Universal Wrestling Federation and New Japan Pro-Wrestling (1985–1988) A former practitioner of
judo,
sumo and
muay thai, Anjo tried
professional wrestling after meeting
Nobuhiko Takada. He passed the original
Universal Wrestling Federation's entrance tests and had his debut on July 6, 1985, against Osamu Hoshina. He only wrestled a handful of matches for the company, as it collapsed later in the year and its roster moved back to
New Japan Pro-Wrestling, where Anjo debuted as a low-ranking member of the UWF "invading" army. Often teaming with fellow shooter Tatsuo Nakano, he feuded with names like
Akira Nogami,
Osamu Matsuda and
Masakatsu Funaki as part of the NJPW
junior heavyweight division. He eventually left the company in 1988 following Takada, Akira Maeda and the rest of his crew to form the second incarnation of UWF.
UWF Newborn (1988–1990) In 1988, already in
UWF Newborn, Anjo climbed up the card and adopted a more eccentric image for himself, wearing zebra tights and
bondage gear and using
heelish sneaky tactics in the ring. He participated in a different style fight at the U-COSMOS event against
Changpuek Kiatsongrit, and also wrestled Holland exponent
Dick Vrij. Just before the promotion disintegrated into several companies, Anjo got a high level victory against
Minoru Suzuki.
Union of Wrestling Forces International (1991–1996) In 1991 he joined
UWF International, following his mentor Takada, and had success as the top native heel. He feuded with Takada and
Kazuo Yamazaki, and had also an humbling match with
The Iron Sheik. In December 1994, Anjo was involved in a famous incident with
Brazilian jiu-jitsu master
Rickson Gracie. After Gracie declined to work with UWF International, Yoji travelled to California along with executive Shinji Sasazaki and a huge Japanese press contingent to perform a
dojo challenge on Rickson. However, he lost the subsequent fight, with Rickson dominating him with brutal
ground and pound and choking him out after the Japanese refused to give up. With the UWFi's formerly fearsome reputation in tatters, the bookers had the idea of co-promoting events with NJPW in 1995, and Yoji earned a victory over
Masahiro Chono in an interpromotional match. He and young wrestlers
Yoshihiro Takayama and
Kenichi Yamamoto formed a stable called the "Golden Cups" (a reference to
pop rock band
The Golden Cups) to feud in
tag team and six-man matches against
Super Strong Machine as the masked "200% Machines". They also forayed into
WAR to feud with
Genichiro Tenryu and others. On August 17, 1996, Takada defeated Yoji Anjo at Tokyo's
Meiji-Jingu Stadium. Despite the effort, UWF's attendance numbers swiftly decreased, with the federation closing its doors once and for all in December 1996. In their final show it was
Kazushi Sakuraba who at long last headlined, defeating Anjo by submission. Following UWFI's collapse he joined
Kingdom but then wandered into independent promotions and also began competing in MMA matches.
All Japan Pro Wrestling (2000–2003) . In 2000 Anjo returned to professional wrestling to help out
All Japan Pro Wrestling's rebuilding. He appeared as a partner to old foe
Genichiro Tenryu, winning the
World Tag Team Championship from Johnny Smith and
Taiyo Kea. They retained the titles for a long times, including a double title match with
AJPW All Asia Tag Team Champions Arashi and
Koki Kitahara, against the teams of
George Hines and Johnny Smith and
Toshiaki Kawada and Nobutaka Araya, coming victorious after Anjo pinned Araya with a knee strike. After some weeks, Tenryu and Anjo finally lost the title to
Keiji Mutoh and Taiyo Kea, dissolving the team. After some single ventures and a failed team with
Mitsuya Nagai, he quit All Japan and wandered again, joining
Fighting World of Japan Pro Wrestling. He fought again alongside Tenryu, feuding with Takao Omori, and also teamed up with Ichiro Yaguchi to take part in the WMG Tag Team Championship tournament, but they were eliminated by
Jinsei Shinzaki and Shiro Koshinaka.
Hustle (2004–2009) After many months of inactivity, Anjo resurfaced in the sports entertainment promotion
Hustle run by old comrade Takada. He debuted as
Commander An Jo,
Generalissimo Takada's right hand, wearing military uniforms and ornated eye masks. On March 19, 2015, Anjo retired from professional wrestling, putting on a small interpromotional card called
Y.A. is Dead (a reference to his entrance song
James Brown Is Dead by LA Style) where he reformed his "Golden Cups" stable with Takayama and Yamamoto, to take on former UWF and New Japan foes
Masakatsu Funaki,
Minoru Suzuki and
Sanae Kikuta in a best-of-three-falls six-man match. Anjo was forced to submit by Funaki in two straight falls, but Anjo demanded the match go to a third fall and was pinned by Suzuki. ==Mixed martial arts career==