Weekly Pro Wrestling Tokyo Dome Show
The Weekly Pro Wrestling Tokyo Dome Show, often referred to as Bridge of Dreams, was a multi-promotional professional wrestling event hosted by Japanese wrestling magazine, Weekly Pro Wrestling. The event took place on April 2, 1995 at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan.[2][3]
Weekly Pro Wrestling Tokyo Dome Show | |
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Promotion | Weekly Pro Wrestling |
Date | April 2, 1995 |
City | Tokyo, Japan |
Venue | Tokyo Dome |
Attendance | 50,000 [1] |
Event Details
The event was a multi-promotional wrestling event. According to Dave Meltzer,[4] the event was only initially supposed to have 8 promotions. However, due to increased interest, 13 promotions from Japan took part in the event.[5] Genichiro Tenryu's WAR promotion notably did not take part in the event as they had a previous planned event the same day at Korakuen Hall. Weekly Gong, another Japanese wrestling magazine, did not cover "Bridge of Dreams", opting instead to cover WAR's event leading that event to be nicknamed, the "Anti-Dream Bridge". Tokyo Sports reported on the event, but did not mention that it was hosted by Weekly Pro Wrestling. Baseball Sha Magazine, a mainstream sports magazine that is the sister company of Weekly Pro Wrestling,[6] briefly covered the event.
The event was not released officially on video due to issues with the companies involved, with only unofficial recordings of the event existing.
Participating promotions
Results
No. | Results | Stipulations | Times[2][3] |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Candy Okutsu, Dynamite Kansai, Fusayo Nochi & Hikari Fukuoka defeated Cutie Suzuki, Devil Masami, Hiromi Yagi & Mayumi Ozaki | Singles match | 17:29 |
2 | Shinobu Kandori defeated Harley Saito | MMA Rules Match | 1:12 |
3 | Ryuma Go defeated Uchu Majin Silver X | Alien Death Match for the Go Gudan Interplanetary Title | 15:11 |
4 | Aja Kong and Kyoko Inoue defeated Blizzard Yuki and Manami Toyota | Six-man tag team match | 17:40 |
5 | Minoru Suzuki defeated Christopher DeWeaver | Singles match, Pancrase rules | 1:50 |
6 | Leatherface, Shoji Nakamaki and Terry Funk defeated The Headhunters and Cactus Jack | Barbed Wire Board & Barbed Wire Baseball Bat Bunkhouse Death Match | 18:28 |
7 | Yoshiaki Fujiwara and Yuki Ishikawa defeated Carl Greco and Don Arakawa | Tag team match | 16:30 |
8 | Gran Naniwa, Super Delfin and Taka Michinoku defeated SATO, Shiryu and The Great Sasuke | Six-man tag team match | 22:25 |
9 | Akira Maeda defeated Chris Dolman | Singles match, Fighting Network Rings rules | 05:26 |
10 | Nobuhiko Takada, Billy Scott and Masahito Kakihara defeated Gary Albright, Gene Lydick and Kazuo Yamazaki | Six-man tag team match, UWF International rules | 15:17 |
11 | Great Nita defeated Pogo Daioh | No Ropes Exploding Barbed Wire Death Match | 13:59 |
12 | Akira Taue, Johnny Ace and Toshiaki Kawada went to a 30 minute time-limit draw with Kenta Kobashi, Mitsuharu Misawa and Stan Hansen | Six-man tag team match | 30:00 |
13 | Shinya Hashimoto defeated Masahiro Chono | Singles match | 15:56 |
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References
- "Weekly Pro at Tokyo Dome". prowrestlinghistory.com. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
- "Bridge Of Dreams ~ Dome Spring Full Bloom". cagematch.net. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
- "Weekly Pro Wrestling @ Tokyo Dome". wrestlingdata.com. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
- "Ask The Observer: Weekly Pro Wrestling show at Tokyo Dome, World Wrestling Peace Festival". f4wonline.com. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
- "ターザン山本がついに決起! 伝説のプロレスイベント『夢の懸け橋』が大みそかに復活". Oricon (in Japanese). Oricon. November 12, 2009. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
- Charlton, Chris (2018). Eggshells : Pro Wrestling in the Tokyo Dome. pp. 82–83. ISBN 978-4-9908658-3-2.