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===WCW===
===WCW===
Jushin Liger also made appearances with [[World Championship Wrestling]] (WCW) during the 1990s. He made his debut in late 1991. He feuded with [[Brian Pillman]], whom he would go on to face at [[SuperBrawl#1992|SuperBrawl]] later that year, where Pillman defeated him.<ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/results/wcwppv/superbrawl92.html|title=Superbrawl II |accessdate=2008-05-25|year=2005 |publisher=Online World of Wrestling}} </ref> Liger left WCW in 1993 for NJPW, but he returned in late 1995. He would later face many other opponents such as [[Chris Benoit]], Brian Pillman, [[Dean Malenko]], [[Rey Mysterio, Jr.]], and [[Juventud Guerrera]].
Jushin Liger also made appearances with [[World Championship Wrestling]] (WCW) during the 1990s. He made his debut in late 1991. He feuded with [[Brian Pillman]] (whom he faced on the debut show of [[WCW Nitro]]), whom he would go on to face at [[SuperBrawl#1992|SuperBrawl]] later that year, where Pillman defeated him.<ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.onlineworldofwrestling.com/results/wcwppv/superbrawl92.html|title=Superbrawl II |accessdate=2008-05-25|year=2005 |publisher=Online World of Wrestling}} </ref> Liger left WCW in 1993 for NJPW, but he returned in late 1995. He would later face many other opponents such as [[Chris Benoit]], Brian Pillman, [[Dean Malenko]], [[Rey Mysterio, Jr.]], and [[Juventud Guerrera]].


===Pancrase===
===Pancrase===

Revision as of 08:30, 23 December 2008

Keiichi Yamada
Born (1964-11-30) November 30, 1964 (age 59)
Hiroshima, Hiroshima
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Keiichi Yamada
"Flying" Fuji Yamada
Jushin Liger
Jyushin Liger
Kishin Liger
Jushin Lyger
Billed height175 cm (5 ft 9 in)
Trained byKotetsu Yamamoto
Stu Hart
DebutMarch 3, 1984

Keiichi Yamada (山田恵一, Yamada Keiichi, born November 30, 1964), better known as Jushin Liger (獣神ライガー, Jūshin Raigā) and later, Jushin "Thunder" Liger (獣神サンダーライガー, Jūshin Sandā Raigā) is a Japanese professional wrestler who works primarily for New Japan Pro Wrestling.

Career

Early career

Yamada was an amateur wrestler while studying in high school. He applied to New Japan Pro Wrestling to become a professional wrestler in the early 1980s. He was not accepted because he did not meet the height requirements they had at that time. Yamada was determined not to give up his dream of becoming a professional wrestler, so he left for Mexico and began his training there. By his own account, he was almost starving while studying there, so NJPW officials who were visiting took pity on him and asked him to come back to Japan. While continuing his studies, he had his debut match in December 1984 at the age of 20. He began studying various martial arts styles because he wanted to add something new and different to his wrestling style, which is how he learned his Rolling Koppou Kick.

He left for England in 1986 where he wrestled for All-Star Promotions as "Flying" Fuji Yamada. After returning to Japan, he debuted his Shooting Star Press in 1987, for which he had gotten the idea from reading the manga Fist of the North Star. He left for Canada early 1989, where he wrestled in Stu Hart's Stampede Wrestling under his real name. He also trained under Hart in Hart's legendary "Dungeon." His experiences there led him to refer to Hart as a "very, very tough man." NJPW called him back to Japan, as they needed him for a gimmick based on an extremely popular anime superhero, Jushin Liger, created by celebrated mangaka Go Nagai. NJPW had done this previously with Tiger Mask, which had become a huge success. Yamada was given a superhero-like full body costume & demonic looking mask, resembling the superhero type featured in tokusatsu and anime programs.

New Japan Pro Wrestling

Jushin Liger debuted in New Japan Pro Wrestling on April 24, 1989. In his debut match, he defeated Kuniaki Kobayashi. Afer using the Jushin Liger gimmick the anime progressed, and as the Go Nagai anime progressed, the hero powered up and changed three times. As the hero changed so did Liger. First to Fire Liger then to the character gimmick he goes by today, Jushin Thunder Liger. He quickly became one of NJPW's top Junior Heavyweights, eventually capturing the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Title eleven times among numerous other titles and accolades while wrestling around the world. When appearing without his mask on, Yamada blocks his appearance by covering his face with one hand. Early on, Yamada's style mostly consisted of high flying. Later on, he started adapting more power moves and started focusing more on grappling and telling a story in the ring, part this change was due to fact that Liger had to reduce the stress he was putting on his body after brain tumor surgery.

Liger has won two Super J Cup tournaments – the 1995 and 2000 events.

During 2000, as booker Riki Chōshū decided to de-emphasize the junior heavyweight division (a costly decision that diminished its credibility), Liger wrestled heavyweights without wearing the upper part of his bodysuit or his mask horns.

From 2001-2007, Liger was the leader of the NJPW heel stable Control Terrorism Unit (CTU) along with Hirooki Goto, Minoru Tanaka, Black Tiger IV, Gedo, Jado, Prince Devitt and briefly James Gibson. CTU was disbanded in August 2007, when Liger decided CTU would disband while at the top of NJPW, Liger would then join Masahiro Chono's Legend stable.

On June 28, 2006, Liger was announced as a participant in the 2006 G-1 Climax, the third time he has appeared in the tournament.

WCW

Jushin Liger also made appearances with World Championship Wrestling (WCW) during the 1990s. He made his debut in late 1991. He feuded with Brian Pillman (whom he faced on the debut show of WCW Nitro), whom he would go on to face at SuperBrawl later that year, where Pillman defeated him.[1] Liger left WCW in 1993 for NJPW, but he returned in late 1995. He would later face many other opponents such as Chris Benoit, Brian Pillman, Dean Malenko, Rey Mysterio, Jr., and Juventud Guerrera.

Pancrase

On November 30, 2002, Liger was booked as a replacement for a mixed martial arts match in the Pancrase organization against Minoru Suzuki due to his planned opponent being forced to pull out. In what would be Liger's only Mixed Martial Arts match, (and Suzuki's last non-worked match) he was easily beaten by Suzuki via rear naked choke only 1:48 into the first round. After a failed attempt at a Rolling Koppu Kick, Liger was quickly mounted and hit with Suzuki's ground and pound until the choke was applied, forcing Liger to tap out.

Ring of Honor

On November 5 2004, Liger debuted in ROH, headlining their back-to-back "Weekend of Thunder" shows to huge acclaim. ROH selected Bryan Danielson as Liger's special opponent for that weekend. For Night 1, the two faced each other in a singles match, with Liger winning the highly competitive bout after a super brainbuster.[2]

On November 6, 2004 Night 2 would see a "dream tag-team" match in the main event. Liger chose then-ROH Champion Samoa Joe as his partner out of respect for Joe's accomplishments as ROH World Champion, and Danielson selected Low Ki to negate Joe. Liger again came out on top, pinning Danielson with a Liger Bomb to win the match.[3]

Total Nonstop Action Wrestling

Liger debuted in the American Total Nonstop Action Wrestling promotion on October 23, 2005 as part of their Bound for Glory pay-per-view, losing to Samoa Joe.[4]

He was scheduled to face off against Christopher Daniels at TNA Lockdown 2006 on April 23, 2006. He had been unaware that the match was to be held in a Steel Cage, something in which he had never participated before. When he heard of this he cancelled the match. One of TNA's bookers Scott D'Amore has speculated that he didn't want to participate in the match due to it being in a new environment, fearing it would have hampered his performance. According to D'Amore, Liger had been unhappy with his previous TNA match against Joe which was cut short due to communication problems, and wanted his next TNA match to be better. D'Amore has also disproved the rumor that communication issues between TNA and NJPW had caused the match to be cancelled. Liger was not double booked to two events at the same time, like had been publicly speculated.

Liger was the captain of the New Japan team in the TNA 2006 World X Cup Tournament and defeated Team Canada's Captain Petey Williams at TNA Sacrifice on May 14, 2006 using a Crash Thunder Buster after Williams was distracted by the rest of Team Japan who draped the flag over Williams after Liger's victory. Liger was eliminated in the X-Cup Gauntlet later that night and Team Japan was unable to gain any points in the match as it was won by Team Canada with Team Mexico as runners up.[5]

UWA Hardcore Wrestling

Liger made his Canadian return on May 25 and May 26, 2007 in Mississauga, Ontario and competed in UWA Hardcore Wrestling. On night one he teamed with PUMA and defeated the team of Último Dragón and Kazuchika Okada after Liger hit the Liger bomb on Okada. On night two, Liger teamed with Último Dragón and defeated the Motor City Machine Guns (Alex Shelly and Chris Sabin) after a Liger Bomb / Dragon Sleeper combo.

Kishin Liger

On October 10, 1996, The Great Muta faced off in a match with Liger. As the match progressed, Muta resorted to his underhand tactics that had become his style over the years. He tore at Liger's mask and eventually ripped it off, but Liger kept his face down on the mat. After grabbing a chair outside the ring, Muta entered the ring but before he could hit Liger with it, Liger stood up and revealed his face to be painted pale white and spit mist into Muta's face (another Muta trademark). He tore off his bodysuit and revealed a painted chest, then proceeded to fight more aggressively the rest of the match. Despite losing, the match remains a personal favorite of many Liger and Muta fans.

On July 30, 2006, Liger once again pulled out the "Kishin" gimmick and faced off with rival Bad Boy Hido in New Japan Pro Wrestling. The story was that Hido had cut a piece of Liger's hair and Liger vowed revenge, so he transformed into Kishin Liger. Liger won the match with a brainbuster onto a steel chair.

The gimmick is a variation of The Great Muta gimmick which relies on bloody and evil tactics in a match, using mannerisms and imagery that differ from the person's normal ways. This gimmick also uses many wrestling moves that are regulars in The Great Muta's move set, such as the Asian mist.

In wrestling

  • Finishing and signature moves

Championships and accomplishments

  • Osaka Pro
  • Osaka Pro Tag Team Championship (1 time) – with Takehiro Murahama
  • PWI ranked him # 12 of the 500 best singles wrestlers during the "PWI Years" in 2003.

1Despite winning the championship, the win and reign aren't recognized by World Wrestling Entertainment. No reign with the championship is recognized by the company prior to December 1997.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Superbrawl II". Online World of Wrestling. 2005. Retrieved 2008-05-25.
  2. ^ "Ring of Honor - Weekend of Thunder 1". Online World of Wrestling. 2005. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  3. ^ "Ring of Honor - Weekend of Thunder 2". Online World of Wrestling. 2005. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  4. ^ "TNA PPV Results". Online World of Wrestling. 2005. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  5. ^ "TNA PPV Wrestling Results". Online World of Wrestling. 2006. Retrieved 2007-12-03.
  6. ^ "History of the Light Heavyweight Championship". 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-03. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |month= and |coauthors= (help)

External sources