Nobuhiko Takada

Nobuhiko Takada
Nobuhiko Takada
Born April 12, 1962 (1962-04-12) (age 49)
Isogo-ku, Yokohama
Nationality Japanese
Height 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight 95 kg (209.4 lb; 15.0 st)
Style Puroresu
Team Takada Dojo
Years active 1997 - 2002 (MMA)
Mixed martial arts record
Total 10
Wins 2
By submission 2
Losses 6
By knockout 1
By submission 4
By decision 1
Draws 2
Other information
Mixed martial arts record from Sherdog

Nobuhiko Takada (Japanese: 髙田延彦, born April 12, 1962) is a Japanese mixed martial arts fighter and professional wrestler. He is best known for helping to popularize shoot-style professional wrestling, as one of the biggest stars of the Universal Wrestling Federation and Union of Wrestling Force International in the '80s and '90s. He has also competed for PRIDE Fighting Championships and New Japan Pro Wrestling. Presently, he is the owner of the HUSTLE Wrestling Organization.

Contents

Early Years: New Japan, UWF, and Newborn UWF

Nobuhiko Takada made his professional wrestling debut in 1981 against Norio Honaga, for New Japan Pro Wrestling, where he started his career as a Junior Heavyweight. He left NJPW in 1984, along with Rusher Kimura, Akira Maeda, Ryuma Go, Mach Hayato, and Gran Hamada, to form the original Universal Wrestling Federation.

The original UWF dissolved in 1986. Takada and Akira Maeda returned to NJPW and formed a UWF stable. Only a few months later, Takada defeated Shiro Koshinaka to capture the IWGP Junior Heavyweight Championship, which he held for four months. In 1987, Takada moved to the Heavyweight ranks. Along with Akira Maeda, he won the IWGP Tag Team Championship from rival, Koshinaka & Keiji Mutoh. He left NJPW in 1988 to form the second incarnation of the Universal Wrestling Federation called Newborn UWF, becoming one of its top stars.

Leader of the UWFI Boom

In December 1990, Newborn UWF closed its doors. Takada formed the Union of Wrestling Force International, using former UWF wrestlers, while Maeda formed Fighting Network RINGS, and Fujiwara formed Pro Wrestling Fujiwara Gumi. As the top star of the UWFI, Takada had feuds with Gary Albright and Super Vader. In 1992, Takada was awarded an old NWA World Heavyweight Title belt by Lou Thesz, after defeating Albright, and was proclaimed the "Real Pro-Wrestling World Heavyweight Champion". He defended the title until Thesz withdrew the belt in 1995, losing the Title once, to Super Vader. The high point of his reign came on December 5, 1993, when he defeated Super Vader before 46,168 fans at Tokyo's Meiji-Jingu Stadium.

Return to New Japan

In 1995, Takada returned to NJPW as the key figure in the landmark New Japan vs UWFI program. On October 9, 1995, Takada's match against IWGP Champion, Keiji Mutoh, drew 67,000 fans to the Tokyo Dome, drawing the largest crowd and gate in Japanese Wrestling history, at the time. Three months later, Takada defeated Mutoh in a rematch, before 64,000 fans, to capture the IWGP Heavyweight Championship, becoming the only wrestler to hold all three major New Japan Titles. Takada dropped the Title to Shinya Hashimoto on April 29, 1996, drawing a crowd of 65,000 and a gate of $5.7 million. When it was all said and done, the New Japan vs UWFI was the biggest moneymaking feud in Japanese pro-wrestling history.

Transition to MMA

In December 1996, the UWFI folded after the failure of the UWFI-WAR feud. Takada entered the world of mixed martial arts by joining PRIDE Fighting Championships.

Though Takada's submission wrestling skills were never doubted either by the Japanese public or the matchmakers, it was his conditioning that would make the essential difference. Takada, being in his 30s at the time of his debut and in less than perfect conditioning, owing to the grueling Japanese pro wrestling circuit, posed little challenge for the experienced, well conditioned mixed martial arts fighters.

Nobuhiko Takada's debut in MMA was against Rickson Gracie, which ended in Gracie winning via armbar. Takada would then go on to finish kickboxer Kyle Sturgeon by a heel hook at PRIDE 3 in Sturgeon's first and last MMA match.[1] Takada wanted a rematch with Rickson Gracie, to which Gracie agreed, saying that "I feel Takada is a warrior and deserves the chance to try and redeem himself".[2] The match however, ended by Takada losing via armbar in a match that lasted 9 minutes and 30 seconds.

Takada fought his next match at PRIDE 5, against Mark Coleman. Though thought to be the much better fighter, Coleman was caught by a heel hook from Takada and submitted. Regarding his performance against Takada, Coleman said in an interview, "It was what it was. I needed to support my family. They guaranteed me another fight after that and I needed that security. It was what it was. I'm going to leave it at that."[3]

Takada was then pitted against Mark Kerr, a freestyle wrestler with similar ground and pound fighting style as Mark Coleman. However, Kerr was able to slip on a submission hold and make Takada tap out in just over 3 minutes at PRIDE 6. Then at PRIDE 7 he beat Alexander Otsuka by a TKO when he put him in a rear naked choke and passed out and the referee stopped the fight (the fight was removed from the Pride 7 DVD).

Takada competed in PRIDE's Grand Prix 2000 opening round. He was pitted against Royce Gracie - the match went the distance and to a decision. The Brazilian master could neither control nor submit Takada in the assigned 15-minute time limit. However, the judges ruled in favor of Gracie and he advanced to the next round. Takada's next MMA event participation was in PRIDE 11, where he lost to a young Igor Vovchanchyn via submission (strikes). Nobuhiko Takada would then go on to draw the likes of Mike Bernardo and Mirko Filipović before entering his final match against former student, Kiyoshi Tamura (Tamura won by a KO).

Mixed martial arts record

Result Record Opponent Method Event Date Round Time Location Notes
xLoss 2-6-2 Japan Kiyoshi Tamura KO (punch) PRIDE 23 02002-11-24 November 24, 2002 1 1:01 Tokyo, Japan
vDraw 2-5-2 South Africa Mike Bernardo Decision (unanimous) Inoki Bom-Ba-Ye 2001 02001-12-31 December 31, 2001 3 3:00 Saitama, Japan
vDraw 2-5-1 Croatia Mirko Filipović Decision (unanimous) PRIDE 17 02001-11-03 November 3, 2001 4 5:00 Tokyo, Japan
xLoss 2-5 Ukraine Igor Vovchanchyn Submission (strikes) PRIDE 11 02000-10-31 October 31, 2000 2 3:18 Osaka, Japan
xLoss 2-4 Brazil Royce Gracie Decision (unanimous) PRIDE Grand Prix 2000 Opening Round 02000-01-30 January 30, 2000 1 15:00 Tokyo, Japan
xLoss 2-3 United States Mark Kerr Submission (kimura) PRIDE 6 01999-07-04 July 4, 1999 1 3:05 Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan
xWin 2-2 United States Mark Coleman Submission (heel hook) PRIDE 5 01999-04-29 April 29, 1999 2 1:44 Nagoya, Japan
xLoss 1-2 Brazil Rickson Gracie Submission (armbar) PRIDE 4 01998-10-11 October 11, 1998 1 9:28 Tokyo, Japan
xWin 1-1 United States Kyle Sturgeon Submission (heel hook) PRIDE 3 01998-06-30 June 30, 1998 1 2:17 Tokyo, Japan
xLoss 0-1 Brazil Rickson Gracie Submission (armbar) PRIDE 1 01997-10-11 October 11, 1997 1 2:32 Tokyo, Japan

Post MMA contributions

Takada has an MMA dojo of his own, Takada Dojo, where he's helped train such fighters as Kazushi Sakuraba.

Takada was the figurehead of the now defunct PRIDE Fighting Championships, as well as the president of the HUSTLE promotion in Japan, while also portraying as the main heel and leader of the "Takada Monster Army" under the name "Generalissimo Takada", a M. Bison-esque character.

Takada returned to the ring at the HUSTLE-Aid show as The Esperanza, a wrestling cyborg, and made short work of his opponent TAJIRI. At HustleMania II, he defeated Razor Ramon HG in what was billed as HG's retirement match (HG continued wrestling for HUSTLE despite the billing), giving him a Tombstone Piledriver on the ramp after the match that caused "erectile dysfunction" to HG.

In wrestling

Championships and accomplishments

  • Tokyo Sports Grand Prix
    • Best Tag Team of the Year (1986)- with Shiro Koshinaka [8]
    • Effort Prize (1983) [9]
    • Match of the Year (1996)- vs. Genichiro Tenryu on September 11 [10]
    • Wrestler of the Year (1992) [11]
  • Union of Wrestling Forces International
    • Real Pro Wrestling (RPW) World Heavyweight Championship (2 times)

Video games

  • Saikyō: Takada Nobuhiko[12] - Super Famicom 1995

Notes

External links


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