Segunda Caida

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Wednesday, March 11, 2026

80s Joshi on Wednesday: Mimi! Nancy!

Disc 2   

10. Mimi Hagiwara vs. Nancy Kumi 8/81

K: 1981 after Jackie Sato drops the belt is the period of AJW where it's most difficult to date anything precisely. The company is at a relative lowpoint in popularity, and for whatever reason I've struggled to find many sources referencing it so have had to just depend on what's on the footage itself, which for some reason is even more sporadic than 1979 or 1980 was. Hopefully the matches on the set are at least in the correct airing order, but it's hard to give much more context of what's going on. We're just watching a good match here.

Having debuted in 1976, Nancy Kumi is now the most senior wrestler on the roster and the only one left who debuted before the 'classes' system introduced when the company was overwhelmed with applicants inspired by the Beauty Pair boom. This cool and collected veteran role is the best fit for her talents than anything else I've seen her do. She's dominant on the mat, twisting Mimi up (mostly targetting her arm) and coming across like she's clearly just superior in this field and Mimi's going to have to pull something out of left field to get the better of her. 

I never feel like there's much effort to get Mimi over as anything other than a sympathetic babyface. She sells well, a bit melodramatic and screamy sometimes but it never gets too much for me that I find it annoying. She never gets anywhere near the passionate reactions Beauty Pair used to get, but that might be a harsh comparison as she's clearly still over.

There's a cool moment where Mimi attempts a flying crossbody off an Irish whip, but Nancy ducks out of the way with excellent timing (it really looked like Mimi intended to hit that crossbody), and with impressive speed Nancy quickly grabs Mimi off the mat, throws her to outside and dumps her into chairs, for which Mimi does a committed bump and sell. That's how they end Mimi's brief respite, as when she gets back in the Nancy locks in her a figure four, and this gives Mimi and opportunity to sell and scream her head off.

Mimi's second respite comes when she counters Nancy into a rollup. In what feels like more emotion and revenge than a well thought-out gameplan, Mimi immediately throws Nancy out of the ring when she's still a bit dazed from kicking out of the rollup, and tries to throw her into chairs. It doesn't pay off, as Nancy just blocks it and Mimi eats chair once again. In cool fighting babyface energy, Mimi doesn't just let the momentum fall away from here. She keeps fighting and when they're back in the ring, does another counter which leads to her doing a big elevated backdrop from Nancy being up on the ropes. The announcer puts this move over as the 'Mimi Special'. Looks like something Misawa could have used as a secondary finisher.

There's not much time left so they go right into the desperation cover attempts after this trying to sneak out a win. This is probably the best example of that we've seen so far. It's lots of kickouts but nobody hits anything big enough that it makes it feel excessive/cheapening moves. It's a time limit draw. A result which puts Mimi over a little bit.

***1/2

MD: This felt like a pretty strong one overall. Kumi had a strength advantage. Hagiwara had a speed/agility advantage. They met in the middle on technique. What stood out the most were transitions, so essential in a babyface vs babyface match like this, especially one going to a draw. You need those momentum shifts to give it all substance. 

They were even early, with both wrestlers really scrapping. Kumi tried to heft her up into a gorilla press but she got out of it. Maybe Kumi had a slight advantage from the get go but Hagiwara was able to open things up with a front dropkick to the gut and a great headscissors takeover followed by a bridging surfboard. Kumi came back with a kick off the ropes and cemented it with power moves (including two fireman’s carry lawn darts across the ring) and then went in hard on the arm including a short arm scissors. Hagiwara was able to come back off the ropes and started in on the leg. That would pay off later with a revenge figure-four from Kumi but not before Hagiwara missed a body press and Kumi beat her around ringside, tossing her into chairs multiple times.

They went into a hot finishing stretch after the figure-four (and Haigwara getting some revenge on the floor as we’re seeing more symmetry in these matches) with a lot of nearfalls and shooty pin counters, before time ran out. Kumi probably looked a little stronger and might have won it on points but Hagiwara had no quit in her. 

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