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Tiger
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It
would be difficult to overstate the influence of the
original Tiger Mask. In the early 1980s, when the
masked highflier from Japan made his name as the worlds
finest junior heavyweight, watching one of his matches
was like looking into the future of professional wrestling.
At a time when most Superstars were glued firmly to
the mat, Tiger Mask took to the sky, busting out Space
Flying Tiger Drops and twisting moonsaults that left
opponents and announcers completely
baffled.
If
Tiger Masks offense was ahead of its time, his
mythos was rooted firmly in the past. When he first
debuted in New Japan Pro Wrestling on April 23, 1981,
his royal blue tights and distinctive mask were immediately
recognized as the trademarks of a hero from a lively
1960s cartoon. The anime which told the story
of a heroic professional wrestler who supports a childrens
hospital while battling a villainous cadre known as
the Tiger Cave had been licensed by New Japan
executives who were trying to grow interest in their
budding junior heavyweight division.
The
characters journey from two-dimensional animation
cels to the real world may have been an awkward one
were it not for Satoru Sayama. A former student of
WWE Hall of Famer Antonio Inoki and Karl Gotch, the
23-year-old had experienced modest success in Mexico
and England under the name Sammy Lee. But the moment
Sayama donned the striped hood whiskers and
all to defeat The Dynamite Kid in his debut
match, he turned Tiger Mask into something much more
than a cartoon come to life.
Over
the next two years, Tiger Mask would distinguish himself
as not only the top junior heavyweight in New Japan,
but in the entire world. On Jan. 1, 1982, he officially
staked that claim by winning the WWE Junior Heavyweight
Championship which had made an unexpected journey
from New York to Japan around the waist of Tatsumi
Fujinami with another triumph over The Dynamite
Kid. The rough Brit became Tiger Masks top rival
and the two men pushed each other to the limit in
matches that are just as exhilarating today as they
were in the days of VHS.
WWE
brought Tiger Mask to America in winter 1982, where
he battled future stars like Eddie Gilbert and Curt
Hennig from the majestic Madison Square Garden to
obscure corners of the northeast like Belleville,
N.J. Back in Japan, he continued to thrill against
rivals like The Dynamite Kid and Black Tiger
another character from the Tiger Mask
series while innovating maneuvers like Rey
Mysterios 619 (known in some circles as the
Tiger Feint Kick) and the Tiger Suplex.
Sayama
disowned the Tiger Mask persona in 1984, but the character
endures to this day. After first being adopted by
the legendary Mitsuharu Misawa, the cartoon hero has
remained a constant presence in the rings of Japan,
with a fifth competitor wearing the hood today. Still,
no version of Tiger Mask and very few junior
heavyweights had the cultural and professional
impact of Satoru Sayama. (WWE.com)
Websites
WWE
- Tiger Mask
Tiger
Mask movie trailer via YouTube.com

Tiger
Mask cover of Bokura



Jushin
"Thunder" Liger and Tiger Mask


Multimedia
FEARFUL
SYMMETRY: THE BEST OF TIGER MASK
WWE'S
FORGOTTEN JAPANESE SUPER SHOWS
TIGER
MASK VS. DYNAMITE KID - JULY 29, 1983 (2:56)
TIGER
MASK VS. EDDIE GILBERT - NOVEMBER 25, 1982 (3:11)
TIGER
MASK VS. CURT HENNIG: JUNIOR HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP
MATCH - ALL STAR WRESTLING, NOVEMBER 27, 1982 (3:16)
TIGER
MASK VS. MR. SAITO - NOVEMBER 17, 1983 (3:05)
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