Kuishinbo Kamen
Kuishinbo Kamen | |
---|---|
Birth name | Akinori Tsukioka |
Born | Mima, Tokushima, Japan | August 19, 1975
Website | Official Twitter |
Professional wrestling career | |
Ring name(s) | Akinori Tsukioka Super Robo K Kuishinbo Kamen |
Billed height | 182 cm (6 ft 0 in) |
Debut | 1999 |
Akinori Tsukioka (月岡 明則, Tsukioka Akinori, born August 19, 1975) is a Japanese professional wrestler better known as Kuishinbo Kamen (くいしんぼう仮面, Kuishinbō Kamen), a masked clown character. Kuishinbo Kamen is Japanese for "Gluttonous Mask". For a while he was forced to give up the Kuishinbo Kamen character, instead he worked as "Super Robo K", a futuristic Robot character, but returned to the Kuishinbo Kamen identity later on.
Professional wrestling career
Tsukioka made his professional wrestling debut in 1999, working under his real name for International Wrestling Association of Japan for the first year of his career. When Tsukioka joined Osaka Pro Wrestling he adopted a masked clown gimmick, the comedic character "Kuishinbo Kamen" who wore a clown suit and even had a hat with yellow pom-poms attached to the mask. He quickly developed a storyline feud with another comedic masked wrestler known as Ebessan. Kamen defeated Ebessan to become the first ever holder of the Osaka Meibutsu Sekaiichi Championship (roughly translated into the "World's Best Osaka Attraction Championship").[1] On June 29, 2002 He became a double champion winning a battle royal to become the Osaka Pro Wrestling Battle Royal Champion).[2] A title he would hold for a month and a half before losing it in another battle royal.[2] February 2, 2003 Kurishinbo Kamen's feud with Ebessan hit its peak as Ebessan defeated Kurishinbo Kamen to win the Osaka Meibutsu Sekaiichi Championship, but more importantly the loss forced Tsukioka to give up the Kurishibo Kamen character.[1] He would return to the ring a week later as ""Super Robo K", a robot gimmick completed with a more mechanical wrestling style. The character change only lasted for a couple of months before Kurishinbo Kamen returned to the ring. He regained the Meibutso Sekaiichi Championship on February 21, 2004 almost a year to the day he lost it.[1] In March 2003 Kurishinbo Kamen and other Osaka Pro Wrestling representatives traveled to the United States of America, where they were part of the 2004 World X-Cup in TNA Wrestling. Kuishinbo Kamen teamed up with rival Ebessan and Nosawa, known as "Team Japan" losing to Chris Sabin, Elix Skipper and Sonjay Dutt who were part of "Team NWA". The group also worked a match for Revolution Pro Wrestling and Pro Wrestling Guerrilla before returning to Japan. Kurishinbo Kamen would hold the Battle Royal and the Meibutsu Sekaiichi several times in subsequent years.[1][2] On June 6, 2010 Kamen teamed up with Ebessan III and Kanjyuro Matsuyama to defeat the team of Atsushi Kotoge, Daisuke Harada and Takoyakida to win the UWA World Trios Championship, holding it for six days before losing it to Tokyo Gurentai (Fujita, Mazada and Nosawa).[3]
In wrestling
- Finishing Moves
- Cancun Tornado[4][5][6] (Diving corkscrew moonsault)[4]
- Signature moves
- Tornado KIX[5] (Second rope springboard moonsault, sometimes to the outside of the ring)[4][6]
- Chocobat[5] (Side headbutt drop, sometimes from an elevated position)
- Kuishinbo Driver[7] (Sitout scoop slam piledriver)
- Arm twist ropewalk backflip arm drag
- Diving crossbody
- Diving moonsault
- Dropkick, sometimes from an elevated position
- Hurricanrana,[6] sometimes while diving[4] or from an elevated position[4][5]
- Shining wizard[5]
- Sitout facebuster
- Small package
- Springboard Tornado DDT
- Superkick
- Managers
- Peckey
Championships and accomplishments
- Osaka Meibutsu Sekaiichi Championship (5 times, first, current)[1]
- Osaka Pro Wrestling Battle Royal Championship (4 times)[2]
- Osaka Pro Wrestling Owarai Championship (2 times)[9]
- UWA World Trios Championship (1 time) - with Ebessan (III) and Kanjyuro Matsuyama[3]
- FM Osaka Cup 1 Day Six Man Tag Tournament (2009) - with Ebessan (III) and Kanjyuro Matsuyama
References
- ^ a b c d e "World's Best Osaka Attraction Title". wrestling-titles.com. July 19, 2010. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
- ^ a b c d "Osaka Pro-Wrestling Battle Royal Title". wrestling-titles.com. April 4, 2014. Retrieved May 3, 2015.
- ^ a b "Universal Wrestling Association World Trios Title". Wrestling-titles.com. December 26, 2010. Retrieved May 1, 2015.
- ^ a b c d e "Kuishinbo Kamen profile". Online World Of Wrestling. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
- ^ a b c d e "Kuishinbo Kamen" (in German). Cagematch. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
- ^ a b c "Kuishinbo Kamen profile". Puroresu Central. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
- ^ "Osaka Pro Wrestling: "Osaka NGK Studio 2 Days 1999"" (in German). Purolove. Retrieved January 13, 2012.
- ^ "Ironman Heavymetalweight Title". Wrestling-titles.com. February 15, 2015. Retrieved May 1, 2015.
- ^ "Osaka Pro-Wrestling Owarai Title". wrestling-titles.com. July 12, 2014. Retrieved May 3, 2015.