FMW under Atsushi Onita (1989–1995) The
Atsushi Onita era of
FMW originally consisted of a promotion that featured not only
professional wrestling but the best
martial arts fighters in the world. Onita would bring in American talent that were known in
Japan like
Jos LeDuc and
Dick Murdoch, as well female talent and midget wrestlers. As the years progressed with FMW, Onita decided to phase out the
martial arts aspect of the company and focus strictly on
professional wrestling. Onita would go on to have violent and bloody matches like the first ever
barbed wire match in the company where he would team with
Tarzan Goto as they took on the team of
Mitsuhiro Matsunaga and
Jerry Flynn. Onita would use real
barbed wire which resulted in him receiving a nasty gash on his arm. Onita would take it one step further as he would go on to have the first ever exploding
barbed wire match in August 1990, as he challenged his rival,
Tarzan Goto. As the years would progress further, we would see an influx of American & Foreign talent begin to appear in FMW with talent ranging from
Chris Jericho,
Lance Storm,
The Original Sheik,
Sabu,
Damián 666,
Dr. Luther,
Leon Spinks,
Tiger Jeet Singh and so forth. During these years, the young
Eiji Ezaki started to slowly work his way through the ranks. He was known as a prodigy in the world of wrestling and like a-lot of promotions in
Japan do, send him on excursion away from the company as they will learn and develop. Ezaki would go on excursion to Mexico and wrestle for a couple of different promotions and developed the character of
Hayabusa. Hayabusa became a fan favorite in the promotion for his high flying style and it was known that Hayabusa was the "ace" of FMW. Onita was fixing to retire once again from
professional wrestling and his retirement match was held at the annual May 5,
Kawasaki Stadium show. This was FMW's biggest show of the year and Onita would take on Hayabusa in an exploding
barbed wire cage, timebomb deathmatch. This match now signified a changing of the guard as Onita would retire and Hayabusa would step up and be the face of FMW. Onita would go on and sell the company to FMW ring announcer,
Shoichi Arai.
FMW under Shoichi Arai and Hiromichi Fuyuki (1995–2002) The
Shoichi Arai era of FMW would end up issuing changes to the promotion and gave the promotion a new look and feel. Arai would slowly phase out the deathmatches that
Atsushi Onita would help popularize and what put the company on the map and would bring in a more "sports entertainment" look and feel for the promotion that would be almost similar to that of the
WWE. In a nod to the WWE, the old Brass Knuckles and Independent championships were abandoned and replaced with new titles, the
World Entertainment Wrestling (WEW) championships. Arai would enlist the help of
professional wrestler,
Kodo Fuyuki as both men would usher in this new era. Having Fuyuki as the
booker, he would put forth his vision on how FMW should be run as Arai would sign the checks and book the arenas for the promotion. During this time, Onita would return to
professional wrestling and start a faction that would rival FMW and they were known simply as
ZEN. This group was loosely based on
World Championship Wrestling's group known as
The New World Order. Onita would run shows under the ZEN label and these shows would feature FMW talent. Hayabusa would continue to be featured as the ace of FMW and would go on to feud with the likes of
Mr. Gannosuke,
Kintaro Kanemura, and,
Tetsuhiro Kuroda. As the
booker of FMW,
Kodo Fuyuki also continued to wrestle and he would go on to help form the top
heel faction known as
Team No Respect. In 2000, FMW would sign a distribution deal with
Tokyopop which would help get their product out to a Western audience as FMW could now be seen officially on
VHS and
DVD in the
United States. They would go on to release 12 programs which were old FMW cards shortened down to feature the best matches or they were compilations of specific talent like Hayabusa. They also featured dubbed commentary from Eric Gellar and John Watanabe. Later releases would feature Dan Lovranski replacing Eric Gellar. As the years progressed, the audiences for the live shows began to decrease and Arai would slowly sink further and further into debt. Tragedy struck the promotion on October 22, 2001, during a match with Hayabusa and Mammoth Sasaki. Hayabusa attempted a
springboard moonsault—one of his signature moves—but he accidentally slipped on the ropes and fell directly on his neck, breaking it and
paralyzing him. As the crowds continued to decrease, the amount of debt became too much for Arai, as he finally decided to announce that he has filed for bankruptcy and FMW would go on to have their final show on February 4, 2002. As 2001 came to a close, it was stated that Arai owed the sum of what would be the equivalent of one million US dollars to
yakuza due to the money he would constantly borrow but never pay back. Running out of options, on May 16, 2002, Shoichi Arai would commit suicide so his family could collect the life insurance to pay back the money owed to the yakuza.
Closure and aftermath The talent divided into two promotions: Kodo Fuyuki's World Entertainment Wrestling (WEW), the name of FMW's title governing body since 1999, and
Mr. Gannosuke's Wrestlings Marvelous Future (WMF). Some of the talent also made appearances on Onita's special shows. Following Fuyuki's death in 2003, most of the WEW talent under Kintaro Kanemura formed a successor promotion,
Apache Pro-Wrestling Army, which continued the WEW championships until 2016 when Kanemura retired and closed the promotion. Since 2017, the WEW championships have been administered by
Tomohiko Hashimoto's Pro-Wrestling A-Team promotion.
Chō Sentō Puroresu FMW (revival, 2015–2018) On April 3, 2015, Hideki Takahashi, Hayabusa and Choden Senshi Battle Ranger held a press conference, announcing they were reviving FMW under the new name "Chō Sentō Puroresu FMW". Takahashi would serve as the president and Hayabusa as the executive producer of the promotion, which would also feature participation from Atsushi Onita. The promotion held its first event on April 21. On October 30, 2015, they announced that they were reviving the
FMW World Street Fight 6-Man Tag Team Championship, as they set a match to determine new champions on December 22. In 2016, two tragedies had befallen FMW. On February 17, 2016,
Ray would announce that she had inoperable stage three brain cancer after being diagnosed with a tumor in December 2015. She would succumb to the disease in 2018, she was 36 years old. On March 3, 2016,
Haybusa would pass away at his home from a brain aneurysm, he was 47 years old. On October 31, 2017, FMW founder Atsushi Onita retired after 43 years in the ring. The promotion held its most recent event as Chō Sentō Puroresu FMW in 2018. Although not officially closing once again the revival seemed to have been forgotten about.
FMW-E (second revival, 2021–present) In 2018, Onita would come out of retirement at a Pro-Wrestling A-Tean (Apache Army's successor promotion) event. After this he would come back as a wrestler having matches with
Combat Zone Wrestling,
Big Japan Pro-Wrestling,
World Wonder Ring Stardom and
DDT Pro-Wrestling. In 2021, Onita announced that he would be starting
Frontier Martial-Arts Wrestling-Explosion, a promotion under the FMW name that specialized in exploding death matches, a match type in which Onita became famous for. The new promotion will have Hidetaka Kajiki serving as president. Onita stated he got the idea for the promotion after
All Elite Wrestling's 2021
Revolution PPV in which the event held an exploding barbed wire death match and seeing that there was still a market for these types of matches internationally in the pro wrestling world and with the popularity of
online media streaming the new promotion was formed. The promotion, however, held its last card to date on December 19, 2021, after which Onita went freelance yet again. In October 2022, FMW-E started back up promoting cards. ==Personnel==