Manami Toyota

Manami Toyota
Manami Toyota
Ring name(s) Manami Toyota
Billed height 1.68 m (5 ft 6 in)
Billed weight 68 kg (150 lb)
Born March 2, 1971 (1971-03-02) (age 40)
Masuda, Shimane, Japan
Trained by Jaguar Yokota
Debut August 5, 1987

Manami Toyota (豊田 真奈美 Toyota Manami?, born March 2, 1971) is a professional wrestler best known for her work with the All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) wrestling promotion. Following AJW's closure she has continued to work in other joshi promotions such as GAEA and NEO. Toyota is a member of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame.

Contents

Career

Manami Toyota made her professional wrestling debut on August 5, 1987, at the age of 16, in a singles match against Sachiko Nakamura.[1] Her big break came in her second year, on the first Wrestlemarinpiad show from Yokohama Arena, on May 6, 1989. Teamed with Mima Shimoda as the Tokyo Sweethearts, she defeated Etsuko Mita and Toshiyo Yamada in a match that nearly stole the card from the more established veterans.[1] The bout had all the basic ingredients that made Toyota a star, including flashy moves, fast and frequent tags, double-team moves, and a long series of dramatic near falls. When the bout was released as part of a four-hour commercial tape, Toyota became recognized as a wrestler to watch.

Toyota won her first title on November 18, 1989, when she defeated Mika Takahashi for the AJW Championship. She defended the title three times, including one defense against her future rival Kyoko Inoue (on August 1, 1990), before vacating it on September 1. The following month (October 7 in Tokyo) she challenged Bison Kimura for the All Pacific Championship and emerged victorious. However, she only managed to defend the title once before losing to Suzuka Minami on March 17, 1991.

Parallel to this success ran Toyota’s feud with future tag-team partner Toshiyo Yamada. Initially, following Tokyo Sweethearts' success, the AJW braintrust felt they could well be the new Beauty Pair or Crush Gals. However, Toyota's real chemistry came not with Shimoda but with Yamada, whose style was unlike Toyota's and provided more of a contrast. Yamada was a slightly built, short-haired, kicking specialist, who idolized both Chigusa Nagayo and Akira Maeda. Unlike other wrestlers who rely on kicks and submissions, Yamada could also work the rapid-paced matches and was accomplished at building to near-falls with repeated kick-outs at the last possible moment. To begin with, however, Toyota and Yamada were opponents rather than partners. Between 1989 and 1991 they wrestled many times. At the start of 1992, the two won their first tag team championship when they defeated KAORU and Lady Apache in Tokyo on January 19 for the UWA Women's World Tag Team Championship.

Their singles feud was not yet over, however, and it reached a climax on August 15, 1992 in a Hair vs. Hair match.[1] The bout was a dramatic one, not least due to what occurred after the match was over. Toyota, even though she had won the match, did not want Yamada to get her head shaved, and had to be forcefully restrained by four prelim girls, who eventually forced her back to the mat. In respect of the match conditions, Yamada wanted her head shaved and went ahead with the stipulation. Soon after this match the two stars once again teamed up to win their first WWWA World Tag Team Championship in March 1992, defeating Jungle Jack (Aja Kong and Bison Kimura) in Tokyo. On November 26, at AJW’s Dreamrush show Toyota and Yamada defended their WWWA Tag Team titles against Dynamite Kansai and Mayumi Ozaki in a 2/3 Falls match, which was rated 5 Stars by Dave Meltzer of the Wrestling Observer Newsletter.

In April of that year, Toyota furthered her singles career by defeating rival Kyoko Inoue on April 25 in Yokohama for the IWA Singles Championship. Toyota defended that title eight times over the course of three years, before losing it to Reggie Bennett on May 15, 1995. It was at around this time that Toyota's talent was being compared to most male competitors, as one of the best wrestlers in the world.

At Dreamslam II, on April 11, 1993 Toyota and Yamada fought a rematch against JWP Project's Kansai and Ozaki in yet another highly-rated two of three falls encounter. This time, however, Toyota and Yamada were on the losing side, and Kansai and Ozaki got their revenge. The feud concluded at AJW’s St. Battle Final event, on December 6, 1993, where Toyota and Yamada regained their tag titles.

On August 24, 1994 Toyota once again squared off against Kyoko Inoue and defeated her to unify the IWA and All Pacific Singles Championships. Toyota’s run with the two titles was not to last long. On October 9, Inoue gained a measure of revenge against Toyota, as Kyoko and her partner Takako Inoue (no relation) won the WWWA Tag Team Championship from Toyota and Yamada. Toyota then vacated her All Pacific Championship, prior to her first WWWA Heavyweight Championship match against the monstrous Aja Kong at AJW’s Queendom III show, on March 26, 1995. The match saw Toyota reach the summit of AJW when she won and became the 39th WWWA Champion.[1]

On May 7, Toyota defended her crown against arch-rival Kyoko Inoue at the Korakuen Hall, where the two fought to a 60 minute time limit draw.[1] Despite piledrivers on the floor, German suplexes off the top rope, and multiple finishers, neither combatant was able to secure outright victory. Nonetheless, Toyota retained, and the match was voted Match of the Year for 1995 in the Wrestling Observer Newsletter. Manami Toyota is also the only woman to have competed in 6 matches that were given a 5-Star rating by the Wrestling Observer.

The following month, Toyota lost the WWWA Championship to former champion Aja Kong, on June 27. Toyota soon recovered from the loss. In 1995, she won the AJW Grand Prix tournament, securing her position as the number one contender for the WWWA Championship. Before she received her title opportunity, she faced Akira Hokuto at AJW's Destiny show on September 2, 1995. On December 4, she finally received her title shot and defeated then-champion Dynamite Kansai to become a two-time world champion.

Over the next 12 months, Toyota made three successful defenses of her WWWA title. In December 1996 she came up against long term rival Kyoko Inoue and lost in a match that saw the All Pacific and IWA Women's World titles unified with the WWWA Title.

On November 28, 1998, Toyota faced the legendary Chigusa Nagayo in a one-time-only legends bout that saw arguably the two best female wrestlers ever go at it. Nagayo came out victorious in a 15-minute match.

Toyota was brought in by Aja Kong to Chigusa Nagayo's GAEA Japan wrestling group. She feuded with her old partner Toshiyo Yamada, as well as Dynamite Kansai. She competed there from 2002 to 2004 before moving on.

Toyota put her wrestler career on hiatus after her August 2007 Tribute Show, where she wrestled in every match. She returned to action in the following year. On a wrestling observer poll taken on March 20, 2009, Toyota was voted as the greatest female wrestler of all time, garnering a whopping 31% of the voting.

Toyota is now currently wrestling for the OZ Academy promotion led by Ozaki.

Toyota in Chikara in April 2011.

On July 25, 2010, it was announced that Toyota would make her first wrestling appearance in the United States, wrestling for the Chikara promotion in September.[2] On September 18, 2010, in Baltimore, Maryland, Toyota defeated Daizee Haze in her first match on American soil.[3] The following day in Brooklyn, New York, Toyota and Mike Quackenbush defeated the Bruderschaft des Kreuzes (Claudio Castagnoli and Sara Del Rey) in a tag team match.[3][4] On February 10, 2011, Chikara announced that Toyota would be returning to the promotion in April to take part in the 2011 King of Trios tournament, where she would team up with Jigsaw and Mike Quackenbush.[5][6] On April 15, Toyota, Jigsaw and Quackenbush defeated Amazing Red, Joel Maximo and Wil Maximo in their first round match in the 2011 King of Trios.[7] The following day, Toyota, Jigsaw and Quackenbush were eliminated from the tournament by Team Michinoku Pro (Dick Togo, Great Sasuke and Jinsei Shinzaki).[8] On April 17, the final day of the tournament, Toyota defeated Madison Eagles in a singles match.[3] On August 10 Chikara posted a video on the official Chikara YouTube page promoting what appeared to be Toyota's last match in Chikara. The video promoted her as the "Queen of Joshi" before it was abruptly interrupted by Aja Kong. Aja stated she would come to Chikara in December to prove she was the best Joshi wrestler in world and would more likely face Toyota for that title.[9]

In wrestling

Championships and accomplishments

  • Diva Dirt
  • Diva Dirt Legacy Award (2011)[10]
  • JWP Project
    • JWP Openweight Division Champion (1 time)
    • JWP Tag Team Championship (1 time) - with Kaoru Ito
  • OZ Academy
    • OZ Academy Openweight Championship (1 time)
    • OZ Academy Tag Team Championship (2 times) - with KAORU
  • Wrestling Observer Newsletter
    • 5 Star Match (1992) vs Kyoko Inoue on May 18
    • 5 Star Match (1992) vs. Toshiyo Yamada on August 15
    • 5 Star Match (1992) with Toshiyo Yamada vs. Dynamite Kansai & Mayumi Ozaki on November 26
    • 5 Star Match (1993) with Toshiyo Yamada vs. Dynamite Kansai & Mayumi Ozaki on April 11
    • 5 Star Match (1993) with Toshiyo Yamada vs. Dynamite Kansai & Mayumi Ozaki on December 6
    • 5 Star Match (1994) vs. Kyoko Inoue on August 24
    • 5 Star Match (1994) vs. Aja Kong on November 20
    • 5 Star Match (1995) vs. Kyoko Inoue on May 7
    • 5 Star Match (1995) with Sakie Hasegawa vs. Kyoko Inoue & Takako Inoue on August 30
    • 5 Star Match (1995) vs. Akira Hokuto on September 2
    • Match of the Year (1993) with Toshiyo Yamada vs. Dynamite Kansai and Mayumi Ozaki
    • Match of the Year (1995) vs. Kyoko Inoue on May 7, Tokyo, Japan
    • Most Outstanding Wrestler (1995)
    • Wrestling Observer Newsletter Hall of Fame (Class of 2002)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e John Molinaro, The Top 100 Pro Wrestlers of All Time, (Winding Stair Press: 2002), p. 208.
  2. ^ Lansdell, Chris (2010-07-25). "Joshi Legend Manami Toyota to Make US Debut". 411Mania. http://www.411mania.com/wrestling/news/146865/Joshi-Legend-Manami-Toyota-to-Make-US-Debut.htm. Retrieved 2010-07-26. 
  3. ^ a b c d "Chikara results". Chikara. http://www.chikarapro.com/results.shtml. Retrieved 2010-09-19. 
  4. ^ a b Cambo, Rick (2010-10-09). "Latest Chikara DVD review including Manami Toyota appearign". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. http://www.f4wonline.com/content/view/17865/. Retrieved 2010-10-10. 
  5. ^ "King of Trios 2011 – April 15 – 16 – 17, 2011 – Philadelphia, PA". Chikara. http://www.chikarapro.com/king-of-trios.php. Retrieved 2011-02-10. 
  6. ^ Martin, Adam (2011-02-10). "Indy News #3: CHIKARA King of Trios and KSWA". WrestleView. http://www.wrestleview.com/viewnews.php?id=1297363121. Retrieved 2011-02-10. 
  7. ^ Radican, Sean (2011-05-04). "Radican's Chikara KoT Night 1 DVD Review 4/15 - Team Michinoku Pro vs. Team 1-2-3 Kid, Quackenbush & Toyota & Jigsaw vs. SAT's". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/DVDs_-_VGames_-_Books_25/article_49808.shtml. Retrieved 2011-05-14. 
  8. ^ Radican, Sean (2011-05-13). "Radican's Chikara DVD review series - "King of Trios 2011 Night 2" 4/16: F.I.S.T. vs. Osaka Pro, RDV tournament, Quackenbush & Toyota & Jigsaw vs. Michinoku Pro". Pro Wrestling Torch. http://pwtorch.com/artman2/publish/DVDs_-_VGames_-_Books_25/article_50050.shtml. Retrieved 2011-05-14. 
  9. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ96ZGk2ywI&lc=TxvSVQbtK05LXRwFHG-l_b6q-NwGWnA5PSrZIBB-oHA&feature=inbox
  10. ^ "Diva Dirt to Honor Manami Toyota with 2011 Diva Dirt Legacy Award". http://www.diva-dirt.com/2011/10/03/diva-dirt-legacy-award-2011-manami-toyota/. Retrieved 2011-03-10. 

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