Riho

Riho Hime (里歩, Hime Riho, born June 4, 1997)[2][3][4] is a Japanese professional wrestler and idol, better known by the ring name Riho. She currently appears for All Elite Wrestling (AEW), where she was the inaugural AEW Women's World Champion, and also works freelance for independent promotions such as World Wonder Ring Stardom, where she is the High Speed Champion in her first reign.

Riho
Riho in November 2015
Birth nameRiho Hime[1]
Born (1997-06-04) June 4, 1997[2][3][4]
Shinagawa, Tokyo[2][3][4]
Professional wrestling career
Ring name(s)Black Cherry (#1)[5]
Lee Ho[6]
Riho
Riho-hime[7]
Billed height1.52 m (5 ft 0 in)[2][3]
Billed weight42.1 kg (93 lb)[3][4][8]
Billed fromShinagawa City, Japan[9]
Trained byEmi Sakura[3]
DebutMay 29, 2006[2][3][4]

She was trained by Emi Sakura and debuted for her Ice Ribbon promotion in May 2006, at the age of nine. She would work for the promotion for the next six years, becoming its first Triple Crown Champion, having won the ICE×60 Championship, the International Ribbon Tag Team Championship and the Triangle Ribbon Championship once each. She also became a DDT Jiyugaoka Six-Person Tag Team, DDT Nihonkai Six-Man Tag Team and UWA World Trios Champion, unifying the three titles in July 2010, teaming with The Great Kojika and Mr. #6. Riho left Ice Ribbon in September 2012 to join Gatoh Move Pro Wrestling, a new promotion founded by Emi Sakura, who had left Ice Ribbon the previous January. In November 2014, Riho won the IWA Triple Crown Championship.

Professional wrestling career

Ice Ribbon (2006–2012)

In 2006, when Riho was only nine years old and still in elementary school, she and her older sister Seina began training professional wrestling under Emi Sakura at her Ice Ribbon dojo.[4] She made her debut in an exhibition match against Nanae Takahashi on May 29, 2006 in Shinagawa, Tokyo.[3][4] On July 25, Riho made her debut for Ice Ribbon at the promotion's third ever event, defeating Makoto.[10] Riho's first year in professional wrestling consisted mainly of matches with Emi Sakura, Hikari Minami and Seina.[11][12] In March 2008, Riho and Seina faced each other in a four match series, which Riho won 3–1.[13][14][15][16]

On October 24, 2008, Riho won her first professional wrestling championship, when she teamed with Yuki Sato to defeat Chounko and Masako Takanashi for the International Ribbon Tag Team Championship.[17] On December 23, Riho was entered into a tournament to determine the inaugural ICE×60 Champion, but was eliminated in the semifinals by Seina, who would go on to become the champion.[18] After successfully defending the International Ribbon Tag Team Championship against Emi Sakura and Ribbon Takanashi, Riho and Sato vacated the title, after Riho fractured her right leg on March 31, 2009.[19] For most of 2009, Riho was involved in a storyline rivalry with Chii Tomiya, which eventually led to the two forming the tag team Miniature Dachs in November.[20][21][22][23] On November 28, 2009, Riho defeated Nanae Takahashi and Tsukasa Fujimoto to become the inaugural Triangle Ribbon Champion.[24] After one successful title defense, Riho lost the title to Miyako Matsumoto on March 22, 2010.[25][26] However, just twelve days later, Riho came back to defeat Matsumoto for the ICE×60 Championship, the promotion's top title.[27] In the process, Riho also became Ice Ribbon's first Triple Crown Champion.[4] During the post-match celebration, Riho nominated her trainer Emi Sakura as her first challenger for the belt.[28] On May 3 at Golden Ribbon, Riho became the youngest person to ever main event a show in Korakuen Hall,[4] when she lost the ICE×60 Championship to Sakura in her first defense, ending her title reign at just 30 days.[29]

Riho in February 2010

The following month, Riho began making appearances for DDT Pro-Wrestling (DDT). On June 13, she teamed with Kenny Omega and Mr. #6 to defeat Mr. Strawberry, Muscle Sakai and O.K. Revolution for the Nihonkai Six-Man Tag Team Championship.[30] On July 20, Omega left the championship team, after which the title was declared vacant, before Riho, Mr. #6 and The Great Kojika were announced as the new champions on July 24.[31] The following day, Riho, The Great Kojika and Mr. #6 defeated Hikaru Sato, Keisuke Ishii and Yoshihiko, and Antonio Honda, Kudo and Yasu Urano in a three-way match to retain the Nihonkai Six-Man Tag Team Championship and win the Jiyugaoka Six-Person Tag Team and UWA World Trios Championships, unifying the three titles in the process.[32] After defending the Trios Triple Crown Championship against Jaki Numazawa, Jun Kasai and Miyako Matsumoto at an Ice Ribbon event on September 23, Riho, The Great Kojika and Mr. #6 lost the title to Hikaru Sato, Michael Nakazawa and Tomomitsu Matsunaga back in DDT on November 3.[33][34] In late 2010 and early 2011, Riho also made appearances for Union Pro Wrestling, where she performed under a mask and the character of Black Cherry, a storyline nemesis of Cherry.[5] The storyline also came to include Black Cherry #2 and Black Cherry #3, portrayed by Ice Ribbon wrestlers Hikari Minami and Emi Sakura, respectively.[5][35][36]

In January 2011, Riho came together with Ice Ribbon's younger wrestlers, including former associates Chii Tomiya and Hikari Minami, to form the Heisei YTR (Young Traditional Revolution) stable, under the leadership of Makoto.[37] On February 6, Riho and Makoto made it to the finals of the Ike! Ike! Ima, Ike! Ribbon Tag Tournament, before being defeated by Muscle Venus (Hikaru Shida and Tsukasa Fujimoto) in a match that was also contested for the International Ribbon Tag Team Championship.[38] On March 31, Riho made her debut for Smash at Smash.15, where she teamed with Hikari Minami and Tsukushi to defeat Emi Sakura, Makoto and Mochi Miyagi in a six-woman tag team match, scoring the deciding pinfall over Miyagi.[39] The following month, Riho and Minami began producing their own events under the banner of "Teens", which would focus on spotlighting Ice Ribbon's younger wrestlers.[40] In August, the alliance between Riho and Makoto was broken, when Makoto announced that she would be leaving Ice Ribbon for Smash.[41][42] On August 11, Riho interrupted a Smash press conference, where the transfer was made official, by attacking Smash promoter Tajiri and challenging him to a match.[43][44] The match took place on August 21, during Makoto's final night in Ice Ribbon, and saw Tajiri pick up the win.[45][46] On December 25 at RibbonMania 2011, Seina returned to Ice Ribbon, after a two-year hiatus, to wrestle her retirement match against her Riho. Riho won the match in eight minutes and afterwards refereed a three-minute match, where Seina was defeated by her longtime friend Hikari Minami.[47][48]

In early 2012, Riho began teaming regularly with Hikari Minami, after the latter brought back the Teens concept, producing Teens4 on March 3.[49][50][51] On April 15 at Teens5, Riho won a tournament to earn the right to book herself a match for Teens6.[52] On May 24, Riho made her debut for Wrestling New Classic (WNC), the follow-up promotion to Smash, when she replaced an injured Mio Shirai in a tag team match, where she and Makoto were defeated by Kana and Syuri.[53][54] On June 16 at Teens6, Riho was defeated by World Wonder Ring Stardom representative Nanae Takahashi in the match she was allowed to choose herself.[55][56][57] On September 1, Riho announced that she was quitting Ice Ribbon after the September 23 Korakuen Hall event to reunite with Emi Sakura, who had left the promotion in the beginning of the year.[58][59] On September 17, Riho wrestled her final match at the Ice Ribbon Dojo in Saitama, teaming with her hand-picked partner Tsukasa Fujimoto in a tag team match, where they defeated Hiroyo Matsumoto and Hamuko Hoshi, with Riho pinning Hoshi for the win.[60][61] On September 23 at Ribbon no Kishitachi 2012, Riho was defeated by Aoi Kizuki in her Ice Ribbon farewell match.[62][63][64]

Gatoh Move Pro Wrestling (2012–2019)

On September 23, 2012, Riho officially joined Emi Sakura's Bangkok, Thailand-based Gatoh Move Pro Wrestling promotion.[65][66] Riho made her in-ring debut for Gatoh Move on October 7 in Shinjuku, Tokyo, wrestling Emi Sakura to a ten-minute time limit draw.[67] As part of her transfer to Gatoh Move, it was announced that Riho would be changing her ring name. On November 4, Riho changed her ring name from hiragana "りほ" to kanji "里歩", another way of writing her old ring name.[3] She then went on to lose to Emi Sakura in a main event singles match.[68] In January 2013, Riho took a temporary break from Gatoh Move to concentrate on her high school entrance exam.[69] On May 4, Riho and Antonio Honda first defeated Choun Shiryu and Hiroyo Matsumoto in the semifinals and then Emi Sakura and Hikaru Sato in the finals to win the Go Go! Green Curry Khob Khun Cup mixed tag team tournament.[70] From December 22 to 23, Riho and Emi Sakura worked two Wrestle-1 events, wrestling singles matches against each other; Riho won the first and Sakura the second.[71][72] On August 9, 2014, Riho defeated Sakura in the finals to win the Gatonun Climax one-day tournament.[73] On November 2, Riho defeated Sakura to win the IWA Triple Crown Championship, after which she announced she was entering the idol business.[74] Riho made her first successful title defense on December 27, defeating Sakura in a rematch.[75] Her second title defense took place on March 26, 2015, when she defeated Reina Joshi Puroresu's Makoto.[76] On August 13, Riho main evented Gatoh Move's first ever Korakuen Hall show, successfully defending the IWA Triple Crown Championship against "Kotori".[77] On September 21, Riho lost the title to male wrestler DJ Nira in her fifth defense.[78] On June 22, 2016, Gatoh Move held Riho's tenth anniversary event, which saw her defeat Kaori Yoneyama in the main event to regain the IWA Triple Crown Championship.[79] She lost the title to Makoto on November 19.[80] On December 24, Riho and "Kotori" defeated Aoi Kizuki and Sayaka Obihiro to win the Asia Dream Tag Team Championship.[81] They lost the title to Emi Sakura and Masahiro Takanashi in their second defense on March 28, 2017.[82] The following May, Riho took part in Pro-Wrestling: EVE events in the United Kingdom.[83]

On September 22, 2017, Riho defeated "Kotori" in the finals of a tournament to become the inaugural Super Asia Champion.[84][85] She made her first successful title defense on November 7 against Emi Sakura and afterwards announced she was going on an overseas tour.[86] On March 31, 2018, she made her second successful defense of the Super Asia Championship vs Saki. Her third defense came against Jibzy in Bangkok, Thailand on May 12. Her next defense in Japan would be against Aoi Kizuki on July 28. A few weeks later she defended against Makoto in China, there was some controversy after the end of the match when Makoto complained that she kicked out before the count of three. On July 2, 2019, Riho was defeated by Emi Sakura in which after the match was over was given a farewell from Gatoh Move.[87]

All Elite Wrestling (2019–present)

On May 25, 2019, Riho made her debut for All Elite Wrestling (AEW), competing in the six women tag-team match at AEW Double or Nothing. She participated and won a three way match at Fyter Fest on June 29, 2019. On August 31 at All Out, Riho defeated Hikaru Shida, advancing to face Nyla Rose on the October 2 episode of All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite to crown the inaugural AEW Women's Champion. Riho would defeat Nyla Rose to win the championship on the October 2 edition of AEW Dynamite to become the first ever AEW Women’s Champion.[88] Riho made successful title defences against Britt Baker on Dynamite, her mentor Emi Sakura at AEW Full Gear, in a fatal four-way match against Britt Baker, Hikaru Shida & Nyla Rose on Dynamite and Riho successfully defended the title in a match against Kris Statlander on the January 8, 2020 edition of Dynamite due to interference from the Nightmare Collective (Awesome Kong, Brandi Rhodes, Dr. Luther, and Mel) against Statlander, which caused Britt Baker, Big Swole and Hikaru Shida to fend off against the stable.[89] On the 12 February episode of All Elite Wrestling, Riho lost the AEW Women's Championship to Nyla Rose, ending her reign at 133 days.

World Wonder Ring Stardom (2019–present)

On July 24, 2019, Riho made a surprise appearance on World Wonder Ring Stardom, announcing that she will wrestle for the company starting August.[90] Riho's first match with Stardom occurred on August 10 where in a three-way Match she defeated Death Yama-san and Starlight Kid to win the High Speed Championship for the first time.[91]

Championships and accomplishments

References

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