WWWA World Tag Team Championship

The World Women's Wrestling Association (WWWA) World Tag Team Championship was the top doubles championship in All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling (AJW) from 1971 until it closed in 2005. During those years the title was held by many of the most famous tag teams in Japanese women's professional wrestling, including the Beauty Pair (Jackie Sato and Maki Ueda) and the Crush Gals (Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka). The WWWA Tag Team belt succeeded AJW's original tag belt, the American Girls Wrestling Association (AGWA) International Tag Team Championship, which was contested in AJW from 1968 until 1971.

WWWA World Tag Team Championship
Details
PromotionAll Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling
Date establishedJune 30, 1971
Date retiredApril 2005
Statistics
First champion(s)Aiko Kyo and Jumbo Miyamoto
Final champion(s)Aja Kong and Amazing Kong
Most reignsJumbo Miyamoto/Yoshiko Miyamoto and Mariko Akagi (9 times)

Reigns edit

Key
No. Overall reign number
Reign Reign number for the specific team—reign numbers for the individuals are in parentheses, if different
Days Number of days held
No. Champion Championship change Reign statistics Notes Ref.
Date Event Location Reign Days
1 Aiko Kyo and Jumbo Miyamoto June 30, 1971 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 <1 Kyo and Miyamoto were awarded the belts as first champions. They immediately give up the belts on the same day, after being unsatisfied with their match against Patty O'Hara and Texas Red. [1]
Vacated June 30, 1971 Live Event Tokyo, Japan Aiko Kyo and Jumbo Miyamoto vacated the championship as they were unsatisfied with their match against Patty O'Hara and Texas Red. [1]
2 Patty O'Hara and Texas Red July 1, 1971 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 5 O'Hara and Texas Red defeated Aiko Kyo and Jumbo Miyamoto in a rematch to win the vacant championship. This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][2][3]
3 Jumbo Miyamoto (2) and Maxie Murata July 6, 1971 Live Event Fukuyama, Hiroshima, Japan 1 86 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][4]
4 Jane Sherill and Marie Vagnone September 30, 1971 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 5 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][5]
5 Aiko Kyo and Yoshiko Miyamoto (3) October 5, 1971 Live Event Chiba, Japan 2 1 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. Yoshiko Miyamoto is formerly known as Jumbo Miyamoto. [1][6]
6 Jane Sherill and Marie Vagnone October 6, 1971 Live Event Niigata, Japan 2 24 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][7]
7 Miyoko Hoshino and Yoshiko Miyamoto (4) October 30, 1971 Live Event Okayama, Japan 1 137 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][8]
8 Masked Lee and Sharon Lee March 15, 1972 Live Event Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 1 6 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][9]
9 Miyoko Hoshino and Yoshiko Miyamoto (5) March 21, 1972 Live Event Nagasaki, Japan 2 35 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][10]
10 Flower Power and Masked Lee (2) April 25, 1972 Live Event Hiroshima, Japan 1 1 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][11]
11 Miyoko Hoshino and Yoshiko Miyamoto (5) April 26, 1972 Live Event Osaka, Japan 3 87 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][12]
12 Masked Lee (3) and Opearl Anston July 22, 1972 Live Event Iruma, Saitama, Japan 1 4 [1]
13 Aiko Kyo and Yoshiko Miyamoto (6) July 26, 1972 Live Event Kasukabe, Saitama, Japan 3 54 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][13]
14 Masked Lee (4) and Sylvia Hackney September 18, 1972 Live Event Muroran, Hokkaido, Japan 1 23 [1][14]
15 Mariko Akagi and Yoshiko Miyamoto (7) October 11, 1972 Live Event Kumamoto, Japan 1 27 [1]
16 Masked Lee (5) and Panama Franco November 7, 1972 Live Event Toyota, Aichi, Japan 1 10 [1]
17 Mariko Akagi and Yoshiko Miyamoto (8) November 17, 1972 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 2 68 [1]
18 Masked Lee (6) and Princess War Star January 24, 1973 Live Event Yokkaichi, Mie, Japan 1 9 [1]
19 Mariko Akagi and Yoshiko Miyamoto (9) February 2, 1973 Live Event Okayama, Japan 3 43 [1]
20 Jackie West and Masked Lee (7) March 17, 1973 Live Event Wakayama, Japan 1 5 [1]
21 Mariko Akagi and Yoshiko Miyamoto (10) March 22, 1973 Live Event Hiroshima, Japan 4 81 [1]
22 Masked Lee (9) and Sandy Parker June 11, 1973 Live Event Sasebo, Nagasaki, Japan 1 14 [1]
23 Mariko Akagi and Yoshiko Miyamoto (11) June 25, 1973 Live Event Ōfunato, Iwate, Japan 5 22 [1]
24 Masked Lee (10) and Sandy Parker July 17, 1973 Live Event Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan 2 7 [1]
25 Mariko Akagi and Yoshiko Miyamoto (12) July 24, 1973 Live Event Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 6 45 [1]
26 Lita Marez and Masked Lee (11) September 7, 1973 Live Event Nagasaki, Japan 1 23 [1]
27 Miyoko Hoshino (4) and Peggy Kuroda September 30, 1973 Live Event Himeji, Hyōgo, Japan 1 8 [1]
28 Juanita de Hoyos and Masked Lee (12) October 8, 1973 Live Event Miyakonojō, Miyazaki, Japan 1 4 [1]
29 Mariko Akagi (7) and Peggy Kuroda (2) October 12, 1973 Live Event Kumamoto, Japan 1 35 [1]
30 Sarah Lee and Sylvia Hackney (2) November 16, 1973 Live Event Fukushima, Japan 1 18 [1]
31 Mariko Akagi (8) and Peggy Kuroda (3) December 4, 1973 Live Event Osaka, Japan 2 34 [1]
32 Jackie West (2) and Sharon Lee (2) January 7, 1974 Live Event Niigata, Japan 1 10 [1]
33 Mariko Akagi (9) and Peggy Kuroda (4) January 17, 1974 Live Event Kagoshima, Japan 3 29 [1]
34 Jackie West (3) and Sharon Lee (3) February 15, 1974 Live Event Hiroshima, Japan 2 1 [1]
35 Junko Sasaki and Mariko Akagi (10) February 16, 1974 Live Event Onomichi, Hiroshima, Japan 1 33 [1]
36 Jackie West (4) and Paula Niet March 21, 1974 Live Event Higashiōsaka, Osaka, Japan 1 1 [1]
37 Junko Sasaki and Mariko Akagi (11) March 22, 1974 Live Event Wakayama, Japan 2 15 [1]
38 Jackie West (5) and Paula Niet April 6, 1974 Live Event Toyama, Japan 2 18 [1]
39 Junko Sasaki (3) and Peggy Kuroda (5) April 24, 1974 Live Event Kumamoto, Japan 1 22 [1]
40 Jean Antone and Sandy Parker (3) May 16, 1974 Live Event Shizuoka, Japan 1 5 [1]
41 Junko Sasaki (4) and Peggy Kuroda (6) May 21, 1974 Live Event Kōchi, Kōchi, Japan 2 13 [1]
42 Betty Niccoli and Sandy Parker (4) June 3, 1974 Live Event Gifu, Japan 1 1 [1]
Vacated June 4, 1974 Betty Niccoli vacated the championship. [1]
43 Junko Sasaki (5) and Mariko Akagi (12) June 5, 1974 Live Event Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 3 9 Akagi and Sasaki defeated Jean Antoine and Sandy Parker to win the vacant championship. [1]
44 Betty Niccoli and Sandy Parker (5) June 14, 1974 Live Event Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 2 14 Akagi and Sasaki defeated Jean Antoine and Sandy Parker to win the vacant championship. [1]
45 Jumbo Miyamoto (13) and Junko Sasaki (6) June 28, 1974 Live Event Morioka, Iwate, Japan 1 1 Jumbo Miyamoto is formerly known as Yoshiko Miyamoto. [1]
46 Betty Niccoli and Sandy Parker (6) June 29, 1974 Live Event Isehara, Kanagawa, Japan 3 10 [1]
47 Junko Sasaki (7) and Mariko Akagi (13) July 9, 1974 Live Event Osaka, Japan 4 12 [1]
48 Betty Niccoli and Sandy Parker (7) July 21, 1974 Live Event Takikawa, Hokkaido, Japan 4 7 [1]
49 Mariko Akagi (14) and Miyuki Yanagi July 28, 1974 Live Event Muroran, Hokkaido, Japan 1 2 [1]
50 Jean Antone and Sandy Parker (8) July 30, 1974 Live Event Mizusawa, Iwate, Japan 2 6 [1]
51 Jumbo Miyamoto (14) and Mariko Akagi (15) August 5, 1974 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 7 19 Jumbo Miyamoto is formerly known as Yoshiko Miyamoto. [1]
52 Jackie West (6) and Panama Franco (2) August 24, 1974 Live Event Fukuoka, Japan 1 10 [1]
53 Jumbo Miyamoto (15) and Mariko Akagi (16) September 3, 1974 Live Event Hiroshima, Japan 8 26 [1][15]
54 Jackie West (7) and Jane Sherill (3) September 29, 1974 Live Event Gobō, Wakayama, Japan 1 3 [1]
55 Jumbo Miyamoto (16) and Junko Sasaki (8) October 2, 1974 Live Event Takamatsu, Kagawa, Japan 2 29 [1]
56 Jane Sherill (4) and Miss Z October 31, 1974 Live Event Tokuyama, Yamaguchi, Japan 1 20 [1]
57 Junko Sasaki (9) and Mariko Akagi (17) November 20, 1974 Live Event Matsumoto, Nagano, Japan 5 50 [1]
58 Sylvia Hackney (3) and Miss Z (2) January 9, 1975 Live Event Matsumoto, Nagano, Japan 1 [Note 1] [1]
Vacated February 1975 Sylvia Hackney vacated the championship to pursue the WWWA World Single Championship. [1]
59 Jumbo Miyamoto (17) and Mariko Akagi (18) March 1, 1975 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 9 33 Akagi and Miyamoto defeated Sharon Lee and Sylvia Hackney to win the vacant championship. [1]
60 Lina Magnani and Lola Garcia April 3, 1975 Live Event Fukui, Japan 1 12 [1]
61 Mach Fumiake and Mariko Akagi (19) April 15, 1975 Live Event Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 1 107 [1]
Vacated July 31, 1975 The championship was vacated after Mach Fumiake suffered an injury. [1]
62 Mach Fumiake and Mariko Akagi (20) September 18, 1975 Live Event Kumamoto, Japan 2 159 Akagi and Fumiake defeated Cheryl Day and Irma González to win the vacant championship. [1]
63 Beauty Pair
(Jackie Sato and Maki Ueda)
February 24, 1976 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 93 [1]
64 Jackie West (8) and Yukari Lynch May 27, 1976 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 51 [1]
65 Beauty Pair
(Jackie Sato and Maki Ueda)
July 17, 1976 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 2 244 Yukari Lynch vacated the championship to train for a martial arts match. The Beauty Pair defeated Cheryl Day and Jackie West to win the vacant championship. [1]
Vacated March 18, 1977 Live Event Japan The championship was vacated after a match between Shinobu Aso and Yumi Ikeshita ended in a draw. [1][16]
66 Black Pair
(Shinobu Aso and Yumi Ikeshita)
April 11, 1977 Live Event Hiroshima, Japan 1 109 The Black Pair defeated the Beauty Pair (Jackie Sato and Maki Ueda) in a two-out-of-three falls match to win the vacant championship. [1][17]
67 Jackie Sato (3) and Nancy Kumi July 29, 1977 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 95 [1]
Vacated November 1, 1977 Live Event Tokyo, Japan The championship was vacated after Jackie Sato defeated Maki Ueda to win the WWWA World Single Championship. [1][18]
68 Golden Pair
(Nancy Kumi (2) and Victoria Fujimi)
February 6, 1978 Live Event Osaka, Japan 1 184 The Golden Pair defeated Chino Sato and Mariko Akagi to win the vacant championship. [1]
69 Queen Angels
(Lucy Kayama and Tomi Aoyama)
August 9, 1978 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 240 [1]
70 Black Pair
(Mami Kumano and Yumi Ikeshita (2))
April 6, 1979 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 305 [1]
71 Lucy Kayama (2) and Nancy Kumi (3) February 5, 1980 Live Event Osaka, Japan 1 316 [1]
72 Ayumi Hori and Rimi Yokota December 17, 1980 Live Event Nagoya, Aichi, Japan 1 18 [1][19]
Vacated January 4, 1981 Rimi Yokota vacated the championship to pursue the WWWA World Single Championship. [1]
73 Ayumi Hori (2) and Nancy Kumi (4) February 5, 1981 Live Event Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan 1 277 Hori and Kumi defeated Devil Masami and Mami Kumano to win the vacated championship. [1]
74 Mimi Hagiwara and Yukari Omori November 9, 1981 Live Event Obama, Fukui, Japan 1 274 [1]
75 Devil Masami and Tarantula August 10, 1982 Live Event Fukushima, Japan 1 [Note 2] [1]
Vacated 1983 The championship was vacated for undocumented reasons. [1]
76 Dynamite Girls
(Jumbo Hori (3) and Yukari Omori (2))
June 17, 1983 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 435 The Dynamite Girls defeated Devil Masami and Taranchela to win the vacant championship. Hori is formerly known as Ayumi Hori. [1]
77 Crush Girls
(Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka)
August 25, 1984 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 184 [1][19]
78 Villainous Alliance
(Crane Yu and Dump Matsumoto)
February 25, 1985 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 [Note 3] [1][20]
Vacated April 1985 The championship was vacated due to Crane Yu's retirement. [1]
79 Crush Girls
(Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka)
May 16, 1985 Live Event Ōmiya-ku, Saitama, Japan 2 213 The Crush Girls defeated Bull Nakano and Dump Matsumoto to win the vacant championship. [1]
Vacated December 15, 1985 The championship was vacated after Chigusa Nagayo suffered ankle and knee injuries. [1]
80 The Jumping Bomb Angels
(Itsuki Yamazaki and Noriyo Tateno)
January 5, 1986 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 74 The Jumping Bomb Angels defeated Bull Nakano and Condor Saito to win the vacant championship. [1]
81 Crush Girls
(Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka)
March 20, 1986 Live Event Osaka, Japan 3 156 [1]
82 Bull Nakano and Dump Matsumoto (2) August 23, 1986 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 162 Kazue Nagahori replaced Lioness Asuka and defended the championship with Chigusa Nagayo, as Asuka suffered an injury. [1]
Vacated February 1, 1987 The championship was vacated for undocumented reasons. [1]
83 Hisako Uno and Yumiko Hotta April 15, 1987 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 12 Hotta and Uno defeated The Glamour Girls (Judy Martin and Leilani Kai to win the vacant championship. [1]
84 Red Typhoons
(Kazue Nagahori and Yumi Ogura)
April 27, 1987 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 176 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][21]
85 Bull Nakano (2) and Condor Saito October 20, 1987 War Dream Tokyo, Japan 1 77 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][22]
Vacated January 5, 1988 The championship was vacated after a match between the Fire Jets (Mitsuko Nishiwaki and Yumiko Hotta). [1]
86 Bull Nakano (3) and Grizzly Iwamoto February 25, 1988 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 145 Iwamoto and Nakano defeated the Fire Jets (Mitsuko Nishiwaki and Yumiko Hotta) to win the vacant championship. [1]
87 Fire Jets
(Mitsuko Nishiwaki and Yumiko Hotta (2))
July 19, 1988 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 37 [1]
88 Calgary Typhoons
(Mika Komatsu and Yumi Ogura (2))
August 25, 1988 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 163 [1]
89 Crush Girls
(Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka)
February 4, 1989 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 4 91 [1]
Vacated May 6, 1989 The championship was vacated due to Chigusa Nagayo's retirement. [1]
90 Marine Wolves
(Akira Hokuto (2) and Suzuka Minami)
June 18, 1989 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 30 The Marine Wolves defeated Bison Kimura and Grizzly Iwamoto to win the vacant championship. Hokuto is formerly known as Hisako Uno. [1]
91 Fire Jets
(Mitsuko Nishiwaki and Yumiko Hotta (3)
July 18, 1989 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 2 144 [1]
92 Aja Kong and Grizzly Iwamoto (2) December 9, 1989 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 60 [1]
93 Marine Wolves
(Akira Hokuto (3) and Suzuka Minami)
February 7, 1990 Live Event Osaka, Japan 2 305 [1]
94 Jungle Jack
(Aja Kong (2) and Bison Kimura)
December 9, 1990 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 33 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][23]
Vacated January 11, 1991 Live Event Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan The championship was vacated after Jungle Jack (Aja Kong and Bison Kimura) lost to Bull Nakano and Kyoko Inoue in a non-title Hair vs. Hair match. [1][24]
95 Jungle Jack
(Aja Kong (3) and Bison Kimura)
April 4, 1991 Live Event Sendai, Miyagi, Japan 2 249 Jungle Jack defeated the Marine Wolves (Akira Hokuto and Suzuka Minami) to win the vacant championship. This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][25]
Vacated December 9, 1991 The championship was vacated for undocumented reasons. [26]
96 Jungle Jack
(Aja Kong (4) and Bison Kimura)
January 5, 1992 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 3 75 Jungle Jack defeated Kyoko Inoue and Toshiyo Yamada to win the vacant championship. This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][27]
97 Manami Toyota and Toshiyo Yamada March 20, 1992 AJW St. Battle Day Tokyo, Japan 1 387 In this match, the UWA World Women's Tag Team Championship which was held by Toyota and Yamada, was unified with the WWWA World Tag Team Championship. This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][28]
98 Dynamite Kansai and Mayumi Ozaki April 11, 1993 Live Event Osaka, Japan 1 239 [1]
99 Manami Toyota and Toshiyo Yamada December 6, 1993 AJW St. Battle Final Tokyo, Japan 2 307 [1]
100 Double Inoue
(Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoue)
October 9, 1994 Wrestlemarinepiad Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 86 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][29]
Vacated January 3, 1995 The championship was vacated as Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoue decided to compete in tournament to determine the 100th champions. [1]
101 Double Inoue
(Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoue)
March 21, 1995 Wrestling Queendom Success Osaka, Japan 2 187 Double Inoue defeated Blizzard Yuki and Manami Toyota in the finals of an eight-team tournament to be the 100th champions. [1]
102 Akira Hokuto (4) and Mima Shimoda September 24, 1995 Innocent Stars in Kawasaki Kawasaki, Kanagawa, Japan 1 120 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][30]
103 Double Inoue
(Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoue)
January 22, 1996 Ota Ward Champion Legend Tokyo, Japan 3 152 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][31]
104 Manami Toyota (3) and Mima Shimoda (2) June 22, 1996 Champions Night in Sapporo Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan 1 212 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][32]
105 Kumiko Maekawa and Tomoko Watanabe January 20, 1997 Ota Ward Champion Legend Zenjo Perfection - Day 13 Tokyo, Japan 1 149 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][33][34]
106 Las Cachorras Orientales
(Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda (3))
June 18, 1997 Zenjo Transformation - Day 36 Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan 1 205 [1]
Vacated January 9, 1998 The championship was vacated for undocumented reasons. [1]
107 Zaps
(Zap I and Zap T (2))
April 12, 1998 Zenjo RAN - Day 2 Tokyo, Japan 1 454 The Zaps defeated Kumiko Maekawa and Takako Inoue in a two-out-of-three falls match to win the vacant championship. Zap T is formerly known as Tomoko Watanabe. [1][35]
108 Las Cachorras Orientales
(Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda (4)
July 10, 1999 Odaiba with Explosion - Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 2 151 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][36]
109 Kumiko Maekawa and Tomoko Watanabe (3) December 8, 1999 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 2 164 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. Tomoko Watanabe is formerly known as Zap T. [1][37]
Vacated May 20, 2000 The championship was vacated for undocumented reasons. [1]
110 Nana☆Momo☆
(Momoe Nakanishi and Nanae Takahashi)
July 16, 2000 Odaiba with Explosion Tokyo, Japan 1 172 Nanamomo defeated Las Cachorras Orientales (Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda) in the finals of a six-team tournament to win the vacant championship. [1][38]
111 Las Cachorras Orientales
(Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda (5)
January 4, 2001 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 3 184 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][39]
112 Nanae Takahashi (2) and Tomoko Watanabe (4) July 7, 2001 Live Event Tokyo, Japan 1 181 [1]
113 Rumi Kazama and Takako Inoue (4) January 4, 2002 Foture Shock - Day 2 Tokyo, Japan 1 149 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][40]
114 Nana☆Momo☆
(Momoe Nakanishi and Nanae Takahashi (3))
June 2, 2002 Japan Grand Prix - Day 15: The Queendom of WWWA Tokyo, Japan 2 119 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][41]
115 Las Cachorras Orientales
(Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda (6)
September 29, 2002 New Wrestlemarinepiad Tokyo, Japan 4 85 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][42]
Vacated December 23, 2002 The championship was vacated after Las Cachorras Orientales lost at the Tag League the Best. [1]
116 Mima Shimoda (7) and Takako Inoue (5) January 3, 2003 The Road of Women's Pro Wrestling - Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 1 107 Inoue and Shimoda defeated Kayo Noumi and Momoe Nakanishi in a two-out-of-three falls match to win the vacant championship. [1][43]
117 Etsuko Mita (5) and Nanae Takahashi (4) April 20, 2003 The Road of Women's Pro Wrestling - Day 39 Tokyo, Japan 1 42 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][44]
118 Kumiko Maekawa and Tomoko Watanabe (5) June 1, 2003 New Flash - Day 10 (Afternoon Show) Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan 3 106 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][45]
119 Double Inoue
(Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoue) (6)
September 15, 2003 Potential Power - Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 4 110 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][46]
120 Ayako Hamada and Nanae Takahashi (5) January 3, 2004 The Legend of Women's Pro Wrestling - Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 1 155 This was a two-out-of-three falls match. [1][47]
Vacated June 6, 2004 The championship was vacated after Ayako Hamada and Nanae Takahashi split after a match against Kumiko Maekawa and Yumiko Hotta. [1]
121 Aja Kong (5) and Amazing Kong October 6, 2004 The Legend of Women's Pro Wrestling - Day 1 Tokyo, Japan 1 [Note 4] Aja Kong and Amazing Kond defeated Hikaru and Nanae Takahashi to win the vacant championship. [1]
Deactivated April 2005 The championship retired when AJW closed. [1]

Combined reigns edit

¤ The exact length of a title reign is uncertain; the combined length may not be correct.
N/A The exact length of a title reign is too uncertain to calculate.

By team edit

Rank Team No. of
reigns
Combined
days
1 Manami Toyota and Toshiyo Yamada 2 694
2 Crush Girls
(Chigusa Nagayo and Lioness Asuka)
4 644
3 Las Cachorras Orientales
(Etsuko Mita and Mima Shimoda)
4 625
4 Double Inoue
(Kyoko Inoue and Takako Inoue)
4 535
5 Zaps
(Zap I and Zap T)
1 454
6 Dynamite Girls
(Jumbo Hori and Yukari Omori)
1 435
7 Kumiko Maekawa and Tomoko Watanabe 4 419
8 Jungle Jack
(Aja Kong and Bison Kimura)
3 357
9 Beauty Pair
(Jackie Sato and Maki Ueda)
2 337
10 Jumbo/Yoshiko Miyamoto and Mariko Akagi 9 331
11 Lucy Kayama and Nancy Kumi 1 316
12 Black Pair
(Mami Kumano and Yumi Ikeshita)
1 305
Marine Wolves
(Akira Hokuto and Suzuka Minami)
2 305
14 Nana☆Momo☆
(Momoe Nakanishi and Nanae Takahashi)
2 291
15 Ayumi Hori and Nancy Kumi 1 277
16 Mimi Hagiwara and Yukari Omori 1 274
17 Mach Fumiake and Mariko Akagi 2 266
18 Miyoko Hoshino and Yoshiko Miyamoto 3 259
19 Queen Angels
(Lucy Kayama and Tomi Aoyama)
1 240
20 Dynamite Kansai and Mayumi Ozaki 1 239
21 Manami Toyota and Mima Shimoda 1 212
22 Golden Pair
(Nancy Kumi Victoria Fujimi)
1 184
23 Fire Jets
(Mitsuko Nishiwaki and Yumiko Hotta)
2 181
Nanae Takahashi and Tomoko Watanabe 1 181
25 Aja Kong and Amazing Kong 1 177 – 206¤
26 Red Typhoons
(Kazue Nagahori and Yumi Ogura)
1 176
27 Calgary Typhoons
(Mika Komatsu and Yumi Ogura)
1 163
28 Bull Nakano and Dump Matsumoto 1 162
29 Rumi Kazama and Takako Inoue 1 149
30 Ayako Hamada and Nanae Takahashi 1 155
31 Bull Nakano and Grizzly Iwamoto 1 145
32 Akira Hokuto and Mima Shimoda 1 120
33 Junko Sasaki and Mariko Akagi 5 119
34 Black Pair
(Shinobu Aso and Yumi Ikeshita)
1 109
35 Mima Shimoda and Takako Inoue 1 107
36 Mariko Akagi and Peggy Kuroda 3 98
37 Jackie Sato and Nancy Kumi 1 95
38 Jumbo Miyamoto and Maxie Murata 1 86
39 Bull Nakano and Condor Saito 1 77
40 The Jumping Bomb Angels
(Itsuki Yamazaki and Noriyo Tateno)
1 74
41 Aja Kong and Grizzly Iwamoto 1 60
42 Aiko Kyo and Jumbo Miyamoto/Yoshiko Miyamoto 3 56
43 Jackie West and Yukari Lynch 1 51
44 Etsuko Mita and Nanae Takahashi 1 42
45 Junko Sasaki and Peggy Kuroda 2 35
Villainous Alliance
(Crane Yu and Dump Matsumoto)
1 35 – 64¤
47 Betty Niccoli and Sandy Parker 4 32
48 Jumbo Miyamoto and Junko Sasaki 2 30
49 Jane Sherill and Marie Vagnone 2 29
50 Masked Lee and Sylvia Hackney 1 23
Lita Marez and Masked Lee 1 23
Sylvia Hackney and Miss Z 1 23 – 50¤
53 Masked Lee and Sandy Parker 2 21
54 Jane Sherill and Miss Z 1 20
55 Jackie West and Paula Niet 2 19
56 Ayumi Hori and Rimi Yokota 1 18
Sarah Lee and Sylvia Hackney 1 18
58 Hisako Uno and Yumiko Hotta 1 12
Lina Magnani and Lola Garcia 1 12
60 Jackie West and Sharon Lee 2 11
Jean Antone and Sandy Parker 2 11
62 Jackie West and Panama Franco 1 10
Masked Lee and Panama Franco 1 10
64 Masked Lee and Princess War Star 1 9
65 Miyoko Hoshino and Hoshino 1 8
66 Masked Lee and Sharon Lee 1 6
67 Jackie West and Masked Lee 1 5
Patty O'Hara and Texas Red 1 5
69 Juanita de Hoyos and Masked Lee 1 4
Masked Lee and Opearl Anston 1 4
71 Jackie West and Jane Sherill 1 3
72 Mariko Akagi and Miyuki Yanagi 1 2
73 Flower Power and Masked Lee 1 1
- Devil Masami and Tarantula 1 N/A

By wrestler edit

Rank wrestler No. of
reigns
Combined
days
1 Mima Shimoda 7 1,064
2 Tomoko Watanabe/Zap T 5 1,054
3 Manami Toyota 3 906
4 Nancy Kumi 4 872
5 Mariko Akagi 20 849
6 Jumbo/Yoshiko Miyamoto 17 794
7 Takako Inoue 6 791
8 Yukari Omori 2 709
9 Toshiyo Yamada 2 694
10 Nanae Takahashi 5 669
11 Etsuko Mita 5 667
12 Chigusa Nagayo 4 644
Lioness Asuka 4 644
14 Aja Kong 5 594 – 623¤
15 Lucy Kayama 2 556
16 Kyoko Inoue 4 535
17 Akira Hokuto/Hisako Uno 4 467
18 Zap I 1 454
19 Jackie Sato 3 432
20 Kumiko Maekawa 3 419
21 Yumi Ikeshita 2 414
22 Bull Nakano 3 384
23 Bison Kimura 3 357
24 Yumi Ogura 2 339
25 Maki Ueda 2 337
26 Mami Kumano 1 305
Suzuka Minami 2 305
28 Ayumi Hori 2 295
29 Momoe Nakanishi 2 291
30 Mimi Hagiwara 1 274
31 Miyoko Hoshino 4 267
32 Mach Fumiake 2 266
33 Tomi Aoyama 1 240
34 Dynamite Kansai 1 239
Mayumi Ozaki 1 239
36 Grizzly Iwamoto 2 205
37 Dump Matsumoto 2 197 – 226¤
38 Yumiko Hotta 3 193
39 Junko Sasaki 9 184
Victoria Fujimi 1 184
41 Mitsuko Nishiwaki 2 181
42 Amazing Kong 1 177 – 206¤
43 Kazue Nagahori 1 176
44 Mika Komatsu 1 163
45 Ayako Hamada 1 155
46 Rumi Kazama 1 149
47 Peggy Kuroda 6 141
48 Shinobu Aso 1 109
49 Masked Lee 11 106
50 Jackie West 8 99
51 Maxie Murata 1 86
52 Condor Saito 1 77
53 Itsuki Yamazaki 1 74
Noriyo Tateno 1 74
55 Sandy Parker 8 64
Sylvia Hackney 3 64 – 91¤
57 Aiko Kyo 3 56
58 Jane Sherill 4 52
59 Yukari Lynch 1 51
60 Miss Z 2 43 – 70¤
61 Crane Yu 1 35 – 64¤
62 Betty Niccoli 4 32
63 Marie Vagnone 2 29
64 Lita Marez 1 23
65 Panama Franco 2 20
66 Paula Niet 2 19
67 Rimi Yokota 1 18
Sarah Lee 1 18
69 Sharon Lee 3 17
70 Lina Magnani 1 12
Lola Garcia 1 12
72 Jean Antone 2 11
73 Princess War Star 1 9
74 Patty O'Hara 1 5
Texas Red 1 5
76 Juanita de Hoyos 1 4
Opearl Anston 1 4
78 Miyuki Yanagi 1 2
79 Flower Power 1 1
- Devil Masami 1 N/A
Tarantula 1 N/A

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy cz da db dc dd de df dg dh di dj dk dl dm dn do dp dq dr ds dt du dv dw dx dy dz ea eb ec ed ee ef eg eh ei ej ek "WWWA World Tag Team Title (Japan)". wrestling-titles.com.
  2. ^ Hoops, Brian (July 1, 2015). "On this day in pro wrestling history (July 1): Ric Flair stripped of WCW title, Von Erich win WCCW Tag titles". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 11, 2017.
  3. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  4. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
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  13. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  14. ^ "Pro wrestling history (9/18): Flair pins Dusty, Triple H defeats CM Punk in No DQ". Wrestling Observer Newsletter. September 18, 2015. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
  15. ^ Hoops, Brian (September 3, 2015). "ON THIS DAY IN PRO WRESTLING HISTORY (SEPT. 3): RIC FLAIR VS. TERRY FUNK TEXAS DEATH MATCH, GREAT MUTA VS. STING, TED DIBIASE AND STAN HANSEN WINS AJPW TAG TITLES". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved February 10, 2017.
  16. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  17. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  18. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  19. ^ a b Molinaro, John (2002). Marek, Jeff; Meltzer, Dave (eds.). Top 100 Pro Wrestlers of All Time. Toronto, Ontario: Winding Stair Press. pp. 134, 166. ISBN 1-55366-305-5.
  20. ^ "Villainous Alliance". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  21. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  22. ^ "AJW War Dream". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  23. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  24. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  25. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  26. ^ "WWWA Tag Team Championship". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  27. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  28. ^ "AJW St. Battle Day". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  29. ^ "AJW Wrestlemarinepiad 1994". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  30. ^ "AJW Innocent Stars In Kawasaki". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  31. ^ "AJW Ota Ward Champion Legend 1996". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  32. ^ "AJW Champions Night In Sapporo". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  33. ^ "AJW "Ota Ward Champion Legend 1997" Zenjo Perfection 1997 - Tag 13". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  34. ^ Hoops, Brian (January 20, 2019). "Pro wrestling history (01/20): HHH returns, wins 2002 Royal Rumble". Wrestling Observer Figure Four Online. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  35. ^ "AJW Zenjo "RAN" 1998 - Tag 2". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  36. ^ "AJW Odaiba W Explosion - Tag 1". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  37. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  38. ^ "AJW Odaiba W Explosion 2000". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  39. ^ "AJW". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  40. ^ "AJW Foture Shock 02 - Tag 2". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  41. ^ "AJW Japan Grand Prix 2002 - Tag 15 ~ The Queendom Of WWWA ~". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  42. ^ "AJW New Wrestlemarinepiad 2002". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  43. ^ "AJW The Road Of Women's Pro Wrestling - Tag 1". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  44. ^ "AJW The Road Of Women's Pro Wrestling - Tag 39". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  45. ^ "AJW New Flash 03 - Tag 10 (Afternoon Show)". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  46. ^ "AJW Potential Power 03 - Tag 1". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.
  47. ^ "AJW The Legend Of Women's Pro Wrestling 04 - Tag 1". Cagematch - The Internet Wrestling Database.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The exact date that Sylvia Hackney and Miss Z vacated the championship is unknown, meaning the reign lasted between 23 and 50 days.
  2. ^ The length of the championship reign is too uncertain to calculate.
  3. ^ The exact date that the championship was vacated is unknown, meaning the reign lasted between 35 and 64 days.
  4. ^ The exact date that AJW closed is unknown, meaning the reign lasted between 177 and 206 days.

External links edit