW and NOAH currently
But yes the top three promotions in Japan are probably NJPW, Stardom, and DDT
@joeyjoejoe1394 If I were a pro wrestler, I would want to train all over the world including Japan as I want to combine all styles into one as my ring name will be Antonino Garea (named after Argentina Rocca's first name and Anthony Gareljich's last name of his professional persona). I'll try to have a strong style in New Japan while going to DDT to be part of the shit and giggles of the Ironman Heavyweight Championship division! Obviously I can't go to Stardom because I'm not a cute but tough female wrestler, but I want to see their matches because World Wonder Ring Stardom and NJPW are owned by Bushiroad.
Kim out here dropping banger videos and teaching me more about Japanese wrestling and their backstage politics
I've been waiting for English-language vids summarizing this era. Good to finally see a good one.
[Edit] NOAH exodus was my #1 topic, but the rise and fall of Inoki-ism would be my #2
As a Noah fan, this reminds me of the hazy green summertime that was Noah’s early days. We’re on better footing now, we have indeed returned to the Dome, but it’ll never be the same as it was over 20 years ago.
I also lived in Japan for a few years. When the topic came up, older people I worked with still called him simply, “Baba-san.” That’s how revered he still is.
Why do you think NOAH will never return to the old days? I'm new as a NOAH fan so I'd love to know your thoughts.
@@zafarafay it’s a pretty long and complicated story. But in short, Noah habitually don’t pull the trigger on up and coming talents enough. They also don’t seem to be well-run, financially. The wrestling is almost always good, but they need personalities that they haven’t had much since Kobashi retired.
Now we’ve got some good talent leaving, chief among them Katsuhiko Nakajima. He’s always been around the top of the card, but hasn’t had a truly big run with the GHC Heavyweight belt since 2016, when he was a bland babyface.
There’s a lot that needs fixing with Noah’s business practices, and a lot wrong with the book, hence why Noah will never be what they were from 2000-09.
@@SoftBank47 well that's saddening to hear. I find NJPW booking to be stale and repetitive hence why I started watching NOAH. Also the production is really good of NOAH and I'm sure you know they ran the Dome as well this year. You don't think they can run the Dome every year?
And what could be the reason behind Nakajima's sudden departure? He was a star for NOAH as you said. Do you think it has to do with the booking? Many NOAH fans are criticizing Nosawa.
I might come across as naive here but is there actually a chance NOAH surpasses NJPW? With CyberAgent is there any hope?
@@zafarafay not a chance NOAH surpasses NJPW. The latter has too much of an international appeal and presence.
NOAH got back to the Dome on the replaced knees of old-ass Mutoh, so returning to the Dome is a pipe dream at best.
@@SoftBank47 so the impression I'm getting is NOAH can't really do much apart from improving their booking and creating more younger stars.
I was told CyberAgent has really good finances so they might be able to offer lucrative contracts to attract better talents. But they can only do so much to improve the international appeal. It's down to booking after all.
I firmly believe NOAH can turn things around and be a solid competition to NJPW. But it's going to be a very slow and long process.
It's awesome to see someone doing in depth looks at All Japan/NOAH. I think it's one of the most fascinating eras in wrestling and there are so many things to talk about. I don't think Giant Baba gets as much credit for booking and general promotion as he deserves. The stability he brought to his promotion and the ability to create stars in Tenryu, Tsuruta, Misawa, Kawada, Kobashi, and others over the years is hard to beat, and his ability to book the Champion Carnival to not only protect the top stars, but also help make new ones is probably only rivaled by Gedo's G1 booking in recent years. Although All Japan by the 90's was the most conservative of the major wrestling promotions, it's important to remember that some of the production choices made by Baba with the introduction of entrance music and lighting for wrestling shows was, at the time, revolutionary. All Japan also pioneered the merchandising of wrestling in the 70's with T-shirts, music, and other souvenirs. I think it's a shame that Motoko and Misawa weren't able to work together because the split probably damaged the popularity of wrestling long term. Motoko probably gets more criticism because she was not well liked by the locker room or in the media but she was somewhat justified in wanting to keep things the way they were. Sure house show business wasn't doing great, but the Tokyo-centric All Japan was still selling out the big Budokan shows which were really the big money makers, the TV ratings were excellent given the poor time slot the promotion had, and the promotion was overall still very profitable. In the end I don't blame Misawa and Co for leaving though since she apparently was unwilling to negotiate at all.
Over all I absolutely love this but one thing you got wrong here is that Tenryu did win the Triple Crown in his first run in the company. June 5th 1989.
Babe wake up, Kim Justice dropped another wrestling video!
Giant Baba is the complete Anti-Thesis of Antonio Inoki. While the latter was known for being the most strict mentor, Giant Baba was well-known for being the most wholesome. He had eye for young talents and was known to be the prime example of Veteran Sympathy in wrestling history. As he would go through great lengths to cultivate future generations of wrestlers in his stable, like a father to his sons.
This was one of the reasons why Giant Baba was well-loved by Japan itself. Because when he died, they didn't just lost a legend, they lost a father figure they've always looked up to.
I think Baba’s only major downsides were his King’s Road style ultimately proving to dangerous for a wrestler’s long term health
The other would be the slow burn to the top which upon being handled after his passing caused part of Noah’s creation. That being lack of pushing younger and healthier talent
The last one would be his handling of a juniors division would be comparable to how lacking WWF’s was compared to WCW with NJPW. That being mentioned quite a few times in by Kim in other videos like the M Pro video for These Days
Giant Baba: Wrestling's Optimus Prime.
Paid for the Patreon specifically for this video but will easily watch it again in full. Excellent work, Kim! Much love
THESE are the kind of documentaries that make me LOVE professional wrestling!
This is a wonderful video. I got into Puroresu in 2005 and then kind of dropped out of following wrestling altogether in about 2013 but NOAH (whose first UK show I went to in 2008) and 1990s AJPW were by far my favourite promotions. I do have a few points to add:
-I've read (and it could be wrong) that part of the reason Kawada didn't get pushed as hard was due to the fact he upset Baba by criticising the fact he wouldn't work with other promotions at a time when NJPW was raking in tons of money with the UWFi feed. This apparently landed him in the doghouse and is the reason Taue won the Triple Crown in 1996 off Misawa when the original plan was for Kawada to win it. Being in the Doghouse would probably explain some of the baffling booking decisions they made even as late as 1998 when they had Kawada drop the title right after winning it in that huge Tokyo Dome match from Misawa! (Funnily enough, the UWFi ran a show at Jingu Stadium in September 1996 which Kawada did work on, facing Takayama so Baba must have given him the OK to do that?)
-There's a website called Quebrada (dot net) which has an AJPW news archive (as well as news archives for other Japanese promotions) going from late 1999 to mid 2001. Some of the links don't seem to work properly so you have to type the address in manually but it's interesting with hindsight seeing a Western fan criticising some of Misawa's booking decisions in AJPW at that time and pointing out how the company was struggling to draw outside of Tokyo. Here's a paragraph the site owner wrote in December of 1999 when the cards had been announced for the then upcoming "New Years Giant Series 00" tour:
"Someone was asking whether '00 Giant Series is going to draw due to the new/different matches. Obviously it's very important for AJ to improve upon the poor (for a major company) business, aside from Tokyo, that they did in 1999. However, that can't happen based on the way they are continuing to 1) roll out matches left and right for no logical reason and 2) book all the guys that have come from other promotions (meaning outsiders and guys like Hase, Kakihara, etc. that were already stars with other Japanese promotions prior to coming to All Japan) except Vader into oblivion. When you look at their lineups, you just have to shake your head. It's the same old problems 1) lack of continiuty 2) only a few guys with a meaningful "role" 3) the same old results 4) new things becoming old immediately because the same guys always win, killing off any potential business the new blood could do. In the end, business will not improve in the foreseeable future because they more new things they try to do on each tour, the less new things are available in the future. Don't get me wrong, doing new things is good, but it has to open new doors that could have a pot of gold behind them rather than slam them in the faces of anyone that could potentially move into their small elite group."
-In the latter part of the video, you mention Tenryu didn't have the chance to win the Triple Crown during his first time round in AJPW. He was actually the second man to hold it, defeating Jumbo on June 5th 1989 before losing it back to him in October that year. Funnily enough, Tenryu's last match in AJPW before leaving for SWS was a Triple Crown match against Jumbo in April 1990 after which Stan Hansen came out and attacked Jumbo to switch the focus away from Tenryu leaving (at least I think I read that somewhere many moons ago).
Keep up the great work!
Man this was a great read, thanks for all the info!!
For your second point, it really isn’t hard to see why Misawa booked NOAH into a corner and led it into a downturn. I can’t exactly remember where I saw this, but apparently Kawada publicly criticised Misawa’s booking at some point and suggested Masanobu Fuchi as booker instead, on the basis that he was the one who assembled the absolute masterpieces of 6 man tag matches between Super Generation Army vs Tsuruta-gun.
Motoko has to be one of the biggest bag fumblers of all time IMAGINE MAKING SOMEONE SICK OF BOOKING THEMSELVES TO GET OVER🤦🏻♀️
It makes one wonder if Triple H and Stephanie haven’t contemplated this in the later 2010s and do their own Exodus with everything Vince has done with his allies in Bruce and Dunn.
Though with everything that came upon the changing of the last few years any POSSIBLE thoughts were likely dashed: Nick Khan’s hiring and later promotion, selling of The Network, Triple H losing control of NXT, Covid, Triple H’s heart issues and forced in-ring retirement, Stephanie’s retirement, Vince’s legal issues and retirement, Stephanie’s return, Triple H and Stephanie taking over, all the rehirings, Vince’s return after several months, Stephanie leaving again, and finally the selling of WWE to UFC
…it’s insane to think all that and quite a bit more has happened in just that ONE company in the span of nearly just 5 years
I've always believed that if Motoko hadn't been so stubborn by clinging onto her husband's philosophy of wrestling, then maybe the NOAH exodus would've never happened and All Japan wouldn't have damn near capitulated the way it did. I'm not saying Misawa was completely faultless, but all he wanted was to start pushing younger talent and help take better care of the wrestlers and Motoko wouldn't listen to anything.
Her bias and the delusion that she knew best was the reason. Nobody in their right mind would reject a totally make sense idea.
we need a video on Misawa from this time frame, from the Heir Apparent, denied his destiny in All Japan. to the Emerald Dynasty that he built brick by brick at the Differ Ariake.
Still blows my mind that All Japan Pro Wrestling and Pro Wrestling NOAH are still in business, they are both in their own way, the Impact Wrestling of Japan, lol. Seriously and not joking, both brands have survived incidents that ended much smaller brands, see the death of David Von Erich and World Class Championship Wrestling as an example. To be frank, I think what occurred to Pride and other Japanese MMA brands in the early 2010's, helped Pro Wrestling in Japan.
Great video. This period of wrestling was crazy to me, as I was just starting to get onto the internet. Learning and loosely following it was such a time. With everything going on with WWF, WCW, and ECW, it lined up perfectly with the madness happening in AJPW. What a time. Curious to see if there's a video made of Keiji Muto's AJPW era. The tape trading/early IWC hated so much of it, but it was easy to transition over to if you were a WWE fan.
This is an awesome video and hearing Toryumon (what would later become Dragon Gate) and Michinoku Pro being mentioned makes me want to see a video about those two fairly obscure promotions. (at the time) Out of curiosity, does anyone know the sort of old school country song playing in the last portion of the video when talking about Makato Baba? It's also really cool seeing Fuchi get the credit he deserves.
Love Toryumon/Dragon Gate! Although I've only seen shows up till late 2006 at this point.
@@Rando1975 It's so damn good, honestly, I fell out of love with it but got back into it thanks to Shun Skywalker.
@@Kaltagstar96 the new big six have me pretty excited to watch DG. Hopefully Japan’s current wrestling recession doesn’t tank them.
My Brother and I went to The Dragon Gate USA Shows in Philadelphia in 2009 and 2010. That's where we first saw Pac, Jon Moxley Brodie Lee and many others some of whom we see in NJPW, AEW and other Professional Wrestling Promotions.
Im glad you said it , Hard Luck Kawada is one of my tippy top favorite wrestlers too ! And yes he was a brilliant sell artist , striker , wrestler and helped produce in ring drama in some of my favorite matches ever ! Legend . Once again thanks for the great content . I truly appreciate it .
One of my favorite videos you've done on Puro! A subject I was hoping someone would cover and I'm glad it was you! Thank you!
Giant Baba set the stage for MANY Japanese talents getting recognized in the states. Especially, with his working relationship with Fritz Von Erich and his Texas territory. The same can be said for the Funk's with Terry & Dory Jr. These two families were VERY influential in the Japanese/American exchange of talent. Japanese Puroresu as a whole in my opinion is probably THE BEST pro wrestling in the world. It is a little bit of amateur wrestling, martial arts, all mixed together. Many of these talents working for NOAH, All Japan, New Japan, etc...Have extensive amateur backgrounds from high school/college. And of course martial arts backgrounds. That's why it's often difficult for gaijin talent to assimilate over there. It's a completely different style of wrestling. Extremely stiff and very competitive. And they have stuck with those roots to this day. Unlike American companies which have swayed more towards entertainment. Which is sad in my candid opinion.
Great story telling. Your docs have left me with some good wrestling bouts I had not known about.
It's a shame that these videos keep getting taken down because I love learning about this era since I never watched it
Hey Kim, love the channel, i was wonder if you ever considered doing a video about World Wrestling All stars? It was a company from Australia. I only remember them because a friend of mine ordered a ppv (from 2002) that had sabu on it. That company seemed very erratic to say the least...... anyways thank you for all the wrestling content. And LONG LIVE MISAWA!!!!
Another amazing video Kim! And I'm glad that my dad introduced me to Giant Baba.
Shout out to the real documentaries. Thank you.
When I tell people that I love pro wrestling, this is the intrigue they'll never understand.
I think there should be a playlist of matches that go along with these videos
Awesome documentary 💯 I'm a big fan of AJPW & Noah and this time of the Exodus and the formation of a new competition has always interested me I hope you keep doing more videos on All Japan during the 2000s 💪
I was really hoping to see you cover this one, what a great way to start the weekend!
Found your channel today and I am 3 documentaries in, absolutely love the channel!!!
Thank you! Please do more documents. Them videos is gold.😀 I love Japanese wrestling. It's great to learn the history on Puroresu
A tremendous video Kim. I enjoy all of your videos but I think this one is the best you've done. Also loved the one about my favorite wrestler of all time Kenta Kobashi:s GHC title reign. I have read a couple of books on this particular subject and this video is a great companion piece. Keep up the good work my man.
Jun Akiyama makes me think of Hangman Page more than Roman Reigns, since the latter's gimmick nearly always had go-away heat as a babyface. I think it is more that the chase for Gold wasn't handled properly, overbooked, which is why it doesn't pay-off once they actually carry a world title. Both Adam Page and Jun Akiyama had tepid runs with a world title because there was no idea where to go once either guy had it.
As late as this is a response I wanted to still bring it up anyways
While I can agree your comparison fits well, I do believe the one with Roman is still applicable
In the case of Page he was acknowledged from the onset to be the initial project, but probably realizing it be to soon had him lose to Jericho and then take the long road to his title win involving numerous storylines to get there
With Roman it became obvious from the start as well he was Vince’s big project made even more so when he kept ALL the SHIELD stuff sans the lyrics for the entrance music once the group splintered
From there he got everything without much to his character being changed from SHIELD Roman to Next Big Face Roman
Akiyama had initial development and interactions with the 4 Pillars and others like Hansen and Vader
Roman had slightly similar with the SHIELD vs Evolution feud
But ultimate he was the one getting major show matches like MitB, Royal Rumble, and fights with long established stars solo (Triple H, Orton, Cena, Bryan, Undertaker, and Brock) and unlike Seth who had heel cheap wins
Or Moxley who got shaky wins or just total loses
Reigns got numerous wins or success in loses
Jun got slotted right in the main event from the word go not to dissimilar to Roman post SHIELD breakup
And to add to your title reign point, most recall Roman’s early wins as either short or bogged down by terrible matches (Mania match with Triple H did him no favors) and even his most prominent and best reign recently as Tribal Chief took MONTHS to really get there since it involved some really bad booking and matches (his title defense against Demon Finn with the constant music, heart restart nonsense, and ridiculous turnbuckle collapse bit)
these are really good. this was a story i thought i pretty much knew already, but the detail and analysis is just a step above anything else
Anyone who worked for Giant Baba said how much INTEGRITY he had as promoter. Its incredible how much respect he garnered.
I am forever greatful to this channel
Man I can’t even begin to thank you for these videos. They’re great, please keep them coming!
Great documentary. Loving the videos Kim
I know next to little or nothing about Japanese wrestling. Especially not the history or backstage goings on. I know a little bit more now. Fantastic video and thank you for the information. Keep up the good work 👍
Ditto. These docs are well-made.
Kawada’s run post split is incredible. His matches against Sasaki, especially the first where Kawada gets the pin, is THE most underrated run in wrestling history
Kawada resented the idea of portraying the role of Misawa’s sidekick and he wants the spotlight and the main event push that Misawa enjoys.
I guarantee i will watch every documentary you post here at least 1 time. And, depending on what it is, share it with at least 5 people i know
Insane to think we're going on almost 25 years and All Japan isn't even in the top 3 let alone 4, it's like a super indie the size of ROH at its mid 2010s days.
It even had to change names as a company and keep the AJPW name as a sort of mask to hide the fact they moved office and priesidents after Muto's own exodus of talent to form Wrestle-1 and finally the recent humiliation of having one of there top heels leave for Noah in the form of Jake Lee who's name and stock has gone drastically up all the way to the upper card.
And Jake Lee is the current GHC Heavyweight Champion for NOAH at the moment too.
@@wwefan11222 yeah they really are putting a lot of stock on him
@@thegunslinger8806 As long as we see him drop the title to someone deserving, I'll be happy.
That was amazing: Thank you for this piece of nostalgia magic.
AJPW of the 90’s is my favorite wrestling era/promotion of all time. Still re watching to this day the matches people upload on YT.
I wish wrestling was still like this but sadly wrestling’s just dead to me.
And I wasn’t aware of all the shenanigans power struggle stuff you mentionned even though I’ve been watching AJPW more than 20 years ago.
Thank you for this fine mini documentary. 🤜🏽💥🤛🏽
Yo Kim. These videos are amazing. I'm learning so much. Thank you! Btw, Misawa forever!
Love your passion and understanding of japanese wrestling. Ur videos are amazing!!!
And thank you for another great wrestling history video man!! Can’t get enough of your stuff!
A very pivotal moment in Puroresu’s history as well as the expansion of the sport in Japan that was now more than just two big time promotions
Always enjoyable. I love seeing a new vid
14:53 Masanobu Fuchi had serious 'Brylcreem Dad in the Late 40s' energy in those days.
He probably had that look as a dude in his 20s, he just seems like Arn Anderson in that he looked 45 at 25.
@@Kaltagstar96 I meant the 1940s.
Just Curious if you have any plans to do a video about the Toryumon Japan split which birthed Dragon Gate?.
Amazing video. Well done
This NEEDS to be a movie.
Thank you for making this! Your content is amazing and I appreciate every video !!
That January 22, 1999 bout between Kawada and Misawa wasn't at the Nippon Budokan. It was at the Osaka Prefectural Gym.
Yeah, sorry about that. A later video will correct it.
@@thewrestlingroad Kawada did get his Triple Crown rematch against Misawa in the summer of 1999 at the Tokyo Nippon Budokan. Misawa of course won.
Your documentaries are amazing! I get super hyped every time I see one drop!
This was a great watch. Thanks so much!
Excellent video it should have millions of views great work👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thank For The Documentary Story Video🙊🤯💞😍💖😁
Tremendous Video love the old school AJPW & Early NOAH content
From what I read back in the day, initially Misawa wasn't interested in having any foreigners in NOAH. I'm guessing influence from NTV persuaded him otherwise.
KIM JUSTICE . Thanks for all this great wrestling information.
Thank you for great videos like these one. I can't wait to see more videos about Mutoh's era AJPW
By far one of my favorite topics you covered
Best Pro Wrestling Videos on TH-cam
I love these videos thank you for sharing the history!!!
Kim... You just got another subscriber. Excellent work brother
In the US at least, Mrs. Baba would have had a strong argument that Misawa breached his fiduciary duty to AJPW by working against it while still president.
I thought the same thing. It's bizarre to me that he remained company president while doing all that. He should have resigned his position and just held onto the book and had matches.
26:51 I KNOW DARN WELL that is KENTA in the red! OMG he was so YOUNGGG!!!
Great video. You should talk about Wrestle-1 next and that exodus.
Thanks for doing this - it’s excellent work!
0:52 Still can’t watch that without cringing, knowing what happened to Misawa. It looked absolutely brutal
Hey Kim! You once had a pretty awesome series running through the entire history of NOAH. Are you planning on bringing that back?
Wonderful documentary. Thank you
I expect that this video be the fist of a saga about the history of NOAH and AJPW since the Giant Baba's death until today.
Amazing documentary
On a side note, I too like Kawada.
I can totally identify with him as a success in life, but often overlooked to the point that each of us was thought of as "The Other Guy".
As for other favorites in Pro Res include Tatsumi Fujinami, Keiji Muto in the 1990s, the other three Pillars, Jumbo, the Funks, and Vader.
The song saying is from The Jackie Chan film Wheels On Meals
Kawada’s overall character arc is this, he refuses to be overshadowed by Misawa and he’ll do whatever it takes to become the ace of All Japan, even if it means whooping Misawa and take everything that he holds dear in his heart.
King's road style ended many careers.
14:56 Johnny Ace (John Laurinaitis) always one of a sad case to me. Very talented wrestler in Japan, But always ended up as a joke in American Wrestling scene both as wrestler and backstage roles. And ended up screwing himself in WWE.
Still wondered why he choose to back to America instead of staying in Japan.
From what’s available on the internet it looks like he left after the ajpw/Noah split. He probably realized ajpw was in trouble, probably also had a list of injuries over the years and then also probably got a sweet deal from WcW before they went belly up to be a behind the scene guy and not have to wrestle. Just my goofball theory though so who knows
que maravilloso contenido, muchas gracias
I’d love you to see you do a documentary about WAR
Love this videos man great work
One of my favourites!
As somebody who was late to Japanese wrestling.
Admittedly, not getting involved and watching regularly until the Ricochete - Osprey match from 2015 that went viral. A few mo mn😮iiths later I watches Omega v Okada 1 and my goodness I was hooked on NJPW.
I fell off around the pandemic. I was so disappointed that Naito finally got another run towards the main title and that it was going to happen during the pandemic and thereby in an empty arena. Just a huge letdown. Naito had 2 majorly dissapointing title wins. Bummer
For better or worse
The death of Giant Baba really changed the shift of Japanese wrestling
good video
London Kentucky loves you guys
Modern booking could take a lesson or two from Baba's philosophy when it comes to vets.
Very few promoters and bookers can say they have built multiple young generations of mega stars. Giant Baba and Vince McMahon can say they did and that makes them the greatest in the history of the business.
I have to ask if anyone knows where I could watch, or if need be buy, Departure
I’ve hardly seen much of early NOAH and REALLY wanna see these first shows
So any suggestions would be great
Its interesting in Japan it seems the top wrestlers have more power then the office while in the United States the office has all the power and the wrestlers could be left in the streets with no say.
It depends on the company really. AEW still has wrestlers as executive VPs after all. In terms of the wrestler contracts itself I don't know if they become actual employees of the company when they sign or are classified as independent contractors like they are in the US. Given the US influence on Japanese business I'd guess it's the later.
I remember jushin thunder liger wrestling for new Japan wrestling
The one thing I didn't like about this video is how it presented New Japan's feuds with other promotions as them killing the other fed. It was them being in the mud so badly that forced them to beg at NJPW for some relevancy as the ultimate desperate measure. UWFi was going under no matter what, it wasn't the NJPW feud that killed it, if anything it bought the company time to try to stay alive.
Same with any other promotion they partnered with, the reason why NJPW won all the feuds is because they were so clearly superior any other result would not have been accepted by the public, either due to failings of the opponents or them not ever being in the same league in the first place. There's a reason why it's always seen as a last resort to do these interpromotional feuds. The modern feud with NOAH the mid 2010s was the exact same, a company in the mud needing help to draw anything practically begging to be helped by the much healthier promotion who had much less to gain from facing opponents seen as inferior by their audience.
Interpromotional feuds with the major promotions are the signs of either one promotion doing terribly (UWFi, AJPW in 2000, NOAH in 2015), simply being much smaller and needing help (WAR) or the entire scene being in the mud (the 2000s general state with all the big matchups, especially from the mid 2000s onwards until Bushiroad bought NJPW basically, and the current pandemic era of general industry wide crisis). As soon as NJPW gets on its feet all these deals are going in the bin too, except the Stardom one since it benefits a sister company and maybe AJPW since they are so below them and might need the help a lot. Actually the NOAH one may continue since it seems to be an ABEMA operation and both of their tv partners are in on it, but reduced to a once a year thing.
Wasn't another component of the locker room turning was Misawa discovering that Baba kept their licensing money and used it as a slush fund for a decade?
Could you please explain cause that sounds interesting?
While Baba was very generous with his gaijin talent, he underpaid his native workers. The highest paid native (Misawa) was making the same money per annum ($250k) as the NJPW Jr. Heavyweight Koji "Tiger Mask III" Kanemoto. The natives were so impoverished that many of them had take out loans from Baba. One of the many reasons Kawada stayed loyal was because he was heavily financially indebted to Baba's estate.
@@blitzerblazinoah6838$250K in the late 90s is actually really good pay for a wrestler, especially considering AJPW's revenues mostly came from ticket sales. That's $456000 in 2024 dollars.
Motoko sure loved her some Johnny Ace
Comparing Tenryu to Jericho is just stupid, Jericho is nowhere near the level Tenryu was at the same age.