Thursday, 22 August 2013

What happens when you've done everything

Saturday, June 29, 2013 

FMW, like ECW, worked on a shock and awe principal that was even more shock and awe than ECW. By the time Atsushi Ohnita had finally (and it took a while by Japanese standards) shuffled off into the sunset, FMW needed something new to compete in a crowded market. The late nineties where a time of rebirth for wrestling world wide. WCW was in its last legs, ECW as at the peak of its popularity before going into its horribly painful for all involved death throes and the WWE was as hot as it had ever been. Ohnita was one of the most bankable stars of the prior era and when he finally called it a day FMW where left with the problem of how to fill that huge void. In reality they couldn't so they tweaked the product to try and find a new audience.

Their idea was interesting to say the least, but in no way original. They took one look at Vince MacMahon's evil company boss figure and said “we can do that”. So in came Kodo Fuyuki and his evil commissioner persona, creating a factional company, two groups vying for new titles the World Entertainment Wrestling belts, having retired the Independent World Brass Knuckles titles (the long time cherished holy grail in FMW). The shift went from stories of honour and toughness to political control. A much harder concept to understand in a Japanese format because Japan really doesn't do story lines. The violence became toned down, not entirely gone, clearly and electrified cage match is no walk in the park but the main event is a pure wrestling match H vs Mr. Gannuske (or fake Hayabusa) in a regular NO DQ bout. Actually this was a throwback to the earlier era, Gannuske and Hayabusa grew up together, trained together and where old friends. In much the same way as Ohnita and Genichiro Tenryu had been 6 years earlier. What really made this match special was the special guest referee Shawn Michaels. Yes THAT Shawn Michaels, show stealer, Icon that could still go (actually he couldn't then he was in the midst of his Undertaker-press-slam-into-the-coffin-bad-backness). This was somewhat of an oddity for him to attend but he is not the only Gaijin by any means. The WEW tag match with Kuroda & Hisakatsu Oya vs. Raven & Tommy Dreamer is a nice slow burner of a brawl. Compared with the returning Funk Brothers vs Yoshinori Sasaki & Naohiko Yamazaki something of a spectacular. The Funk's brought back their classic 70's approach for a nostalgia match of high quality. Kintaro Kanemura vs. Balls Mahoney is another dream match for brawl fans, we even get a classic Kanemura giving a promo-with-no-clothes-on-moment which is always hard not laugh at.

The tone is set by the two opening matches. Ricky Fuji, Flying Kid Ichihara, & Chocoball Mukai vs. Koji Nakagawa, Jado, & Gedo a lot more comedy and brawling, but a lot of fun to watch. If you have never heard of Jado and Gedo by the way you should go look them up, as they are now the bookers for the NJPW division they have been a key component in the success of Fergal Devitt. No less fun is Kaori Nakayama & Emi Motokawa vs. Miss Mongol, Malia Hosaka, & Jazz, the handicap match that has some of the best female workers at the time in heads up battle. In usual FMW style its pretty stiff but relied a lot more on action than in days of Combat Toyoda and Megumi Kudo. Emi Motokawa went on to be the top face of Ice Ribbon. Bad Boy Hido vs. Willie Williams is good for what it is, a worked shoot match, but nothing to write home about.

So what was the story that came out of this card? Well the violence was still there but placed in the background of an attempt to sell a story. The end of Ohnita as a main event wrestler allowed opportunities for Hayabusa, Tanaka and Gannuske to take the lead with the company. The toning down ensured a more stable roster and the higher production values developed a sense of style. The upshot was a much more watchable product from the general publics point of view, but gone was the spectacle. The move towards entertainment over violence lost FMW its core audience and its biggest supporter Ohnita. Though having a healthy roster was vital for long term survival, the company couldn't ride out the loss of revenue to move back up to bigger things and it slowly faded away. In 2001 Hayabusa slipped while performing a springboard thus breaking his neck and ending his career. Shoichi Arai then owner of FMW was 3 million dollars in debt to the banks and another million in debt to the Yakuza (sadly the main money source for a lot of Japanese wrestling promotions) he declared bankruptcy, went into hiding and attempted to write a book before finally committing suicide so his family could pay back the Yakuza with the insurance money. They are still paying it back.

A truly sad end to promotion that burned brightly for years but fizzled out unceremoniously. Enjoy the show.


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