FMW Women's Championship

FMW Women's Championship
Details
Promotion Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling
Date established November 5, 1990
Date retired September 28, 1997
Other name(s)
WWA World Women's Championship
FMW Independent Women's Championship

The FMW Women's Championship (or the FMW Independent Women's & WWA Women's Championship) was two Japanese women's professional wrestling championships (WWA World Women's Championship and FMW Independent World Women's Championship) contested in the promotion Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling (FMW). During the heyday of FMW, the female wrestlers wrestled in the same types of bloody death matches as the FMW men, and were feared by other Japanese female wrestlers for their toughness and intensity.

Title history

Names

Name Years
WWA World Women's Championship November 5, 1990February 25, 1994
FMW Independent Women's Championship February 25, 1994September 28, 1997
FMW Independent / WWA World Women's Championship February 25, 1994September 28, 1997

Reigns

No: Wrestler: Reigns: Date: Days held: Location: Event: Notes:
1 Combat Toyoda 1 November 5, 1990 143 Tokyo, Japan 1st Anniversary Show Defeated Beastie the Road Warrior to become the first WWA World Women's Champion
2 Megumi Kudo 1 March 28, 1991 142 Tokyo, Japan FMW
3 Combat Toyoda 2 August 17, 1991 58 Tokyo, Japan FMW
4 Miwa Sato 1 October 14, 1991 163 Tokyo, Japan FMW
5 Shark Tsuchiya 1 March 25, 1992 60 Tokyo, Japan FMW
6 Megumi Kudo 2 May 24, 1992 426 Tokyo, Japan FMW
7 Combat Toyoda 3 July 24, 1993 99 Kitakyushu, Japan FMW
8 Crusher Maedomari 1 October 31, 1993 103 Tokyo, Japan FMW
Vacated February 11, 1994 Fukaya, Japan FMW Crusher Maedomari vacated the title due to the creation of a new FMW Independent World Women's Championship and the vacant WWA World Women's Championship would also be decided in the tournament.
9 Megumi Kudo 3 February 25, 1994 128 Tokyo, Japan FMW Defeated Leilani Kai to become the first FMW Independent World Women's Champion and win the vacant WWA World Women's Championship. Both titles were unified and defend it as one and the same lineage continued.
10 Combat Toyoda 4 June 19, 1994 70 Tokyo, Japan FMW
11 Yukie Nabeno 1 August 28, 1994 106 Osaka, Japan Summer Spectacular
Vacated December 12, 1994 Nabeno vacated the titles due to injury.
12 Bad Nurse Nakamura 1 March 30, 1995 36 Yokohama, Japan FMW Defeated Megumi Kudo for the vacant titles.
13 Megumi Kudo 4 May 5, 1995 199 Kawasaki, Japan 6th Anniversary Show
14 Shark Tsuchiya 2 November 20, 1995 20 Fukuoka, Japan FMW
15 Combat Toyoda 5 December 10, 1995 147 Tokyo, Japan FMW
16 Megumi Kudo 5 May 5, 1996 320 Kawasaki, Japan 7th Anniversary Show This was a no ropes exploding barbed wire deathmatch and Combat Toyoda's retirement match.
17 Shark Tsuchiya 3 March 21, 1997 39 Sendai, Miyagi Winning Road tour
18 Megumi Kudo 6 April 29, 1997 45 Yokohama, Japan 8th Anniversary Show This was a no rope 200 volt double hell double barbed wire barricade double landmine crushed glass electrical barbed wire deathmatch and Megumi Kudo's retirement match.
Vacated June 13, 1997 Tokyo, Japan King of Fight tour Megumi Kudo vacated the titles at her retirement ceremony due to retirement.
19 Shark Tsuchiya 4 September 28, 1997 <1 Kawasaki, Japan Fall Spectacular Defeated Aja Kong for vacant titles. This was the final match of the Women's Championship titles and the titles were retired after the match.
Retired September 28, 1997 Kawasaki, Japan Fall Spectacular The titles were retired after the match.

Combined reigns

Rank Wrestler No. of
reigns
Combined days
1 Megumi Kudo61,246
2 Combat Toyoda5517
3 Miwa Sato1163
4 Shark Tsuchiya4119
5 Yukie Nabeno1106
6 Crusher Maedomari1103
7 Bad Nurse Nakamura136
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