Hiromasa Horiguchi

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DGUSA Untouchable 2009
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Untouchable / Open The Untouchable Gate was a professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by Dragon Gate USA that was taped September 6, 2009 at the Congress Theater in Chicago, Illinois and aired on November 6, 2009.
PWG: 2006 Battle of Los Angeles - Night Two
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2006 Battle of Los Angeles First Round Match 1. Austin Aries vs. Disco Machine 2006 Battle of Los Angeles First Round Match 2. Davey Richards vs. Ronin 2006 Battle of Los Angeles First Round Match 3. "Double C" Claudio Castagnoli vs. Jack Evans 2006 Battle of Los Angeles First Round Match 4. Chris Hero vs. Genki Horiguchi Pro Wrestling Guerrilla World Championship Title 4-Way Elimination Match 5. Joey Ryan (c) vs. Excalibur vs. Human Tornado vs. Petey Williams Pro Wrestling Guerrilla World Tag Team Championship Title 3-Way Match 6. Arrogance ("Photogenic" Chris Bosh & "The Professional" Scott Lost) (c) vs. The Briscoe Brothers (Jay & Mark Briscoe) vs. B-Boy & Homicide 2006 Battle of Los Angeles First Round Match 7. "The Future" Frankie Kazarian vs. Scorpio Sky 2006 Battle of Los Angeles First Round No Disqualification Match 8. Necro Butcher vs. Super Dragon
Dragon Gate USA: Open the Untouchable Gate
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Eight Way Fray Elimination Match Arik Cannon vs. Flip Kendrick vs. Hallowicked vs. Johnny Gargano vs. Louis Lyndon vs. Prince Mustafa Ali vs. Shiima Xion vs. The Great Malaki Singles Match Dragon Kid vs. Masato Yoshino Tag Team Match Gran Akuma & YAMATO vs. Jigsaw & Mike Quackenbush Singles Match Bryan Danielson vs. Naruki Doi Singles Match Brian Kendrick vs. CIMA Singles Match Davey Richards vs. SHINGO Tag Team Match Real Hazard (Genki Horiguchi & Ryo Saito) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson)
Dragon Gate USA: Open the Ultimate Gate
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Dark Eight Way Fray Match Brad Allen vs. Brandon Cutler vs. Chimaera vs. Dave Crist vs. Dustin Cutler vs. Jake Crist vs. Malachi Jackson vs. The Prophet Singles Match Luke Hawx vs. YAMATO Tag Team Match CHIKARA Sekigun (Jigsaw & Mike Quackenbush) vs. Genki Horiguchi & Susumu Yokosuka Singles Match TJP vs. YAMATO Tag Team Match Brian Kendrick & Jon Moxley vs. Jimmy Jacobs & Paul London Singles Match Masato Yoshino vs. SHINGO Tag Team Match Derrick Neikirk & GQ Gallo vs. El Hijo de Rey Misterio & LA Park Open The Freedom Gate Title Match BxB Hulk (c) vs. Naruki Doi Six Man Tag Team Match Jack Evans & The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson) vs. WARRIORS (CIMA, Dragon Kid & Gamma)
Dragon Gate USA: Mercury Rising
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Dark Eight Man Tag Team Match Derrick Neikirk, Irish Airborne (Dave Crist & Jake Crist) & The Prophet vs. Chimaera, Malachi Jackson & The Cutler Brothers (Brandon Cutler & Dustin Cutler) Singles Match Brad Allen vs. TJP Tag Team Match CHIKARA Sekigun (Jigsaw & Mike Quackenbush) vs. The Young Bucks (Matt Jackson & Nick Jackson) Singles Match Genki Horiguchi vs. SHINGO Tag Team Match Brian Kendrick & Paul London vs. Jack Evans & Jimmy Jacobs Hardcore Match Jon Moxley vs. Tommy Dreamer Open The Dream Gate Title Match YAMATO (c) vs. Susumu Yokosuka Six Man Tag Team Match WARRIORS (CIMA, Dragon Kid & Gamma) vs. WORLD-1 (BxB Hulk, Masato Yoshino & Naruki Doi)
Alex Shelley: Made in Detroit
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"Talent on loan from God" - that is how Alex Shelley referred to himself the night Generation Next made its debut in Philadelphia and given the amazing wrestling abilities he has displayed throughout his career, it's a nickname hard to discredit. Even before he helped found the group, during his tag team and subsequent rivalry with Jimmy Jacobs, Alex Shelley demonstrated gifts few wrestlers possess and it only blossomed further under the GenNext banner. Battles with Jay Lethal, Doug Williams, and Bryan Danielson honed his technical prowess and prepared Alex for what would come next as he was exiled from the group he founded...
Austin Aries: The Greatest Man That Ever Lived
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He established himself as a bona fide star the night he dethroned Samoa Joe for the ROH World Title. He asserted his dominance as an ROH World Tag Team champion alongside Roderick Strong. He cemented his status as the Ace of ROH with his 3 match series against Bryan Danielson. So what was next for Austin Aries? Making history once again by becoming the only two-time World champion in Ring of Honor history...
ROH: Best In The World
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This mighty collection contains some of Ring of Honor's most intense wrestling action yet, including a title match between Takeshi Morishima and Nigel McGuinness and another with Bryan Danielson taking on Lance Storm. Other bouts include Claudio Castagnoli vs. El Generico, a vicious match between Samoa Joe and Kenta Kobashi, and a world tag team title bout with Jay and Mark Briscoe facing off against Naruki Doi and Shingo.
ROH: Japan's Finest
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ROH: Japan's Finest

Jan 01, 2012
Since its inception, Ring of Honor has prided itself on presenting the absolute best professional wrestling on the planet with the top athletes not just from the United States but from around the world. In that endeavor, we have been graced with the presence of numerous wrestlers from the world of Japanese Puroresu; from young up & comers to the legends of the squared circle, ROH has been home to them all over the years. Be it Jushin 'Thunder' Liger & The Great Muta or Go Shiozaki & Dragon Kid, they have all competed here and enriched the great history of ROH.
Wrestling Society X
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Wrestling Society X

Mar 14, 2007
Wrestling Society X was a short-lived professional wrestling-based television series produced in 2006 by Big Vision Entertainment. The weekly television series formerly aired on MTV, MTV2, MTV Tr3s, and over a dozen other MTV outlets throughout the world. WSXtra, an extra program featuring WSX matches and interviews not broadcast on television, was available on the promotion's MTV website and Video on Demand. WSX was presented as a secret society of wrestling that used a venue referred to as the WSX Bunker, complete with an artificially worn-out looking ring for its matchups. In matches held within this venue, falls count anywhere was the stipulation. The program also stood out due to its unorthodox approach to pro wrestling; this included frequent use of highly expressive plants, crowd sound effects, electrical sound effects, visual effects, and camera shaking when a wrestler would fall prey to electrical weapons. Along with wrestling, WSX featured musical guests playing at the start of each television broadcast, with some band members joining the broadcast team after the performance.