FMW 10th Anniversary Show

FMW 10th Anniversary Show: Entertainment Wrestling Special Live
Promotion Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling
Date November 23, 1999
City Yokohama, Japan
Venue Yokohama Arena
Attendance 11,000
Pay-per-view chronology
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Making of a New Legend IV: Day 7
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Making of a New Legend VI: Day 5
FMW Anniversary Show chronology
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FMW 9th Anniversary Show
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FMW 11th Anniversary Show

FMW 10th Anniversary Show: Entertainment Wrestling Special Live was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW). The event took place on November 23, 1999 at the Yokohama Arena in Yokohama, Japan. This was the tenth edition of the company's premier event Anniversary Show, commemorating the tenth anniversary of the company.

In the main event, H defeated "Hayabusa" (Mr. Gannosuke in disguise) with Shawn Michaels as the special guest referee. H and Gannosuke reconciled after the match and ended their rivalry for the first time in FMW and would enjoy a reign as WEW Tag Team Champions shortly after the event. In the event's other high-profile matches, Masato Tanaka defeated Kodo Fuyuki in a loser leaves FMW 13,000 volt electrical thunderbolt cage deathmatch to win the WEW Heavyweight Championship, forcing Fuyuki to leave FMW, Tetsuhiro Kuroda and Hisakatsu Oya retained the WEW Tag Team Championship against ECW World Tag Team Champions Raven and Tommy Dreamer and Kintaro Kanemura retained the WEW Hardcore Championship against Balls Mahoney.

The event is known in the United States as Judgment Day.[1]

Event

Other on-screen personnel
Role: Name:
Commentary team J-Taro Sugisaku
Takashi Saito
Jun Kusanagi

Reception

The 10th Anniversary Show received mixed reviews from critics. Stuart of Puroresu Central wrote "This card was so/so, but the good outweighed the bad, or at least will be remembered more than the bad (which is essentially the same thing). From the Kanemura vs. Balls match onward, everything was decent (the ECW vs FMW tag was borderline) or better", and considered it a good way for Japanese wrestling to "get into the Japanese style without immediately dashing away from the dominant angle-driven style of the WWF and WCW" He appreciated the ladder match, calling it "a good way to start the show, because it was a hot, action-packed match with no resting" but also panned it for not being "the standard of many U.S. ladder matches, despite being fought in the same Americanized way" and gave mixed reviews to the Hardcore Championship match, praising Kanemura with "This match showed how good Kanemura can still be and was a walk in the park for him, because it was hardcore-lite compared to the old school FMW garbage stuff (exploding barbed wire, etc.)" but panned Mahoney's performance and the match itself. He gave mixed reaction to the Tag Team Championship match, in which he praised the defending champions and panned the challengers, with analyzing that the match was not "even that decent, but the champions and the novelty made it watchable". He gave positive reviews to Tanaka/Fuyuki match by stating that the match was "really damn good".[2]

Ryan Byers of 411mania wrote "Though this card wasn’t quite as bad as things would become, it certainly featured several key steps in that direction. As a result, instead of this show being pleasant nostalgia, it was an unfortunate reminder of how a once great company began its death spiral" He appreciated the Hardcore Championship match, with stating that "The two wrestlers paced the match well and the spots built in their intensity to the big finish, which is how you want a hardcore match to play out. In addition to that, I have to give them credit for coming up with some spots involving the car that I had never seen before and have not seen since. Heck, some of them were even safer than many extreme spots, since the automobile glass that they were using on one another is actually designed to break in such a way that it will do as little damage as possible to people. Though I’m at a point in my life during which I’m not going to advocate for any wrestlers slamming each other on hard metal objects or making risky twelve foot dives, if you accept the premise that this sort of match is going to be happening in the world, this was a damn fine example of it." He also praised the WEW World Heavyweight Championship match considering it "interesting" and rated it a 3 out of 4 stars.[1]

Results

No. Results[1][2][3][4][5] Stipulations Times
1 Ricky Fuji, Flying Kid Ichihara and Chocoball Mukai defeated Koji Nakagawa, Jado and Gedo Ladder match for the vacant WEW 6-Man Tag Team Championship 14:54
2 Kaori Nakayama and Emi Motokawa defeated Jazz, Malia Hosaka and Miss Mongol Handicap match 12:59
3 Willie Williams defeated Hido via knockout in the 2nd round Different Style Fight 2:34
4 The Funks (Dory Funk, Jr. and Terry Funk) defeated Naohiko Yamazaki and Yoshinori Sasaki Tag team match 15:13
5 Kintaro Kanemura (c) defeated Balls Mahoney Singles match for the WEW Hardcore Championship 12:34
6 Tetsuhiro Kuroda and Hisakatsu Oya (c) defeated Raven and Tommy Dreamer Tag team match for the WEW World Tag Team Championship 11:13
7 Masato Tanaka defeated Kodo Fuyuki Loser Leaves FMW 13,000 Volt Electrical Thunderbolt Cage Deathmatch for the WEW World Heavyweight Championship 16:14
8 H defeated "Hayabusa" Singles match with Shawn Michaels as the special guest referee 18:21
  • (c) – refers to the champion(s) heading into the match

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ryan Byers (November 3, 2009). "Into the Indies 11.03.09: FMW Judgment Day 1999". 411Mania. Retrieved 2011-11-18.
  2. 1 2 "FMW DirecTV PPV on 11/23/99". Puroresu Central. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  3. "Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling Results: 1999" (in German). Puro Love. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  4. "10th Anniversary Show". Pro Wrestling History. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
  5. "FMW Results (5/23/99 - 5/5/00)". FMW Wrestling. Retrieved 2017-11-18.
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